HIS to HOPE Help

by Curantis Solutions

HIS to HOPE Help

HOPE visit types

The HOPE (Hospice Outcomes & Patient Evaluation) model introduces a new rhythm to hospice documentation, one that centers on the patient’s evolving experience of care. To meet HOPE’s standards with confidence, it’s critical to understand the different visit types and their timing.

Let’s break down the three visit types defined by HOPE: INV, HUV, and Symptom Follow-Ups, so your team knows exactly what’s required, when, and why it matters.

HIS to HOPE Help Curantis Solutions

INV

Initial Nursing Visit

What it is: The first clinical touchpoint in the HOPE timeline. The INV marks the beginning of structured data collection and sets the baseline for all subsequent updates.

When it’s due: As soon as possible after admission, ideally within the first day.

What it captures:

  • Key demographic and clinical data
  • Initial symptom impact ratings
  • Observations that may trigger a future follow-up

HUV

HOPE Update Visits

HOPE requires two follow-up check-ins to capture how the patient’s condition is changing over time. These are called HOPE Update Visits—HUV1 and HUV2.

HUV1

When it’s due: Days 6–15 after admission
Purpose: Reassess symptoms and update the patient’s status.

HUV2

When it’s due: Days 16–30 after admission
Purpose: Continue tracking trends and changes, especially as patients stabilize or begin to decline.

Pro tip: Even if the visit wasn’t originally intended as a HOPE Update Visit, clinicians can update their response at visit close ensuring the right file is created.

Symptom Follow-Up Visits

What they are:
Special visits required when certain symptoms (e.g., pain, shortness of breath, anxiety) are rated as having a moderate or severe impact on the patient’s well-being.

When they’re due:
Time-sensitive, must occur within days of the symptom being flagged.

Why they matter:
These follow-ups are the heart of HOPE’s patient-centered approach. They ensure that care plans are adapted quickly and that patients don’t suffer in silence.

Symptom follow-ups should be:

  • Automatically evaluated after each visit
  • Clearly flagged with alerts across the system
  • Auto-documented into the HOPE record upon completion and QA

HOPE Hub

To support you every step of the way, Curantis Solutions has created the HOPE Hub—a dedicated resource center designed to guide your team through a seamless transition to HOPE-based documentation. For more HOPE Resources, visit here.

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About Curantis Solutions

Curantis Solutions

Curantis Solutions was born from a desire to put hospice and palliative care first. With a genuine culture of caring, our team is dedicated to creating a refreshingly simple software experience that utilizes emerging technology, smart design and a cloud-native/serverless architecture to create an experience that is congruent with the technology you utilize in your everyday life. It’s time for hospice and palliative care software to make life easier vs creating arduous workarounds and added frustration. It’s time you experience Curantis Solutions!

Non-Compliance Notifications & HOPE Training

by Kristin Rowan, Editor

Hospice Non-Compliance Notifications

On July 21, 2025, the CMS Hospice QRP Announcements page added an update titled “Hospice Quality Reporting Program: Non-Compliance Notifications.”

The Update Reads:

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is providing notifications to hospices that were determined to be out of compliance with Hospice Quality Reporting Program (HQRP) requirements for calendar year (CY) 2024…. This will affect their fiscal year (FY) 2026 Annual Payment Update (APU). The Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs) will distribute Non-compliance notifications and place them into hospices’ Certification and Survey Enhanced Reporting (CASPER) folders in QIES on July 21, 2025. Hospices that receive a letter of non-compliance may submit a request for reconsideration to CMS via email no later than 11:59 pm, August 26, 2025. If you receive a notice of non-compliance and would like to request a reconsideration, see the instructions in your notification and on the Reconsideration Requests webpage.

Details

Any reconsiderations containing protected health information (PHI) will not be processed. All PHI must be removed for a reconsideration to be reviewed.

Additionally, all submissions must be less than 20 MB overall (email message and attachments). Submissions that are greater than 20 MB in size cannot be processed.

HOPE Training

As the implementation date for the HOPE tool drew nearer, advocacy groups and hospice agencies expressed concern over it’s readiness. On June 6, 2025, The Rowan Report shared that three of the largest organizations urged CMS to delay the tool. The groups asked for proper information, education, and training. 

CMS Response

As of now, CMS is not delaying the implementation of the HOPE tool. They have, however, published training tools for hospice providers. The first series of videos is Didactic Training. They cover an introduction to the tool, admin information, preferences and active diagnoses, health conditions, skin conditions, and medications.

On July 21, 2025, CMS announced the opening of registration for live HOPE training. “Hospice Outcomes and Patient Evaluation (HOPE) National Implementation Virtual Training Program Course 2: Coding Workshop.” CMS recommends completing The Didactic Training as a prerequisite to the Coding Workshop.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is offering a live coding workshop on August 5, 2025…. It will provide coding practice for items that are new for HOPE, as well as the existing and updated items carried over from the Hospice Item Set (HIS).

Register now at:The Hospice Outcomes and Patient Evaluation (HOPE) National Implementation Coding Workshop

Find the Didactic Recorded Training Series here.

Data Collection Starts Soon

The HOPE tool begins data collection on October 1, 2025. Key items hospice providers should understand:

  • More Frequent Assessments: HOPE introduces up to four assessment points per patient, capturing care from multiple angles during the first 30 days and at discharge.
  • Real-Time Data Capture: Unlike the retrospective nature of HIS, HOPE assessments are completed during live patient encounters, providing richer and more immediate insights.
  • Higher Stakes for Compliance: To avoid a reimbursement cut of up to 4%, agencies must ensure that at least 90% of HOPE assessments are submitted on time—a notable increase from the previous 2% penalty under HIS.
  • Public Reporting Timeline: While HIS data has been publicly available, HOPE data will not be released for public comparison until fiscal year 2028 or later, giving providers time to adapt.

*from the SimiTree blog: Understanding the Transition from HIS to HOPE

As the implementation of the HOPE tool gets closer, we will continue to share training information from CMS and other sources as it becomes available. If you need a referral to a hospice consultant to navigate the transition, please reach out to The Rowan Report.

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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