Medicare Program; Changes to the Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment Systems and Fiscal Year 2007 Rates; Fiscal Year 2007 Occupational Mix Adjustment to Wage Index; Health Care Infrastructure Improvement Program; Selection Criteria of Loan Program for Qualifying Hospitals Engaged in Cancer-Related Health Care and Forgiveness of Indebtedness; and Exclusion of Vendor Purchases Made Under the Competitive Acquisition Program (CAP) for Outpatient Drugs and Biologicals Under Part B for the Purpose of Calculating the Average Sales Price (ASP), 47870-48351 [06-6692]
Download as PDF
47870
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
42 CFR Parts 409, 410, 412, 413, 414,
424, 485, 489, and 505
[CMS–1488–F; CMS–1287–F; CMS–1320–F;
and CMS–1325–IFC4]
RINs 0938–AO12; 0938–AO03; 0938–AN93;
and 0938–AN58
Medicare Program; Changes to the
Hospital Inpatient Prospective
Payment Systems and Fiscal Year 2007
Rates; Fiscal Year 2007 Occupational
Mix Adjustment to Wage Index; Health
Care Infrastructure Improvement
Program; Selection Criteria of Loan
Program for Qualifying Hospitals
Engaged in Cancer-Related Health
Care and Forgiveness of
Indebtedness; and Exclusion of
Vendor Purchases Made Under the
Competitive Acquisition Program
(CAP) for Outpatient Drugs and
Biologicals Under Part B for the
Purpose of Calculating the Average
Sales Price (ASP)
Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Final rules and interim final
rule with comment period.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: We are revising the Medicare
hospital inpatient prospective payment
systems (IPPS) for operating and capitalrelated costs to implement changes
arising from our continuing experience
with these systems, and to implement a
number of changes made by the Deficit
Reduction Act of 2005 (Pub. L. 109–
171). In addition, in the Addendum to
this final rule, we describe the changes
to the amounts and factors used to
determine the rates for Medicare
hospital inpatient services for operating
costs and capital-related costs. We also
are setting forth rate-of-increase limits
as well as policy changes for hospitals
and hospital units excluded from the
IPPS that are paid in full or in part on
a reasonable cost basis subject to these
limits. These changes are applicable to
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2006.
In this final rule, we discuss public
comments we received on our proposals
to refine the diagnosis-related group
(DRG) system under the IPPS to better
recognize severity of illness among
patients—to use a hospital-specific
relative value (HSRV) cost center
weighting methodology to adjust DRG
relative weights; and to implement
consolidated severity-adjusted DRGs or
alternative severity adjustment methods.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Among the other policy changes that
we are making are those changes related
to: limited revisions of the
reclassification of cases to DRGs; the
long-term care (LTC)–DRGs and relative
weights; the wage data, including the
occupational mix data, used to compute
the wage index; applications for new
technologies and medical services addon payments; payments to hospitals for
the direct and indirect costs of graduate
medical education; submission of
hospital quality data; payments to sole
community hospitals and Medicaredependent, small rural hospitals; and
provisions governing emergency
services under the Emergency Medical
Treatment and Labor Act of 1986
(EMTALA).
We are responding to requested
public comments on a number of other
issues that include performance-based
hospital payments for services and
health information technology, as well
as how to improve health data
transparency for consumers.
In addition, we are responding to
public comments received on a
proposed rule issued in the Federal
Register on May 17, 2006 that proposed
to revise the methodology for
calculating the occupational mix
adjustment to the wage index for the FY
2007 hospital inpatient prospective
payment system by applying an
adjustment to 100 percent of the wage
index using new 2006 occupational mix
survey data collected from hospitals.
We are finalizing two policy
documents published in the Federal
Register relating to the implementation
of the Health Care Infrastructure
Improvement Program, a hospital loan
program for cancer research, established
under the Medicare Prescription Drug,
Improvement, and Modernization Act of
2003.
This final rule also revises the
definition of the term ‘‘unit’’ to specify
the exclusion of units of drugs sold to
approved Medicare Competitive
Acquisition Program (CAP) vendors for
use under the CAP from average sales
price (ASP) calculations for a period of
up to 3 years, at which time we will
reevaluate our policy.
DATES: Effective Dates: The provisions
of these final rules are effective on
October 1, 2006, with the exception of
the provisions in § 412.8, § 414.802, and
the procedures for withdrawing or
terminating reclassifications established
in section III.H.4. of the preamble. The
provisions of § 412.8, § 414.802, and the
procedures for withdrawing or
terminating reclassifications established
in section II.H.4. of the preamble are
effective August 18, 2006. This rule is
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
a major rule as defined in 5 U.S.C.
804(2). Pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
801(a)(1)(A), we are submitting a report
to the Congress on this rule on August
1, 2006.
Comment Date: We will consider
comments on the exclusion of CAP
drugs from the ASP calculation
(§ 414.802) as discussed in section XII.
of the preamble of this final rule, if we
receive them at one of the addresses
provided below, no later than 5 p.m. on
October 2, 2006.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, on section
XII. of this rule, please refer to file code
CMS–1325–IFC4.
Because of staff and resource
limitations, we cannot accept comments
by facsimile (FAX) transmission.
You may submit comments in one of
four ways (no duplicates, please):
1. Electronically. You may submit
electronic comments on specific issues
in this regulation to https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/eRulemaking. Click
on the link ‘‘Submit electronic
comments on CMS regulations with an
open comment period.’’ (Attachments
should be in Microsoft Word,
WordPerfect, or Excel; however, we
prefer Microsoft Word.)
2. By regular mail. You may mail
written comments (one original and two
copies) to the following address ONLY:
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, Department of Health and
Human Services, Attention: CMS–1325–
IFC4, P.O. Box 8011, Baltimore, MD
21244–1850.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed
comments to be received before the
close of the comment period.
3. By express or overnight mail. You
may send written comments (one
original and two copies) to the following
address ONLY: Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, Department of
Health and Human Services, Attention:
CMS–1325–IFC4, Mail Stop C4–26–05,
7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21244–1850.
4. By hand or courier. If you prefer,
you may deliver (by hand or courier)
your written comments (one original
and two copies) before the close of the
comment period to one of the following
addresses. If you intend to deliver your
comments to the Baltimore address,
please call telephone number (410) 786–
7195 in advance to schedule your
arrival with one of our staff members.
Room 445-G, Hubert H. Humphrey
Building, 200 Independence Avenue,
SW., Washington, DC 20201; or 7500
Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21244–1850.
(Because access to the interior of the
HHH Building is not readily available to
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
persons without Federal Government
identification, commenters are
encouraged to leave their comments in
the CMS drop slots located in the main
lobby of the building. A stamp-in clock
is available for persons wishing to retain
a proof of filing by stamping in and
retaining an extra copy of the comments
being filed.)
Comments mailed to the addresses
indicated as appropriate for hand or
courier delivery may be delayed and
received after the comment period.
For information on viewing public
comments, see the beginning of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Marc Hartstein, (410) 786–4548,
Operating Prospective Payment,
Diagnosis-Related Groups (DRGs),
Wage Index, Occupational Mix
Adjustment, New Medical Services
and Technology Add-On Payments,
Hospital Geographic Reclassifications,
Sole Community Hospital,
Disproportionate Share Hospital, and
Medicare-Dependent, Small Rural
Hospital Issues.
Tzvi Hefter, (410) 786–4487, Capital
Prospective Payment, Excluded
Hospitals, Graduate Medical
Education, Critical Access Hospitals,
Long-Term Care (LTC)-DRGs, and
Terms of Hospital Loans under Health
Care Infrastructure Improvement
Program Issues.
Siddhartha Mazumdar, (410) 786–6673,
Rural Community Hospital
Demonstration Issues.
Sheila Blackstock, (410) 786–3502,
Quality Data for Annual Payment
Update Issues.
Thomas Valuck, (410) 786–7479,
Hospital Value-Based Purchasing
Issues.
Frederick Grabau, (410) 786–0206,
Services in Foreign Hospitals Issues.
Brian Reitz, (410) 786–5001, Obsolete
Paper Claims Forms Issues.
Melinda Jones, (410) 786–7069, Loan
Forgiveness Criteria for Health Care
Infrastructure Improvement Program.
Corinne Axelrod, (410) 786–5620,
Competitive Acquisition Program
(CAP) for Part B Drugs Issues.
Angela Mason, (410) 786–7452,
Payment for Covered Outpatient
Drugs and Biologicals Issues.
Submitting Comments: We welcome
comments from the public on all issues
set forth in this rule to assist us in fully
considering issues and developing
policies. You can assist us by
referencing the file code CMS–1325–
IFC4 and the specific ‘‘issue identifier’’
that precedes the section on which you
choose to comment.
Inspection of Public Comments: All
comments received before the close of
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
the comment period are available for
viewing by the public, including any
personally identifiable or confidential
business information that is included in
a comment. We post all comments
received before the close of the
comment period on a public Web site as
soon as possible after they are received:
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/eRulemaking.
Clink on the link ‘‘Electronic Comments
on CMS Regulations’’ on that Web site
to view public comments.
Comments received timely will also
be available for public inspection as
they are received, generally beginning
approximately 3 weeks after publication
of a document, at the headquarters of
the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, 7500 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, Maryland 21244, Monday
through Friday of each week from 8:30
a.m. to 4 p.m. To schedule an
appointment to view public comments,
phone 1–800–743–3951.
Electronic Access
This Federal Register document is
also available from the Federal Register
online database through GPO Access, a
service of the U.S. Government Printing
Office. Free public access is available on
a Wide Area Information Server (WAIS)
through the Internet and via
asynchronous dial-in. Internet users can
access the database by using the World
Wide Web; the Superintendent of
Documents’ home page address is
https://www.gpoaccess.gov/, by using
local WAIS client software, or by telnet
to swais.access.gpo.gov, then login as
guest (no password required). Dial-in
users should use communications
software and modem to call (202) 512–
1661; type swais, then login as guest (no
password required).
Acronyms
AHA American Hospital Association
AHIMA American Health Information
Management Association
AHRO Agency for Health Care
Research and Quality
AMI Acute myocardial infarction
AOA American Osteopathic
Association
APR DRG All Patient Refined
Diagnosis-Related Group System
ASC Ambulatory surgical center
ASP Average sales price
AWP Average wholesale price
BBA Balanced Budget Act of 1997,
Pub. L. 105–33
BBRA Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP
[State Children’s Health Insurance
Program] Balanced Budget
Refinement Act of 1999, Pub. L. 106–
113
BIPA Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP
[State Children’s Health Insurance
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47871
Program] Benefits Improvement and
Protection Act of 2000, Pub. L. 106–
554
BLS Bureau of Labor Statistics
AH Critical access hospital
AP Competitive Acquisition Program
CART CMS Abstraction & Reporting
Tool
CBSAs Core-based statistical areas
CC Complication or comorbidity
CDAC Clinical Data Abstraction Center
CIPI Capital input price index
CPI Consumer price index
CMI Case-mix index
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
CMSA Consolidated Metropolitan
Statistical Area
COBRA Consolidated Omnibus
Reconciliation Act of 1985, Pub. L.
99–272
CPI Consumer price index
CRNA Certified registered nurse
anesthetist
CY Calendar year
DRA Deficit Reduction Act of 2005,
Pub. L. 109–171
DRG Diagnosis-related group
DSH Disproportionate share hospital
ECI Employment cost index
EMR Electronic medical record
EMTALA Emergency Medical
Treatment and Labor Act of 1986,
Pub. L. 99–272
FDA Food and Drug Administration
FFY Federal fiscal year
FIPS Federal information processing
standards
FQHC Federally qualified health
center
FTE Full-time equivalent
FY Fiscal year
GAAP Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles
GAF Geographic Adjustment Factor
GME Graduate medical education
HCAHPS Hospital Consumer
Assessment of Healthcare Providers
and Systems
HCFA Health Care Financing
Administration
HCRIS Hospital Cost Report
Information System
HHA Home health agency
HHS Department of Health and
Human Services
HIC Health insurance card
HIPAA Health Insurance Portability
and Accountability Act of 1996, Pub.
L. 104–191
HIPC Health Information Policy
Council
HIS Health information system
HIT Health information technology
HMO Health maintenance
organization
HSA Health savings account
HSCRC Maryland Health Services Cost
Review Commission
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47872
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
HSRV Hospital-specific relative value
HSRVcc Hospital-specific relative
value cost center
HQA Hospital Quality Alliance
HQI Hospital Quality Initiative
HwH Hospital-within-a-hospital
ICD–9–CM International Classification
of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical
Modification
ICD–10–PCS International
Classification of Diseases, Tenth
Edition, Procedure Coding System
ICU Intensive care unit
IHS Indian Health Service
IME Indirect medical education
IOM Institute of Medicine
IPF Inpatient psychiatric facility
IPPS Acute care hospital inpatient
prospective payment system
IRF Inpatient rehabilitation facility
IRP Initial residency period
JCAHO Joint Commission on
Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations
LAMCs Large area metropolitan
counties
LTC-DRG Long-term care diagnosisrelated group
LTCH Long-term care hospital
MCE Medicare Code Editor
MCO Managed care organization
MCV Major cardiovascular condition
MDC Major diagnostic category
MDH Medicare-dependent, small rural
hospital
MedPAC Medicare Payment Advisory
Commission
MedPAR Medicare Provider Analysis
and Review File
MEI Medicare Economic Index
MGCRB Medicare Geographic
Classification Review Board
MMA Medicare Prescription Drug,
Improvement, and Modernization Act
of 2003, Pub. L. 108–173
MRHFP Medicare Rural Hospital
Flexibility Program
MSA Metropolitan Statistical Area
NAICS North American Industrial
Classification System
NCD National coverage determination
NCHS National Center for Health
Statistics
NCQA National Committee for Quality
Assurance
NCVHS National Committee on Vital
and Health Statistics
NECMA New England County
Metropolitan Areas
NICU Neonatal intensive care unit
NQF National Quality Forum
NTIS National Technical Information
Service
NVHRI National Voluntary Hospital
Reporting Initiative
OES Occupational employment
statistics
OIG Office of the Inspector General
OMB Executive Office of Management
and Budget
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
O.R. Operating room
OSCAR Online Survey Certification
and Reporting (System)
PRM Provider Reimbursement Manual
PPI Producer price index
PMSAs Primary metropolitan
statistical areas
PPS Prospective payment system
PRA Per resident amount
ProPAC Prospective Payment
Assessment Commission
PRRB Provider Reimbursement
Review Board
PS&R Provider Statistical and
Reimbursement (System)
QIG Quality Improvement Group, CMS
QIO Quality Improvement
Organization
RHC Rural health clinic
RHQDAPU Reporting hospital quality
data for annual payment update
RNHCI Religious Nonmedical Health
Care Institution
RRC Rural referral center
RUCAs Rural-urban commuting area
codes
RY Rate year
SAF Standard Analytic File
SCH Sole community hospital
SFY State fiscal year
SIC Standard Industrial Classification
SNF Skilled nursing facility
SOCs Standard occupational
classifications
SOM State Operations Manual
SSA Social Security Administration
SSI Supplemental Security Income
TAG Technical Advisory Group
TEFRA Tax Equity and Fiscal
Responsibility Act of 1982, Pub. L.
