Medicare Program; Electronic Submission of Medicare Claims, 71008-71020 [05-23080]
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71008
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 226 / Friday, November 25, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
fires; protection of patients, staff, and
the public; evacuation; and cooperation
with fire fighting authorities.
(3) The RNHCI must maintain written
evidence of regular inspection and
approval by State or local fire control
agencies.
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(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program No. 93.778, Medical Assistance
Program)
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program No. 93.773, Medicare—Hospital
Insurance; and Program No. 93.774,
Medicare—Supplementary Medical
Insurance Program)
Dated: November 21, 2005.
Ann C. Agnew,
Executive Secretary to the Department.
[FR Doc. 05–23289 Filed 11–23–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
42 CFR Part 424
[CMS–0008–F]
RIN 0938–AM22
Medicare Program; Electronic
Submission of Medicare Claims
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This final rule adopts as final,
and makes amendments to, the interim
final rule published on August 15, 2003.
That interim final rule implemented the
statutory requirement that claims for
reimbursement under the Medicare
Program be submitted electronically as
of October 16, 2003, except where
waived. These regulations identify those
circumstances for which mandatory
submission of electronic claims to the
Medicare Program is waived.
DATES: Effective date: These regulations
are effective on December 27, 2005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kathleen Simmons, (410) 786–6157.
Stewart Streimer, (410) 786–9318.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 3 of the Administrative
Simplification Compliance Act (ASCA),
Pub. L. 107–105, was enacted by the
Congress to improve the administration
of the Medicare Program by facilitating
program efficiencies gained through the
electronic submission of Medicare
claims. Section 3 of ASCA amends
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subsection (a) of section 1862 of the
Social Security Act (the Act) (42 U.S.C.
1395y(a)) and adds a new subsection (h)
to section 1862 (42 U.S.C. 1395y). The
amendment to subsection (a) requires
the Medicare Program, subject to
subsection (h), to deny payment under
Part A or Part B for any expenses for
items or services ‘‘for which a claim is
submitted other than in an electronic
form specified by the Secretary.’’
Subsection (h) provides that the
Secretary shall waive such denial in two
types of cases and may also waive such
denial ‘‘in such unusual cases as the
Secretary finds appropriate.’’
Section 3 of ASCA operates in the
context of the Administrative
Simplification provisions of the Health
Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA),
Pub. L. 104–191. Those provisions
require the Secretary to adopt, among
other standards, standards for financial
and administrative transactions for the
health care industry, including health
claims transactions (see section 1173(a)
of the Act). In the August 17, 2000
Federal Register (65 FR 50311), the
Secretary of Health and Human Services
(the Secretary) published a final rule
(generally known as the Transactions
Rule) that adopted standards for eight
electronic transactions. The transactions
standards adopted by that final rule, as
subsequently modified by final rule
published on February 20, 2003 (68 FR
8381), are codified at 45 CFR part 162,
subparts A and I through R.
The HIPAA standards apply to health
plans, health care clearinghouses, and
certain health care providers;
collectively, these entities are known as
‘‘covered entities.’’ An additional
category of covered entities—
prescription drug card sponsors—was
added by the Medicare Prescription
Drug, Improvement, and Modernization
Act of 2003 (MMA), Pub. L. 108–173.
Covered entities are required to comply
not only with the standards established
by the Transactions Rule, but also with
those established via other HIPAA
Administrative Simplification rules—
such as the Privacy Rule, the Employer
Identifier Rule, the Security Rule, and
the National Provider Identifier Rule—
by the respective applicable compliance
dates specified in those rules.
Compliance with the standards for the
electronic transactions established by
the Transactions Rule was required for
all covered entities other than small
health plans by October 16, 2002;
compliance by small health plans was
required by October 16, 2003. However,
section 2 of ASCA extended the October
16, 2002 compliance deadline to
October 16, 2003 for covered entities
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that were not small health plans and
that submitted a compliance plan by
October 15, 2002. In accordance with 45
CFR 162.900(c), covered entities that
were not small health plans and that did
not timely submit a compliance plan
under ASCA were required to comply
by October 16, 2002. Thus, all covered
entities, regardless of type, were
required to be in compliance no later
than October 16, 2003.
Since a significant number of covered
entities had expressed strong concern
over the health care industry’s state of
readiness to conduct fully compliant
HIPAA transactions and we wanted to
promote compliance while ensuring that
cash flow and health care operations
would not be unnecessarily disrupted,
the Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) issued guidance on the
approach CMS would take to enforce
the HIPAA electronic transactions and
code sets provisions. In accordance with
the July 24, 2003 guidance, the
Secretary explained that we would
focus on voluntary compliance, use a
complaint-driven approach, and would
not impose penalties on covered entities
that deployed temporary contingency
plans, if they made reasonable and
diligent efforts to become compliant
and, in the case of health plans,
facilitated the compliance of their
trading partners.
By statute, the Medicare Program is a
health plan under HIPAA (see section
1171(5)(D) of the Act). It is, therefore, a
covered entity. In 45 CFR 160.102(a)(3),
we specify that, in accordance with
section 1172(a)(3) of the Act, health care
providers are covered entities if they
transmit health information in
electronic form in connection with a
transaction for which the Secretary has
adopted a standard (covered
transaction). In 45 CFR 162.923(a), we
specify that if a covered entity
electronically conducts a covered
transaction with another covered entity,
it must conduct it as a standard
transaction.
Approximately 86.1 percent of claims
submitted to the Medicare Program are
submitted electronically, which means
that approximately 139 million claims
are submitted on paper per year (fiscal
year (FY) 2002). Section 3 of ASCA
required Medicare providers to submit
Medicare claims electronically by
October 16, 2003, unless one of the
specified grounds for waiver applies. As
the October 16, 2003 deadline
approached, we made the decision to
implement our own contingency plan
after reviewing statistics showing that
an unacceptably low number of
Medicare providers would likely be
capable of submitting compliant claims
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by the compliance date. Concerned that
many of its trading partners were still
completing their transition to HIPAAcompliant transactions, Medicare
implemented a contingency plan
permitting the submission and
processing of claims in electronic
formats that were then in use and giving
providers additional time to complete
the testing processes. Neither CMS’s
contingency plan for Medicare nor
HHS’s enforcement guidance modified
the October 16, 2003 compliance date
for HIPAA transactions.
Section 3 of ASCA, thus, in general
has the effect of requiring Medicare
providers that are not already covered
entities to conduct a covered transaction
(the health claim transaction)
electronically and, thereby, become
covered entities. In submitting claims
electronically, the providers are
required to comply with the applicable
HIPAA standard for the health claim
transaction. Thus, section 3 of ASCA
promotes the submission of standard
transactions and will further the goal of
improved health care delivery by
reducing the administrative burden and
paperwork associated with Medicare
claims submissions.
Although 86.1 percent of Medicare
claims are submitted electronically, the
volume of Medicare claims submitted in
paper form is substantial. Moving from
paper to electronic submission has the
potential for significant savings and
efficiencies for Medicare physicians,
practitioners, facilities, suppliers, and
other health care providers, as well as
for the Medicare program itself.
Although these Medicare physicians,
practitioners, facilities, suppliers, and
other health care providers would incur
a cost to comply with the mandatory
electronic billing requirement, we
believe their savings will offset the costs
they incur. Further, the use of the
HIPAA electronic claim standards could
result in additional savings if these
entities begin electronically billing other
payers. However, the statute recognizes
that certain circumstances may
effectively prevent some providers from
transacting claims with Medicare
electronically or as standard
transactions. ASCA, thus, identifies
exceptions to the mandatory submission
of electronic Medicare claims. This final
rule reiterates and interprets these
exceptions.
We considered whether the
amendment to section 1862(a) of the Act
in section 3 of ASCA could be
interpreted to apply to payments made
by Medicare + Choice (M+C)
organizations to providers for services
provided to Medicare beneficiaries.
(Note: The MMA, enacted December 8,
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2003, changed and renamed M+C to
Medicare Advantage. For discussion
purposes and to remain consistent with
the interim final rule, the term ‘‘M+C’’
will continue to be used in this
preamble.) The question was raised by
the provision in section 4 of ASCA that
expressly adds Medicare Part C, found
in Part C of Title XVIII, to the definition
of Medicare ‘‘health plans’’ found in
section 1171(5)(D) of the Act.
The plain language of section 1862(a)
of the Act, however, provides that
‘‘payment may not be made under Part
A or Part B’’ for a number of activities.
The Congress could have amended this
provision, just as it amended section
1171(5) of the Act, if it had wanted to
prohibit M+C organizations from paying
for claims for services given to M+C
enrollees by the M+C organization’s
participating providers if those claims
were not submitted electronically. The
fact that it did not so amend this
provision indicates that it did not
intend to apply the ASCA payment
prohibition to the M+C organizations.
The Congress’s intent to apply the
broader definition of ‘‘health plan’’ in
section 4 of ASCA solely to the
Administrative Simplifications
provisions of HIPAA and not to the
electronic submission requirement for
Medicare claims is further suggested by
the title of section 4 of ASCA:
‘‘Clarification with Respect to
Applicability of Administrative
Simplification Requirement to M+C
Organizations.’’
The M+C organizations, as health
plans for the purposes of HIPAA
Administrative Simplification, were
required to come into compliance with
the regulatory requirements related to
transactions no later than October 16,
2003. We understand that all M+C
organizations properly filed ASCA
compliance plans before October 16,
2002. Therefore, they obtained
extensions and had a compliance date of
October 16, 2003.
An M+C organization that pays a noncompliant electronic claim after October
16, 2003, would accordingly be out of
compliance with the HIPAA
transactions regulations, but would not
violate the provisions of section
1862(a)(22) of the Act or the
requirements of this regulation. This
final rule applies only to providers,
practitioners, and suppliers who submit
claims under Part A or Part B of
Medicare. It does not apply to the
submission of claims by providers to
M+C organizations. Moreover, the
waiver provisions for small providers,
practitioners, and suppliers established
by section 3 of ASCA and this
regulation do not extend to claims
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submitted by these providers to any
health plans other than Medicare.
Section 902 of the MMA amended
section 1871(a) of the Act and requires
the Secretary, in consultation with the
Director of OMB, to establish and
publish timelines for the publication of
Medicare final regulations based on the
publication of Medicare proposed or
interim final regulations. Section 902 of
the MMA also states that the timelines
for these regulations may vary but shall
not exceed 3 years from the previous
publication of the proposed or interim
final rule, except under exceptional
circumstances.
The MMA also introduced Part D of
the Medicare Program. Future
rulemaking may be needed to explore
the applicability of section 3 of ASCA
to Part D. We will initiate such
rulemaking, if needed, upon further
evaluation as we get closer to the Part
D implementation date.
We note that this rule finalizes the
provisions of the August 15, 2003
interim final rule. The final rule is, thus,
being published within the 3-year time
period identified in section 902 of the
MMA.
II. Provisions of the Interim Final Rule
Section 3 of ASCA established the
requirements and exceptions under the
Medicare Program for the mandatory
submission of claims in electronic form.
In the August 15, 2003 Federal Register
(68 FR 48805), we published an interim
final rule that implemented these
statutory requirements.
A. Definitions Used for Electronic Claim
Submission
The interim final rule added a new
paragraph (d) to § 424.32. Section
424.32(d)(1) specified the following
definitions for the purposes of
paragraph (d): Claim; electronic claim;
direct data entry; electronic media;
initial Medicare claim; physician,
practitioner, facility, or supplier;
provider of services; and small provider
of services or small supplier. We
defined ‘‘claim’’ to mean the transaction
defined at 45 CFR 162.1101(a) (that is,
‘‘health care claim’’). We specified the
definition of ‘‘electronic claim’’ to mean
a claim that is submitted via electronic
media. In addition, we specified that the
definitions of ‘‘direct data entry’’ and
‘‘electronic media’’ are defined as those
terms are defined in 45 CFR 162.103
and 160.103, respectively.
In § 424.32(d)(1)(v) of the interim final
rule, we defined an ‘‘initial Medicare
claim’’ as a claim submitted to Medicare
for payment under Part A or Part B of
the Medicare Program for the first time
for processing, including claims sent to
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Medicare for the first time for secondary
payment purposes. This definition also
specified that an initial Medicare claim
excludes any adjustment or appeal of a
previously submitted claim. This final
rule adds the phrase ‘‘for initial
processing’’ to the definition of ‘‘initial
Medicare claim’’ to clarify that the
requirement for electronic submission
applies to claims that have been
previously rejected before being
accepted into the Medicare processing
system.
In § 424.32(d)(1)(vi), we defined a
‘‘physician, practitioner, facility, or
supplier’’ as a Medicare provider other
than a provider of services. The final
rule adds the words ‘‘or supplier’’ to
make the definition precise, so that the
term is defined as ‘‘a Medicare provider
or supplier other than a provider of
services.’’ In § 424.32(d)(1)(vii), we
defined a ‘‘provider of services’’ as a
provider of services as defined in
section 1861(u) of the Act. In
§ 424.32(d)(1)(viii), we defined a ‘‘small
provider of services or small supplier’’
as a provider of services with fewer than
25 full-time equivalent employees; or a
physician, practitioner, facility, or
supplier (other than provider of
services) with fewer than 10 full-time
equivalent employees.
B. Submission of Electronic Claims
Required
Electronic submission of Medicare
claims is required for initial Medicare
claims, including initial claims with
paper attachments, submitted for
processing by the Medicare fiscal
intermediary (FI) or carrier that serves
the physician, practitioner, facility,
supplier, or other health care provider.
No other transactions, including
changes, adjustments, or appeals to the
initial claim, are required to be
submitted electronically in accordance
with ASCA.
In § 424.32(d)(2), we specified that,
except for claims to which
§ 424.32(d)(3) or (d)(4) applies, an initial
Medicare claim under Part A or Part B
or both may be paid only if submitted
as an electronic claim for processing by
the Medicare FI or carrier that serves the
physician, practitioner, facility,
supplier, or other health care provider.
This requirement does not apply to any
other transactions, including adjustment
or appeal of the initial Medicare claim.
C. Exceptions to Requirement To Submit
Electronic Claims
The regulations at 45 CFR 162.923
state that, ‘‘except as otherwise
provided in this part, if a covered entity
conducts with another covered entity
(or within the same covered entity),
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using electronic media, a transaction for
which the Secretary has adopted a
standard under this part, the covered
entity must conduct the transaction as a
standard transaction.’’ HIPAA does not
require that a health plan be able to
accept claims via every type of
electronic media, only that claims
received via such media comply with
the standard format and content
requirements of HIPAA (www.wpcedi.com/HIPAA). The reference in
section 3 of ASCA to the filing of claims
‘‘in electronic form’’ does not dictate the
use of a particular electronic form.
Thus, the Medicare program will
continue to accept only those forms
identified in Chapter 24 of the Medicare
Internet Only Claims Processing Manual
(IOM Pub. L. 100–04) that we issue. At
present, Medicare does not accept
claims via the Internet, an extranet or,
in many cases, via removable/
transportable storage media. This final
rule does not change this Medicare
policy. The interim final rule stated that
an advance notice of any future plans
for expansion or contraction in the
electronic media accepted for
submission of Medicare claims would
be published in Medicare program
instructions and via routine contractor
notification and instructional media.
In the interim final rule, we specified
that we will consider claims submitted
via a direct data entry screen
maintained for Medicare, and as
permitted by 45 CFR 162.923, to be
electronic claims for purposes of this
requirement. Also, we stated that claims
transmitted to a Medicare contractor
using the free or low cost claims
software issued by Medicare fee-forservice plans will be considered
electronic claims for purposes of this
requirement.
