Medicare Program; Criteria and Standards for Evaluating Intermediary, Carrier, and Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS) Regional Carrier Performance During Fiscal Year 2006, 55887-55896 [05-18923]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 184 / Friday, September 23, 2005 / Notices
deductibles and daily coinsurance
amounts paid.
V. Waiver of Proposed Notice and
Comment Period
The Medicare statute, as discussed
previously, requires publication of the
Medicare Part A inpatient hospital
deductible and the hospital and
extended care services coinsurance
amounts for services for each calendar
year. The amounts are determined
according to the statute. As has been our
custom, we use general notices, rather
than notice and comment rulemaking
procedures, to make the
announcements. In doing so, we
acknowledge that, under the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA),
interpretive rules, general statements of
policy, and rules of agency organization,
procedure, or practice are excepted from
the requirements of notice and comment
rulemaking.
We considered publishing a proposed
notice to provide a period for public
comment. However, we may waive that
procedure if we find good cause that
prior notice and comment are
impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary
to the public interest. We find that the
procedure for notice and comment is
unnecessary because the formulae used
to calculate the inpatient hospital
deductible and hospital and extended
care services coinsurance amounts are
statutorily directed, and we can exercise
no discretion in following those
formulae. Moreover, the statute
establishes the time period for which
the deductible and coinsurance amounts
will apply and delaying publication
would be contrary to the public interest.
Therefore, we find good cause to waive
publication of a proposed notice and
solicitation of public comments.
VI. Regulatory Impact Statement
We have examined the impacts of this
notice as required by Executive Order
12866 (September 1993, Regulatory
Planning and Review), the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA) (September 19,
1980, Pub. L. 96–354), section 1102(b) of
the Act, the Unfunded Mandates Reform
Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4), and
Executive Order 13132.
Executive Order 12866, which merely
reassigns responsibility of duties)
directs agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). As stated in Section IV of this
notice, we estimate that the total
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increase in costs to beneficiaries
associated with this notice is about $230
million due to: (1) The increase in the
deductible and coinsurance amounts
and (2) the change in the number of
deductibles and daily coinsurance
amounts paid. Therefore, this notice is
a major rule as defined in Title 5,
United States Code, section 804(2), and
is an economically significant rule
under Executive Order 12866.
The RFA requires agencies to analyze
options for regulatory relief of small
entities. For purposes of the RFA, small
entities include small businesses,
nonprofit organizations, and
government agencies. Most hospitals
and most other providers and suppliers
are small entities, either by nonprofit
status or by having revenues of $6
million to $29 million in any 1 year.
Individuals and States are not included
in the definition of a small entity. We
have determined that this notice will
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. Therefore we are not preparing
an analysis for the RFA.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act
requires us to prepare a regulatory
impact analysis if a rule may have a
significant impact on the operations of
a substantial number of small rural
hospitals. This analysis must conform to
the provisions of section 604 of the
RFA. For purposes of section 1102(b) of
the Act, we define a small rural hospital
as a hospital that is located outside of
a Metropolitan Statistical Area and has
fewer than 100 beds. We have
determined that this notice will not
have a significant effect on the
operations of a substantial number of
small rural hospitals. Therefore, we are
not preparing an analysis for section
1102(b) of the Act.
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 also
requires that agencies assess anticipated
costs and benefits before issuing any
rule that may result in expenditure in
any 1 year by State, local, or tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $110 million. This
notice has no consequential effect on
State, local, or tribal governments or on
the private sector.
Executive Order 13132 establishes
certain requirements that an agency
must meet when it promulgates a
proposed rule (and subsequent final
rule) that imposes substantial direct
requirement costs on State and local
governments, preempts State law, or
otherwise has Federalism implications.
This notice has no consequential effect
on State or local governments.
In accordance with the provisions of
Executive Order 12866, this regulation
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55887
was reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget.
Authority: Sections 1813(b)(2) of the Social
Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1395e–2(b)(2)).
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program No. 93.773, Medicare—Hospital
Insurance)
Dated: September 12, 2005.
Mark B. McClellan,
Administrator, Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services.
Dated: September 15, 2005.
Michael O. Leavitt,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 05–18838 Filed 9–16–05; 4:00 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
[CMS–1307–GNC]
RIN 0938–ZA74
Medicare Program; Criteria and
Standards for Evaluating Intermediary,
Carrier, and Durable Medical
Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and
Supplies (DMEPOS) Regional Carrier
Performance During Fiscal Year 2006
Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services (CMS), Health and
Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: General notice with comment
period.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This notice describes the
criteria and standards to be used for
evaluating the performance of fiscal
intermediaries (FIs), carriers, and
Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
(DMEPOS) regional carriers in the
administration of the Medicare program
beginning on the first day of the first
month following publication of this
notice in the Federal Register. The
results of these evaluations are
considered whenever we enter into,
renew, or terminate an intermediary
agreement, carrier contract, or DMEPOS
regional carrier contract or take other
contract actions, for example, assigning
or reassigning providers or services to
an intermediary or designating regional
or national intermediaries. We are
requesting public comment on these
criteria and standards.
DATES: Effective Date: The criteria and
standards are effective on October 24,
2005.
Comment Date: To be assured
consideration, comments must be
received at one of the addresses
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provided below, no later than 5 p.m.
beginning on the first day of the first
month following publication of this
notice in the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, please refer
to file code CMS–1307–GNC. Because of
staff and resource limitations, we cannot
accept comments by facsimile (FAX)
transmission.
You may submit comments in one of
three ways (no duplicates, please):
1. Electronically. You may submit
electronic comments on specific issues
in this regulation to https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/regulations/
ecomments or to https://
www.regulations.gov, (attachments must
be in Microsoft Word, WordPerfect, or
Excel; however, we prefer Microsoft
Word.)
2. By mail. You may mail written
comments (one original and two copies)
to the following address only: Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Services,
Department of Health and Human
Services, Attention: CMS–1307–GNC,
P.O. Box 8013, Baltimore, MD 21244–
8013.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed
comments to be received at the close of
the comment period.
3. By hand or courier. If you prefer,
you may deliver (by hand or courier)
your written comments (one original
and two copies) before the close of the
comment period to one of the following
addresses. If you intend to deliver your
comments to the Baltimore address,
please call telephone number (410) 786–
7197 in advance to schedule your
arrival with one of our staff members.
Room 445–G, Hubert H. Humphrey
Building, 200 Independence Avenue,
SW., Washington, DC 20201; or 7500
Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21244–1850.
(Because access to the interior of the
HHH Building is not readily available to
persons without Federal Government
identification, commenters are
encouraged to leave their comments in
the CMS drop slots located in the main
lobby of the building. A stamp-in clock
is available for persons wishing to retain
a proof of filing by stamping in and
retaining an extra copy of the comments
being filed.)
Comments mailed to the addresses
indicated as appropriate for hand or
courier delivery may be delayed and
could be considered late. All comments
received before the close of the
comment period are available for
viewing by the public, including any
personally identifiable or confidential
business information that is included in
a comment. After the close of the
comment period, CMS posts all
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electronic comments received before the
close of the comment period on its
public website.
For information on viewing public
comments, see the beginning of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Richard Johnson, (410) 786–5633.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Submitting Comments: We welcome
comments from the public on all issues
set forth in this notice to assist us in
fully considering issues and developing
policies. You can assist us by
referencing the file code CMS–1307GNC and the specific ‘‘issue identifier’’
that precedes the section on which you
choose to comment.
Inspection of Public Comments: All
comments received before the close of
the comment period are available for
viewing by the public, including any
personally identifiable or confidential
business information that is included in
a comment. We post all electronic
comments received before the close of
the comment period on its public
website as soon as possible after they
are received. Hard copy comments
received timely will be available for
public inspection as they are received,
generally beginning approximately 3
weeks after publication of a document,
at the headquarters of the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services, 7500
Security Boulevard, Baltimore,
Maryland 21244, Monday through
Friday of each week from 8:30 a.m. to
4 p.m. To schedule an appointment to
view public comments, phone 1–800–
743–3951.
I. Background
[If you choose to comment on issues in
this section, please include the caption
‘‘BACKGROUND’’ at the beginning of
your comments.]
A. Part A—Hospital Insurance
Under section 1816 of the Social
Security Act (the Act), public or private
organizations and agencies participate
in the administration of Part A (Hospital
Insurance) of the Medicare program
under agreements with us. These
agencies or organizations, known as FIs,
determine whether medical services are
covered under Medicare, determine
correct payment amounts and then
make payments to the health care
providers (for example, hospitals,
skilled nursing facilities (SNFs), and
community mental health centers) on
behalf of the beneficiaries. Section
1816(f) of the Act requires us to develop
criteria, standards, and procedures to
evaluate an intermediary’s performance
of its functions under its agreement.
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Section 1816(e)(4) of the Act requires
us to designate regional agencies or
organizations, which are already
Medicare intermediaries under section
1816 of the Act, to perform claim
processing functions for freestanding
Home Health Agency (HHA) claims. We
refer to these organizations as Regional
Home Health Intermediaries (RHHIs).
See § 421.117 and the final rule
published on May 19, 1988 in the
Federal Register (53 FR 17936) for more
details about the RHHIs.
The evaluation of intermediary
performance is part of our contract
management process. These evaluations
need not be limited to the current fiscal
year (FY), other fixed term basis, or
agreement term.
B. Part B—Supplementary Medical
Insurance
Under section 1842 of the Act, we are
authorized to enter into contracts with
carriers to fulfill various functions in
the administration of Part B,
Supplementary Medical Insurance of
the Medicare program. Beneficiaries,
physicians, and suppliers of services
submit claims to these carriers. The
carriers determine whether the services
are covered under Medicare and the
amount payable for the services or
supplies, and then make payment to the
appropriate party.
Under section 1842(b)(2) of the Act,
we are required to develop criteria,
standards, and procedures to evaluate a
carrier’s performance of its functions
under its contract. Evaluations of
Medicare fee-for-service (FFS)
contractor performance need not be
limited to the current FY, other fixed
term basis, or contract term. The
evaluation of carrier performance is part
of our contract management process.
C. Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
(DMEPOS) Regional Carriers
In accordance with section
1834(a)(12) of the Act, we have entered
into contracts with four DMEPOS
regional carriers to perform all of the
duties associated with the processing of
claims for DMEPOS, under Part B of the
Medicare program. These DMEPOS
regional carriers process claims based
on a Medicare beneficiary’s principal
residence by State. Section 1842(a) of
the Act authorizes contracts with
carriers for the payment of Part B claims
for Medicare covered services and
items. Section 1842(b)(2) of the Act
requires us to publish in the Federal
Register criteria and standards for the
efficient and effective performance of
carrier contract obligations. Evaluation
of Medicare FFS contractor performance
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need not be limited to the current FY,
other fixed term basis, or contract term.
The evaluation of DMEPOS regional
carrier performance is part of our
contract management process.
D. Development and Publication of
Criteria and Standards
In addition to the statutory
requirements, § 421.120, § 421.122 and
§ 421.201 provide for publication of a
Federal Register notice to announce
criteria and standards for intermediaries
and carriers before the beginning of each
evaluation period. The current criteria
and standards for intermediaries,
carriers, and DMEPOS regional carriers
were published in the Federal Register
(68 FR 74613) on November 26, 2004.
To the extent possible, we make every
effort to publish the criteria and
standards before the beginning of the
Federal FY, which is October 1. If we do
not publish a Federal Register notice
before the new FY begins, readers may
presume that until and unless notified
otherwise, the criteria and standards
that were in effect for the previous FY
remain in effect.
In those instances in which we are
unable to meet our goal of publishing
the subject Federal Register notice
before the beginning of the FY, we may
publish the criteria and standards notice
at any subsequent time during the year.
If we publish a notice in this manner,
the evaluation period for the criteria and
standards that are the subject of the
notice will be effective beginning on the
first day of the first month following
publication of this notice in the Federal
Register. Any revised criteria and
standards will measure performance
prospectively; that is, any new criteria
and standards in the notice will be
applied only to performance after the
effective date listed on the notice.
It is not our intention to revise the
criteria and standards that will be used
during the evaluation period once this
information is published in a Federal
Register notice. However, on occasion,
either because of administrative action
or statutory mandate, there may be a
need for changes that have a direct
impact on the criteria and standards
previously published, or that require the
addition of new criteria or standards, or
that cause the deletion of previously
published criteria and standards. If we
must make these changes, we will
publish an amended Federal Register
notice before implementation of the
changes. In all instances, necessary
manual issuances will be published to
ensure that the criteria and standards
are applied uniformly and accurately.
Also, as in previous years, this Federal
Register notice will be republished and
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the effective date revised if changes are
warranted as a result of the public
comments received on the criteria and
standards.
