Medicare Program; Physicians' Referrals to Health Care Entities With Which They Have Financial Relationships; Exceptions for Certain Electronic Prescribing and Electronic Health Records Arrangements, 59182-59198 [05-20322]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 195 / Tuesday, October 11, 2005 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
42 CFR Part 411
[CMS–1303–P]
RIN 0938–AN69
Medicare Program; Physicians’
Referrals to Health Care Entities With
Which They Have Financial
Relationships; Exceptions for Certain
Electronic Prescribing and Electronic
Health Records Arrangements
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: As required by section 101 of
the Medicare Prescription Drug,
Improvement, and Modernization Act of
2003 (MMA), this proposed rule would
create an exception to the physician
self-referral prohibition in section 1877
of the Social Security Act (the Act) for
certain arrangements in which a
physician receives necessary nonmonetary remuneration that is used
solely to receive and transmit electronic
prescription drug information. In
addition, using our separate legal
authority under section 1877(b)(4) of the
Act, we are proposing two separate
regulatory exceptions for electronic
health records software and directly
related training services. These
exceptions are consistent with the
President’s goal of achieving
widespread adoption of interoperable
electronic health records for the purpose
of improving the quality and efficiency
of health care, while maintaining the
levels of security and privacy that
consumers expect.
DATES: To be assured consideration,
comments must be received at one of
the addresses provided below, no later
than 5 p.m. on December 12, 2005.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, please refer
to file code CMS–1303–P. 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. (Attachments should 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
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for Medicare & Medicaid Services,
Department of Health and Human
Services, Attention: CMS–1303–P, PO
Box 8010, Baltimore, MD 21244–8010.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed
comments to be received before the
close of the comment period.
3. By express or overnight mail. You
may send 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–1303–P, Mail Stop C4–26–05,
7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21244–1850.
4. 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 (410) 786–9994 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
received after the comment period.
Submission of comments on
paperwork requirements. You may
submit comments on this document’s
paperwork requirements by mailing
your comments to the addresses
provided at the end of the ‘‘Collection
of Information Requirements’’ section in
this document. For information on
viewing public comments, see the
beginning of the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Linda Howard, (410) 786–5255.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Submitting Comments: We welcome
comments from the public on all issues
set forth in this rule to assist us in fully
considering issues and developing
policies. You can assist us by
referencing the file code [CMS–1303–P]
and the specific ‘‘issue identifier’’ that
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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. CMS posts all electronic
comments received before the close of
the comment period on its public Web
site as soon as possible after they have
been 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.
Open Door Forum: We are planning to
schedule an Open Door Forum early in
the comment period to discuss the
benefits and risks of donating electronic
prescribing and electronic health
records technology. Please note,
however, that our planned Open Door
Forum is in addition to, and not in lieu
of, the public comment process
discussed above. To be assured
consideration, please forward your
written comments by the close of the
comment period.
I. Background
[If you choose to comment on issues in
this section, please include the caption
‘‘Background’’ at the beginning of your
comment.]
Section 1877 of the Act, also known
as the physician self-referral law: (1)
Prohibits a physician from making
referrals for certain designated health
services (DHS) payable by Medicare to
an entity with which he or she (or an
immediate family member) has a
financial relationship (ownership
interest or compensation arrangement),
unless an exception applies; and (2)
prohibits the entity from submitting
claims to Medicare for those referred
services, unless an exception applies.
The statute establishes a number of
exceptions and grants the Secretary the
authority to create additional regulatory
exceptions for financial relationships
that do not pose a risk of program or
patient abuse. When enacted in 1989,
the physician self-referral law applied
only to physician referrals for clinical
laboratory services under Medicare
when made to an entity with which the
physician (or an immediate family
member) had a financial relationship. In
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1993 and 1994, the Congress expanded
the prohibition to include ten additional
DHS and added section 1903(s) of the
Act, which extended aspects of the
referral prohibition to the Medicaid
program.
Section 1877 of the Act, as it applies
to referrals for eleven DHS, has been in
effect and subject to enforcement since
January 1, 1995. On August 14, 1995, we
published a final rule with comment
period in the Federal Register (60 FR
41914) that incorporated into
regulations the physician self-referral
prohibition as it applied to clinical
laboratory services. That final rule did
not address the other DHS. On January
9, 1998, we published a proposed rule
in the Federal Register (63 FR 1659) to
revise the regulations to cover the
additional DHS and the Medicaid
expansion. On January 4, 2001, we
published the ‘‘Phase I’’ final rule with
comment period in the Federal Register
(66 FR 856). Phase I addressed the
general prohibition on physician selfreferrals and the statutory exceptions
applicable to both ownership and
compensation arrangements, defined
key terms, and created a number of new
regulatory exceptions. With two
exceptions, the regulations published in
Phase I became effective on January 4,
2002.1 On March 26, 2004, we
published the ‘‘Phase II’’ interim final
rule with comment period in the
Federal Register (69 FR 16054), which
became effective on July 26, 2004. Phase
II addressed the statutory exceptions
related to ownership and investment
interests, the statutory exceptions for
certain compensation arrangements, and
the reporting requirements. Phase II also
created some new regulatory exceptions
and addressed public comments on
Phase I.
Section 101 of the Medicare
Prescription Drug, Improvement, and
Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA) (Pub.
L. 108–173) added a new section 1860D
to the Act establishing a prescription
drug benefit in the Medicare program.
As part of the new legislation, the
Congress directed the Secretary in
section 1860D–4(e)(4) of the Act to
1 Revised § 424.22(d), relating to home health
services, became effective on April 6, 2001 (see our
Federal Register notice dated February 2, 2001 (66
FR 8771)). In addition, the effective date of the final
sentence of § 411.354(d)(1) relating to the definition
of ‘‘set in advances’’ was delayed several times. The
sentence never went into effect and was deleted in
the Phase II regulation, effective July 26, 2004.
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adopt standards for electronic
prescribing in connection with the new
prescription drug benefit with the
objective of improving patient safety,
quality of care, and efficiency in the
delivery of care. (H.R. Conf. Rep. No.
108–391, at 455, 456 (2003).) Section
1860D–4(e)(6) of the Act directs the
Secretary, in consultation with the
Attorney General, to create an exception
to the physician self-referral prohibition
and a safe harbor under the antikickback statute (section 1128B(b) of the
Act) to protect certain arrangements
involving the provision of non-monetary
remuneration (consisting of items and
services in the form of hardware,
software, or information technology and
training services) that is necessary and
used solely to receive and transmit
electronic prescription drug information
in accordance with electronic
prescribing standards published by the
Secretary under section 1860D–4(e)(4)
of the Act. We note that, depending on
the circumstances, provisions in the
existing physician self-referral
regulations may provide sufficient
protection for the donation of these
items and services to physicians.
This proposed rule sets forth the
terms and conditions of the MMAmandated physician self-referral
exception for certain arrangements
involving the donation of electronic
prescribing technology. The MMAmandated anti-kickback statute safe
harbor is being implemented in a
separate rulemaking by the Office of
Inspector General (OIG). We have
attempted to ensure as much
consistency as possible between our
proposed electronic prescribing
exception and the corresponding safe
harbor proposed by OIG, given the
differences in the respective underlying
statutes. We intend the final rules to be
similarly consistent.
Section 1877(b)(4) of the Act
authorizes the Secretary to create
regulatory exceptions for financial
relationships that he determines do not
pose a risk of program or patient abuse.
Using this authority, this proposed rule
also sets forth terms and conditions for
two separate physician self-referral
exceptions for certain arrangements
involving the donation of electronic
health records software and directly
related training services. Information
technology, and electronic health
records in particular, supports treatment
choices for consumers and enables
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better and more cost-effective care,
while maintaining the levels of security
and privacy that consumers expect. We
seek to encourage the adoption of such
technology through this proposed
rulemaking. We also intend to monitor
the progress made toward fully
interoperable electronic health records
systems, as we believe that systems that
are fully interoperable and certified can
mitigate many of our concerns regarding
the potential anti-competitive effects of
stand-alone electronic health records
systems.
II. Provisions of the Proposed Rule
As required by section 101 of the
MMA, this proposed rule would add
new paragraph (v) to § 411.357. New
paragraph (v) would describe more
specifically: (1) The items and services
protected by the new electronic
prescribing exception mandated under
section 101 of the MMA; (2) the
conditions under which offering these
items and services to physicians would
be protected; and (3) the DHS entities
and referring physicians covered by the
electronic prescribing exception.
In addition, using our separate legal
authority under section 1877(b)(4) of the
Act, we are proposing two separate
exceptions at § 411.357(w) and
§ 411.357(x) for electronic health
records software and training services
that are not covered by the MMAmandated exception. New paragraphs
(w) and (x) would describe more
specifically: (1) The items and services
protected by the new electronic health
records exceptions; (2) the individuals
and entities that may provide the
protected items and services; and (3) the
conditions under which the provision of
items and services to physicians would
be protected.
The proposed exceptions at
§ 411.357(v), § 411.357(w), and
§ 411.357(x) would, if implemented,
create independent grounds for
protection under the physician selfreferral prohibition. For the
convenience of the public, we are
providing the following chart that lays
out schematically the overall structure
and approach of these proposed
regulations, details of which are
provided below in Sections II.A. and B.
of this proposed rule. Readers are
cautioned that the exceptions contain
additional conditions and information
not summarized here.
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MMA-mandated electronic prescribing exception
Pre-interoperability electronic
health records exception
Post-interoperability electronic
health records exception
Section 101 of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement,
and Modernization Act of 2003.
Proposed:
• Items and services that are
necessary and used solely to
transmit and receive electronic
prescription drug information.
• Includes hardware, software,
internet connectvity, and training and support services.
Section 1877(b)(4) of the Social
Security Act.
Section 1877(b)(4) of the Social
Security Act.
Proposed:
• Software used solely for the
transmission, receipt or maintenance of electronic health
records.
• Directly-related training services.
• Software must include an electronic prescribing component.
Standards With Which Donated
Technology Must Comply
Proposed:
• Foundation standards for electronic prescribing as adopted by
the Secretary.
Proposed:
• Electronic prescribing component must comply with foundation standards for electronic
prescribing as adopted by the
Secretary.
Permissible Donors ........................
Proposed:
• As required by statute, hospitals (to members of their medical staffs), group practices (to
physician
members),
PDP
sponsors and MA organizations
(to Physicians).
Proposed:
• Donors may not take into account the volume or value of referrals from the recipient or
other business between the
parties.
Proposed:
• Hospitals to members of their
medical staffs.
• Group practices to physician
members.
• PDP sponsors.
• MA organizations.
Proposed:
• Donors may not take into account the volume or value of referrals from the recipient or
other business between the
parties.
Proposed:
• No specific dollar amount proposed for a cap on the value of
protected technology.
Proposed:
• No specific dollar amount proposed for a cap on the value of
protected items and services.
Proposed:
• Certified
electronic
health
records software
• Directly-related training services
• Software must include an electronic prescribing component
• Could include billing and scheduling software, provided that the
core function of the software is
electronic health records.
Proposed:
• Product certification criteria
adopted by the Secretary.
• Electronic prescribing component must comply with foundation standards for electronic
prescribing as adopted by the
Secretary, to the extent these
standards are not fully incorporated into the product certification criteria.
Proposed:
• Hospitals to members of their
medical staffs.
• Group practices to physician
members.
• PDP sponsors.
• MA organizations.
Proposed:
• Donors may use criteria to select recipients that are not directly related to the volume or
value of referrals or other business generated between the
parties.
Proposed:
• No specific dollar amount proposed for a cap on the value of
protected items and services.
• May be greater than the cap on
preinteroperability donations.
Authority for Proposed Exception ..
Covered Technology ......................
Selection of Recipients ..................
Value of Protected Technology .....
A. Exception for Certain Arrangements
Involving Electronic Prescribing
Technology: § 411.357(v)
[If you choose to comment on issues
in this section, please include the
caption ‘‘Electronic Prescribing
Exception: § 411.357(v)’’ at the
beginning of your comment.]
The Congress, in mandating the
creation of an electronic prescribing
exception under the physician selfreferral law, recognized the value of
electronic prescription programs as a
vehicle to reduce medical errors and to
improve efficiencies in the health care
system. (H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 108–391, at
456 (2003).) We believe that promoting
the rapid adoption of electronic
prescribing for Medicare Part D is
beneficial to both health care providers
and patients, and we have interpreted
the mandate accordingly.
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1. Protected Non-Monetary
Remuneration
Section 1860D–4(e)(6) of the Act
authorizes the creation of an exception
only for the provision of items and
services that are ‘‘necessary and used
solely’’ to transmit and receive
electronic prescription drug
information. This proposed rule would
clarify the items and services that would
qualify for the new exception
(‘‘qualifying electronic prescribing
technology’’).
a. ‘‘Necessary’’ Non-Monetary
Remuneration
First, consistent with the MMA
mandate, the proposed exception would
protect only items or services that are
‘‘necessary’’ to conduct electronic
prescription drug transactions. This
might include, for example, hardware,
software, broadband or wireless internet
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connectivity, training, information
technology support services, and other
items and services used in connection
with the transmission or receipt of
electronic prescribing information. The
exception would not protect
arrangements in which DHS entities
provide items or services that are
technically or functionally equivalent to
items that the receiving physician
already possesses or services that the
physician has already obtained. For
example, we believe the exception
would allow a hospital to provide a
physician with a hand-held device
capable of transmitting electronic
prescribing information, even though
the physician may already have a
desktop computer that could also be
used to send the same information. By
contrast, the provision of a second
hand-held device would not qualify for
the exception if the physician already
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possesses a hand-held device that could
run the new software. We do not
interpret the term ‘‘necessary’’ to
preclude upgrades of equipment or
software that significantly enhance the
functionality of the item or service.
We believe that restricting the
exception to ‘‘necessary’’ items and
services is important to minimize the
potential for abuse. However, we
recognize that the donors of the items
and services will not necessarily know
which items and services the physician
already possesses or has obtained.
Accordingly, § 411.357(v)(7)(iv) would
require the physician to certify that the
items and services provided are not
technically or functionally equivalent to
those that the physician already
possesses or has already obtained. The
physician must update the certification
prior to the furnishing of any necessary
upgrades or items and services not
reflected in the original certification. We
are concerned that the certification
process would be ineffective as a
safeguard against fraud and abuse if it
is a mere formality or if physicians
simply execute a form certification
provided by the DHS entity. The
certification must be truthful, and we
are proposing at § 411.357(v)(8) that the
DHS entity must not have actual
knowledge of, or act in reckless
disregard or deliberate ignorance of, the
fact that the physician possessed or had
obtained items and services that were
technically or functionally equivalent to
those donated by the entity. We are
soliciting comments about other ways to
address this concern.
We are also concerned that there may
be a risk that physicians would
intentionally divest themselves of
functionally or technically equivalent
technology that they already possess in
order to shift costs to the DHS entity.
We are soliciting public comments on
how best to address this issue.
b. ‘‘Used Solely’’
In addition to the ‘‘necessary’’
standard, section 1860D–4(e)(6) of the
Act provides that the items and services
must be ‘‘used solely’’ for the
transmission or receipt of electronic
prescribing information. We believe that
the Congress included this requirement
to safeguard against abusive
arrangements in which the remunerative
technology might constitute a payment
for referrals because it might have
additional value attributable to uses
other than electronic prescribing.
Accordingly, the proposed exception at
§ 411.357(v) requires that the protected
items and services be used solely to
transmit or receive electronic
prescribing information.
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We are concerned that DHS entities
might provide free or reduced cost
software that bundles valuable general
office management, billing, scheduling,
or other software with the electronic
prescribing features. Such additional
remuneration would not meet the ‘‘used
solely’’ requirement and would not be
protected by the proposed electronic
prescribing exception. However, the
physician would not be precluded from
purchasing from the DHS entity for fair
market value additional technology not
protected by the proposed exception.
