AI Adoption Risk in Home Health and Hospice

by Bill Dombi and Jason Bring, Arnall Golden Gregory LLP

AI Adoption in Home Health and Hospice

Accelerating Regulatory Risk

Law firm Arnall Golden Gregory LLP, Bill A. Dombi, Senior Counsel and Jason E. Bring, Partner, recently published an article on navigating the AI frontier. The article proposes legal guardrails for Home Health and Hospice providers. As AI adoption becomes more prevalent, so too does the risk of regulatory errors in nondiscrimination, HIPAA, and CMS reimbursement, among others.

by Bill Dombi and Jason Bring – Arnall Golden Gregory, LLP

Key Takeaways

AI adoption in home health and hospice...

Is accelerating regulatory risk with Section 1557 nondiscrimination rules, HIPAA obligations, and CMS reimbursement scrutiny creating new exposure around bias, PHI handling, ambient listening, AI-generated documentation, and improper reliance on predictive models

Common AI failure points

Unauthorized tools, biased algorithms, ambient-recording missteps, hallucinated documentation, and eligibility-prediction “coding bias,” now trigger audits, denials, False Claims Act exposure, breach allegations, and malpractice risk, especially where human oversight is weak or documentation is inconsistent.

Providers must strengthen AI governance and transparency

Including enterprise-grade vendor controls, business associate agreements, patient disclosure and consent protocols, model-bias testing, workforce training, documentation review, and a comprehensive AI Acceptable Use Policy backed by ongoing monitoring and interdisciplinary oversight.

Read the full article here

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AI Adoption Risk Dombi
AI adoption risk Bring

AGG Healthcare and Post-Acute & Long-Term Care attorneys, Jason Bring and Bill Dombi, advise home health agencies, hospices, and technology vendors nationwide on AI governance, compliance, and reimbursement strategy. For questions about these issues or in general, please contact Jason and Bill.

Appeals Court Filing

by Kristin Rowan, Editor

Appeals Court Filing

Hospice ALJ

A hospice claim may fall under review either before or after the claim has been paid. A hospice agency with a denied claim must file appeals until the claim is approved or the appeals are exhausted. First, they file a written request to reconsider. Then, they file an appeal to a Qualified Independent Contractor (QIC) who employs medical professionals to assess the case. Next, they file an appeal to an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ).

The ALJ is meant to review the documentation to determine whether it satisfies Medicare requirements. That’s all. There are two sets of criteria: the Medicare requirements and the patient record. If they match, the claim is paid. However, a recent ALJ decision and subsequent challenge suggests that the ALJ ignored expert testimony and decided independently that the patient did not qualify for hospice care.

Request to File

The hospice agency in this case filed suit against the ALJ, arguing that physician expertise should be shown deference in these cases. The National Alliance for Care at Home (the Alliance), joined by the American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine (AAHPM), represented by William A. Dombi of Arnall Golden Gregory (AGG), has requested the right to file an amicus brief. An amicus brief provides extra information in a court case from an individual or group that is not part of the lawsuit, but has a vested interest in the outcome.

The Dispute

The Alliance puts at the heart of the case several issues, including:

  • Predicting death is inherently difficult
  • Physicians are the experts and their opinion should carry more weight
  • Oversight from non-qualified third parties add confusion, increase costs, and limit care

The Argument

The wording in multiple parts of the hospice benefit recognizes the expertise and importance of the physician. It is the physician who determines terminal illness. Physicians must have a face-to-face for continued eligibility. And it is the physician’s clinical judgment makes these determinations based on a patient’s individual circumstances, not an arbitrary set of standards.

If an ALJ, or any non-medical person, can overrule the treating physician’s assessment of a patient, they are effectively usurping the role of the doctor in providing a treatment plan. Medical care is subjective, which is why CMS has repeatedly considered and rejected defined criteria that would overrule a physician.

Broader Implications

The brief argues that medical professionals are better able to make care determinations. Further, the brief includes the complexity of health care prognosis, particularly in terminal illnesses. Previous court decisions have noted that “clinical judgments must be tethered to a patient’s valid medical records….” which already eliminates the need for this oversight. The Alliance stated a high probability that the decision in this case will carry substantial weight and influence both in the Sixth Circuit and in courts nationwide.

In fact, the implications may be farther reaching than that. Payors in and out of hospice deny claims deemed “unnecessary” regularly. Claims denials range from about 19% in the ACA Marketplace to as much as 49% from private payers. Even though about 80% of appeals are later accepted, only about 1% of denied claims are appealed.

Not only could this case help more patients get the hospice care they need, it could also lay the groundwork to require insurance companies to rely more heavily on the treating physician’s recommendation. We could see lower denials from prior authorization requests, unconventional treatment plans, VA benefits, and more. 

Final Thoughts

The Rowan Report supports the Alliance’s efforts in this case and wholeheartedly agrees that a physician knows better the care his patient needs than a judge ever could. We are hopeful that Bill Dombi and his team at AGG will be successful in this case and that hospice providers can get back to the  business of patient care. Read the statement from the Alliance here.

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Kristin Rowan, Editor
Kristin Rowan, Editor

Kristin Rowan has been working at The Rowan Report since 2008. She is the owner and Editor-in-chief of The Rowan Report, the industry’s most trusted source for care at home news, and speaker on Artificial Intelligence and Lone Worker Safety and state and national conferences.