The Medicare Prescription Drug,
Improvement and Modernization Act of
2003 (MMA) (Pub. L. 108–173) was
enacted on December 8, 2003. Section
911 of the MMA establishes the
Medicare FFS Contracting Reform
(MCR) initiative that will be
implemented over the next several
years. This provision requires that we
use competitive procedures to replace
our current FIs and carriers with
Medicare Administrative Contractors
(MACs). The MMA requires that we
compete and transition all work to
MACs by October 1, 2011.
FIs and or carriers will continue
administering Medicare FFS work until
the final competitively selected MAC is
up and operating. We will continue to
develop and publish standards and
criteria for use in evaluating the
performance of FIs, carriers, and
DMERCs as long as these types of
contractors exist.
II. Analysis of and Response to Public
Comments Received on FY 2005
Criteria and Standards
We received three comments in
response to the November 26, 2004
Federal Register general notice with
comments. All comments were
reviewed, but none necessitated our
reissuance of the FY 2005 Criteria and
Standards. Comments submitted did not
pertain specifically to the FY 2005
criteria and standards.
III. Criteria and Standards—General
[If you choose to comment on issues in
this section, please include the caption
‘‘CRITERIA AND STANDARDS—
GENERAL’’ at the beginning of your
comments.]
Basic principles of the Medicare
program are to pay claims promptly and
accurately and to foster good beneficiary
and provider relations. Contractors must
administer the Medicare program
efficiently and economically. The goal
of performance evaluation is to ensure
that contractors meet their contractual
obligations. We measure contractor
performance to ensure that contractors
do what is required of them by statute,
regulation, contract, and our directives.
We have developed a contractor
oversight program for FY 2006 that
outlines expectations of the contractor,
measures the performance of the
contractor; evaluates the performance
against the expectations; and provides
for appropriate contract action based
upon the evaluation of the contractor’s
performance.
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As a means to monitor the accuracy
of Medicare FFS payments, we have
established the Comprehensive Error
Rate Testing (CERT) program that
measures and reports error rates for
claims payment decisions made by
carriers, DMERCs, and FIs. Beginning in
November 2003, the CERT program
measures and reports claims payment
error rates for each individual carrier
and DMERC. FI-specific rates became
available November 2004. These rates
measure not only how well contractors
are doing at implementing automated
review edits and identifying which
claims to subject to manual medical
review but they also measure the impact
of the contractor’s provider outreach/
education, as well as the effectiveness of
the contractor’s provider call center(s).
We will use these contractor-specific
error rates as a means to evaluate a
contractor’s performance.
Several times throughout this notice,
we refer to the appropriate reading level
of letters, decisions, or correspondence
that are going to Medicare beneficiaries
from intermediaries or carriers. In those
instances, appropriate reading level is
defined as whether the communication
is below the 8th grade reading level
unless it is obvious that an incoming
request from the beneficiary contains
language written at a higher level. In
these cases, the appropriate reading
level is tailored to the capacities and
circumstances of the intended recipient.
In addition to evaluating performance
based upon expectations for FY 2006,
we may also conduct follow-up
evaluations throughout FY 2006 of areas
in which contractor performance was
out of compliance with statute,
regulations, and our performance
expectations during prior review years
where contractors were required to
submit a Performance Improvement
Plan (PIP).
We may also utilize Statement of
Auditing Standards-70 (SAS–70)
reviews as a means to evaluate
contractors in some or all business
functions.
In FY 2001, we established the
Contractor Rebuttal Process as a
commitment to continual improvement
of contractor performance evaluation
(CPE). We will continue the use of this
process in FY 2006. The Contractor
Rebuttal Process provides the
contractors an opportunity to submit a
written rebuttal of CPE findings of fact.
Whenever we conduct an evaluation of
contractor operations, contractors have
7 calendar days from the date of the CPE
review exit conference to submit a
written rebuttal. The CPE review team
or, if appropriate, the individual
reviewer will consider the contents of
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the rebuttal before the issuance of the
final CPE report to the contractor.
The FY 2006 CPE for intermediaries
and carriers is structured into five
criteria designed to meet the stated
objectives. The first criterion, claims
processing, measures contractual
performance against claims processing
accuracy and timeliness requirements,
as well as activities in handling appeals.
Within the claims processing criterion,
we have identified those performance
standards that are mandated by
legislation, regulation, or judicial
decision. These standards include
claims processing timeliness, the
accuracy of Medicare Summary Notices
(MSNs), the timeliness of intermediary
redeterminations, the timeliness of
carrier redeterminations and hearings,
and the appropriateness of the reading
level and content of intermediary and
carrier redetermination letters. Further
evaluation in the Claims Processing
Criterion may include, but is not limited
to, the accuracy of claims processing,
the percent of claims paid with interest,
and the accuracy of redeterminations
and carrier hearings.
The second criterion, customer
service, assesses the adequacy of the
service provided to customers by the
contractor in its administration of the
Medicare program. The mandated
standard in the customer service
criterion is the need to provide
beneficiaries with written replies that
are responsive, that is, they provide in
detail the reasons for a determination
when a beneficiary requests this
information, they have a customerfriendly tone and clarity, and they are
at the appropriate reading level. Further
evaluation of services under this
criterion may include, but will not be
limited to, the following: Timeliness
and accuracy of all correspondence both
to beneficiaries and providers;
monitoring of the quality of replies
provided by the contractor’s telephone
customer service representatives
(quality call monitoring); beneficiary
and provider education, training, and
outreach activities; and service provided
by the contractor’s customer service
representatives to beneficiaries and
providers who come to the contractor’s
facility (walk-in inquiry service).
The third criterion, payment
safeguards, evaluates whether the
Medicare Trust Fund is safeguarded
against inappropriate program
expenditures. Intermediary and carrier
performance may be evaluated in the
areas of Medical Review (MR), Medicare
Secondary Payer (MSP), Overpayments
(OP), and Provider Enrollment (PE). In
addition, intermediary performance may
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be evaluated in the area of Audit and
Reimbursement (A&R).
In FY 1996 the Congress enacted the
Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (HIPAA), Medicare
Integrity Program, giving us the
authority to contract with entities other
than, but not excluding, Medicare
carriers and intermediaries to perform
certain program safeguard functions. In
situations where one or more program
safeguard functions are contracted to
another entity, we may evaluate the
flow of communication and information
between a Medicare FFS contractor and
the payment safeguard contractor. All
benefit integrity functions have been
transitioned from intermediaries,
carriers, and one DMERC to the program
safeguard contractors. Since, the other
three DMERC contractors will continue
to conduct benefit integrity activities in
FY 2006, we may evaluate their
performance of that function.
Mandated performance standards for
intermediaries in the payment
safeguards criterion include the
accuracy of decisions on SNF demand
bills and the timeliness of processing
Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility
Act (TEFRA) target rate adjustments,
exceptions, and exemptions. There are
no mandated performance standards for
carriers in the payment safeguards
criterion. Intermediaries and carriers
may also be evaluated on any Medicare
Integrity Program (MIP) activities if
performed under their agreement or
contract.
The fourth criterion, fiscal
responsibility, evaluates the contractor’s
efforts to protect the Medicare program
and the public interest. Contractors
must effectively manage Federal funds
for both the payment of benefits and the
costs of administration under the
Medicare program. Proper financial and
budgetary controls, including internal
controls, must be in place to ensure
contractor compliance with its
agreement with HHS and CMS.
Additional functions reviewed under
this criterion may include, but are not
limited to, adherence to approved
budget, compliance with the Budget and
Performance Requirements (BPRs), and
compliance with financial reporting
requirements.
The fifth and final criterion,
administrative activities, measures a
contractor’s administrative management
of the Medicare program. A contractor
must efficiently and effectively manage
its operations. Proper systems security
(general and application controls),
Automated Data Processing (ADP)
maintenance, and disaster recovery
plans must be in place. A contractor’s
evaluation under the administrative
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activities criterion may include, but is
not limited to, establishment,
application, documentation, and
effectiveness of internal controls that are
essential in all aspects of a contractor’s
operation, as well as the degree to
which the contractor cooperates with us
in complying with the Federal
Managers’ Financial Integrity Act of
1982 (FMFIA). Administrative activities
evaluations may also include reviews
related to contractor implementation of
our general instructions and data and
reporting requirements.
We have developed separate measures
for RHHIs in order to evaluate the
distinct RHHI functions. These
functions include the processing of
claims from freestanding HHAs,
hospital-affiliated HHAs, and hospices.
Through an evaluation using these
criteria and standards, we may
determine whether the RHHI is
effectively and efficiently administering
the program benefit or whether the
functions should be moved from one
intermediary to another in order to gain
that assurance.
In sections IV through VII of this
notice, we list the criteria and standards
to be used for evaluating the
performance of intermediaries, RHHIs,
carriers, and DMEPOS regional carriers.
IV. Criteria and Standards for
Intermediaries
[If you choose to comment on issues in
this section, please include the caption
‘‘CRITERIA AND STANDARDS FOR
INTERMEDIARIES’’ at the beginning of
your comments.]
A. Claims Processing Criterion
The claims processing criterion
contains the following four mandated
standards:
Standard 1. Not less than 95.0 percent
of clean electronically submitted nonPeriodic Interim Payment claims are
paid within statutorily specified time
frames. Clean claims are defined as
claims that do not require Medicare
intermediaries to investigate or develop
them outside of their Medicare
operations on a prepayment basis.
Specifically, the statute specifies that
clean non-Periodic Interim Payment
electronic claims be paid no earlier than
the 14th day after the date of receipt,
and that interest is payable for any clean
claims if payment is not issued by the
31st day after the date of receipt. The
HIPAA Administrative Simplification
provisions and the implementing
regulations established standards for
electronic transmission of claims. We
issued instructions that effective July 1,
2004, electronic claims that do not
comply with the appropriate HIPAA
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claim standard will no longer qualify for
payment as early as the 14th day after
the date of receipt. These ‘‘non-HIPAA’’
claims will not be paid earlier than the
27th day after the date of receipt. These
‘‘non-HIPAA’’ claims will continue to
have interest payable if payment is not
issued by the 31st day after the date of
receipt. Our expectation is that
contractors will pay 95 percent of these
clean claims by the 31st day (30 days
after date of receipt) on a monthly basis.
Standard 2. Not less than 95.0 percent
of clean paper non-Periodic Interim
Payment claims are paid within
specified time frames. Specifically,
clean non-Periodic Interim Payment
paper claims can be paid as early as the
27th day (26 days after the date of
receipt) and must be paid by the 31st
day (30 days after the date of receipt).
Our expectation is that contractors will
meet this percentage on a monthly basis.
Standard 3. Redetermination letters
prepared in response to beneficiaryinitiated appeal requests are written in
a manner calculated to be understood by
the beneficiary. Letters must contain the
required elements as specified in
§ 405.956.
Standard 4. All redeterminations must
be concluded and mailed within 60
days of receipt of the request, unless the
appellant submits documentation after
the request, in which case the decision
making timeframe is extended for 14
calendar days for each submission.
Because intermediaries process many
claims for benefits under the Part B
portion of the Medicare Program, we
also may evaluate how well an
intermediary follows the procedures for
processing appeals of any claims for
Part B benefits.
Additional functions that may be
evaluated under this criterion include,
but are not limited to, the following:
• Accuracy of claims processing.
• Remittance advice transactions.
• Establishment and maintenance of a
relationship with Common Working File
(CWF) Host.
• Accuracy of redeterminations as
well as the appropriateness of the
reading level of any redetermination
decision letters.
• Accuracy and timeliness of
processing appeals under section 521 of
the Medicare, Medicaid and SCHIP
Benefits Improvement and Protection
Act of 2000 (BIPA) and sections 933 and
940 of the MMA.
Note: Section 521 of BIPA and sections 933
and 940 of MMA amend section 1869 of the
Act by requiring major revisions to the
Medicare appeals process. Section 937 of
MMA also requires the creation of a process
outside the appeals process, whereby
Medicare contractors can correct minor errors
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Jkt 205001
and omissions. We may evaluate compliance
with our instructions concerning other
provisions of section 521 of BIPA and
sections 933, 937 and 940 of MMA as they
are implemented.
B. Customer Service Criterion
Functions that may be evaluated
under this criterion include, but are not
limited to, the following:
• Maintaining a properly
programmed interactive voice response
system to assist with provider inquiries.
• Performing quality call monitoring.
• Training customer service
representatives.
• Entering valid call center
performance data in the customer
service assessment and management
system.
• Providing timely and accurate
written replies to beneficiaries and/or
providers that address the concerns
raised and are written with an
appropriate customer-friendly tone and
clarity and those written to beneficiaries
are at the appropriate reading level.
• Maintaining walk-in inquiry service
for beneficiaries and providers.
• Conducting beneficiary and
provider education, training, and
outreach activities.
• Effectively maintaining an Internet
website dedicated to furnishing
providers and physicians timely,
accurate, and useful Medicare program
information.
• Ensuring written correspondence is
evaluated for quality.
C. Payment Safeguards Criterion
The Payment Safeguard criterion
contains the following two mandated
standards:
Standard 1. Decisions on SNF
demand bills are accurate.