The ASCA provided for exceptions to
the requirement for mandatory
electronic submission of Medicare
claims. In accordance with ASCA, the
interim final rule established that the
Secretary of HHS could waive the
application of the electronic claim
requirement in specific cases. To
implement the statutory mandate, we
provided more explicit requirements
that are specified in § 424.32(d).
Specifically, § 424.32(d)(3) states that
there are two exceptions to electronic
submission of initial Medicare claims.
The first exception, specified in
§ 424.32(d)(3)(i), applies when there is
no method available for the submission
of an electronic claim. For example, we
could not reasonably expect Medicare
beneficiaries to submit electronic
claims. Even though the statute requires,
with very few exceptions, that providers
of health care bill Medicare on behalf of
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a beneficiary (sections 1814(a) and
1848(g)(4) of the Act), some
beneficiaries will still submit claims to
Medicare. However, those relatively few
beneficiaries who submit claims are not
likely to possess the capability to submit
a HIPAA compliant claim. Further,
there are situations in which the
standard adopted by the Secretary at 45
CFR 162.1102 does not support all of
the information necessary for payment
of the claim. We identified three other
situations that fall into this category:
• Roster billing of vaccinations
covered by the Medicare Program. In
order to promote an increase in the flu
vaccinations for Medicare beneficiaries,
since 1993 Medicare has allowed mass
immunizers to bill the program using a
single claim form with an attached list
of beneficiaries to whom a flu vaccine
was administered. Many mass
immunizers bill electronically, but in a
non-standard format. This roster billing
simplifies provider billing but is not
available in electronic form under the
Transactions Rule.
• Claims for payment under Medicare
demonstration projects. Medicare
demonstration projects often allow for
unusual situations not normally
handled by the transactions standards;
and
• Claims where more than one health
plan is responsible for payment before
Medicare. The interim final rule
indicated that efforts were underway to
resolve the confusion in the reporting of
per service payments by more than one
primary payer and allowed these claims
to continue to be submitted to Medicare
on paper for the time being. Although a
number of alternatives were considered,
a clear process for electronic billing of
Medicare in this case is not yet
finalized. Once a solution is reached, we
will then notify the public of the
effective date of the change.
Providers to whom an exception does
not apply will then be required to
submit Medicare claims electronically.
In the interim final rule, we established
that specific program guidance would
be issued to Medicare providers
concerning submission of these claims
on paper effective October 16, 2003. We
stated that we would also issue specific
guidance or regulations, as necessary,
informing covered entities if this or
another exception no longer applies.
The second exception, described in
§ 424.32(d)(3)(ii), provided that
electronic submission would be waived
when the entity submitting the claim is
a small provider of services or small
supplier. The statute is quite specific as
to the size requirements, and the interim
final rule simply incorporated the
statutory requirements. This final rule
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makes a slight technical revision, in
order to use a defined term consistently.
D. Unusual Cases
In the interim final rule, we
established that the Secretary may
waive the electronic submission
requirement in certain unusual
situations as the Secretary finds
appropriate. In § 424.32(d)(4), we
specified that such an exception would
exist in the following three situations:
• The submission of dental claims.
This exception is being included
because, under HIPAA, dentists who are
covered entities are required to submit
electronic transactions to other payers
in a format different from that generally
used in the Medicare Program. Since
Medicare does not generally cover
dental services, this exception is added
to minimize the burden on dentists who
may, at times, need to bill the Program.
• A service interruption in the mode
of submitting the electronic claim that is
outside of the control of the entity
submitting the claim, for the period of
the interruption. This exception would
apply only if the physician, practitioner,
facility, supplier, or other health care
provider temporarily loses electricity, or
telephone or other communication
service. If electricity, telephone, or other
communication services exist, but one
or the other is unavailable for a period
of time (for example, because of
inclement weather or due to telephone
company technical breakdowns), paper
claims will be accepted during the
period of disrupted power or
communication service.
• On demonstration, satisfactory to
the Secretary, of other extraordinary
circumstances precluding submission of
electronic claims.
The interim final rule specified that
entities would not generally need to
make a special request to determine
whether an exception applies that
would make them eligible for a
mandatory waiver under § 424.32(d)(3)
or a discretionary waiver under
§ 424.32(d)(4). A special request would
have to be submitted to a Medicare FI
or carrier when an entity did not meet
the mandated exceptions at
§ 424.32(d)(3), or the specified
discretionary waiver criteria at
§ 424.32(d)(4)(i) and (d)(4)(ii), but
believed there were other extraordinary
circumstances that precluded its
submission of electronic claims. We also
proposed to issue program guidance to
Medicare FIs and carriers to enable
them to handle, on a case-by-case basis,
requests for relief in extraordinary
circumstances. This program guidance
was issued on December 19, 2003
(Transmittal 44, CR 2966, Instructions
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for the Mandatory Electronic
Submission of Medicare Claims), and
may be found at www.cms.hhs.gov/
manuals/. Publication of this final rule
will result in some changes to
Transmittal 44, CR 2966, which will be
reissued following publication of this
final rule.
This final rule adds two more unusual
situations under § 424.32(d)(4) for
which an exception would exist.
Specifically, the requirement to submit
electronic claims may be waived when
the entity submitting the claim (1)
submits, on average, less than 10 claims
per month, or (2) furnishes services only
outside of the U.S. territory. See our
response to comments in section III of
this preamble for further discussion
regarding these additional exceptions.
E. Enforcement
ASCA’s amendment to section 1862(a)
of the Act prescribes that ‘‘no payment
may be made under Part A or Part B of
the Medicare Program for any expenses
incurred for items or services’’ for
which a claim is submitted in a nonelectronic form. Consequently, absent
an applicable exception, paper claims
submitted to Medicare will not be paid.
We specified that the Secretary may
review entities that bill Medicare nonelectronically. We stated that entities
determined to be in violation of the
statute or the interim final rule would
be subject to claim denials,
overpayment recoveries, and applicable
interest on overpayments.
F. Effective Date
In accordance with section 3(b) of
ASCA, we specified, in § 424.32(d)(5) of
the regulations, that the effective date
for these amendments would be for
claims submitted on or after October 16,
2003.
III. Analysis of and Responses to Public
Comments
We received 17 timely public
comments on the August 15, 2003
interim final rule. Based upon some of
the comments we received from
members of the health care provider
community who bill Medicare, there
remain questions about Medicare’s
electronic claim submission
requirement and how this rule applies
in certain situations. Additional
information was provided through
Medicare manual instructions to FIs and
carriers (Transmittal 44, CR 2966,
December 19, 2003, which may be
found at www.cms.hhs.gov/manuals/).
Several providers are uncertain about
how to determine if they meet the
definition of ‘‘small provider of services
or small supplier,’’ especially when
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deciding who should be included in the
‘‘full time equivalent’’ (FTE) employee
calculation. Furthermore, some
providers have questions concerning
whether they are required to submit a
request to HHS for a small provider
waiver, which would allow them to
continue submitting their claims to
Medicare on paper.
A. General Issues
Comment: One commenter stated that
the August 15, 2003 interim final rule
did not provide sufficient time for
providers to comply with the October
16, 2003 statutory effective date and that
we should change the implementation
date.
Response: We understand the
commenter’s concern. However, we are
not able to change the effective date of
implementation and compliance,
because the October 16, 2003 effective
date is mandated by the statute.
B. Determining Small Provider Status
To qualify for a waiver as a small
provider of services or small supplier,
and thus, be permitted to continue
billing Medicare on paper, the entity
submitting a claim must be either: (1) A
provider of services with fewer than 25
FTEs that submits its claims to a
Medicare FI; or (2) a physician,
practitioner, facility, or supplier with
fewer than 10 FTEs who bills a
Medicare carrier or Durable Medical
Equipment Regional Carrier (DMERC).
Comment: Several commenters
believe many in the provider
community remain unaware that
providers do not need to request a
waiver for a small provider exception
from Medicare electronic claims
submission. In addition, other
commenters requested a small provider
waiver.
Response: Providers who in good faith
believe they qualify as ‘‘small providers
of services or small suppliers’’
automatically qualify for the small
provider waiver unless, upon
subsequent review, the Department
determines that the waiver requirements
in fact are not met. In that case, if the
Department finds that none of the
exceptions applies, the provider must
submit all claims to Medicare
electronically. Providers must assess
their own situation and determine for
themselves whether they meet the small
provider criteria.
Small providers of services and small
suppliers may elect to submit some of
their claims to Medicare electronically,
and some claims on paper. Submission
of some claims electronically does not
revoke or cancel their status as a small
provider of services or small supplier,
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nor obligate them to submit all of their
claims electronically. (More information
about this will be published through the
Medicare contractors. The first in a
series of publications was Transmittal
44, CR 2966 dated December 19, 2003.)
Comment: Several commenters
requested additional guidance on the
term ‘‘FTE,’’ including direction on who
is considered an FTE and how the
number of FTEs should be calculated for
a small provider of services or small
supplier. One commenter suggested that
only clinical staff should be included in
the FTE count. Other commenters
believe owners of practices should not
count toward the FTE total.
Response: ASCA and its
implementing regulation do not modify
pre-existing laws or employer policies
defining full-time employment.
Employers have established policies and
practices, subject to State and Federal
laws, which define ‘‘full-time
equivalent’’ and provide methods for
calculating the number of hours their
employees must work on average on a
weekly, biweekly, monthly, or yearly
basis to constitute a ‘‘full-time
equivalent’’ employee. Some employers
classify employees who work an average
of 32 hours per week as one FTE,
whereas other employers consider only
employees who work 35 to 40 hours per
week on average as one FTE. An
employee who works an average of 40
or more hours a week would virtually
always be considered full-time and one
FTE, but employees who work fewer
hours weekly could also be considered
full-time and one FTE according to the
policies of, and laws applicable to, a
different employer.
Everyone on staff for whom a health
care provider withholds taxes and files
reports with the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) using an Employer
Identification Number (EIN) is
considered an employee including, if
applicable, the physician(s) who owns a
practice and provides hands-on
services, and those support staff who do
not furnish health care services but do
retain records of, perform billing for,
order supplies related to, provide
personnel services for, and otherwise
perform support services to enable the
provider to function. Unpaid volunteers
would not be considered employees for
purposes of calculating FTEs.
Individuals who perform services under
independent contract for a provider,
such as individuals employed by a
billing agency or medical placement
service, for whom a provider does not
withhold taxes, are not considered
members of a provider’s staff for FTE
calculation purposes when determining
whether a provider of services or
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supplier can be considered as ‘‘small’’
for electronic billing waiver purposes.
Medical staff members may
sometimes work part-time, or may work
full-time but their time is split among
multiple providers. Part-time employee
hours must also be counted when
determining the number of FTEs
employed by a provider. For example, if
a provider has a policy that anyone who
works at least 35 hours per week on
average qualifies as full-time (that is, as
one FTE), and has five full-time
employees and seven part-time
employees, each of whom works 25
hours a week, that provider would have
ten FTEs (5+[7 × 25 = 175 divided by
35 = 5]).
In some cases, the employer
identification number (EIN) of a parent
company may be used to file employee
tax reports for multiple providers under
multiple Medicare provider numbers. In
that instance, it is acceptable to consider
only those staff, or staff hours worked
for a particular provider as identified by
Medicare provider number to calculate
the number of FTEs employed by that
provider. For example, ABC Health Care
Company owns hospital, home health
agency (HHA), ambulatory surgical
center (ASC), and durable medical
equipment (DME) subsidiaries. Some of
those providers bill intermediaries and
some carriers. All have separate
provider numbers, but the tax records
for all employees are reported under the
same EIN to the IRS. There is a company
policy that staff must work an average
of 40 hours a week to be considered fulltime.
Some of the same staff split hours
between the hospital and the ASC, or
between the DME and HHA
subsidiaries. To determine total FTEs by
provider number, it is acceptable to base
the calculation on the number of hours
each staff member contributes to the
support of each separate provider by
provider number. First, each provider
would need to determine the number of
staff members who work on a full-time
basis under a single provider number
only; not more than 40 hours a week
should be counted for these employees.
Then each provider would need to
determine the number of part-time
hours a week worked on average by all
staff who furnished services for the
provider on a less than full-time basis,
and divide that total by 40 hours to
determine their full-time equivalent
total. If certain staff members regularly
work an average of 60 hours per week,
but their time is divided 50 hours to the
hospital and 10 hours to the ASC, for
FTE calculation purposes, consider the
person as one FTE for the hospital and
.25 FTE for the ASC.
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In some cases, a single provider
number and EIN may be assigned, but
the entity’s primary mission is not as a
health care provider. For instance, a
grocery store’s primary role is the retail
sale of groceries and ancillary items
including over-the-counter medications,
but the grocery store has a small
pharmacy section that provides
prescription drugs and some DME to
Medicare beneficiaries. A large drug
store has a pharmacy department that
supplies prescriptions and DME to
Medicare beneficiaries, but most of the
store’s revenue and most of their
employees are not involved with
prescription drugs or DME and
concentrate on non-related departments
of the store, such as groceries, film
development, cosmetics, electronics,
cleaning supplies, etc. A county
government uses the same EIN for all
county employees but their health care
provider services are limited to
furnishing of emergency medical care
and ambulance transport to residents.
For FTE calculation purposes, it is
acceptable to include only those staff
members of the grocery store, drug store,
or county government involved with, or
that support the provision of, health
care in the FTE count when assessing
whether a small provider waiver may
apply. Support staff who are to be
included in the FTE calculation in these
instances include, but are not
necessarily limited to, those that restock
the pharmacy or ambulance, order
supplies, maintain patient records, or
provide billing and personnel services
for the pharmacy or emergency medical
services department if under the same
EIN. FTEs should be calculated
according to the number of hours on
average that each staff member
contributes to the department that
furnishes the services or supplies for
which the Medicare provider number
was issued.
Neither unpaid volunteers nor
individuals that perform services for a
provider under independent contract,
such as individuals employed by a
billing agency or medical placement
service, for whom a provider does not
withhold taxes, should be considered
toward an entity’s FTE count when
determining if a provider of services or
supplier can be considered as ‘‘small’’
for electronic billing waiver purposes.
C. Contingency for Paper Billers
Comment: Several commenters
requested that the Medicare HIPAA
contingency plan extend to paper claims
so as to avoid cash flow problems
among providers.
Response: The ASCA enacted on
December 27, 2001 (Pub. L. 107–105)
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requires the electronic submission of
Medicare claims in an electronic form
specified by the Secretary of the HHS.
The statute waives this requirement
only in limited situations, which are
detailed in § 424.32 of this regulation.
The ‘‘electronic form’’ specified by the
Secretary generally means the electronic
transactions and code sets standards
adopted as part of the HIPAA as
detailed in 45 CFR parts 160 and 162.
In response to HHS contingency plan
guidance for the electronic transactions
and code sets standards under HIPAA,
issued on July 24, 2003, Medicare
announced its HIPAA contingency
plans on September 23, 2003.
Medicare’s contingency plans allowed
for the submission of claims in noncompliant electronic formats on and
after October 16, 2003, for an
unspecified period of time. However,
Medicare has revised its contingency
plan; it is paying electronic, HIPAA
non-compliant claims no sooner than 27
days after receipt, beginning with claims
received on or after July 1, 2004.
