OHIP Payments For Palliative Care Services
OHIP Payments For Palliative Care Services
OHIP Payments For Palliative Care Services
While many patients receiving palliative care are dying of cancer, palliative care is a service that
could be rendered to patients who are dying of any number of chronic or terminal illnesses (e.g.
AIDS, heart disease, muscular dystrophy, etc.).
1
Disclaimer: Every effort has been made to ensure that the contents of this Guide are accurate. Members should, however, be
aware that the laws, regulations and other agreements may change over time. The Ontario Medical Association assumes no
responsibility for any discrepancies or differences of interpretation of applicable Regulations with the Government of Ontario
including but not limited to the Ministry of Health (MOH), and the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO). Members
are advised that the ultimate authority in matters of interpretation and payment of insured services (as well as determination of
what constitutes an uninsured service) are in the purview of the government. Members are advised to request updated billing
information and interpretations – in writing – by contacting their regional OHIP office.
2
OHIP Schedule of Benefits, Physician Services, March 19, 2020 (effective April 1, 2020)
(http://www.health.gov.on.ca/en/pro/programs/ohip/sob/).
3
OHIP Schedule of Benefits (SOB), April 2020, page GP5
Not every patient will require or be eligible for palliative care services in their final year of life.
For example, a patient residing in a long-term care facility may be nearing end of life, but not
dying of a terminal illness requiring comfort measures. The intention of the palliative care fee
codes in the OHIP Schedule is that they are to be applied to patients in accordance with the
OHIP Schedule’s definition for palliative care.
A Special Palliative Care Consultation4 is a consultation requested because of the need for
specialized management for palliative care where the physician spends a minimum of 50
minutes with the patient and/or patient's representative/family in consultation (majority of time
must be spent in consultation with the patient). In addition to the general requirements for a
consultation, the service includes a psychosocial assessment, comprehensive review of
pharmacotherapy, appropriate counselling and consideration of appropriate community
services, where indicated.
When the duration of a Special Palliative Care Consultation (A945 or C945) exceeds 50 minutes,
one or more units of Palliative Care Support (K0235) are eligible for payment in addition to A945
or C945, provided that the minimum time requirements for K023 are met. Start and stop times
must be recorded in the patient’s permanent medical record.
In cases where the Palliative Care Consultation does not meet the minimum 50-minute time
requirement, then a regular consultation fee may be eligible for payment (A005, C005 or W105).
The Palliative Care Case Management Fee6 is payment for a service rendered for providing
supervision of palliative care to a patient for a period of one week, commencing at midnight
Sunday, and includes the following specific elements:
a) monitoring the condition of a patient including ordering tests and interpreting test
results;
b) discussion with and providing telephone advice to the patient, patient’s family or
patient’s representative(s) even if initiated by the patient, patient’s family or patient’s
representative(s);
c) arranging for assessments, procedures or therapy and coordinating community and
hospital care including but not limited to urgent rescue palliative radiation therapy or
4
OHIP SOB, April 2020, page A1
5
OHIP SOB, April 2020, page A47
6
OHIP SOB, April 2020, page J103
Summary
The Palliative Care Case Management code G512 is billed weekly by the physician most
responsible for the patient’s palliative care, or by a physician substituting for this physician.
The patient may be seeing other physicians but the primary provider will be responsible and
“first call” for the patient’s palliative care needs.
In situations where the most responsible physician (MRP) needs to refer to a palliative care
specialist, the MRP may still be eligible to claim G512 if the Schedule requirements have
been fulfilled.
G512 can be billed for up to one year.
The patient can be in any location – home, hospital, LTC, etc.
Services such as telephone management of palliative care (G511) and home care
application/supervision (K070/K071) are not separately billable services when a physician
has claimed G512 for the time period in which those services have occurred.
Services not excluded in payment rule #2 such as assessments, subsequent visit fees, W010,
K023, special visit premiums etc. remain eligible for payment when rendered with G512.
The Palliative Care Telephone Management Fee7 is payment for the provision by telephone of
medical advice, direction or information at the request of the patient, patient’s relative(s),
patient’s representative or other caregiver(s), regarding a patient receiving palliative care at
home. The service must be rendered personally by the physician and is eligible for payment only
when a dated summary of the telephone call is recorded in the patient’s medical record.
Visits that are less than 20 minutes in length are billed according to the usual family practice fee
codes; i.e., bill the applicable fee code that best reflects the service rendered. If the visit is 20
minutes or greater and is directed at providing pain and symptom management, emotional
support and counseling the Palliative Care Support (K023)8 code may be billed. Much like the
counseling codes, this is a time-based code that is billed in number of units.
When meeting with relatives of a terminally ill patient for the purpose of developing an
awareness of modalities for treatment of the patient and/or his or her prognosis, this visit may
be eligible to be billed as Counseling of Relatives (K015).9 This is, again, a time-based service
greater than 20 minutes and billed in units. Please note that K015 requires that the
appointment be pre-booked.