97–248
UHDDS Uniform hospital discharge
data set
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. Summary
1. Acute Care Hospital Inpatient
Prospective Payment System (IPPS)
2. Hospitals and Hospital Units Excluded
from the IPPS
a. Inpatient Rehabilitation Facilities (IRFs)
b. Long-Term Care Hospitals (LTCHs)
c. Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities (IPFs)
3. Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
4. Payments for Graduate Medical
Education (GME)
B. Provisions of the Deficit Reduction Act
of 2005 (DRA)
C. Summary of the Provisions of the FY
2007 IPPS and FY 2007 Occupational
Mix Adjustment to the Wage Index
Proposed Rules
1. DRG Reclassifications and Recalibrations
of Relative Weights
2. Changes to the Hospital Wage Index
3. Other Decisions and Changes to the IPPS
for Operating Costs, GME Costs, and
Promoting Hospitals’ Effective Use of
Health Information Technology
4. Changes to the PPS for Capital-Related
Costs
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
5. Changes for Hospitals and Hospital
Units Excluded from the IPPS
6. Payments for Services Furnished
Outside the United States
7. Payment for Blood Clotting Factor
Administered to Inpatients with
Hemophilia
8. Limitation on Payments to Skilled
Nursing Facilities for Bad Debt
9. Determining Prospective Payment
Operating and Capital Rates and Rate-ofIncrease Limits
10. Impact Analysis
11. Recommendation of Update Factors for
Operating Cost Rates of Payment for
Inpatient Hospital Services
12. Discussion of Medicare Payment
Advisory Commission Recommendations
13. Appendix C and Appendix D
D. Public Comments Received in Response
to the FY 2007 IPPS and FY 2007
Occupational Mix Adjustment to the
Wage Index Proposed Rules
E. Interim Final Rule on Selection Criteria
of Loan Program for Qualifying Hospitals
Engaged in Cancer-Related Health Care
F. Proposed Rule on Forgiveness of
Indebtedness under the Health Care
Infrastructure Improvement Program
G. Interim Final Rule on the Exclusion of
Vendor Purchases Made Under the
Competitive Acquisition Program for
Part B Outpatient Drugs and Biologicals
for the Purpose of Calculating the
Average Sales Price
II. Changes to DRG Classifications and
Relative Weights
A. Background
B. DRG Reclassifications
1. General
2. Yearly Review for Making DRG Changes
C. Revisions to the DRG System Used
Under the IPPS
1. MedPAC Recommendations
2. Refinement of the Relative Weight
Calculation
3. Refinement of DRGs Based on Severity
of Illness
a. Comparison of the CMS DRG System and
the APR DRG System
b. CS DRGs for Use in the IPPS
c. Changes to CMI from a New DRG System
4. Effect of CS DRGs on the Outlier
Threshold
5. Impact of Refinement of DRG System on
Payments
6. Conclusions
7. Severity Refinement to CMS DRGs
a. MDC 1 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Nervous System)
b. MDC 4 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Respiratory System): Respiratory System
Diagnosis with Ventilator Support
c. MDC 6 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Digestive System)
d. MDC 11 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Kidney and Urinary Tract): Major
Bladder Procedures
e. MDC 16 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Blood and Blood Forming Organs and
Immunological Disorders): Major
Hematological and Immunological
Diagnoses
f. MDC 18 (Infectious and Parasitic
Diseases (Systemic or Unspecified
Sites)): O.R. Procedure for Patients with
Infectious and Parasitic Diseases
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
g. Severe Sepsis
D. Changes to Specific DRG Classifications
1. Pre-MDCs
a. Heart Transplant or Implant of Heart
Assist System: Addition of Procedure to
DRG 103
b. Pancreas Transplants
2. MDC 1 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Nervous System)
a. Implantation of Intracranial
Neurostimulator System for Deep Brain
Stimulation (DBS)
b. Carotid Artery Stents
3. MDC 5 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Circulatory System)
a. Insertion of Epicardial Leads for
Defibrillator Devices
b. Application of Major Cardiovascular
Diagnoses (MCVs) List to Defibrillator
DRGs
4. MDC 8 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Musculoskeletal System and Connective
Tissue)
a. Hip and Knee Replacements
b. Spinal Fusion
c. CHARITETM Spinal Disc Replacement
Device
5. MDC 18 (Infectious and Parasitic
Diseases (Systemic or Unspecified
Sites)): Severe Sepsis
6. Medicare Code Editor (MCE) Changes
a. Edit: Newborn Diagnoses
b. Edit: Diagnoses for Pediatric—Age 0–17
Years Old
c. Edit: Maternity Diagnoses—Age 12
through 55
d. Edit: Diagnoses Allowed for Females
Only
e. Edit: Diagnoses Allowed for Males Only
f. Edit: Procedures Allowed for Females
Only
g. Edit: Manifestations Not Allowed as
Principal Diagnosis
h. Edit: Nonspecific Principal Diagnosis
i. Edit: Unacceptable Principal Diagnosis
j. Edit: Nonspecific O.R. Procedures
k. Edit: Noncovered Procedures
l. Edit: Bilateral Procedure
7. Surgical Hierarchies
8. Refinement of Complications and
Comorbidities (CC) List
a. Background
b. Comprehensive Review of the CC List
c. CC Exclusions List for FY 2007
9. Review of Procedure Codes in DRGs 468,
476, and 477
a. Moving Procedure Codes from DRG 468
or DRG 477 to MDCs
b. Reassignment of Procedures among
DRGs 468, 476, and 477
c. Adding Diagnosis or Procedure Codes to
MDCs
10. Changes to the ICD–9–CM Coding
System
11. Other Issues
a. Chronic Kidney Disease
b. Bronchial Valve
c. Female Reproductive System
Reconstruction Procedures
d. Devices That are Replaced Without Cost
or Where Credit for a Replaced Device is
Furnished to the Hospital
E. Recalibration of DRG Weights
F. LTC–DRG Reclassifications and Relative
Weights for LTCHs for FY 2007
1. Background
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
2. Changes in the LTC–DRG Classifications
a. Background
b. Patient Classifications into DRGs
3. Development of the FY 2007 LTC–DRG
Relative Weights
a. General Overview of Development of the
LTC–DRG Relative Weights
b. Data
c. Hospital-Specific Relative Value
Methodology
d. Low-Volume LTC–DRGs
4. Steps for Determining the FY 2007 LTC–
DRG Relative Weights
5. Summary of Public Comments and
Departmental Responses
G. Add-On Payments for New Services and
Technologies
1. Background
2. Public Input Before Publication of a
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on AddOn Payments
3. FY 2007 Status of Technologies
Approved for FY 2006 Add-On Payments
a. Kinetra Implantable Neurostimulator
(Kinetra) for Deep Brain Stimulation
b. Endovascular Graft Repair of the
Thoracic Aorta
c. Restore Rechargeable Implantable
Neurostimulator
4. FY 2007 Applications for New
Technology Add-On Payments
a. C-Port Distal Anastomosis System
b. NovoSeven for Intracerebral
Hemorrhage
c. X STOP Interspinous Process
Decompression System
5. Interim and Final Cost Threshold Tables
Due to Changes to Wage Index and
Budget Neutrality Factors
III. Changes to the Hospital Wage Index
A. Background
B. Core-Based Statistical Areas for the
Hospital Wage Index
C. Occupational Mix Adjustment to the FY
2007 Wage Index
1. Development of Data for the FY 2007
Occupational Mix Adjustment
2. Timeline for the Collection, Review, and
Correction of the Occupational Mix Data
3. Calculation of the Occupational Mix
Adjustment
D. Worksheet S–3 Wage Data for the FY
2007 Wage Index Update
E. Verification of Worksheet S–3 Wage
Data
F. Computation of the FY 2007 Unadjusted
Wage Index
G. Implementation of the FY 2007
Occupational Mix Adjustment to the
Wage Index
H. Revisions to the Wage Index Based on
Hospital Redesignations
1. General
2. Effects of Reclassification/Redesignation
3. FY 2007 MGCRB Reclassifications
4. Procedures for Hospitals Applying for
Reclassification Effective in FY 2008 and
Reinstating Reclassifications in FY 2008
5. FY 2007 Redesignations Under Section
1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
6. Reclassifications Under Section 508 of
Pub. L. 108–173
7. Wage Indices for Reclassified Hospitals
and Reclassification Budget Neutrality
Factor
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47873
I. FY 2007 Wage Index Adjustment Based
on Commuting Patterns of Hospital
Employees
J. Process for Requests for Wage Index Data
Corrections
K. Labor-Related Share for the Wage Index
for FY 2007
L. Proxy for the Hospital Market Basket
IV. Other Decisions and Changes to the IPPS
for Operating Costs and GME Costs
A. Reporting of Hospital Quality Data for
Annual Hospital Payment Update
1. Background
2. New Procedures for Hospital Reporting
of Quality Data
a. Two Percentage Point Reduction
b. New Procedures
c. Expanded Quality Measures
d. HCAHPS Survey
e. Data Submission
f. RHQDAPU Program Withdrawal and
Chart Validation Requirements
g. Data Validation and Attestation
h. Public Display and Reconsideration
Procedures
i. Conclusion
3. Electronic Medical Records
B. Value-Based Purchasing
1. Introduction
2. Premier Hospital Quality Incentive
Demonstration
3. RHQDAPU Program
a. Section 501(b) of Pub. L. 108–173
(MMA)
b. Section 5001(a) of Pub. L. 109–171
(DRA)
4. Plan for Implementing Hospital ValueBased Purchasing Beginning with FY
2009
a. Measure Development and Refinement
b. Data Infrastructure
c. Incentive Methodology
d. Public Reporting
5. Considerations Related to Certain
Conditions, Including Hospital-Acquired
Infections
6. Promoting Effective Use of Health
Information Technology
C. Sole Community Hospitals (SCHs) and
Medicare-Dependent, Small Rural
Hospitals (MDHs)
1. Background
2. Volume Decrease Adjustment for SCHs
and MDHs
a. HAS/Monitrend Data
b. HAS/Monitrend Data Book Replacement
Alternative
3. Mandatory Reporting Requirements for
Any Changes in the Circumstances
Under Which a Hospital Was Designated
as an SCH or MDH
4. Payment Changes for MDHs under the
DRA of 2005
a. Background
b. Regulation Changes
5. Technical Change
D. Rural Referral Centers
1. Case-Mix Index
2. Discharges
E. Indirect Medical Education (IME)
Adjustment
1. Background
2. IME Adjustment Factor for FY 2007
3. Technical Change to Revise CrossReference
F. Payment Adjustment for
Disproportionate Share Hospitals (DSHs)
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47874
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
1. Background
2. Technical Corrections
3. Reinstatement of Inadvertently Deleted
Provisions on DSH Payment Adjustment
Factors
4. Enhanced DSH Adjustment for MDHs
G. Geographic Reclassifications
1. Background
2. Reclassifications under Section 508 of
Pub. L. 108–173
3. Multicampus Hospitals
4. Urban Group Hospital Reclassifications
5. Effect of Change of Ownership on Urban
County Group Reclassifications
6. Requested Reclassification for Hospitals
Located in a Single Hospital MSA
Surrounded by Rural Counties
7. Special Adjustment for the Hospital
Group Reclassification Denied on the
Basis of Incomplete CSA Listing
H. Payment for Direct Graduate Medical
Education
1. Background
2. Determination of Weighted Average Per
Resident Amounts (PRAs) for Merged
Teaching Hospitals
3. Determination of Per Resident Amounts
(PRAs) for New Teaching Hospitals
4. Requirements for Counting and
Appropriate Documentation of FTE
Residents: Clarification
5. Resident Time Spent in Nonpatient Care
Activities as Part of Approved Residency
Programs
6. Medicare GME Affiliated Groups:
Technical Changes to Regulations
I. Payment for the Costs of Nursing and
Allied Health Education Activities:
Clarification
J. Hospital Emergency Services under
EMTALA
1. Background
2. Role of the EMTALA Technical
Advisory Group (TAG)
3. Definition of ‘‘Labor’’
4. Application of EMTALA Requirements
to Hospitals Without Dedicated
Emergency Departments
5. Clarification of Reference to ‘‘Referral
Centers’’
K. Other Technical Changes
1. Cross-Reference Correction in
Regulations on Limitations on
Beneficiary Charges
2. Cross-Reference Corrections in
Regulations on Payment Denials Based
on Admissions and Quality Reviews
3. Cross-Reference Correction in
Regulations on Outlier Payments
4. Removing References to Two Paper
Claims Forms
L. Rural Community Hospital
Demonstration Program
M. Health Care Information Transparency
Initiative
V. Changes to the PPS for Capital-Related
Costs
A. Background
B. Treatment of Certain Urban Hospitals
Reclassified as Rural Hospitals Under
§ 412.103
C. Other Technical Corrections Relating to
the Capital PPS Geographic Adjustment
Factors
VI. Changes for Hospitals and Hospital Units
Excluded from the IPPS
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
A. Payments to Excluded Hospitals and
Hospital Units
1. Payments to Existing Excluded and New
Hospitals and Hospital Units
2. Separate PPS for IRFs
3. Separate PPS for LTCHs
4. Separate PPS for IPFs
5. Grandfathering of Hospitals-WithinHospitals (HwHs) and Satellite Facilities
6. Changes to the Methodology for
Determining LTCH Cost-to-Charge Ratios
(CCRs) and the Reconciliation of HighCost and Short-Stay Outlier Payments
under the LTCH PPS
a. Background
b. High-Cost Outliers
c. Short-Stay Outliers
d. CCR Ceiling
e. Statewide Average CCRs
f. Data Used to Determine a CCR
g. Reconciliation of Outlier Payments Upon
Cost report Settlement
7. Technical Corrections Relating to LTCHs
8. Cross-Reference Correction in Authority
Citations for 42 CFR 412 and 413
9. Report of Adjustment (Exceptions)
Payments
B. Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
1. Background
2. Sunset of Designation of CAHs as
Necessary Providers: Technical
Correction
VII. Payment for Services Furnished Outside
the United States
A. Background
B. Proposed Clarification of Regulations
VIII. Payment for Blood Clotting Factor
Administered to Inpatients with
Hemophilia
IX. Limitation on Payments to Skilled
Nursing Facilities for Bad Debt
A. Background
B. Changes Made by Section 5004 of Pub.
L. 109–171
C. Proposed Regulation Changes
X. MedPAC Recommendations
XI. Health Care Infrastructure Improvement
Program: Selection Criteria for Loan
Program for Qualifying Hospitals
Engaged in Cancer-Related Health Care
and Forgiveness of Indebtedness
A. Background
B. Issuance of an Interim Final Rule with
Comment Period and a Proposed
Regulation
C. Provisions of the Interim Final Rule
With Comment Period
1. Loan Qualifying Criteria
2. Selection Criteria
3. Terms of the Loan
4. Public Comments Received on the
Interim Final Rule With Comment Period
5. Provisions of this Final Rule
D. Proposed Rule on Forgiveness of
Indebtedness
1. Conditions for Loan Forgiveness
2. Plan Criteria for Meeting the Conditions
for Loan Forgiveness
3. Public Comments Received on the
Proposed Rule and Our Responses
4. Provisions of the Final Rule
E. Statutory Requirements for Issuance of
Regulations
XII. Exclusion of Vendor Purchases Made
Under the Competitive Acquisition
Program (CAP) for Outpatient Drugs and
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Biologicals Under Part B for the Purpose
of Calculating the Average Sales Price
(ASP)
A. Background
1. Average Sales Price (ASP)
2. Competitive Acquisition Program (CAP)
3. Regulatory History
B. Regulation Change
XIII. Other Required Information
A. Requests for Data from the Public
B. Collection of Information Requirements
C. Waiver of Proposed Rulemaking and
Delay in the Effective Date
D. Response to Comments
Regulation Text
Addendum—Schedule of Tentative
Standardized Amounts, Tentative
Update Factors and Rate-of-Increase
Percentages Effective With Cost
Reporting Periods Beginning On or After
October 1, 2006
I. Summary and Background
II. Changes to Prospective Payment Rates for
Hospital Inpatient Operating Costs
A. Calculation of the Tentative Adjusted
Standardized Amount
1. Standardization of Base-Year Costs or
Target Amounts
2. Computing the Tentative Average
Standardized Amount
3. Updating the Tentative Average
Standardized Amount
4. Other Adjustments to the Average
Standardized Amount
a. Recalibration of DRG Weights and
Updated Wage Index—Budget Neutrality
Adjustment
b. Reclassified Hospitals—Tentative
Budget Neutrality Adjustment
c. Outliers
d. Tentative Rural Community Hospital
Demonstration Program Adjustment
(Section 410A of Pub. L. 108–173)
5. Tentative FY 2007 Standardized Amount
B. Tentative Adjustments for Area Wage
Levels and Cost-of-Living
1. Tentative Adjustment for Area Wage
Levels
2. Final Adjustment for Cost-of-Living in
Alaska and Hawaii
C. DRG Relative Weights
D. Calculation of the Prospective Payment
Rates
1. Federal Rate
2. Hospital-Specific Rate (Applicable Only
to SCHs and MDHs)
a. Calculation of Hospital-Specific Rate
b. Updating the FY 1982, FY 1987, FY
1996, and FY 2002 Hospital-Specific
Rates for FY 2007
3. General Formula for Calculation of
Prospective Payment Rates for Hospitals
Located in Puerto Rico Beginning On or
After October 1, 2006, and Before
October 1, 2007
a. Puerto Rico Rate
b. National Rate
III. Changes to Payment Rates for Acute Care
Hospital Inpatient Capital-Related Costs
for FY 2007
A. Determination of Federal Hospital
Inpatient Capital-Related Prospective
Payment Rate Update
1. Projected Capital Standard Federal Rate
Update
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
a. Description of the Update Framework
b. Comparison of CMS and MedPAC
Update Recommendation
2. Outlier Payment Adjustment Factor
3. Budget Neutrality Adjustment Factor for
Changes in DRG Classifications and
Weights and the GAF
4. Exceptions Payment Adjustment Factor
5. Capital Standard Federal Rate for FY
2007
6. Special Capital Rate for Puerto Rico
Hospitals
B. Calculation of the Inpatient CapitalRelated Prospective Payments for FY
2007
C. Capital Input Price Index
1. Background
2. Forecast of the CIPI for FY 2007
IV. Payment Rates for Excluded Hospitals
and Hospital Units: Rate-of-Increase
Percentages
A. Payments to Existing Excluded
Hospitals and Units
B. New Excluded Hospitals and Units
V. Payment for Blood Clotting Factor
Administered to Inpatients with
Hemophilia
Tables
The following tables are included as part of
this final rule:
Table 1A—National Adjusted Operating
Standardized Amounts, Labor/Nonlabor
(69.7 Percent Labor Share/30.3 Percent
Nonlabor Share If Wage Index Is Greater
Than 1) (Tentative)
Table 1B—National Adjusted Operating
Standardized Amounts, Labor/Nonlabor
(62 Percent Labor Share/38 Percent
Nonlabor Share If Wage Index Is Less
Than or Equal to 1) (Tentative)
Table 1C—Adjusted Operating Standardized
Amounts for Puerto Rico, Labor/
Nonlabor (Tentative)
Table 1D—Capital Standard Federal Payment
Rate (Tentative)
Table 4J—Out-Migration Wage Adjustment—
FY 2007 (Tentative)
Table 5—List of Diagnosis-Related Groups
(DRGs), Relative Weighting Factors, and
Geometric and Arithmetic Mean Length
of Stay (LOS) (Tentative)
Table 6A—New Diagnosis Codes
Table 6B—New Procedure Codes
Table 6C—Invalid Diagnosis Codes
Table 6D—Invalid Procedure Codes
Table 6E—Revised Diagnosis Code Titles
Table 6F—Revised Procedure Code Titles
Table 6G—Additions to the CC Exclusions
List
Table 6H—Deletions from the CC Exclusions
List
Table 7A—Medicare Prospective Payment
System Selected Percentile Lengths of
Stay: FY 2005 MedPAR Update March
2006 GROUPER V23.0
Table 7B—Medicare Prospective Payment
System Selected Percentile Lengths of
Stay: FY 2005 MedPAR Update March
2006 GROUPER V24.0
Table 8A—Statewide Average Operating
Cost-to-Charge Ratios—July 2006
Table 8B—Statewide Average Capital Cost-toCharge Ratios—July 2006
Table 8C— Statewide Average Total Cost-toCharge Ratios for LTCHs—July 2006
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Table 9A—Hospital Reclassifications and
Redesignations by Individual Hospital
and CBSA for FY 2007 (Tentative)
Table 9B—Hospital Reclassifications and
Redesignation by Individual Hospital
Under Section 508 of Pub. L. 108–173 for
FY 2007 (Tentative)
Table 9C—Hospitals Redesignated as Rural
under Section 1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act
for FY 2007 (Tentative)
Table 10—Geometric Mean Plus the Lesser of
.75 of the National Adjusted Operating
Standardized Payment Amount
(Increased to Reflect the Difference
Between Costs and Charges) or .75 of
One Standard Deviation of Mean Charges
by Diagnosis-Related Group (DRG)—July
2006 (Tentative)
Table 11—FY 2007 LTC–DRGs, Relative
Weights, Geometric Average Length of
Stay, and 5⁄6ths of the Geometric Average
Length of Stay
Appendix A—Regulatory Impact Analysis
I. Overall Impact
II. Objectives
III. Limitations on Our Analysis
IV. Hospitals Included In and Excluded From
the IPPS
V. Effects on Excluded Hospitals and
Hospital Units
VI. Quantitative Effects of the Policy Changes
Under the IPPS for Operating Costs
A. Basis and Methodology of Estimates
B. Analysis of Table I
C. Effects on the Hospitals that Failed the
Quality Data Submission Process
(Column 2)
D. Effects of the DRA Provision Related to
MDHs (Column 3)
E. Effects of the Changes to the DRG
Reclassifications and Relative Cost-Based
Weights (Column 4)
F. Effects of Wage Index Changes (Column
5)
G. Combined Effects of DRG and Wage
Index Changes, Including Budget
Neutrality Adjustment (Column 6)
H. Effects of the 3-Year Provision Allowing
Urban Hospitals that Were Converted to
Rural as a Result of the FY 2005 Labor
Market Area Changes to Maintain the
Wage Index of the Urban Labor Market
Area in Which They Were Formerly
Located (Column 7)
I. Effects of MGCRB Reclassifications
(Column 8)
J. Effects of the Wage Index Adjustment for
Out-Migration (Column 9)
K. Effects of All Changes (Column 10)
L. Effects of Policy on Payment
Adjustments for Low-Volume Hospitals
M. Impact Analysis of Table II
VII. Effects of Other Policy Changes
A. Effects of LTC–DRG Reclassifications
and Relative Weights for LTCHs
B. Effects of New Technology Add-On
Payments
C. Effects of Requirements for Hospital
Reporting of Quality Data for Annual
Hospital Payment Update
D. Effects of Other Policy Changes
Affecting Sole Community Hospitals
(SCHs) and Medicare-Dependent, Small
Rural Hospitals (MDHs)
E. Effects of Policy on Payment for Direct
Costs of Graduate Medical Education
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47875
1. Determination of Weighted Average
GME PRAs for Merged Teaching
Hospitals
2. Determination of PRAs for New
Teaching Hospitals
3. Requirements for Counting and
Appropriate Documentation of FTE
Residents
4. Resident Time Spent in Nonpatient Care
Activities as Part of an Approved
Residency Program
F. Effects of Policy Changes Relating to
Emergency Services under EMTALA
G. Effects of Policy on Rural Community
Hospital Demonstration Program
H. Effects of Policy on Hospitals-withinHospitals and Satellite Facilities
I. Effects of Policy Changes to the
Methodology for Determining LTCH
CCRs and the Reconciliation of LTCH
PPS Outlier Payments
J. Effects of Policy on Payment for Services
Furnished Outside the United States
K. Effects of Final Policy on Limitation on
Payments to SNFs
L. Effects of Policy on CAP for Outpatient
Drugs and Biologicals under Part B for
the Purpose of Calculating the ASP
VIII. Impact of Changes in the Capital PPS
A. General Considerations
B. Results
IX. Impact of Changes Relating to the Loan
Program for Capital Cost under the
Health Care Infrastructure Improvement
Program
A. Effects on Hospitals
B. Effects on the Medicare and Medicaid
Programs
X. Alternatives Considered
XI. Overall Conclusion
XII. Accounting Statement
XIII. Executive Order 12866
Appendix B—Recommendation of Update
Factors for Operating Cost Rates of
Payment for Inpatient Hospital Services
I. Background
II. Secretary’s Final Recommendation for
Updating the Prospective Payment
System Standardized Amounts
III. Secretary’s Final Recommendation for
Updating the Rate-of-Increase Limits for
Excluded Hospitals and Hospital Units
IV. Secretary’s Recommendation for
Updating the Capital Prospective
Payment Amounts
I. Background
A. Summary
1. Acute Care Hospital Inpatient
Prospective Payment System (IPPS)
Section 1886(d) of the Social Security
Act (the Act) sets forth a system of
payment for the operating costs of acute
care hospital inpatient stays under
Medicare Part A (Hospital Insurance)
based on prospectively set rates. Section
1886(g) of the Act requires the Secretary
to pay for the capital-related costs of
hospital inpatient stays under a
prospective payment system (PPS).
Under these PPSs, Medicare payment
for hospital inpatient operating and
capital-related costs is made at
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47876
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
predetermined, specific rates for each
hospital discharge. Discharges are
classified according to a list of
diagnosis-related groups (DRGs).