Continued paper submission of
Medicare claims is not a part of
Medicare’s HIPAA transactions
contingency plan. The statute affords no
latitude for those who do not meet one
of the exceptions, but Medicare will
take into consideration the good faith
efforts by a provider to comply with the
electronic billing requirement when
enforcing the provision.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concerns that Medicare would not be
able to handle an increase in paper
claims submission if a larger portion of
providers eligible for the ‘‘small
provider of services or supplier’’ waiver
opted to continue, or drop back to,
paper claims submission.
Response: Approximately 98 percent
of claims submitted to FIs, and 83
percent of carrier claims are electronic.
With the benefits and efficiencies
gained through electronic billing, we do
not believe that electronic billers who
are eligible to bill on paper will indeed
revert to paper. Paper claims are more
cumbersome to complete and are paid
less timely than electronic claims.
Moreover, we do not expect difficulty
with Medicare contractors’ ability to
handle paper claims if there were an
increase in volume. Since the interim
final rule’s October 16, 2003 effective
date, Medicare contractors have not
experienced any problems in receiving
and processing electronic claims, and
we have not observed any increase in
electronic billers who are eligible to bill
by paper reverting to paper claims
submissions.
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D. Definition of Initial Medicare Claim
We received a number of comments
related to our definition of ‘‘initial
Medicare claim.’’ In the interim final
rule, this term was defined in
§ 424.32(d)(1)(v) as a claim submitted to
Medicare for payment under Part A or
Part B of the Medicare program for the
first time for processing, including for
secondary payment purposes. Some
disagree with our decision to require
electronic submission of Medicare
Secondary Payer (MSP) claims. We have
responded to comments submitted on
this definition below and provided
added clarity. Some commenters also
expressed concerns with their ability to
submit an electronic MSP claim with a
paper attachment.
Comment: We received one comment
on resubmission of initial Medicare
claims. The commenter was concerned
that claims submitted before the
compliance deadline of October 16,
2003 on paper and then resubmitted
after the deadline on paper would be
rejected.
Response: We understand the
concerns of the provider community
regarding resubmission of claims
previously submitted on paper in an
electronic format; however, the statute
does not afford us any flexibility in
allowing for paper claims submission
following the compliance deadline.
We have interpreted the intent of the
statute to mean claims submitted to the
Medicare claims processing system for
the first time, including claims
submitted after having been previously
rejected (which were not previously
considered as submitted claims since
they were never accepted into the
processing system), claims with paper
attachments, demand bills, claims
where Medicare is secondary and there
is only one primary payer, and nonpayment claims, as claims that must be
submitted electronically barring any
waiver or exception. Initial Medicare
claims do not include adjustments
submitted to intermediaries on
previously submitted claims or appeal
requests.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concerns with our inclusion of a claim
sent to Medicare for secondary payment
(MSP) purposes in our definition of
‘‘initial Medicare claim.’’ They argued
that although primary claims and MSP
claims use the same HIPAA 837
standard, the HIPAA regulations make a
distinction between the two transactions
and, as a result, MSP claims should be
treated differently than other Medicare
claims.
Response: While MSP claims were not
specifically highlighted, the statutory
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71013
language does not exclude them from
consideration as initial Medicare claims.
Furthermore, we do not believe that
MSP claims should be treated as a
different type of claims transaction for
purposes of Medicare electronic claims
submission, because submission of a
secondary claim would still constitute
an initial submission of a claim to
Medicare. Therefore, we have
interpreted the statute to mean they
must not be excluded from the
electronic submission requirement. Our
definition of an ‘‘initial Medicare claim’’
is consistent with this interpretation.
Claims submitted to Medicare when
there is more than one primary payer
must be submitted on paper as it is
difficult to submit service level data for
more than one primary payer
electronically at this time. The only
alternative is for providers to submit
those claims to Medicare on paper with
copies of the explanation of benefits
(EOBs)/remittance advices (RAs) from
the primary payers attached.
Comment: We received comments
from providers concerning submission
of EOBs/RAs. For instance, one
commenter was under the impression
that an 835 electronic remittance advice
transaction is needed to submit an 837
MSP claim. The commenter proposed as
an alternative that the electronic
submission of claims for which
Medicare is secondary be phased in and
only required when providers receive an
835.
Response: In order for a provider to be
reimbursed for an MSP claim, the
provider must submit to Medicare
certain payment information contained
in the EOB/RA from the primary
payer(s). We encourage providers to
work with their payers to receive the
remittance advice in the 835 electronic
format, but that is not mandated by
HIPAA or ASCA. A provider may
receive this information from the
primary payer(s) either on paper or
electronically. A provider does not need
to receive an 835 electronic remittance
advice transaction from a primary payer,
however, in order to generate a
secondary claim for Medicare.
E. Attachments
Comment: We received some
comments on timely reimbursement of
electronic claims submitted with paper
attachments. In one case, a provider
believed that it was unable to receive
reimbursement for an electronic claim
unless a paper claim was also
submitted.
Response: Transmittal 44, CR 2966,
December 19, 2003, required Medicare
contractors to issue further guidance to
providers and submitters on the
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submission of electronic claims when
there are paper attachments. Providers
and submitters who experience
difficulty getting their electronic claims
that have paper attachments processed
must first contact their Medicare
contractor. If problems persist,
providers and submitters are
encouraged to contact their regional
CMS office to troubleshoot these issues.
Phone numbers for Medicare contractors
and CMS regional offices can be found
on our Web site at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/physicians/
default.asp.
Comment: Another commenter was
concerned with Medicare connecting
paperwork and hard copy EOBs with an
electronic claim, resulting in untimely
reimbursement and extra follow-up
time.
Response: Once the electronic claims
attachment standard is adopted and
entities have properly implemented it,
this issue will be resolved. In the
meantime, and prior to the claims
attachment standard compliance date,
paper attachments must be properly
associated with the corresponding
electronic claims by incorporating
correct and appropriate data and
indicating in the electronic claims
transaction that separate paper
documentation is being sent. Separate
submission of electronic claims and
related paper attachments should
consequently not cause a discernable
delay in payment of claims. Providers
and other electronic claim submitters
are advised to contact the Medicare
contractor to which they submit their
claims if they have further questions
about the locally published process.
Pending issuance of the future
instructions concerning submission of
medical records for electronic claims,
providers and Medicare contractors can
continue current policies and practices
regarding submission of attachments
with claims, whether in a proprietary
format, on paper, via fax, or by other
means.
F. Unusual Cases
While commenters expressed their
support for electronic claims
submission, they were also pleased with
the flexibility afforded by the outlined
exceptions, which permit continued
paper claims submission such as in the
case of roster vaccinations billing and
certain Medicare demonstration claims.
We received a number of comments on
‘‘unusual cases,’’ asking for further
clarity.
Comment: One commenter stated the
interim final rule was unclear
concerning whether paper claims would
be allowable after the compliance
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deadline. The commenter proposed
designating the HIPAA transition period
to a largely electronic submission
environment for Medicare, an ‘‘unusual
case.’’
Response: The ‘‘unusual case’’
provision is intended to operate as an
exception to a situation in which
Medicare providers are generally
submitting claims electronically. The
commenter, however, proposes making
the exception to be the norm, which
would appear to be contrary to what the
Congress intended.
Comment: Another commenter
suggested we expand the criteria for the
service interruption to include power
outages, which result in a phone or
communication service interruption.
Response: We have interpreted an
‘‘unusual case’’ exception to be one
applied to a temporary situation outside
of a provider’s control that effectively
precludes electronic submission of
claims. For a situation to fall under an
‘‘unusual case’’ exception, the
circumstances must be truly out of the
ordinary and they must genuinely
prevent the provider from complying
with the applicable electronic
submission requirement.
In the August 15, 2003 interim final
rule, we described three situations that
we believe meet the criteria for an
unusual case exception. The three
situations we listed were submission of
dental claims, a service interruption
outside the control of the submitter, and
other extraordinary circumstances
deemed satisfactory to the Secretary.
We also specified that the service
interruption exception is limited to
submitters who have experienced a loss
of phone or communication service. We
agree with the commenter that it may be
possible for an interruption in the mode
of service used to submit a claim to
occur resulting from something other
than inclement weather or phone
company problems. We further
recognize that a loss of power could
occur that does not result in the loss of
the use of a phone or other
communication services but precludes
or severely inhibits a submitter from
sending claims electronically. In this
rare and unanticipated situation, a
waiver may be granted for service
interruption. This is addressed in
Medicare manual instructions,
Transmittal 44, CR 2966, December 19,
2003.
Based on comments received and our
assessment of the reasonableness of an
entity’s ability to comply, we have
identified the following two additional
‘‘unusual case’’ situations we consider
to be eligible for a waiver under
§ 424.32(d)(4). First, an unusual case is
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deemed to exist when an entity submits
fewer than 10 claims to Medicare per
month on average. We believe entities
that submit such low volumes of
Medicare claims are ‘‘unusual cases’’ in
that the volume does not support
mandating the acquisition of hardware/
software to submit claims electronically.
The exception for small providers
indicates to us the Congress’s intention
that the electronic submission
requirement not apply to providers for
whom the electronic submission
requirement of claims would be truly
burdensome. This would be the case for
providers who submit fewer than 10
claims per month, as the cost of
converting their billing systems for so
few claims would be uneconomic. If the
volume increases, then electronic claim
submission would be required, unless
another exception applies. This is selfassessable and the entity need not
submit a waiver request. Second, it is
deemed to be an unusual case when the
entity submitting a claim furnishes
services only outside of the U.S.
territory. The HIPAA transactions and
code sets standards are consensusbased, American National Standards
Institute (ANSI)-accredited standards
that rely upon hardware and software
that meet certain specifications, which
may not be readily available outside of
the U.S. territory. We believe that
entities furnishing services solely
outside of the U.S. in many cases could
not properly submit electronic claims.
Moreover, we think those entities are
few in number and truly constitute an
unusual case. This is also self-assessable
and the entity need not submit a waiver
request. Section 424.32(d)(4) is revised
to include these two additional
‘‘unusual case’’ situations.
Instructions to the Medicare
contractors that describe how to go
about requesting an ‘‘unusual case’’
waiver were issued December 19, 2003
(Transmittal 44, CR 2966).
Comment: One commenter urged
Medicare contractors to furnish all
providers and mass immunizer billers
and suppliers with free electronic roster
billing software, in order to reduce
dependence on paper roster billing and
increase cost savings to the program.
Another commenter suggested there
remains a need for continued outreach
to educate providers on these topics.
Response: We are considering these
suggestions; however, claims
submission for roster billing for
vaccinations is still considered exempt
from the electronic claims submission
requirement. To the extent certain
Medicare contractors’ software permits
electronic submission of roster bills, we
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encourage providers to use it; however,
it is not required.
We have issued instructions to the
Medicare contractors that describe in
greater detail how this regulation is
operationalized, including instructions
for requesting an ‘‘unusual case’’ waiver
(refer to Transmittal 44, CR 2966, dated
December 19, 2003). In addition,
Medicare contractors will be instructed
to include information on their provider
Web sites and in their newsletters that
addresses these and other issues
pertinent to operationalization of the
regulation.
G. Testing With Medicare
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concerns regarding low
HIPAA transaction testing rates between
providers and Medicare.
Response: Medicare testing has
increased over the past several months
and rose steadily in the weeks leading
up to the HIPAA compliance deadline.
As of September 10, 2004,
approximately 97.7 percent of inbound
claims were being submitted to
Medicare in the HIPAA-compliant
format.
Medicare invoked its HIPAA
contingency plan to afford added
flexibility to providers and submitters
who were not ready to submit claims in
the HIPAA electronic format on the
deadline of October 16, 2003, to
continue to prepare for the electronic
claims submission requirement in the
adopted formats. Many Medicare
contractors were ready to test the 837
and 835 for 6 or more months before the
October 16, 2003 deadline. Medicare’s
revised HIPAA contingency plan
encourages further HIPAA compliance
because, effective July 1, 2004, noncompliant electronic claims are paid no
sooner than 27 days after the date of
receipt while compliant claims are paid
sooner.
Comment: Another commenter
requested that Medicare relax the
technical edits to HIPAA transactions so
that claims may continue to be
processed after the deadline.
Response: We believe that Medicare
has tried to make reasonable
accommodations regarding its technical
edits, while remaining considerate of
how changes in its claims processing
systems may affect various other
submitters (some of whom could be
adversely affected by inappropriate
technical edits).
H. Impact of HIPAA Standards
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concerns surrounding the
overall level of readiness by the
industry for implementing the HIPAA
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transaction and code set standards due
to possible industry variations in the
interpretation of the standards. They
were concerned that unresolved
questions pertaining to complying with
the HIPAA standards could impact a
provider’s ability to submit claims
electronically and, therefore, comply
with the Medicare electronic claims
submission requirement.
Response: We recognize that a
number of HIPAA implementation
issues exist and present obstacles to
HIPAA compliance; however, these
issues and obstacles extend beyond the
scope of this regulation. We are
addressing these concerns through other
channels. Medicare’s HIPAA
contingency plan may afford some
additional latitude to entities as they
work toward compliance with the
HIPAA standards. In the meantime,
Medicare’s contingency plan allows for
providers, under specified
circumstances, to continue to send
HIPAA non-compliant electronic claims
to Medicare and, therefore, facilitate
compliance with the ASCA mandate.
I. Enforcement
Comment: One commenter identified
a few issues related to compliance with
HIPAA’s electronic transactions and
code sets standards such as a request for
new data elements, which could impact
compliance with the Medicare
electronic claims submission
requirement.
Response: For any change to a
standard to become effective and
compliance required, the designated
standard maintenance organization
would first have to hold public hearings
and ultimately the Secretary would
need to adopt the change formally.
Comment: Another commenter
suggested we find an alternate term for
‘‘audit’’ when discussing enforcement.
Response: We accept this comment;
therefore, in the future we will reference
the Secretary’s ability to ‘‘audit’’ an
entity as the ability to ‘‘review’’ an
entity for compliance. In addition, the
preliminary enforcement process will be
conducted on a prospective basis and
will focus on providers that appear to be
submitting extraordinarily high
numbers of paper claims. If a review
establishes that a provider is submitting
paper claims without properly
qualifying for a waiver, the provider
will be notified that any paper claims
submitted after a certain date will be
rejected by Medicare. However,
providers will be afforded a reasonable
amount of time under the circumstances
to come into compliance with the
electronic claim submission
requirement.
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71015
A future Medicare manual instruction
to Medicare contractors will explain the
criteria for review and the enforcement
requirements for providers that are
determined to have incorrectly
submitted paper claims.
J. Costs To Convert From the
Submission of ‘‘Paper Claims’’ to
‘‘Electronic Claims’’
Comment: One commenter requested
that we provide a more realistic estimate
of the costs associated with converting
from paper claims submission to
electronic claims submission. Several
commenters believe that the
requirement to submit Medicare claims
electronically represents a costly
expense without the potential for
reimbursement to providers.
Response: When considering this
comment, we reviewed again the basis
for the cost estimate and considered
further possible paperwork burden and
capital investment issues in the impact
analysis of the interim final rule. We
concluded that the cost estimate
remains the most accurate, given the
data that were available.
Due to the high number of Medicare
claims already submitted electronically
and the waivers issued for ‘‘small
providers,’’ moderately sized providers
are most likely to be affected by this
requirement. While we do agree that a
provider’s staff will need some time to
become fully familiar and proficient
with the use of the free/low cost
Medicare billing software, a physician’s
office (which presently submits claims
on paper) can purchase hardware to
enable compliance with this
requirement for less than $1,000.
