Tag: PDPM

Respiratory Therapy in Skilled Nursing: Opportunity, Exposure, and the Case for Standardized Training

Respiratory Therapy in Skilled Nursing: Opportunity, Exposure, and the Case for Standardized Training

Respiratory therapy has become one of the most consequential clinical and financial pressure points in skilled nursing today. For providers operating under PDPM, it represents a genuine opportunity to capture reimbursement that reflects the true complexity of the patients they serve. It also represents one of the fastest-growing areas of audit exposure in the industry.

Getting it right requires more than good intentions. It requires trained staff, standardized processes, and documentation that withstands scrutiny.

The Opportunity

Respiratory conditions sit at the intersection of diagnoses most likely to drive skilled nursing admissions. Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), and other pulmonary conditions are associated with high hospitalization rates, elevated nursing intensity, and significant non-ancillary costs—all of which factor into PDPM reimbursement.

Industry experts estimate that up to 50% of today’s nursing home patients may genuinely meet the threshold for a Respiratory Special Care High designation. Even a routine daily nebulizer treatment averages 17 minutes to administer, not including assessment, monitoring, and cleanup.

The Exposure is Growing

According to Alicia Cantinieri, Managing Director at Zimmet Healthcare Services Group, the Respiratory Special Care High designation has been identified as a key driver of audit findings and denials, not because care isn’t being delivered, but because providers frequently fail to capture required indicators or maintain documentation needed to support their claims. As more states convert Medicaid case mix systems to PDPM-aligned models, that risk is expanding. Auditors expect specific physician orders detailing modality, frequency, duration, and scope. They look for evaluations conducted by qualified personnel with verifiable credentials and training to match. Gaps in any of these areas don’t just create compliance risk. They leave reimbursement on the table.

What Strong Respiratory Programs Have in Common

Providers who successfully capture the clinical and reimbursement value of respiratory care share a few things in common: standardized risk assessment built into the care process, staff trained to use a consistent definition of skilled care need, a clear escalation pathway for patients whose conditions change, and documented staff credentials that support audit defense.

The Role of Education and Credentialing

This is where training becomes a strategic priority, not just a compliance requirement. Staff who understand respiratory assessment, intervention, and documentation don’t just reduce audit risk; they deliver better care. When that training is credentialed by a recognized authority, it carries weight with auditors and administrators alike. Two ACP courses approved by the American Association for Respiratory Care (AARC), are designed to build exactly that foundation:

  • Pulmonary Essentials – Assessment and Intervention (1.5 CEUs): Covers the clinical assessment skills and intervention strategies essential to respiratory care in the post-acute setting, giving staff a consistent, trainable framework for identifying need and responding appropriately.
  • Pulmonary Essentials – Spirometry (1CEU): Focuses on one of the most important diagnostic and monitoring tools in respiratory care, ensuring staff understand how spirometry is performed, how results are interpreted, and how findings support care planning and documentation.

Together, these courses address the full picture: qualified teams, standardized assessment, and documented, credentialed training that supports both quality outcomes and audit defense.

How ACPlus® Respiratory Assessment Supports the Whole Picture

Meeting the standard for respiratory care documentation requires a reliable, standardized process that starts at admission and carries through every reassessment. That’s exactly what ACPlus® Respiratory Assessment (ARA) is built to deliver.

ARA is an innovative solution that enables skilled nursing operators to proactively identify patients with pulmonary dysfunction using objective, data-driven assessment. Using an iPad and Bluetooth spirometer, clinicians can conduct breathing tests at the bedside, capture baseline metrics, and receive automated suggestions for possible lung disease patterns and severity levels. This gives the care team the precise data needed to build an individualized treatment plan from day one.

ARA’s objective data provides the robust documentation required to justify respiratory care and support reimbursement, addressing one of the most consistent failure points auditors identify. And because ARA integrates seamlessly with PointClickCare and MatrixCare, results sync automatically at the point of service, helping to reduce documentation burden and ensuring nothing falls through the cracks.

Building Programs that Last

Respiratory therapy isn’t a reimbursement strategy. It’s a clinical service that, when delivered well, meaningfully improves patient outcomes and reduces hospitalizations. The providers who approach it that way — investing in training, standardizing processes, and capturing care accurately — are the ones best positioned to realize its full value.

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Respiratory therapy has become one of the most consequential clinical and financial pressure points in skilled nursing today. For providers operating under PDPM, it represents a genuine opportunity to capture reimbursement that reflects the true complexity of the patients they serve. It also represents one of the fastest-growing areas of audit exposure in the industry.

Improving Patient Outcomes Through Early Respiratory Assessment

The highlights:

  • Early respiratory assessment in SNFs can improve patient outcomes and ensure PDPM reimbursement is appropriate to address underlying medical conditions. 
  • PDPM emphasizes the value of respiratory therapy, providing higher reimbursement for patients in the special care high category.   
  • ACP will launch a new tool to streamline and document the respiratory assessment process.  