Standard 2. TEFRA target rate
adjustments, exceptions, and
exemptions are processed within
mandated time frames. Specifically,
applications must be processed to
completion within 75 days after receipt
by the contractor or returned to the
hospitals as incomplete within 60 days
of receipt.
Intermediaries may also be evaluated
on any MIP activities if performed
under their Part A contractual
agreement. These functions and
activities include, but are not limited to,
the following:
• Audit and Reimbursement
+ Performing the activities specified
in our general instructions for
conducting audit and settlement of
Medicare cost reports.
+ Establishing accurate interim
payments.
• Benefit Integrity
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55891
+ Referring allegations of potential
fraud that are made by beneficiaries,
providers, CMS, Office of Inspector
General (OIG), and other sources to the
Payment Safeguard Contractor.
+ Putting in place effective detection
and deterrence programs for potential
fraud.
• Medical Review
+ Increasing the effectiveness of
medical review activities.
+ Exercising accurate and defensible
decision making on medical reviews.
+ Effectively educating and
communicating with the provider
community.
+ Collaborating with other internal
components and external entities to
ensure the effectiveness of medical
review activities.
• Medicare Secondary Payer
+ Accurately reporting MSP savings.
+ Accurately following MSP claim
development and edit procedures.
+ Auditing hospital files and claims
to determine that claims are being filed
to Medicare appropriately.
+ Supporting the Coordination of
Benefits Contractors’ efforts to identify
responsible payers primary to Medicare.
+ Identifying, recovering, and
referring mistaken/conditional Medicare
payments in accordance with
appropriate Medicare Manual
instructions and any other pertinent
general instructions, in the specified
order of priority.
• Overpayments
+ Collecting and referring Medicare
debts timely.
+ Accurately reporting and collecting
overpayments.
+ Adhering to our instructions for
management of Medicare Trust Fund
debts.
• Provider Enrollment
+ Complying with assignment of staff
to the provider enrollment function and
training the staff in procedures and
verification techniques.
+ Complying with the operational
standards relevant to the process for
enrolling providers.
D. Fiscal Responsibility Criterion
We may review the intermediary’s
efforts to establish and maintain
appropriate financial and budgetary
internal controls over benefit payments
and administrative costs. Proper
internal controls must be in place to
ensure that contractors comply with
their agreements with us.
Additional functions that may be
reviewed under the fiscal responsibility
criterion include, but are not limited to,
the following:
• Adherence to approved program
management and MIP budgets.
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• Compliance with the BPRs.
• Compliance with financial
reporting requirements.
• Control of administrative cost and
benefit payments.
E. Administrative Activities Criterion
We may measure an intermediary’s
administrative ability to manage the
Medicare program. We may evaluate the
efficiency and effectiveness of its
operations, its system of internal
controls, and its compliance with our
directives and initiatives.
We may measure an intermediary’s
efficiency and effectiveness in managing
its operations. Proper systems security
(general and application controls), ADP
maintenance, and disaster recovery
plans must be in place. An intermediary
must also test system changes to ensure
the accurate implementation of our
instructions.
Our evaluation of an intermediary
under the administrative activities
criterion may include, but is not limited
to, reviews of the following:
• Systems security.
• ADP maintenance (configuration
management, testing, change
management, and security).
• Implementation of the Electronic
Data Interchange (EDI) standards
adopted for use under HIPAA.
• Disaster recovery plan and systems
contingency plan.
• Data and reporting requirements
implementation.
• Internal controls establishment and
use, including the degree to which the
contractor cooperates with the Secretary
in complying with the FMFIA.
• Implementation of our general
instructions.
V. Criteria and Standards for Regional
Home Health Intermediaries (RHHIs)
[If you choose to comment on issues in
this section, please include the caption
‘‘CRITERIA AND STANDARDS FOR
RHHIs’’ at the beginning of your
comments.]
The following four standards are
mandated for the RHHI criterion:
Standard 1. Not less than 95.0 percent
of clean electronically submitted nonPeriodic Interim Payment home health
and hospice claims are paid within
statutorily specified time frames. Clean
claims are defined as claims that do not
require Medicare intermediaries to
investigate or develop them outside of
their Medicare operations on a
prepayment basis. Specifically, the
statute specifies that clean non-Periodic
Interim Payment electronic claims be
paid no earlier than the 14th day after
the date of receipt, and that interest is
payable for any clean claims if payment
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Jkt 205001
is not issued by the 31st day after the
date of receipt. The HIPAA
Administrative Simplification
provisions and the implementing
regulations established standards for
electronic transmission of claims. We
issued instructions that effective July 1,
2004, electronic claims that do not
comply with the appropriate HIPAA
claim standard will no longer qualify for
payment as early as the 14th day after
the date of receipt. These ‘‘non-HIPAA’’
claims will not be paid earlier than the
27th day after the date of receipt. These
‘‘non-HIPAA’’ claims will continue to
have interest payable if payment is not
issued by the 31st day after the date of
receipt. Our expectation is that
contractors will pay 95 percent of these
clean claims by the 31st day (30 days
after date of receipt) on a monthly basis.
Standard 2. Not less than 95.0 percent
of clean paper non-periodic interim
payment home health and hospice
claims are paid within specified time
frames. Specifically, clean, non-periodic
interim payment paper claims can be
paid as early as the 27th day (26 days
after the date of receipt) and must be
paid by the 31st day (30 days after the
date of receipt). Our expectation is that
contractors will meet this percentage on
a monthly basis.
Standard 3. Redetermination letters
prepared in response to beneficiary
initiated appeal requests are written in
a manner calculated to be understood by
the beneficiary. Letters must contain the
required elements as specified in
§ 405.956.
Standard 4: All redeterminations must
be concluded and mailed within 60
days of receipt of the request, unless the
appellant submits documentation after
the request, in which case the decision
making timeframe is extended for 14
calendar days for each submission.
We may use this criterion to review
an RHHI’s performance for handling the
HHA and hospice workload. This
includes processing HHA and hospice
claims timely and accurately, properly
paying and settling HHA cost reports,
and timely and accurately processing
BIPA section 521 redeterminations from
beneficiaries, HHAs, and hospices.
Note: Section 521 of BIPA and sections 933
and 940 of MMA amend section 1869 of the
Act by requiring major revisions to the
Medicare appeals process. Section 937 of
MMA requires the creation of a process
outside the appeals process, whereby
Medicare contractors can correct minor errors
and omissions. We may evaluate compliance
with our instructions concerning other
provisions of section 521 of BIPA and
sections 933, 937 and 940 of MMA as they
are implemented.
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VI. Criteria and Standards for Carriers
[If you choose to comment on issues in
this section, please include the caption
‘‘CRITERIA AND STANDARDS FOR
CARRIERS’’ at the beginning of your
comments.]
A. Claims Processing Criterion
The Claims Processing criterion
contains the following six mandated
standards:
Standard 1. Not less than 95.0 percent
of clean electronically submitted claims
are processed within statutorily
specified time frames. Clean claims are
defined as claims that do not require
Medicare carriers to investigate or
develop them outside of their Medicare
operations on a prepayment basis.
Specifically, the statute specifies that
clean non-Periodic Interim payment
electronic claims be paid no earlier than
the 14th day after the date of receipt,
and that interest is payable for any clean
claims if payment is not issued by the
31st day after the date of receipt. The
HIPAA Administrative Simplification
provisions and the implementing
regulations established standards for
electronic transmission of claims. We
issued instructions that effective July 1,
2004, electronic claims that do not
comply with the appropriate HIPAA
claim standard will no longer qualify for
payment as early as the 14th day after
the date of receipt. These ‘‘non-HIPAA’’
claims will not be paid earlier than the
27th day after the date of receipt. These
‘‘non-HIPAA’’ claims will continue to
have interest payable if payment is not
issued by the 31st day after the date of
receipt. Our expectation is that
contractors will pay 95 percent of these
clean claims by the 31st day (30 days
after date of receipt) on a monthly basis.
Standard 2. Not less than 95.0 percent
of clean paper claims are processed
within specified time frames.
Specifically, clean paper claims can be
paid as early as the 27th day (26 days
after the date of receipt) and must be
paid by the 31st day (30 days after the
date of receipt). Our expectation is that
contractors will meet this percentage on
a monthly basis.
Standard 3. 98.0 percent of MSNs are
properly generated. Our expectation is
that MSN messages are accurately
reflecting the services provided.
Standard 4. 90.0 percent of carrier
hearing decisions are completed within
120 days. Our expectation is that
contractors will meet this percentage on
a monthly basis. This standard will
remain in effect until the Part B hearing
officer work is transitioned to the QICs
sometime in FY 2006.
Standard 5. Redetermination letters
prepared in response to beneficiary
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initiated appeal requests are written in
a manner calculated to be understood by
the beneficiary. Letters must contain the
required elements as specified in
§ 405.956.
Standard 6. All redeterminations must
be concluded and mailed within 60
days of receipt of the request, unless the
appellant submits documentation after
the request, in which case the decision
making time frame is extended for 14
calendar days for each submission.
Additional functions that may be
evaluated under this criterion include,
but are not limited to, the following:
• Accuracy of claims processing.
• Remittance advice transactions.
• Establishment and maintenance of
relationship with Common Working File
(CWF) Host.
• Accuracy of redetermination
decisions.
• Accuracy of processing hearing
cases with decision letters that are clear
and have an appropriate customerfriendly tone. This standard will remain
in effect until the Part B hearing officer
work is transitioned to the QICs
sometime in FY 2006.
• Accuracy and timeliness of appeals
decisions issued pursuant to the
requirements of BIPA section 521 and
sections 933 and 940 of MMA.
Note: Section 521 of BIPA and sections 933
and 940 of MMA amend section 1869 of the
Act by requiring major revisions to the
Medicare appeals process. Section 937 of
MMA also requires the creation of a process
outside the appeals process, whereby
Medicare contractors can correct minor errors
and omissions. We may evaluate compliance
with our instructions concerning other
provisions of section 521 of BIPA and
sections 933, 937 and 940 of MMA as they
are implemented.
B. Customer Service Criterion
The customer service criterion
contains the following mandated
standard: Replies to beneficiary written
correspondence are responsive to the
beneficiary’s concerns, are written with
an appropriate customer-friendly tone
and clarity, and are written at the
appropriate reading level.
Contractors must meet our
performance expectations that
beneficiaries and providers are served
by prompt and accurate administration
of the program in accordance with all
applicable laws, regulations, and our
general instructions.
Additional functions that may be
evaluated under this criterion include,
but are not limited to, the following:
• Maintaining a properly
programmed interactive voice response
system to assist with provider inquiries.
• Performing quality call monitoring.
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Jkt 205001
• Training customer service
representatives.
• Entering valid call center
performance data in the customer
service assessment and management
system.
• Providing timely and accurate
written replies to beneficiary and/or
providers.
• Maintaining walk-in inquiry service
for beneficiaries and providers.
• Conducting beneficiary and
provider education, training, and
outreach activities.
• Effectively maintaining an internet
website dedicated to furnishing
providers timely, accurate, and useful
Medicare program information.
• Ensuring written correspondence is
evaluated for quality.
C. Payment Safeguards Criterion
Carriers may be evaluated on any MIP
activities if performed under their
contracts. In addition, other carrier
functions and activities that may be
reviewed under this criterion include,
but are not limited to the following:
• Benefit Integrity
+ Referring allegations of potential
fraud that are made by beneficiaries,
providers, CMS, OIG, and other sources
to the payment safeguard contractor.
+ Putting in place effective detection
and deterrence programs for potential
fraud.
• Medical Review
+ Increasing the effectiveness of
medical review activities.
+ Exercising accurate and defensible
decision making on medical reviews.
+ Effectively educating and
communicating with the provider
community.
+ Collaborating with other internal
components and external entities to
ensure the effectiveness of medical
review activities.
• Medicare Secondary Payer
+ Accurately reporting MSP savings.
+ Accurately following MSP claim
development/edit procedures.
+ Supporting the Coordination of
Benefits Contractor’s efforts to identify
responsible payers primary to Medicare.
+ Identifying, recovering, and
referring mistaken/conditional Medicare
payments in accordance with the
appropriate Medicare Manual
instructions, and our other pertinent
general instructions.
• Overpayments
+ Collecting and referring Medicare
debts timely.
+ Accurately reporting and collecting
overpayments.
+ Compliance with our instructions
for management of Medicare Trust Fund
debts.
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Fmt 4703
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55893
• Provider Enrollment
+ Complying with assignment of staff
to the provider enrollment function and
training staff in procedures and
verification techniques.
+ Complying with the operational
standards relevant to the process for
enrolling suppliers.
D. Fiscal Responsibility Criterion
We may review the carrier’s efforts to
establish and maintain appropriate
financial and budgetary internal
controls over benefit payments and
administrative costs. Proper internal
controls must be in place to ensure that
contractors comply with their contracts.