Although the electronic conversion will
not be reimbursed, we continue to
believe that we have tried to provide the
most economical software for providers,
and we will even provide free technical
support on the installation and usage
through our Medicare contractors.
K. Outside the Scope of This Rule
Comment: One commenter requested
that Medicare guidance
communications or program changes to
physicians be completed on paper
rather than electronically.
Response: Although we appreciate
this commenter’s concern, because these
issues were not addressed in the August
15, 2003 interim final rule, we are not
able to address this concern in this final
rule.
Comment: Another commenter
suggested that we reimburse for nursing
service claims.
Response: Although we appreciate the
commenter’s concerns, nursing service
claim reimbursement was not covered
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in the August 15, 2003 interim final
rule. Therefore, we are unable to
address this concern in this final
regulation.
IV. Provisions of This Final Rule
With some minor editing and
modification to include two additional
‘‘unusual cases’’ for an automatic
exception and changed ‘‘unusual
circumstances’’ to ‘‘unusual cases’’, we
are adopting all of the provisions set
forth in the August 15, 2003 interim
final rule as final.
V. Collection of Information
Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA) of 1995, we are required to
provide 30-day 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 fairly
evaluate whether an information
collection should be approved by OMB,
section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the PRA 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.
Therefore, we are soliciting public
comments on each of these issues for
the information collection requirements
discussed below.
The information collection
requirements and associated burdens in
§ 424.32 are subject to the PRA. The
burden of submitting the information
required is addressed under OMB
approval number:
0938–0866, HIPAA Standards for
Coding Electronic Transactions, with a
one-time burden of 34,000,000 hours.
The current approval expires 5/31/05.
0938–0279, Medicare Uniform
Institutional Provider Bill, with an
annual burden of 1,666,208 hours (form
CMS–1450). The current approval
expires 12/31/05.
0938–0008, Common Claim form,
instructions, and supporting regulations
at § 414.40, § 424.32, and § 414.40, with
an annual burden of 44,189,007 hours
(form CMS–1500). The current approval
expires 3/31/06.
Approximately 205,409 providers and
suppliers will be affected by this final
rule and will have to change the format
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for the claims they submit. They will
incur some costs, either that of
switching to clearinghouses, which will
not affect the time it takes to submit the
information for a claim, but may cost
them approximately $.30 per claim, or
that of purchasing computer equipment,
which we estimate at $500 to $1,000.
In the final rule published to
implement the electronic transactions
and code sets standards, we estimated
that it would take an average of 10 hours
per entity to switch over to the
mandated standard transaction. (The
switch could be from paper to electronic
or from another electronic format to the
standard format.)
For purposes of this discussion, we
are estimating that 37.5 percent of the
affected providers and suppliers (that is,
those not meeting one of the exceptions)
already own computers and will not
incur capital costs. We are also
estimating that 50 percent of the
affected providers and suppliers will
start using a clearinghouse or billing
service, which will not impose any
capital costs subject to the PRA. The
remaining 12.5 percent (25,676) will
buy computers at an average of $750, for
a total capital cost of $19.3 million.
On the other hand, the providers and
suppliers who own or who will buy a
computer will require less time to
submit claims. Form CMS–1450 takes
approximately 9 minutes to submit in
hard copy and 0.5 minutes to submit
electronically; form CMS–1500 takes 15
minutes and 1 minute, respectively.
If 50 percent of the entities that will
bill us directly are responsible for 25
percent of the paper bills (we assume
that half of the bills are submitted by
entities that will be excepted from the
requirements, and that 25 percent will
be submitted through an intermediate
party), they will save 7,651,089 million
hours for form 1500 and 129,196 hours
for form 1450. Mailing costs will be
reduced by approximately $.40 per
claim on average and the cost of the
forms by $.03 for the form 1450 and
form 1500 (the third form is furnished
by us).
As required by section 3504(h) of the
PRA of 1995, we have submitted a copy
of the revision to § 424.32 to OMB for
its review of the information collection
requirements. The revision is not
effective until OMB has approved it.
If you comment on these information
collection and recordkeeping
requirements, please mail copies
directly to the following:
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, Office of Strategic Operations
and Regulatory Affairs, Regulations
Development and Issuances Group,
Attn: Jimmy Wickliffe, CMS–0008–F,
PO 00000
Frm 00026
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Room C5–11–04, 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244–1850.
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and
Budget, Room 10235, New Executive
Office Building, Washington, DC 20503,
Attn: Christopher Martin, Desk Officer,
CMS–0008–F.
Comments submitted to OMB may
also be e-mailed to the following
address: e-mail:
christophermartin@omb.eop.gov; or
faxed to OMB at (202)395–6974.
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Overall Impact
We have examined the impacts of this
rule as required by Executive Order
12866 (September 1993, Regulatory
Planning and Review), the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA) (September 16,
1980, Pub. L. 96–354), section 1102(b) of
the Social Security Act, the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L.
104–4), and Executive Order 13132.
For the purpose of this analysis, we
use a pre-statute baseline; therefore, all
costs and benefits identified in this
impact analysis are attributed to this
final rule. Nevertheless, the ASCA
mandates most aspects of this final rule.
In particular, the ASCA requires
Medicare providers to submit claims
electronically and stipulates the
exceptions that will and may be granted.
However, we did have discretion in
setting the conditions for exceptions,
and believe that these exceptions reduce
the burden relative to the burden that
was imposed by ASCA without this
implementing regulation.
Executive Order 12866 directs
agencies to assess all costs and benefits
of available regulatory alternatives and,
if regulation is necessary, to select
regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential
economic, environmental, public health
and safety effects, distributive impacts,
and equity). A regulatory impact
analysis (RIA) must be prepared for
major rules with economically
significant effects ($100 million or more
in any 1 year). This is not a major rule.
While additional costs will be imposed
on those entities that do not meet any
of the exception requirements and
which must purchase the capability to
bill Medicare electronically, we estimate
the impact to be less than $100 million.
Our estimates of the cost impact are
based on the following analysis. (Note:
The primary sources of data contained
herein are the Medicare Program’s
‘‘Contractor Reporting of Operational
Workload Data’’ (CROWD), the ‘‘2002
CMS Statistics’’ Handbook, and the Year
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2000 ‘‘Statistics of U.S. Business’’
issued by the U.S. Census Bureau.)
The Administrative Simplification
provisions under HIPAA establish the
standards for electronic data
transmission when transactions are
conducted electronically, but they do
not require physicians, practitioners,
facilities, suppliers, and other health
care providers to transmit claims and
other transactions electronically. ASCA,
however, does require Medicare
physicians, practitioners, facilities,
suppliers, and other health care
providers (except those for which this
rule provides for an exception) to
submit claims electronically to
Medicare. Consequently, Medicare
claims must be submitted in the HIPAAprescribed electronic format. Thus, this
rule will only have an impact on that
group of entities that now submit paper
claims to the Medicare Program and that
do not fall into one of the excepted
groups.
Approximately 139 million paper
claims were submitted to Medicare in
FY 2002. This represents about 13.9
percent of all claims processed. Broken
down between paper claims submitted
to FIs and carriers, the number of paper
claims in FY 2002 was 3.4 million and
136 million, respectively (source of data
is CROWD).
Over the past 4 years, Medicare’s
electronic media claims (EMC) rate has
slowly grown at an average of 0.3
percent per year for FIs and 0.9 percent
per year for carriers (source of data is
CROWD). We do not expect a change in
this trend for the immediate future.
Therefore, we assume that similar
changes will continue for FY 2004, the
first year of implementation of
mandatory Medicare electronic media
claims (EMC). Using workload growth
projections from our FY 2004 budget
submission to the Congress, we estimate
the FY 2004 volume of paper claims
impacted by the ASCA, factoring out
Medicare’s continuing trend of higher
EMC rates, will be 2.5 million for
Medicare FIs and 133.7 million for
carriers. These volumes could be even
smaller in FY 2004 due to the
simultaneous implementation of
HIPAA. However, the impact of HIPAA,
coupled with Medicare’s EMC trends,
cannot be quantified, though the impact
would only further reduce the cost/
savings impact of ASCA and further
support that a RIA is not needed.
We do not know at this time how
many providers will be excepted from
the ASCA requirements, but projections
have been made based upon the
percentage of health care providers
reported in the Census Bureau’s ‘‘Year
2000 Statistics of U.S. Businesses,’’
which includes data on the number of
health care providers by type with fewer
than 20 employees and the numbers of
physician, practitioner, and supplier
entities with fewer than 10 employees.
The Census figures do not differentiate
between part-time and full-time
employees, and would be expected to
result in inflated numbers on the whole
when applied to Medicare, but that is
acceptable for impact assessment
purposes. The Census did not have a
category for fewer than 25 employees;
fewer than 20 employees was their
closest statistic. Overall, the Census data
would still be reliable indicators of the
anticipated worse case scenario of the
maximum number of Medicare
providers, physicians, practitioners, and
suppliers likely to be impacted by this
regulation. The percentages of small
providers, physicians, practitioners, and
suppliers based on employment
numbers for the universe of all U.S.
providers, physicians, practitioners, and
suppliers should be comparable to the
percentage of the subset of those
providers that bill the Medicare
program.
The Census figures did not include
each of the same provider, physician,
practitioner, and supplier breakouts as
tracked by Medicare’s statistics, but the
Census figures did include the largest
provider, physician, practitioner, and
supplier types. The Census figures
included 90 percent of all Medicare
providers, physicians, practitioners, and
suppliers by type. The provider types,
tracked differently by the Census
Bureau and us, include regional referral
centers, Christian Science Sanitoria,
rural health clinics, critical access
facilities, and hospices. The ‘‘2002 CMS
Statistics’’ directory (number of
providers) and the 2000 Census data
health care establishment totals
(percentage of providers with less than
20 employees) reported the following:
Number of
providers
Provider type
71017
Percentage of
providers with
less than 20
employees
Likely number
excepted
Hospitals ......................................................................................................................................
Home Health Agencies ................................................................................................................
ESRD Facilities ............................................................................................................................
Skilled Nursing Facilities ..............................................................................................................
6,031
7,099
3,991
14,841
10.6
69.2
16.6
25.7
639
4,913
663
3,814
Totals ....................................................................................................................................
31,962
31.4
10,029
Percentage of
providers with
less than 10
employees
Likely number
excepted
Number of
providers
Type of physician, practitioner or supplier
Clinical Labs ................................................................................................................................
Ambulatory Surgical Centers .......................................................................................................
Physicians ....................................................................................................................................
All Other Practitioners ..................................................................................................................
168,333
3,147
567,412
297,967
41.4
34.9
70.6
71.8
69,690
1,098
400,593
213,940
Totals ....................................................................................................................................
1,036,859
66.1
685,321
As there was a 10 percent difference
between the Census provider, physician,
practitioner, and supplier types and the
Medicare provider types, due to
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differences in type of collection, the
numbers impacted would need to be
increased by 10 percent to account for
the difference. Increased by 10 percent,
PO 00000
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approximately 11,032 (31.4 percent) of
all Medicare providers, and 753,853
(66.1 percent) of all Medicare
physicians, practitioners, and suppliers
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could qualify for an exception of the
electronic claim-filing requirement
based on provider size, leaving
approximately 24,126 providers and
386,692 physicians, practitioners, and
suppliers (a total of 410,818) potentially
affected by the ASCA Medicare
requirement nationally.
Approximately 98 percent of
providers, and 83 percent of physicians,
practitioners, and suppliers already
submit claims to Medicare
electronically, and are expected to
continue doing so, so the total impacted
must be further reduced to determine
the approximate number of current
paper claim submitters that would
likely be affected. It is reasonable to
assume that the majority of the paper
claims received by Medicare are
submitted by smaller providers,
physicians, practitioners, and suppliers.
As a result, it would not be accurate to
reduce the number of affected providers
by the full 98 percent or 83 percent. In
the absence of reliable statistics to
project the current source of all paper
claims, however, the number of
providers potentially affected by the
mandatory Medicare electronic claim
requirement will be conservatively
estimated at a maximum of 50 percent
of the entities that would not qualify for
a waiver. This leaves 12,063 providers
and 193,346 physicians, practitioners,
and suppliers (a total of 205,409) that
would need to begin submitting claims
to Medicare electronically.
Statistics collected for PRA clearance
of the Medicare paper claim forms and
referenced in the ‘‘Collection of
Information Requirements’’ section of
this preamble indicate that, in the
absence of a mandatory electronic claim
requirement effective for FY 2004, 2.5
million paper claims are expected to be
sent to Medicare intermediaries and
133.7 million paper claims are to be sent
to Medicare carriers.
Prior to HIPAA, many Medicare
providers used billing agents or
clearinghouses to bill the Medicare
program. Many providers, physicians,
practitioners, and suppliers that
submitted paper claims indicated
anecdotally that they used paper as they
would rather avoid the ‘‘hassle’’ of
dealing with the multiple electronic
claim formats required by payers, and
the need to have staff keep abreast of the
updates to those formats. HIPAA largely
eliminates format differences among
payers, but there will always be
differences concerning use of certain
‘‘situational’’ segments and data
elements in the formats. It is reasonable
to assume that up to half (205,409 × 50
percent = 102,704) of those entities that
do not submit claims to Medicare
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electronically today would prefer to
contract with a third party to deal with
such differences on their behalf.
A small sampling of Medicare
contractors indicated an average cost of
$0.30 per claim for billing agent and
clearinghouse services. The total cost to
physicians, practitioners, facilities,
suppliers, and other health care
providers to use a billing agent or
clearinghouse should not be more than
$7,055,895 (that is, $.30 × {the sum of
2.5 million paper claims sent to
intermediaries as estimated previously
for FY 2004 multiplied by the 68.6
percent of providers that would not
meet the exception criteria, plus 133.7
million paper claims estimated to be
sent to carriers multiplied by the 33.9
percent of physicians, practitioners, and
suppliers that would not meet the
exception criteria}).
Finally, in regard to the balance of
102,704 (205,409 × 50 percent)
providers, physicians, practitioners, and
suppliers that would not be expected to
meet the criteria to submit paper claims,
we conservatively estimate that
approximately 75 percent of these
already own personal computers that
are used to prepare the paper claim
forms they currently submit to
Medicare. Very few hand-written or
manually typed claims are submitted to
Medicare. Although many paper claim
submitters have not used personal
computers for electronic billing, they
have used them for claims preparation,
patient scheduling, and other aspects of
their practice.
We estimate that, at a maximum, the
remaining total of 25,676 (25 percent of
102,704) providers, physicians,
practitioners, and suppliers will obtain
personal computers to allow them to
submit their claims directly to Medicare
electronically. A recent review of
computer costs in the marketplace
indicated that personal computers
sufficient to meet the mandatory
electronic claim requirement could be
obtained for $500 to $1,000 for
hardware (personal computer, monitor,
printer, and modem). Billing software is
available free or at low cost (less than
$25 for shipping and handling) from
Medicare. At the average rate of $750, it
would cost $19.3 million to purchase
25,676 personal computer systems.
More expensive equipment and
peripherals could be used, but would
not be necessary for basic compliance.
Therefore, the total maximum cost
should be no higher than $26.4 million
($7.1 million for users of clearinghouses
or billing services, and $19.3 million for
those that obtain personal computers).