The base payment rate is comprised of
a standardized amount that is divided
into a labor-related share and a
nonlabor-related share. The laborrelated share is adjusted by the wage
index applicable to the area where the
hospital is located; and if the hospital is
located in Alaska or Hawaii, the
nonlabor-related share is adjusted by a
cost-of-living adjustment factor. This
base payment rate is multiplied by the
DRG relative weight.
If the hospital treats a high percentage
of low-income patients, it receives a
percentage add-on payment applied to
the DRG-adjusted base payment rate.
This add-on payment, known as the
disproportionate share hospital (DSH)
adjustment, provides for a percentage
increase in Medicare payments to
hospitals that qualify under either of
two statutory formulas designed to
identify hospitals that serve a
disproportionate share of low-income
patients. For qualifying hospitals, the
amount of this adjustment may vary
based on the outcome of the statutory
calculations.
If the hospital is an approved teaching
hospital, it receives a percentage add-on
payment for each case paid under the
IPPS, known as the indirect medical
education (IME) adjustment. This
percentage varies, depending on the
ratio of residents to beds.
Additional payments may be made for
cases that involve new technologies or
medical services that have been
approved for special add-on payments.
To qualify, a new technology or medical
service must demonstrate that it is a
substantial clinical improvement over
technologies or services otherwise
available, and that, absent an add-on
payment, it would be inadequately paid
under the regular DRG payment.
The costs incurred by the hospital for
a case are evaluated to determine
whether the hospital is eligible for an
additional payment as an outlier case.
This additional payment is designed to
protect the hospital from large financial
losses due to unusually expensive cases.
Any outlier payment due is added to the
DRG-adjusted base payment rate, plus
any DSH, IME, and new technology or
medical service add-on adjustments.
Although payments to most hospitals
under the IPPS are made on the basis of
the standardized amounts, some
categories of hospitals are paid the
higher of a hospital-specific rate based
on their costs in a base year (the higher
of FY 1982, FY 1987, FY 1996, or FY
2002) or the IPPS rate based on the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
standardized amount. For example, sole
community hospitals (SCHs) are the sole
source of care in their areas, and
Medicare-dependent, small rural
hospitals (MDHs) are a major source of
care for Medicare beneficiaries in their
areas. Both of these categories of
hospitals are afforded special payment
protection in order to maintain access to
services for beneficiaries. (Through FY
2007, an MDH receives the IPPS rate
plus 50 percent of the difference
between the IPPS rate and its hospitalspecific rate if the hospital-specific rate
is higher than the IPPS rate. In addition,
an MDH may not use FY 1996 as its base
year for the hospital-specific rate. As
discussed below, for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2007,
but before October 1, 2011, an MDH will
receive the IPPS rate plus 75 percent of
the difference between the IPPS rate and
its hospital-specific rate, if the hospitalspecific rate is higher than the IPPS
rate.)
Section 1886(g) of the Act requires the
Secretary to pay for the capital-related
costs of inpatient hospital services ‘‘in
accordance with a prospective payment
system established by the Secretary.’’
The basic methodology for determining
capital prospective payments is set forth
in our regulations at 42 CFR 412.308
and 412.312. Under the capital PPS,
payments are adjusted by the same DRG
for the case as they are under the
operating IPPS. Capital PPS payments
are also adjusted for IME and DSH,
similar to the adjustments made under
the operating IPPS. In addition,
hospitals may receive outlier payments
for those cases that have unusually high
costs.
The existing regulations governing
payments to hospitals under the IPPS
are located in 42 CFR Part 412, Subparts
A through M.
2. Hospitals and Hospital Units
Excluded From the IPPS
Under section 1886(d)(1)(B) of the
Act, as amended, certain specialty
hospitals and hospital units are
excluded from the IPPS. These hospitals
and units are: inpatient rehabilitation
hospitals and units (commonly referred
to as inpatient rehabilitation facilities
(IRFs); long-term care hospitals
(LTCHs); inpatient psychiatric hospitals
and units (commonly referred to as
inpatient psychiatric facilities (IPFs);
children’s hospitals; and cancer
hospitals. Religious nonmedical health
care institutions (RNHCIs) are also
excluded from the IPPS. Various
sections of the Balanced Budget Act of
1997 (Pub. L. 105–33), the Medicare,
Medicaid and SCHIP [State Children’s
Health Insurance Program] Balanced
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Budget Refinement Act of 1999 (Pub. L.
106–113), and the Medicare, Medicaid,
and SCHIP Benefits Improvement and
Protection Act of 2000 (Pub. L. 106–554)
provide for the implementation of PPSs
for IRFs, LTCHs, and IPFs, as discussed
below. Children’s hospitals, cancer
hospitals, and RNHCIs continue to be
paid solely under a reasonable costbased system.
The existing regulations governing
payments to excluded hospitals and
hospital units are located in 42 CFR
Parts 412 and 413.
a. Inpatient Rehabilitation Facilities
(IRFs)
Under section 1886(j) of the Act, IRFs
have been transitioned from payment
based on a blend of reasonable cost
reimbursement and the adjusted IRF
Federal prospective payment rate for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after January 1, 2002, through
September 30, 2002, to payment at 100
percent of the Federal rate effective for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 2002. IRFs subject to the
blend were also permitted to elect
payment based on 100 percent of the
Federal rate. The existing regulations
governing payments under the IRF PPS
are located in 42 CFR Part 412, Subpart
P.
b. Long-Term Care Hospitals (LTCHs)
Under the authority of sections 123(a)
and (c) of Pub. L. 106–113 and section
307(b)(1) of Pub. L. 106–554, LTCHs
that do not meet the definition of ‘‘new’’
under § 412.23(e)(4) are being
transitioned from being paid for
inpatient hospital services based on a
blend of reasonable cost-based
reimbursement under section 1886(b) of
the Act to 100 percent of the Federal
rate during a 5-year period with cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2002. Those LTCHs that do
not meet the definition of ‘‘new’’ may
elect to be paid based on 100 percent of
the Federal prospective payment rate
instead of a blended payment in any
year during the 5-year transition. For
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 2006, LTCHs will be
paid 100 percent of the Federal rate. The
existing regulations governing payment
under the LTCH PPS are located in 42
CFR Part 412, Subpart O.
c. Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities (IPFs)
Under the authority of sections 124(a)
and (c) of Pub. L. 106–113, IPFs are paid
under the IPF PPS. Under the IPF PPS,
some IPFs are transitioning from being
paid for inpatient hospital services
based on a blend of reasonable costbased payment to a Federal per diem
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
payment rate, effective for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after January 1,
2005 (November 15, 2004 IPF PPS final
rule (69 FR 66922) and May 9, 2006 IPF
PPS final rule (71 FR 27040)). For cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
January 1, 2008, all IPFs will be paid
100 percent of the Federal per diem
payment amount. The existing
regulations governing payment under
the IPF PPS are located in 42 CFR 412,
Subpart N.
3. Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
Under sections 1814, 1820, and
1834(g) of the Act, payments are made
to critical access hospitals (CAHs) (that
is, rural hospitals or facilities that meet
certain statutory requirements) for
inpatient and outpatient services based
on 101 percent of reasonable cost.
Reasonable cost is determined under the
provisions of section 1861(v)(1)(A) of
the Act and existing regulations under
42 CFR Parts 413 and 415.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
4. Payments for Graduate Medical
Education (GME)
Under section 1886(a)(4) of the Act,
costs of approved educational activities
are excluded from the operating costs of
inpatient hospital services. Hospitals
with approved graduate medical
education (GME) programs are paid for
the direct costs of GME in accordance
with section 1886(h) of the Act; the
amount of payment for direct GME costs
for a cost reporting period is based on
the hospital’s number of residents in
that period and the hospital’s costs per
resident in a base year. The existing
regulations governing payments to the
various types of hospitals are located in
42 CFR Part 413.
B. Provisions of the Deficit Reduction
Act of 2005 (DRA)
On February 8, 2006, the Deficit
Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA), Pub. L.
109–171, was enacted. Pub. L. 109–171
made a number of changes to the Act
relating to prospective payments to
hospitals and other providers for
inpatient services. This final rule
implements amendments made by the
following sections of Pub. L. 109–171:
• Section 5001(a), which, effective for
FY 2007 and subsequent years, allows
for expansion of the requirements for
hospital quality data reporting.
• Section 5003, which makes several
changes to the MDH program. It extends
special payment provisions, requires
MDHs to use FY 2002 as their base year
for determining whether use of their
hospital-specific rate enhances payment
(but permits them to continue to use
either their 1982 or 1987 hospitalspecific rate if using either of those rates
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
results in higher payments), and
removes the application of the 12percent cap on the DSH payment
adjustment factor for MDHs.
• Section 5004, which reduces certain
allowable SNF bad debt payments by 30
percent. Payments for the bad debts of
full-benefit, dual eligible individuals are
not reduced.
In this final rule, we also discuss the
provisions of section 5001(b) of Pub. L.
109–171, which require us to develop a
plan to implement, beginning with FY
2009, a value-based purchasing plan for
section 1886(d) hospitals and
summarize the public comments
received in response to our invitation
for public comments. This discussion
also includes the provisions of section
5001(c) of Pub. L. 109–171, which
requires a quality adjustment in DRG
payments for certain hospital-acquired
conditions, effective for FY 2008.
C. Summary of the Provisions of the FY
2007 IPPS and FY 2007 Occupational
Mix Adjustment to the Wage Index
Proposed Rules
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule,
we set forth proposed changes to the
Medicare IPPS for operating costs and
for capital-related costs in FY 2007. We
also set forth proposed changes relating
to payments for GME costs, payments to
certain hospitals and units that continue
to be excluded from the IPPS and paid
on a reasonable cost basis, and
payments for SCHs and MDHs. The
changes were proposed to be effective
for discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 2006, unless otherwise noted.
After publication of the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule, the United States Court
of Appeals for the Second Circuit issued
a decision in the Bellevue case that
caused us to modify our proposals on
the implementation of the occupational
mix adjustment. As a result, we
published a second proposed rule in the
May 17, 2006 Federal Register that
superseded the occupational mix
proposals that had been made in the FY
2007 IPPS proposed rule (published
April 25, 2006). The following is a
summary of the major changes that we
proposed to make and the issues that we
addressed in the FY 2007 IPPS and FY
2007 Occupational Mix Adjustment to
the Wage Index proposed rules:
1. DRG Reclassifications and
Recalibrations of Relative Weights
As required by section 1886(d)(4)(C)
of the Act, we proposed limited annual
revisions to the DRG classifications
structure. In this section, we responded
to several recommendations made by
MedPAC intended to improve the DRG
system. We also proposed to use, for FY
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47877
2007, hospital-specific relative values
(HSRVs) for 10 cost centers to compute
DRG relative weights. In addition, we
proposed to use consolidated severityadjusted DRGs or alternative severity
adjustment methods in FY 2008 (if not
earlier).
We presented our reevaluation of
certain FY 2006 applicants for add-on
payments for high-cost new medical
services and technologies, and our
analysis of FY 2007 applicants
(including public input, as directed by
Pub. L. 108–173, obtained in a town hall
meeting).
We proposed the annual update of the
long-term care diagnosis-related group
(LTC–DRG) classifications and relative
weights for use under the LTCH PPS for
FY 2007.
2. Changes to the Hospital Wage Index
We proposed revisions to the wage
index and the annual update of the
wage data. Specific issues addressed
include the following:
• The FY 2007 wage index update,
using wage data from cost reporting
periods that began during FY 2003.
• The FY 2007 occupational mix
adjustment to the wage index (discussed
inthe May 17, 2006 proposed rule).
• The revisions to the wage index
based on hospital redesignations and
reclassifications.
• The adjustment to the wage index
for FY 2007 based on commuting
patterns of hospital employees who
reside in a county and work in a
different area with a higher wage index.
• The timetable for reviewing and
verifying the wage data that will be in
effect for the proposed FY 2007 wage
index.
• The special timetable that will
apply in FY 2007 in order to allow us
to make presumptive reclassification
withdrawal or termination decisions on
behalf of affected hospitals which will
then become final unless reversed or
modified by the affected hospitals in
accordance with CMS procedural rules.
• The labor-related share for the FY
2007 wage index, including the laborrelated share for Puerto Rico.
3. Other Decisions and Changes to the
IPPS for Operating Costs, GME Costs,
and Promoting Hospitals’ Effective Use
of Health Information Technology
In the proposed rule, we discussed a
number of provisions of the regulations
in 42 CFR Parts 412 and 413 and related
proposed changes, including the
following:
• The reporting of hospital quality
data as a condition for receiving the full
annual payment update increase.
• Changes in payments to SCHs and
MDHs.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47878
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
• Updated national and regional casemix values and discharges for purposes
of determining rural referral center
status.
• The statutorily-required IME
adjustment factor for FY 2007.
• Changes relating to hospitals’
geographic classifications, including
reclassifications under section 508 of
Pub. L. 108–173, multicampus
hospitals, urban group hospital
reclassification and the effect of change
in ownership on urban county group
reclassifications.
• Changes and clarifications relating
to GME that address determining the per
resident amounts (PRAs) for merged
hospitals and new teaching hospitals,
counting and appropriate
documentation of FTE residents, and
counting of resident time spent in
nonpatient care activities as part of
approved residency programs.
• Changes relating to payment for
costs of nursing and allied health
education programs.
• Changes relating to requirements for
emergency services for hospitals under
EMTALA.
• Discussion of the third year of
implementation of the Rural
Community Hospital Demonstration
Program.
We also invited comments on
promoting hospitals’ effective use of
health information technology.
4. Changes to the PPS for CapitalRelated Costs
In the proposed rule, we discussed
the payment policy requirements for
capital-related costs and capital
payments to hospitals and proposed
several technical corrections to the
regulations.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
5. Changes for Hospitals and Hospital
Units Excluded From the IPPS
In the proposed rule, we discussed
payments made to excluded hospitals
and hospital units, proposed policy
changes regarding decreases in square
footage or decreases in the number of
beds of the ‘‘grandfathering’’ HwHs and
satellite facilities, and proposed changes
to the methodology for determining
LTCH CCRs and the reconciliation of
high-cost and short-stay outlier
payments under the LTCH PPS. In
addition, we proposed a technical
change relating to the designation of
CAHs as necessary providers.
6. Payments for Services Furnished
Outside the United States
In the proposed rule, we set forth
proposed changes to clarify what is
considered ‘‘outside the United States’’
for Medicare payment purposes.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
7. Payment for Blood Clotting Factor
Administered to Inpatients With
Hemophilia
In the proposed rule, we discussed
the proposed changes in payment for
blood clotting factor administered to
Medicare beneficiaries with hemophilia
for FY 2007.
8. Limitation on Payments to Skilled
Nursing Facilities for Bad Debt
In the proposed rule, we proposed to
implement section 5004 of Pub. L. 109–
171 relating to reduction in payments to
SNFs for bad debt.
9. Determining Prospective Payment
Operating and Capital Rates and Rate-ofIncrease Limits
In the Addendum to the proposed
rule, we set forth proposed changes to
the amounts and factors for determining
the FY 2007 prospective payment rates
for operating costs and capital-related
costs. We also proposed to establish the
threshold amounts for outlier cases. In
addition, we addressed the proposed
update factors for determining the rateof-increase limits for cost reporting
periods beginning in FY 2007 for
hospitals and hospital units excluded
from the PPS.
10. Impact Analysis
In Appendix A of the proposed rule,
we set forth an analysis of the impact
that the proposed changes would have
on affected hospitals.
11. Recommendation of Update Factors
for Operating Cost Rates of Payment for
Inpatient Hospital Services
In Appendix B of the proposed rule,
as required by sections 1886(e)(4) and
(e)(5) of the Act, we provided our
recommendations of the appropriate
percentage changes for FY 2007 for the
following:
• A single average standardized
amount for all areas for hospital
inpatient services paid under the IPPS
for operating costs (and hospital-specific
rates applicable to SCHs and MDHs).
• Target rate-of-increase limits to the
allowable operating costs of hospital
inpatient services furnished by hospitals
and hospital units excluded from the
IPPS.
12. Discussion of Medicare Payment
Advisory Commission
Recommendations
Under section 1805(b) of the Act,
MedPAC is required to submit a report
to the Congress, no later than March 1
of each year, in which MedPAC reviews
and makes recommendations on
Medicare payment policies. MedPAC’s
March 2006 recommendation
concerning hospital inpatient payment
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
policies addressed the update factor for
inpatient hospital operating costs and
capital-related costs under the IPPS and
for hospitals and distinct part hospital
units excluded from the IPPS. This
recommendation was addressed in
Appendix B of the proposed rule. For
further information relating specifically
to the MedPAC reports or to obtain a
copy of the reports, contact MedPAC at
(202) 220–3700 or visit MedPAC’s Web
site at: www.medpac.gov.
13. Appendix C and Appendix D
In Appendix C of the proposed rule,
we listed the combinations of the
consolidated severity-adjusted DRGs
that we proposed to implement on FY
2008 (if not earlier), as discussed in
section II.C. of the preamble of the
proposed rule. In Appendix D of the
proposed rule, we provided a crosswalk
of the proposed consolidated severityadjusted DRG system to the respective
All Patient Related Diagnosis-Related
Group (APR DRG) system.
D. Public Comments Received in
Response to the FY 2007 IPPS and FY
2007 Occupational Mix Adjustment to
the Wage Index Proposed Rules
We received over 2,300 timely items
of correspondence containing multiple
comments on the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule. We also received over
100 timely items of correspondence on
the FY 2007 Occupational Mix
Adjustment to the Wage Index proposed
rule. Summaries of the public comments
and our responses to those comments
are set forth under the appropriate
heading.
E. Interim Final Rule on Selection
Criteria of Loan Program for Qualifying
Hospitals Engaged in Cancer-Related
Health Care
On September 30, 2005, we published
in the Federal Register (70 FR 57368) an
interim final rule with comment period
(CMS–1287–IFC) that set forth the
criteria for implementing a loan
program for qualifying hospitals
engaged in research in the causes,
prevention, and treatment of cancer, as
specified in section 1016 of the
Medicare Prescription Drug,
Improvement, and Modernization Act of
2003 (Pub. L. 108–173). Specifically,
this interim final rule established a loan
application process by which qualifying
hospitals, including specified entities,
may apply for a loan for the capital costs
of health care infrastructure
improvement projects. The interim final
rule was effective on November 29,
2005.
We received seven timely items of
correspondence on the interim final
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
rule. In section XI. of the preamble to
this final rule, we are finalizing this
interim final rule with comment period.
In that section, we discuss the
provisions of the program, the public
comments received, our responses to
those comments, and the final policy.
F. Proposed Rule on Forgiveness of
Indebtedness under the Health Care
Infrastructure Improvement Program
On September 30, 2005, we published
in the Federal Register (70 FR 57376) a
proposed rule (CMS–1320–P) to
establish the loan forgiveness criteria for
qualifying hospitals who receive loans
under the Health Care Infrastructure
Improvement Program that was
established under section 1016 of Pub.
L. 108–173.
We received one timely item of
correspondence on this proposed rule.
We address the provisions of the
proposed rule, a summary of the public
comments received and our responses,
and the provisions of the final rule in
section XI. of the preamble of this final
rule.
G. Interim Final Rule on the Exclusion
of Vendor Purchases Made Under the
Competitive Acquisition Program for
Part B Outpatient Drugs and Biologicals
for the Purpose of Calculating the
Average Sales Price
In November 21, 2005 Federal
Register (70 FR 70748), we published an
interim final rule with comment period
(CMS–1325–IFC3) to clarify and solicit
comments on the relationship between
drugs supplied under the CAP for Part
B Drugs and Biologicals and the
calculation of the ASP.
We did not receive any timely items
of correspondence on this interim final
rule with comment period. We
summarize the provisions of the July 6,
2005 and the November 21, 2005
interim final rules and the current
interim final provisions in section XII.
of the preamble of this final rule.
II. Changes to DRG Classifications and
Relative Weights
A. Background
Section 1886(d) of the Act specifies
that the Secretary shall establish a
classification system (referred to as
DRGs) for inpatient discharges and
adjust payments under the IPPS based
on appropriate weighting factors
assigned to each DRG. Therefore, under
the IPPS, we pay for inpatient hospital
services on a rate per discharge basis
that varies according to the DRG to
which a beneficiary’s stay is assigned.
The formula used to calculate payment
for a specific case multiplies an
individual hospital’s payment rate per
case by the weight of the DRG to which
the case is assigned. Each DRG weight
represents the average resources
required to care for cases in that
particular DRG, relative to the average
resources used to treat cases in all
DRGs.
