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Hospices Face Increased Scrutiny Under New CMS Scoring

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Summary

CMS has proposed a new Service and Spending Variation Index (SSVI) scoring system for hospice providers to be implemented in fiscal year 2027. The system will track metrics including non-hospice spending, length of stay, live discharge return rates, and average minutes per routine home care day. Facility SSVI scores will be publicly posted on the CMS Hospice Center webpage, with high scores triggering increased oversight, additional reviews, and potential license revocations.

What changed

CMS has proposed a new SSVI scoring system for hospice providers to be implemented in fiscal year 2027. The scoring methodology incorporates metrics from hospice claims data including non-hospice spending, percent of beneficiaries with stays exceeding 180 days, average minutes per routine home care day, and seven-day return rates after live discharges. Provider-level SSVI scores will be publicly posted on CMS's Hospice Center webpage.

Hospice providers should anticipate increased scrutiny and take proactive steps to improve their metrics, including training clinical staff on indicator importance and instituting compliance policies. While a high SSVI score is not itself an indicator of fraud, CMS has indicated it represents a cause for concern regarding integrity risks and will trigger additional review. CMS has already revoked over 200 hospice Medicare enrollments in Arizona, California, Nevada, and Texas for non-compliance and expanded oversight to Georgia and Ohio.

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Apr 16, 2026

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April 16, 2026

Hospices Face Increased Scrutiny Under New CMS Scoring

Roy W. Breitenbach, Glenn M. Jones Harris Beach Murtha + Follow Contact LinkedIn Facebook X Send Embed The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) plans a new hospice scoring system in fiscal year 2027 to track “indicators of potential inappropriate utilization, quality of care, and compliance concerns, holding suspicious facilities accountable while allowing legitimate hospices to thrive.”

CMS announced the service and spending variation index (SSVI) is part of its ongoing efforts to combat fraud and strengthen program integrity. CMS said the system will increase transparency for families, ensure proper care, protect beneficiaries and support providers delivering quality end-of-life care.

Details of the proposed rule can be found on the Federal Register. The agency has also published a fact sheet on the proposed rule.

The SSVI score will be based on a variety of metrics CMS gathers from hospice claims, including:

  • Non-hospice spending

  • Percent of beneficiaries discharged with a length of stay of 180 days or more

  • Average minutes per routine home care day

  • Percent of live discharges where beneficiaries return to the same hospice in seven days
    Provider-level data and each facility’s SSVI score would be posted on CMS’ Hospice Center webpage.

While a high SSVI score is not a direct indicator of fraud, waste or abuse, CMS believes it would represent cause for concern of integrity risks or inappropriate utilization, indicating a need for increased oversight, including additional review to assess potential program integrity or compliance issues.

“Hospices exist to help Americans die peaceful, dignified deaths, not to line the pockets of fraudsters,” CMS Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz said in a press release. “These new transparency measures will make it easier for CMS and others to identify hospice providers that misuse Medicare dollars, cut off their funding, and refer them to law enforcement for criminal prosecution.”

Among other efforts to combat fraud, CMS has conducted unannounced hospice site visits nationwide and revoked the licenses of hundreds of hospice providers engaged in improper activity. In Arizona, California, Nevada and Texas, the agency has revoked more than 200 hospice Medicare enrollments for failure to comply with CMS requirements. CMS has since expanded this targeted oversight approach to additional states, including Georgia and Ohio.

Hospice providers should plan for this development and take steps to improve their metrics. This includes training rain staff on the importance of these indicators and instituting policies to ensure compliance and best practices. Consult an experienced attorney to assist with improving your SSVI score.

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Classification

Agency
Harris Beach
Published
April 16th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Healthcare providers
Industry sector
6211 Healthcare Providers
Activity scope
Healthcare oversight Medicare compliance Fraud detection
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Healthcare
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Anti-Money Laundering Public Health

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