She also runs Girard Marketing Group, a multi-faceted boutique marketing firm specializing in content creation, social media management, and event marketing.  Connect with Kristin directly kristin@girardmarketinggroup.com or www.girardmarketinggroup.com

©2025 by The Rowan Report, Peoria, AZ. All rights reserved. This article originally appeared in The Rowan Report. One copy may be printed for personal use: further reproduction by permission only. editor@therowanreport.com

 

Bill Dombi to Continue the Care at Home Fight in D.C.

by Kristin Rowan, Editor

Bill Dombi Key Supporter of Care at Home

The end of 2024 and the official merger of NAHC and NHPCO also brought to a close the extensive service to the care at home industry by former NAHC President Bill Dombi. Dombi served as vice president for law from 1987 to 2017. He was named interim presidnt in 2017 and president in 2018, where he served until 2024.

Bill has been instrumental in the advancement of care at home policies at the federal level, a champion for advocacy for care at home at local, state, and national conferences and organizations, and spearheaded lawsuits and challenges to CMS rulings for year. His retirement, though well-earned, was a great loss to the industry.

Back in Action

On February 4, 2025, Arnall Golden Gregory law firm, of Atlanta and Washington D.C. an Am Law 200 law firm with a client-service model of “business sensibility” announced the additional of Bill Dombi to the firm as senior counsel. With more than 40 years of experience with litigation and policy in the care at home industry, Bill will continue his fight to advance care at home in D.C.

“It’s not a stretch to say that Bill is the face of the home healthcare space and the standard-bearer for advocating on its behalf, whether in state or federal court or through his deep-rooted experience and relationships within Congress and various federal agencies. In addition to tackling major policy issues, Bill has fiercely defended providers and patients in litigation across the country. His broad perspective and exceptional legal acumen will be invaluable to our already outstanding Healthcare practice, particularly in the areas of home health, hospice, and post-acute and long-term care litigation, benefitting both our teams and the clients we serve.”

Jason E. Bring

Healthcare Litigation co-chair, Arnall Golden Gregory LLP

BIll Dombi Returns

From AGG

Bill has been actively involved with significant litigation matters affecting home health policy since 1976. Notably, he served as lead counsel in the lawsuit that resulted in the expansion of Medicare home health coverage in 1980, and he was pivotal in the creation of the Medicare hospice benefit in 1983, the institution of the Medicare Prospective Payment System (PPS) for home health in 2000, and national healthcare reform legislation in 2010. In 2017, Bill was selected as NAHC’s president and served through 2024, ultimately concluding his tenure as president emeritus and counsel of the National Alliance for Care at Home, the combined organization of NAHC and the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization.

“To call Bill a major addition to AGG’s Healthcare practice would be an understatement,” said Sean P. Fogarty, AGG’s managing partner. “Bill has been a pillar in the home health industry for years, and I know I speak on behalf of the entire firm when I say we we’re thrilled to have him join our team.”

Bill is renowned for his commitment to advancing care at home through legal, legislative, and regulatory advocacy. His background spans all key advocacy forums, including Congress, regulatory bodies, and the courts, where he has engineered laws and regulations that directly impact home health and hospice providers. This breadth of experience empowers his private practice to offer clients with a practical framework for compliance standards and operational excellence.

“As I look to the next chapter of my career after almost 40 years at NAHC, it’s exciting to join such an impressive firm and group of professionals with a well-established and supportive culture. AGG is so unique in its earnest focus on collegiality and collaboration, and I look forward to continuing my hard work with my new colleagues on behalf of the dedicated home health providers we serve.”

Bill Dombi

Senior Counsel, AGG

A hall of famer among several home care and hospice organizations, Bill has also served as executive director for the Center of Health Care Law and Home Care and Hospice Financial Managers Association at NAHC. He continues to serve the industry as a member of the board of directors of the Research Institute for Home Care and the Hospice and Home Care Foundation of North Carolina. With Medicaid expenditures now exceeding $130 billion annually and Medicare home health services growing from $300 million to over $25 billion, Bill’s work has seen the evolution of home care from a cottage industry to a cornerstone of long-term care in the U.S.

Bill attended the University of Connecticut, where he earned his law degree, as well as a B.A. in political science.

About Arnall Golden Gregory LLP

Arnall Golden Gregory (AGG) is an Am Law 200 law firm with offices in Atlanta and Washington, D.C. Our client-service model is rooted in taking a “business sensibility” approach of fully understanding how our clients’ legal matters fit into their overall business objectives. Our transaction, litigation, regulatory, and privacy counselors serve clients in healthcare, real estate, retail, technology, fintech/payment systems, global commerce/global mobility, life sciences, logistics and transportation, government investigations, and government contracts. With our rich experience and know-how, we don’t ask “if,” we figure out “how.” Visit us at www.agg.com.

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Kristin Rowan, Editor
Kristin Rowan, Editor

Kristin Rowan has been working at The Rowan Report since 2008. She is the owner and Editor-in-chief of The Rowan Report, the industry’s most trusted source for care at home news .She also has a master’s degree in business administration and marketing and runs Girard Marketing Group, a multi-faceted boutique marketing firm specializing in content creation, social media management, and event marketing.  Connect with Kristin directly kristin@girardmarketinggroup.com or www.girardmarketinggroup.com

©2025 by The Rowan Report, Peoria, AZ. All rights reserved. This article originally appeared in The Rowan Report. One copy may be printed for personal use: further reproduction by permission only. editor@therowanreport.com