Additional functions that may be
reviewed under the Fiscal
Responsibility criterion include, but are
not limited to, the following:
• Adherence to approved program
management and MIP budgets.
• Compliance with the BPRs.
• Compliance with financial
reporting requirements.
• Control of administrative cost and
benefit payments.
E. Administrative Activities Criterion
We may measure a carrier’s
administrative ability to manage the
Medicare program. We may evaluate the
efficiency and effectiveness of its
operations, its system of internal
controls, and its compliance with our
directives and initiatives.
We may measure a carrier’s efficiency
and effectiveness in managing its
operations. Proper systems security
(general and application controls), ADP
maintenance, and disaster recovery
plans must be in place. Also, a carrier
must test system changes to ensure
accurate implementation of our
instructions.
Our evaluation of a carrier under this
criterion may include, but is not limited
to, reviews of the following:
• Systems security.
• ADP maintenance (configuration
management, testing, change
management, and security).
• Disaster recovery plan/systems
contingency plan.
• Data and reporting requirements
implementation.
• Internal controls establishment and
use, including the degree to which the
contractor cooperates with the Secretary
in complying with the FMFIA.
• Implementation of the Electronic
Data Interchange (EDI) standards
adopted for use under the Health
Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (HIPAA).
• Implementation of our general
instructions.
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VII. Criteria and Standards for Durable
Medical Equipment, Prosthetics,
Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS)
Regional Carriers
[If you choose to comment on issues in
this section, please include the caption
‘‘CRITERIA AND STANDARDS FOR
DMEPOS’’ at the beginning of your
comments.]
The five criteria for DMEPOS regional
carriers contain a total of six mandated
standards against which all DMEPOS
regional carriers must be evaluated.
There also are examples of other
activities for which the DMEPOS
regional carriers may be evaluated. The
mandated standards are in the claims
processing and customer service
criteria. In addition to being described
in these criteria, the mandated
standards are also described in the
DMEPOS regional carrier statement of
work (SOW).
A. Claims Processing Criterion
The claims processing criterion
contains the following six mandated
standards:
Standard 1. Not less than 95.0 percent
of clean electronically submitted claims
are processed within statutorily
specified time frames. Clean claims are
defined as claims that do not require
Medicare DMEPOS regional carriers to
investigate or develop them outside of
their Medicare operations on a
prepayment basis. Specifically, the
statute specifies that clean non-Periodic
Interim Payment electronic claims be
paid no earlier than the 14th day after
the date of receipt, and that interest is
payable for any clean claims if payment
is not issued by the 31st day after the
date of receipt. The HIPAA
Administrative Simplification
provisions and the implementing
regulations established standards for
electronic transmission of claims. We
issued instructions that effective July 1,
2004, electronic claims that do not
comply with the appropriate HIPAA
claim standard will no longer qualify for
payment as early as the 14th day after
the date of receipt. These ‘‘non-HIPAA’’
claims will not be paid earlier than the
27th day after the date of receipt. These
‘‘non-HIPAA’’ claims will continue to
have interest payable if payment is not
issued by the 31st day after the date of
receipt. Our expectation is that
contractors will pay 95 percent of these
clean claims by the 31st day (30 days
after date of receipt) on a monthly basis.
Standard 2. Not less than 95.0 percent
of clean paper claims are processed
within specified timeframes.
Specifically, clean paper claims can be
paid as early as day 27 (26 days after the
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Jkt 205001
date of receipt) and must be paid by day
31 (30 days after the date of receipt).
Our expectation is that contractors will
meet this percentage on a monthly basis.
Standard 3. 98.0 percent of MSNs are
properly generated. Our expectation is
that MSN messages are accurately
reflecting the services provided.
Standard 4. 90.0 percent of DMEPOS
regional carrier hearing decisions are
completed within 120 days. Our
expectation is that contractors will meet
this percentage on a monthly basis. This
standard will remain in effect until the
Part B hearing officer work is
transitioned to the QICs sometime in FY
2006.
Standard 5. Redetermination letters
prepared in response to beneficiary
initiated appeal requests are written in
a manner calculated to be understood by
the beneficiary. Letters must contain the
required elements as specified in
§ 405.956.
Standard 6. All redeterminations must
be concluded and mailed within 60
days of receipt of the request, unless the
appellant submits documentation after
the request, in which case the decision
making timeframe is extended for 14
calendar days for each submission.
Additional functions that may be
evaluated under this criterion include,
but are not limited to, the following:
• Claims processing accuracy.
• Accuracy and timeliness of appeals
decisions prior to the implementation of
BIPA sections 521 and 933 and section
940 of MMA requirements.
• Requests for ALJ hearings are
forwarded timely.
• Accuracy and timeliness of appeals
decisions issued pursuant to the
requirements of BIPA sections 521 and
933 and section 940 of MMA.
Note: Section 521 of BIPA and sections 933
and 940 of MMA amend section 1869 of the
Act by requiring major revisions to the
Medicare appeals process. Section 937 of
MMA also requires the creation of a process
outside the appeals process, whereby
Medicare contractors can correct minor errors
and omissions. We may evaluate compliance
with our instructions concerning other
provisions of section 521 of BIPA and
sections 933, 937 and 940 of MMA as they
are implemented.
B. Customer Service Criterion
The customer service criterion
contains the following mandated
standard: Replies to beneficiary written
correspondence are responsive to the
beneficiary’s concerns, are written with
an appropriate customer-friendly tone
and clarity, and are written at the
appropriate reading level.
Contractors must meet our
performance expectations that
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
beneficiaries and suppliers are served
by prompt and accurate administration
of the program in accordance with all
applicable laws, regulations, the
DMEPOS regional carrier SOW, and our
general instructions.
Additional functions that may be
evaluated under this criterion include,
but are not limited to, the following:
• Maintaining a properly
programmed interactive voice response
system to assist with provider inquiries.
• Performing quality call monitoring.
• Training customer service
representatives.
• Entering valid call center
performance data in the customer
service assessment and management
system.
• Providing timely and accurate
written replies to beneficiaries and/or
providers.
• Maintaining walk-in inquiry service
for beneficiaries and suppliers.
• Conducting beneficiary and
provider education, training, and
outreach activities.
• Effectively maintaining an internet
website dedicated to furnishing
providers timely, accurate, and useful
Medicare program information.
• Ensuring that communications are
made to interested supplier
organizations for the purpose of
developing and maintaining
collaborative supplier education and
training activities and programs.
• Ensuring written correspondence is
evaluated for quality.
C. Payment Safeguards Criterion
DMEPOS regional carriers may be
evaluated on any MIP activities if
performed under their contracts. The
DMEPOS regional carriers must
undertake actions to promote an
effective program administration for
DMEPOS regional carrier claims. These
functions and activities include, but are
not limited to the following:
• Benefit Integrity
+ Identifying potential fraud cases
that exist within the DMEPOS regional
carrier’s service area and taking
appropriate actions to resolve these
cases.
+ Investigating allegations of
potential fraud made by beneficiaries,
suppliers, CMS, OIG, and other sources.
+ Putting in place effective detection
and deterrence programs for potential
fraud.
• Medical Review
+ Increasing the effectiveness of
medical review activities.
+ Exercising accurate and defensible
decision making on medical reviews.
+ Effectively educating and
communicating with the supplier
community.
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+ Collaborating with other internal
components and external entities to
ensure the effectiveness of medical
review activities.
• Medicare Secondary Payer
+ Accurately reporting MSP savings.
+ Accurately following MSP claim
development/edit procedures.
+ Supporting the coordination of
benefits contractors’ efforts to identify
responsible payers primary to Medicare.
• Identifying, recovering, and
referring mistaken/conditional Medicare
payments in accordance with the
appropriate program instructions in the
specified order of priority.
• Overpayments
+ Collecting and referring Medicare
debts timely.
+ Accurately reporting and collecting
overpayments.
+ Compliance with our instructions
for management of Medicare Trust Fund
debts.
D. Fiscal Responsibility Criterion
We may review the DMEPOS regional
carrier’s efforts to establish and
maintain appropriate financial and
budgetary internal controls over benefit
payments and administrative costs.
Proper internal controls must be in
place to ensure that contractors comply
with their contracts. Additional matters
that may be reviewed under this
criterion include, but are not limited to,
the following:
• Compliance with financial
reporting requirements.
• Adherence to approved program
management and MIP budgets.
• Control of administrative cost and
benefit payments.
E. Administrative Activities
We may measure a DMEPOS regional
carrier’s administrative ability to
manage the Medicare program. We may
evaluate the efficiency and effectiveness
of its operations, its system of internal
controls, and its compliance with our
directives and initiatives. Our
evaluation of a DMEPOS regional carrier
under this criterion may include, but is
not limited to, review of the following:
• Systems security.
• Disaster recovery plan/systems
contingency plan.
• Internal controls establishment and
use, including the degree to which the
contractor cooperates with the Secretary
in complying with the FMFIA.
• Implementation of the EDI
standards adopted for use under HIPAA.
VIII. Action Based on Performance
Evaluations
[If you choose to comment on this
section, please include the caption
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15:21 Sep 22, 2005
Jkt 205001
‘‘ACTION BASED ON PERFORMANCE
EVALUATIONS’’ at the beginning of
your comments.]
We evaluate a contractor’s
performance against applicable program
requirements for each criterion. Each
contractor must certify that all
information submitted to us relating to
the contract management process,
including, without limitation, all files,
records, documents and data, whether
in written, electronic, or other form, is
accurate and complete to the best of the
contractor’s knowledge and belief. A
contractor is required to certify that its
files, records, documents, and data are
not manipulated or falsified in an effort
to receive a more favorable performance
evaluation. A contractor must further
certify that, to the best of its knowledge
and belief, the contractor has submitted,
without withholding any relevant
information, all information required to
be submitted for the contract
management process under the
authority of applicable law(s),
regulation(s), contract(s), or our manual
provision(s). Any contractor that makes
a false, fictitious, or fraudulent
certification may be subject to criminal
or civil prosecution, as well as
appropriate administrative action. This
administrative action may include
debarment or suspension of the
contractor, as well as the termination or
nonrenewal of a contract.
If a contractor meets the level of
performance required by operational
instructions, it meets the requirements
of that criterion. When we determine a
contractor is not meeting performance
requirements, we will use the terms
‘‘major nonconformance’’ or ‘‘minor
nonconformance’’ to classify our
findings. A major nonconformance is a
nonconformance that is likely to result
in failure of the supplies or services, or
to materially reduce the usability of the
supplies or services for their intended
purpose. A minor nonconformance is a
nonconformance that is not likely to
materially reduce the usability of the
supplies or services for their intended
purpose, or is a departure from
established standards having little
bearing on the effective use or operation
of the supplies or services. The
contractor will be required to develop
and implement PIPs for findings
determined to be either a major or minor
nonconformance. The contractor will be
monitored to ensure effective and
efficient compliance with the PIP, and
to ensure improved performance when
requirements are not met.
The results of performance
evaluations and assessments under all
criteria applying to intermediaries,
PO 00000
Frm 00081
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
55895
carriers, RHHIs, and DMEPOS regional
carriers will be used for contract
management activities and will be
published in the contractor’s annual
Report of Contractor Performance (RCP).
We may initiate administrative actions
as a result of the evaluation of
contractor performance based on these
performance criteria. Under sections
1816 and 1842 of the Act, we consider
the results of the evaluation in our
determinations when—
• Entering into, renewing, or
terminating agreements or contracts
with contractors, and
• Deciding other contract actions for
intermediaries and carriers (such as
deletion of an automatic renewal
clause). These decisions are made on a
case-by-case basis and depend primarily
on the nature and degree of
performance. More specifically, these
decisions depend on the following:
+ Relative overall performance
compared to other contractors.
+ Number of criteria in which
nonconformance occurs.
+ Extent of each nonconformance.
+ Relative significance of the
requirement for which nonconformance
occurs within the overall evaluation
program.
+ Efforts to improve program quality,
service, and efficiency.
+ Deciding the assignment or
reassignment of providers and
designation of regional or national
intermediaries for classes of providers.
We make individual contract action
decisions after considering these factors
in terms of their relative significance
and impact on the effective and efficient
administration of the Medicare program.
In addition, if the cost incurred by the
intermediary, RHHI, carrier, or DMEPOS
regional carrier to meet its contractual
requirements exceeds the amount that
we find to be reasonable and adequate
to meet the cost that must be incurred
by an efficiently and economically
operated intermediary or carrier, these
high costs may also be grounds for
adverse action.
IX. Collection of Information
Requirements
This document does not impose
information collection and record
keeping requirements. Consequently the
Office of Management and Budget need
not review it under the authority of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
X. Response to Comments
Because of the large number of items
of correspondence we normally receive
on Federal Register documents
published for comment, we are unable
E:\FR\FM\23SEN1.SGM
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55896
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 184 / Friday, September 23, 2005 / Notices
to acknowledge or respond to them
individually. We will consider all
comments we receive by the date and
time specified in the Comment Period
section of this preamble, and, if we
proceed with a subsequent document,
we will respond to the comments in the
preamble of that document.