We are mindful that hardware and
connectivity services can be used for the
receipt and transmission of a wide range
of information services, including, but
not limited to, electronic prescription
information, and that many physicians
may prefer to use a single, multifunctional device, especially a handheld, rather than multiple single-use
devices. Similarly, many physicians
may prefer to use a single connectivity
service. Accordingly, we are proposing
to use our authority under section
1877(b)(4) of the Act to create an
additional exception to protect the
provision by DHS entities to physicians
of hardware (including necessary
operating system software) and
connectivity services that are used for
more than one function, so long as a
substantial use of the item or service is
to receive or transmit electronic
prescription information. We propose to
treat operating software as integral to
the hardware and distinct from other
software applications that are not
necessary for the hardware to operate.
Under this additional exception,
protection would not extend to the
provision of items or services that are
only occasionally used for electronic
prescribing. The additional exception
would incorporate the definitions and
conditions set forth in this proposed
rulemaking and would also include
conditions to address the additional risk
of abuse posed by multi-functional
items and services.
We are soliciting public comment
about the standards that should appear
in an additional exception for multifunctional hardware (including
necessary operating system software) or
connectivity services. In particular, we
are soliciting public comment on
methodologies for quantifying or
ensuring that a substantial use of
hardware and connectivity services is
for the receipt or transmission of
electronic prescribing information. We
have considered how to quantify
‘‘substantial use’’ with respect to other
provisions of the Act and its
implementing regulations; here, we are
specifically seeking comments regarding
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an appropriate definition of ‘‘substantial
use’’ in the context of electronic
prescribing technology and its use. We
are also soliciting public comment on
the nature and amount of any cap that
we should impose on the value of the
donated multi-functional hardware or
connectivity services.
2. Designated Health Services (DHS)
Entities Protected by the Exception
In addition to describing the kinds of
electronic prescribing technology that
can be protected, section 1860D–4(e)(6)
of the Act limits the kinds of entities
that may provide this assistance, and
the persons to whom assistance can be
provided. Specifically, the statutory
provision protects the donation of
qualifying electronic prescribing
technology when the donation is made
by hospitals to members of their
medical staffs, by group practices to
their physician members, and by
prescription drug plan (PDP) sponsors
and Medicare advantage (MA)
organizations to pharmacies,
pharmacists, and physicians and other
prescribing health care professionals.
The proposed regulation text largely
mirrors the statutory language except
where the statute refers to persons or
entities other than physicians (that is,
pharmacies, pharmacists, and nonphysician prescribing health care
professionals). We are proposing to limit
the exception at § 411.357(v) to
remuneration provided to physicians,
because section 1877 of the Act is not
implicated when remuneration is
provided to non-physician prescribing
health care professionals or to
pharmacists and pharmacies that are not
otherwise affiliated with a referring
physician. To the extent that a hospital
has a financial relationship with these
parties, no exception is necessary.
However, arrangements that do not
implicate section 1877 of the Act can
still violate the anti-kickback statute.
Proposed § 411.357(v)(1)(i) would
protect donations of qualifying
electronic prescribing technology
provided by a hospital to physicians on
its medical staff. We intend to protect
donations only to physicians who
routinely furnish services at the
hospital. We do not intend for this
exception to protect remuneration used
to induce physicians who already
practice at other hospitals to join the
medical staff of a different hospital. We
are soliciting comments on this issue.
Proposed § 411.357(v)(1)(ii) would
protect donations of qualifying
electronic prescribing technology
provided by a group practice to its
physician members. For purposes of the
new exception, we propose to apply the
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existing regulatory definitions of the
terms ‘‘group practice’’ and ‘‘member of
a group practice’’ (see § 411.352 and
§ 411.351, respectively). Further, the
inclusion of paragraph
§ 411.357(v)(1)(ii) does not imply that
the provision of the items and services
by a group to its members necessarily
requires a new exception, because the
in-office ancillary services exception or
the employment exception would apply
in most circumstances, where needed.
We believe the Congress included these
relationships in section 1860D–4(e)(6) of
the Act simply to encourage group
practices to adopt electronic prescribing
technology. We are soliciting comments
regarding whether and how a group
practice may appropriately furnish
qualifying electronic prescribing
technology to a ‘‘physician in the group
practice,’’ as defined at § 411.351.
Proposed § 411.357(v)(1)(iii) would
protect donations of qualifying
electronic prescribing technology
provided by a PDP sponsor or MA
organization to prescribing physicians.
We note that, in certain circumstances,
donations of qualifying electronic
prescribing technology may qualify for
protection under the existing exception
at § 411.355(c). In addition, although
section 1860D–4(e)(6) of the Act also
applies to the provision of qualifying
electronic prescribing technology by
PDP sponsors and MA organizations to
pharmacies, pharmacists, and nonphysician prescribing health care
professionals in the plans’ networks,
these financial relationships do not
implicate section 1877 of the Act.
We are soliciting comments on
whether we should use our authority
under section 1877(b)(4) of the Act to
protect qualifying electronic prescribing
technology provided to physicians by
other DHS entities. Most other DHS
services do not appear to involve
substantial utilization of prescription
drugs. We are interested in comments
addressing the types of DHS entities that
should be included, the degree of need
for the protection, and the safeguards
that should be imposed to protect
against program or patient abuse.
3. Additional Limitations on the
Provision of Electronic Prescribing
Technology
a. Promoting Compatibility and
Interoperability
Section 1860D–4(e)(6) of the Act is
integral to the electronic prescribing
program established by section 101 of
the MMA. Section 1860D–4(e)(6) of the
Act provides that, in order to qualify for
the physician self-referral exception, the
qualifying electronic prescription
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technology must be used to receive and
transmit electronic prescription
information in accordance with
standards to be established by the
Secretary for Part D electronic
prescription drug programs. Consistent
with section 1860D–4(e)(6) of the Act,
proposed § 411.357(v)(2) would require
that the items and services be provided
as part of, or be used to access, an
electronic prescription drug program
that complies with the standards
established by the Secretary for these
programs. We are soliciting comments
on whether the exception should permit
qualifying electronic prescribing
technology to be used for the
transmission of prescription information
regarding items and services that are not
drugs (for example, supplies or
laboratory tests).
Interoperable systems have the
technical capacity to transmit and
receive information from other devices
and applications in a secure and
intelligible manner. We believe that
interoperability can serve as an
important safeguard against fraud and
abuse, because a requirement that
protected technology be fully
interoperable would mitigate the risk
that an entity could offer free or reduced
price technology to a referring physician
as a means of maintaining or increasing
that physician’s referrals to the entity.
With interoperable electronic
prescribing technology, the physician
would be free to transmit prescriptions
to any appropriate pharmacy.
At this time, there are no regulatory
standards to ensure that electronic
prescription information products are
interoperable with other products.
However, we note that interoperability
may be required in the future under
final regulations regarding the standards
for the Part D electronic prescription
drug program. To the extent that either
the hardware or software can be
interoperable, we propose at
§ 411.357(v)(3) to prohibit donors or
their agents from taking any actions to
disable or limit that interoperability or
otherwise impose barriers to
compatibility. We believe this condition
is necessary to limit the ability of a
donor, such as a hospital, to use the
provision of items or services to tie the
physicians to the facility.
We are considering defining the term
‘‘interoperable’’ to mean the ability of
different information systems, software
applications, and networks to
communicate and exchange information
in an accurate, secure, effective, useful,
and consistent manner. (See generally
44 U.S.C. § 3601(6) (pertaining to the
management and promotion of
electronic government services).) We are
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soliciting public comment about this
approach, our definition of the term
‘‘interoperable,’’ alternative means of
ensuring the maximum level of
interoperability, and the types of
software currently available for
electronic prescribing.
b. Value of Protected Technology
We are considering whether to limit
the aggregate fair market value of all
items and services provided to a
physician from a single donor. We
believe a monetary limit is appropriate
and reasonable to minimize the
potential for fraud and abuse. We are
soliciting public comment on the
amount of a cap that would adequately
protect the program against abuse, the
methodology used to determine the cap
(for example, fixed dollar amount,
percentage of the value of the donated
technology, or another methodology),
whether the same cap would be
adequate if there were protection for the
donation of multi-functional hardware
and connectivity services, whether the
cap should be reduced over time, and
whether the cap places a disadvantage
on smaller entities that do not have the
financial resources of larger chains or
organizations.
We are also interested in comments
on the retail and nonretail costs of
obtaining electronic prescribing
technology and the degree to which
physicians may already possess items or
services that could be used for
electronic prescribing. We have received
varying estimates of the costs of
implementing electronic prescribing
through the comment process for our EPrescribing and the Prescription Drug
Program proposed rule published on
February 4, 2005 in the Federal Register
(70 FR 6256). We also have explored the
available literature on the costs of
implementing electronic prescribing.
(See section IV of this preamble.) We
caution that the cost of implementing an
electronic prescribing program will not
correlate necessarily to the amount of
any cap if one is established. Moreover,
we do not expect that donors will wish
necessarily to donate the total amount
that the technology costs or, depending
on the size of a cap, the total amount
ultimately protected in the final rule.
Although we are interested in obtaining
detailed information about the costs of
the full range of technology so as to be
fully informed on this matter, we do not
expect that the final regulations will
protect all possible costs.
c. Other Conditions
We seek to minimize the potential for
abuse and to ensure that the protected
technology furthers the congressional
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purpose of promoting electronic
prescribing as a means of improving the
quality of care for all patients. We
believe that any protected items and
services must, to the extent possible, be
usable by physicians for electronic
prescribing for all patients to ensure that
uninsured and non-Medicare patients
receive the same benefits that the
technology may engender, including
reduction of errors and improvements in
care. Some donated technology (such as
software for tracking prescriptions or
formularies of a particular MA
organization’s patients) may not be
applicable to all patients. However,
other technology (for example, handheld devices and software that transmit
prescriptions to pharmacies) is
potentially usable for all patients, and
physicians should not be restricted from
using such technology for all patients.
Accordingly, proposed § 411.357(v)(4)
would require that, where possible,
physicians must be able to use the
protected technology for all patients
without regard to payor status.
Proposed § 411.357(v)(5) would
provide that neither the physician nor
the physician’s practice (including
employees and staff members) may
make the donation of qualifying
electronic prescribing technology items
or services a condition of doing business
with the entity.
Proposed § 411.357(v)(6) and (v)(7)
would incorporate conditions that are
consistent with the conditions in the
other regulatory exceptions under the
physician self-referral prohibition.
Paragraph (v)(6) would provide that the
eligibility of a physician to receive items
and services from a DHS entity, and the
amount and nature of the items and
services received, may not be
determined in a manner that takes into
account the volume or value of the
physician’s referrals to the DHS entity
or other business generated between the
physician and the DHS entity. This does
not preclude selection criteria that are
based upon the total number of
prescriptions written by a physician, but
the proposed regulation would prohibit
criteria based upon the volume or value
of prescriptions written by the
physician that are dispensed or paid by
the donor, as well as any criteria based
on any other business generated
between the parties. We are interested
in comments with respect to other
potential criteria for selecting medical
staff recipients of donated technology.
Also, the exception would not protect
arrangements that seek to induce a
physician to change loyalties from other
providers or plans to the donor (for
example, a hospital using an electronic
prescribing technology arrangement to
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induce a physician who is on the
medical staff of another hospital to join
the donor hospital’s medical staff for a
purpose of referring patients to the
donor hospital). Proposed
§ 411.357(v)(7) would require the
arrangement to be in writing, to be
signed by the parties, to identify with
specificity the items or services being
provided and the value of those items
and services, and to include the
certification described in section II.A.1
of this proposed rule. To permit
effective oversight of protected
arrangements, the written agreement
must cover all of the qualifying
electronic prescribing technology to be
furnished to the physician by the DHS
entity. For example, if a hospital
provides a piece of hardware under one
arrangement and then subsequently
provides a software program, the
agreement regarding the software would
have to include a description of the
previously donated hardware (including
its nature and value). In addition, the
written agreement must include a
certification by the physician that the
items and services are not technically or
functionally equivalent to any items or
services that he or she already possesses
or has already obtained.
Proposed § 411.357(v)(8) would
provide that the DHS entity must not
have actual knowledge of, or act in
reckless disregard or deliberate
ignorance of, the fact that the physician
possessed or had obtained items and
services that were technically or
functionally equivalent to those donated
by the entity. In other words, the DHS
entity would not be subject to sanctions
under section 1877(g) of the Act if it did
not know or have reason to suspect that
the physician certification required
under § 411.357(v)(7)(iv) was false.
B. Exceptions for Certain Arrangements
Involving Electronic Health Records
Items and Services: § 411.357(w) and
§ 411.357(x)
The implementation of electronic
health information technology is a
compelling national priority to improve
our healthcare system. Interoperable
electronic health information
technology would allow patient
information to be portable and to move
with consumers from one point of care
to another. This would require an
infrastructure that can help clinicians
gain access to critical health information
when treatment decisions are being
made, while keeping that information
confidential and secure. We believe that
the promise of a secure and seamless
information exchange that reduces
medical errors, improves the quality of
patient care, and improves efficiency
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59187
will be realized only when we have a
standardized system that is open,
adaptable, interoperable, and
predictable.
We believe that interoperable
electronic health records technology,
once implemented, has the potential to
increase health care quality and
improve efficiency, which are outcomes
consistent with our goals in exploring
Pay-for-Performance options. We
believe it is important to promote these
open, interconnected, interoperable
electronic health records systems that
help improve the quality of patient care
and efficiency in the delivery of health
care to patients, without protecting
arrangements that hinder marketplace
competition, serve as marketing
platforms, or are mechanisms to
influence inappropriately clinical
decision-making.
Accordingly, in addition to the
electronic prescribing exception, we are
proposing to use our legal authority
under section 1877(b)(4) of the Act to
promulgate two new exceptions, at
§ 411.357(w) and § 411.357(x), to protect
non-abusive arrangements involving the
provision of software and directly
related training services that are
necessary and used to receive, transmit,
and maintain the electronic health
records of the entity’s or physician’s
patients. The first exception would
apply to donations made before the
Secretary’s adoption of product
certification criteria, including criteria
for the interoperability, functionality,
and privacy and security of electronic
health records technology (these criteria
are referred to herein as ‘‘product
certification criteria’’), and would
provide limited protection. For
purposes of this rulemaking, we will
refer to this exception as the ‘‘preinteroperability’’ exception. The second
exception would apply to donations
made after product certification criteria
are adopted by the Secretary. For
purposes of this rulemaking, we will
refer to this exception as the ‘‘postinteroperability’’ exception. In
recognition of the reduction in the risk
of fraud and abuse that may result from
interoperable systems, the postinteroperability exception would offer
broader protection than the preinteroperability exception.
We are concerned about the risk of
program abuse that may be posed by a
DHS entity’s provision of valuable
technology to physicians. We believe
that this risk increases as the value of
the technology to the physician
increases. The provision of electronic
health records technology to physicians
poses greater risk of abuse than the
provision of limited electronic
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prescribing technology, because
electronic health records technology is
inherently more valuable to physicians
in terms of actual cost, avoided
overhead, and administrative expenses
of an office practice. However, in light
of the potential patient benefits of
electronic health records, we have
attempted to construct exceptions that
include several criteria designed to
ensure that the exceptions do not pose
a risk of program or patient abuse. We
will continue to evaluate the risks posed
by the donation to physicians of
electronic health records technology
and may refine or add additional
safeguards to the final rule to ensure
that the exceptions do not pose a risk of
program or patient abuse. We are
requesting comments on whether
hardware, connectivity and related
items and services should also be
protected under either or both these
exceptions, and, if so, under what
conditions.
1. Pre-Interoperability Exception
[If you choose to comment on issues in
this section, please include the caption
‘‘Pre-Interoperability Electronic Health
Records Exception: § 411.357(w)’’ at the
beginning of your comment.]
We wish to recognize the innovative
early adopters of electronic health
records technology and establish an
exception to protect donations of such
technology made before the Secretary
has adopted product certification
criteria for electronic health records.