Following the HIPAA savings
calculation used in the Transaction
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Rule, but projected to FY 2004 to
account for inflation, a savings of $615
per provider could result in a total
provider savings of approximately $15.8
million (that is, 25,676 times $615).
We note that the Transaction Final
Rule (65 FR 50353 through 50359) used
a 10-year timeframe to capture the full
extent of costs and savings that could be
attributed to the use of the transactions
adopted under HIPAA. Data from the
2000 edition of Faulkner and Gray’s
‘‘Health Data Directory,’’ from a
Workgroup for Electronic Data
Interchange study report, and from the
Department of Labor was used in those
calculations to determine total claims in
the health care industry, costs to use the
transactions electronically, savings
expected to be realized, the historical
growth rate for claims overall as well as
electronic claims, the percentage of
electronic health care claims nationally
in 2000, and the anticipated inflation
rate for the 10-year period.
Thus, we estimate that the total costplus savings would be approximately
$42.2 million, which is less than the
$100 million threshold for an RIA.
Again, these total costs and savings
attributable to ASCA could be even less
if we were able to factor in the impact
HIPAA may have on electronic billing
growth.
The RFA requires agencies to analyze
options for regulatory relief of small
businesses. For purposes of the RFA,
small entities include small businesses,
nonprofit organizations, and
government agencies. According to the
Small Business Administration’s
(SBA’s) data, approximately 95 percent
of offices of physicians are considered
small businesses (see the Small
Business Administration’s final rule
titled ‘‘Small Business Size Standards,
Health Care,’’ published in the Federal
Register on November 17, 2000, 65 FR
69432). Most practitioners, facilities,
suppliers, and other providers are small
entities either because of nonprofit
status or because of having revenues of
$6 million to $29 million or less in any
1 year. For purposes of the RFA, all
physicians, practitioners, facilities,
suppliers, and other health care
providers that serve Medicare
beneficiaries are considered to be small
entities. However, as stated earlier, this
rule in and of itself does not impose a
regulatory burden. The ASCA mandates
most aspects of this rule, in particular,
the ASCA requires Medicare providers
to submit claims electronically and
stipulates the exceptions that will and
may be granted. We did have discretion
however, in setting conditions for
exceptions, and believe these exceptions
reduce the burden relative to the burden
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 226 / Friday, November 25, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
that may have been imposed by ASCA
without this implementing regulation. If
this final rule has an average annual
impact that exceeds 3 to 5 percent of
total costs or revenues, it would be
considered significant according to the
Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) Guidelines. However, at
a cost of $750 per computer and savings
of $615 ($750–$615), we expect this to
fall significantly below the revenue rule
given by the HHS. Therefore, we have
determined that this rule will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Individuals and States are not
considered small entities. Therefore, no
regulatory relief options are considered.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act
requires us to prepare a regulatory
impact analysis if a rule may have a
significant impact on the operations of
a substantial number of small rural
hospitals. This analysis must conform to
the provisions of section 604 of the
RFA. For purposes of section 1102(b) of
the Act, we define a small rural hospital
as a hospital that is located outside of
a Metropolitan Statistical Area and has
fewer than 100 beds. As indicated
above, this rule could have an impact on
those small rural hospitals that bill
Medicare and that do not meet one of
the exceptions. However, we do not
believe the impact is significant since
the cost of compliance is relatively
small ($500 to $1,000) and small rural
hospitals may be able to qualify for the
small provider exception. Therefore, no
regulatory impact analysis is required as
the impact on small rural hospitals is
not significant.
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 also
requires that agencies assess anticipated
costs and benefits before issuing any
rule that may result in expenditure in
any 1 year by State, local, or tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million. This
final rule will not have an impact of that
size on State, local, or tribal
governments or on the private sector.
Instead, the primary impact on State,
local, or tribal governments, or the
private sector will be that entities that
must begin billing Medicare
electronically as a result of the ASCA
are likely to use that capability to also
bill other payers (such as State, local, or
tribal governments and the private
sector).
Executive Order 13132 establishes
certain requirements that an agency
must meet when it publishes a final rule
that imposes substantial direct
requirement costs on State and local
governments, preempts State law, or
otherwise has Federalism implications.
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This final rule will not have a
substantial effect on State or local
governments for the reasons noted in
this section of this final rule.
B. Anticipated Effects
1. Effects on Beneficiaries, Physicians,
Practitioners, Facilities, Suppliers, and
Other Health Care Providers
The anticipated effects on Medicare’s
beneficiaries will be that additional
attention and services may be provided
by their health care physician because,
for example, electronic billing should
reduce administrative paperwork. (This
assertion was made by the medical
community in numerous forums over
the years, although documentation to
this effect is not available.)
The anticipated effects on the entities
required to bill electronically will
reduce or eliminate paper in their
administrative operations, realizing
increased efficiencies and
indeterminable savings. These savings
may be increased by the fact that the
Administrative Simplification
provisions of HIPAA mandate a
standard transaction for electronic claim
submissions, and this will facilitate
electronic claims submissions to all
health care payers. At this time, we do
not have additional data to estimate
those savings to Medicare physicians,
practitioners, facilities, suppliers, and
other healthcare providers. As
previously stated, there will be a cost
incurred by those entities that cannot
satisfy one of the exceptions and would
be required to bill Medicare in
electronic form.
2. Effects on the Medicare and Medicaid
Programs
Implementation of this final rule will
result in a savings to the Medicare
program. If the FY 2004 projected paper
claims submissions of 136.2 million
(HHS FY 2004 Budget submission to the
Congress and estimated electronic
media claims rate), are reduced by half
and we assume a savings of $1.40 per
claim as a result, the program could
realize administrative savings of over
$95 million per year. (Note: The $1.40
per claim savings is our estimate of
savings based upon a 1990 Industrial
Engineering Study, contracted by CMS
(then HCFA). The study documented
that FI paper claims cost about $3.30
more to process than electronic claims
and, similarly, carrier paper claims cost
about $1.00 more to process than
electronic claims. Weighing these
differences by the 2004 workloads and
combining them yields the $1.40
estimated per claim savings.)
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
71019
We might expect similar types of
savings for the States, which administer
the Medicaid Program. That is,
Medicare providers who become
electronic billers due to ASCA may
decide to begin billing Medicaid
electronically as well. However, this
would depend on which of the affected
Medicare physicians, practitioners,
facilities, suppliers, and other
healthcare providers also bill Medicaid.
Again, the fact that the Administrative
Simplification provisions of HIPAA
mandate a standard transaction for
electronic claim submissions will
facilitate electronic claims submissions
to all health care payers.
C. Alternatives Considered
Section 3 of the ASCA mandated that
all Medicare claims on or after October
16, 2003, be submitted electronically.
Since the statute requires the electronic
submission of claims, no alternatives to
electronic submission were considered.
However, we are interpreting the
statutory provisions of the ASCA to
allow for reasonable and limited
exceptions to the electronic submission
requirement.
D. Conclusion
As described above in section VI.A.,
this final rule establishes the
requirements for implementing the
statutory provisions under section 3 of
the ASCA. The statute requires, with
few exceptions, that physicians,
practitioners, facilities, suppliers, and
other health care providers that bill
Medicare do so electronically. Coupled
with the electronic standard transaction
requirements under HIPAA, this rule
facilitates greater administrative
efficiencies for the Medicare program as
well as for those that bill Medicare.
There will be a cost incurred for those
entities that are unable to meet one of
the statutory exceptions, but we expect
these initial costs to be offset by
increased efficiencies and lower
ongoing costs attributable to Medicare
claims processing.
In accordance with the provisions of
Executive Order 12866, the Office of
Management and Budget reviewed this
regulation.
List of Subjects in 42 CFR Part 424
Emergency medical services, Health
facilities, Health professions, Medicare,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements
I For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the interim rule amending 42
CFR part 424 that CMS published on
August 15, 2003 (68 FR 48805) is
adopted as a final rule with the
following amendments:
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 226 / Friday, November 25, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
Dated: May 2, 2005.
Mark B. McClellan,
Administrator, Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services.
Approved: August 15, 2005.
Michael O. Leavitt,
Secretary.
PART 424—CONDITIONS FOR
MEDICARE PAYMENT
1. The authority citation for part 424
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the
Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302 and
1395hh).
Editorial Note: This document was
received at the Federal Register on
November 17, 2005.
2. Amend § 424.32 by—
I A. Revising paragraphs (d)(1)(v);
(d)(1)(vi); (d)(3)(ii), and (d)(4)
introductory text.
I B. Redesignating (d)(4)(iii) as
paragraph (d)(4)(v).
I C. Adding paragraphs (d)(4)(iii) and
(iv).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
I
§ 424.32
[FR Doc. 05–23080 Filed 11–23–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES (HHS)
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
Basic requirements for all claims.
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
(v) Initial Medicare claim means a
claim submitted to Medicare for
payment under Part A or Part B of the
Medicare Program under title XVIII of
the Act for initial processing, including
claims sent to Medicare for the first time
for secondary payment purposes. Initial
Medicare claim excludes any
adjustment or appeal of a previously
submitted claim, and claims submitted
for payment under Part C of the
Medicare program under title XVIII of
the Act.
(vi) Physician, practitioner, facility, or
supplier is a Medicare provider or
supplier other than a provider of
services.
*
*
*
*
*
(3) * * *
(i) * * *
(ii) The entity submitting the claim is
a small provider of services or small
supplier.
(4) Unusual cases. The Secretary may
waive the requirement of paragraph
(d)(2) of this section in unusual cases as
the Secretary finds appropriate. Unusual
cases are deemed to exist in the
following situations:
*
*
*
*
*
(iii) The entity submitting the claim
submits fewer than 10 claims to
Medicare per month, on average.
(iv) The entity submitting the claim
only furnishes services outside of the
U.S. territory.
*
*
*
*
*
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program No. 93.774, Medicare—
Supplementary Medical Insurance Program)
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45 CFR Parts 144, 146, 148, and 150
[CMS–4091–F]
RIN 0938–AN35
Federal Enforcement in Group and
Individual Health Insurance Markets
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This rule makes final an
interim final rule that details procedures
we use for enforcing title XXVII of the
Public Health Service Act as added by
the Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996, and as
amended by the Mental Health Parity
Act of 1996, the Newborns’ and
Mothers’ Health Protection Act of 1996,
and the Women’s Health and Cancer
Rights Act of 1998. Specifically, we are
responsible for enforcing title XXVII
requirements in States that do not enact
the legislation necessary to enforce
those requirements, or otherwise fail to
substantially enforce the requirements.
We are also responsible for taking
enforcement actions against non-Federal
governmental plans. The regulation
describes the process we use in both
enforcement contexts. This final rule
deletes an appendix to the interim rule
that listed examples of violations of title
XXVII and corrects the description of a
cross-reference, but makes no
substantive changes to the interim final
rule.
DATES: These regulations are effective
on December 27, 2005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
David Mlawsky (877) 267–2323, ext.
61565.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
I. Background
Title I of the Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act of
1996 (HIPAA) created a new title XXVII
of the Public Health Service (PHS) Act
(42 U.S.C. 300gg, et seq.) that requires
group health plans and health insurance
issuers to provide certain guarantees for
availability and renewability of health
coverage in the group and individual
health insurance markets.
HIPAA created a series of parallel
provisions that were placed in the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act (ERISA), which is within the
jurisdiction of the Department of Labor;
the Public Health Service (PHS) Act,
which is within the jurisdiction of the
Department of Health and Human
Services; and the Internal Revenue
Code, which is within the jurisdiction of
the Department of the Treasury. These
‘‘shared provisions’’ set forth Federal
requirements relating to portability of
and access to group health plan
coverage, as well as group health
insurance coverage provided by issuers.
The shared provisions contain rules
limiting the use of preexisting condition
exclusion periods, and prohibiting
discrimination against participants and
beneficiaries based on health status.
Section 104 of Title I of HIPAA
requires that the Secretaries of the three
Departments ensure through an
interagency Memorandum of
Understanding (MOU) that regulations,
rulings, and interpretations issued by
each of the Departments relating to the
same matter over which two or more
departments have jurisdiction, are
administered so as to have the same
effect at all times. Under section 104,
the Departments, through the MOU, are
to provide for coordination of policies
relating to enforcement of the same
requirements in order to have a
coordinated enforcement strategy that
avoids duplication of enforcement
efforts and assigns priorities in
enforcement. The Secretaries of the
three departments signed and published
the MOU in 1999 (64 FR 70164).
HIPAA also added certain provisions
governing insurance in the group and
individual markets, and with respect to
non-Federal governmental plans, which
are contained only in the Public Health
Service Act and are not within the
regulatory jurisdiction of the
Department of Labor or the Department
of the Treasury.
Under section 101(b) of HIPAA the
Department of Labor is not authorized to
enforce any of the portability
requirements of part 7 of ERISA (the
‘‘shared’’ provisions) against a health
insurance issuer offering health
E:\FR\FM\25NOR1.SGM
25NOR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 226 (Friday, November 25, 2005)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 71008-71020]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-23080]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Part 424
[CMS-0008-F]
RIN 0938-AM22
Medicare Program; Electronic Submission of Medicare Claims
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule adopts as final, and makes amendments to, the
interim final rule published on August 15, 2003. That interim final
rule implemented the statutory requirement that claims for
reimbursement under the Medicare Program be submitted electronically as
of October 16, 2003, except where waived. These regulations identify
those circumstances for which mandatory submission of electronic claims
to the Medicare Program is waived.
DATES: Effective date: These regulations are effective on December 27,
2005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kathleen Simmons, (410) 786-6157.
Stewart Streimer, (410) 786-9318.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 3 of the Administrative Simplification Compliance Act
(ASCA), Pub. L. 107-105, was enacted by the Congress to improve the
administration of the Medicare Program by facilitating program
efficiencies gained through the electronic submission of Medicare
claims. Section 3 of ASCA amends subsection (a) of section 1862 of the
Social Security Act (the Act) (42 U.S.C. 1395y(a)) and adds a new
subsection (h) to section 1862 (42 U.S.C. 1395y). The amendment to
subsection (a) requires the Medicare Program, subject to subsection
(h), to deny payment under Part A or Part B for any expenses for items
or services ``for which a claim is submitted other than in an
electronic form specified by the Secretary.'' Subsection (h) provides
that the Secretary shall waive such denial in two types of cases and
may also waive such denial ``in such unusual cases as the Secretary
finds appropriate.''
Section 3 of ASCA operates in the context of the Administrative
Simplification provisions of the Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA), Pub. L. 104-191. Those provisions
require the Secretary to adopt, among other standards, standards for
financial and administrative transactions for the health care industry,
including health claims transactions (see section 1173(a) of the Act).
In the August 17, 2000 Federal Register (65 FR 50311), the Secretary of
Health and Human Services (the Secretary) published a final rule
(generally known as the Transactions Rule) that adopted standards for
eight electronic transactions. The transactions standards adopted by
that final rule, as subsequently modified by final rule published on
February 20, 2003 (68 FR 8381), are codified at 45 CFR part 162,
subparts A and I through R.
The HIPAA standards apply to health plans, health care
clearinghouses, and certain health care providers; collectively, these
entities are known as ``covered entities.'' An additional category of
covered entities--prescription drug card sponsors--was added by the
Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003
(MMA), Pub. L. 108-173. Covered entities are required to comply not
only with the standards established by the Transactions Rule, but also
with those established via other HIPAA Administrative Simplification
rules--such as the Privacy Rule, the Employer Identifier Rule, the
Security Rule, and the National Provider Identifier Rule--by the
respective applicable compliance dates specified in those rules.