Authority: Sections 1816(f), 1834(a)(12),
and 1842(b) of the Social Security Act (42
U.S.C. 1395h(f), 1395m(a)(12), and 1395u(b))
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program No. 93.774, Medicare—
Supplementary Medical Insurance Program)
Dated: May 19, 2005.
Mark B. McClellan,
Administrator, Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services.
[FR Doc. 05–18923 Filed 9–22–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–U
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
[CMS–8025–N]
RIN 0938–AO01
Medicare Program; Part A Premium for
Calendar Year 2006 for the Uninsured
Aged and for Certain Disabled
Individuals Who Have Exhausted Other
Entitlement
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This annual notice announces
Medicare’s Hospital Insurance (Part A)
premium for uninsured enrollees in
calendar year (CY) 2006. This premium
is to be paid by enrollees age 65 and
over who are not otherwise eligible
(hereafter known as the ‘‘uninsured
aged’’) and for certain disabled
individuals who have exhausted other
entitlement. The monthly Part A
premium for the 12 months beginning
January 1, 2006 for these individuals
will be $393. The reduced premium for
certain other individuals as described in
this notice will be $216. Section 1818(d)
of the Social Security Act specifies the
method to be used to determine these
amounts.
This notice is effective
on January 1, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Clare McFarland, (410) 786–6390.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
EFFECTIVE DATE:
I. Background
Section 1818 of the Social Security
Act (the Act) provides for voluntary
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:21 Sep 22, 2005
Jkt 205001
enrollment in the Medicare Hospital
Insurance program (Medicare Part A),
subject to payment of a monthly
premium, of certain persons aged 65
and older who are uninsured under the
Old-Age, Survivors and Disability
Insurance (OASDI) program or the
Railroad Retirement Act and do not
otherwise meet the requirements for
entitlement to Medicare Part A. (Persons
insured under the OASDI program or
the Railroad Retirement Act and certain
others do not have to pay premiums for
hospital insurance.)
Section 1818A of the Act provides for
voluntary enrollment in Medicare Part
A, subject to payment of a monthly
premium, of certain disabled
individuals who have exhausted other
entitlement. These are individuals who
are not currently entitled to Part A
coverage, but who were entitled to
coverage due to a disabling impairment
under section 226(b) of the Act, and
who would still be entitled to Part A
coverage if their earnings had not
exceeded the statutorily defined
substantial gainful activity amount
(section 223(d)(4) of the Act).
Section 1818A(d)(2) of the Act
specifies that the provisions relating to
premiums under section 1818(d)
through section 1818(f) of the Act for
the aged will also apply to certain
disabled individuals as described above.
Section 1818(d) of the Act requires us
to estimate, on an average per capita
basis, the amount to be paid from the
Federal Hospital Insurance Trust Fund
for services incurred in the following
calendar year (including the associated
administrative costs) on behalf of
individuals aged 65 and over who will
be entitled to benefits under Medicare
Part A. We must then determine, during
September of each year, the monthly
actuarial rate for the following year (the
per capita amount estimated above
divided by 12) and publish the dollar
amount for the monthly premium in the
succeeding CY. If the premium is not a
multiple of $1, the premium is rounded
to the nearest multiple of $1 (or, if it is
a multiple of 50 cents but not of $1, it
is rounded to the next highest $1).
Section 13508 of the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1993 (Pub. L. 103–
66) amended section 1818(d) of the Act
to provide for a reduction in the
premium amount for certain voluntary
enrollees (section 1818 and section
1818A). The reduction applies to an
individual who is eligible to buy into
the Medicare Part A program and who,
as of the last day of the previous
month—
• Had at least 30 quarters of coverage
under title II of the Act;
PO 00000
Frm 00082
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
• Was married, and had been married
for the previous 1-year period, to a
person who had at least 30 quarters of
coverage;
• Had been married to a person for at
least 1 year at the time of the person’s
death if, at the time of death, the person
had at least 30 quarters of coverage; or
• Is divorced from a person and had
been married to the person for at least
10 years at the time of the divorce if, at
the time of the divorce, the person had
at least 30 quarters of coverage.
Section 1818(d)(4)(A) of the Act
specifies that the premium that these
individuals will pay for CY 2006 will be
equal to the premium for uninsured
aged enrollees reduced by 45 percent.
II. Monthly Premium Amount for CY
2006
The monthly premium for the
uninsured aged and certain disabled
individuals who have exhausted other
entitlement for the 12 months beginning
January 1, 2006, is $393.
The monthly premium for those
individuals subject to the 45 percent
reduction in the monthly premium is
$216.
III. Monthly Premium Rate Calculation
As discussed in section I of this
notice, the monthly Medicare Part A
premium is equal to the estimated
monthly actuarial rate for CY 2006
rounded to the nearest multiple of $1
and equals one-twelfth of the average
per capita amount, which is determined
by projecting the number of Part A
enrollees aged 65 years and over as well
as the benefits and administrative costs
that will be incurred on their behalf.
The steps involved in projecting these
future costs to the Federal Hospital
Insurance Trust Fund are:
• Establishing the present cost of
services furnished to beneficiaries, by
type of service, to serve as a projection
base;
• Projecting increases in payment
amounts for each of the service types;
and
• Projecting increases in
administrative costs.
We base our projections for CY 2006
on: (a) current historical data, and (b)
projection assumptions derived from
current law and the Mid-Session Review
of the President’s Fiscal Year 2006
Budget.
We estimate that in CY 2006, 35.205
million people aged 65 years and over
will be entitled to benefits (without
premium payment) and that they will
incur $166.121 billion of benefits and
related administrative costs. Thus, the
estimated monthly average per capita
amount is $393.23 and the monthly
E:\FR\FM\23SEN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 184 (Friday, September 23, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 55887-55896]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-18923]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
[CMS-1307-GNC]
RIN 0938-ZA74
Medicare Program; Criteria and Standards for Evaluating
Intermediary, Carrier, and Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics,
Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS) Regional Carrier Performance During
Fiscal Year 2006
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), Health and
Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: General notice with comment period.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice describes the criteria and standards to be used
for evaluating the performance of fiscal intermediaries (FIs),
carriers, and Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and
Supplies (DMEPOS) regional carriers in the administration of the
Medicare program beginning on the first day of the first month
following publication of this notice in the Federal Register. The
results of these evaluations are considered whenever we enter into,
renew, or terminate an intermediary agreement, carrier contract, or
DMEPOS regional carrier contract or take other contract actions, for
example, assigning or reassigning providers or services to an
intermediary or designating regional or national intermediaries. We are
requesting public comment on these criteria and standards.
DATES: Effective Date: The criteria and standards are effective on
October 24, 2005.
Comment Date: To be assured consideration, comments must be
received at one of the addresses
[[Page 55888]]
provided below, no later than 5 p.m. beginning on the first day of the
first month following publication of this notice in the Federal
Register.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, please refer to file code CMS-1307-GNC.
Because of staff and resource limitations, we cannot accept comments by
facsimile (FAX) transmission.
You may submit comments in one of three ways (no duplicates,
please):
1. Electronically. You may submit electronic comments on specific
issues in this regulation to https://www.cms.hhs.gov/regulations/
ecomments or to https://www.regulations.gov, (attachments must be in
Microsoft Word, WordPerfect, or Excel; however, we prefer Microsoft
Word.)
2. By mail. You may mail written comments (one original and two
copies) to the following address only: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, Department of Health and Human Services, Attention: CMS-1307-
GNC, P.O. Box 8013, Baltimore, MD 21244-8013.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed comments to be received at
the close of the comment period.
3. By hand or courier. If you prefer, you may deliver (by hand or
courier) your written comments (one original and two copies) before the
close of the comment period to one of the following addresses. If you
intend to deliver your comments to the Baltimore address, please call
telephone number (410) 786-7197 in advance to schedule your arrival
with one of our staff members. Room 445-G, Hubert H. Humphrey Building,
200 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20201; or 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
(Because access to the interior of the HHH Building is not readily
available to persons without Federal Government identification,
commenters are encouraged to leave their comments in the CMS drop slots
located in the main lobby of the building. A stamp-in clock is
available for persons wishing to retain a proof of filing by stamping
in and retaining an extra copy of the comments being filed.)
Comments mailed to the addresses indicated as appropriate for hand
or courier delivery may be delayed and could be considered late. All
comments received before the close of the comment period are available
for viewing by the public, including any personally identifiable or
confidential business information that is included in a comment. After
the close of the comment period, CMS posts all electronic comments
received before the close of the comment period on its public website.
For information on viewing public comments, see the beginning of
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Richard Johnson, (410) 786-5633.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Submitting Comments: We welcome comments
from the public on all issues set forth in this notice to assist us in
fully considering issues and developing policies. You can assist us by
referencing the file code CMS-1307-GNC and the specific ``issue
identifier'' that precedes the section on which you choose to comment.
Inspection of Public Comments: All comments received before the
close of the comment period are available for viewing by the public,
including any personally identifiable or confidential business
information that is included in a comment. We post all electronic
comments received before the close of the comment period on its public
website as soon as possible after they are received. Hard copy comments
received timely will be available for public inspection as they are
received, generally beginning approximately 3 weeks after publication
of a document, at the headquarters of the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, 7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, Maryland 21244,
Monday through Friday of each week from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. To schedule
an appointment to view public comments, phone 1-800-743-3951.
I. Background
[If you choose to comment on issues in this section, please include the
caption ``BACKGROUND'' at the beginning of your comments.]
A. Part A--Hospital Insurance
Under section 1816 of the Social Security Act (the Act), public or
private organizations and agencies participate in the administration of
Part A (Hospital Insurance) of the Medicare program under agreements
with us. These agencies or organizations, known as FIs, determine
whether medical services are covered under Medicare, determine correct
payment amounts and then make payments to the health care providers
(for example, hospitals, skilled nursing facilities (SNFs), and
community mental health centers) on behalf of the beneficiaries.
Section 1816(f) of the Act requires us to develop criteria, standards,
and procedures to evaluate an intermediary's performance of its
functions under its agreement.
Section 1816(e)(4) of the Act requires us to designate regional
agencies or organizations, which are already Medicare intermediaries
under section 1816 of the Act, to perform claim processing functions
for freestanding Home Health Agency (HHA) claims. We refer to these
organizations as Regional Home Health Intermediaries (RHHIs). See Sec.
421.117 and the final rule published on May 19, 1988 in the Federal
Register (53 FR 17936) for more details about the RHHIs.
The evaluation of intermediary performance is part of our contract
management process. These evaluations need not be limited to the
current fiscal year (FY), other fixed term basis, or agreement term.
B. Part B--Supplementary Medical Insurance
Under section 1842 of the Act, we are authorized to enter into
contracts with carriers to fulfill various functions in the
administration of Part B, Supplementary Medical Insurance of the
Medicare program. Beneficiaries, physicians, and suppliers of services
submit claims to these carriers. The carriers determine whether the
services are covered under Medicare and the amount payable for the
services or supplies, and then make payment to the appropriate party.
Under section 1842(b)(2) of the Act, we are required to develop
criteria, standards, and procedures to evaluate a carrier's performance
of its functions under its contract. Evaluations of Medicare fee-for-
service (FFS) contractor performance need not be limited to the current
FY, other fixed term basis, or contract term. The evaluation of carrier
performance is part of our contract management process.
C. Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
(DMEPOS) Regional Carriers
In accordance with section 1834(a)(12) of the Act, we have entered
into contracts with four DMEPOS regional carriers to perform all of the
duties associated with the processing of claims for DMEPOS, under Part
B of the Medicare program. These DMEPOS regional carriers process
claims based on a Medicare beneficiary's principal residence by State.
Section 1842(a) of the Act authorizes contracts with carriers for the
payment of Part B claims for Medicare covered services and items.
Section 1842(b)(2) of the Act requires us to publish in the Federal
Register criteria and standards for the efficient and effective
performance of carrier contract obligations. Evaluation of Medicare FFS
contractor performance
[[Page 55889]]
need not be limited to the current FY, other fixed term basis, or
contract term. The evaluation of DMEPOS regional carrier performance is
part of our contract management process.
D. Development and Publication of Criteria and Standards
In addition to the statutory requirements, Sec. 421.120, Sec.
421.122 and Sec. 421.201 provide for publication of a Federal Register
notice to announce criteria and standards for intermediaries and
carriers before the beginning of each evaluation period. The current
criteria and standards for intermediaries, carriers, and DMEPOS
regional carriers were published in the Federal Register (68 FR 74613)
on November 26, 2004.
To the extent possible, we make every effort to publish the
criteria and standards before the beginning of the Federal FY, which is
October 1. If we do not publish a Federal Register notice before the
new FY begins, readers may presume that until and unless notified
otherwise, the criteria and standards that were in effect for the
previous FY remain in effect.
