Under the guarantee of payment provision, a participating hospital may be paid for
            inpatient hospital services furnished on behalf of a beneficiary whose benefit days
            have been exhausted (including the 190-day lifetime limit on inpatient psychiatric
            hospital services). The guarantee of payment provision does not apply until the individual
            has exhausted their 60 lifetime reserve days  except where the average daily charge is equal to, or less than the lifetime reserve day
            coinsurance amount, since in such cases the reserve days cannot be used by the beneficiary.
            (See HI 00601.065).
         
         The guarantee applies only to inpatient hospital services furnished by a participating
            hospital, whether general, psychiatric, or tuberculosis. The provision assures that
            payment will be made to a hospital for services furnished during the time it takes
            to ascertain the patient’s eligibility from the utilization record.
         
         Benefits are payable under the guarantee if the patient’s benefit days were exhausted
            before the intermediary’s reply to the notice of admission reached the hospital. This
            includes those situations in which benefit days were exhausted prior to admission
            and where a beneficiary had some benefit days remaining at the time of their admission,
            e.g., two or three days of eligibility, but these were exhausted before the intermediary’s
            reply to the notice of admission reached the hospital. Payment under the guarantee
            is made at the full rate; that is, the hospital receives payment without any reduction
            for coinsurance. A hospital is not required to claim payment under the guarantee provision;
            it may look to the patient for payment.