Compliance with the standards for the electronic transactions
established by the Transactions Rule was required for all covered
entities other than small health plans by October 16, 2002; compliance
by small health plans was required by October 16, 2003. However,
section 2 of ASCA extended the October 16, 2002 compliance deadline to
October 16, 2003 for covered entities that were not small health plans
and that submitted a compliance plan by October 15, 2002. In accordance
with 45 CFR 162.900(c), covered entities that were not small health
plans and that did not timely submit a compliance plan under ASCA were
required to comply by October 16, 2002. Thus, all covered entities,
regardless of type, were required to be in compliance no later than
October 16, 2003.
Since a significant number of covered entities had expressed strong
concern over the health care industry's state of readiness to conduct
fully compliant HIPAA transactions and we wanted to promote compliance
while ensuring that cash flow and health care operations would not be
unnecessarily disrupted, the Department of Health and Human Services
(HHS) issued guidance on the approach CMS would take to enforce the
HIPAA electronic transactions and code sets provisions. In accordance
with the July 24, 2003 guidance, the Secretary explained that we would
focus on voluntary compliance, use a complaint-driven approach, and
would not impose penalties on covered entities that deployed temporary
contingency plans, if they made reasonable and diligent efforts to
become compliant and, in the case of health plans, facilitated the
compliance of their trading partners.
By statute, the Medicare Program is a health plan under HIPAA (see
section 1171(5)(D) of the Act). It is, therefore, a covered entity. In
45 CFR 160.102(a)(3), we specify that, in accordance with section
1172(a)(3) of the Act, health care providers are covered entities if
they transmit health information in electronic form in connection with
a transaction for which the Secretary has adopted a standard (covered
transaction). In 45 CFR 162.923(a), we specify that if a covered entity
electronically conducts a covered transaction with another covered
entity, it must conduct it as a standard transaction.
Approximately 86.1 percent of claims submitted to the Medicare
Program are submitted electronically, which means that approximately
139 million claims are submitted on paper per year (fiscal year (FY)
2002). Section 3 of ASCA required Medicare providers to submit Medicare
claims electronically by October 16, 2003, unless one of the specified
grounds for waiver applies. As the October 16, 2003 deadline
approached, we made the decision to implement our own contingency plan
after reviewing statistics showing that an unacceptably low number of
Medicare providers would likely be capable of submitting compliant
claims
[[Page 71009]]
by the compliance date. Concerned that many of its trading partners
were still completing their transition to HIPAA-compliant transactions,
Medicare implemented a contingency plan permitting the submission and
processing of claims in electronic formats that were then in use and
giving providers additional time to complete the testing processes.
Neither CMS's contingency plan for Medicare nor HHS's enforcement
guidance modified the October 16, 2003 compliance date for HIPAA
transactions.
Section 3 of ASCA, thus, in general has the effect of requiring
Medicare providers that are not already covered entities to conduct a
covered transaction (the health claim transaction) electronically and,
thereby, become covered entities. In submitting claims electronically,
the providers are required to comply with the applicable HIPAA standard
for the health claim transaction. Thus, section 3 of ASCA promotes the
submission of standard transactions and will further the goal of
improved health care delivery by reducing the administrative burden and
paperwork associated with Medicare claims submissions.
Although 86.1 percent of Medicare claims are submitted
electronically, the volume of Medicare claims submitted in paper form
is substantial. Moving from paper to electronic submission has the
potential for significant savings and efficiencies for Medicare
physicians, practitioners, facilities, suppliers, and other health care
providers, as well as for the Medicare program itself. Although these
Medicare physicians, practitioners, facilities, suppliers, and other
health care providers would incur a cost to comply with the mandatory
electronic billing requirement, we believe their savings will offset
the costs they incur. Further, the use of the HIPAA electronic claim
standards could result in additional savings if these entities begin
electronically billing other payers. However, the statute recognizes
that certain circumstances may effectively prevent some providers from
transacting claims with Medicare electronically or as standard
transactions. ASCA, thus, identifies exceptions to the mandatory
submission of electronic Medicare claims. This final rule reiterates
and interprets these exceptions.
We considered whether the amendment to section 1862(a) of the Act
in section 3 of ASCA could be interpreted to apply to payments made by
Medicare + Choice (M+C) organizations to providers for services
provided to Medicare beneficiaries. (Note: The MMA, enacted December 8,
2003, changed and renamed M+C to Medicare Advantage. For discussion
purposes and to remain consistent with the interim final rule, the term
``M+C'' will continue to be used in this preamble.) The question was
raised by the provision in section 4 of ASCA that expressly adds
Medicare Part C, found in Part C of Title XVIII, to the definition of
Medicare ``health plans'' found in section 1171(5)(D) of the Act.
The plain language of section 1862(a) of the Act, however, provides
that ``payment may not be made under Part A or Part B'' for a number of
activities. The Congress could have amended this provision, just as it
amended section 1171(5) of the Act, if it had wanted to prohibit M+C
organizations from paying for claims for services given to M+C
enrollees by the M+C organization's participating providers if those
claims were not submitted electronically. The fact that it did not so
amend this provision indicates that it did not intend to apply the ASCA
payment prohibition to the M+C organizations. The Congress's intent to
apply the broader definition of ``health plan'' in section 4 of ASCA
solely to the Administrative Simplifications provisions of HIPAA and
not to the electronic submission requirement for Medicare claims is
further suggested by the title of section 4 of ASCA: ``Clarification
with Respect to Applicability of Administrative Simplification
Requirement to M+C Organizations.''
The M+C organizations, as health plans for the purposes of HIPAA
Administrative Simplification, were required to come into compliance
with the regulatory requirements related to transactions no later than
October 16, 2003. We understand that all M+C organizations properly
filed ASCA compliance plans before October 16, 2002. Therefore, they
obtained extensions and had a compliance date of October 16, 2003.
An M+C organization that pays a non-compliant electronic claim
after October 16, 2003, would accordingly be out of compliance with the
HIPAA transactions regulations, but would not violate the provisions of
section 1862(a)(22) of the Act or the requirements of this regulation.
This final rule applies only to providers, practitioners, and suppliers
who submit claims under Part A or Part B of Medicare. It does not apply
to the submission of claims by providers to M+C organizations.
Moreover, the waiver provisions for small providers, practitioners, and
suppliers established by section 3 of ASCA and this regulation do not
extend to claims submitted by these providers to any health plans other
than Medicare.
Section 902 of the MMA amended section 1871(a) of the Act and
requires the Secretary, in consultation with the Director of OMB, to
establish and publish timelines for the publication of Medicare final
regulations based on the publication of Medicare proposed or interim
final regulations. Section 902 of the MMA also states that the
timelines for these regulations may vary but shall not exceed 3 years
from the previous publication of the proposed or interim final rule,
except under exceptional circumstances.
The MMA also introduced Part D of the Medicare Program. Future
rulemaking may be needed to explore the applicability of section 3 of
ASCA to Part D. We will initiate such rulemaking, if needed, upon
further evaluation as we get closer to the Part D implementation date.
We note that this rule finalizes the provisions of the August 15,
2003 interim final rule. The final rule is, thus, being published
within the 3-year time period identified in section 902 of the MMA.
II. Provisions of the Interim Final Rule
Section 3 of ASCA established the requirements and exceptions under
the Medicare Program for the mandatory submission of claims in
electronic form. In the August 15, 2003 Federal Register (68 FR 48805),
we published an interim final rule that implemented these statutory
requirements.
A. Definitions Used for Electronic Claim Submission
The interim final rule added a new paragraph (d) to Sec. 424.32.
Section 424.32(d)(1) specified the following definitions for the
purposes of paragraph (d): Claim; electronic claim; direct data entry;
electronic media; initial Medicare claim; physician, practitioner,
facility, or supplier; provider of services; and small provider of
services or small supplier. We defined ``claim'' to mean the
transaction defined at 45 CFR 162.1101(a) (that is, ``health care
claim''). We specified the definition of ``electronic claim'' to mean a
claim that is submitted via electronic media. In addition, we specified
that the definitions of ``direct data entry'' and ``electronic media''
are defined as those terms are defined in 45 CFR 162.103 and 160.103,
respectively.
In Sec. 424.32(d)(1)(v) of the interim final rule, we defined an
``initial Medicare claim'' as a claim submitted to Medicare for payment
under Part A or Part B of the Medicare Program for the first time for
processing, including claims sent to
[[Page 71010]]
Medicare for the first time for secondary payment purposes. This
definition also specified that an initial Medicare claim excludes any
adjustment or appeal of a previously submitted claim. This final rule
adds the phrase ``for initial processing'' to the definition of
``initial Medicare claim'' to clarify that the requirement for
electronic submission applies to claims that have been previously
rejected before being accepted into the Medicare processing system.
In Sec. 424.32(d)(1)(vi), we defined a ``physician, practitioner,
facility, or supplier'' as a Medicare provider other than a provider of
services. The final rule adds the words ``or supplier'' to make the
definition precise, so that the term is defined as ``a Medicare
provider or supplier other than a provider of services.'' In Sec.
424.32(d)(1)(vii), we defined a ``provider of services'' as a provider
of services as defined in section 1861(u) of the Act. In Sec.
424.32(d)(1)(viii), we defined a ``small provider of services or small
supplier'' as a provider of services with fewer than 25 full-time
equivalent employees; or a physician, practitioner, facility, or
supplier (other than provider of services) with fewer than 10 full-time
equivalent employees.
B. Submission of Electronic Claims Required
Electronic submission of Medicare claims is required for initial
Medicare claims, including initial claims with paper attachments,
submitted for processing by the Medicare fiscal intermediary (FI) or
carrier that serves the physician, practitioner, facility, supplier, or
other health care provider. No other transactions, including changes,
adjustments, or appeals to the initial claim, are required to be
submitted electronically in accordance with ASCA.
In Sec. 424.32(d)(2), we specified that, except for claims to
which Sec. 424.32(d)(3) or (d)(4) applies, an initial Medicare claim
under Part A or Part B or both may be paid only if submitted as an
electronic claim for processing by the Medicare FI or carrier that
serves the physician, practitioner, facility, supplier, or other health
care provider. This requirement does not apply to any other
transactions, including adjustment or appeal of the initial Medicare
claim.
C. Exceptions to Requirement To Submit Electronic Claims
The regulations at 45 CFR 162.923 state that, ``except as otherwise
provided in this part, if a covered entity conducts with another
covered entity (or within the same covered entity), using electronic
media, a transaction for which the Secretary has adopted a standard
under this part, the covered entity must conduct the transaction as a
standard transaction.'' HIPAA does not require that a health plan be
able to accept claims via every type of electronic media, only that
claims received via such media comply with the standard format and
content requirements of HIPAA (www.wpc-edi.com/HIPAA). The reference in
section 3 of ASCA to the filing of claims ``in electronic form'' does
not dictate the use of a particular electronic form. Thus, the Medicare
program will continue to accept only those forms identified in Chapter
24 of the Medicare Internet Only Claims Processing Manual (IOM Pub. L.
100-04) that we issue. At present, Medicare does not accept claims via
the Internet, an extranet or, in many cases, via removable/
transportable storage media. This final rule does not change this
Medicare policy. The interim final rule stated that an advance notice
of any future plans for expansion or contraction in the electronic
media accepted for submission of Medicare claims would be published in
Medicare program instructions and via routine contractor notification
and instructional media.
In the interim final rule, we specified that we will consider
claims submitted via a direct data entry screen maintained for
Medicare, and as permitted by 45 CFR 162.923, to be electronic claims
for purposes of this requirement. Also, we stated that claims
transmitted to a Medicare contractor using the free or low cost claims
software issued by Medicare fee-for-service plans will be considered
electronic claims for purposes of this requirement.
The ASCA provided for exceptions to the requirement for mandatory
electronic submission of Medicare claims. In accordance with ASCA, the
interim final rule established that the Secretary of HHS could waive
the application of the electronic claim requirement in specific cases.
To implement the statutory mandate, we provided more explicit
requirements that are specified in Sec. 424.32(d). Specifically, Sec.
424.32(d)(3) states that there are two exceptions to electronic
submission of initial Medicare claims.
The first exception, specified in Sec. 424.32(d)(3)(i), applies
when there is no method available for the submission of an electronic
claim. For example, we could not reasonably expect Medicare
beneficiaries to submit electronic claims. Even though the statute
requires, with very few exceptions, that providers of health care bill
Medicare on behalf of a beneficiary (sections 1814(a) and 1848(g)(4) of
the Act), some beneficiaries will still submit claims to Medicare.
However, those relatively few beneficiaries who submit claims are not
likely to possess the capability to submit a HIPAA compliant claim.
Further, there are situations in which the standard adopted by the
Secretary at 45 CFR 162.1102 does not support all of the information
necessary for payment of the claim. We identified three other
situations that fall into this category:
Roster billing of vaccinations covered by the Medicare
Program. In order to promote an increase in the flu vaccinations for
Medicare beneficiaries, since 1993 Medicare has allowed mass immunizers
to bill the program using a single claim form with an attached list of
beneficiaries to whom a flu vaccine was administered. Many mass
immunizers bill electronically, but in a non-standard format. This
roster billing simplifies provider billing but is not available in
electronic form under the Transactions Rule.
Claims for payment under Medicare demonstration projects.
Medicare demonstration projects often allow for unusual situations not
normally handled by the transactions standards; and
Claims where more than one health plan is responsible for
payment before Medicare. The interim final rule indicated that efforts
were underway to resolve the confusion in the reporting of per service
payments by more than one primary payer and allowed these claims to
continue to be submitted to Medicare on paper for the time being.
Although a number of alternatives were considered, a clear process for
electronic billing of Medicare in this case is not yet finalized. Once
a solution is reached, we will then notify the public of the effective
date of the change.
Providers to whom an exception does not apply will then be required
to submit Medicare claims electronically. In the interim final rule, we
established that specific program guidance would be issued to Medicare
providers concerning submission of these claims on paper effective
October 16, 2003. We stated that we would also issue specific guidance
or regulations, as necessary, informing covered entities if this or
another exception no longer applies.
The second exception, described in Sec. 424.32(d)(3)(ii), provided
that electronic submission would be waived when the entity submitting
the claim is a small provider of services or small supplier. The
statute is quite specific as to the size requirements, and the interim
final rule simply incorporated the statutory requirements. This final
rule
[[Page 71011]]
makes a slight technical revision, in order to use a defined term
consistently.
D. Unusual Cases
In the interim final rule, we established that the Secretary may
waive the electronic submission requirement in certain unusual
situations as the Secretary finds appropriate. In Sec. 424.32(d)(4),
we specified that such an exception would exist in the following three
situations:
The submission of dental claims. This exception is being
included because, under HIPAA, dentists who are covered entities are
required to submit electronic transactions to other payers in a format
different from that generally used in the Medicare Program. Since
Medicare does not generally cover dental services, this exception is
added to minimize the burden on dentists who may, at times, need to
bill the Program.
A service interruption in the mode of submitting the
electronic claim that is outside of the control of the entity
submitting the claim, for the period of the interruption. This
exception would apply only if the physician, practitioner, facility,
supplier, or other health care provider temporarily loses electricity,
or telephone or other communication service. If electricity, telephone,
or other communication services exist, but one or the other is
unavailable for a period of time (for example, because of inclement
weather or due to telephone company technical breakdowns), paper claims
will be accepted during the period of disrupted power or communication
service.