However, as noted above in section
II.A.3 with respect to electronic
prescribing, it is important that
protected electronic health records
software be interoperable to the extent
technologically feasible and that neither
donors nor their agents take any actions
to disable or limit interoperability or
otherwise impose barriers to
compatibility. Unlike electronic
prescribing, at this time, there are no
proposed Federal regulatory standards
for electronic health records, nor are
there any product certification criteria
with which electronic health records
software can comply. Nonetheless,
while product certification criteria are
being developed, we are proposing the
narrow pre-interoperability exception
described below to protect certain
donations of electronic health records
technology in an effort to stimulate and
promote the expansion of technology in
the health care industry.
a. Covered Technology
We are proposing to protect only
electronic health records software, that
is, software that is essential to and used
solely for the transmission, receipt, or
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maintenance of patients’ electronic
health records. To be protected by this
exception, the donated electronic health
records software must have an
electronic prescribing component. The
required electronic prescribing
component must consist of software that
is used to receive and transmit
electronically prescription drug
information in accordance with
electronic prescribing standards
published by the Secretary under
section 1860D–4(e)(4) of the Act. We are
soliciting comments on whether the
exception should permit the electronic
prescribing component of electronic
health record software to be used for the
transmission of prescription information
regarding items and services that are not
drugs (for example, supplies or
laboratory tests). Additionally, we are
soliciting comments with respect to
whether we should also or instead
require that electronic health records
software include a computerized
provider order entry (CPOE) component.
We are proposing at § 411.357(w)(8) not
to protect the provision of other types of
technology, including, for example,
hardware, connectivity services, billing
or scheduling software, or software that
might be used by a physician to conduct
personal business or business unrelated
to the physician’s medical practice.
Although the proposed exception would
protect necessary training services in
connection with the software, the
exception would not protect the
provision of staff to physicians or their
offices.
We are mindful that there may be
particular constituencies, such as rural
area providers, that lack sufficient
hardware or connectivity services to
implement effective electronic health
records systems. We are soliciting
comments addressing these special
circumstances.
In order to protect further against
abuse, we are considering including in
the final regulations a definition of
‘‘electronic health records’’ for purposes
of the exception. We are soliciting
comments on how we should draft this
definition. In particular, we are
interested in public comments that
address the types of software that
should be protected; the retail and
nonretail cost of this software; the ways
in which this software is currently
marketed (for example, individual
applications versus bundled software
packages); methods for defining the
scope of protected software; and
safeguards that might be imposed (either
in the definition or separately) to ensure
that the exception does not pose a risk
of program or patient abuse. Finally, we
are soliciting public comment on
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whether and, if so, how to protect the
provision of other kinds of electronic
health information technology.
We are proposing to interpret
‘‘necessary’’ in the new exception
consistent with our interpretation of the
term in section II.A.1 of this proposed
rule and to include a comparable
provision at § 411.357(w)(5)(iv) to
ensure that the exception does not
protect the provision of items or
services that are technically and
functionally equivalent to items and
services the physician currently
possesses or has obtained. As with
electronic prescribing technology, we
are concerned that there may be a risk
that physicians would intentionally
divest themselves of functionally or
technically equivalent technology that
they already possess to shift costs to
donors and we are soliciting public
comment on whether and how to
address this situation.
b. Standards With Which Donated
Technology Must Comply
The pre-interoperability exception
would require at § 411.357(w)(9) that
any protected software must include an
electronic prescribing component that
complies with standards established by
the Secretary for the Part D electronic
prescription drug program. Moreover, as
with the electronic prescribing
exception discussed above, we would
require at § 411.357(w)(2) that neither
donor entities nor their agents take any
actions to disable or limit
interoperability of any component of the
software or otherwise impose barriers to
compatibility. We are also considering
requiring protected software to comply
with relevant Public Health Information
Network preparedness standards, such
as those related to BioSense. We are
soliciting comments on these and other
appropriate standards.
We are interested in comments
addressing whether this preinteroperability exception may have the
unintended effect of impeding the
beneficial spread of interoperable
electronic health records systems by
promoting closed or isolated systems or
systems that effectively tie physicians to
particular providers or suppliers. For
example, a hospital that donates
expensive technology to a physician
may exercise control over that physician
sufficient to preclude or discourage
other systems or health plans from
having access to the physician for their
own networks.
c. Permissible Donors
Proposed § 411.357(w) would protect
the same categories of donors and
physicians as the proposed exception
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for electronic prescribing items and
services at § 411.357(v). We believe that
donors should be limited to hospitals,
group practices, PDP sponsors, and MA
organizations because they have a direct
and primary patient care relationship
and therefore have a central role in the
health care delivery infrastructure that
justifies protection for the furnishing of
electronic health records technology
that would not be appropriate for other
types of providers and suppliers,
including providers and suppliers of
ancillary services. Moreover, hospitals,
group practices, PDP sponsors, and MA
organizations are potentially in a better
position to promote widespread use of
electronic health records technology
that has the greatest degree of openness
and interoperability. We do not believe
that providers and suppliers of ancillary
services, such as laboratories, are wellpositioned to advance the goal of
widespread use of interoperable
electronic health records for patients,
nor would they have the same interest
in doing so. Nevertheless, we are
interested in comments regarding
whether other categories of donors
should be included and why. We are
also interested in comments with
respect to whether different or
alternative conditions should apply to
any category of donor. In addition, we
note that some donations of electronic
health records software and related
training services may fit within existing
exceptions, including those at § 411.352
(for group practices) and § 411.355(c)
(for certain prepaid health plans).
d. Selection of Recipients
We are proposing at § 411.357(w)(4) a
condition, consistent with other
regulatory exceptions, that the eligibility
of a recipient to receive items and
services from a donor, and the amount
and nature of the items and services
received, may not be determined in a
manner that takes into account the
volume or value of the recipient’s
referrals to the donor or other business
generated between the parties. We are
interested in comments with respect to
potential criteria for selecting physician
recipients of donated electronic health
records software and related training
services.
e. Value of Protected Technology
We believe it would be appropriate to
limit the aggregate value of the
protected software and directly related
training services that a DHS entity could
provide to a physician under the
exception. The cap under the proposed
pre-interoperability exception would be
directly related to any cap adopted in
connection with the electronic
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prescribing exception discussed in
section II.A.3. of this proposed rule. We
believe this approach is consistent with
the purpose of the physician self-referral
prohibition and would also minimize
any competitive disadvantage for
smaller entities that do not have the
financial resources or potential volume
of technology business of larger chains
or organizations.
We are interested in comments
regarding the appropriate amount and
methodology of a limiting cap. In
addition to an aggregate dollar cap, we
are considering two alternative
approaches: (1) A cap that would be set
at a percentage of the value of the
donated technology to the physician
(thus requiring the physician to share
the costs); or (2) a cap set at the lower
of a fixed dollar amount or a percentage
of the value of the technology to the
physician. We are soliciting public
comment about this approach, including
comments on how a cap under this
exception would relate to a cap under
the exception proposed at § 411.357(v)
and how the value of technology
provided under the final exceptions
would be aggregated. We are concerned
that DHS entities may abuse the
proposed exceptions for electronic
prescribing items and services and
electronic health records software and
training services by selectively relying
on both exceptions to maximize the
value of technology provided to
physicians as a means of disguising
payments for referrals. We believe
conditions should be included in the
final regulation to prevent this abuse
and are considering requiring an overall
cap on value, as well as documentation
requirements that integrate all
technology provided under the final
exceptions. We are interested in public
comments that address the retail and
nonretail costs (that is, the costs of
purchasing from manufacturers,
distributors, or other nonretail sources)
of obtaining electronic health records
software and training services necessary
to promote the widespread adoption of
electronic health records. We are also
interested in comments that address the
degree to which physicians may already
possess items or services that could be
used for electronic health records. In
addition, we are soliciting comments on
whether and, if so, how to take into
account physician access to any
software that is publicly available either
free or at a reduced price.
f. Other Conditions
To ensure further that this new
exception does not pose a risk of
program or patient abuse and for the
reasons discussed in section II.A.3 of
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59189
this proposed rule, we are incorporating
in § 411.357(w) certain other conditions
described above in connection with
§ 11.357(v). These include a restriction
at § 411.357(w)(3) on conditioning
business on the receipt of electronic
health records technology, a restriction
at § 411.357(w)(4) on the provision of
items and services related to the volume
or value of referrals, a documentation
requirement at § 411.357(w)(5), and an
all-payors requirement at
§ 411.357(w)(7). Proposed
§ 411.357(w)(10) would require that the
arrangement not violate the antikickback statute (section 1128B(b) of the
Act) or any Federal or State law or
regulation governing billing or claims
submission. Because the provision of
valuable items and services to a referral
source can be used to induce or reward
referrals, compliance with the antikickback statute is required to ensure
that the protected arrangements do not
pose a risk of abuse. This condition is
consistent with the other regulatory
exceptions to the physician self-referral
law and was discussed in the interim
final rule published on March 26, 2004
in the Federal Register (69 FR 16108).
We believe that requiring compliance
with the anti-kickback statute is
particularly important because of the
high dollar value of electronic health
records technology.
g. Sunset Provision
We are also proposing a provision at
§ 411.357(w)(11) that would sunset the
pre-interoperability exception
applicable to electronic health records
software and training services at the
time that the post-interoperability
exception at § 411.357(x) (see discussion
in section II.B.2 of this proposed rule)
becomes effective.
2. Post-Interoperability Electronic
Health Records Exception
[If you choose to comment on issues in
this section, please include the caption
‘‘Post-Interoperability Electronic Health
Records Exception: § 411.357(x)’’ at the
beginning of your comment.]
We realize that variable (that is, nonstandardized) adoption of electronic
health records systems could discourage
market forces and competition from
improving healthcare. Interoperability
could mitigate many of our concerns
regarding the potential anti-competitive
effects of stand-alone electronic health
records. We recognize that stand-alone
electronic health records systems, even
if widely adopted, may not deliver the
error reductions, cost savings or
marketplace changes necessary to meet
the Secretary’s goals, and could even
shift the market toward more
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fragmentation. We believe that only
open, interconnected, interoperable
electronic health records systems will
allow for the free flow of information
necessary to realize the full potential
benefits of this technology.
We anticipate that a process to
identify product certification criteria,
including uniform industry standards
for interoperability, functionality, and
privacy and security, may be completed
in the next year. The health information
technology contractors and the
American Health Information
Community (AHIC) will be considering
processes to set standards and to certify
and inspect electronic health records
technology; these processes and
standards will be recommended to the
Secretary for recognition and adoption.
A certified product will meet all of the
criteria adopted by the Secretary,
including criteria for interoperability,
functionality, and privacy and security,
through the process recognized by the
Secretary. The post-interoperability
exception will protect only the donation
of certified electronic health records
technology. We are soliciting comments
on how these processes under
development might impact the scope of
a final exception for electronic health
records.
Once the Secretary adopts product
certification criteria for interoperable
electronic health records technology, we
intend to finalize the exception
described below, which offers broader
protection specific to the donation of
certified electronic health records
systems. We discuss below an expanded
exception for the donation of electronic
health records software that is certified
in accordance with the product
certification criteria and process
adopted by the Secretary.
a. Covered Technology
We are proposing to expand the scope
of covered software, potentially
including other kinds of software,
provided that the core functions of the
donated software are electronic
prescribing and electronic health
records. It is our intent that electronic
prescribing and electronic health
records be the core functions of the
protected donated technology, but we
also want to ensure that integrated
packages that could positively impact
patient care are not excluded from the
post-interoperability exception. We
intend to protect systems that improve
patient care rather than systems
comprised solely or primarily of
technology that is incidental to the core
functions of electronic prescribing and
electronic health records. Although the
proposed exception would protect
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necessary training services in
connection with the software, we
specify at § 411.357(x)(8) that the
exception would not protect the
provision of staff to physicians or their
offices or the provision of items or
services used by a physician solely to
conduct personal business or business
unrelated to the physician’s medical
practice. We are soliciting public
comments on what types of software
should be protected under the postinteroperability exception and methods
for ensuring that electronic prescribing
and electronic health records are the
core functions of the donated
technology. As with the preinteroperability exception, we propose
at § 411.357(x)(9) that the technology
protected under this exception must
include an electronic prescribing
component, and we are soliciting
comments with respect to whether we
should also or instead require that
electronic health records software
include a CPOE component.
b. Standards With Which Donated
Technology Must Comply
We are proposing in § 411.357(x)(2)
that the donated electronic health
records software must be certified in
accordance with the product
certification criteria adopted by the
Secretary. In addition, we propose at
§ 411.357(x)(9) that the electronic
prescribing component must comply
with electronic prescribing standards
established by the Secretary under the
Part D program, to the extent those
standards are not incorporated into the
product certification criteria adopted by
the Secretary. Accordingly, no
protection would be available under the
post-interoperability exception until
product certification criteria are
adopted.
c. Permissible Donors
In new § 411.357(x)(1), we are
proposing to protect the same categories
of donors protected under the preinteroperability exception as discussed
in section II.B.1 of this proposed rule.
We are also considering whether to
protect additional categories of donors
and whether different or alternative
conditions should apply to any category
of permissible donor. We are interested
in comments addressing the types of
individuals and entities that should be
protected, the degree of need for
protection, and the safeguards that
should be imposed to protect against
fraud and abuse.
d. Selection of Recipients
Because certified, interoperable
systems would offer enhanced
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protection against some types of fraud
and abuse, we are proposing to permit
donors to use selective criteria for
choosing recipients, provided that
neither the eligibility of a recipient, nor
the amount or nature of the items or
services, is determined in a manner that
directly takes into account the volume
or value of the referrals or other
business generated between the parties.
Proposed § 411.357(x)(4) would
enumerate several selection criteria that
would be deemed not to be directly
related to volume or value of referrals or
other business generated between the
parties. For example, selection criteria
that are based upon the total number of
prescriptions written by a physician
would not be precluded, but the
proposed regulation would prohibit
criteria based upon the number or value
of prescriptions written by the
physician and dispensed or paid by the
DHS entity, as well as criteria based on
any other business generated between
the parties. Also, the exception would
not protect arrangements that seek to
induce a physician to change loyalties
from other providers or plans to the
DHS entity.
We expect that this approach will
ensure that donated technology can be
targeted at physicians who use it the
most, in order to promote a public
policy favoring adoption of the
technology, while discouraging
problematic direct correlations with
Medicare referrals (for example, a
hospital offering a physician 10 new
computers for every 500 referrals of
Medicare payable procedures). We
caution, however, that outside of the
context of electronic health records, as
specifically addressed in this proposed
rule, and except as permitted in
§ 411.352(i) (special rules for
productivity bonuses and profit shares
distributed to group practice
physicians), both direct and indirect
correlations between the provision of
goods or services and the volume or
value of referrals or other business
generated between the parties are
prohibited. We are interested in public
comments about this approach,
including whether there may be
unintended consequences that would
inhibit the adoption of interoperable
technology or lead to abusive
arrangements and, if so, whether more
or less restrictive conditions would be
preferable. We are also soliciting public
comments on other possible criteria that
would be an acceptable basis for
selecting recipients of the donated
technology.
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e. Value of Protected Technology
We are considering whether a larger
cap on the value of the donated software
would be appropriate. In the discussion
of the pre-interoperability exception at
section II.B.1 of this preamble, we noted
various alternatives we are considering
in connection with a limiting cap and
outlined issues about which we are
soliciting comments. We are considering
similar issues, and are interested in
similar comments, in connection with
the appropriate amount of a cap for
interoperable, certified technology
donated under the post-interoperability
exception.
We are interested in comments
regarding the appropriate amount and
methodology of a limiting cap. In
addition to an aggregate dollar cap, we
are considering two alternative
approaches: (1) A cap that would be set
at a percentage of the value of the
donated technology to the physician
(thus requiring the physician to share
the costs); or (2) a cap set at the lower
of a fixed dollar amount or a percentage
of the value of the technology to the
physician. We are soliciting public
comment about this approach, including
comments on how a cap under this
exception would relate to a cap under
the exceptions proposed at § 411.357(v)
and § 411.357(w) and how the value of
technology provided under the final
exceptions would be aggregated. We are
interested in public comments that
address the retail and nonretail costs
(that is, the costs of purchasing from
manufacturers, distributors, or other
nonretail sources) of obtaining
electronic health records software and
training services necessary to promote
the widespread adoption of certified
electronic health records systems. We
are also interested in comments that
address the degree to which physicians
may already possess items or services
that could be used for electronic health
records. In addition, we are soliciting
comments on whether and, if so, how to
take into account physicians’ access to
any software that is publicly available
either free or at a reduced price.
f. Other Conditions
Similar to the proposed electronic
prescribing and pre-interoperability
exceptions, the proposed postinteroperability exception would
incorporate additional conditions as
discussed in section II.A.3 above. These
include a restriction at § 411.357(x)(3)
on conditioning business on the receipt
of electronic health records technology,
a documentation requirement at
§ 411.357(x)(5), a requirement at
§ 411.357(x)(6) that the DHS entity not
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have actual knowledge or act in reckless
disregard or deliberate ignorance of the
fact that the physician possesses or has
obtained duplicative items or services,
an all-payors requirement at
§ 411.357(x)(7), and a requirement at
§ 411.357(x)(10) that the arrangement
not violate the anti-kickback statute
(section 1128B(b) of the Act) or any
Federal or State law or regulation
governing billing or claims submission.