Note: Start and stop times must be recorded in the patient’s permanent medical record when
billing K023 and K015.
7
OHIP SOB, April 2020, page J102
8
OHIP SOB, April 2020, pages A47, GP7, GP54-GP55
9
OHIP SOB, April 2020, pages A19, GP7, GP60
The Palliative Care Support code (K023) and Counselling of Relatives (K015) are billed
like counseling codes in 30-minute increments.
Where more than one unit is claimed, each preceding unit must be a full 30 minutes and
the additional unit is 'major part thereof' or 16 additional minutes of care. For example,
a 50-minute visit would be billed as K023 x 2.
Refer to page GP54 GP55in the General Preamble of the OHIP Schedule for more
information on calculating time units.
Home visits for providing palliative care are often eligible to be billed with special visit premiums
(SVPs)10 11; see Table 1 on page 6 for listing of applicable SVP codes. SVPs are broken down into
two components: (1) the travel premium and (2) the first person seen premium. Both premiums
are billed with the appropriate assessment fee.
If the visit is greater than 20 minutes, Palliative Care Support (K023) may be eligible as an
alternative to an assessment fee. If the visit is less than 20 minutes, then bill a house call
assessment fee (A900 Complex house call assessment)12, which is a service that satisfies, at
minimum, all of the requirements of an intermediate assessment.13 Note that the Complex
house call assessment (A900), requires that the patient be considered a frail, elderly patient or a
housebound patient (please refer to the OHIP Schedule for complete definition and payment
rules).
For pronouncement of death in the home, bill the appropriate special visit premium code(s) as
above, and Pronouncement of death in the home (A902).14 If the physician completes the death
certificate after death has been pronounced by another provider (nurse or physician), bill
Certification of death (A771).15
When completing an application for home care services or providing home care supervision to a
CCAC, the following fees may be eligible for payment16:
K070 for home care application
K071 for acute home care supervision (first 8 weeks)
K072 for chronic home care supervision (after 8 th week)
Physicians providing ongoing care to a palliative care patient at home should consider their
eligibility to bill Palliative Care Case Management (G512) or Telephone Management of Palliative
Care (G511). Note that K071, K072 and G511 are not eligible for payment when G512 is billed.
10
OHIP SOB, April 2020, pages GP65-GP76
11
For additional information on billing Special Visit Premiums, refer to Education and Prevention Committee Interpretive Bulletin
Vol.7, No. 1: https://www.oma.org/wp-content/uploads/0701epc_bulletin.pdf
12
OHIP SOB, April 2020, page A3
13
OHIP SOB, April 2020, page GP27
14
OHIP SOB, April 2020, page A3
15
OHIP SOB, April 2020, page A5
16
OHIP SOB, April 2020, page A55
For hospital inpatients, MRP subsequent visit fees C122, C123 and C124 may be eligible for
payment by the MRP; please refer to the OHIP Schedule for complete definition and payment
rules.17 On day 2 and 3 following an admission, C122 and C123 may be billed. For discharging
the inpatient from hospital, C12418 may be billed for rendering a subsequent visit on the day of
discharge and completing the discharge summary.
Hospital visits to palliative care patients that are less than 20 minutes should be billed as a
Palliative Care subsequent visit – C882 (for GPs) and C982 (for specialists).19 These codes do not
have the weekly service limits associated with other subsequent visit fees (e.g., the after six
weeks of care weekly maximum service limits). If the visit is 20 minutes or greater and is
17
OHIP SOB, April 2020, pages GP44 and GP45.
18
OHIP SOB, April 2020, page GP45
19
OHIP SOB, April 2020, pages GP50, A12; For C982, refer to appropriate Specialist listing in Section A of the SOB
directed at providing pain and symptom management, emotional support and counselling, then
the Palliative Care Support fee (K023) could be billed.
When the admission assessment and subsequent hospital visit (including palliative care visits) is
rendered by the patient’s MRP in an acute care hospital, the MRP may be eligible to bill MRP
premium codes E082 (MRP Admission assessment premium) and/or E083 (MRP subsequent visit
premium) in addition to the admission assessment or subsequent visit codes (including C122,
C123 and C124), when all of the service requirements have been met. Please refer to the OHIP
Schedule for complete definition and payment rules.20
For palliative care visits in a Long-Term Care (LTC) institute, the applicable palliative care fee
depends on the type of LTC facility. For patients in a Chronic Care or Convalescent Hospital, bill
W882 or W982, as appropriate. For patients in a Nursing home or home for the aged, bill W872
or W972, as appropriate. Please note that W872 and W972 are not eligible for payment if W010
(Monthly Management of a Nursing Home or Home for the Aged Patient) has been billed on the
patient in the same month.
