South Georgia Specialty Hospital
Frequently Asked Questions
LTACH hospitals are facilities specializing in the treatment of patients with serious medical conditions requiring ongoing care but no longer require intensive care or extensive diagnostic procedures.
- Short term acute hospital stay ≥ 5 days
- Failed a lower level of care and required readmission
- Lower nurse to patient ratio (similar to hospital ICU step-down unit)
- Daily physician visits
Long-term acute care hospitals (LTACHs) are facilities that specialize in the treatment of patients with serious medical conditions that require care on an ongoing basis but no longer require intensive care or extensive diagnostic procedures. These patients are typically discharged from the intensive care units and require more care than they can receive in a rehabilitation center, skilled nursing facility, or at home.
LTACHs often are housed within the walls of an acute care hospital but function independently. LTACHs must be licensed independently and have their own governing body. LTACHs may also exist as a stand-alone facility. They may offer some outpatient services, such as laboratory or radiology procedures.
Under Medicare, the patient must need more than 25 days of hospitalization. The types of patients typically seen in LTACHs include the following:
- Prolonged ventilator use or weaning
- Ongoing dialysis for chronic renal failure
- Intensive respiratory care
- Multiple IV medications or transfusions
- Complex wound care/care for burns
A short stay is any stay that does not meet the 5/6 GMLOS.
Examples:
- Patient experiences an acute condition that requires urgent treatment or requires more intensive rehabilitation and you then discharge the patient to another facility
- Patient does not require the level of care provided in an LTACH and you then discharge the patient to another facility
- Patient discharges to his or her home
- Patient dies within the first several days of admission to an LTACH
Patient exhausts benefits during the LTACH stay