III. Collection of Information
Requirements
[If you choose to comment on issues in
this section, please include the caption
‘‘Collection of Information
Requirements’’ at the beginning of your
comment.]
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995, we are required to provide 60day notice in the Federal Register and
solicit public comment before a
collection of information requirement is
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) for review and
approval. In order to evaluate fairly
whether an information collection
should be approved by OMB, section
3506(c)(2)(A) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 requires that we
solicit comment on the following issues:
• The need for the information
collection and its usefulness in carrying
out the proper functions of our agency.
• The accuracy of our estimate of the
information collection burden.
• The quality, utility, and clarity of
the information to be collected.
• Recommendations to minimize the
information collection burden on the
affected public, including automated
collection techniques.
We are soliciting public comment on
each of these issues for the exceptions
that are being proposed by this
document. The electronic prescribing
exception and the electronic health
records exceptions would include an
information collection requirement; that
is, there would be a written, signed
agreement for the provision to a
physician of qualifying electronic
technology.
The exception at § 411.357(v) would
apply to the donation of non-monetary
remuneration (consisting of items and
services in the form of hardware,
software, or information technology and
training services) necessary and used
solely to receive and transmit electronic
prescription information. The
exceptions at § 411.357(w) and
§ 411.357(x) would apply to nonmonetary remuneration consisting of
items and services (in the form of
electronic health records software and
directly related training services) that is
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59191
necessary to receive, transmit, and
maintain electronic health records.
These exceptions are limited to
donations made by hospitals to
physicians who are members of their
medical staffs, by group practices to
their physician members, and by PDP
sponsors and MA organizations to
physicians in their networks. Each of
these arrangements must be in a writing
that is signed by the parties and that
identifies the items or services being
provided and their value. In addition,
the written arrangement must include a
certification by the physician that the
items and services to be provided are
not technically or functionally
equivalent to any items or services he or
she already possesses or has already
obtained.
The burden associated with the
written agreement requirement is the
time and effort necessary for
documentation of the agreement
between the parties, including
signatures of the parties, and the signed
certification by physicians.
We do not know how many hospitals,
PDP sponsors, or MA organizations
would use the exceptions that apply to
qualifying electronic prescribing
technology and electronic health
records software and training services.
However, as explained in section II.A.2
of this proposed rule, we expect that
few group practices would use either
exception because existing exceptions
would likely apply to permit a group
practice to provide its physician
members with qualifying electronic
prescribing items and services and
electronic health records software and
training services. Thus, few group
practices would be affected by this
exception and any related paperwork
burdens.
In addition, because the donation of
qualifying electronic prescribing
technology and electronic health
records software and training services is
voluntary, we believe that some
hospitals, PDP sponsors, and MA
organizations will not avail themselves
of this exception and will therefore not
experience any paperwork burden.
Finally, we believe that, for those
entities that choose to donate qualifying
electronic prescribing technology or
electronic health records software and
training services to physicians, the
paperwork burden will be limited by the
terms of each exception. Each exception
requires the donated items and services
to be necessary and not duplicative of
items and services the physician already
possesses or has obtained.
We expect that every hospital, PDP
sponsor, and MA organization that
would choose to furnish qualifying
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 195 / Tuesday, October 11, 2005 / Proposed Rules
electronic prescribing technology or
electronic health records software and
training services to physicians would
likely use a model agreement that lists
or describes the electronic items and
services to be donated. We expect that
State or national organizations
representing lawyers, physicians, group
practices, hospitals, PDP sponsors, and
MA organizations would create model
agreements for their members. However,
we also expect that attorneys for large
providers (for example, academic
medical centers) would create model
agreements. We estimate that an entity
that creates a model agreement would
have to spend approximately 3 hours to
draft two model agreements (one for
each exception). We estimate that it
would take a donor hospital 20 minutes
to both tailor each model agreement for
each physician and to sign each
agreement. We estimate that each
physician would also spend 20 minutes
reading and signing each agreement and
completing the necessary certification.
We recognize that a physician and an
entity would have to understand the
differences between the items and
services that an entity is offering and the
items and services that the physician
already possesses or has obtained.
As of April 2003, there were 586,411
physicians who provided Part B
physician services to beneficiaries and
(as of December 31, 2003) 6,057
hospitals that participated in Medicare.
As of January 1, 2006, we expect that
there would be at least two PDP
sponsors serving each State and at least
270 MA plans. We assume that each
physician is on the medical staff of two
hospitals and would treat patients who
are members of one PDP and two MA
plans.
We do not believe that physicians
would be willing now to participate in
more than one type of electronic system
because of the time necessary to learn to
use each system efficiently. Because
items and services must be necessary
and used solely for electronic
prescribing or electronic health records,
we estimate that, on average, physicians
would receive items and services from
only one entity. (We recognize that two
or more entities could each provide
necessary items and services to a
physician under an exception, but we
do not expect that to occur in the near
future.)
We are unable to estimate how many
entities would provide these items or
services to physicians annually.
However, because the Federal
government has established a goal of
having most Americans’ health
information in electronic form by 2014,
we estimate that one-ninth of all entities
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would begin the process of developing
or using electronic prescribing and
electronic health records each year.
Taking all of this into account, we
expect that no more than 150 State or
national organizations or lawyers for
large hospital systems, PDP sponsors, or
MA organizations would draft
agreements for the 6,057 hospitals, 100
PDP sponsors, and 270 MA
organizations. Because we estimate it
would take 3 hours to prepare a model
agreement, there may be at least two
model agreements, and that 150
organizations would each prepare these
agreements, it could take a maximum of
900 hours to prepare all model
agreements (2 types of model
agreements × 150 model agreements × 3
hours to prepare = 900 hours).
To calculate the maximum number of
hours that reasonably would be required
to complete the agreements, we assume
that 10 percent of the 586,411
physicians would sign an agreement for
electronic items and services. Therefore,
we estimate that annually the donating
entities may spend 19,547 hours in
completing and signing the agreements
(20 minutes × [.10 × 586,411 physicians]
= 19,547 hours). In addition, we
estimate that the cumulative burden on
physicians would also be 19,547 hours.
An additional burden associated with
the requirements for both exceptions
would be that of maintaining
documentation, and, if necessary,
making it available to the Secretary
upon request. We believe that the
information we are requiring entities to
maintain is information that they would
already maintain in the ordinary course
of business. Thus, any information the
Secretary would need would already
have been collected and maintained by
the entities. Moreover, making
information available to the Secretary
should rarely be necessary, as the
information is not collected routinely by
the Secretary. Rather, the information
would likely be collected only during
the conduct of an administrative action,
investigation, or audit involving a
Federal governmental agency regarding
specific individuals or entities. The
paperwork burden associated with these
types of reviews is exempt from the PRA
under 5 CFR 1320.4(a).
If you comment on these information
collection and record keeping
requirements, please mail copies
directly to the following:
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, Office of Strategic
Operations and Regulatory Affairs,
Regulations Development Group,
Attn: Jim Wickliffe, CMS–1303–P,
Room C4–26–05, 7500 Security
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Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244–
1850; and
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and
Budget, Room 10235, New Executive
Office Building, Washington, DC
20503, Attn: CMS Desk Officer, Fax
(202) 395–6974.
IV. Regulatory Impact Statement
[If you choose to comment on issues in
this section, please include the caption
‘‘Regulatory Impact Statement’’ at the
beginning of your comment.]
A. Overall Impact
We have examined the impact of this
rule 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 Social Security Act, the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995, Pub. L.
104–4), the Congressional Review Act (5
U.S.C. 804(2)), and Executive Order
13132.
Executive Order 12866 (as amended
by Executive Order 13258, which
merely reassigns responsibilities of
duties) directs agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, when regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). A regulatory impact analysis
(RIA) must be prepared for final rules
with economically significant effects
(that is, a final rule that would have an
annual effect on the economy of $100
million or more in any one year, or
would adversely affect in a material way
the economy, a sector of the economy,
productivity, competition, jobs, the
environment, public health or safety, or
State, local, or tribal governments or
communities). Because we believe that
the economic impact of this proposed
rule would not exceed $100 million
annually, we have not prepared an RIA.
However, we have analyzed alternatives
and assessed benefits and costs in order
to provide a basis for informed
responses that will help us make final
decisions.
This proposed rule would create new
exceptions to the physician self-referral
prohibition to allow certain entities to
provide technology-related items and
services to physicians for purposes of
conducting electronic prescribing and
maintaining electronic health records.
The exceptions would protect donations
of qualifying electronic prescribing
technology and electronic health
records software and directly related
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training services made by a hospital to
a physician member of its medical staff,
a group practice to a physician member,
and a PDP sponsor or MA organization
to a prescribing physician, provided that
certain conditions are satisfied. The
exceptions should facilitate the
adoption of electronic prescribing and
electronic health records technology by
filling a gap rather than creating the
primary means by which physicians
will adopt these technologies. In other
words, we do not believe that donor
entities will fund all of the health
information technology used by
physicians.
The proposed rule on electronic
prescribing standards, which was
published on February 4, 2005 (70 FR
6256), takes into consideration the
expected cost for the hardware,
software, training and information
technology needed by prescribing
practitioners, including physicians. In
the preamble to that rule, we presented
a Regulatory Impact Analysis covering
the expected effects of electronic
prescribing and the specific standards
proposed. Our analysis showed the
possibility of substantial and
economically significant positive health
effects on consumers and net positive
economic effects on affected entities,
such as physicians, pharmacies, and
health plans. Our analysis focused on
the likelihood that PDP sponsors and
MA organizations would find it in their
interest to pay some or all of the costs
of qualifying electronic prescribing
technology or electronic health records
software and training services to
encourage physician adoption.
This proposed rule would remove a
potential obstacle to the provision of
qualifying electronic prescribing
technology and electronic health
records software and directly related
training services (for purposes of this
Regulatory Impact Statement, herein
referred to as ‘‘qualifying health
information technology’’) by certain
entities. Although this proposed rule
applies to donations of qualified health
information technology donations by
hospitals, group practices, PDP
sponsors, and MA organizations, we
expect that many donor entities may not
need to use these proposed exceptions,
given the existing exceptions at
§ 411.352 and § 411.355(c).
Of particular importance, managed
care services furnished by prepaid
health plans or their contractors may
fall within a previously codified
exception (see § 411.355(c)). We believe
that prepaid plans have substantial
economic incentives to encourage the
adoption of health information
technology by contracting physicians,
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incentives that are larger than those for
most other entities. We are interested in
public comments on whether this
existing exception is sufficiently broad
to accommodate non-abusive
arrangements and to foster the adoption
of health information technology.
Regardless of whether donations
would be allowed under existing
exceptions or those that are included in
this proposed rule, we encourage
commenters to provide information on
the costs that would likely be incurred
by entities that would choose to furnish
qualifying health information
technology to physicians, as well as
other related costs that would likely be
incurred by both donors and physicians,
such as costs incurred for changes in
office procedures.
Our analysis under Executive Order
12866 of the expenditures that entities
may choose to make under this
proposed rule is restricted by potential
effects of outside factors, such as
technological progress and other market
forces, future certification standards,
and companion proposed anti-kickback
statute safe harbors. Furthermore, both
the costs and potential savings of
electronic prescribing, electronic health
records, computerized physician order
entry, and billing and scheduling
software vary to the extent to which
each element operates as a stand-alone
system or as part of an integrated
system. We welcome comments that
will help identify both the independent
and synergistic effects of these variables.
As discussed in the February 4, 2005
E-Prescribing proposed rule at 70 FR
6268 through 6273, we expect that
donors may experience net savings with
electronic prescribing in place and
patients would experience significant
positive health effects. We have not
repeated that analysis in this proposed
rule.
There are numerous studies reporting
that electronic health records in the
ambulatory setting can result in a
substantial improvement in clinical
process. The effects of electronic health
records include: (1) Reducing
unnecessary or duplicative lab and
radiology test ordering by 9 to 14
percent (Bates, D., et al., ‘‘A randomized
trial of a computer-based intervention to
reduce utilization of redundant
laboratory tests,’’ Am. J. Med. 106(2),
144–50 (1999)); (Tierney, W., et al.,
‘‘The effect on test ordering of informing
physicians of the charges for outpatient
diagnostic tests,’’ N. Engl. J. Med.
322(21): 1499–504 (1990)); (Tierney, W.,
et al., ‘‘Computerized display of past
test results. Effect on outpatient
testing,’’ Ann. Intern. Med. 107(4): 569–
74 (1987)); (2) lowering ancillary test
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59193
charges by up to 8 percent (Tierney, W.,
et al., ‘‘Computer predictions of
abnormal test results. Effects on
outpatient testing,’’ JAMA 259: 1194–8
(1988)); (3) reducing hospital
admissions due to adverse drug events
(ADEs), costing an average of $17,000
each, by 2 to 3 percent (Jha, A., et al.,
‘‘Identifying hospital admissions due to
adverse drug events using a computerbased monitor,’’ Pharmacoepidemiology
and Drug Safety 10(2), 113–19 (2001));
and (4) reducing excess medication
usage by 11 percent (Wang, S., et al., ‘‘A
cost-benefit analysis of electronic
medical records in primary care,’’ Am.
J. Med. 114(5): 397–403 (2003)); (Teich,
J., et al., ‘‘Effects of computerized
physician order entry on prescribing
practices,’’ Arch. Intern. Med. 160(18):
2741–7 (2000)). There is also evidence
that electronic health records can
reduce administrative inefficiency and
paper handling. (Khoury, A., ‘‘Support
of quality and business goals by an
ambulatory automated medical record
system in Kaiser Permanente of Ohio,’’
Eff. Clin.Pract. 1(2): 73–82 (1998)). Most
recently, a large study evaluating the
impact of electronic health records on
resource utilization in two States found
that physician visits decreased by 9
percent 2 years after implementation.
These studies show a consistent
pattern of clinical utilization reductions
that have been reported to arise from
electronic health records use in
ambulatory settings. Although financial
estimates were not performed in these
studies, these utilization reductions
could yield savings that accrue to
Medicare because of its use of volumebased payments for ambulatory and
inpatient care. Other studies have
estimated that electronic health records
in the ambulatory setting would save
$78 billion to $112 billion annually,
across all payors. This estimate includes
up to $34 billion in annual savings from
ambulatory computerized provider
order entry (Johnston, D., et al., ‘‘The
Value of Computerized Provider Order
Entry in Ambulatory Settings,’’ Center
for IT Leadership, Wellesley, MA
(2003)) and up to $78 billion annually
from interoperability of electronic
health records (Walker, J., et al., ‘‘The
Value of Health Care Information
Exchange and Interoperability,’’ Health
Affairs, https://www.healthaffairs.org
(online exclusive) (2005)).
At the same time, the costs of
electronic health records and other
health information technology are very
substantial. For example, one estimate
of HIPAA compliance costs alone
indicated that hospitals would need to
spend $14 billion and health plans more
than $5 billion. (Duncan, M., ‘‘August
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2002 HIPAA Panel Results: Expected
Costs/Benefits,’’ Gartner (2002)). The
range of cost estimates for electronic
health records alone is wide. At one
extreme, there are software systems
under development that may be offered
to physician settings free or at the cost
of perhaps several thousand dollars,
while others may cost $20,000 to
$30,000. Extrapolated to the universe of
health plans, hospitals, and physicians,
total investment costs are likely to reach
the billions of dollars.
It is unclear how rapidly adoption is
now occurring. A recent study indicates
‘‘practices are encountering greaterthan-expected barriers to adopting an
[electronic health records] system, but
the adoption rate continues to rise.’’
