Home Health vs. Outpatient Therapy After Stroke
After discharge from inpatient rehab or SNF, should a stroke survivor use home health therapy or outpatient therapy? A Texas placement specialist explains the choice.
The transition from inpatient rehab or skilled nursing to community-based stroke recovery involves a choice between home health therapy (therapists come to you) and outpatient therapy (you travel to a clinic). The right choice depends on functional status, homebound criteria, and therapy intensity goals. Most stroke survivors transition through both phases.
Home health first, then outpatient as function improves
Most stroke survivors follow a natural progression: inpatient rehab or SNF → home health therapy → outpatient therapy. Home health is appropriate when the person is homebound (leaving home requires considerable effort) and bridges the gap between institutional and community-based care. The transition to outpatient therapy should happen as soon as the person can travel safely, because outpatient clinics provide more intensive therapy with better equipment. Delaying the transition to outpatient therapy when a person is able to travel costs recovery potential.
Questions Families Ask About This Decision
Medicare defines homebound as: leaving home requires considerable and taxing effort, OR leaving home is medically contraindicated. Using a walker or wheelchair, having difficulty with stairs, or significant fatigue typically qualifies. Once a patient can drive or regularly leaves home for leisure, they generally no longer qualify for home health.
For most stroke deficits, yes — outpatient therapy allows higher intensity, better equipment, and specialized programs (constraint-induced movement therapy, body weight-supported treadmill training) not available at home. Home health is valuable in the early post-discharge phase, but outpatient should be the goal.
Under Medicare Part B, you pay 20% of the Medicare-approved amount after your Part B deductible. With a Medigap supplement, most or all of this copay is covered. Without supplemental insurance, outpatient therapy copays can add up significantly over months of treatment.
Generally not simultaneously under Medicare. Once a patient is receiving Medicare Part B outpatient therapy, they typically no longer qualify as homebound and aren’t eligible for the Part A home health benefit concurrently. The transition should be planned with the therapy team.
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