Note: If a patient is in a designated palliative care bed, regardless of the type of facility, claims
are to be submitted as C882 or C982, as appropriate. 21
For pronouncement of death in hospital with completion of the death certificate bill C777 and
for completion of the death certificate alone bill C771. 22 For pronouncement of death in a LTC
facility (regardless of type of facility) with completion of the death certificate bill W777 and for
completion of the death certificate alone bill W771. 23
20
OHIP SOB, April 2020, pages GP42 and GP47
21
OHIP SOB, April 2020, pages GP50
22
OHIP SOB, April 2020, pages GP27, A11
23
OHIP SOB, April 2020, pages GP27, A17
Special visits to hospital or LTC for the purpose of providing palliative care are often eligible to
be billed with special visit premiums (SVPs)24 25; see Table 2 on page 8 for listing of applicable
SVP codes. As noted above, special visit premiums are broken down into two components; (1)
the travel premium and (2) the person premium. Both the travel code and the first person and
additional person(s) seen codes are billed with the appropriate assessment fee.
If the visit is greater than 20 minutes, Palliative Care Support (K023) may be eligible as an
alternative to an assessment fee. If the visit is less than 20 minutes, then bill appropriate
assessment fee that best reflects the service rendered (e.g., A007 Intermediate assessment fee).
In cases where you are called to the hospital or LTC for pronouncement of death, bill the
applicable SVP codes and A777 (not C777 or W777).
Weekdays Evenings
Sat., Sun.
Weekdays Daytime (17:00-
and Nights
Daytime (07:00-17:00) 24:00)
Holidays (00:00-
(07:00- with Sacrifice Monday
(07:00- 07:00)
17:00) of Office through
24:00)
Hours Friday
Travel Premium $36.40 $36.40 $36.40 $36.40 $36.40
C/W960 C/W961 C/W962 C/W963 C/W964
Additional person(s)
$20.00 $40.00 $60.00 $75.00 $100.00
seen
C987
C/W991 C/W993 C/W995 C/W997
W999
24
OHIP SOB, April 2020, pages GP65-GP76
25
For additional information on billing Special Visit Premiums, refer to Education and Prevention Committee Interpretive Bulletin
Vol.7, No. 1: https://www.oma.org/wp-content/uploads/0701epc_bulletin.pdf
H: Case Conferences
There are a number of fee codes that apply to case conferences26 27 involving members of a
care team. The general requirements of a case conference are:
a pre-scheduled meeting conducted for the purpose of discussing and directing the
management of an individual patient
must be conducted by personal attendance, videoconference or by telephone
must involve at least 2 other participants (eligible participants may vary by type of case
conference)
at least one of the physician participants is the physician most responsible for the care
of the patient
A record of the conference must be recorded with start and stop times and the list of
attendees
Billing is in 10-minute increments with a maximum of 8 units and a maximum of 4
conferences annually, per patient, per physician.
Multidisciplinary cancer conferences (MCC), which are case conferences specific to the
discussion and management of one or more cancer patients, must meet the minimum standards
established by Cancer Care Ontario.
Refer to the OHIP Schedule for a complete list of the different types of case conferences28, the
associated requirements and payment rules.
26
OHIP SOB, April 2020, pages A29-A38
27
For additional information on billing for Case Conferences, refer to Education and Prevention Committee Interpretive Bulletin
Vol.9, No. 3: https://www.oma.org/wp-content/uploads/0903epc_bulletin.pdf
28
OHIP SOB, April 2020, pages A29-A38
29
For additional information on billing for Telephone Consultations, refer to Education and Prevention Committee Interpretive
Bulletin Vol.9, No. 2: https://www.oma.org/wp-content/uploads/0902epc_bulletin.pdf
30
OHIP SOB, April 2020, pages A39-A41
consultation with the intention of continuing the care, treatment and management of the
patient. When the purpose of the telephone discussion is to arrange for transfer of the patient’s
care to any physician, the service is not eligible for billing. A record of the consultation must be
kept by the physician(s) who submits a claim for the service.31
Physicians may be eligible to receive the annual Palliative Care Special Premium Bonus. The
following fee schedule codes will accumulate to Palliative Care special premium thresholds for
enrolled and non-enrolled patients: K023, C882, A945, C945, W882, W872, B997 and B998.
In order to receive the Premium payment, a physician must reach the following thresholds:
Please note:
(i) all family physicians are eligible for the level “A” bonus; and
(ii) only PEM physicians are eligible for the level “C” bonus.
31
See ‘Medical record requirements’, OHIP SOB, April 2020, pages A41
32
OHIP SOB, April 2020, pages A45-A46
The following are some billing considerations specific to Patient Enrollment Models (PEMs):
Document compiled by the OMA’s Economics, Policy & Research department
Please forward questions to economics@oma.org