(Gans, D., et al., ‘‘Medical Groups’
Adoption of Electronic Health Records
and Information Systems,’’ Health
Affairs, September/October 2005). This
study dealt only with group practices,
and found greater difficulties in smaller
groups. We can infer similar
implementation difficulties for
individual physician practices. For
example, this study found the average
initial cost of implementing an
electronic health records system to be
$33,000 per physician, with
maintenance costs of $1,500 per
physician per month, numbers which
‘‘would translate into about a 10 percent
reduction in take-home pay each year
for most primary care practices’’ if
amortized over 5 years. (See Gans, D.).
Another recent study reviews a broader
range of providers and is equally
pessimistic, arguing that the economic
incentives of most stakeholders do not
support health information technology
investments. According to that article,
‘‘The greater marvel is that any
physician, at his or her personal
expense, would install a system that
* * * saves money for every health care
stakeholder except the adopting
physician.’’ (Kleinke, J.D., ‘‘Dot-Gov:
Market Failure and the Creation of a
National Health Information Technology
System,’’ Health Affairs, September/
October 2005). This study is also more
pessimistic than most about the
business case for managed care plans to
make health information technology
investments, arguing that investments
benefit not only the investing firm but
also its competitors. Many other studies,
discussed below, are more optimistic
about economic returns to physicians.
However, the disparate results illustrate
the uncertainty that prevents us from
making confident quantitative estimates
of rates of adoption.
We assume that health information
technology costs and benefits will be
realized eventually. Even without
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government intervention, there is a
lively market today, and as consensus
standards evolve, that market will grow.
The question as to the regulatory impact
of the proposed rule is: Taking into
account available policy instruments
(notably the development of
interoperability standards), to what
extent would the use of these proposed
physician self-referral exceptions
accelerate adoption of electronic
prescribing and electronic health
records?
We do not have good baseline
information. There are numerous
estimates for the adoption of electronic
prescribing by health plans, hospitals,
physicians, and (for prescribing of drugs
only) pharmacies. However, these
estimates are clouded by uncertainty.
For example, some studies count
facsimile transmission of prescriptions
as electronic prescribing. The majority
of physician offices now use computers,
and have high-speed Internet access, but
less than one in five uses electronic
health records. (Goldsmith, J., et al.,
‘‘Federal Health Information Policy: A
Case of Arrested Development,’’ Health
Affairs, July/August 2003 (citing 17
percent adoption)). The Gans study
found that about 12 percent of medical
group practices have a fully
implemented electronic health records
system, and another 13 percent are in
the process of implementation. For
smaller group practices these
percentages fall to 10 and 10,
respectively. (See Gans, D., supra).
As discussed below, we estimate that
2 percent of physicians and 2 percent of
all hospitals, group practices, MA
organizations and PDP sponsors would
be affected by these proposed
exceptions each year. That is, only one
in five of the potential donors of
qualifying health information
technology will utilize these exceptions.
As explained in the February 4, 2005 EPrescribing proposed rule (70 FR 6256),
we believe that between 5 and 18
percent of prescribers, including
physicians, are currently participating
in some electronic prescribing. In
addition, we explained that we believe
that the proportion of prescribers using
electronic prescribing would increase by
about 10 percent annually over the next
5 years (70 FR 6256). We believe it is
likely that about one in five of those
prescribers would receive assistance
under these proposed exceptions and
another one in five would receive
assistance under the exceptions already
in place that apply to managed care
plans and group practices.
These estimates depend primarily on
the decisions of MA organizations and
PDP sponsors as to whether to provide
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assistance to physicians for electronic
prescribing and electronic health
records and the decisions of group
practices to implement these systems.
We welcome information about the
intentions of MA organizations and PDP
sponsors to make donations of
qualifying health information
technology to physicians and the
willingness of group practices to
implement these systems.
Even if we were able to determine
more precisely the number of
physicians who are currently engaged
in, and the number of physicians who
will engage in, electronic prescribing,
we cannot estimate with certainty the
number of those physicians who would
receive donated items and services.
Some entities may be unwilling or
unable to donate items or services, and
some physicians already have the
requisite items and services. In addition,
we cannot estimate with certainty the
cost of the qualifying health information
technology that a physician would need
from a donor. Part of this uncertainty is
due to varying needs for the technology.
For example, we expect that for face-toface encounters with patients in
hospital inpatient and outpatient
departments, physicians would
primarily use a hand-held device, for
example, a personal digital assistant
(PDA). Alternatively, physicians might
find it easier to use one of the hospital’s
computers that increasingly are
becoming located near patient rooms
and throughout outpatient departments.
Although we do not know the cost of
the electronic prescribing technology or
of the electronic health records software
that ultimately may be donated under
these proposed exceptions, we describe
below several studies of the costs and
benefits of equipping doctors with such
technology and software. The speed of
adoption will depend on the extent to
which prescribers realize net benefits
(discussed extensively in our proposed
rule on E-Prescribing) and on the extent
to which our proposed exceptions
(when made final) incrementally affect
the costs and savings of the technology.
One study of data on the costs
associated with an internally developed
electronic medical record system for
several internal medicine clinics at an
integrated delivery system indicated
that software development and
maintenance would cost about $1,600
per provider per year. (See Wang,
supra.) Use of commercially available
software may cost twice as much.
Financial benefits of electronic health
records include not having to ‘‘pull’’
patient charts whenever a patient is to
be seen and reduced transcription costs.
In addition, electronic clinical decision
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support has been shown to reduce ADEs
and redundant radiology and clinical
laboratory tests, and up-to-date
information about alternative drugs
reduces the use of expensive
medications. Finally, when a medical
record has complete and accurate
information about services provided,
billing errors are reduced, including
failure to bill for a furnished service.
The 5-year cost-benefit analysis of the
internally developed electronic medical
records system discussed above
indicated savings per practitioner. (See
Wang, supra.)
In another article, Dr. Kenneth Adler
reported on his 86-physician, multispecialty group practice’s adoption of an
electronic health records system
beginning in 2003. (Adler, K., ‘‘Why It’s
Time to Purchase an Electronic Health
Record System,’’ American Academy of
Family Practitioners, November/
December 2004.) This group practice
found that its electronic health records
system improved communication,
access to data, and documentation,
which led to better clinical and service
quality. This electronic health records
system also saved the group practice
money, and Dr. Adler expects that other
group practices that adopt electronic
health records systems will save money
in addition to the other benefits listed
above.
In a third study, the Central Utah
Multi-Specialty Clinic, a 59-physician,
nine-location group practice installed an
electronic medical records system in
April 2002. (Barlow, S., et al., ‘‘The
Economic Effect of Implementing an
EMR in an Outpatient Clinical Setting,’’
J. of Healthcare Information
Management, 18(1): 46–51 (2004).)
During its first year of operation, the
group practice experienced direct
reductions in spending and increases in
revenue of more than $952,000
compared with the prior year, and
anticipates savings of more than $8.2
million over the first 5 years of
implementation. Once again, the savings
are expected to result from reduced
transcription costs, a reduced number of
paper charts and related maintenance
(including storage), and more
appropriate coding because of
appropriate documentation. (This study
did not include information about the
start-up costs of the electronic medical
record system or the annual continuing
costs. Therefore, caution should be used
in drawing conclusions on any cost
savings based on the results of this
study.)
Finally, we note that the Center for
Information Technology Leadership
(CITL), in its 2003 report, ‘‘The Value of
Computerized Provider Order Entry in
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16:07 Oct 07, 2005
Jkt 208001
Ambulatory Settings’’ 2 found that the
average first year total cost of a basic
electronic prescribing software system
was approximately $3,000 per
physician. This estimate was based on
a survey of commercially available
software.
We believe that donations allowed by
this proposed rule would create no net
costs to the economy. This rule would
permit cost-shifting, allowing hospitals,
PDP sponsors, and MA organizations to
bear financial burdens that otherwise
would have been borne by physicians
and their patients. We anticipate that
electronic prescribing and electronic
health records technology ultimately
should save donor entities and
physicians the costs and other burdens
associated with incorrect drug
prescribing or dispensing, and result in
reductions in the costs of medical
transcribing and other paperwork.
Similarly, obtaining accurate health
records on a timely basis should benefit
patients, physicians, hospitals, MA
organizations, and PDP sponsors. The
February 4, 2005 proposed rule on EPrescribing standards (70 FR 6256) cites
an estimate from the CITL that
nationwide adoption of electronic
prescribing would eliminate nearly 2.1
million ADEs per year. In turn, this
reduction of ADEs would prevent nearly
1.3 million provider visits, more than
190,000 hospitalizations, and more than
136,000 life-threatening ADEs (70 FR
6268). We hope to see a significant
reduction in ADEs each year as
nationwide adoption occurs.
We estimate that 10 percent of the
586,411 physicians who provide
services to Medicare beneficiaries
would adopt electronic prescribing
technology and electronic health
records software and software training
each year. We believe it is likely that
health plans or hospitals would donate
software or other items or services to no
more than 20 percent of these
physicians (or to fewer than 12,000
physicians) under our proposed
exceptions and perhaps another 20
percent of these physicians (again fewer
than 12,000 physicians) would receive
donations under the existing exceptions
that apply to managed care services and
to group practices. We estimate that, at
most, each physician would receive a
total of $3,000 worth of donated items
and services under the proposed
exceptions. Therefore, assuming that 2
percent of physicians (one-fifth of all
adopting physicians) would receive
2 Center for Information Technology (CITL, a
research organization chartered in 2002) https://
www.citl.org, Wellesley, MA (781–416–9200) 2003
report: ‘‘The Value of Computerized Provider Order
Entry in Ambulatory Care.’’
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59195
$3,000 worth of donated items and
services in each of the two categories
(electronic prescribing and electronic
health records), annual donations
approximate $36 million.
We expect that many physicians
already own hand-held devices and will
have begun to computerize their own
medical practices. We also expect that
hospitals, MA organizations, and PDP
sponsors would see immediate financial
and patient care benefits from the
expanded use of electronic prescribing
and electronic health records. We are
particularly interested in comments
concerning our estimated costs to
hospitals for donating these items and
services and the expected savings from
reductions in medical transcription,
redundant diagnostic testing, ADEs, and
readmissions to hospitals. We anticipate
that these savings will be greater than
the costs incurred by entities using
these exceptions, but we cannot
quantify the savings at this time.
We note that an unexpected benefit
recently occurred. The Atlantic
Information Service reported in AIS EHealth on September 15, 2005 that
patients from the Veterans
Administration (VA) Hospital in New
Orleans had been evacuated to other VA
hospitals throughout the United States
because of the effects of Hurricane
Katrina. (See (www.aishealth.com/
EHealthBusiness/091505.html)).
Because the VA system makes extensive
use of electronic prescribing and
electronic health records, complete
patient medical information was quickly
made available to VA clinicians
throughout the country.
The estimates above are highly
sensitive to assumptions. The permitted
value of donated items and services
under the proposed exceptions might be
half as much or twice as much as
discussed above. The rate of adoption
might be higher or lower than estimated.
The proportion of physicians receiving
remuneration could be lower or higher
than estimated, depending on the
willingness of hospitals, group
practices, MA organizations, and PDP
sponsors to subsidize investment in
health information technology. We
welcome comments on these variables
and independent estimates as to the
likely rates of adoption and
subsidization.
At this time, there are mixed signals
about the potential of electronic
prescribing and electronic health
records to reduce costs. For example,
many estimates are based in part on the
reduction of medical errors. However,
one study has also shown that medical
errors, and potentially costs, can
increase if software is poorly designed
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or implemented (Koppel, et al., 2005).
Therefore, achieving reliable cost
savings requires a more substantial
transformation of care delivery that goes
beyond simple use of any one kind of
health information technology.
This rule likely would have an effect
on the actual rate of adoption of
electronic prescribing and electronic
health records technology. Potential
donors may be unlikely to provide
assistance unless they believe it would
accelerate the adoption of the
technology. To the extent adoption is
advanced, the costs and benefits of these
technologies will be realized sooner.
However, we are unable to provide any
quantitative estimate of the likely effect
of these proposed exceptions, taken
alone, in the larger panorama of all
health information technology
investment decisions, market evolution,
standards adoption, and use of existing
physician self-referral exceptions. We
welcome comment on whether
information exists that would allow
such estimates, and what they might be.
Finally, we believe it unlikely that
annual effects would exceed $100
million in the 5-year timeframe that we
generally use in our economic impact
projections. If our estimate of the
independent and direct effects of these
new exceptions is accurate, and if the
resulting acceleration in adoption is
relatively small, this proposed rule
would not be a major rule. However, we
have completed all the elements of a
Regulatory Impact Analysis because the
uncertainty is so great.
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 requires
that agencies assess the anticipated
costs and benefits of Federal mandates
before issuing any rule that may result
in the mandated expenditure by State,
local, or tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector, of
$100 million in 1995 dollars (a
threshold adjusted annually for inflation
and now approximately $120 million).
This proposed rule would impose no
mandates. Any actions taken under this
rule would be voluntary. Furthermore,
such actions are likely to result in cost
savings, not net expenditures, and any
expenditures would be undertaken by
government-owned hospitals in their
business capacity, without any
necessary impact on State, local, or
tribal governments, or their expenditure
budgets, as such.
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
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otherwise has Federalism implications.
For the reasons given above, this
proposed rule, if finalized, would not
have a substantial effect on State or
local governments.
B. Impact on Small Businesses
The RFA requires agencies to analyze
options for regulatory relief for small
entities when a proposed rule may
create a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities. For
purposes of the RFA, small entities
include small businesses, nonprofit
organizations, and small governmental
jurisdictions. Most hospitals and
physicians are considered small entities,
either by nonprofit status or by having
revenues of less than $6 million a year.
Almost all physicians in private practice
(or all the practices of which they are
members) are small entities because
their annual revenues do not meet the
Small Business Administration’s $8.5
million threshold for small physician
practices. Individuals and States are not
included in the definition of a small
entity, and this proposed rule would not
have a financial impact on small
governmental entities.
We have determined that this
proposed rule would not have a
significant impact on small entities
because it does not increase regulatory
burden or otherwise meet the RFA
standard of ‘‘significant impact.’’ While
the aggregate impacts would be
substantial, it is unlikely that near term
effects on individual practitioners
would be substantial as a proportion of
revenues (for example, a $3,000
remuneration compared to typical
practice revenues in the hundreds of
thousands of dollars). We expect our
proposed new exceptions ultimately to
be highly beneficial to physicians,
hospitals, and pharmacies (most in each
category are small entities), as well as to
affected entities and persons who are
not ‘‘small entities’’ as defined in the
RFA—PDP sponsors, MA organizations,
and our beneficiaries. We welcome
comment on these conclusions.
Nothing in this proposed rule meets
any of the other thresholds requiring indepth analysis. Although it affects a
substantial number of small rural
hospitals, there is no significant
economic effect on small rural hospitals
(more than 3 to 5 percent of total costs/
revenues), it imposes no unfunded
mandates or costs on either private or
public entities, and it neither preempts
State law nor otherwise has Federalism
implications.
C. Conclusion
We have concluded that this proposed
rule would not have a significant
PO 00000
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
economic effect. Although the proposed
exceptions may shift costs from
physicians and patients to permissible
donor entities and may lead to faster
adoption of health information
technology with substantial benefits, it
is unclear whether, and we believe
unlikely that, these effects would reach
the threshold of $100 million annually
in the near term, even though the longterm cumulative costs and benefits are
likely to be many times this threshold.
This rule would remove a potential
obstacle to certain entities providing
qualifying electronic prescribing
technology and electronic health
records software and directly related
training services to physicians. The rule
would permit cost shifting, allowing
hospitals, MA organizations and PDP
sponsors to bear financial burdens that
otherwise would have been borne by
physicians and their patients. We
believe that this rule will provide
substantial positive health effects on
consumers and net positive economic
effects on affected entities, including
physicians, hospitals, and MA
organizations.
We are not preparing analyses for
either the RFA or section 1102(b) of the
Act because we have determined that
this rule would not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities or a significant
impact on the operations of a substantial
number of small rural hospitals.
In accordance with the provisions of
Executive Order 12866, this regulation
was reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget.