Congress recognized that it would be
necessary to recalculate the DRG
relative weights periodically to account
for changes in resource consumption.
Accordingly, section 1886(d)(4)(C) of
the Act requires that the Secretary
adjust the DRG classifications and
relative weights at least annually. These
adjustments are made to reflect changes
in treatment patterns, technology, and
any other factors that may change the
relative use of hospital resources.
B. DRG Reclassifications
1. General
As discussed in section II.D. of the
preamble to the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule (71 FR 24030), for FY 2007, we are
making only limited changes to the
current DRG classifications that will be
applicable to discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2006. We are limiting
our changes because, as discussed in
detail in section II.C. of the preamble to
the proposed rule and to this final rule,
we are focusing our efforts on
addressing the recommendations made
last year by MedPAC to refine the entire
CMS DRG system by taking into account
severity of illness and applying
hospital-specific relative value (HSRV)
weights to DRGs.
Currently, cases are classified into
CMS DRGs for payment under the IPPS
based on the principal diagnosis, up to
eight additional diagnoses, and up to six
procedures performed during the stay.
In a small number of DRGs,
classification is also based on the age,
sex, and discharge status of the patient.
The diagnosis and procedure
information is reported by the hospital
using codes from the International
Classification of Diseases, Ninth
Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD–9–
CM).
The process of forming the DRGs was
begun by dividing all possible principal
diagnoses into mutually exclusive
principal diagnosis areas, referred to as
Major Diagnostic Categories (MDCs).
The MDCs were formed by physician
panels as the first step toward ensuring
that the DRGs would be clinically
coherent. The diagnoses in each MDC
correspond to a single organ system or
etiology and, in general, are associated
with a particular medical specialty.
Thus, in order to maintain the
requirement of clinical coherence, no
final DRG could contain patients in
different MDCs. Most MDCs are based
on a particular organ system of the
body. For example, MDC 6 is Diseases
and Disorders of the Digestive System.
This approach is used because clinical
care is generally organized in
accordance with the organ system
affected. However, some MDCs are not
constructed on this basis because they
involve multiple organ systems (for
example, MDC 22 (Burns)). For FY 2006,
cases are assigned to one of 526 DRGs
in 25 MDCs. The table below lists the 25
MDCs.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
MAJOR DIAGNOSTIC CATEGORIES (MDCS)
1 ........
2 ........
3 ........
4 ........
5 ........
6 ........
7 ........
8 ........
9 ........
10 ......
11 ......
12 ......
13 ......
14 ......
15 ......
16 ......
Diseases and Disorders of the Nervous System.
Diseases and Disorders of the Eye.
Diseases and Disorders of the Ear, Nose, Mouth, and Throat.
Diseases and Disorders of the Respiratory System.
Diseases and Disorders of the Circulatory System.
Diseases and Disorders of the Digestive System.
Diseases and Disorders of the Hepatobiliary System and Pancreas.
Diseases and Disorders of the Musculoskeletal System and Connective Tissue.
Diseases and Disorders of the Skin, Subcutaneous Tissue and Breast.
Endocrine, Nutritional and Metabolic Diseases and Disorders.
Diseases and Disorders of the Kidney and Urinary Tract.
Diseases and Disorders of the Male Reproductive System.
Diseases and Disorders of the Female Reproductive System.
Pregnancy, Childbirth, and the Puerperium.
Newborns and Other Neonates with Conditions Originating in the Perinatal Period.
Diseases and Disorders of the Blood and Blood Forming Organs and Immunological Disorders.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47879
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47880
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
MAJOR DIAGNOSTIC CATEGORIES (MDCS)—Continued
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
Myeloproliferative Diseases and Disorders and Poorly Differentiated Neoplasms.
Infectious and Parasitic Diseases (Systemic or Unspecified Sites).
Mental Diseases and Disorders.
Alcohol/Drug Use and Alcohol/Drug Induced Organic Mental Disorders.
Injuries, Poisonings, and Toxic Effects of Drugs.
Burns.
Factors Influencing Health Status and Other Contacts with Health Services.
Multiple Significant Trauma.
Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infections.
procedure codes. These DRGs are for
heart transplant or implant of heart
assist systems, liver and/or intestinal
transplants, bone marrow transplants,
lung transplants, simultaneous
pancreas/kidney transplants, pancreas
In general, cases are assigned to an
MDC based on the patient’s principal
diagnosis before assignment to a DRG.
However, for FY 2006, there are nine
DRGs to which cases are directly
assigned on the basis of ICD–9–CM
transplants, and for tracheostomies.
Cases are assigned to these DRGs before
they are classified to an MDC. The table
below lists the nine current pre-MDCs.
PRE-MAJOR DIAGNOSTIC CATEGORIES (PRE-MDCS)
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
103
480
481
482
495
512
513
541
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG 542 ......
Heart Transplant or Implant of Heart Assist System.
Liver Transplant and/or Intestinal Transplant.
Bone Marrow Transplant.
Tracheostomy for Face, Mouth, and Neck Diagnoses.
Lung Transplant.
Simultaneous Pancreas/Kidney Transplant.
Pancreas Transplant.
ECMO or Tracheostomy with Mechanical Ventilation 96+ Hours or Principal Diagnosis Except for Face, Mouth, and Neck Diagnosis with Major O.R.
Tracheostomy with Mechanical Ventilation 96+ Hours or Principal Diagnosis Except for Face, Mouth, and Neck Diagnosis without Major O.R.
Once the MDCs were defined, each
MDC was evaluated to identify those
additional patient characteristics that
would have a consistent effect on the
consumption of hospital resources.
Because the presence of a surgical
procedure that required the use of the
operating room would have a significant
effect on the type of hospital resources
used by a patient, most MDCs were
initially divided into surgical DRGs and
medical DRGs. Surgical DRGs are based
on a hierarchy that orders operating
room (O.R.) procedures or groups of
O.R. procedures by resource intensity.
Medical DRGs generally are
differentiated on the basis of diagnosis
and age (0 to 17 years of age or greater
than 17 years of age). Some surgical and
medical DRGs are further differentiated
based on the presence or absence of a
complication or a comorbidity (CC).
Generally, nonsurgical procedures
and minor surgical procedures that are
not usually performed in an operating
room are not treated as O.R. procedures.
However, there are a few non-O.R.
procedures that do affect DRG
assignment for certain principal
diagnoses. An example is extracorporeal
shock wave lithotripsy for patients with
a principal diagnosis of urinary stones.
Once the medical and surgical classes
for an MDC were formed, each class of
diagnoses was evaluated to determine if
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
complications, comorbidities, or the
patient’s age would consistently affect
the consumption of hospital resources.
Physician panels classified each
diagnosis code based on whether the
diagnosis, when present as a secondary
condition, would be considered a
substantial CC. A substantial CC was
defined as a condition which, because
of its presence with a specific principal
diagnosis, would cause an increase in
the length of stay by at least one day in
at least 75 percent of the patients. Each
medical and surgical class within an
MDC was tested to determine if the
presence of any substantial CC would
consistently affect the consumption of
hospital resources.
A patient’s diagnosis, procedure,
discharge status, and demographic
information is fed into the Medicare
claims processing systems and subjected
to a series of automated screens called
the Medicare Code Editor (MCE). The
MCE screens are designed to identify
cases that require further review before
classification into a DRG.
After patient information is screened
through the MCE and any further
development of the claim is conducted,
the cases are classified into the
appropriate DRG by the Medicare
GROUPER software program. The
GROUPER program was developed as a
means of classifying each case into a
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
DRG on the basis of the diagnosis and
procedure codes and, for a limited
number of DRGs, demographic
information (that is, sex, age, and
discharge status).
After cases are screened through the
MCE and assigned to a DRG by the
GROUPER, the PRICER software
calculates a base DRG payment. The
PRICER calculates the payment for each
case covered by the IPPS based on the
DRG relative weight and additional
factors associated with each hospital,
such as IME and DSH adjustments.
These additional factors increase the
payment amount to hospitals above the
base DRG payment.
The records for all Medicare hospital
inpatient discharges are maintained in
the Medicare Provider Analysis and
Review (MedPAR) file. The data in this
file are used to evaluate possible DRG
classification changes and to recalibrate
the DRG weights. However, in the July
30, 1999 IPPS final rule (64 FR 41500),
we discussed a process for considering
non-MedPAR data in the recalibration
process. In order for us to consider
using particular non-MedPAR data, we
must have sufficient time to evaluate
and test the data. The time necessary to
do so depends upon the nature and
quality of the non-MedPAR data
submitted. Generally, however, a
significant sample of the non-MedPAR
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
data should be submitted by midOctober for consideration in
conjunction with the next year’s
proposed rule. This allows us time to
test the data and make a preliminary
assessment as to the feasibility of using
the data. Subsequently, a complete
database should be submitted by early
December for consideration in
conjunction with the next year’s
proposed rule.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule,
we proposed limited changes to the
DRG classification system for FY 2007
for the FY 2007 GROUPER, Version 24.0
and to the methodology used to
recalibrate the DRG weights. The
changes we proposed, the public
comments we received concerning the
proposed changes, the final DRG
changes, and the methodology used to
calculate the DRG weights are set forth
below. The changes we are
implementing in this final rule will be
reflected in the FY 2007 GROUPER,
Version 24.0, and are effective for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2006. Unless otherwise noted in this
final rule, our DRG analysis is based on
data from the March 2006 update of the
FY 2005 MedPAR file, which contains
hospital bills received through March
31, 2006, for discharges occurring in FY
2005.
2. Yearly Review for Making DRG
Changes
Many of the changes to the DRG
classifications are the result of specific
issues brought to our attention by
interested parties. We encourage
individuals with concerns about DRG
classifications to bring those concerns to
our attention in a timely manner so they
can be carefully considered for possible
inclusion in the annual proposed rule
Therefore, similar to the timetable for
interested parties to submit nonMedPAR data for consideration in the
DRG recalibration process, concerns
about DRG classification issues should
be brought to our attention no later than
early December in order to be
considered and possibly included in the
next annual proposed rule updating the
IPPS.
The actual process of forming the
DRGs was, and continues to be, highly
iterative, involving a combination of
statistical results from test data
combined with clinical judgment. For
purposes of this final rule, in deciding
whether to create a separate DRG, we
consider whether the resource
consumption and clinical characteristics
of the patients with a given set of
conditions are significantly different
than the remaining patients in the
existing DRG. We evaluate patient care
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
costs using average charges and lengths
of stay as proxies for costs and rely on
the judgment of our medical officers to
decide whether patients are clinically
distinct or similar to other patients in
the DRG. In evaluating resource costs,
we consider both the absolute and
percentage differences in average
charges between the cases we are
selecting for review and the remainder
of cases in the DRG. We also consider
variation in charges within these
groups; that is, whether observed
average differences are consistent across
patients or attributable to cases that are
extreme in terms of charges or length of
stay, or both. Further, we also consider
the number of patients who will have a
given set of characteristics and generally
prefer not to create a new DRG unless
it will include a substantial number of
cases.
C. Revisions to the DRG System Used
Under the IPPS
1. MedPAC Recommendations
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule, we
discussed a number of
recommendations made by MedPAC
regarding revisions to the DRG system
used under the IPPS (70 FR 47473
through 47482).
In Recommendation 1–3 in the 2005
Report to Congress on Physician-Owned
Specialty Hospitals, MedPAC
recommended that CMS refine the
current DRGs to more fully capture
differences in severity of illness among
patients, including:
• Base the DRG relative weights on
the estimated cost of providing care.
• Base the weights on the national
average of the hospital-specific relative
values (HSRVs) for each DRG (using
hospital-specific costs to derive the
HSRVs).
• Adjust the DRG relative weights to
account for differences in the
prevalence of high-cost outlier cases.
• Implement the case-mix
measurement and outlier policies over a
transitional period.
As we noted in the FY 2006 IPPS final
rule, we had insufficient time to
complete a thorough evaluation of these
recommendations for full
implementation in FY 2006. However,
we did adopt severity-weighted cardiac
DRGs in FY 2006 to address public
comments on this issue and the specific
concerns of MedPAC regarding cardiac
surgery DRGs. We also indicated that we
planned to further consider all of
MedPAC’s recommendations and
thoroughly analyze options and their
impacts on the various types of
hospitals in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule. Following the publication of the
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47881
FY 2006 IPPS final rule, we contracted
with 3M Health Information Systems to
assist us in performing this analysis.
Beginning with MedPAC’s relative
weight recommendations, we analyzed
MedPAC’s recommendations to move to
a cost-based HSRV weighting
methodology. In performing this portion
of the analysis, we studied hospital cost
report data, departmental cost-to-charge
ratios (CCRs), MedPAR claims data, and
HSRV weighting methodology. Our
intention in undertaking this portion of
the analysis was to find an
administratively feasible approach to
improving the accuracy of the DRG
weights. As we described in the
proposed rule, we believe some changes
can be made to MedPAC’s methodology
for determining the relative weights that
will make it more feasible to replicate
on an annual basis but will result in
similar impacts.
In conjunction with analyzing
MedPAC’s relative weight
recommendations, we looked at refining
the current DRG system to better
recognize severity of illness. Starting
with the APR DRG GROUPER used by
MedPAC in its analysis, we studied
Medicare claims data. Based on this
analysis, we developed a CS DRG
GROUPER that we believe could be a
better alternative for recognizing
severity of illness among the Medicare
population. We note that MedPAC’s
recommendations with regard to
revising the DRGs to better recognize
severity of illness may have
implications for the outlier threshold,
the measurement of real case-mix versus
apparent case-mix, and the IME and the
DSH adjustments. We discuss these
implications in more detail in the
following sections.
As we present below, we believe that
the recommendations made by
MedPAC, or some variants of them,
have significant promise to improve the
accuracy of the payment rates in the
IPPS. We agree with MedPAC about
exploring possible refinements to our
payment methodology even in the
absence of concerns about the
proliferation of specialty hospitals. In
the FY 2006 final rule, we indicated that
until we had completed further analysis
of the options and their effects, we
could not predict the extent to which
changing to APR DRGs would provide
payment equity between specialty and
general hospitals. In fact, we cautioned
that any system that groups cases will
always present some opportunities for
providers to specialize in cases they
believe to have higher margins. We
believe that improving payment
accuracy should reduce these
opportunities and potentially reduce the
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47882
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
incentives that Medicare payments may
provide for the further development of
specialty hospitals.
We considered MedPAC’s
recommendation to adjust the relative
weights to account for differences in the
prevalence of outlier cases. However,
we placed most of our attention and
resources on the recommendations
related to refinement of the current
DRGs to more fully capture differences
in severity of illness among patients, as
we do not have the statutory authority
to make the specific changes to our
outlier policy that MedPAC
recommended. While we have not made
MedPAC’s recommendation regarding
outliers a central focus of our analysis,
we do intend to examine this issue in
more detail in the future. In sections
II.C.2. through C.6. of the FY 2007
proposed rule, we discussed a number
of issues related to the MedPAC
recommendations. We also presented
our analysis and specific proposals for
FY 2007 and FY 2008 including their
estimated impacts. In this final rule, we
present the public comments received
on the proposed rule, our responses to
those comments, our final decisions for
FY 2007 and our intended actions for
FY 2008.
2. Refinement of the Relative Weight
Calculation
MedPAC made two recommendations
with respect to the DRG relative weight
calculation. First, MedPAC
recommended that CMS base the DRG
relative weights on the estimated cost of
providing care. Second, MedPAC
recommended that CMS base the
weights on the national average of
hospitals’ relative values in each DRG.
Because both of these recommendations
address the relative weight calculation,
we are addressing them together. The
work we have done to address these
recommendations was discussed in
detail in the proposed rule (71 FR
24006–24011).
MedPAC recommended that CMS
replace its charge-based relative weight
methodology with cost-based weights,
as it believed that the charge-based
relative weight methodology that CMS
has utilized since 1985 has introduced
bias into the weights due to differential
markups for ancillary services among
the DRGs. In analyzing claims data, it is
evident to us that some hospital types
(for example, teaching hospitals) are
systematically more expensive overall
than the average hospital and certain
case types are more commonly treated at
these more expensive facilities. Higher
average charges for cases that are treated
at more expensive hospitals may result
in higher weights for these types of
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
cases. MedPAC suggested a hospitalspecific relative value (HSRV)
methodology which MedPAC believed
would reduce the effect of cost
differences among hospitals that may be
present in the national relative weights
due to differences in case-mix adjusted
costs.
Under the HSRV methodology
recommended by MedPAC, charges are
standardized for each provider by
converting its charges for each case to
hospital-specific relative charge values
and then adjusting those values for the
hospital’s case-mix. The first step in this
process involves dividing the charge for
each case at the hospital by the average
charge for all cases at the hospital in
which the case was treated. The
hospital-specific relative charge value,
by definition, averages 1.0 for each
hospital. The resulting ratio is then
multiplied by the hospital’s case-mix
index (CMI). In this way, each hospital’s
relative charge value is adjusted by its
case-mix to an average that reflects the
complexity of the cases it treats relative
to the complexity of the cases treated by
all other hospitals. We discuss this issue
in further detail below.
Our analysis of departmental-level
CCRs from the Medicare cost report data
has shown that charges for routine days,
intensive care days, and various
ancillary services are not marked up by
a consistent amount. For example, the
markup amounts for cardiology services
are higher than average. Because charges
are the current basis for the DRG relative
weights, the practice of differential
markups can lead to bias in the DRG
weights because various DRGs use, on
average, more or less of particular
ancillary services. MedPAC believes
that the bias in the national DRG
relative weights that may arise as a
result of differential markups across
various cost centers can be removed by
moving from charge-based to cost-based
weights. Based on the analysis we have
conducted, we agree that it is
appropriate to adjust the DRG relative
weights to account for the differences in
charge markups across cost centers.
In the proposed rule, we indicated
several concerns about the methodology
used by MedPAC. MedPAC’s
methodology to reduce hospital charges
to cost is administratively burdensome,
not only to develop, but also to
maintain. First, MedPAC developed
CCRs for individual hospitals at the
most detailed department level.
Specifically, in calculating costs as the
basis for the relative weights, MedPAC
applied hospital-specific CCRs from
each provider’s cost report to the line
item charges on the claims that the
hospital submitted during the same time
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
period. This methodology required
matching cost report data to claims data,
and because cost report data take longer
to compile and file, the method
necessitates using older claims data to
set relative weights. The most recent
complete set of Medicare cost reports
available to us is from FY 2003. Thus,
if we were to model the exact approach
used by MedPAC and use claims data
for a matching year, we would be using
claims data from FY 2003 instead of
using FY 2005 claims data, as we would
if we were to continue with our current
methodology. In addition, MedPAC’s
hospital-specific approach required
detailed cost center distinctions for each
hospital that are difficult to define, map,
and apply. This approach also required
the use of the Standard Analytic File
(SAF) because MedPAR data that we
currently use to set DRG weights did not
have the necessary level of detail. Using
the SAF increases processing time and
adds further complexity to the process
of setting the relative weights.
Second, because MedPAC applied
these CCRs at the individual claim level,
missing or invalid data resulted in
MedPAC deleting a large number of
claims (approximately 10 percent) from
the relative weight calculation. Lastly,
MedPAC acknowledged that its method
was too difficult to replicate on an
annual basis and suggested that the
weights be recalculated once every 5
years with other adjustments based on
charges during the intervening years.
As we explained in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule, we developed an
alternative to MedPAC’s approach that
we believe achieves similar results in a
more administratively feasible manner.
This method involves developing
hospital-specific charge relative weights
at the cost center level and then scaling
the weights to costs using the national
cost center charge ratios developed from
the cost report data. After studying
Medicare cost report data, we
established 10 cost center categories
based upon broad hospital accounting
definitions. In our cost center categories,
there are 8 ancillary cost groups in
addition to routine day costs and
intensive care day costs, and each
category represents at least 5 percent of
the charges in the claims data. The
specific cost report lines that contribute
to each category and the corresponding
charge lines from the MedPAR claims
data are itemized in Table A below.
In the proposed rule, we stated that
this alternative approach, which we
labeled as the HSRV cost center
(HSRVcc) methodology, has several
advantages. First, the use of national
average rather than hospital-specific
CCRs avoids the complexity
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
encountered with cost center CCRs at
the hospital level and allows us to retain
more data for use in the relative weight
calculation. In addition, the
methodology eliminates the need to
match claims to the time period of the
CCRs, resulting in the ability to use
more timely claims data. Furthermore,
the alternative approach makes it more
feasible to update the relative weights
annually using a single methodology.