In those instances in which we are unable to meet our goal of
publishing the subject Federal Register notice before the beginning of
the FY, we may publish the criteria and standards notice at any
subsequent time during the year. If we publish a notice in this manner,
the evaluation period for the criteria and standards that are the
subject of the notice will be effective beginning on the first day of
the first month following publication of this notice in the Federal
Register. Any revised criteria and standards will measure performance
prospectively; that is, any new criteria and standards in the notice
will be applied only to performance after the effective date listed on
the notice.
It is not our intention to revise the criteria and standards that
will be used during the evaluation period once this information is
published in a Federal Register notice. However, on occasion, either
because of administrative action or statutory mandate, there may be a
need for changes that have a direct impact on the criteria and
standards previously published, or that require the addition of new
criteria or standards, or that cause the deletion of previously
published criteria and standards. If we must make these changes, we
will publish an amended Federal Register notice before implementation
of the changes. In all instances, necessary manual issuances will be
published to ensure that the criteria and standards are applied
uniformly and accurately. Also, as in previous years, this Federal
Register notice will be republished and the effective date revised if
changes are warranted as a result of the public comments received on
the criteria and standards.
The Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement and Modernization Act
of 2003 (MMA) (Pub. L. 108-173) was enacted on December 8, 2003.
Section 911 of the MMA establishes the Medicare FFS Contracting Reform
(MCR) initiative that will be implemented over the next several years.
This provision requires that we use competitive procedures to replace
our current FIs and carriers with Medicare Administrative Contractors
(MACs). The MMA requires that we compete and transition all work to
MACs by October 1, 2011.
FIs and or carriers will continue administering Medicare FFS work
until the final competitively selected MAC is up and operating. We will
continue to develop and publish standards and criteria for use in
evaluating the performance of FIs, carriers, and DMERCs as long as
these types of contractors exist.
II. Analysis of and Response to Public Comments Received on FY 2005
Criteria and Standards
We received three comments in response to the November 26, 2004
Federal Register general notice with comments. All comments were
reviewed, but none necessitated our reissuance of the FY 2005 Criteria
and Standards. Comments submitted did not pertain specifically to the
FY 2005 criteria and standards.
III. Criteria and Standards--General
[If you choose to comment on issues in this section, please include the
caption ``CRITERIA AND STANDARDS--GENERAL'' at the beginning of your
comments.]
Basic principles of the Medicare program are to pay claims promptly
and accurately and to foster good beneficiary and provider relations.
Contractors must administer the Medicare program efficiently and
economically. The goal of performance evaluation is to ensure that
contractors meet their contractual obligations. We measure contractor
performance to ensure that contractors do what is required of them by
statute, regulation, contract, and our directives.
We have developed a contractor oversight program for FY 2006 that
outlines expectations of the contractor, measures the performance of
the contractor; evaluates the performance against the expectations; and
provides for appropriate contract action based upon the evaluation of
the contractor's performance.
As a means to monitor the accuracy of Medicare FFS payments, we
have established the Comprehensive Error Rate Testing (CERT) program
that measures and reports error rates for claims payment decisions made
by carriers, DMERCs, and FIs. Beginning in November 2003, the CERT
program measures and reports claims payment error rates for each
individual carrier and DMERC. FI-specific rates became available
November 2004. These rates measure not only how well contractors are
doing at implementing automated review edits and identifying which
claims to subject to manual medical review but they also measure the
impact of the contractor's provider outreach/education, as well as the
effectiveness of the contractor's provider call center(s). We will use
these contractor-specific error rates as a means to evaluate a
contractor's performance.
Several times throughout this notice, we refer to the appropriate
reading level of letters, decisions, or correspondence that are going
to Medicare beneficiaries from intermediaries or carriers. In those
instances, appropriate reading level is defined as whether the
communication is below the 8th grade reading level unless it is obvious
that an incoming request from the beneficiary contains language written
at a higher level. In these cases, the appropriate reading level is
tailored to the capacities and circumstances of the intended recipient.
In addition to evaluating performance based upon expectations for
FY 2006, we may also conduct follow-up evaluations throughout FY 2006
of areas in which contractor performance was out of compliance with
statute, regulations, and our performance expectations during prior
review years where contractors were required to submit a Performance
Improvement Plan (PIP).
We may also utilize Statement of Auditing Standards-70 (SAS-70)
reviews as a means to evaluate contractors in some or all business
functions.
In FY 2001, we established the Contractor Rebuttal Process as a
commitment to continual improvement of contractor performance
evaluation (CPE). We will continue the use of this process in FY 2006.
The Contractor Rebuttal Process provides the contractors an opportunity
to submit a written rebuttal of CPE findings of fact. Whenever we
conduct an evaluation of contractor operations, contractors have 7
calendar days from the date of the CPE review exit conference to submit
a written rebuttal. The CPE review team or, if appropriate, the
individual reviewer will consider the contents of
[[Page 55890]]
the rebuttal before the issuance of the final CPE report to the
contractor.
The FY 2006 CPE for intermediaries and carriers is structured into
five criteria designed to meet the stated objectives. The first
criterion, claims processing, measures contractual performance against
claims processing accuracy and timeliness requirements, as well as
activities in handling appeals. Within the claims processing criterion,
we have identified those performance standards that are mandated by
legislation, regulation, or judicial decision. These standards include
claims processing timeliness, the accuracy of Medicare Summary Notices
(MSNs), the timeliness of intermediary redeterminations, the timeliness
of carrier redeterminations and hearings, and the appropriateness of
the reading level and content of intermediary and carrier
redetermination letters. Further evaluation in the Claims Processing
Criterion may include, but is not limited to, the accuracy of claims
processing, the percent of claims paid with interest, and the accuracy
of redeterminations and carrier hearings.
The second criterion, customer service, assesses the adequacy of
the service provided to customers by the contractor in its
administration of the Medicare program. The mandated standard in the
customer service criterion is the need to provide beneficiaries with
written replies that are responsive, that is, they provide in detail
the reasons for a determination when a beneficiary requests this
information, they have a customer-friendly tone and clarity, and they
are at the appropriate reading level. Further evaluation of services
under this criterion may include, but will not be limited to, the
following: Timeliness and accuracy of all correspondence both to
beneficiaries and providers; monitoring of the quality of replies
provided by the contractor's telephone customer service representatives
(quality call monitoring); beneficiary and provider education,
training, and outreach activities; and service provided by the
contractor's customer service representatives to beneficiaries and
providers who come to the contractor's facility (walk-in inquiry
service).
The third criterion, payment safeguards, evaluates whether the
Medicare Trust Fund is safeguarded against inappropriate program
expenditures. Intermediary and carrier performance may be evaluated in
the areas of Medical Review (MR), Medicare Secondary Payer (MSP),
Overpayments (OP), and Provider Enrollment (PE). In addition,
intermediary performance may be evaluated in the area of Audit and
Reimbursement (A&R).
In FY 1996 the Congress enacted the Health Insurance Portability
and Accountability Act (HIPAA), Medicare Integrity Program, giving us
the authority to contract with entities other than, but not excluding,
Medicare carriers and intermediaries to perform certain program
safeguard functions. In situations where one or more program safeguard
functions are contracted to another entity, we may evaluate the flow of
communication and information between a Medicare FFS contractor and the
payment safeguard contractor. All benefit integrity functions have been
transitioned from intermediaries, carriers, and one DMERC to the
program safeguard contractors. Since, the other three DMERC contractors
will continue to conduct benefit integrity activities in FY 2006, we
may evaluate their performance of that function.
Mandated performance standards for intermediaries in the payment
safeguards criterion include the accuracy of decisions on SNF demand
bills and the timeliness of processing Tax Equity and Fiscal
Responsibility Act (TEFRA) target rate adjustments, exceptions, and
exemptions. There are no mandated performance standards for carriers in
the payment safeguards criterion. Intermediaries and carriers may also
be evaluated on any Medicare Integrity Program (MIP) activities if
performed under their agreement or contract.
The fourth criterion, fiscal responsibility, evaluates the
contractor's efforts to protect the Medicare program and the public
interest. Contractors must effectively manage Federal funds for both
the payment of benefits and the costs of administration under the
Medicare program. Proper financial and budgetary controls, including
internal controls, must be in place to ensure contractor compliance
with its agreement with HHS and CMS.
Additional functions reviewed under this criterion may include, but
are not limited to, adherence to approved budget, compliance with the
Budget and Performance Requirements (BPRs), and compliance with
financial reporting requirements.
The fifth and final criterion, administrative activities, measures
a contractor's administrative management of the Medicare program. A
contractor must efficiently and effectively manage its operations.
Proper systems security (general and application controls), Automated
Data Processing (ADP) maintenance, and disaster recovery plans must be
in place. A contractor's evaluation under the administrative activities
criterion may include, but is not limited to, establishment,
application, documentation, and effectiveness of internal controls that
are essential in all aspects of a contractor's operation, as well as
the degree to which the contractor cooperates with us in complying with
the Federal Managers' Financial Integrity Act of 1982 (FMFIA).
Administrative activities evaluations may also include reviews related
to contractor implementation of our general instructions and data and
reporting requirements.
We have developed separate measures for RHHIs in order to evaluate
the distinct RHHI functions. These functions include the processing of
claims from freestanding HHAs, hospital-affiliated HHAs, and hospices.
Through an evaluation using these criteria and standards, we may
determine whether the RHHI is effectively and efficiently administering
the program benefit or whether the functions should be moved from one
intermediary to another in order to gain that assurance.
In sections IV through VII of this notice, we list the criteria and
standards to be used for evaluating the performance of intermediaries,
RHHIs, carriers, and DMEPOS regional carriers.
IV. Criteria and Standards for Intermediaries
[If you choose to comment on issues in this section, please include the
caption ``CRITERIA AND STANDARDS FOR INTERMEDIARIES'' at the beginning
of your comments.]
A. Claims Processing Criterion
The claims processing criterion contains the following four
mandated standards:
Standard 1. Not less than 95.0 percent of clean electronically
submitted non-Periodic Interim Payment claims are paid within
statutorily specified time frames. Clean claims are defined as claims
that do not require Medicare intermediaries to investigate or develop
them outside of their Medicare operations on a prepayment basis.
Specifically, the statute specifies that clean non-Periodic Interim
Payment electronic claims be paid no earlier than the 14th day after
the date of receipt, and that interest is payable for any clean claims
if payment is not issued by the 31st day after the date of receipt. The
HIPAA Administrative Simplification provisions and the implementing
regulations established standards for electronic transmission of
claims. We issued instructions that effective July 1, 2004, electronic
claims that do not comply with the appropriate HIPAA
[[Page 55891]]
claim standard will no longer qualify for payment as early as the 14th
day after the date of receipt. These ``non-HIPAA'' claims will not be
paid earlier than the 27th day after the date of receipt. These ``non-
HIPAA'' claims will continue to have interest payable if payment is not
issued by the 31st day after the date of receipt. Our expectation is
that contractors will pay 95 percent of these clean claims by the 31st
day (30 days after date of receipt) on a monthly basis.
Standard 2. Not less than 95.0 percent of clean paper non-Periodic
Interim Payment claims are paid within specified time frames.
Specifically, clean non-Periodic Interim Payment paper claims can be
paid as early as the 27th day (26 days after the date of receipt) and
must be paid by the 31st day (30 days after the date of receipt). Our
expectation is that contractors will meet this percentage on a monthly
basis.
Standard 3. Redetermination letters prepared in response to
beneficiary-initiated appeal requests are written in a manner
calculated to be understood by the beneficiary. Letters must contain
the required elements as specified in Sec. 405.956.
Standard 4. All redeterminations must be concluded and mailed
within 60 days of receipt of the request, unless the appellant submits
documentation after the request, in which case the decision making
timeframe is extended for 14 calendar days for each submission.
Because intermediaries process many claims for benefits under the
Part B portion of the Medicare Program, we also may evaluate how well
an intermediary follows the procedures for processing appeals of any
claims for Part B benefits.
Additional functions that may be evaluated under this criterion
include, but are not limited to, the following:
Accuracy of claims processing.
Remittance advice transactions.
Establishment and maintenance of a relationship with
Common Working File (CWF) Host.
Accuracy of redeterminations as well as the
appropriateness of the reading level of any redetermination decision
letters.
Accuracy and timeliness of processing appeals under
section 521 of the Medicare, Medicaid and SCHIP Benefits Improvement
and Protection Act of 2000 (BIPA) and sections 933 and 940 of the MMA.
Note: Section 521 of BIPA and sections 933 and 940 of MMA amend
section 1869 of the Act by requiring major revisions to the Medicare
appeals process. Section 937 of MMA also requires the creation of a
process outside the appeals process, whereby Medicare contractors
can correct minor errors and omissions. We may evaluate compliance
with our instructions concerning other provisions of section 521 of
BIPA and sections 933, 937 and 940 of MMA as they are implemented.