List of Subjects in 42 CFR Part 411
Kidney diseases, Medicare, Physician
referral, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services would amend 42 CFR
chapter IV as set forth below:
PART 411—[AMENDED]
1. The authority for part 411 is
amended to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 1102, 1871, and 1877(b)(4)
and (5) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
1302, and 1395hh, and 1395nn(b)(4) and (5)).
Subpart J—Financial Relationships
Between Physicians and Entities
Furnishing Designated Health Services
2. Section 411.357 is amended by
adding paragraphs (v), (w), and (x) to
read as follows:
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§ 411.357 Exceptions to the referral
prohibition related to compensation
exceptions.
*
*
*
*
*
(v) Electronic prescribing items and
services. Non-monetary remuneration
(consisting of items and services in the
form of hardware, software, or
information technology and training
services) necessary and used solely to
receive and transmit electronic
prescription information, if all of the
following conditions are met:
(1) The items and services are
provided by a—
(i) Hospital to physicians who are
members of its medical staff;
(ii) Group practice (as defined at
§ 411.352) to physicians who are
members of the group practice (as
defined at § 411.351); or
(iii) PDP sponsor or MA organization
to prescribing physicians.
(2) The items and services are donated
as part of, or are used to access, an
electronic prescription drug program
that meets the applicable standards
under Medicare Part D at the time the
items and services are furnished.
(3) The entity (or any person on the
entity’s behalf) must not take any
actions to limit or restrict unnecessarily
the use or compatibility of the items or
services with other electronic
prescription information items or
services or electronic health information
systems.
(4) For items or services that are of the
type that can be used for any patient
without regard to payor status, the
donor may not restrict, or take any
action to limit, the physician’s right or
ability to use the items or services for
any patient.
(5) Neither the physician nor the
physician’s practice (including
employees and staff members) makes
the receipt of items or services a
condition of doing business with the
donor.
(6) Neither the eligibility of a
physician for the items or services, nor
the amount or nature of the items and
services, is determined in a manner that
takes into account the volume or value
of referrals or other business generated
between the parties.
(7) The arrangement is set forth in a
written agreement that—
(i) Is signed by the parties;
(ii) Specifies the items or services
being provided and the value of those
items and services;
(iii) Covers all of the electronic
prescribing items or services to be
furnished by the entity; and
(iv) Contains a certification by the
physician that the items and services are
not technically or functionally
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equivalent to items and services he or
she already possesses or has obtained.
(8) The entity did not have actual
knowledge of, and did not act in
reckless disregard or deliberate
ignorance of, the fact that the physician
possessed or had obtained items and
services that were technically or
functionally equivalent to those donated
by the entity.
(w) Electronic health records items
and services that are not certified. Nonmonetary remuneration (consisting of
items and services in the form of
software or directly related training
services) necessary and used solely to
receive, transmit, and maintain
electronic health records, if all of the
following conditions are met:
(1) The items and services are
provided by a—
(i) Hospital to physicians who are
members of its medical staff;
(ii) Group practice (as defined at
§ 411.352) to physicians who are
members of the group practice (as
defined at § 411.351); or
(iii) PDP sponsor or MA organization
to prescribing physicians.
(2) The entity (or any person on the
entity’s behalf) must not take any
actions to limit or restrict unnecessarily
the use or compatibility of the items or
services with other electronic health
records items or services or electronic
health information systems.
(3) Neither the physician nor the
physician’s practice (including
employees and staff members) makes
the receipt of items or services, nor the
amount or nature of the items or
services, a condition of doing business
with the donor.
(4) Neither the eligibility of a
physician, nor the amount or nature of
the items and services, is determined in
a manner that takes into account the
volume or value of referrals or other
business generated between the parties.
(5) The arrangement is set forth in a
written agreement that—
(i) Is signed by the parties;
(ii) Specifies the items or services
being provided and the value of those
items and services;
(iii) Covers all of the electronic health
records items and services to be
furnished by the entity to the physician;
and
(iv) Contains a certification by the
physician that the items and services are
not technically or functionally
equivalent to items and services he or
she already possesses or has obtained.
(6) The entity did not have actual
knowledge of, and did not act in
reckless disregard or deliberate
ignorance of, the fact that the physician
possessed or had obtained items and
PO 00000
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59197
services that were technically or
functionally equivalent to those donated
by the donor.
(7) For items or services that are of the
type that can be used for any patient
without regard to payor status, the
donor may not restrict or take any action
to limit the physician’s right or ability
to use the items or services for any
patient.
(8) The items and services do not
include any billing, scheduling, or other
similar general office management or
administration software or services, nor
do the services include staffing of
physician offices.
(9) The electronic health records
technology contains electronic
prescribing capability that complies
with the electronic prescription drug
program standards under Medicare Part
D at the time the items and services are
furnished.
(10) The arrangement does not violate
the anti-kickback statute (section
1128B(b) of the Act) or any Federal or
State law or regulation governing billing
or claims submission.
(11) The donation was made before
the effective date of paragraph (x) of this
section.
(x) Certified electronic health records
items and services. Non-monetary
remuneration (consisting of items and
services in the form of software or
directly related training services)
necessary to receive, transmit, and
maintain electronic health records, if all
of the following conditions are met:
(1) The items and services are
provided by a—
(i) Hospital to physicians who are
members of its medical staff;
(ii) Group practice (as defined at
§ 411.352) to physicians who are
members of the group practice (as
defined at § 411.351); or
(iii) PDP sponsor or MA organization
to prescribing physicians.
(2) The technology is certified in
accordance with criteria adopted by the
Secretary that are in effect at the time of
the donation.
(3) Neither the physician nor the
physician’s practice (including
employees and staff members) makes
the receipt of items or services, nor the
amount or nature of the items or
services, a condition of doing business
with the donor.
(4) Neither the eligibility of a
physician for the items or services, nor
the amount or nature of the items and
services, is determined in a manner that
is directly related to the volume or value
of referrals or other business generated
between the parties. For the purposes of
this paragraph, the determination is
deemed not to be directly related to the
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volume or value of referrals or other
business generated between the parties
if any one of the following conditions is
met:
(i) The determination is based on the
total number of prescriptions written by
the recipient;
(ii) The determination is based on the
size of the recipient’s medical practice
(for example, total patients, total patient
encounters, or relative value units);
(iii) The determination is based on the
total number of hours that the recipient
practices medicine;
(iv) The determination is based on the
recipient’s overall use of automated
technology in his or her medical
practice (without specific reference to
the use of technology in connection
with referrals made to the donor);
(v) The determination is based on
whether the physician is a member of
the hospital’s medical staff, if the donor
is a hospital; or
(vi) The determination is made in any
reasonable and verifiable manner that is
not directly related to the volume or
value of referrals or other business
generated between the parties.
(5) The arrangement is set forth in a
written agreement that—
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16:07 Oct 07, 2005
Jkt 208001
(i) Is signed by the parties;
(ii) Specifies the items or services
being provided and the value of those
items and services;
(iii) Covers all of the electronic health
records items and services to be
furnished by the entity to the physician;
and
(iv) Contains a certification by the
physician that the items and services are
not technically or functionally
equivalent to items and services he or
she already possesses or has obtained.
(6) The entity did not have actual
knowledge of, and did not act in
reckless disregard or deliberate
ignorance of, the fact that the physician
possessed or had obtained items and
services that were technically or
functionally equivalent to those donated
by the donor.
(7) For items or services that are of the
type that can be used for any patient
without regard to payor status, the
donor may not restrict or take any action
to limit the physician’s right or ability
to use the items or services for any
patient.
(8) The items and services do not
include staffing of physician offices and
are not used solely to conduct personal
PO 00000
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
business or business unrelated to the
physician’s medical practice.
(9) The electronic health records
technology contains electronic
prescribing capability that complies
with the electronic prescription drug
program standards under Medicare Part
D at the time the items and services are
furnished.
(10) The arrangement does not violate
the anti-kickback statute (section
1128B(b) of the Act), or any Federal or
State law or regulation governing billing
or claims submission.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program No. 93.773, Medicare—Hospital
Insurance; and Program No. 93.774,
Medicare—Supplementary Medical
Insurance Program)
Dated: March 18, 2005.
Mark B. McClellan,
Administrator, Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services.
Approved: August 12, 2005.
Michael O. Leavitt,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 05–20322 Filed 10–5–05; 10:49 am]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\11OCP2.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 195 (Tuesday, October 11, 2005)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 59182-59198]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-20322]
[[Page 59181]]
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Part III
Department of Health and Human Services
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Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
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42 CFR Part 411
Medicare Program; Physicians' Referrals to Health Care Entities With
Which They Have Financial Relationships; Exceptions for Certain
Electronic Prescribing and Electronic Health Records Arrangements;
Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 195 / Tuesday, October 11, 2005 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 59182]]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Part 411
[CMS-1303-P]
RIN 0938-AN69
Medicare Program; Physicians' Referrals to Health Care Entities
With Which They Have Financial Relationships; Exceptions for Certain
Electronic Prescribing and Electronic Health Records Arrangements
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: As required by section 101 of the Medicare Prescription Drug,
Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA), this proposed rule
would create an exception to the physician self-referral prohibition in
section 1877 of the Social Security Act (the Act) for certain
arrangements in which a physician receives necessary non-monetary
remuneration that is used solely to receive and transmit electronic
prescription drug information. In addition, using our separate legal
authority under section 1877(b)(4) of the Act, we are proposing two
separate regulatory exceptions for electronic health records software
and directly related training services. These exceptions are consistent
with the President's goal of achieving widespread adoption of
interoperable electronic health records for the purpose of improving
the quality and efficiency of health care, while maintaining the levels
of security and privacy that consumers expect.
DATES: To be assured consideration, comments must be received at one of
the addresses provided below, no later than 5 p.m. on December 12,
2005.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, please refer to file code CMS-1303-P. 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. (Attachments should 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-1303-
P, PO Box 8010, Baltimore, MD 21244-8010.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed comments to be received
before the close of the comment period.
3. By express or overnight mail. You may send 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-1303-P, Mail Stop C4-26-05, 7500 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
4. 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
(410) 786-9994 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 received after the comment
period.
Submission of comments on paperwork requirements. You may submit
comments on this document's paperwork requirements by mailing your
comments to the addresses provided at the end of the ``Collection of
Information Requirements'' section in this document. For information on
viewing public comments, see the beginning of the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Linda Howard, (410) 786-5255.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Submitting Comments: We welcome comments
from the public on all issues set forth in this rule to assist us in
fully considering issues and developing policies. You can assist us by
referencing the file code [CMS-1303-P] 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. CMS posts all electronic
comments received before the close of the comment period on its public
Web site as soon as possible after they have been 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.
Open Door Forum: We are planning to schedule an Open Door Forum
early in the comment period to discuss the benefits and risks of
donating electronic prescribing and electronic health records
technology. Please note, however, that our planned Open Door Forum is
in addition to, and not in lieu of, the public comment process
discussed above. To be assured consideration, please forward your
written comments by the close of the comment period.
I. Background
[If you choose to comment on issues in this section, please include the
caption ``Background'' at the beginning of your comment.]
Section 1877 of the Act, also known as the physician self-referral
law: (1) Prohibits a physician from making referrals for certain
designated health services (DHS) payable by Medicare to an entity with
which he or she (or an immediate family member) has a financial
relationship (ownership interest or compensation arrangement), unless
an exception applies; and (2) prohibits the entity from submitting
claims to Medicare for those referred services, unless an exception
applies. The statute establishes a number of exceptions and grants the
Secretary the authority to create additional regulatory exceptions for
financial relationships that do not pose a risk of program or patient
abuse. When enacted in 1989, the physician self-referral law applied
only to physician referrals for clinical laboratory services under
Medicare when made to an entity with which the physician (or an
immediate family member) had a financial relationship. In
[[Page 59183]]
1993 and 1994, the Congress expanded the prohibition to include ten
additional DHS and added section 1903(s) of the Act, which extended
aspects of the referral prohibition to the Medicaid program.
Section 1877 of the Act, as it applies to referrals for eleven DHS,
has been in effect and subject to enforcement since January 1, 1995. On
August 14, 1995, we published a final rule with comment period in the
Federal Register (60 FR 41914) that incorporated into regulations the
physician self-referral prohibition as it applied to clinical
laboratory services. That final rule did not address the other DHS. On
January 9, 1998, we published a proposed rule in the Federal Register
(63 FR 1659) to revise the regulations to cover the additional DHS and
the Medicaid expansion. On January 4, 2001, we published the ``Phase
I'' final rule with comment period in the Federal Register (66 FR 856).
Phase I addressed the general prohibition on physician self-referrals
and the statutory exceptions applicable to both ownership and
compensation arrangements, defined key terms, and created a number of
new regulatory exceptions. With two exceptions, the regulations
published in Phase I became effective on January 4, 2002.\1\ On March
26, 2004, we published the ``Phase II'' interim final rule with comment
period in the Federal Register (69 FR 16054), which became effective on
July 26, 2004. Phase II addressed the statutory exceptions related to
ownership and investment interests, the statutory exceptions for
certain compensation arrangements, and the reporting requirements.
Phase II also created some new regulatory exceptions and addressed
public comments on Phase I.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Revised Sec. 424.22(d), relating to home health services,
became effective on April 6, 2001 (see our Federal Register notice
dated February 2, 2001 (66 FR 8771)). In addition, the effective
date of the final sentence of Sec. 411.354(d)(1) relating to the
definition of ``set in advances'' was delayed several times. The
sentence never went into effect and was deleted in the Phase II
regulation, effective July 26, 2004.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 101 of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and
Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA) (Pub. L. 108-173) added a new section
1860D to the Act establishing a prescription drug benefit in the
Medicare program. As part of the new legislation, the Congress directed
the Secretary in section 1860D-4(e)(4) of the Act to adopt standards
for electronic prescribing in connection with the new prescription drug
benefit with the objective of improving patient safety, quality of
care, and efficiency in the delivery of care. (H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 108-
391, at 455, 456 (2003).) Section 1860D-4(e)(6) of the Act directs the
Secretary, in consultation with the Attorney General, to create an
exception to the physician self-referral prohibition and a safe harbor
under the anti-kickback statute (section 1128B(b) of the Act) to
protect certain arrangements involving the provision of non-monetary
remuneration (consisting of items and services in the form of hardware,
software, or information technology and training services) that is
necessary and used solely to receive and transmit electronic
prescription drug information in accordance with electronic prescribing
standards published by the Secretary under section 1860D-4(e)(4) of the
Act. We note that, depending on the circumstances, provisions in the
existing physician self-referral regulations may provide sufficient
protection for the donation of these items and services to physicians.
This proposed rule sets forth the terms and conditions of the MMA-
mandated physician self-referral exception for certain arrangements
involving the donation of electronic prescribing technology. The MMA-
mandated anti-kickback statute safe harbor is being implemented in a
separate rulemaking by the Office of Inspector General (OIG). We have
attempted to ensure as much consistency as possible between our
proposed electronic prescribing exception and the corresponding safe
harbor proposed by OIG, given the differences in the respective
underlying statutes. We intend the final rules to be similarly
consistent.
Section 1877(b)(4) of the Act authorizes the Secretary to create
regulatory exceptions for financial relationships that he determines do
not pose a risk of program or patient abuse. Using this authority, this
proposed rule also sets forth terms and conditions for two separate
physician self-referral exceptions for certain arrangements involving
the donation of electronic health records software and directly related
training services. Information technology, and electronic health
records in particular, supports treatment choices for consumers and
enables better and more cost-effective care, while maintaining the
levels of security and privacy that consumers expect. We seek to
encourage the adoption of such technology through this proposed
rulemaking. We also intend to monitor the progress made toward fully
interoperable electronic health records systems, as we believe that
systems that are fully interoperable and certified can mitigate many of
our concerns regarding the potential anti-competitive effects of stand-
alone electronic health records systems.
II. Provisions of the Proposed Rule
As required by section 101 of the MMA, this proposed rule would add
new paragraph (v) to Sec. 411.357. New paragraph (v) would describe
more specifically: (1) The items and services protected by the new
electronic prescribing exception mandated under section 101 of the MMA;
(2) the conditions under which offering these items and services to
physicians would be protected; and (3) the DHS entities and referring
physicians covered by the electronic prescribing exception.