On demonstration, satisfactory to the Secretary, of other
extraordinary circumstances precluding submission of electronic claims.
The interim final rule specified that entities would not generally
need to make a special request to determine whether an exception
applies that would make them eligible for a mandatory waiver under
Sec. 424.32(d)(3) or a discretionary waiver under Sec. 424.32(d)(4).
A special request would have to be submitted to a Medicare FI or
carrier when an entity did not meet the mandated exceptions at Sec.
424.32(d)(3), or the specified discretionary waiver criteria at Sec.
424.32(d)(4)(i) and (d)(4)(ii), but believed there were other
extraordinary circumstances that precluded its submission of electronic
claims. We also proposed to issue program guidance to Medicare FIs and
carriers to enable them to handle, on a case-by-case basis, requests
for relief in extraordinary circumstances. This program guidance was
issued on December 19, 2003 (Transmittal 44, CR 2966, Instructions for
the Mandatory Electronic Submission of Medicare Claims), and may be
found at www.cms.hhs.gov/manuals/. Publication of this final rule will
result in some changes to Transmittal 44, CR 2966, which will be
reissued following publication of this final rule.
This final rule adds two more unusual situations under Sec.
424.32(d)(4) for which an exception would exist. Specifically, the
requirement to submit electronic claims may be waived when the entity
submitting the claim (1) submits, on average, less than 10 claims per
month, or (2) furnishes services only outside of the U.S. territory.
See our response to comments in section III of this preamble for
further discussion regarding these additional exceptions.
E. Enforcement
ASCA's amendment to section 1862(a) of the Act prescribes that ``no
payment may be made under Part A or Part B of the Medicare Program for
any expenses incurred for items or services'' for which a claim is
submitted in a non-electronic form. Consequently, absent an applicable
exception, paper claims submitted to Medicare will not be paid.
We specified that the Secretary may review entities that bill
Medicare non-electronically. We stated that entities determined to be
in violation of the statute or the interim final rule would be subject
to claim denials, overpayment recoveries, and applicable interest on
overpayments.
F. Effective Date
In accordance with section 3(b) of ASCA, we specified, in Sec.
424.32(d)(5) of the regulations, that the effective date for these
amendments would be for claims submitted on or after October 16, 2003.
III. Analysis of and Responses to Public Comments
We received 17 timely public comments on the August 15, 2003
interim final rule. Based upon some of the comments we received from
members of the health care provider community who bill Medicare, there
remain questions about Medicare's electronic claim submission
requirement and how this rule applies in certain situations. Additional
information was provided through Medicare manual instructions to FIs
and carriers (Transmittal 44, CR 2966, December 19, 2003, which may be
found at www.cms.hhs.gov/manuals/). Several providers are uncertain
about how to determine if they meet the definition of ``small provider
of services or small supplier,'' especially when deciding who should be
included in the ``full time equivalent'' (FTE) employee calculation.
Furthermore, some providers have questions concerning whether they are
required to submit a request to HHS for a small provider waiver, which
would allow them to continue submitting their claims to Medicare on
paper.
A. General Issues
Comment: One commenter stated that the August 15, 2003 interim
final rule did not provide sufficient time for providers to comply with
the October 16, 2003 statutory effective date and that we should change
the implementation date.
Response: We understand the commenter's concern. However, we are
not able to change the effective date of implementation and compliance,
because the October 16, 2003 effective date is mandated by the statute.
B. Determining Small Provider Status
To qualify for a waiver as a small provider of services or small
supplier, and thus, be permitted to continue billing Medicare on paper,
the entity submitting a claim must be either: (1) A provider of
services with fewer than 25 FTEs that submits its claims to a Medicare
FI; or (2) a physician, practitioner, facility, or supplier with fewer
than 10 FTEs who bills a Medicare carrier or Durable Medical Equipment
Regional Carrier (DMERC).
Comment: Several commenters believe many in the provider community
remain unaware that providers do not need to request a waiver for a
small provider exception from Medicare electronic claims submission. In
addition, other commenters requested a small provider waiver.
Response: Providers who in good faith believe they qualify as
``small providers of services or small suppliers'' automatically
qualify for the small provider waiver unless, upon subsequent review,
the Department determines that the waiver requirements in fact are not
met. In that case, if the Department finds that none of the exceptions
applies, the provider must submit all claims to Medicare
electronically. Providers must assess their own situation and determine
for themselves whether they meet the small provider criteria.
Small providers of services and small suppliers may elect to submit
some of their claims to Medicare electronically, and some claims on
paper. Submission of some claims electronically does not revoke or
cancel their status as a small provider of services or small supplier,
[[Page 71012]]
nor obligate them to submit all of their claims electronically. (More
information about this will be published through the Medicare
contractors. The first in a series of publications was Transmittal 44,
CR 2966 dated December 19, 2003.)
Comment: Several commenters requested additional guidance on the
term ``FTE,'' including direction on who is considered an FTE and how
the number of FTEs should be calculated for a small provider of
services or small supplier. One commenter suggested that only clinical
staff should be included in the FTE count. Other commenters believe
owners of practices should not count toward the FTE total.
Response: ASCA and its implementing regulation do not modify pre-
existing laws or employer policies defining full-time employment.
Employers have established policies and practices, subject to State and
Federal laws, which define ``full-time equivalent'' and provide methods
for calculating the number of hours their employees must work on
average on a weekly, biweekly, monthly, or yearly basis to constitute a
``full-time equivalent'' employee. Some employers classify employees
who work an average of 32 hours per week as one FTE, whereas other
employers consider only employees who work 35 to 40 hours per week on
average as one FTE. An employee who works an average of 40 or more
hours a week would virtually always be considered full-time and one
FTE, but employees who work fewer hours weekly could also be considered
full-time and one FTE according to the policies of, and laws applicable
to, a different employer.
Everyone on staff for whom a health care provider withholds taxes
and files reports with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) using an
Employer Identification Number (EIN) is considered an employee
including, if applicable, the physician(s) who owns a practice and
provides hands-on services, and those support staff who do not furnish
health care services but do retain records of, perform billing for,
order supplies related to, provide personnel services for, and
otherwise perform support services to enable the provider to function.
Unpaid volunteers would not be considered employees for purposes of
calculating FTEs. Individuals who perform services under independent
contract for a provider, such as individuals employed by a billing
agency or medical placement service, for whom a provider does not
withhold taxes, are not considered members of a provider's staff for
FTE calculation purposes when determining whether a provider of
services or supplier can be considered as ``small'' for electronic
billing waiver purposes.
Medical staff members may sometimes work part-time, or may work
full-time but their time is split among multiple providers. Part-time
employee hours must also be counted when determining the number of FTEs
employed by a provider. For example, if a provider has a policy that
anyone who works at least 35 hours per week on average qualifies as
full-time (that is, as one FTE), and has five full-time employees and
seven part-time employees, each of whom works 25 hours a week, that
provider would have ten FTEs (5+[7 x 25 = 175 divided by 35 = 5]).
In some cases, the employer identification number (EIN) of a parent
company may be used to file employee tax reports for multiple providers
under multiple Medicare provider numbers. In that instance, it is
acceptable to consider only those staff, or staff hours worked for a
particular provider as identified by Medicare provider number to
calculate the number of FTEs employed by that provider. For example,
ABC Health Care Company owns hospital, home health agency (HHA),
ambulatory surgical center (ASC), and durable medical equipment (DME)
subsidiaries. Some of those providers bill intermediaries and some
carriers. All have separate provider numbers, but the tax records for
all employees are reported under the same EIN to the IRS. There is a
company policy that staff must work an average of 40 hours a week to be
considered full-time.
Some of the same staff split hours between the hospital and the
ASC, or between the DME and HHA subsidiaries. To determine total FTEs
by provider number, it is acceptable to base the calculation on the
number of hours each staff member contributes to the support of each
separate provider by provider number. First, each provider would need
to determine the number of staff members who work on a full-time basis
under a single provider number only; not more than 40 hours a week
should be counted for these employees. Then each provider would need to
determine the number of part-time hours a week worked on average by all
staff who furnished services for the provider on a less than full-time
basis, and divide that total by 40 hours to determine their full-time
equivalent total. If certain staff members regularly work an average of
60 hours per week, but their time is divided 50 hours to the hospital
and 10 hours to the ASC, for FTE calculation purposes, consider the
person as one FTE for the hospital and .25 FTE for the ASC.
In some cases, a single provider number and EIN may be assigned,
but the entity's primary mission is not as a health care provider. For
instance, a grocery store's primary role is the retail sale of
groceries and ancillary items including over-the-counter medications,
but the grocery store has a small pharmacy section that provides
prescription drugs and some DME to Medicare beneficiaries. A large drug
store has a pharmacy department that supplies prescriptions and DME to
Medicare beneficiaries, but most of the store's revenue and most of
their employees are not involved with prescription drugs or DME and
concentrate on non-related departments of the store, such as groceries,
film development, cosmetics, electronics, cleaning supplies, etc. A
county government uses the same EIN for all county employees but their
health care provider services are limited to furnishing of emergency
medical care and ambulance transport to residents.
For FTE calculation purposes, it is acceptable to include only
those staff members of the grocery store, drug store, or county
government involved with, or that support the provision of, health care
in the FTE count when assessing whether a small provider waiver may
apply. Support staff who are to be included in the FTE calculation in
these instances include, but are not necessarily limited to, those that
restock the pharmacy or ambulance, order supplies, maintain patient
records, or provide billing and personnel services for the pharmacy or
emergency medical services department if under the same EIN. FTEs
should be calculated according to the number of hours on average that
each staff member contributes to the department that furnishes the
services or supplies for which the Medicare provider number was issued.
Neither unpaid volunteers nor individuals that perform services for
a provider under independent contract, such as individuals employed by
a billing agency or medical placement service, for whom a provider does
not withhold taxes, should be considered toward an entity's FTE count
when determining if a provider of services or supplier can be
considered as ``small'' for electronic billing waiver purposes.
C. Contingency for Paper Billers
Comment: Several commenters requested that the Medicare HIPAA
contingency plan extend to paper claims so as to avoid cash flow
problems among providers.
Response: The ASCA enacted on December 27, 2001 (Pub. L. 107-105)
[[Page 71013]]
requires the electronic submission of Medicare claims in an electronic
form specified by the Secretary of the HHS. The statute waives this
requirement only in limited situations, which are detailed in Sec.
424.32 of this regulation. The ``electronic form'' specified by the
Secretary generally means the electronic transactions and code sets
standards adopted as part of the HIPAA as detailed in 45 CFR parts 160
and 162.
In response to HHS contingency plan guidance for the electronic
transactions and code sets standards under HIPAA, issued on July 24,
2003, Medicare announced its HIPAA contingency plans on September 23,
2003. Medicare's contingency plans allowed for the submission of claims
in non-compliant electronic formats on and after October 16, 2003, for
an unspecified period of time. However, Medicare has revised its
contingency plan; it is paying electronic, HIPAA non-compliant claims
no sooner than 27 days after receipt, beginning with claims received on
or after July 1, 2004. Continued paper submission of Medicare claims is
not a part of Medicare's HIPAA transactions contingency plan. The
statute affords no latitude for those who do not meet one of the
exceptions, but Medicare will take into consideration the good faith
efforts by a provider to comply with the electronic billing requirement
when enforcing the provision.
Comment: One commenter expressed concerns that Medicare would not
be able to handle an increase in paper claims submission if a larger
portion of providers eligible for the ``small provider of services or
supplier'' waiver opted to continue, or drop back to, paper claims
submission.
Response: Approximately 98 percent of claims submitted to FIs, and
83 percent of carrier claims are electronic. With the benefits and
efficiencies gained through electronic billing, we do not believe that
electronic billers who are eligible to bill on paper will indeed revert
to paper. Paper claims are more cumbersome to complete and are paid
less timely than electronic claims. Moreover, we do not expect
difficulty with Medicare contractors' ability to handle paper claims if
there were an increase in volume. Since the interim final rule's
October 16, 2003 effective date, Medicare contractors have not
experienced any problems in receiving and processing electronic claims,
and we have not observed any increase in electronic billers who are
eligible to bill by paper reverting to paper claims submissions.
D. Definition of Initial Medicare Claim
We received a number of comments related to our definition of
``initial Medicare claim.'' In the interim final rule, this term was
defined in Sec. 424.32(d)(1)(v) as a claim submitted to Medicare for
payment under Part A or Part B of the Medicare program for the first
time for processing, including for secondary payment purposes. Some
disagree with our decision to require electronic submission of Medicare
Secondary Payer (MSP) claims. We have responded to comments submitted
on this definition below and provided added clarity. Some commenters
also expressed concerns with their ability to submit an electronic MSP
claim with a paper attachment.
Comment: We received one comment on resubmission of initial
Medicare claims. The commenter was concerned that claims submitted
before the compliance deadline of October 16, 2003 on paper and then
resubmitted after the deadline on paper would be rejected.
Response: We understand the concerns of the provider community
regarding resubmission of claims previously submitted on paper in an
electronic format; however, the statute does not afford us any
flexibility in allowing for paper claims submission following the
compliance deadline.
We have interpreted the intent of the statute to mean claims
submitted to the Medicare claims processing system for the first time,
including claims submitted after having been previously rejected (which
were not previously considered as submitted claims since they were
never accepted into the processing system), claims with paper
attachments, demand bills, claims where Medicare is secondary and there
is only one primary payer, and non-payment claims, as claims that must
be submitted electronically barring any waiver or exception. Initial
Medicare claims do not include adjustments submitted to intermediaries
on previously submitted claims or appeal requests.
Comment: One commenter expressed concerns with our inclusion of a
claim sent to Medicare for secondary payment (MSP) purposes in our
definition of ``initial Medicare claim.'' They argued that although
primary claims and MSP claims use the same HIPAA 837 standard, the
HIPAA regulations make a distinction between the two transactions and,
as a result, MSP claims should be treated differently than other
Medicare claims.
Response: While MSP claims were not specifically highlighted, the
statutory language does not exclude them from consideration as initial
Medicare claims. Furthermore, we do not believe that MSP claims should
be treated as a different type of claims transaction for purposes of
Medicare electronic claims submission, because submission of a
secondary claim would still constitute an initial submission of a claim
to Medicare. Therefore, we have interpreted the statute to mean they
must not be excluded from the electronic submission requirement. Our
definition of an ``initial Medicare claim'' is consistent with this
interpretation.
Claims submitted to Medicare when there is more than one primary
payer must be submitted on paper as it is difficult to submit service
level data for more than one primary payer electronically at this time.
The only alternative is for providers to submit those claims to
Medicare on paper with copies of the explanation of benefits (EOBs)/
remittance advices (RAs) from the primary payers attached.
Comment: We received comments from providers concerning submission
of EOBs/RAs. For instance, one commenter was under the impression that
an 835 electronic remittance advice transaction is needed to submit an
837 MSP claim. The commenter proposed as an alternative that the
electronic submission of claims for which Medicare is secondary be
phased in and only required when providers receive an 835.
Response: In order for a provider to be reimbursed for an MSP
claim, the provider must submit to Medicare certain payment information
contained in the EOB/RA from the primary payer(s). We encourage
providers to work with their payers to receive the remittance advice in
the 835 electronic format, but that is not mandated by HIPAA or ASCA. A
provider may receive this information from the primary payer(s) either
on paper or electronically. A provider does not need to receive an 835
electronic remittance advice transaction from a primary payer, however,
in order to generate a secondary claim for Medicare.