B. Customer Service Criterion
Functions that may be evaluated under this criterion include, but
are not limited to, the following:
Maintaining a properly programmed interactive voice
response system to assist with provider inquiries.
Performing quality call monitoring.
Training customer service representatives.
Entering valid call center performance data in the
customer service assessment and management system.
Providing timely and accurate written replies to
beneficiaries and/or providers that address the concerns raised and are
written with an appropriate customer-friendly tone and clarity and
those written to beneficiaries are at the appropriate reading level.
Maintaining walk-in inquiry service for beneficiaries and
providers.
Conducting beneficiary and provider education, training,
and outreach activities.
Effectively maintaining an Internet website dedicated to
furnishing providers and physicians timely, accurate, and useful
Medicare program information.
Ensuring written correspondence is evaluated for quality.
C. Payment Safeguards Criterion
The Payment Safeguard criterion contains the following two mandated
standards:
Standard 1. Decisions on SNF demand bills are accurate.
Standard 2. TEFRA target rate adjustments, exceptions, and
exemptions are processed within mandated time frames. Specifically,
applications must be processed to completion within 75 days after
receipt by the contractor or returned to the hospitals as incomplete
within 60 days of receipt.
Intermediaries may also be evaluated on any MIP activities if
performed under their Part A contractual agreement. These functions and
activities include, but are not limited to, the following:
Audit and Reimbursement
+ Performing the activities specified in our general instructions
for conducting audit and settlement of Medicare cost reports.
+ Establishing accurate interim payments.
Benefit Integrity
+ Referring allegations of potential fraud that are made by
beneficiaries, providers, CMS, Office of Inspector General (OIG), and
other sources to the Payment Safeguard Contractor.
+ Putting in place effective detection and deterrence programs for
potential fraud.
Medical Review
+ Increasing the effectiveness of medical review activities.
+ Exercising accurate and defensible decision making on medical
reviews.
+ Effectively educating and communicating with the provider
community.
+ Collaborating with other internal components and external
entities to ensure the effectiveness of medical review activities.
Medicare Secondary Payer
+ Accurately reporting MSP savings.
+ Accurately following MSP claim development and edit procedures.
+ Auditing hospital files and claims to determine that claims are
being filed to Medicare appropriately.
+ Supporting the Coordination of Benefits Contractors' efforts to
identify responsible payers primary to Medicare.
+ Identifying, recovering, and referring mistaken/conditional
Medicare payments in accordance with appropriate Medicare Manual
instructions and any other pertinent general instructions, in the
specified order of priority.
Overpayments
+ Collecting and referring Medicare debts timely.
+ Accurately reporting and collecting overpayments.
+ Adhering to our instructions for management of Medicare Trust
Fund debts.
Provider Enrollment
+ Complying with assignment of staff to the provider enrollment
function and training the staff in procedures and verification
techniques.
+ Complying with the operational standards relevant to the process
for enrolling providers.
D. Fiscal Responsibility Criterion
We may review the intermediary's efforts to establish and maintain
appropriate financial and budgetary internal controls over benefit
payments and administrative costs. Proper internal controls must be in
place to ensure that contractors comply with their agreements with us.
Additional functions that may be reviewed under the fiscal
responsibility criterion include, but are not limited to, the
following:
Adherence to approved program management and MIP budgets.
[[Page 55892]]
Compliance with the BPRs.
Compliance with financial reporting requirements.
Control of administrative cost and benefit payments.
E. Administrative Activities Criterion
We may measure an intermediary's administrative ability to manage
the Medicare program. We may evaluate the efficiency and effectiveness
of its operations, its system of internal controls, and its compliance
with our directives and initiatives.
We may measure an intermediary's efficiency and effectiveness in
managing its operations. Proper systems security (general and
application controls), ADP maintenance, and disaster recovery plans
must be in place. An intermediary must also test system changes to
ensure the accurate implementation of our instructions.
Our evaluation of an intermediary under the administrative
activities criterion may include, but is not limited to, reviews of the
following:
Systems security.
ADP maintenance (configuration management, testing, change
management, and security).
Implementation of the Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)
standards adopted for use under HIPAA.
Disaster recovery plan and systems contingency plan.
Data and reporting requirements implementation.
Internal controls establishment and use, including the
degree to which the contractor cooperates with the Secretary in
complying with the FMFIA.
Implementation of our general instructions.
V. Criteria and Standards for Regional Home Health Intermediaries
(RHHIs)
[If you choose to comment on issues in this section, please include the
caption ``CRITERIA AND STANDARDS FOR RHHIs'' at the beginning of your
comments.]
The following four standards are mandated for the RHHI criterion:
Standard 1. Not less than 95.0 percent of clean electronically
submitted non-Periodic Interim Payment home health and hospice claims
are paid within statutorily specified time frames. Clean claims are
defined as claims that do not require Medicare intermediaries to
investigate or develop them outside of their Medicare operations on a
prepayment basis. Specifically, the statute specifies that clean non-
Periodic Interim Payment electronic claims be paid no earlier than the
14th day after the date of receipt, and that interest is payable for
any clean claims if payment is not issued by the 31st day after the
date of receipt. The HIPAA Administrative Simplification provisions and
the implementing regulations established standards for electronic
transmission of claims. We issued instructions that effective July 1,
2004, electronic claims that do not comply with the appropriate HIPAA
claim standard will no longer qualify for payment as early as the 14th
day after the date of receipt. These ``non-HIPAA'' claims will not be
paid earlier than the 27th day after the date of receipt. These ``non-
HIPAA'' claims will continue to have interest payable if payment is not
issued by the 31st day after the date of receipt. Our expectation is
that contractors will pay 95 percent of these clean claims by the 31st
day (30 days after date of receipt) on a monthly basis.
Standard 2. Not less than 95.0 percent of clean paper non-periodic
interim payment home health and hospice claims are paid within
specified time frames. Specifically, clean, non-periodic interim
payment paper claims can be paid as early as the 27th day (26 days
after the date of receipt) and must be paid by the 31st day (30 days
after the date of receipt). Our expectation is that contractors will
meet this percentage on a monthly basis.
Standard 3. Redetermination letters prepared in response to
beneficiary initiated appeal requests are written in a manner
calculated to be understood by the beneficiary. Letters must contain
the required elements as specified in Sec. 405.956.
Standard 4: All redeterminations must be concluded and mailed
within 60 days of receipt of the request, unless the appellant submits
documentation after the request, in which case the decision making
timeframe is extended for 14 calendar days for each submission.
We may use this criterion to review an RHHI's performance for
handling the HHA and hospice workload. This includes processing HHA and
hospice claims timely and accurately, properly paying and settling HHA
cost reports, and timely and accurately processing BIPA section 521
redeterminations from beneficiaries, HHAs, and hospices.
Note: Section 521 of BIPA and sections 933 and 940 of MMA amend
section 1869 of the Act by requiring major revisions to the Medicare
appeals process. Section 937 of MMA requires the creation of a
process outside the appeals process, whereby Medicare contractors
can correct minor errors and omissions. We may evaluate compliance
with our instructions concerning other provisions of section 521 of
BIPA and sections 933, 937 and 940 of MMA as they are implemented.
VI. Criteria and Standards for Carriers
[If you choose to comment on issues in this section, please include the
caption ``CRITERIA AND STANDARDS FOR CARRIERS'' at the beginning of
your comments.]
A. Claims Processing Criterion
The Claims Processing criterion contains the following six mandated
standards:
Standard 1. Not less than 95.0 percent of clean electronically
submitted claims are processed within statutorily specified time
frames. Clean claims are defined as claims that do not require Medicare
carriers to investigate or develop them outside of their Medicare
operations on a prepayment basis. Specifically, the statute specifies
that clean non-Periodic Interim payment electronic claims be paid no
earlier than the 14th day after the date of receipt, and that interest
is payable for any clean claims if payment is not issued by the 31st
day after the date of receipt. The HIPAA Administrative Simplification
provisions and the implementing regulations established standards for
electronic transmission of claims. We issued instructions that
effective July 1, 2004, electronic claims that do not comply with the
appropriate HIPAA claim standard will no longer qualify for payment as
early as the 14th day after the date of receipt. These ``non-HIPAA''
claims will not be paid earlier than the 27th day after the date of
receipt. These ``non-HIPAA'' claims will continue to have interest
payable if payment is not issued by the 31st day after the date of
receipt. Our expectation is that contractors will pay 95 percent of
these clean claims by the 31st day (30 days after date of receipt) on a
monthly basis.
Standard 2. Not less than 95.0 percent of clean paper claims are
processed within specified time frames. Specifically, clean paper
claims can be paid as early as the 27th day (26 days after the date of
receipt) and must be paid by the 31st day (30 days after the date of
receipt). Our expectation is that contractors will meet this percentage
on a monthly basis.
Standard 3. 98.0 percent of MSNs are properly generated. Our
expectation is that MSN messages are accurately reflecting the services
provided.
Standard 4. 90.0 percent of carrier hearing decisions are completed
within 120 days. Our expectation is that contractors will meet this
percentage on a monthly basis. This standard will remain in effect
until the Part B hearing officer work is transitioned to the QICs
sometime in FY 2006.
Standard 5. Redetermination letters prepared in response to
beneficiary
[[Page 55893]]
initiated appeal requests are written in a manner calculated to be
understood by the beneficiary. Letters must contain the required
elements as specified in Sec. 405.956.
Standard 6. All redeterminations must be concluded and mailed
within 60 days of receipt of the request, unless the appellant submits
documentation after the request, in which case the decision making time
frame is extended for 14 calendar days for each submission.
Additional functions that may be evaluated under this criterion
include, but are not limited to, the following:
Accuracy of claims processing.
Remittance advice transactions.
Establishment and maintenance of relationship with Common
Working File (CWF) Host.
Accuracy of redetermination decisions.
Accuracy of processing hearing cases with decision letters
that are clear and have an appropriate customer-friendly tone. This
standard will remain in effect until the Part B hearing officer work is
transitioned to the QICs sometime in FY 2006.
Accuracy and timeliness of appeals decisions issued
pursuant to the requirements of BIPA section 521 and sections 933 and
940 of MMA.
Note: Section 521 of BIPA and sections 933 and 940 of MMA amend
section 1869 of the Act by requiring major revisions to the Medicare
appeals process. Section 937 of MMA also requires the creation of a
process outside the appeals process, whereby Medicare contractors
can correct minor errors and omissions. We may evaluate compliance
with our instructions concerning other provisions of section 521 of
BIPA and sections 933, 937 and 940 of MMA as they are implemented.
B. Customer Service Criterion
The customer service criterion contains the following mandated
standard: Replies to beneficiary written correspondence are responsive
to the beneficiary's concerns, are written with an appropriate
customer-friendly tone and clarity, and are written at the appropriate
reading level.
Contractors must meet our performance expectations that
beneficiaries and providers are served by prompt and accurate
administration of the program in accordance with all applicable laws,
regulations, and our general instructions.
Additional functions that may be evaluated under this criterion
include, but are not limited to, the following:
Maintaining a properly programmed interactive voice
response system to assist with provider inquiries.
Performing quality call monitoring.
Training customer service representatives.
Entering valid call center performance data in the
customer service assessment and management system.
Providing timely and accurate written replies to
beneficiary and/or providers.
Maintaining walk-in inquiry service for beneficiaries and
providers.
Conducting beneficiary and provider education, training,
and outreach activities.
Effectively maintaining an internet website dedicated to
furnishing providers timely, accurate, and useful Medicare program
information.
Ensuring written correspondence is evaluated for quality.
C. Payment Safeguards Criterion
Carriers may be evaluated on any MIP activities if performed under
their contracts. In addition, other carrier functions and activities
that may be reviewed under this criterion include, but are not limited
to the following:
Benefit Integrity
+ Referring allegations of potential fraud that are made by
beneficiaries, providers, CMS, OIG, and other sources to the payment
safeguard contractor.
+ Putting in place effective detection and deterrence programs for
potential fraud.
Medical Review
+ Increasing the effectiveness of medical review activities.
+ Exercising accurate and defensible decision making on medical
reviews.
+ Effectively educating and communicating with the provider
community.
+ Collaborating with other internal components and external
entities to ensure the effectiveness of medical review activities.
Medicare Secondary Payer
+ Accurately reporting MSP savings.
+ Accurately following MSP claim development/edit procedures.
+ Supporting the Coordination of Benefits Contractor's efforts to
identify responsible payers primary to Medicare.
+ Identifying, recovering, and referring mistaken/conditional
Medicare payments in accordance with the appropriate Medicare Manual
instructions, and our other pertinent general instructions.
Overpayments
+ Collecting and referring Medicare debts timely.
+ Accurately reporting and collecting overpayments.
+ Compliance with our instructions for management of Medicare Trust
Fund debts.
Provider Enrollment
+ Complying with assignment of staff to the provider enrollment
function and training staff in procedures and verification techniques.