In addition, using our separate legal authority under section
1877(b)(4) of the Act, we are proposing two separate exceptions at
Sec. 411.357(w) and Sec. 411.357(x) for electronic health records
software and training services that are not covered by the MMA-mandated
exception. New paragraphs (w) and (x) would describe more specifically:
(1) The items and services protected by the new electronic health
records exceptions; (2) the individuals and entities that may provide
the protected items and services; and (3) the conditions under which
the provision of items and services to physicians would be protected.
The proposed exceptions at Sec. 411.357(v), Sec. 411.357(w), and
Sec. 411.357(x) would, if implemented, create independent grounds for
protection under the physician self-referral prohibition. For the
convenience of the public, we are providing the following chart that
lays out schematically the overall structure and approach of these
proposed regulations, details of which are provided below in Sections
II.A. and B. of this proposed rule. Readers are cautioned that the
exceptions contain additional conditions and information not summarized
here.
[[Page 59184]]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MMA-mandated Post-
electronic Pre-interoperability interoperability
prescribing electronic health electronic health
exception records exception records exception
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Authority for Proposed Exception.............. Section 101 of the Section 1877(b)(4) Section 1877(b)(4)
Medicare of the Social of the Social
Prescription Drug, Security Act. Security Act.
Improvement, and
Modernization Act
of 2003.
Covered Technology............................ Proposed: Proposed: Proposed:
Items and Software Certified
services that are used solely for the electronic health
necessary and used transmission, records software
solely to transmit receipt or Directly-
and receive maintenance of related training
electronic electronic health services
prescription drug records. Software
information. Directly- must include an
Includes related training electronic
hardware, software, services.. prescribing
internet Software component
connectvity, and must include an Could
training and electronic include billing and
support services. prescribing scheduling
component. software, provided
that the core
function of the
software is
electronic health
records.
Standards With Which Donated Technology Must Proposed: Proposed: Proposed:
Comply Foundation Electronic Product
standards for prescribing certification
electronic component must criteria adopted by
prescribing as comply with the Secretary.
adopted by the foundation Electronic
Secretary. standards for prescribing
electronic component must
prescribing as comply with
adopted by the foundation
Secretary. standards for
electronic
prescribing as
adopted by the
Secretary, to the
extent these
standards are not
fully incorporated
into the product
certification
criteria.
Permissible Donors............................ Proposed: Proposed: Proposed:
As required Hospitals Hospitals
by statute, to members of their to members of their
hospitals (to medical staffs. medical staffs.
members of their Group Group
medical staffs), practices to practices to
group practices (to physician members. physician members.
physician members), PDP PDP
PDP sponsors and MA sponsors.. sponsors.
organizations (to MA MA
Physicians). organizations.. organizations.
Selection of Recipients....................... Proposed: Proposed: Proposed:
Donors may Donors may Donors may
not take into not take into use criteria to
account the volume account the volume select recipients
or value of or value of that are not
referrals from the referrals from the directly related to
recipient or other recipient or other the volume or value
business between business between of referrals or
the parties. the parties. other business
generated between
the parties.
Value of Protected Technology................. Proposed: Proposed: Proposed:
No specific No specific No specific
dollar amount dollar amount dollar amount
proposed for a cap proposed for a cap proposed for a cap
on the value of on the value of on the value of
protected protected items and protected items and
technology. services. services.
May be
greater than the
cap on
preinteroperability
donations.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Exception for Certain Arrangements Involving Electronic Prescribing
Technology: Sec. 411.357(v)
[If you choose to comment on issues in this section, please include
the caption ``Electronic Prescribing Exception: Sec. 411.357(v)'' at
the beginning of your comment.]
The Congress, in mandating the creation of an electronic
prescribing exception under the physician self-referral law, recognized
the value of electronic prescription programs as a vehicle to reduce
medical errors and to improve efficiencies in the health care system.
(H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 108-391, at 456 (2003).) We believe that promoting
the rapid adoption of electronic prescribing for Medicare Part D is
beneficial to both health care providers and patients, and we have
interpreted the mandate accordingly.
1. Protected Non-Monetary Remuneration
Section 1860D-4(e)(6) of the Act authorizes the creation of an
exception only for the provision of items and services that are
``necessary and used solely'' to transmit and receive electronic
prescription drug information. This proposed rule would clarify the
items and services that would qualify for the new exception
(``qualifying electronic prescribing technology'').
a. ``Necessary'' Non-Monetary Remuneration
First, consistent with the MMA mandate, the proposed exception
would protect only items or services that are ``necessary'' to conduct
electronic prescription drug transactions. This might include, for
example, hardware, software, broadband or wireless internet
connectivity, training, information technology support services, and
other items and services used in connection with the transmission or
receipt of electronic prescribing information. The exception would not
protect arrangements in which DHS entities provide items or services
that are technically or functionally equivalent to items that the
receiving physician already possesses or services that the physician
has already obtained. For example, we believe the exception would allow
a hospital to provide a physician with a hand-held device capable of
transmitting electronic prescribing information, even though the
physician may already have a desktop computer that could also be used
to send the same information. By contrast, the provision of a second
hand-held device would not qualify for the exception if the physician
already
[[Page 59185]]
possesses a hand-held device that could run the new software. We do not
interpret the term ``necessary'' to preclude upgrades of equipment or
software that significantly enhance the functionality of the item or
service.
We believe that restricting the exception to ``necessary'' items
and services is important to minimize the potential for abuse. However,
we recognize that the donors of the items and services will not
necessarily know which items and services the physician already
possesses or has obtained. Accordingly, Sec. 411.357(v)(7)(iv) would
require the physician to certify that the items and services provided
are not technically or functionally equivalent to those that the
physician already possesses or has already obtained. The physician must
update the certification prior to the furnishing of any necessary
upgrades or items and services not reflected in the original
certification. We are concerned that the certification process would be
ineffective as a safeguard against fraud and abuse if it is a mere
formality or if physicians simply execute a form certification provided
by the DHS entity. The certification must be truthful, and we are
proposing at Sec. 411.357(v)(8) that the DHS entity must not have
actual knowledge of, or act in reckless disregard or deliberate
ignorance of, the fact that the physician possessed or had obtained
items and services that were technically or functionally equivalent to
those donated by the entity. We are soliciting comments about other
ways to address this concern.
We are also concerned that there may be a risk that physicians
would intentionally divest themselves of functionally or technically
equivalent technology that they already possess in order to shift costs
to the DHS entity. We are soliciting public comments on how best to
address this issue.
b. ``Used Solely''
In addition to the ``necessary'' standard, section 1860D-4(e)(6) of
the Act provides that the items and services must be ``used solely''
for the transmission or receipt of electronic prescribing information.
We believe that the Congress included this requirement to safeguard
against abusive arrangements in which the remunerative technology might
constitute a payment for referrals because it might have additional
value attributable to uses other than electronic prescribing.
Accordingly, the proposed exception at Sec. 411.357(v) requires that
the protected items and services be used solely to transmit or receive
electronic prescribing information.
We are concerned that DHS entities might provide free or reduced
cost software that bundles valuable general office management, billing,
scheduling, or other software with the electronic prescribing features.
Such additional remuneration would not meet the ``used solely''
requirement and would not be protected by the proposed electronic
prescribing exception. However, the physician would not be precluded
from purchasing from the DHS entity for fair market value additional
technology not protected by the proposed exception.
We are mindful that hardware and connectivity services can be used
for the receipt and transmission of a wide range of information
services, including, but not limited to, electronic prescription
information, and that many physicians may prefer to use a single,
multi-functional device, especially a hand-held, rather than multiple
single-use devices. Similarly, many physicians may prefer to use a
single connectivity service. Accordingly, we are proposing to use our
authority under section 1877(b)(4) of the Act to create an additional
exception to protect the provision by DHS entities to physicians of
hardware (including necessary operating system software) and
connectivity services that are used for more than one function, so long
as a substantial use of the item or service is to receive or transmit
electronic prescription information. We propose to treat operating
software as integral to the hardware and distinct from other software
applications that are not necessary for the hardware to operate. Under
this additional exception, protection would not extend to the provision
of items or services that are only occasionally used for electronic
prescribing. The additional exception would incorporate the definitions
and conditions set forth in this proposed rulemaking and would also
include conditions to address the additional risk of abuse posed by
multi-functional items and services.
We are soliciting public comment about the standards that should
appear in an additional exception for multi-functional hardware
(including necessary operating system software) or connectivity
services. In particular, we are soliciting public comment on
methodologies for quantifying or ensuring that a substantial use of
hardware and connectivity services is for the receipt or transmission
of electronic prescribing information. We have considered how to
quantify ``substantial use'' with respect to other provisions of the
Act and its implementing regulations; here, we are specifically seeking
comments regarding an appropriate definition of ``substantial use'' in
the context of electronic prescribing technology and its use. We are
also soliciting public comment on the nature and amount of any cap that
we should impose on the value of the donated multi-functional hardware
or connectivity services.
2. Designated Health Services (DHS) Entities Protected by the Exception
In addition to describing the kinds of electronic prescribing
technology that can be protected, section 1860D-4(e)(6) of the Act
limits the kinds of entities that may provide this assistance, and the
persons to whom assistance can be provided. Specifically, the statutory
provision protects the donation of qualifying electronic prescribing
technology when the donation is made by hospitals to members of their
medical staffs, by group practices to their physician members, and by
prescription drug plan (PDP) sponsors and Medicare advantage (MA)
organizations to pharmacies, pharmacists, and physicians and other
prescribing health care professionals.
The proposed regulation text largely mirrors the statutory language
except where the statute refers to persons or entities other than
physicians (that is, pharmacies, pharmacists, and non-physician
prescribing health care professionals). We are proposing to limit the
exception at Sec. 411.357(v) to remuneration provided to physicians,
because section 1877 of the Act is not implicated when remuneration is
provided to non-physician prescribing health care professionals or to
pharmacists and pharmacies that are not otherwise affiliated with a
referring physician. To the extent that a hospital has a financial
relationship with these parties, no exception is necessary. However,
arrangements that do not implicate section 1877 of the Act can still
violate the anti-kickback statute.
Proposed Sec. 411.357(v)(1)(i) would protect donations of
qualifying electronic prescribing technology provided by a hospital to
physicians on its medical staff. We intend to protect donations only to
physicians who routinely furnish services at the hospital. We do not
intend for this exception to protect remuneration used to induce
physicians who already practice at other hospitals to join the medical
staff of a different hospital. We are soliciting comments on this
issue.
Proposed Sec. 411.357(v)(1)(ii) would protect donations of
qualifying electronic prescribing technology provided by a group
practice to its physician members. For purposes of the new exception,
we propose to apply the
[[Page 59186]]
existing regulatory definitions of the terms ``group practice'' and
``member of a group practice'' (see Sec. 411.352 and Sec. 411.351,
respectively). Further, the inclusion of paragraph Sec.
411.357(v)(1)(ii) does not imply that the provision of the items and
services by a group to its members necessarily requires a new
exception, because the in-office ancillary services exception or the
employment exception would apply in most circumstances, where needed.
We believe the Congress included these relationships in section 1860D-
4(e)(6) of the Act simply to encourage group practices to adopt
electronic prescribing technology. We are soliciting comments regarding
whether and how a group practice may appropriately furnish qualifying
electronic prescribing technology to a ``physician in the group
practice,'' as defined at Sec. 411.351.
Proposed Sec. 411.357(v)(1)(iii) would protect donations of
qualifying electronic prescribing technology provided by a PDP sponsor
or MA organization to prescribing physicians. We note that, in certain
circumstances, donations of qualifying electronic prescribing
technology may qualify for protection under the existing exception at
Sec. 411.355(c). In addition, although section 1860D-4(e)(6) of the
Act also applies to the provision of qualifying electronic prescribing
technology by PDP sponsors and MA organizations to pharmacies,
pharmacists, and non-physician prescribing health care professionals in
the plans' networks, these financial relationships do not implicate
section 1877 of the Act.
We are soliciting comments on whether we should use our authority
under section 1877(b)(4) of the Act to protect qualifying electronic
prescribing technology provided to physicians by other DHS entities.
Most other DHS services do not appear to involve substantial
utilization of prescription drugs. We are interested in comments
addressing the types of DHS entities that should be included, the
degree of need for the protection, and the safeguards that should be
imposed to protect against program or patient abuse.
3. Additional Limitations on the Provision of Electronic Prescribing
Technology
a. Promoting Compatibility and Interoperability
Section 1860D-4(e)(6) of the Act is integral to the electronic
prescribing program established by section 101 of the MMA. Section
1860D-4(e)(6) of the Act provides that, in order to qualify for the
physician self-referral exception, the qualifying electronic
prescription technology must be used to receive and transmit electronic
prescription information in accordance with standards to be established
by the Secretary for Part D electronic prescription drug programs.
Consistent with section 1860D-4(e)(6) of the Act, proposed Sec.
411.357(v)(2) would require that the items and services be provided as
part of, or be used to access, an electronic prescription drug program
that complies with the standards established by the Secretary for these
programs. We are soliciting comments on whether the exception should
permit qualifying electronic prescribing technology to be used for the
transmission of prescription information regarding items and services
that are not drugs (for example, supplies or laboratory tests).
Interoperable systems have the technical capacity to transmit and
receive information from other devices and applications in a secure and
intelligible manner. We believe that interoperability can serve as an
important safeguard against fraud and abuse, because a requirement that
protected technology be fully interoperable would mitigate the risk
that an entity could offer free or reduced price technology to a
referring physician as a means of maintaining or increasing that
physician's referrals to the entity. With interoperable electronic
prescribing technology, the physician would be free to transmit
prescriptions to any appropriate pharmacy.
At this time, there are no regulatory standards to ensure that
electronic prescription information products are interoperable with
other products. However, we note that interoperability may be required
in the future under final regulations regarding the standards for the
Part D electronic prescription drug program. To the extent that either
the hardware or software can be interoperable, we propose at Sec.
411.357(v)(3) to prohibit donors or their agents from taking any
actions to disable or limit that interoperability or otherwise impose
barriers to compatibility. We believe this condition is necessary to
limit the ability of a donor, such as a hospital, to use the provision
of items or services to tie the physicians to the facility.
We are considering defining the term ``interoperable'' to mean the
ability of different information systems, software applications, and
networks to communicate and exchange information in an accurate,
secure, effective, useful, and consistent manner. (See generally 44
U.S.C. Sec. 3601(6) (pertaining to the management and promotion of
electronic government services).) We are soliciting public comment
about this approach, our definition of the term ``interoperable,''
alternative means of ensuring the maximum level of interoperability,
and the types of software currently available for electronic
prescribing.
b. Value of Protected Technology
We are considering whether to limit the aggregate fair market value
of all items and services provided to a physician from a single donor.
We believe a monetary limit is appropriate and reasonable to minimize
the potential for fraud and abuse. We are soliciting public comment on
the amount of a cap that would adequately protect the program against
abuse, the methodology used to determine the cap (for example, fixed
dollar amount, percentage of the value of the donated technology, or
another methodology), whether the same cap would be adequate if there
were protection for the donation of multi-functional hardware and
connectivity services, whether the cap should be reduced over time, and
whether the cap places a disadvantage on smaller entities that do not
have the financial resources of larger chains or organizations.
We are also interested in comments on the retail and nonretail
costs of obtaining electronic prescribing technology and the degree to
which physicians may already possess items or services that could be
used for electronic prescribing. We have received varying estimates of
the costs of implementing electronic prescribing through the comment
process for our E-Prescribing and the Prescription Drug Program
proposed rule published on February 4, 2005 in the Federal Register (70
FR 6256). We also have explored the available literature on the costs
of implementing electronic prescribing. (See section IV of this
preamble.) We caution that the cost of implementing an electronic
prescribing program will not correlate necessarily to the amount of any
cap if one is established. Moreover, we do not expect that donors will
wish necessarily to donate the total amount that the technology costs
or, depending on the size of a cap, the total amount ultimately
protected in the final rule. Although we are interested in obtaining
detailed information about the costs of the full range of technology so
as to be fully informed on this matter, we do not expect that the final
regulations will protect all possible costs.
c. Other Conditions
We seek to minimize the potential for abuse and to ensure that the
protected technology furthers the congressional
[[Page 59187]]
purpose of promoting electronic prescribing as a means of improving the
quality of care for all patients. We believe that any protected items
and services must, to the extent possible, be usable by physicians for
electronic prescribing for all patients to ensure that uninsured and
non-Medicare patients receive the same benefits that the technology may
engender, including reduction of errors and improvements in care. Some
donated technology (such as software for tracking prescriptions or
formularies of a particular MA organization's patients) may not be
applicable to all patients. However, other technology (for example,
hand-held devices and software that transmit prescriptions to
pharmacies) is potentially usable for all patients, and physicians
should not be restricted from using such technology for all patients.