We do not have to replicate the
methodology once every 5 years and
make adjustments based on changes in
charges in the intervening years. The
HSRVcc methodology is described in
detail in the proposed rule (71 FR 24008
through 24011).
Comment: Several commenters
supported CMS’ effort to restructure the
DRG relative weights based on cost.
They stated that using charges as a
proxy for hospital costs in determining
resource utilization under the current
system is inappropriate and encouraged
CMS to implement a cost-based system
consistent with the agency’s original
intent without delay.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support of our proposal to
implement a cost-based weighting
methodology. We believe that adopting
cost-based weights will result in
significant improvements to Medicare’s
IPPS payments. MedPAC concluded
after an extensive analysis of Medicare
hospital inpatient claims and cost data
that the IPPS payment rates are badly
distorted, resulting in Medicare paying
too much for some types of patients and
too little for others. As indicated below,
we are making some modifications to
our proposals in response to the public
comments. However, we are adopting a
system of cost-based weights for FY
2007 to address the concerns raised by
MedPAC. As a result, all hospitals,
including specialty hospitals, will be
paid more appropriately. In addition,
based on our analysis, we concur with
MedPAC that the current DRG system
needs to be changed to better account
for severity of illness among patients.
This issue is discussed in more detail in
the next section of this final rule.
Comment: A majority of commenters
supported CMS’ efforts to improve the
accuracy of the DRG weights, and better
reflect variations in patients’ severity of
illness. However, many commenters
viewed the HSRVcc proposal as flawed
from both a methodological and policy
perspective, and believed the proposal
to implement cost-based weights should
be delayed for at least a year. They
believed that CMS needs to further
consider a number of issues raised in
the public comments before such
sweeping changes are implemented. In
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
addition, the commenters indicated that
CMS needs to provide hospitals with
more lead-time before implementing
changes so they can budget accurately.
They urged CMS to use the current
standardized charge-based approach in
FY 2007 until these issues can be
addressed. At a minimum, they believed
CMS should address what were
characterized as methodological flaws
and publish revised relative weights
along with hospital impacts for public
comment prior to implementation.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ concerns with regard to a
rapid and full implementation of the
changes we proposed to the relative
weight methodology. However, based on
our analysis and study of the MedPAC
recommendations that we presented in
our proposed rule, it has come to our
attention that differential markups
between routine and ancillary cost
centers have introduced significant bias
into the relative weights. In order to
reduce the bias in weights and make
more appropriate payments under the
IPPS, we believe it is necessary to
initiate the transition to a cost-based
relative weight methodology in FY
2007. However, we have considered the
commenters’ requests to further review
the HSRV methodology. Therefore, in
this final rule, we are not adopting our
proposal to standardize charges using
the HSRV methodology. However, we
are adopting our proposal to reduce
charges to estimated costs prior to
setting DRG weights. We will undertake
further analysis of the HSRV
methodology during the next year.
Based on this analysis, we will consider
proposing further changes to adopt the
HSRV methodology for FY 2008.
Comment: Many commenters
disagreed with CMS’ assertion that the
more administratively feasible HSRVcc
approach achieves similar results to the
MedPAC methodology. While they
supported CMS’ efforts to ensure the
DRG weights are updated annually to
reflect the most recent trends in
inpatient care, they expressed concern
with the specifics of the HSRVcc
methodology.
First, they noted that CMS stated in
the proposed rule that organ acquisition
costs were eliminated from hospital
charges before the HSRVcc weights were
calculated. However, it had come to
their attention that organ acquisition
charges were actually included in the
calculation of DRG weights under the
proposed methodology. They stated that
organ acquisition is reimbursed by
Medicare on a cost basis and should not
be included in the weight calculation.
Furthermore, the commenters asserted
that the inclusion of organ acquisition
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47883
charges improperly overstated the
transplant DRG HSRVcc weights.
Commenters recommended that CMS
remove the organ acquisition charges
from the computation of the DRG
weights if the HSRVcc methodology is
to be adopted.
Second, commenters believe CMS
made questionable methodological
decisions when calculating the national
CCRs. Under the proposed
methodology, CMS calculated hospitalweighted rather than charge-weighted
CCRs for each of the 10 cost centers
used to scale the charge-based weights.
Because the averages are unweighted,
the commenters stated that the CCRs do
not account for the differential
contribution of each hospital to total
charges. The commenters asserted that,
mathematically, the only correct way to
get from total hospital charges to total
hospital costs is to use a chargeweighted average of hospital CCRs.
Failure to use charge-weighted averages
overestimates routine and ICU costs and
underestimates ancillary costs, which
ultimately exaggerates the shift in
payments, according to the commenters.
Therefore, commenters believed CMS
should recalculate the mean national
CCRs using a charge-weighted method.
Third, commenters believed CMS
applied questionable trimming criteria
in computing the cost center CCRs.
They stated that trimming the cost
center CCRs at 1.96 standard deviations
(rather than 3 standard deviations) from
the geometric mean inappropriately
excluded over 200 large hospitals that
account for 25 percent of routine
accommodation charges. They noted
that the CCRs for these hospitals appear
to be predominantly correct. In
addition, the commenters noted that
CMS applied the CCRs to the charge
data for hospitals that were excluded
from the national average CCR
calculation. Thus, the commenters
argued there is a significant mismatch
between the hospital data that was
included in the CCR and HSRVcc
calculations. These commenters
recommended that CMS exclude
hospital data from the CCRs if it is more
than 3 standard deviations (rather than
1.96) from the mean CCR. Many
commenters characterized these
methodological decisions as errors and
indicated that their combined impact is
significant. If CMS is to use the HSRVcc
methodology, the commenters indicated
that these issues should be addressed.
A few commenters stated that we
made incorrect assumptions that may
have resulted in new distortions to the
relative weights. Specifically, the
commenters stated that we were
incorrect in applying the same CCR
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47884
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
across all hospitals for a given cost
center and applying the same percent
mix of services by cost center to all
DRGs. The commenters recommended
that we first convert charges to costs for
each hospital and DRG, and then
compute hospital-specific relative
values. They stated that the reversal of
the calculations in the HSRVcc
methodology accommodates cost center
mix and charge markup differences
across hospitals and across DRGs.
Many commenters argued that the
hospital-specific relative value
methodology is unnecessary and
compresses the DRG weights.
Commenters cited past research
indicating that HSRV has a
disproportionate impact on certain
types of hospitals and types of care, and
reduces the range of DRG weights
between the lowest and highest weight
DRGs.1 Commenters noted that the
HSRV methodology ‘‘produces more
compressed DRG weights’’ than the
existing standardization methodology
and that ‘‘the greater compression of the
HSRV weights is counter balanced by
the fact that more high-weighted cases
qualify as [high cost] outlier cases.’’ A
few commenters expressed concern that
adopting MedPAC’s recommendation to
exclude high-cost outliers in addition to
statistical outliers from the computation
of the DRG weights so that the weights
reflect the average cost only of inlier
cases would compound the DRG weight
compression caused by the HSRV
methodology because high-cost outlier
cases occur most frequently in highweighted DRGs. The commenters
indicated that the finding raises the
concern of patient access to care for
services in higher cost DRGs.
Commenters also believed that the
HSRV methodology fails to take into
account legitimate variation in costs that
occur between hospitals. Therefore, any
hospital-level variation in cost that is
not explained by the IPPS case mix
index is simply ignored, according to
the commenters. To the extent that
certain services are provided most
frequently in hospitals with higher than
average cost, the commenters believed
that the HSRV methodology will result
in inappropriately lower DRG weights
for these services.
Therefore, commenters strongly
recommended that the HSRV
methodology be eliminated in favor of
the cost-based weighting methodology
adopted under the OPPS. They stated
that the main difference between these
two approaches is the treatment of cost
1 Carter, Grace ‘‘How recalibration method,
pricing, and coding affect DRG weights,’’ Health
Care Financing Review, Winter 1992.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
variation that is not otherwise explained
with IPPS payment factors. In the
standardization approach employed by
OPPS, any variation in hospital costs
that is not explained by CMS payment
factors affects the calibration of DRG
weights. They stated that the HSRV
approach proposed by CMS, by contrast,
ignores any hospital level variation in
charges that is not explained by the case
mix index. Many commenters added
that CMS could propose to remove other
sources of cost variation beyond its
current practice of standardizing for
wage index, DSH, and IME. They
believed a factor-specific approach to
standardization would lead to more
precise and valid adjustments than
those recognized under the HSRV
methodology, which eliminates all
sources of charge variation irrespective
of whether there are legitimate
differences among hospitals in costs that
are not taken into account in the
payment system.
Response: In preparing the FY 2007
relative weights, the costs of organ
acquisition were inadvertently included
in the relative weight for the calculation
of ‘‘other services.’’ The costs of organ
acquisition are paid by Medicare on a
cost basis and should not be included in
setting the IPPS relative weights. These
costs have been excluded from the IPPS
relative weights calculated for this final
rule.
In response to the concerns expressed
regarding the CCR calculation, we
proposed to establish the geometric
mean CCRs using a hospital-weighted
methodology because we believed that it
served as an acceptable measure of
central tendency. In addition, we
proposed to trim the CCRs on the basis
of 1.96 standard deviations since we
were using national averages and
thought a more stringent statistical trim
would be appropriate. In response to
comments, however, we have
reconsidered our approach and have
implemented the 3 standard deviation
statistical trim supported by
commenters. Further, we are also
adopting the charge-weighted method of
calculating CCRs, as we now believe it
may be more appropriate to apply CCRs
based on aggregate costs and charges
among hospitals to the charges that are
aggregated by DRG and used to set the
relative weights.
Although commenters asserted that
the HSRV methodology exacerbates the
effect of charge compression on the
relative weights, we have not had
sufficient time between the close of the
comment period and the publication of
this final rule to analyze this assertion.
Therefore, in response to comments
(and as stated above), we are postponing
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
the implementation of the HSRV
methodology until we can study this
comment further. Instead, as suggested
by many commenters, we are using an
approach to calculating the IPPS relative
weights that is more similar to the
approach used in the OPPS. That is,
rather than using a hospital-specific
relative weighting methodology, we are
standardizing charges to remove
relevant payment factor adjustments
and then adjusting those charges to
costs using national cost center CCRs.
As we stated in the proposed rule, it is
not administratively feasible to adjust
charges to cost using hospital-specific
cost to charge ratios. Therefore, while
we are standardizing charges for the
IPPS cost-based weights using a similar
process to the OPPS, we are still
utilizing national average CCRs to
determine cost. Specifically, we are
standardizing the charges for each DRG
by cost center to remove differences in
wage index, indirect medical education
and disproportionate share adjustments
and are then reducing the standardized
charges to cost using the national
average CCRs. The relative weights we
are adopting in this final rule are
calculated based on the average total
cost for a DRG in relation to the national
average total cost.
Comment: Many commenters
expressed concern that CMS collapsed
the full set of at least 37 cost centers into
only 10. They believed this approach
eliminates detail that is available on the
cost report. The commenters requested
that CMS elaborate on the process it
went through to derive the 10 cost
centers used to calculate the HSRVcc
weights. Some commenters stated CMS
should use all 37 cost centers that are
used in calculating the OPPS relative
weights for the IPPS. Other commenters
suggested that CMS expand the number
of cost centers used in the calculation.
MedPAC found that the CCRs within the
proposed 10 cost centers varied
significantly in some areas and
recommended that CMS expand the
number to 13 by distinguishing
anesthesia and labor and delivery from
the operating room cost center and
distinguishing inhalation therapy from
the therapy services cost center. Several
commenters supported MedPAC’s
recommendation. Further, MedPAC
recommended that the CCRs be based
on Medicare-specific costs and charges
rather than on the costs and charges for
the entire facility. Some commenters
advocated that a separate cost center be
added for implantable devices. They
believed this additional cost center
would better identify the mark-up for
high cost technological devices than
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
using the average for all supplies and
equipment.
Several commenters encouraged CMS
to specifically incorporate nursing costs
into the weighting methodology. They
stated that nursing care represents
approximately 30 percent of all hospital
expenditures and nearly half of all
direct care costs and have been
essentially ignored in the payment
formula. Specifically, these commenters
urged CMS to create a unique Nursing
Cost Center that identifies the inpatient
direct and indirect costs for registered
nurses, licensed practical nurses, and
unlicensed assistive personnel. They
defined direct nursing costs as those
associated with licensed and assistive
nursing personnel assigned to care for
an individual patient. Indirect nursing
costs are all other salary and benefits
related to licensed and assistive nursing
personnel not directly assigned to care
for individual patients. They suggested
that the routine and intensive care cost
centers in the proposed HSRVcc
methodology be replaced with a nursing
cost center and a separate facility cost
center to identify the non-nursing cost
component of care. They urged CMS to
set aside funds to study and implement
the above recommendation using
methodologically sound research and
demonstration projects.
Response: As we stated in the
proposed rule, we established 10 cost
center categories based upon broad
hospital accounting definitions. These
10 cost center categories consist of 8
ancillary cost groups, a routine days
cost group, and an intensive care days
cost group. These cost centers were
selected because each category
represents at least 5 percent of the
charges in the claims data.
We thoroughly reviewed the
comments advocating that we expand
the number of cost centers used in the
calculation. We currently use the
MedPAR data set for charge detail. The
MedPAR file does not provide enough
granularity in the charge detail to
support 37 different cost centers. In
addition, in the proposed methodology,
we eliminated claims for providers that
did not have costs greater than zero for
at least 8 of the 10 cost centers. At least
96 percent of the providers in the
MedPAR file had charges for at least 8
of the 10 cost centers. We believe that
if we were to expand to the full set of
37 cost centers outlined in the cost
report, we would eliminate a greater
number of claims in the calculation of
the DRG relative weights.
While we do not believe expanding to
37 cost centers is feasible, we agree with
MedPAC that we may have consolidated
a few revenue centers that have
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
significantly different CCRs. Upon
further examination of the data, in this
final rule, we are expanding the number
of cost centers from 10 to 13 by creating
separate cost centers for anesthesia,
labor and delivery, and inhalation
therapy. We also agree with MedPAC
that it would be more appropriate to set
the CCRs based on Medicare-specific
charges and costs rather than on the
costs and charges for the entire facility.
Therefore, in this final rule, we are
modifying our CCR calculations to
incorporate Medicare-specific charge
data from Worksheet D Part 4 in
addition to the cost and charge data
from Worksheet C Part I that we used in
the proposed rule.
Other commenters suggested that we
also create separate cost centers for
implantable devices and nursing. As
noted in the comments, the MedPAR
file does not contain the necessary
detail to identify a separate cost center
for implantable devices or nursing. In
addition, we did not have enough time
to evaluate whether it would be
reasonable to utilize a nursing cost
center in the methodology in the future.
However, we anticipate undertaking
further analysis of the relative weight
methodology over the next year in
conjunction with the research we are
doing on charge compression to
determine if additional cost centers are
necessary.
Comment: Commenters, referring to
Table A, ‘‘Charge Line Items from
MedPAR Included in Cost Center
Charge Group,’’ noted that MedPAR
charge descriptions do not match the
Form CMS–2552–96 Cost Center
description(s) for several cost centers.
For example:
(a) MedPAR lists (18) Lithotripsy
Charges where the cost reporting form
lists Radioisotopes;
(b) MedPAR lists (6) Other Services
where the cost reporting form lists
Whole Blood and Packed Red Blood
Cells;
(c) MedPAR lists (19) Cardiology
Charges as including line 54 of the cost
report, which is
Electroencephalography;
(d) MedPAR lists (16) Blood
Administration Charges where the cost
reporting form lists ASC (Non-Distinct
Part);
(e) MedPAR lists (24) Outpatient
Services Charges where the cost
reporting form lists Emergency;
(f) MedPAR lists (25) Emergency
Room Charges where the cost reporting
form lists Ambulance Services;
(g) MedPAR lists (26) Ambulance
Charges where the cost reporting form
lists Renal Dialysis;
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47885
(h) MedPAR lists (29) ESRD Revenue
Setting Charges where the cost reporting
form lists Clinic;
(i) MedPAR lists (30) Clinic Visit
Charges where the cost reporting form
lists Other Outpatient Services, Other
Ancillary, Home Program Dialysis and
Ambulance Services;
(j) Ambulance Services appear to be
included twice, once in (30) Clinic Visit
Charges and once in (25) Emergency
Room Charges;
(k) Lithotripsy is included in
Radiology Services;
(l) Line 62 ‘‘Observation Beds’’ is not
reflected separately in Table A; and
(m) Line 68 ‘‘Other reimbursement’’ of
the cost report is not listed in Table A.
In addition, commenters were unclear
as to whether CMS accounted for
subscripted lines in the cost report
when calculating CCRs. The
commenters noted that subscripted lines
did not appear in Table A. Commenters
believed this inconsistency in reporting
may lead to distorted DRG weights.
Therefore, commenters recommended
that CMS examine this issue thoroughly
before implementing cost-based
weights. Several commenters requested
that CMS publish a crosswalk of the
revenue codes that are used for each
MedPAR charge data group and require
intermediaries to review cost report data
to ensure that providers have reported
data consistent with the mapping to the
MedPAR data.
Response: We wish to clarify to the
commenters that the charge description
titles shown in the MedPAR charge
description column in Table A were not
meant to also be interpreted as the title
for each of the cost report line items.
That is, we were simply using Table A
to illustrate the MedPAR charge groups
and the cost report line numbers that
were used to create the 10 proposed cost
centers. To alleviate this confusion, we
are revising Table A to show both the
MedPAR charge titles and the titles of
the cost report line items. In response to
comments (j) and (l), we note that the
cost report line item number 65 for
ambulance was inadvertently listed
twice in the proposed rule; line item 62,
observation beds, was used in
establishing the CCR for the other
services category. Line 65 for ambulance
was only used once in the actual other
services CCR calculation. Line item 62
should have appeared in the ‘‘other
services’’ cost center grouping printed
in Table A in the proposed rule. We
have corrected this error in the final
version of Table A. In addition, in
regards to comment (k) above, we have
moved the lithotripsy charges from
MedPAR to the ‘‘other services’’ cost
center grouping and we have also
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47886
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
revised the CCR for ‘‘other services’’ to
include the cost report line item 43 for
radioisotopes, which was formerly
included in the radiology CCR.
In response to the commenters’
question regarding the inclusion of
subscripted lines, when we calculated
the CCRs for the proposed rule and
subsequently for this final rule, we
relied on a HCRIS data set that contains
rolled-up cost report fields such that
line items which are subscripted
contain the total value for the line item
and any subscripted lines below.
Therefore, most subscripted lines were
included in the proposed rule CCRs and
continue to be included in the final rule
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
CCR calculations. However, some
subscripted line items are not rolled up
and continue to have their own field on
the HCRIS data set that we used to
calculate the CCRs. Therefore, we are
now including the cost report line item
6201 for observation beds, the cost
report line item 6350 for Rural Health
clinics and the cost report line item
6360 for Federally Qualified Health
clinics in the other services CCR. Cost
report line items 6350 and 6360 are only
reported by provider-based Rural Health
clinics and Federally Qualified Health
clinics and are necessary in order to
identify all incurred costs applicable to
furnishing an observation bed prior to a
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
decision to admit a patient to the
hospital. Further, we are now including
the cost report line item 68 for other
reimbursement in the other services
CCR, and we are including professional
services charges from MedPAR in the
other services charge grouping. In
response to the commenters’ requests
that we show the revenue codes that
comprise the MedPAR charges, we have
also inserted an additional column in
Table A that lists the revenue codes
MedPAR groups into each charge field
that we are using in the final 13 cost
centers. The final version of Table A
appears below:
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47887
ER18AU06.000
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.001
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47888
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47889
ER18AU06.002
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.003
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47890
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47891
ER18AU06.004
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Comment: Many commenters warned
that the redistribution of payments from
the surgical to the medical DRGs under
the proposed methodology may create
unintended consequences. Several of
these commenters stated that this
redistribution poses a threat to patients’
access to the latest medical advances
and highest quality care. They feared
that hospitals will invest less in new
medical technologies because Medicare
would not pay sufficiently for the DRGs
that use them. Another commenter
stated that the increased reimbursement
for psychiatric DRGs may create an
incentive for IPFs to decertify and
become inpatient units.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ concern that payment
redistribution may create the potential
for unintended consequences. However,
we wish to emphasize that the
redistribution of payments among DRGs
is necessary to improve payment
accuracy and eliminate the distortions
in the current IPPS payment rates.