E. Attachments
Comment: We received some comments on timely reimbursement of
electronic claims submitted with paper attachments. In one case, a
provider believed that it was unable to receive reimbursement for an
electronic claim unless a paper claim was also submitted.
Response: Transmittal 44, CR 2966, December 19, 2003, required
Medicare contractors to issue further guidance to providers and
submitters on the
[[Page 71014]]
submission of electronic claims when there are paper attachments.
Providers and submitters who experience difficulty getting their
electronic claims that have paper attachments processed must first
contact their Medicare contractor. If problems persist, providers and
submitters are encouraged to contact their regional CMS office to
troubleshoot these issues. Phone numbers for Medicare contractors and
CMS regional offices can be found on our Web site at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/physicians/default.asp.
Comment: Another commenter was concerned with Medicare connecting
paperwork and hard copy EOBs with an electronic claim, resulting in
untimely reimbursement and extra follow-up time.
Response: Once the electronic claims attachment standard is adopted
and entities have properly implemented it, this issue will be resolved.
In the meantime, and prior to the claims attachment standard compliance
date, paper attachments must be properly associated with the
corresponding electronic claims by incorporating correct and
appropriate data and indicating in the electronic claims transaction
that separate paper documentation is being sent. Separate submission of
electronic claims and related paper attachments should consequently not
cause a discernable delay in payment of claims. Providers and other
electronic claim submitters are advised to contact the Medicare
contractor to which they submit their claims if they have further
questions about the locally published process.
Pending issuance of the future instructions concerning submission
of medical records for electronic claims, providers and Medicare
contractors can continue current policies and practices regarding
submission of attachments with claims, whether in a proprietary format,
on paper, via fax, or by other means.
F. Unusual Cases
While commenters expressed their support for electronic claims
submission, they were also pleased with the flexibility afforded by the
outlined exceptions, which permit continued paper claims submission
such as in the case of roster vaccinations billing and certain Medicare
demonstration claims. We received a number of comments on ``unusual
cases,'' asking for further clarity.
Comment: One commenter stated the interim final rule was unclear
concerning whether paper claims would be allowable after the compliance
deadline. The commenter proposed designating the HIPAA transition
period to a largely electronic submission environment for Medicare, an
``unusual case.''
Response: The ``unusual case'' provision is intended to operate as
an exception to a situation in which Medicare providers are generally
submitting claims electronically. The commenter, however, proposes
making the exception to be the norm, which would appear to be contrary
to what the Congress intended.
Comment: Another commenter suggested we expand the criteria for the
service interruption to include power outages, which result in a phone
or communication service interruption.
Response: We have interpreted an ``unusual case'' exception to be
one applied to a temporary situation outside of a provider's control
that effectively precludes electronic submission of claims. For a
situation to fall under an ``unusual case'' exception, the
circumstances must be truly out of the ordinary and they must genuinely
prevent the provider from complying with the applicable electronic
submission requirement.
In the August 15, 2003 interim final rule, we described three
situations that we believe meet the criteria for an unusual case
exception. The three situations we listed were submission of dental
claims, a service interruption outside the control of the submitter,
and other extraordinary circumstances deemed satisfactory to the
Secretary.
We also specified that the service interruption exception is
limited to submitters who have experienced a loss of phone or
communication service. We agree with the commenter that it may be
possible for an interruption in the mode of service used to submit a
claim to occur resulting from something other than inclement weather or
phone company problems. We further recognize that a loss of power could
occur that does not result in the loss of the use of a phone or other
communication services but precludes or severely inhibits a submitter
from sending claims electronically. In this rare and unanticipated
situation, a waiver may be granted for service interruption. This is
addressed in Medicare manual instructions, Transmittal 44, CR 2966,
December 19, 2003.
Based on comments received and our assessment of the reasonableness
of an entity's ability to comply, we have identified the following two
additional ``unusual case'' situations we consider to be eligible for a
waiver under Sec. 424.32(d)(4). First, an unusual case is deemed to
exist when an entity submits fewer than 10 claims to Medicare per month
on average. We believe entities that submit such low volumes of
Medicare claims are ``unusual cases'' in that the volume does not
support mandating the acquisition of hardware/software to submit claims
electronically. The exception for small providers indicates to us the
Congress's intention that the electronic submission requirement not
apply to providers for whom the electronic submission requirement of
claims would be truly burdensome. This would be the case for providers
who submit fewer than 10 claims per month, as the cost of converting
their billing systems for so few claims would be uneconomic. If the
volume increases, then electronic claim submission would be required,
unless another exception applies. This is self-assessable and the
entity need not submit a waiver request. Second, it is deemed to be an
unusual case when the entity submitting a claim furnishes services only
outside of the U.S. territory. The HIPAA transactions and code sets
standards are consensus-based, American National Standards Institute
(ANSI)-accredited standards that rely upon hardware and software that
meet certain specifications, which may not be readily available outside
of the U.S. territory. We believe that entities furnishing services
solely outside of the U.S. in many cases could not properly submit
electronic claims. Moreover, we think those entities are few in number
and truly constitute an unusual case. This is also self-assessable and
the entity need not submit a waiver request. Section 424.32(d)(4) is
revised to include these two additional ``unusual case'' situations.
Instructions to the Medicare contractors that describe how to go
about requesting an ``unusual case'' waiver were issued December 19,
2003 (Transmittal 44, CR 2966).
Comment: One commenter urged Medicare contractors to furnish all
providers and mass immunizer billers and suppliers with free electronic
roster billing software, in order to reduce dependence on paper roster
billing and increase cost savings to the program. Another commenter
suggested there remains a need for continued outreach to educate
providers on these topics.
Response: We are considering these suggestions; however, claims
submission for roster billing for vaccinations is still considered
exempt from the electronic claims submission requirement. To the extent
certain Medicare contractors' software permits electronic submission of
roster bills, we
[[Page 71015]]
encourage providers to use it; however, it is not required.
We have issued instructions to the Medicare contractors that
describe in greater detail how this regulation is operationalized,
including instructions for requesting an ``unusual case'' waiver (refer
to Transmittal 44, CR 2966, dated December 19, 2003). In addition,
Medicare contractors will be instructed to include information on their
provider Web sites and in their newsletters that addresses these and
other issues pertinent to operationalization of the regulation.
G. Testing With Medicare
Comment: Several commenters expressed concerns regarding low HIPAA
transaction testing rates between providers and Medicare.
Response: Medicare testing has increased over the past several
months and rose steadily in the weeks leading up to the HIPAA
compliance deadline. As of September 10, 2004, approximately 97.7
percent of inbound claims were being submitted to Medicare in the
HIPAA-compliant format.
Medicare invoked its HIPAA contingency plan to afford added
flexibility to providers and submitters who were not ready to submit
claims in the HIPAA electronic format on the deadline of October 16,
2003, to continue to prepare for the electronic claims submission
requirement in the adopted formats. Many Medicare contractors were
ready to test the 837 and 835 for 6 or more months before the October
16, 2003 deadline. Medicare's revised HIPAA contingency plan encourages
further HIPAA compliance because, effective July 1, 2004, non-compliant
electronic claims are paid no sooner than 27 days after the date of
receipt while compliant claims are paid sooner.
Comment: Another commenter requested that Medicare relax the
technical edits to HIPAA transactions so that claims may continue to be
processed after the deadline.
Response: We believe that Medicare has tried to make reasonable
accommodations regarding its technical edits, while remaining
considerate of how changes in its claims processing systems may affect
various other submitters (some of whom could be adversely affected by
inappropriate technical edits).
H. Impact of HIPAA Standards
Comment: Several commenters expressed concerns surrounding the
overall level of readiness by the industry for implementing the HIPAA
transaction and code set standards due to possible industry variations
in the interpretation of the standards. They were concerned that
unresolved questions pertaining to complying with the HIPAA standards
could impact a provider's ability to submit claims electronically and,
therefore, comply with the Medicare electronic claims submission
requirement.
Response: We recognize that a number of HIPAA implementation issues
exist and present obstacles to HIPAA compliance; however, these issues
and obstacles extend beyond the scope of this regulation. We are
addressing these concerns through other channels. Medicare's HIPAA
contingency plan may afford some additional latitude to entities as
they work toward compliance with the HIPAA standards. In the meantime,
Medicare's contingency plan allows for providers, under specified
circumstances, to continue to send HIPAA non-compliant electronic
claims to Medicare and, therefore, facilitate compliance with the ASCA
mandate.
I. Enforcement
Comment: One commenter identified a few issues related to
compliance with HIPAA's electronic transactions and code sets standards
such as a request for new data elements, which could impact compliance
with the Medicare electronic claims submission requirement.
Response: For any change to a standard to become effective and
compliance required, the designated standard maintenance organization
would first have to hold public hearings and ultimately the Secretary
would need to adopt the change formally.
Comment: Another commenter suggested we find an alternate term for
``audit'' when discussing enforcement.
Response: We accept this comment; therefore, in the future we will
reference the Secretary's ability to ``audit'' an entity as the ability
to ``review'' an entity for compliance. In addition, the preliminary
enforcement process will be conducted on a prospective basis and will
focus on providers that appear to be submitting extraordinarily high
numbers of paper claims. If a review establishes that a provider is
submitting paper claims without properly qualifying for a waiver, the
provider will be notified that any paper claims submitted after a
certain date will be rejected by Medicare. However, providers will be
afforded a reasonable amount of time under the circumstances to come
into compliance with the electronic claim submission requirement.
A future Medicare manual instruction to Medicare contractors will
explain the criteria for review and the enforcement requirements for
providers that are determined to have incorrectly submitted paper
claims.
J. Costs To Convert From the Submission of ``Paper Claims'' to
``Electronic Claims''
Comment: One commenter requested that we provide a more realistic
estimate of the costs associated with converting from paper claims
submission to electronic claims submission. Several commenters believe
that the requirement to submit Medicare claims electronically
represents a costly expense without the potential for reimbursement to
providers.
Response: When considering this comment, we reviewed again the
basis for the cost estimate and considered further possible paperwork
burden and capital investment issues in the impact analysis of the
interim final rule. We concluded that the cost estimate remains the
most accurate, given the data that were available.
Due to the high number of Medicare claims already submitted
electronically and the waivers issued for ``small providers,''
moderately sized providers are most likely to be affected by this
requirement. While we do agree that a provider's staff will need some
time to become fully familiar and proficient with the use of the free/
low cost Medicare billing software, a physician's office (which
presently submits claims on paper) can purchase hardware to enable
compliance with this requirement for less than $1,000. Although the
electronic conversion will not be reimbursed, we continue to believe
that we have tried to provide the most economical software for
providers, and we will even provide free technical support on the
installation and usage through our Medicare contractors.
K. Outside the Scope of This Rule
Comment: One commenter requested that Medicare guidance
communications or program changes to physicians be completed on paper
rather than electronically.
Response: Although we appreciate this commenter's concern, because
these issues were not addressed in the August 15, 2003 interim final
rule, we are not able to address this concern in this final rule.
Comment: Another commenter suggested that we reimburse for nursing
service claims.
Response: Although we appreciate the commenter's concerns, nursing
service claim reimbursement was not covered
[[Page 71016]]
in the August 15, 2003 interim final rule. Therefore, we are unable to
address this concern in this final regulation.
IV. Provisions of This Final Rule
With some minor editing and modification to include two additional
``unusual cases'' for an automatic exception and changed ``unusual
circumstances'' to ``unusual cases'', we are adopting all of the
provisions set forth in the August 15, 2003 interim final rule as
final.
V. Collection of Information Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) of 1995, we are required to
provide 30-day 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 fairly evaluate whether an information collection should be
approved by OMB, section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the PRA 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.
Therefore, we are soliciting public comments on each of these
issues for the information collection requirements discussed below.
The information collection requirements and associated burdens in
Sec. 424.32 are subject to the PRA. The burden of submitting the
information required is addressed under OMB approval number:
0938-0866, HIPAA Standards for Coding Electronic Transactions, with
a one-time burden of 34,000,000 hours. The current approval expires 5/
31/05.
0938-0279, Medicare Uniform Institutional Provider Bill, with an
annual burden of 1,666,208 hours (form CMS-1450). The current approval
expires 12/31/05.
0938-0008, Common Claim form, instructions, and supporting
regulations at Sec. 414.40, Sec. 424.32, and Sec. 414.40, with an
annual burden of 44,189,007 hours (form CMS-1500). The current approval
expires 3/31/06.
Approximately 205,409 providers and suppliers will be affected by
this final rule and will have to change the format for the claims they
submit. They will incur some costs, either that of switching to
clearinghouses, which will not affect the time it takes to submit the
information for a claim, but may cost them approximately $.30 per
claim, or that of purchasing computer equipment, which we estimate at
$500 to $1,000.
In the final rule published to implement the electronic
transactions and code sets standards, we estimated that it would take
an average of 10 hours per entity to switch over to the mandated
standard transaction. (The switch could be from paper to electronic or
from another electronic format to the standard format.)
For purposes of this discussion, we are estimating that 37.5
percent of the affected providers and suppliers (that is, those not
meeting one of the exceptions) already own computers and will not incur
capital costs. We are also estimating that 50 percent of the affected
providers and suppliers will start using a clearinghouse or billing
service, which will not impose any capital costs subject to the PRA.
The remaining 12.5 percent (25,676) will buy computers at an average of
$750, for a total capital cost of $19.3 million.
On the other hand, the providers and suppliers who own or who will
buy a computer will require less time to submit claims. Form CMS-1450
takes approximately 9 minutes to submit in hard copy and 0.5 minutes to
submit electronically; form CMS-1500 takes 15 minutes and 1 minute,
respectively.
If 50 percent of the entities that will bill us directly are
responsible for 25 percent of the paper bills (we assume that half of
the bills are submitted by entities that will be excepted from the
requirements, and that 25 percent will be submitted through an
intermediate party), they will save 7,651,089 million hours for form
1500 and 129,196 hours for form 1450. Mailing costs will be reduced by
approximately $.40 per claim on average and the cost of the forms by
$.03 for the form 1450 and form 1500 (the third form is furnished by
us).
As required by section 3504(h) of the PRA of 1995, we have
submitted a copy of the revision to Sec. 424.32 to OMB for its review
of the information collection requirements. The revision is not
effective until OMB has approved it.
If you comment on these information collection and recordkeeping
requirements, please mail copies directly to the following:
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Office of Strategic
Operations and Regulatory Affairs, Regulations Development and
Issuances Group, Attn: Jimmy Wickliffe, CMS-0008-F, Room C5-11-04, 7500
Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management
and Budget, Room 10235, New Executive Office Building, Washington, DC
20503, Attn: Christopher Martin, Desk Officer, CMS-0008-F.
Comments submitted to OMB may also be e-mailed to the following
address: e-mail: christophermartin@omb.eop.gov; or faxed to OMB at
(202)395-6974.
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Overall Impact
We have examined the impacts of this rule as required by Executive
Order 12866 (September 1993, Regulatory Planning and Review), the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (September 16, 1980, Pub. L. 96-354),
section 1102(b) of the Social Security Act, the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4), and Executive Order 13132.
For the purpose of this analysis, we use a pre-statute baseline;
therefore, all costs and benefits identified in this impact analysis
are attributed to this final rule. Nevertheless, the ASCA mandates most
aspects of this final rule. In particular, the ASCA requires Medicare
providers to submit claims electronically and stipulates the exceptions
that will and may be granted. However, we did have discretion in
sett