Accordingly, proposed Sec. 411.357(v)(4) would require that, where
possible, physicians must be able to use the protected technology for
all patients without regard to payor status.
Proposed Sec. 411.357(v)(5) would provide that neither the
physician nor the physician's practice (including employees and staff
members) may make the donation of qualifying electronic prescribing
technology items or services a condition of doing business with the
entity.
Proposed Sec. 411.357(v)(6) and (v)(7) would incorporate
conditions that are consistent with the conditions in the other
regulatory exceptions under the physician self-referral prohibition.
Paragraph (v)(6) would provide that the eligibility of a physician to
receive items and services from a DHS entity, and the amount and nature
of the items and services received, may not be determined in a manner
that takes into account the volume or value of the physician's
referrals to the DHS entity or other business generated between the
physician and the DHS entity. This does not preclude selection criteria
that are based upon the total number of prescriptions written by a
physician, but the proposed regulation would prohibit criteria based
upon the volume or value of prescriptions written by the physician that
are dispensed or paid by the donor, as well as any criteria based on
any other business generated between the parties. We are interested in
comments with respect to other potential criteria for selecting medical
staff recipients of donated technology. Also, the exception would not
protect arrangements that seek to induce a physician to change
loyalties from other providers or plans to the donor (for example, a
hospital using an electronic prescribing technology arrangement to
induce a physician who is on the medical staff of another hospital to
join the donor hospital's medical staff for a purpose of referring
patients to the donor hospital). Proposed Sec. 411.357(v)(7) would
require the arrangement to be in writing, to be signed by the parties,
to identify with specificity the items or services being provided and
the value of those items and services, and to include the certification
described in section II.A.1 of this proposed rule. To permit effective
oversight of protected arrangements, the written agreement must cover
all of the qualifying electronic prescribing technology to be furnished
to the physician by the DHS entity. For example, if a hospital provides
a piece of hardware under one arrangement and then subsequently
provides a software program, the agreement regarding the software would
have to include a description of the previously donated hardware
(including its nature and value). In addition, the written agreement
must include a certification by the physician that the items and
services are not technically or functionally equivalent to any items or
services that he or she already possesses or has already obtained.
Proposed Sec. 411.357(v)(8) would provide that the DHS entity must
not have actual knowledge of, or act in reckless disregard or
deliberate ignorance of, the fact that the physician possessed or had
obtained items and services that were technically or functionally
equivalent to those donated by the entity. In other words, the DHS
entity would not be subject to sanctions under section 1877(g) of the
Act if it did not know or have reason to suspect that the physician
certification required under Sec. 411.357(v)(7)(iv) was false.
B. Exceptions for Certain Arrangements Involving Electronic Health
Records Items and Services: Sec. 411.357(w) and Sec. 411.357(x)
The implementation of electronic health information technology is a
compelling national priority to improve our healthcare system.
Interoperable electronic health information technology would allow
patient information to be portable and to move with consumers from one
point of care to another. This would require an infrastructure that can
help clinicians gain access to critical health information when
treatment decisions are being made, while keeping that information
confidential and secure. We believe that the promise of a secure and
seamless information exchange that reduces medical errors, improves the
quality of patient care, and improves efficiency will be realized only
when we have a standardized system that is open, adaptable,
interoperable, and predictable.
We believe that interoperable electronic health records technology,
once implemented, has the potential to increase health care quality and
improve efficiency, which are outcomes consistent with our goals in
exploring Pay-for-Performance options. We believe it is important to
promote these open, interconnected, interoperable electronic health
records systems that help improve the quality of patient care and
efficiency in the delivery of health care to patients, without
protecting arrangements that hinder marketplace competition, serve as
marketing platforms, or are mechanisms to influence inappropriately
clinical decision-making.
Accordingly, in addition to the electronic prescribing exception,
we are proposing to use our legal authority under section 1877(b)(4) of
the Act to promulgate two new exceptions, at Sec. 411.357(w) and Sec.
411.357(x), to protect non-abusive arrangements involving the provision
of software and directly related training services that are necessary
and used to receive, transmit, and maintain the electronic health
records of the entity's or physician's patients. The first exception
would apply to donations made before the Secretary's adoption of
product certification criteria, including criteria for the
interoperability, functionality, and privacy and security of electronic
health records technology (these criteria are referred to herein as
``product certification criteria''), and would provide limited
protection. For purposes of this rulemaking, we will refer to this
exception as the ``pre-interoperability'' exception. The second
exception would apply to donations made after product certification
criteria are adopted by the Secretary. For purposes of this rulemaking,
we will refer to this exception as the ``post-interoperability''
exception. In recognition of the reduction in the risk of fraud and
abuse that may result from interoperable systems, the post-
interoperability exception would offer broader protection than the pre-
interoperability exception.
We are concerned about the risk of program abuse that may be posed
by a DHS entity's provision of valuable technology to physicians. We
believe that this risk increases as the value of the technology to the
physician increases. The provision of electronic health records
technology to physicians poses greater risk of abuse than the provision
of limited electronic
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prescribing technology, because electronic health records technology is
inherently more valuable to physicians in terms of actual cost, avoided
overhead, and administrative expenses of an office practice. However,
in light of the potential patient benefits of electronic health
records, we have attempted to construct exceptions that include several
criteria designed to ensure that the exceptions do not pose a risk of
program or patient abuse. We will continue to evaluate the risks posed
by the donation to physicians of electronic health records technology
and may refine or add additional safeguards to the final rule to ensure
that the exceptions do not pose a risk of program or patient abuse. We
are requesting comments on whether hardware, connectivity and related
items and services should also be protected under either or both these
exceptions, and, if so, under what conditions.
1. Pre-Interoperability Exception
[If you choose to comment on issues in this section, please include the
caption ``Pre-Interoperability Electronic Health Records Exception:
Sec. 411.357(w)'' at the beginning of your comment.]
We wish to recognize the innovative early adopters of electronic
health records technology and establish an exception to protect
donations of such technology made before the Secretary has adopted
product certification criteria for electronic health records. However,
as noted above in section II.A.3 with respect to electronic
prescribing, it is important that protected electronic health records
software be interoperable to the extent technologically feasible and
that neither donors nor their agents take any actions to disable or
limit interoperability or otherwise impose barriers to compatibility.
Unlike electronic prescribing, at this time, there are no proposed
Federal regulatory standards for electronic health records, nor are
there any product certification criteria with which electronic health
records software can comply. Nonetheless, while product certification
criteria are being developed, we are proposing the narrow pre-
interoperability exception described below to protect certain donations
of electronic health records technology in an effort to stimulate and
promote the expansion of technology in the health care industry.
a. Covered Technology
We are proposing to protect only electronic health records
software, that is, software that is essential to and used solely for
the transmission, receipt, or maintenance of patients' electronic
health records. To be protected by this exception, the donated
electronic health records software must have an electronic prescribing
component. The required electronic prescribing component must consist
of software that is used to receive and transmit electronically
prescription drug information in accordance with electronic prescribing
standards published by the Secretary under section 1860D-4(e)(4) of the
Act. We are soliciting comments on whether the exception should permit
the electronic prescribing component of electronic health record
software to be used for the transmission of prescription information
regarding items and services that are not drugs (for example, supplies
or laboratory tests). Additionally, we are soliciting comments with
respect to whether we should also or instead require that electronic
health records software include a computerized provider order entry
(CPOE) component. We are proposing at Sec. 411.357(w)(8) not to
protect the provision of other types of technology, including, for
example, hardware, connectivity services, billing or scheduling
software, or software that might be used by a physician to conduct
personal business or business unrelated to the physician's medical
practice. Although the proposed exception would protect necessary
training services in connection with the software, the exception would
not protect the provision of staff to physicians or their offices.
We are mindful that there may be particular constituencies, such as
rural area providers, that lack sufficient hardware or connectivity
services to implement effective electronic health records systems. We
are soliciting comments addressing these special circumstances.
In order to protect further against abuse, we are considering
including in the final regulations a definition of ``electronic health
records'' for purposes of the exception. We are soliciting comments on
how we should draft this definition. In particular, we are interested
in public comments that address the types of software that should be
protected; the retail and nonretail cost of this software; the ways in
which this software is currently marketed (for example, individual
applications versus bundled software packages); methods for defining
the scope of protected software; and safeguards that might be imposed
(either in the definition or separately) to ensure that the exception
does not pose a risk of program or patient abuse. Finally, we are
soliciting public comment on whether and, if so, how to protect the
provision of other kinds of electronic health information technology.
We are proposing to interpret ``necessary'' in the new exception
consistent with our interpretation of the term in section II.A.1 of
this proposed rule and to include a comparable provision at Sec.
411.357(w)(5)(iv) to ensure that the exception does not protect the
provision of items or services that are technically and functionally
equivalent to items and services the physician currently possesses or
has obtained. As with electronic prescribing technology, we are
concerned that there may be a risk that physicians would intentionally
divest themselves of functionally or technically equivalent technology
that they already possess to shift costs to donors and we are
soliciting public comment on whether and how to address this situation.
b. Standards With Which Donated Technology Must Comply
The pre-interoperability exception would require at Sec.
411.357(w)(9) that any protected software must include an electronic
prescribing component that complies with standards established by the
Secretary for the Part D electronic prescription drug program.
Moreover, as with the electronic prescribing exception discussed above,
we would require at Sec. 411.357(w)(2) that neither donor entities nor
their agents take any actions to disable or limit interoperability of
any component of the software or otherwise impose barriers to
compatibility. We are also considering requiring protected software to
comply with relevant Public Health Information Network preparedness
standards, such as those related to BioSense. We are soliciting
comments on these and other appropriate standards.
We are interested in comments addressing whether this pre-
interoperability exception may have the unintended effect of impeding
the beneficial spread of interoperable electronic health records
systems by promoting closed or isolated systems or systems that
effectively tie physicians to particular providers or suppliers. For
example, a hospital that donates expensive technology to a physician
may exercise control over that physician sufficient to preclude or
discourage other systems or health plans from having access to the
physician for their own networks.
c. Permissible Donors
Proposed Sec. 411.357(w) would protect the same categories of
donors and physicians as the proposed exception
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for electronic prescribing items and services at Sec. 411.357(v). We
believe that donors should be limited to hospitals, group practices,
PDP sponsors, and MA organizations because they have a direct and
primary patient care relationship and therefore have a central role in
the health care delivery infrastructure that justifies protection for
the furnishing of electronic health records technology that would not
be appropriate for other types of providers and suppliers, including
providers and suppliers of ancillary services. Moreover, hospitals,
group practices, PDP sponsors, and MA organizations are potentially in
a better position to promote widespread use of electronic health
records technology that has the greatest degree of openness and
interoperability. We do not believe that providers and suppliers of
ancillary services, such as laboratories, are well-positioned to
advance the goal of widespread use of interoperable electronic health
records for patients, nor would they have the same interest in doing
so. Nevertheless, we are interested in comments regarding whether other
categories of donors should be included and why. We are also interested
in comments with respect to whether different or alternative conditions
should apply to any category of donor. In addition, we note that some
donations of electronic health records software and related training
services may fit within existing exceptions, including those at Sec.
411.352 (for group practices) and Sec. 411.355(c) (for certain prepaid
health plans).
d. Selection of Recipients
We are proposing at Sec. 411.357(w)(4) a condition, consistent
with other regulatory exceptions, that the eligibility of a recipient
to receive items and services from a donor, and the amount and nature
of the items and services received, may not be determined in a manner
that takes into account the volume or value of the recipient's
referrals to the donor or other business generated between the parties.
We are interested in comments with respect to potential criteria for
selecting physician recipients of donated electronic health records
software and related training services.
e. Value of Protected Technology
We believe it would be appropriate to limit the aggregate value of
the protected software and directly related training services that a
DHS entity could provide to a physician under the exception. The cap
under the proposed pre-interoperability exception would be directly
related to any cap adopted in connection with the electronic
prescribing exception discussed in section II.A.3. of this proposed
rule. We believe this approach is consistent with the purpose of the
physician self-referral prohibition and would also minimize any
competitive disadvantage for smaller entities that do not have the
financial resources or potential volume of technology business of
larger chains or organizations.
We are interested in comments regarding the appropriate amount and
methodology of a limiting cap. In addition to an aggregate dollar cap,
we are considering two alternative approaches: (1) A cap that would be
set at a percentage of the value of the donated technology to the
physician (thus requiring the physician to share the costs); or (2) a
cap set at the lower of a fixed dollar amount or a percentage of the
value of the technology to the physician. We are soliciting public
comment about this approach, including comments on how a cap under this
exception would relate to a cap under the exception proposed at Sec.
411.357(v) and how the value of technology provided under the final
exceptions would be aggregated. We are concerned that DHS entities may
abuse the proposed exceptions for electronic prescribing items and
services and electronic health records software and training services
by selectively relying on both exceptions to maximize the value of
technology provided to physicians as a means of disguising payments for
referrals. We believe conditions should be included in the final
regulation to prevent this abuse and are considering requiring an
overall cap on value, as well as documentation requirements that
integrate all technology provided under the final exceptions. We are
interested in public comments that address the retail and nonretail
costs (that is, the costs of purchasing from manufacturers,
distributors, or other nonretail sources) of obtaining electronic
health records software and training services necessary to promote the
widespread adoption of electronic health records. We are also
interested in comments that address the degree to which physicians may
already possess items or services that could be used for electronic
health records. In addition, we are soliciting comments on whether and,
if so, how to take into account physician access to any software that
is publicly available either free or at a reduced price.
f. Other Conditions
To ensure further that this new exception does not pose a risk of
program or patient abuse and for the reasons discussed in section
II.A.3 of this proposed rule, we are incorporating in Sec. 411.357(w)
certain other conditions described above in connection with Sec.
11.357(v). These include a restriction at Sec. 411.357(w)(3) on
conditioning business on the receipt of electronic health records
technology, a restriction at Sec. 411.357(w)(4) on the provision of
items and services related to the volume or value of referrals, a
documentation requirement at Sec. 411.357(w)(5), and an all-payors
requirement at Sec. 411.357(w)(7). Proposed Sec. 411.357(w)(10) would
require that the arrangement not violate the anti-kickback statute
(section 1128B(b) of the Act) or any Federal or State law or regulation
governing billing or claims submission. Because the provision of
valuable items and services to a referral source can be used to induce
or reward referrals, compliance with the anti-kickback statute is
required to ensure that the protected arrangements do not pose a risk
of abuse. This condition is consistent with the other regulatory
exceptions to the physician self-referral law and was discussed in the
interim final rule published on March 26, 2004 in the Federal Register
(69 FR 16108). We believe that requiring compliance with the anti-
kickback statute is particularly important because of the high dollar
value of electronic health records technology.
g. Sunset Provision
We are also proposing a provision at Sec. 411.357(w)(11) that
would sunset the pre-interoperability exception applicable to
electronic health records software and training services at the time
that the post-interoperability exception at Sec. 411.357(x) (see
discussion in section II.B.2 of this proposed rule) becomes effective.
2. Post-Interoperability Electronic Health Records Exception
[If you choose to comment on issues in this section, please include the
caption ``Post-Interoperability Electronic Health Records Exception:
Sec. 411.357(x)'' at the beginning of your comment.]
We realize that variable (that is, non-standardized) adoption of
electronic health records systems could discourage market forces and
competition from improving healthcare. Interoperability could mitigate
many of our concerns regarding the potential anti-competitive effects
of stand-alone electronic health records. We recognize that stand-alone
electronic health records systems, even if widely adopted, may not
deliver the error reductions, cost savings or marketplace changes
necessary to meet the Secretary's goals, and could even shift the
market toward more
[[Page 59190]]
fragment