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Under Medicare A, the benefit period for an acute hospital stay is 90 days. The cost for those 90 days are 100?

1) True
2) False

User Takeit
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1 Answer

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Final answer:

The statement is False. Medicare Part A has a deductible and requires copayments for hospital stays after 60 days within a benefit period. Costs are not 100% covered for the entire 90 days. This statement is false

Step-by-step explanation:

The statement that under Medicare Part A, the benefit period for an acute hospital stay is 90 days and the cost for those 90 days are 100% covered is False. While Medicare Part A does cover hospital stays, there are specific costs associated with those stays, including deductibles and copayments after a certain number of days.

A benefit period starts the day a patient is admitted to a hospital and ends when the patient has not received any inpatient hospital care for 60 days in a row. For a hospital stay, Medicare Part A covers the full cost for the first 60 days after the deductible has been paid. For days 61-90, there is a daily copayment required from the patient.

Regarding the survey problems, the interpretation of stay lengths would require statistical analysis to determine likelihoods.

Hence, the statement is false

User Yesid
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