Under the methodology in this final
rule, we will increase payment for
relatively underpaid cases and reduce
payment for relatively overpaid cases.
We are adopting a methodology that
will realign payments with costs to pay
more appropriately for services
rendered by hospitals. Therefore, we do
not believe altering the DRG relative
weighting methodology will affect
patients’ access to quality medical care.
Patients should have continued and
uninterrupted access to new, innovative
technologies.
We have analyzed the impact of the
increased reimbursement for psychiatric
DRGs in response to the commenter’s
concern that increased reimbursement
may provide incentives for IPFs to
decertify their units and be paid under
the IPPS. Because of the differences in
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
payment between the IPPS and the IPF
PPS, we do not believe that the DRG
relative weights we are adopting in this
final rule will provide increased
incentive for IPFs to decertify units.
Whereas under the IPF PPS, hospitals
receive a daily base rate and
adjustments to account for certain
patient and facility characteristics,
hospitals paid under the IPPS are paid
a specified amount based on the DRG
for the same cases, regardless of the
length of the hospital stay. Our analysis
suggests that even though the average
payment per day (total payment divided
by average length of stay) for the
psychiatric DRGs in the IPPS proposed
rule may be higher than under the IPF
PPS, the total average payment per
episode of care remains lower (product
of the average IPF payment per day and
the average length of stay). Thus,
because payments per episode of care
remain lower under the IPPS than under
the IPF PPS, we are not concerned that
IPFs will decertify to get paid using the
IPPS. In addition, as indicated above,
we are making some modifications to
our methodology in response to the
public comments. Based on these
changes, the increase in the relative
weights for the psychiatric DRGs
presented in this final rule will not be
as significant as those contained in the
proposed rule.
Comment: Commenters expressed
concern that because hospitals often
allocate charges on the cost reports
differently than charges on the claims,
the cost-center level CCRs are calculated
based on a different set of charges than
the charges on the claims to which the
CCRs are later applied. Commenters
expressed concern that Medicare cost
report data are not detailed enough or
consistently reported accurately to
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
determine costs accurately at a DRG
level since such data lack specific cost
data on individual items and services.
They reiterated that the Medicare cost
reports, which serve as the primary
source of data under the proposed
system, were not designed to be used in
a prospective payment system and have
not been used to establish hospital rates
for inpatient services for some time.
They noted several limitations in using
the cost reports to derive estimated costs
utilized in the DRG relative weight
calculations that should be carefully
examined and addressed before moving
forward with the proposed system of
hospital-specific cost weights.
First, the commenters believed that
CMS should address cost report
accuracy. The commenters stated that
because the cost reports have only been
used for payment in limited
circumstances (DSH, IME, outlier
policy), hospitals have had little
incentive to report accurately and
completely for the services provided to
Medicare beneficiaries. In addition, they
claimed the cost reports do not contain
the level of detail necessary to
accurately determine costs at the DRG
level. Instead, the cost report provides
payments, costs, and some
reimbursement totals by department or
cost center. The commenters also
advised that CMS perform additional
auditing of the cost reports to ensure
accuracy. The commenters were
concerned that if CMS implements a
cost-based weighting methodology, the
DRG weights will be based on largely
un-audited cost reports since
approximately 15 percent of hospital
cost reports are audited each year. They
noted that MedPAC estimated that a
full-scale audit could require 1,000 to
2,000 hours from a fiscal intermediary,
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.005
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47892
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
as well as additional time and resources
from the hospital. In addition, a few
commenters stated that CMS should
only use final settled cost report data,
not as-submitted data, in calculating
DRG weights.
Second, some commenters contended
that CMS should evaluate the overall
timeliness of cost report data. They
stated that cost report data used to
recalibrate the DRG weights are
outdated and significantly older than
the charge-based data currently used to
determine DRG weights under the IPPS.
Under the proposed methodology, CMS
used hospital claims data from FY 2005
and hospital cost reports from FY 2003.
The commenters were concerned that
because a lag between the cost report
year and the payment year exists, the
proposed methodology would rely on
older data that does not reflect the costs
of many newer technologies. The
commenters supported an approach that
uses more recent claims and cost report
data and also urge CMS to explore
options for using alternative data
sources that include current information
on the costs of inpatient care.
Third, the commenters stated that
CMS should examine the comparability
of cost reports due to variability in how
hospitals allocate costs. Commenters
explained that a cost allocation
methodology must be used to estimate
the cost of individual items and services
from the aggregate costs reported for
each cost-center on the cost-report. They
stated that the proposed methodology
assumes that all hospitals consistently
allocate costs to the same cost centers.
However, hospitals may have
inconsistent cost accounting practices or
use different cost allocation methods
(for example, utilization or squarefootage) according to the commenters.
The commenters suggested these factors
and the compression of charges both
within and across cost-centers, limits
the usefulness of cost report data to
accurately estimate costs. According to
the commenters, each hospital uses its
own method to allocate costs among
cost centers, often resulting in cost
assignments that do not reflect the
departments to which charges are
assigned in the MedPAR data. For
example, some commenters indicated
that they included cardiac
catheterization in lines other than 53
and 54 that group to the cardiac cost
center. In addition, several commenters
noted that hospitals report medical
supply costs inconsistently. While some
report them in the supply cost center,
others report the medical supply cost in
the cost center for the procedure in
which the device was used (that is,
medical supplies specific to the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Emergency Room are included in line
61 of the cost report). The commenters
suggested that more specific cost report
instructions may be necessary to ensure
that hospitals report the information
correctly and consistently. Some
commenters believed that cost report
data were not intended or designed to
be used to develop accurate payment
rates and suggested developing a proxy
to more accurately allocate costs at the
DRG level, such as collecting data from
hospitals that utilize ‘‘sophisticated cost
accounting tools that provide more
accurate allocation of costs.’’
Some commenters also recommended
that CMS convene an expert panel to
explore ways to address the current
limitations of the cost report. They
stated that this effort should identify
methods to better use or improve
hospital cost reports for use in setting
the inpatient and outpatient relative
weights. The expert panel should aim to
identify changes to the cost report that
reduce the net information burden on
hospitals, while improving overall
payment accuracy. The panel should
report its recommendations by April
2007 to enable CMS enough time to
consider the recommendations in
setting the relative weights for FY 2008.
Other commenters advocated that CMS
initiate a national project to correct any
misalignments between cost and charges
in cost reports and on the MedPAR
claims. Other commenters suggested
that CMS postpone the adoption of the
proposed HSRVcc methodology until
such time that providers improve the
accuracy of the source data used in the
determination of the DRG weights.
Response: With respect to the
commenters’ recommendation regarding
the reporting of costs and charges for
services, CMS requires hospitals to
report their costs and charges through
the cost report with sufficient specificity
to support CMS’ use of cost report data
for monitoring and payment. Within
generally accepted principles of cost
accounting, CMS allows providers
flexibility to accommodate the unique
attributes of each institution’s
accounting systems. For example,
providers must match the generally
intended meaning of the line-item cost
centers, both standard and nonstandard, to the unique configuration of
department and service categories used
by each hospital’s accounting system.
Also, while the cost report provides a
recommended basis of allocation for the
general service cost centers, a provider
is permitted, within specified
guidelines, to use an alternative basis
for a general service cost if it can
support to its intermediary that the
alternative is more accurate than the
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47893
recommended basis. This approach
creates internal consistency between a
hospital’s accounting system and the
cost report but cannot guarantee the
precise comparability of costs and
charges for individual cost centers
across institutions.
However, we believe that achieving
greater uniformity by, for example,
specifying the exact components of
individual cost centers, would be very
burdensome for hospitals and auditors.
Hospitals would need to tailor their
internal accounting systems to reflect a
national definition of a cost center. It is
not clear that the marginal improvement
in precision created here is worth the
additional administrative burden. The
current hospital practice of matching
costs to the generally intended meaning
of a cost center ensures that most
services in the cost center will be
comparable across providers, even if the
precise composition of a cost center
among hospitals differs. Further, every
hospital provides a different mix of
services. Even if CMS specified the
components of each cost center, costs
and charges on the cost report would
continue to reflect each hospital’s mix
of services. At the same time, internal
consistency is very important to the
IPPS. Costs are estimated on claims by
matching CCRs for a given hospital to
their own claims data through a cost
center-to-revenue code crosswalk.
Despite the concerns raised in the
comments, we believe that costs and
charges are reported through the cost
report with sufficient specificity to
support CMS’ use of cost report data to
develop cost-based weights. The
information we obtained from the cost
report on the differing level of charge
markups occurring between routine and
ancillary hospital departments supports
MedPAC’s conclusions that the most
profitable DRGs that are leading to the
development of specialty hospitals are
those that require a lot of ancillary
services with high markups and low
CCRs. To the extent that charge markups
vary significantly between the various
routine and ancillary hospital
departments, we believe that there is a
need to adjust charges to cost prior to
setting the relative weights. We will
continue to rely on the cost report to
establish the CCRs that we are finalizing
to use to adjust the DRG charges to
costs.
However, we continue to be interested
in receiving suggestions on ways that
hospitals can uniformly and
consistently report charges and costs
related to all cost centers that also
acknowledge the ubiquitous tradeoff
between greater precision in developing
CCRs and administrative burden
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47894
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
coupled with reduced flexibility in
hospital accounting practices. Another
issue to consider is the potential
changes to the relative weights from
undertaking efforts of this magnitude
that will be costly for both CMS, its
fiscal intermediaries and costly and
burdensome to hospitals. Although we
are not modifying the cost report or our
cost report instructions at this time, we
would be open to making improvements
in the future.
Comment: Several commenters
applauded CMS’ efforts to find ‘‘an
administratively feasible approach to
improving the accuracy of the DRG
weights.’’ However, they expressed
serious concerns about whether the
proposed approach achieves that goal.
Many commenters asserted that CMS
proposes to move to a new cost-based
methodology without offering any
evidence that the proposed method
actually improves payment accuracy.
A few commenters submitted analyses
that suggest that the impact of the
proposed HSRVcc methodology is
substantially different than the MedPAC
recommendations, and may even
decrease payment accuracy relative to
the charge-based weights. A few
commenters specifically noted that
cardiac procedures are more adversely
impacted by the HSRVcc methodology.
The proposed methodology reduces
relative weights for the three major
implantable cardioverter defibrillator
(ICD) DRGs (515, 535, and 536) by 25
percent or more. While these proposed
reductions imply that the weights based
on the existing charge-based
methodology overstate the costs of ICD
procedures and therefore overpay them,
the commenters presented analyses
suggesting that these cases are actually
underpaid. One such analysis by
MedPAC, in its report on physicianowned specialty hospitals, found ICD
procedures to have ‘‘lower marginal’’
profitability or ‘‘possibly a loss’’ for
hospitals, based on calculation of
payment-to-cost ratios and surveys of
specialty hospitals. They also indicated
that CMS, in approving cardiac
resynchronization therapy defibrillators
(CRT–D) for new technology add-on
payments, found the device to be
inadequately paid and granted the addon payments to defray the costs of the
therapy. Given that payment rates under
the charge-based weights appear to be
inadequate in many of the
cardiovascular DRGs, the commenters
believed the severe reductions resulting
from the proposed HSRVcc
methodology appear to be unjustified
and provide ample reason to believe
that the proposed methodology does not
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
accomplish the goal of improving
payment accuracy.
These commenters emphasized that
while measuring improved payment
accuracy is difficult, the large degree to
which the weights fluctuate given the
methodological changes alone indicates
the need for further analysis and study.
The commenters believed CMS should
publish reliable indicators that
demonstrate how the goal of payment
accuracy is achieved. One commenter
requested that CMS produce and
publish estimates of payment-to-cost
ratios and the relative profitability by
DRG to determine the effectiveness of
different weight-setting and patient
classification methodologies in
improving overall payment accuracy.
The commenter emphasized that such
estimates must be adjusted to account
for the cost of providing services that
include high-technology devices that are
understated in the cost reports. Another
commenter recommended that CMS
construct a process to test the sensitivity
of weights to various methodological
assumptions and publicly share the
results, including: a comparison of the
CMS weights to MedPAC’s HSRV cost
approach; a comparison of CMS weights
to an approach using standardized costs
(as opposed to HSRV); comparison of
CMS weights to weights calculated by
estimating costs at the claim level using
the 10 cost center approach; evaluation
of other alternative methodologies for
estimating costs; and an evaluation of
the stability of weights over time.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters concerns regarding the
HSRVcc relative weight setting
methodology we proposed and the large
change in the relative weights that result
from the application of this
methodology. As we stated in the FY
2006 IPPS final rule, given the potential
for significant redistribution in
payments, the MedPAC
recommendations should be studied
extensively before any broad
fundamental changes are made to the
current system. In the proposed rule, we
provided the results of such an
extensive analysis and concluded that
changes can be made to the relative
weight methodology and the DRG
system to improve payment accuracy.
Although we agree that adopting a
methodology that results in large
changes in payment should not be
adopted without careful study, we do
not believe that the mere presence of
such significant impacts invalidates the
methodology. On the contrary, we
believe large payment impacts may
suggest there is a significant degree of
distortion present in the current
payment system. In our view, we
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
believe that the changes to the IPPS
should be evaluated based on whether
they represent an improvement to the
current system. MedPAC has studied
the IPPS extensively and found that
improvement can be found in payment
accuracy from adopting its
recommendations that are similar to
those we proposed.2
While we acknowledge the need for
further study and evaluation of the
HSRVcc methodology, we continue to
believe that the differential markups
among departmental CCRs have
introduced distortion into the chargebased relative weights. We note that
MedPAC found that ‘‘the current
payment system encourages community
hospitals to allocate capital to profitable
services such as cardiology and
stimulates the formation of specialty
hospitals that often focus on providing
profitable services and tend to care for
low-severity patients.’’ 3 The
information we obtained from the cost
reports on the differing level of charge
markups occurring between routine and
ancillary hospital departments supports
MedPAC’s conclusions that the most
profitable DRGs that are leading to the
development of cardiac specialty
hospitals are those that require a lot of
ancillary services with high markups
and low CCRs. We note that the
proposed rule showed that these
hospitals are almost exclusively affected
by changes to the relative weight
methodology providing further evidence
of bias and distortion in the relative
weights by setting them using hospital
charges. To the extent that charge
markups vary significantly between the
various routine and ancillary hospital
departments, we believe that there is a
need to adjust charges to cost prior to
setting the relative weights. Although it
suggested refinements to CMS’ proposal
(all of which we have adopted in this
final rule), we note that MedPAC found
that the CMS proposals made great
strides toward achieving the goal of
improvements in payment accuracy.4
Therefore, as discussed in section II. C.,
we are using the national average CCRs
to adjust the cost center charges for each
DRG to cost prior to setting the relative
weights. While we acknowledge that no
payment methodology can be perfect
because DRG-specific costs cannot be
determined, we believe the cost-based
methodology we are finalizing in this
rule represents a significant
2 Medicare Payment Advisory Commission:
Report to Congress on Physician-Owned Specialty
Hospitals, March 2005, p. 37–38.
3 Hackbarth, Glenn, MedPAC Comments on the
IPS Rule, June 12, 2006, page 2.
4 Hackbarth, Glenn, MedPAC Comments on the
IPPS Rule, June 12, 2006, page 2.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
improvement over the current chargebased methodology for all of the reasons
we specified above. Under the costbased methodology in this final rule, we
will increase payment for relatively
underpaid cases and reduce payment for
relatively overpaid cases. We believe
this reform is badly needed to reduce
the bias in the weights and make more
appropriate payments for both medical
and surgical DRGs.
In order to mitigate the impact of the
changes in the relative weights, we are
implementing the new cost-based
weight methodology in a 3-year
transition, where the weights in the first
year will be set based on 33 percent of
the cost-based weight and 67 percent of
the charge based weight. We will
continue to study the HSRVcc
methodology, the potential effects of
charge compression and ways in which
we can better account for severity of
illness within the DRG system in the
coming year.
With respect to the changes in the
new patient classification system, the
proposed rule noted that we modeled
the CS DRGs and observed a 12-percent
increase in the explanatory power (or Rquare statistic) of the DRG system to
explain hospital charges. That is, we
found more uniformity among hospital
total charges within the CS DRGs than
we did with Medicare’s current DRG
system (71 FR 24027). Thus, we believe
that there is clear evidence that
improvements can be made to the
current DRG system that will reduce
heterogeneity among patients within a
given DRG. While this statistic indicates
that the current CMS DRG system can be
refined to improve payment accuracy,
we agree that it does not necessarily
mean we should adopt the system we
proposed. For a variety of reasons
explained further below, we believe that
a number of factors must be considered
in deciding how to revise the DRG
system to better recognize severity of
illness.
Comment: One commenter asserted
that CMS published incorrect and
deficient information about the HSRVcc
methodology, its impact on hospitals,
and the underlying data utilized in
developing the proposed rule.
Specifically, the commenter believed
the HSRVcc methodology was flawed
and therefore stated that the published
impacts were inaccurate. The
commenter believed that we failed to
comply with the Federal Data Quality
Act, and OMB, HHS, and CMS
Guidelines which address the quality of
the data used for policy development, in
particular, meeting standards of utility,
objectivity, integrity, and transparency
and reproducibility. Because the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
18:47 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
commenter believed that we have
violated these data quality standards,
the public was deprived of the
opportunity to submit meaningful
comments, as required by the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
The commenter urged CMS to take the
appropriate steps that would result in
the withdrawal of the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule and the publication of a
new proposed rule.
Response: We disagree with the
commenter’s claims that the data
utilized in the development of the FY
2007 IPPS proposed rule were
materially flawed, did not comply with
the Federal Data Quality Act, and did
not meet established OMB, Department
and CMS guidelines for data quality.
The data sources used in estimating the
payment impacts from policy changes
proposed in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule were the HCRIS files that contain
Medicare cost report data, the MedPAR
files that contain Medicare claims data,
the OSCAR database, and the PSF
(which is maintained by the fiscal
intermediaries and used in paying
Medicare claims). These are the best and
most reliable data sources available to
CMS for modeling the impacts of policy
changes. We note that these same
databases are used in modeling payment
impacts under the LTCH PPS, the OPPS,
the IRF PPS, and the IPF PPS, as well
as other payment systems. We also note
that the comment period to the FY 2007
IPPS proposed rule provided
commenters with an opportunity to
bring to our attention specific examples
of incorrect or inaccurate data. In
addition to our posting the impact files
from the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule on
the CMS Web site, as always,
commenters had access to the same
CMS data files that we utilized through
communication with our Office of
Information Services (OIS).
The fact that the data we used in the
development of the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule were available and
transparent to the public was attested by
the detailed data analyses included with
a significant number of the public
comments we received on the FY 2007
IPPS proposed rule. Therefore, for the
reasons stated above, we disagree with
the commenter’s assertion that the data
used by CMS in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule does not meet the
transparency and reproducibility
standards. As is the case with any
change in policy, we do not base policy
decisions on mere assumptions, but
rather we analyze the relevant data and
any comments submitted in response to
a proposed rule.
Comment: One commenter stated that
it was unclear whether the weights
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47895
published for CS DRGs included using
the transfer-adjusted charges prior to
calculating weights.
Response: We used the hospital’s
charge on the claim in the HSRVcc
methodology. We presume the
commenter is asking whether we
adjusted the number of cases in setting
the relative weights to reflect early
transfer to either a post-acute or other
acute care setting. We did use transferadjusted case counts when we applied
the HSRVcc methodology for the
relative weights that were shown in
Table 5 of the IPPS proposed rule (71 FR
24272) and the ‘‘Consolidated severity
adjusted DRG HSRVcc relative weights’’
provided on the CMS Web site at:
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/FFD/list.asp
#TopOfPage. The case mix index that
we use to iterate the proposed FY 2007
HSRVcc weights did not reflect a
transfer-adjusted case count. That is, we
used the sum of all the case weights
divided by the total number of cases
unadjusted for transfers to post-acute or
other acute care settings.
Comment: Many commenters stated
that once a cost-based system is
implemented, CMS should provide at
least a three-year transition. They stated
that a three-year transition is consistent
with MedPAC’s recommendation to
implement the changes to the weights
and DRG system over a transitional
period. Commenters recommended that
payments be made based on a blend of
charge and cost-based weights
culminating with full cost-based
weights at the completion of the
transition period.
