The compliance environment for hospice providers has shifted. CMS has intensified scrutiny of the hospice program in response to improper payments, suspected fraud, and rapid growth in certain markets. A central enforcement tool is the Provisional Period of Enhanced Oversight (PPEO), which places selected new hospices under heightened review that may include prepayment review of Medicare claims.
For organizations focused on scaling hospice care, PPEO reinforces a clear operational requirement: growth must be supported by disciplined documentation practices, defensible eligibility determinations, and a structured compliance process. Without that foundation, expansion increases audit exposure and financial risk. Across the industry, audits are increasingly recurring and overlapping rather than isolated events.
CMS implemented PPEO under the Social Security Act to apply enhanced oversight to new providers in high-risk categories. The hospice program drew scrutiny due to rapid growth of new hospices, improper payments identified in hospice audits, Inspector General concerns, and anomalies in claims data analysis.
Recovery audit contractors, unified program integrity contractors conducting UPIC audits, and SMRC audits have identified deficiencies in eligibility documentation, face-to-face encounters, and proper billing practices.
Under PPEO, Medicare Administrative Contractors review medical records for compliance with Medicare regulations before paying for services rendered, increasing the risk of claim denials.
PPEO currently launched in six states (Arizona, California, Nevada, Texas, Georgia, and Ohio) identified as high risk for hospice program integrity concerns. While geographically targeted, it reflects a broader enforcement pattern across Medicare and Medicaid services.
Increased scrutiny now aligns with expanded use of:
For many healthcare providers, hospice audits are becoming part of the normal course of operations rather than isolated events. Cross-program monitoring involving home health and other healthcare providers further reinforces that hospice agencies must operate with continuous audit readiness to ensure Medicare pays for the rendered services. Organizations in all states may face similar expectations even when PPEO itself is geographically limited.
Under PPEO, the primary risk area remains eligibility. To qualify for the Medicare hospice benefit, documentation must clearly support a terminal prognosis, disease progression, ongoing clinical decline, appropriate care plans, compliance with the Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, and alignment with the Medicare Program Integrity Manual.
Medical directors and nurse practitioner documentation must include properly documented face-to-face encounters. Certifications and recertifications must demonstrate measurable clinical evidence supporting continued hospice services for hospice patients receiving palliative care.
When documentation is inconsistent or incomplete, hospice providers face claim denials, audit findings, recoupments, extended appeal process timelines, and increased monitoring. In a prepayment review environment, even minor documentation gaps can delay payment or trigger additional scrutiny from CMS contractors. Many denials occur not because records are missing, but because the full chart does not consistently support the eligibility decision when reviewed longitudinally.
Strong documentation practices also protect patient care quality, support consumer assessment reporting, and reinforce the integrity of services provided.
Hospice agencies whether preparing for PPEO or additional general scrutiny should:
If hospices fail to prepare for prepayment review, the consequences can be significant. Claims may be denied or delayed, leading to immediate cash flow disruption and increased administrative burden. Repeated deficiencies can trigger expanded audits, prolonged TPE cycles, extrapolated overpayment demands, and reputational damage with regulators and referral sources. Operational strain increases as staff shift from patient care to reactive documentation retrieval and appeals management. Ultimately, inadequate preparation places financial stability, compliance standing, and patient access at risk.
Akssi™ Recert-Assist strengthens eligibility determination by standardizing review across certification periods using rule-based logic aligned with LCD criteria. It enables hospice providers to generate consistent, physician-ready summaries that support terminal illness eligibility and reduce risk tied to improper payments and audit findings.
Akssi™ Audit-Scan adds continuous oversight by reviewing 100 percent of charts against CMS requirements before claims are submitted. In a prepayment review environment, this reduces the likelihood that documentation gaps will result in denials or expanded audit exposure across recovery audit contractors, UPIC audits, SMRC audits, and Medicaid audits.
PPEO reflects a durable shift in hospice oversight. Compliance infrastructure must expand alongside census growth. Hospice agencies that standardize eligibility reviews, strengthen documentation practices, educate providers, and implement structured internal audit processes are better positioned to protect revenue while sustaining high-quality patient care.
Akssi™ Recert-Assist and Akssi™ Audit-Scan from Buds Technology help hospice providers prepare for prepayment review, reduce claim denials, and support defensible clinical documentation under heightened Medicare scrutiny.
Schedule a demo today to ensure compliance and scale hospice services without scaling risk.