When a patient is admitted to a skilled nursing facility (SNF), the first few days are critical in setting the stage for their care plan through thorough and accurate intake assessment. This is especially true under the Patient-Driven Payment Model (PDPM). As SNFs navigate a complex reimbursement landscape and manage more acute cases, capturing conditions as early as possible in a patient’s stay has become more important than ever. One evaluation that can make a significant difference in patient outcomes and clinically appropriate reimbursement is the respiratory assessment.

Advantages of Respiratory Assessment for Patients and Facilities

Early respiratory assessment can benefit both the patient and the facility. For the patient, it ensures that any respiratory issues are identified and addressed. For the facility, it can lead to improved patient outcomes and increased reimbursement under PDPM. Cardiopulmonary issues are a leading source of hospital readmissions; early and repeated respiratory assessment enables operators to avoid these costly events through proactive intervention, helping patients access the right care plan.

Respiratory Assessment and Therapy within PDPM Guidelines

Under the PDPM reimbursement structure, patients receiving respiratory therapy are classified into a -Nursing Case Mix Group with a higher daily reimbursement rate than those not receiving this service. SNFs that can accurately identify patients in need of respiratory services can secure additional reimbursement for necessary care ranging from an average of $50 to $100 per day throughout the patient’s stay.1

The coding of the Respiratory Therapy on the MDS (Section O0400) requires:

  • Respiratory therapy 7 consecutive days (to be captured within the first 8 days of admission and reflected in the Assessment Reference Date)
  • At least 15 minutes per day (105 minutes total per week)
  • Respiratory-trained nurse or respiratory therapist daily intervention may include any of the following:
    • Assessing   
    • Teaching   
    • Training   
    • Breathing exercises  
    • Delivering Nebulizer Therapy 
    • Biofeedback Respiratory exercise training  

In the RAI User’s Manual, Appendix A (page Appendix A-18), the following definition is provided for the Minimum Data Set (MDS) application of Respiratory Therapy: 

Services that are provided by a qualified professional (respiratory therapists, respiratory nurse). Respiratory therapy services are for the assessment, treatment, and monitoring of patients with deficiencies or abnormalities of pulmonary function. Respiratory therapy services include coughing, deep breathing, heated nebulizers, aerosol treatments, assessing breath sounds and mechanical ventilation, etc., which must be provided by a respiratory therapist or trained respiratory nurse.

The RAI User’s Manual defines a respiratory-trained nurse as one who received education in delivering respiratory services and assessment through formal training or during nursing education. For guidance on establishing a respiratory nurse, please refer to your respective State Practice Act and confirm that nurses comply with their scope of practice as defined by the State Specific Board for Nursing and according to Facility Policy.  

Overcoming Barriers

Time constraints and lack of training prevent many facilities from effectively incorporating respiratory assessment and intervention into staff workflows. To address these challenges, we are excited to share the upcoming launch of an innovative tool designed to expedite the assessment process. Our product ensures swift and efficient respiratory assessment, enabling more users to seamlessly integrate assessments into their workflow. Additionally, ACP offers Continuing Education (CE) courses for nurses and nursing home administrators to bridge the training gap, empowering SNFs to harness the full potential of respiratory therapy services for both patient care and facility sustainability.  

  1. Estimate based on analysis using CMS’ PDPM Calculation Worksheet for SNFs (pgs.25-29) and CliftonLarsonAllen 2024 Skilled Nursing Facility PDPM PPS Rate Calculator. ↩︎

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Early respiratory assessment in SNFs can improve patient outcomes and ensure PDPM reimbursement is appropriate to address underlying medical conditions. PDPM emphasizes the value of respiratory therapy, providing higher reimbursement for patients in the special care high category.  ACP will launch a new tool to streamline and document the respiratory assessment process.

Services that are provided by a qualified professional (respiratory therapists, respiratory nurse). Respiratory therapy services are for the assessment, treatment, and monitoring of patients with deficiencies or abnormalities of pulmonary function. Respiratory therapy services include coughing, deep breathing, heated nebulizers, aerosol treatments, assessing breath sounds and mechanical ventilation, etc., which must be provided by a respiratory therapist or trained respiratory nurse.

The coding of the Respiratory Therapy on the MDS (Section O0400) requires:

  • Respiratory therapy 7 days per week (established within the first eight days of admission)
  • At least 15 minutes per day (105 minutes total per week)

Respiratory-trained nurse or respiratory therapist daily intervention may include any of the following:

  • Assessing
  • Teaching
  • Training
  • Breathing exercises
  • Delivering Nebulizer Therapy
  • Biofeedback Respiratory exercise training