Response: We have in the past
provided for transition periods when
adopting changes that have significant
payment implications. Given the
significant payment impacts upon some
hospitals because of these changes to
the DRG weighting methodology, we
considered options to transition to costbased weights. We believe the potential
payment effects from the changes to the
DRG relative weights can be mitigated
by adopting a 3-year transition of the
relative weights. During the first year of
the transition, the relative weights will
be based on a blend of 33 percent of the
cost-based weights and 67 percent of the
charge weights. In the second year of the
transition, the relative weights will be
based on a blend of 33 percent of the
charge weights and 67 percent of the
cost-based weights. In the third year of
the transition, the relative weights will
be based on 100 percent of the costbased weights.
Comment: One commenter asserted
that the proposed changes to improve
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47896
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
payment accuracy and to provide
payment equity between specialty and
general hospitals do not address many
of the differences between specialty and
full-service hospitals. The commenter
stated that hospitals should be
reimbursed for the additional services
that are required to operate a full-service
hospital which are often unnecessary in
a specialty hospital setting. The
commenter acknowledged that CMS
already provides some support to
hospitals that serve a high percentage of
Medicaid patients through
disproportionate share payments.
However, the commenter suggested that
CMS also make add-on payments to the
base DRG payment for expenses such as:
operation of a full-service, 24-hour
emergency department; operation of a
trauma service, a burn unit, or other
high cost medically necessary services;
sponsoring ground and helicopter
ambulance services; operation of 24hour diagnostic services; provision of
round the clock nursing services; and
provision of other support services such
as clinical pharmacists, nutritionists,
case managers, and medical social
workers. The commenter believed these
add-on payments will encourage
hospitals to maintain these services
rather than promote specialty hospitals
that may be able to operate at a lesser
cost without some or all of these
services.
Response: Medicare does pay for all of
these services through either the IPPS or
OPPS payment. We disagree that add-on
payments are necessary for services that
are commonly provided at many
hospitals. The costs of these services
will be incorporated in the IPPS or
OPPS relative weights. Rather, we
continue to believe that Medicare’s IPPS
payment system needs to be changed to
make more equitable payment across all
hospitals and decrease the incentive to
profit from patient and DRG selection.
Comment: A few commenters stated
that although the DRG payment changes
proposed by CMS seek to address the
proliferation of physician-owned,
limited service hospitals in response to
recommendations by MedPAC, they do
not believe that these payment changes
alone will remove the inappropriate
incentives created by physician selfreferral to limited-service hospitals.
They stated that physicians will still
have the ability and incentive to refer
financially attractive patients to
facilities they own, avoid serving lowincome patients, and encourage
utilization of profitable services. The
commenters urged CMS to examine the
investment structures of physicianowned, limited service hospitals and to
continue the moratorium on issuing
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
new provider numbers to physicianowned, limited service hospitals until
the agency’s strategic plan has been
developed and the Congress has had the
opportunity to consider the agency’s
final report on the topic.
Response: We are in the process of
completing the Final Report to Congress
and the Strategic and Implementing
Plan on Specialty Hospitals, as required
by section 5006 of the DRA. Section
5006 of the DRA requires us to consider,
among other things, issues of bona fide
investment and proportionality of
investment with respect to physician
investment in specialty (that is, cardiac,
orthopedic or surgical) hospitals.
Section 5006 of the DRA also provides
that the suspension on enrollment of
new specialty hospitals that we
administratively instituted on June 9,
2005, shall expire upon the date we
issue the final report, or, if the report is
issued after August 8, 2006, it shall
expire on October 8, 2006. We note that
Congress has provided for a date certain
for the end of the suspension on
enrollment of new specialty hospitals.
Furthermore, we have not identified a
need at this time to continue the
suspension beyond that date.
Comment: Many commenters stated
that CMS’s proposed HSRVcc
methodology presented in the FY 2007
IPPS proposed rule failed to address
issues of ‘‘charge compression.’’ The
commenters explained that ‘‘charge
compression’’ describes the common
billing practice of hospitals applying
higher percentage markups on lower
cost items and lower percentage
markups on higher cost items. The
commenters noted that MedPAC
explained that hospitals may reduce the
mark-ups for higher-cost items to avoid
‘‘sticker shock.’’ 5 As discussed below,
many commenters believed that, to the
extent ‘‘charge compression’’ exists, the
proposed HSRVcc methodology would
lead to systematic differences between
estimates of costs and Medicare’s
payments. Therefore, the commenters
believed that the proposal failed to
accomplish CMS’s stated goal of setting
the DRG weights based on accurate cost
determinations. If the proposed
methodology is implemented, several
commenters believed hospitals that
perform a large volume of procedures
requiring relatively costly supplies/
procedures would be severely and
unfairly penalized through
inappropriately reduced Medicare DRG
payments. The treatments they provide
would be less likely to be provided, and
5 Medicare Payment Advisory Commission,
‘‘Meeting Brief: Study of Hospital Charge-Setting
Practices, ’’ September 9–10, 2004.
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
consequently, Medicare beneficiaries’
access to care may be diminished.
Therefore, the commenters stated that if
CMS adopts a cost-based DRG weighting
methodology, a more accurate measure
of determining hospitals’ actual costs
must be developed.
Many commenters believed that
‘‘charge compression’’ is a concern
because the proposed HSRVcc
methodology uses a single CCR for a
variety of items and services in a
department. Specifically, under the
proposed HSRVcc methodology, we
proposed to aggregate hospital-level
departmental charges into 10 cost
centers for each DRG, and then apply
national average cost-center level CCRs
to determine estimated costs. The
commenters asserted that because most
hospitals do not apply the same uniform
percentage mark-up when setting the
charges of each item in the department,
the proposed HSRVcc methodology
underestimates the cost of relatively
more expensive items (particularly
devices and implants) and overestimates
the cost of relatively less expensive
items. The commenters believed that the
use of a single CCR for a variety of
different items results in a systematic
distortion of the estimated costs, and
consequently the DRG relative weights
that are used in determining the IPPS
payment rates. Specifically, many
commenters stated that the HSRVcc
methodology has a disproportionate
adverse impact on DRGs that include
implantable technologies and devices,
and in some cases would result in
Medicare reimbursement that is less
than the actual cost of the device.
Some commenters discussed cost data
research that has been performed since
the implementation of the OPPS to
determine the causes and effects of
‘‘charge compression.’’ The commenters
asserted that OPPS payment rates are
also affected by charge compression.
Specifically, one commenter recently
commissioned research to investigate
whether Medicare claims data provided
statistical evidence of ‘‘charge
compression.’’ (This research was
summarized in an executive summary
by Christopher Hogan of Direct
Research, LLC. entitled ‘‘A Proposed
Solution for Charge Compression.’’)
Many other commenters cited this
recent research in their own comments,
and recommended that the results of
this research be used to develop an
adjustment under the proposed HSRVcc
methodology to account for ‘‘charge
compression.’’ This analysis utilized the
detailed coding of charges for supplies
by revenue center on the Medicare
claims data in the Standard Analytical
Files (SAF) to divide the single cost-
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
center CCR for ‘‘supplies and
equipment’’ used under the proposed
HSRVcc methodology into separate costcenter CCRs for 5 supplies subcategories
(general supplies; implantables; sterile
supplies; pacemakers and defibrillators;
and all other supplies) based on a
‘‘strong statistical association between
mix of charges for supplies (by revenue
center) in a hospital and the [overall]
supplies CCR in a hospital.’’ Using these
data from all hospitals, a regression
analysis yielded a single ‘‘set of CCR
adjustments reflecting national average
CCRs for [each of] the [five supplies]
sub-categories.’’ This national-average
set of adjustments is applied to each
hospital (and combined with each
hospital’s actual supplies CCR) to
determine an adjusted estimate of cost
on each hospital’s claim in the MedPAR
file. The results of this research showed
that this variation in CCRs across the
supplies subcategories would result in
weights for some DRGs being
significantly different than under the
HSRVcc methodology. In particular, the
methodology advocated by Hogan
would increase the relative weights ‘‘for
DRGs with substantial charges in the
implantable devices and pacemaker/
defibrillator revenue centers.’’
The commenters pointed out that the
results of this research are consistent
with previous analyses demonstrating
‘‘charge compression’’ in hospitals’
billing patterns. The commenters also
noted that this research was conducted
exclusively on Medicare claims data,
without supplementation with any
external data. The commenters believed
that this research demonstrates that an
adjustment for ‘‘charge compression’’ is
possible. They further asserted that the
research provides a solid analytical
basis for a specific adjustment. The
commenters advocated that we use the
coefficients from this regression analysis
to develop a ‘‘data-driven’’ adjustment
to the CCRs for the supplies and
equipment to address the distortion
caused by ‘‘charge compression.’’
Another commenter supported the
idea of a ‘‘charge compression’’
adjustment but suggested that CMS
should ensure appropriate stakeholder
involvement before applying such a
policy. Other commenters also
advocated for the use of data from the
SAF to analyze the relationship between
costs and charges for non-implantable
supplies and equipment to determine
whether an adjustment to the medicalsurgical supplies cost center on the
MedPAR files to account for ‘‘charge
compression’’ is also warranted.
As a result of the concerns discussed
above, many commenters stated that any
change toward a cost-based DRG
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
weighting methodology under the IPPS
must address the distortion caused by
‘‘charge compression’’ and must ensure
that the methodology utilizes accurate
cost determinations. Consequently,
some commenters requested a delay in
the implementation of the cost-based
DRG weighting methodology until an
adjustment for ‘‘charge compression’’
can be incorporated. In addition, some
commenters stated that such an
adjustment should also be used to
address ‘‘charge compression’’ under
the OPPS. Several commenters
recommended that, in addition to
including an adjustment for ‘‘charge
compression,’’ the methodology for
determining the cost-based DRG relative
weights be developed without
employing the HSRV methodology.
However, a few other commenters
endorsed the proposed HSRVcc
methodology, stating that the ‘‘HSRVcc
methodology more closely represents
the cost of providing services than the
current charge-based system.’’
Several commenters referenced
various research studies on this issue
undertaken over the past 5 to 6 years.
These commenters asserted that the
research supports the existence of
‘‘charge compression’’ and its systemic
distortion in payment rates. The
commenters also stated that ‘‘although
evidence of the effect of charge
compression is not new,’’ research that
could support an adjustment to offset
charge compression was not available.
However, according to the commenters,
‘‘research just completed now presents
a solution.’’
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ concerns regarding charge
compression and its impact on the
relative weight calculations under the
proposed HSRVcc methodology. We are
interested in further studying the
analytic technique suggested in the
comments of using a regression analysis
to identify adjustments that could be
made to the CCRs to account for charge
compression. We note that the Hogan
study’s regression model was only
applied to expensive medical supplies
and devices and was not applied
uniformly to develop potential
adjustments that could be made to costs
and charges across all revenue and cost
centers that could potentially be subject
to charge compression. If such a model
were to be applied, we believe further
analysis would have to be undertaken to
determine whether it should apply to all
costs and revenue centers. At this time,
we intend to research whether a
rigorous model should allow an
adjustment for ‘‘charge compression’’ to
the extent it exists. Accordingly, we
have engaged a contractor to undertake
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47897
a study on charge compression and
review the statistical models provided
to us by the commenters. To the extent
that we find ‘‘charge compression’’
exists, we will further study potential
models that could adjust for it so we can
develop more accurate systems of costbased weights to better reflect the
relative costs of the different types of
services provided under the IPPS. As
suggested in the comments, we plan to
fully involve appropriate stakeholders
in future analysis of this issue to the
extent feasible. Before implementing
such an adjustment, we would fully
describe our analysis and a potential
proposed adjustment as part of the IPPS
proposed rule for FY 2008.
Further, we intend to use the charge
compression study that we will conduct
over the next year as an opportunity to
better understand the costs of medical
devices. The United States faces a
dilemna in health care. Although the
rate-of-increase in health care spending
slowed last year, costs are still growing
at an unsustainable rate. One reason
health care costs are rising so quickly is
that most consumers of health care are
frequently not aware of the actual cost
of their care due to lack of transparency.
We believe that cost, quality, and
patient satisfaction information should
be available across the spectrum of care.
Transparency of device pricing is a
key aspect of consumer understanding
of the cost of health care. We believe
that the enhanced understanding of
device pricing that will be brought
about as part of our charge compression
study will help accelerate the public
release, in a consumer friendly fashion,
of pricing information of medical
devices. The public release of device
pricing will help augment our overall
efforts to empower consumers with
better information on the health care
they require.
In addition, we note that in order to
mitigate the impact of adopting a
revised methodology for calculating
DRG weights, we are standardizing
charges for MedPAR claims using the
same methodology we have used in past
years, rather than using the HSRV
methodology. However, as discussed in
detail in section II.E. of this preamble to
the final rule, we are adopting our
proposal to adjust charges to account for
costs prior to establishing DRG weights.
However, we anticipate undertaking
further analysis of the hospital-specific
methodology over the next year in
conjunction with the research we are
doing on charge compression. If our
analysis suggests that an adjustment for
charge compression should be applied
and/or that the hospital-specific
methodology will result in relative
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47898
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
weights that more closely approximate
the relative costs of care, we will
propose further changes for FY 2008. In
the interim, we are further mitigating
the potential payment effects from the
changes to the DRG relative weights by
adopting a 3-year transition of the
relative weights. During the first year of
the transition, the relative weights will
be based on a blend of 33 percent of the
cost-based weights and 67 percent of the
charge weights. In the second year of the
transition, the relative weights will be
based on a blend of 33 percent of the
charge weights and 67 percent of the
cost-based weights. In the third year of
the transition, the relative weights will
be based on 100 percent of the costbased weights.
3. Refinement of DRGs Based on
Severity of Illness
For purposes of the following
discussions, the term ‘‘CMS DRGs’’
means the DRG system we currently use
under the IPPS; the term ‘‘APR DRGs’’
means the severity DRG system
designed by 3M Health Information
Systems that currently is used by the
State of Maryland; and the term
‘‘consolidated severity-adjusted DRGs
(CS DRGs)’’ means the DRG system
based on a consolidated version of the
APR DRGs (as described in detail
below). We discussed the CS DRGs in
the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule and
solicited public comments on whether
there are alternative DRG systems that
could result in better recognition of
severity than the CS DRGs we were
proposing. As we made clear in the
proposed rule, there are still further
changes that are important to make to
the CS DRG system before it is ready for
adoption. In the remainder of this final
rule, ‘‘CS DRGs’’ refers to the DRG
system we analyzed and proposed for
adoption in FY 2008. However, as we
indicate below, we received a number of
public comments about the proposed CS
DRGs, potential alternatives, and a
number of other issues related to our
proposal. Below we summarize those
comments, respond to the comments,
and present our plans for adopting a
severity-adjusted DRG system for FY
2008.
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47474), we stated that we would
consider making changes to the CMS
DRGs to better reflect severity of illness
among patients. We indicated that we
would conduct a comprehensive review
of the CC list as well as consider the
possibility of using the APR DRGs for
FY 2007. We did not adopt APR DRGs
for FY 2006 because such an adoption
would represent a significant
undertaking that could have a
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
substantial effect on all hospitals. There
was insufficient time between the
release of the MedPAC report in March
2005 and the publication of the FY 2006
IPPS final rule for us to analyze fully a
change of this magnitude. Instead, we
adopted a more limited policy by
implementing severity-adjusted cardiac
DRGs.
After publication of the FY 2006 IPPS
final rule, CMS contracted with 3M
Health Information Systems to further
analyze the MedPAC recommendations
in support of our consideration of
possible changes to the IPPS for FY
2007. Under one task of this contract,
3M Health Information Systems
analyzed the feasibility of using a
revised DRG system under the IPPS that
is modeled on the APR DRGs Version 23
to better recognize severity of illness.
The APR DRGs have been used
successfully as the basis of Belgium’s
hospital prospective global budgeting
system since 2002. The State of
Maryland began using APR DRGs as the
basis of its all-payer hospital payment
system in July 2005. More than a third
of the hospitals in the United States are
already using APR DRG software to
analyze comparative hospital
performance. Many major health
information system vendors have
integrated this system into their
products. Several State agencies utilize
the APR DRGs for the public
dissemination of comparative hospital
performance reports. APR DRGs have
been widely applied in policy and
health services research. In addition to
being used in research by MedPAC, the
APR DRGs also contain a separate
measure of risk of mortality that is used
in the Quality Indicators of the Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality, the
Premier Hospital Quality Incentive
Demonstration discussed in section
IV.B. of this preamble, and the Joint
Commission on Accreditation of
Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO)
hospital accreditation survey process
(Shared Visions-New Pathways).
Below we present a comparison of the
CMS DRG system and the APR DRG
system.
a. Comparison of the CMS DRG System
and the APR DRG System
The CMS DRG and APR DRG systems
have a similar basic structure. There are
25 MDCs in both systems. The DRG
assignments for both systems are based
on the reporting of ICD–9–CM diagnosis
and procedure codes. Both DRG systems
are composed of a base DRG that
describes the reason for hospital
admission and a subdivision of the base
DRG based on other patient attributes
that affect the care of the patient. For
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
surgical patients, the base DRG is
defined based on the type of procedure
performed. For medical patients, the
base DRG is defined based on the
principal diagnosis. In Version 23.0 of
the CMS DRG system, there are 367 base
DRGs and 526 total DRGs. In Version 23
of the APR DRG system, there are 314
base DRGs and 1,258 total APR DRGs.
Some of the base DRGs in the two
systems are virtually identical. For
example, there is no significant
difference between the base DRG under
both systems for medical treatment of
congestive heart failure. For other base
DRGs, there are substantial differences.
For example, in the CMS DRG system,
there are two base DRGs for
appendectomy (simple and complex); in
the APR DRG system, there is only one
base DRG for appendectomy (the
relative complexity of the patient is
addressed in the subsequent subdivision
of the base DRG into severity of illness
subclasses).
The focus of the CMS DRGs is on
complexity. Complexity is defined as
the relative volume and types of
diagnostic, therapeutic, and bed services
required for the treatment of a particular
illness. Thus, the focus of payment in
the CMS DRG system reflects the
relative resource use needed by the
patient in one DRG group compared to
another. Resource use is generally
correlated with severity of illness but
intensive resource use does not
necessarily indicate a high level of
severity in every case. It is possible that
some patients will be resource-intensive
and require high-cost services even
though they are less severely ill than
other patients. The CMS DRG system
subdivides the base DRGs using age and
the presence of a secondary diagnosis
that represents a CC. The age
subdivisions primarily relate to
pediatric patients (those who are less
than 18 years of age). Patients are
assigned to the CC subgroup if they have
at least one secondary diagnosis that is
considered a CC. The diagnoses that are
designated as CCs are the same across
all base DRGs. The subdivisions of the
base CMS DRGs are not uniform: Some
base DRGs have no subdivision; some
base DRGs have a two-way subdivision
based on the presence of a CC; and other
base DRGs have a three-way subdivision
based on a pediatric subdivision
followed by a CC subdivision of the
adult patients. In addition, some base
DRGs in MDC 5 (Diseases and Disorders
of the Circulatory System) have a
subdivision based on the presence of a
major cardiovascular condition or
complex diagnosis.
The APR DRG system subdivides the
base DRGs by adding four severity of
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
illness subclasses to each DRG. Under
the APR DRG system, severity of illness
is defined as the extent of physiologic
decompensation or organ system loss of
function. The underlying clinical
principle of APR DRGs is that the
severity of illness of a patient is highly
dependent on the patient’s underlying
problem and that patients with high
severity of illness are usually
characterized by multiple serious
diseases or illnesses. The assessment of
the severity of illness of a patient is
specific to the base APR DRG to which
a patient is assigned. In other words, the
determination of the severity of illness
is disease-specific. High severity of
illness is primarily determined by the
interaction of multiple diseases. Patients
with multiple comorbid conditions
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
involving multiple organ systems are
assigned to the higher severity of illness
subclasses. The four severity of illness
subclasses under the APR DRG system
are numbered sequentially from 1 to 4,
indicating minor (1), moderate (2),
major (3), and extreme (4) severity of
illness.
The APR DRG system does not
subdivide base DRGs based on the age
of the patient. Instead, patient age is
used in the determination of the severity
of illness subclass. In the CMS DRG
system, the CC list is generally the same
across all base DRGs. However, there are
CC list exclusions for secondary
diagnoses that are related to the
principal diagnosis. In the APR DRG
system, the significance of a secondary
diagnosis is dependent on the base DRG.
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47899
For example, an infection is considered
more significant for an immunesuppressed patient than for a patient
with a broken arm. The logic of the CC
subdivision in the CMS DRG system is
a simple binary split for the presence or
absence of a CC. In the APR DRG
system, the determination of the
severity subclass is based on an 18-step
process that takes into account
secondary diagnoses, principal
diagnosis, age, and procedures. The 18
steps are divided into three phases.
