Intro
MS home health care is skilled, in-home medical care provided by licensed healthcare professionals — registered nurses, physical therapists, occupational therapists, speech-language pathologists, and home health aides — who specialize in supporting people living with multiple sclerosis. It is delivered in your own home, on a schedule, under a plan of care signed by your doctor, and for eligible patients on Medicare, it is covered at $0 copayment.
It is not a nursing home. It is not 24-hour care. It is not a service you have to be hospitalized to start. And it is not, despite what some families have been told, only available for patients who are expected to recover.
This page explains exactly what MS home health care is, what makes it different from generic home health, who qualifies, and what to expect from your first call to your first visit.
How MS Home Health Care Works (Step by Step)
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We stay up to date with modern methods and combine them with proven chiropractic principles to achieve lasting results.
- Step 1: A doctor's order Home health care begins with a written order from a physician, nurse practitioner, physician assistant, or clinical nurse specialist. For most MS patients, this is your neurologist or primary care doctor. We coordinate this directly — you do not have to navigate the paperwork alone.
- Step 2: The face-to-face encounter Medicare requires that the certifying provider see you in person (or via approved telehealth) within 90 days before the start of care or 30 days after, to document why home health is needed. If your last visit was within that window, we can use it. If not, we help schedule it.
- Step 3: Initial assessment by an RN Within 24 to 48 hours of receiving the referral, a registered nurse comes to your home to complete a comprehensive assessment using the OASIS (Outcome and Assessment Information Set) — Medicare's standardized clinical evaluation tool. This visit is covered.
- Step 4: The plan of care Based on the assessment and your physician's orders, we build a written plan of care that lists every service, the frequency of visits, the clinical goals, and the duration of the 60-day episode. Your doctor signs off on it. You and your family receive a copy.
- Step 5: Care begins Skilled visits begin. Each visit is documented, communicated back to your physician, and tracked toward the goals in your plan of care. At the end of 60 days, your doctor reviews your status and decides whether to recertify for another 60 days.
What Makes It "Skilled" (And Why That Matters)
Medicare covers home health care only when it includes at least one skilled service. “Skilled” means care that requires the judgment of a licensed clinician — not tasks a family member could be trained to do.
Examples of skilled services common in MS care: catheter management, injection teaching for disease-modifying therapies, wound care for pressure injuries, gait training with assistive devices, swallowing therapy, complex medication reconciliation, and monitoring for autonomic dysfunction.
This is also where many families get tripped up. If your only need is help bathing or making meals — without a skilled nurse or therapist also being involved — Medicare will not cover that. But for an MS patient who needs even one skilled service, a home health aide can be added to the plan to help with bathing and personal care, and that aide is also covered.
MS patients who use a walker, wheelchair, or cane; who experience severe fatigue after outings; who have heat sensitivity; or who need help to leave the house typically meet the homebound criteria. You can still leave home for medical appointments, religious services, family events, and personal care without losing eligibility.
- You qualify if you meet all four of these:
- You are under the care of a doctor or allowed practitioner with a signed plan of care
- You had a face-to-face encounter within the required Medicare window
- You need skilled care — nursing, PT, OT, or speech therapy — on a part-time basis
- You are homebound (it takes considerable and taxing effort to leave home)
MS Home Health vs. Other Care Options
MS Home Health vs. Hospice
Hospice is end-of-life care for patients with a life expectancy of six months or less if the disease runs its normal course. Most MS patients live a near-normal lifespan and do not need hospice. Home health is appropriate at any disease stage where skilled care is needed.
MS Home Health vs. Home Care (Non-Medical)
Home care (sometimes called custodial care or companion care) provides help with daily activities — bathing, dressing, meal preparation — without skilled medical services. It is typically paid privately or through long-term care insurance. Medicare does NOT cover home care alone. Home health, in contrast, includes skilled medical services and is Medicare-covered.
MS Home Health vs. a Nursing Home
A nursing home is a residential facility where patients live full-time. For a person with MS who can be safely supported at home, home health is almost always the better choice — research consistently shows older adults who age in place experience slower functional decline than matched nursing home residents, and Medicare-covered home health costs the system less while keeping people in their own communities.