+ Complying with the operational standards relevant to the process
for enrolling suppliers.
D. Fiscal Responsibility Criterion
We may review the carrier's efforts to establish and maintain
appropriate financial and budgetary internal controls over benefit
payments and administrative costs. Proper internal controls must be in
place to ensure that contractors comply with their contracts.
Additional functions that may be reviewed under the Fiscal
Responsibility criterion include, but are not limited to, the
following:
Adherence to approved program management and MIP budgets.
Compliance with the BPRs.
Compliance with financial reporting requirements.
Control of administrative cost and benefit payments.
E. Administrative Activities Criterion
We may measure a carrier's administrative ability to manage the
Medicare program. We may evaluate the efficiency and effectiveness of
its operations, its system of internal controls, and its compliance
with our directives and initiatives.
We may measure a carrier's efficiency and effectiveness in managing
its operations. Proper systems security (general and application
controls), ADP maintenance, and disaster recovery plans must be in
place. Also, a carrier must test system changes to ensure accurate
implementation of our instructions.
Our evaluation of a carrier under this criterion may include, but
is not limited to, reviews of the following:
Systems security.
ADP maintenance (configuration management, testing, change
management, and security).
Disaster recovery plan/systems contingency plan.
Data and reporting requirements implementation.
Internal controls establishment and use, including the
degree to which the contractor cooperates with the Secretary in
complying with the FMFIA.
Implementation of the Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)
standards adopted for use under the Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (HIPAA).
Implementation of our general instructions.
[[Page 55894]]
VII. Criteria and Standards for Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics,
Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS) Regional Carriers
[If you choose to comment on issues in this section, please include the
caption ``CRITERIA AND STANDARDS FOR DMEPOS'' at the beginning of your
comments.]
The five criteria for DMEPOS regional carriers contain a total of
six mandated standards against which all DMEPOS regional carriers must
be evaluated.
There also are examples of other activities for which the DMEPOS
regional carriers may be evaluated. The mandated standards are in the
claims processing and customer service criteria. In addition to being
described in these criteria, the mandated standards are also described
in the DMEPOS regional carrier statement of work (SOW).
A. Claims Processing Criterion
The claims processing criterion contains the following six mandated
standards:
Standard 1. Not less than 95.0 percent of clean electronically
submitted claims are processed within statutorily specified time
frames. Clean claims are defined as claims that do not require Medicare
DMEPOS regional carriers to investigate or develop them outside of
their Medicare operations on a prepayment basis. Specifically, the
statute specifies that clean non-Periodic Interim Payment electronic
claims be paid no earlier than the 14th day after the date of receipt,
and that interest is payable for any clean claims if payment is not
issued by the 31st day after the date of receipt. The HIPAA
Administrative Simplification provisions and the implementing
regulations established standards for electronic transmission of
claims. We issued instructions that effective July 1, 2004, electronic
claims that do not comply with the appropriate HIPAA claim standard
will no longer qualify for payment as early as the 14th day after the
date of receipt. These ``non-HIPAA'' claims will not be paid earlier
than the 27th day after the date of receipt. These ``non-HIPAA'' claims
will continue to have interest payable if payment is not issued by the
31st day after the date of receipt. Our expectation is that contractors
will pay 95 percent of these clean claims by the 31st day (30 days
after date of receipt) on a monthly basis.
Standard 2. Not less than 95.0 percent of clean paper claims are
processed within specified timeframes. Specifically, clean paper claims
can be paid as early as day 27 (26 days after the date of receipt) and
must be paid by day 31 (30 days after the date of receipt). Our
expectation is that contractors will meet this percentage on a monthly
basis.
Standard 3. 98.0 percent of MSNs are properly generated. Our
expectation is that MSN messages are accurately reflecting the services
provided.
Standard 4. 90.0 percent of DMEPOS regional carrier hearing
decisions are completed within 120 days. Our expectation is that
contractors will meet this percentage on a monthly basis. This standard
will remain in effect until the Part B hearing officer work is
transitioned to the QICs sometime in FY 2006.
Standard 5. Redetermination letters prepared in response to
beneficiary initiated appeal requests are written in a manner
calculated to be understood by the beneficiary. Letters must contain
the required elements as specified in Sec. 405.956.
Standard 6. All redeterminations must be concluded and mailed
within 60 days of receipt of the request, unless the appellant submits
documentation after the request, in which case the decision making
timeframe is extended for 14 calendar days for each submission.
Additional functions that may be evaluated under this criterion
include, but are not limited to, the following:
Claims processing accuracy.
Accuracy and timeliness of appeals decisions prior to the
implementation of BIPA sections 521 and 933 and section 940 of MMA
requirements.
Requests for ALJ hearings are forwarded timely.
Accuracy and timeliness of appeals decisions issued
pursuant to the requirements of BIPA sections 521 and 933 and section
940 of MMA.
Note: Section 521 of BIPA and sections 933 and 940 of MMA amend
section 1869 of the Act by requiring major revisions to the Medicare
appeals process. Section 937 of MMA also requires the creation of a
process outside the appeals process, whereby Medicare contractors
can correct minor errors and omissions. We may evaluate compliance
with our instructions concerning other provisions of section 521 of
BIPA and sections 933, 937 and 940 of MMA as they are implemented.
B. Customer Service Criterion
The customer service criterion contains the following mandated
standard: Replies to beneficiary written correspondence are responsive
to the beneficiary's concerns, are written with an appropriate
customer-friendly tone and clarity, and are written at the appropriate
reading level.
Contractors must meet our performance expectations that
beneficiaries and suppliers are served by prompt and accurate
administration of the program in accordance with all applicable laws,
regulations, the DMEPOS regional carrier SOW, and our general
instructions.
Additional functions that may be evaluated under this criterion
include, but are not limited to, the following:
Maintaining a properly programmed interactive voice
response system to assist with provider inquiries.
Performing quality call monitoring.
Training customer service representatives.
Entering valid call center performance data in the
customer service assessment and management system.
Providing timely and accurate written replies to
beneficiaries and/or providers.
Maintaining walk-in inquiry service for beneficiaries and
suppliers.
Conducting beneficiary and provider education, training,
and outreach activities.
Effectively maintaining an internet website dedicated to
furnishing providers timely, accurate, and useful Medicare program
information.
Ensuring that communications are made to interested
supplier organizations for the purpose of developing and maintaining
collaborative supplier education and training activities and programs.
Ensuring written correspondence is evaluated for quality.
C. Payment Safeguards Criterion
DMEPOS regional carriers may be evaluated on any MIP activities if
performed under their contracts. The DMEPOS regional carriers must
undertake actions to promote an effective program administration for
DMEPOS regional carrier claims. These functions and activities include,
but are not limited to the following:
Benefit Integrity
+ Identifying potential fraud cases that exist within the DMEPOS
regional carrier's service area and taking appropriate actions to
resolve these cases.
+ Investigating allegations of potential fraud made by
beneficiaries, suppliers, CMS, OIG, and other sources.
+ Putting in place effective detection and deterrence programs for
potential fraud.
Medical Review
+ Increasing the effectiveness of medical review activities.
+ Exercising accurate and defensible decision making on medical
reviews.
+ Effectively educating and communicating with the supplier
community.
[[Page 55895]]
+ Collaborating with other internal components and external
entities to ensure the effectiveness of medical review activities.
Medicare Secondary Payer
+ Accurately reporting MSP savings.
+ Accurately following MSP claim development/edit procedures.
+ Supporting the coordination of benefits contractors' efforts to
identify responsible payers primary to Medicare.
Identifying, recovering, and referring mistaken/
conditional Medicare payments in accordance with the appropriate
program instructions in the specified order of priority.
Overpayments
+ Collecting and referring Medicare debts timely.
+ Accurately reporting and collecting overpayments.
+ Compliance with our instructions for management of Medicare Trust
Fund debts.
D. Fiscal Responsibility Criterion
We may review the DMEPOS regional carrier's efforts to establish
and maintain appropriate financial and budgetary internal controls over
benefit payments and administrative costs. Proper internal controls
must be in place to ensure that contractors comply with their
contracts. Additional matters that may be reviewed under this criterion
include, but are not limited to, the following:
Compliance with financial reporting requirements.
Adherence to approved program management and MIP budgets.
Control of administrative cost and benefit payments.
E. Administrative Activities
We may measure a DMEPOS regional carrier's administrative ability
to manage the Medicare program. We may evaluate the efficiency and
effectiveness of its operations, its system of internal controls, and
its compliance with our directives and initiatives. Our evaluation of a
DMEPOS regional carrier under this criterion may include, but is not
limited to, review of the following:
Systems security.
Disaster recovery plan/systems contingency plan.
Internal controls establishment and use, including the
degree to which the contractor cooperates with the Secretary in
complying with the FMFIA.
Implementation of the EDI standards adopted for use under
HIPAA.
VIII. Action Based on Performance Evaluations
[If you choose to comment on this section, please include the caption
``ACTION BASED ON PERFORMANCE EVALUATIONS'' at the beginning of your
comments.]
We evaluate a contractor's performance against applicable program
requirements for each criterion. Each contractor must certify that all
information submitted to us relating to the contract management
process, including, without limitation, all files, records, documents
and data, whether in written, electronic, or other form, is accurate
and complete to the best of the contractor's knowledge and belief. A
contractor is required to certify that its files, records, documents,
and data are not manipulated or falsified in an effort to receive a
more favorable performance evaluation. A contractor must further
certify that, to the best of its knowledge and belief, the contractor
has submitted, without withholding any relevant information, all
information required to be submitted for the contract management
process under the authority of applicable law(s), regulation(s),
contract(s), or our manual provision(s). Any contractor that makes a
false, fictitious, or fraudulent certification may be subject to
criminal or civil prosecution, as well as appropriate administrative
action. This administrative action may include debarment or suspension
of the contractor, as well as the termination or nonrenewal of a
contract.
If a contractor meets the level of performance required by
operational instructions, it meets the requirements of that criterion.
When we determine a contractor is not meeting performance requirements,
we will use the terms ``major nonconformance'' or ``minor
nonconformance'' to classify our findings. A major nonconformance is a
nonconformance that is likely to result in failure of the supplies or
services, or to materially reduce the usability of the supplies or
services for their intended purpose. A minor nonconformance is a
nonconformance that is not likely to materially reduce the usability of
the supplies or services for their intended purpose, or is a departure
from established standards having little bearing on the effective use
or operation of the supplies or services. The contractor will be
required to develop and implement PIPs for findings determined to be
either a major or minor nonconformance. The contractor will be
monitored to ensure effective and efficient compliance with the PIP,
and to ensure improved performance when requirements are not met.
The results of performance evaluations and assessments under all
criteria applying to intermediaries, carriers, RHHIs, and DMEPOS
regional carriers will be used for contract management activities and
will be published in the contractor's annual Report of Contractor
Performance (RCP). We may initiate administrative actions as a result
of the evaluation of contractor performance based on these performance
criteria. Under sections 1816 and 1842 of the Act, we consider the
results of the evaluation in our determinations when--
Entering into, renewing, or terminating agreements or
contracts with contractors, and
Deciding other contract actions for intermediaries and
carriers (such as deletion of an automatic renewal clause). These
decisions are made on a case-by-case basis and depend primarily on the
nature and degree of performance. More specifically, these decisions
depend on the following:
+ Relative overall performance compared to other contractors.
+ Number of criteria in which nonconformance occurs.
+ Extent of each nonconformance.
+ Relative significance of the requirement for which nonconformance
occurs within the overall evaluation program.
+ Efforts to improve program quality, service, and efficiency.
+ Deciding the assignment or reassignment of providers and
designation of regional or national intermediaries for classes of
providers.
We make individual contract action decisions after considering
these factors in terms of their relative significance and impact on the
effective and efficient administration of the Medicare program.
In addition, if the cost incurred by the intermediary, RHHI,
carrier, or DMEPOS regional carrier to meet its contractual
requirements exceeds the amount that we find to be reasonable and
adequate to meet the cost that must be incurred by an efficiently and
economically operated intermediary or carrier, these high costs may
also be grounds for adverse action.
IX. Collection of Information Requirements
This document does not impose information collection and record
keeping requirements. Consequently the Office of Management and Budget
need not review it under the authority of the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
X. Response to Comments
Because of the large number of items of correspondence we normally
receive on Federal Register documents published for comment, we are
unable
[[Page 55896]]
to acknowledge or respond to them individually. We will consider all
comments we receive by the date and time specified in the Comment
Period section of this preamble, and, if we proceed with a subsequent
document, we will respond to the comments in the preamble of that
document.
Authority: Sections 1816(f), 1834(a)(12), and 1842(b) of the
Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1395h(f), 1395m(a)(12), and 1395u(b))
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Program No. 93.774,
Medicare--Supplementary Medical Insurance Program)
Dated: May 19, 2005.
Mark B. McClellan,
Administrator, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
[FR Doc. 05-18923 Filed 9-22-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-U