There are six steps in Phase I, three
steps in Phase II, and nine steps in
Phase III.
The diagram below illustrates the
three-phase process for determining
patient severity of illness subclass.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Under the CMS DRG system, a patient
is assigned to the DRG with CC if there
is at least one secondary diagnosis
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
present that is a CC. There is no
recognition of the impact of multiple
CCs. Under the APR DRG system, high
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
severity of illness is primarily
determined by the interaction of
multiple diseases. Under the CMS DRG
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.006
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47900
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
system, patients are assigned to an MDC
based on their principal diagnosis.
While the principal diagnosis is
generally used to assign the patient to
an MDC in the APR DRG system, there
is a rerouting step that assigns some
patients to another MDC. For example,
lower leg amputations can be performed
for circulatory, endocrine, or
musculoskeletal principal diagnoses.
Instead of having three separate
amputation base DRGs in different
MDCs as is done in the CMS DRG
system, the APR DRG system reroutes
all of these amputation patients into a
single base APR DRG in the
musculoskeletal MDC. The CMS DRG
system uses death as a variable in the
DRG definitions but the APR DRG
system does not. Both DRG systems are
based on the information contained in
the Medicare Uniform Bill. The APR
DRG system requires the same
information used by the current CMS
DRG system. No changes to the claims
form or the data reported would be
necessary if CMS were to adopt APR
DRGs or a variant of them.
The CMS DRG structure makes some
DRG modifications difficult to
accommodate. For example, high
severity diseases that occur in low
volume are difficult to accommodate
because the only choice is to form a
separate base DRG with relatively few
patients. Such an approach could lead
to a proliferation of low-volume DRGs.
Alternatively, these cases may be
included in DRGs with other patients
that are dissimilar clinically or in costs.
Requests for new base DRGs formed on
the use of a specific technology may
also be difficult to accommodate. Base
DRGs formed based on the use of a
specific technology would result in the
payment weight for the DRG being
dominated by the price set by the
manufacturer for the technology.
The structure of the APR DRGs
provides a means of addressing high
severity cases that occur in low volume
through assignment of the case to a
severity of illness subclass. However,
the APR DRG structure does not
currently accommodate distinctions
based on complexity. Technologies that
represent increased complexity, but not
necessarily greater severity of illness,
are not explicitly recognized in the APR
DRG system. For example, in the CMS
DRGs, there are separate DRGs for
coronary angioplasty with or without
insertion of stents. The APR DRGs do
not make such a differentiation. The
insertion of the stent makes the patient’s
case more complex but does not mean
the patient is more severely ill.
However, the inability to insert a stent
may be indicative of a patient’s more
advanced coronary artery disease.
Although such conflicts are relatively
few in number, they do represent an
underlying difference between the two
systems. If Medicare were to adopt a
severity DRG system based on the APR
DRG logic but assign cases based on
complexity as well as severity as we do
under the current Medicare DRG
system, such a distinction would
represent a departure from the exclusive
focus on severity of illness that
currently forms the basis of assigning
cases in the APR DRG system.
Section 1886(d)(4) of the Act specifies
that the Secretary must adjust the
classifications and weighting factors at
least annually to reflect changes in
treatment patterns, technology, and
other factors that may change the
relative use of hospital resources.
Therefore, we believe a method of
recognizing technologies that represent
increased complexity, but not
necessarily greater severity of illness,
should be included in the system. We
plan to develop criteria for determining
when it is appropriate to recognize
increased complexity in the structure of
the DRG system and how these criteria
interact with the existing statutory
provisions for new technology add-on
payments. In the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule, we invited public
comments on this particular issue.
Another difference between the CMS
DRG system and the APR DRG system
is the assignment of diagnosis codes in
category 996 (Complications peculiar to
certain specified procedures). The CMS
DRG system treats virtually all of these
codes as CCs. With the exceptions of
complications of organ transplant and
limb reattachments, these complication
codes do not contribute to the severity
of illness subclass in the APR DRG
system. While these codes could be
added to the severity logic, the
appropriateness of recognizing codes
such as code 998.4 (Foreign body
accidentally left during a procedure) as
a factor in payment calculation could
create the appearance of incentives for
47901
less than optimal quality. Although
there is no direct recognition of the
codes under the 996 category, the
precise complication, in general, can be
coded separately and could contribute
to the severity of illness subclass
assignment.
Comment: Some commenters strongly
supported including the complication
codes (996.00–999.9) when assigning a
patient to a severity-adjusted DRG
because the codes represent pre-existing
or predictably higher risks upon
admission for difficult patients who are
typically referred to regional centers.
The commenters stated that failure to do
so will create new incentives for adverse
admission selection and underpay
hospitals that treat difficult patients.
The commenters stated that the 996
codes include some complications that
should never be paid (for example,
wrong site surgery and instruments left
in the patient). However, the
commenters indicated that these kinds
of complications likely constitute less
than one-half of one percent of all
complications and revising the DRG
system so that all 996 codes are not paid
will provide incentives to hospitals to
avoid admitting patients that are at high
risk because of a pre-existing condition
or other circumstance. Another
commenter stated that all infections
should be removed as complicating
conditions under the DRG system.
Response: The discussion in this
section of the proposed rule noted that
996 codes are used in assigning a
patient to a CMS DRG but not to an APR
DRG. Although the discussion in this
section of the proposed rule did indicate
that using these codes to assign a patient
to a DRG may raise questions about
incentives for less than optimal quality,
the discussion was only intended to
note the differences that currently exist
between the CMS and the APR DRGs.
The commenters raised issues that
require further study. We will consider
quality of care issues and payment
incentives as we consider how to
implement section 5001(c) of Pub. L.
109–171 with respect to hospital
acquired conditions, including
infections. There is a more detailed
discussion of this provision of the law
in a later section of this final rule.
Table B below summarizes the
differences between the two DRG
systems:
TABLE B.—COMPARISON OF THE CMS DRG SYSTEM AND THE APR DRG SYSTEM
Element
CMS DRG System
Number of base DRGs .........................................................................................
Total number of DRGs .........................................................................................
Number of CC (severity) subclasses ...................................................................
367 ........................................................
526 ........................................................
2 ............................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
APR DRG System
314
1,258
4
47902
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE B.—COMPARISON OF THE CMS DRG SYSTEM AND THE APR DRG SYSTEM—Continued
Element
CMS DRG System
Multiple CCs recognized ......................................................................................
CC assignment specific to base DRG .................................................................
Logic of CC subdivision .......................................................................................
Logic of MDC assignment ....................................................................................
No .........................................................
No .........................................................
Presence or absence ............................
Principal diagnosis ................................
Death used in DRG definitions ............................................................................
Data requirements ................................................................................................
Yes ........................................................
Hospital claims ......................................
To illustrate the differences between
the two DRG systems, we compare in
Table C below four cases that have been
assigned to CMS DRGs and APR DRGs.
In all four cases, the patient is a 67-yearold who is admitted for diverticulitis of
the colon and who has a multiple
segmental resection of the large
intestine performed. ICD–9–CM
diagnosis code 562.11 (Diverticulitis of
colon (without mention of hemorrhage))
and ICD–9–CM procedure code 45.71
(Multiple segmental resection of large
intestine) would be reported to capture
this case. In both DRG systems, the
patient would be assigned to the base
DRG for major small and large bowel
procedures. These four cases would fall
into two different CMS DRGs and four
different APR DRGs. We include
Medicare average charges in the table to
illustrate the differences in hospital
resource use.
Case 1: The patient receives only a
secondary diagnosis of an ulcer of anus
and rectum (ICD–9–CM diagnosis code
569.41). Under the CMS DRG system,
the patient is assigned to base DRG 149
(Major Small and Large Bowel
Procedures Without CC). Under the APR
DRG system, the patient is assigned to
base DRG 221 (Major Small and Large
Bowel Procedures) with a severity of
illness subclass of 1 (minor).
Case 2: The patient receives a
secondary diagnosis of an ulcer of anus
and rectum and an additional secondary
diagnosis of unspecified intestinal
obstruction (ICD–9–CM diagnosis code
560.9). Under the CMS DRG system, the
patient is assigned to DRG 148 (Major
Small and Large Bowel Procedures With
CC). Under the APR DRG system, the
patient is assigned to base DRG 221 and
the severity of illness subclass increases
to 2 (moderate).
Case 3: The patient receives multiple
secondary diagnoses of an ulcer of anus
and rectum, unspecified intestinal
obstruction, acute myocarditis (ICD–9–
APR DRG System
Yes.
Yes.
18-step process.
Principal diagnosis
with rerouting.
No.
Hospital claims.
CM diagnosis code 422.99), and
atrioventricular block, complete (ICD–
9–CM diagnosis code 426.0). Under the
CMS DRG system, the patient is
assigned to DRG 148. Under the APR
DRG system, the patient is assigned to
base DRG 221 and the severity of illness
subclass increases to 3 (major).
Case 4: The patient receives multiple
secondary diagnoses of an ulcer of anus
and rectum, unspecified intestinal
obstruction, acute myocarditis,
atrioventricular block, complete, and
the additional diagnosis of acute renal
failure, unspecified (ICD–9–CM
diagnosis code 584.9). Under the CMS
DRG system, the patient is assigned to
DRG 148. Under the APR DRG system,
the patient is assigned to base DRG 221
and the severity of illness subclass
increases to 4 (extreme).
TABLE C.—EXAMPLE OF SAMPLE CASES ASSIGNED UNDER THE CMS DRG SYSTEM AND UNDER THE APR DRG SYSTEM
CMS DRG System
APR DRG System
Principal diagnosis code: 562.11
Procedure code: 45.71
DRG assigned
Case 1—Secondary Diagnosis: 569.41 ..........................................
149 without CC ..........
$25,147
Case 2—Secondary Diagnoses: 569.41, 560.9 .............................
148 with CC ...............
59,519
Case 3—Secondary Diagnoses: 569.41, 560.9, 422.99, 426.0 .....
148 with CC ...............
59,519
Case 4—Secondary Diagnoses: 569.41, 560.9, 422.99, 426.0,
584.9.
148 with CC ...............
59,519
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
The largest significant difference in
average charges is seen in case 4 where
the average charge under the APR DRG
assigned to the patient ($130,750) is
more than double the average charge
under the CMS DRG assigned to the
patient ($59,519).
b. CS DRGs for Use in the IPPS
APR DRGs were developed to
encompass all-payer patient
populations. As a result, we found that,
for the Medicare population, some of
the APR DRGs have very low volume.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Average
charge
MedPAC noted that the larger number of
DRGs under a severity-weighted system
might mean that CMS would be faced
with establishing weights in many
categories that have few cases and, thus,
potentially creating unstable estimates.
While volume is an important
consideration in evaluating any
potential consolidation of APR DRGs for
use under the IPPS, we believe that
hospital resource use and clinical
interpretability also need to be taken
into consideration. For example, any
consolidation of severity of illness
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Average
charge
DRG assigned
221 with severity of
ness subclass 1.
221 with severity of
ness subclass 2.
221 with severity of
ness subclass 3.
221 with severity of
ness subclass 4.
ill-
$25,988
ill-
38,209
ill-
66,597
ill-
130,750
subclasses within a base DRG should be
restricted to contiguous severity of
illness subclasses. Thus, it would not be
reasonable clinically to combine
severity of illness subclasses 1 and 4
solely because both consist of lowvolume cases. We analyzed
consolidating APR DRGs by either
combining the base DRGs or the severity
of illness subclasses within a base DRG.
For consolidation across base APR
DRGs, we considered patient volume,
similarity of hospital charges across all
four severity of illness subclasses and
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
clinical similarity of the base APR
DRGs. For consolidations of severity of
illness subclasses within a base DRG,
we considered patient volume and the
similarity of hospital charges between
severity of illness subclasses. In
considering how to consolidate severity
of illness subclasses, we believed it was
important to use uniform criteria across
all DRGs to avoid creating confusing
and difficult to interpret results. That is,
we were concerned about
inconsistencies in the number of
severity levels across different DRGs.
The objective to simultaneously take
into consideration patient volume and
average charges often produced conflict.
Table D below contains the overall
patient volume and average charge by
APR DRG severity of illness subclass.
While severity of illness subclass 4
(extreme) has the lowest patient volume
of 5.80 percent, we found that the
dramatically different average charges
between severity of illness subclass 3
(major) and subclass 4 (extreme)
patients of approximately $32,426 and
$81,952, respectively, would make it
47903
difficult to consolidate severity of
illness subclass 3 and 4 patients.
Conversely, we found that, while the
average charge difference between
severity of illness subclass 1 (minor)
and 2 (moderate) patients was much
smaller, of approximately $17,649 and
$20,021, respectively, the majority of
patient volume (68.08 percent) is in
these two subclasses. Thus, low patient
volume and small average charge
differences rarely coincided.
TABLE D.—OVERALL AVERAGE CHARGES AND PATIENT VOLUME BY APR DRG SEVERITY OF ILLNESS SUBCLASS
All cases
Number of Cases .......................................................
Average Charges .......................................................
There were also few opportunities to
consolidate base DRGs. For base DRGs
in which there was a clinical basis for
considering a consolidation, there were
usually significant differences in
average charges for one or more of the
severity of illness subclasses. APR DRGs
already represented a considerable
consolidation of base DRGs (314)
compared to CMS DRGs (367). Thus, we
expected that further base DRG
consolidation would be difficult.
We reviewed the patient volume and
average charges across APR DRGs and
found that medical cases assigned
severity of illness subclass 4 within an
MDC have similar average charges. We
observed the same pattern in average
charges across severity of illness
subclass 4 surgical patients within an
MDC. The data suggest that, in cases
with a severity of illness of subclass 4,
the severity of the cases had more
11,142,651
$26,342
APR DRG
Severity of
illness
Subclass 1
APR DRG
Severity of
illness
Subclass 2
21.47%
$17,649
impact on hospital resource use than the
reason for admission (that is, the base
APR DRG within an MDC). Thus, we
believe that, within each MDC, the
severity of illness subclass 4 medical
and surgical patients, respectively,
could be consolidated into a single
group.
In some MDCs, it was not possible to
consolidate into a single medical and a
single surgical severity of illness
subclass 4 group. In these MDCs, more
than one group was necessary. For
instance, Table E below contains the
patient volume and average charges for
severity of illness subclass 4 cases in
MDC 11 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Kidney and Urinary Tract). Taking into
consideration volume and average
charges, except for APR DRG 440
(Kidney Transplant), surgical cases
assigned severity of illness subclass 4 in
MDC 11 could be consolidated into a
APR DRG
Severity of
illness
Subclass 3
46.61%
$20,021
APR DRG
Severity of
illness
Subclass 4
26.12%
$32,426
5.80%
$81,952
single group having 5,492 patients and
an average charge of $107,258. However,
we decided not to include kidney
transplant patients in this severity of
illness subclass 4 due to their very high
average charges (approximately
$203,732 or more than $100,000 greater
than other patients in MDC 11 having a
severity of illness subclass 4). Average
charges within the consolidated severity
of illness subclass 4 surgical DRG in
MDC 11 show some variation but are
much higher than the corresponding
average charges for the severity of
illness subgroup 3 patients of $48,863.
Thus, our analysis suggests that the data
support maintaining three severity of
illness levels for each base DRG in MDC
11; a separate severity of illness subclass
4 for all patients other than those having
kidney transplant; and a separate DRG
for kidney transplants.
TABLE E.—SUMMARY STATISTICS FOR SURGICAL CASES WITH SEVERITY OF ILLNESS SUBCLASS 4 IN MDC 11
Number of
cases
APR DRG
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
(Kidney Transplant) ........................................................................................................................
(Major Bladder Procedures) ...........................................................................................................
(Kidney & Urinary Tract Procedure for Malignancy) ......................................................................
(Kidney & Urinary Tract Procedure for Non-Malignancy) ..............................................................
(Renal Dialysis Access Device Procedure Only—Severity of Illness Subclass 4) .......................
(Other Bladder Procedures) ...........................................................................................................
(Urethral & Transurethral Procedure—Severity of Illness Subclass 4) .........................................
(Other Kidney, Urinary Tract & Related Procedures) ....................................................................
The consolidation of severity of
illness subclass 4 APR DRG into fewer
groups was done for all MDCs except
MDC 15 (Newborn and Other Neonates
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
With Conditions Originating in the
Perinatal Period), MDC 19 (Mental
Diseases and Disorders), and MDC 20
(Alcohol/Drug Use and Alcohol/Drug
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
378
528
833
966
935
186
492
1,552
Average
length of
stay
18.0
21.5
16.6
18.4
18.3
15.2
13.4
19.3
Average
total
charges
$203,732
128,729
101,501
103,905
104,249
80,197
73,110
121,011
Induced Organic Mental Disorders). In
the 22 MDCs in which the severity of
illness subclass 4 consolidation was
applied, the number of separate severity
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47904
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
of illness subclass 4 groups was reduced
from 262 to 69.
For MDC 14 (Pregnancy, Childbirth,
and Puerperium), the base APR DRGs
were consolidated from 12 to 6. Severity
of illness subclass 1 through 3 were
retained, and severity of illness subclass
4 was consolidated into a single APR
DRG, except for cesarean section and
vaginal deliveries, which were
maintained as separate APR DRGs. This
consolidation reduced the total number
of obstetric APR DRGs from 48 to 22.
The Medicare patient volume in MDC
15 was very low, allowing for a more
aggressive consolidation. For MDC 15,
we consolidated 28 base APR DRGs into
7 base CS DRGs. For each of the 7
consolidated base MDC 15 DRGs, we
combined severity of illness subclasses
1 and 2 into one DRG and severity of
illness subclass 3 and 4 into another
DRG. This consolidation reduced the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
total number of MDC 15 DRGs from 112
in the APR DRG system to 14 CS DRGs.
In MDC 19, we consolidated 12 base
DRGs into 4 base DRGs. We retained the
4 severity of illness subclasses in MDC
19 for each of the 4 base DRGs. In MDC
20, the base APR DRG for patients who
left against medical advice has severity
of illness subclass 1 and 2 consolidated
and severity of illness subclass 3 and 4
consolidated. The remaining 4 base
DRGs were consolidated into 1 base
DRG with 4 severity of illness
subclasses.
We did not consolidate any of the preMDC subclass 4 APR DRGs such as
Heart Transplant. As explained earlier,
pre-MDC DRGs are DRGs to which cases
are directly assigned on the basis of
ICD–9–CM procedure codes. These
DRGs are for liver and/or intestinal
transplants, heart and/or lung
transplants, bone marrow transplants,
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
pancreas transplants, and
tracheotomies. For the pre-MDC DRGs,
except for Bone Marrow Transplant, we
consolidated severity of illness
subclasses 1 and 2 into one DRG. In
addition, the three base APR DRGs for
Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)
with multiple or major HIV-related
conditions had severity of illness
subclasses 1 and 2 consolidated.
In total, we reduced 1,258 APR DRGs
to 861 CS DRGs. In Appendix C of this
proposed rule, we present the 861
unique combinations of CS DRGs.
Table F below includes a description
of the consolidations that we did within
each individual MDC and includes
information about the total number of
DRGs that were eliminated from the
APR DRGs to develop the CS DRGs.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Appendix D of the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24433) showed the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
crosswalk of each CS DRG to its
respective APR DRG. We numbered the
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47905
DRGs sequentially and incorporated the
severity of illness subclass into the DRG
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.007
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47906
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
description. However, within the range
of sequential numbers used for an MDC,
we retained some unused numbers to
allow for future DRG expansion. By
using a three-digit number for the CS
DRGs, we also avoid the need for
reprogramming of computer systems
that would be necessary to
accommodate a change from the current
three-digit DRG number to separate
fields for the base CS DRG number and
the severity of illness subclass.
Severity DRGs represent a significant
change from our current DRG system. In
addition to changing the way claims are
grouped, severity DRGs introduce other
issues requiring additional analysis,
including possible increases in reported
case-mix and changes to the outlier
threshold. Our analysis of these issues
is outlined further in the next section.
Comment: A number of commenters
suggested further refinements that need
to be made to the CS DRGs to account
for complexity as well as severity.
Commenters recommended that CMS
create a ‘‘task force’’ to analyze
situations in which the complexity of
the patients is not always appropriately
recognized by the proposed CS DRGs.
One commenter stated that the severity
system is flawed because it does not
capture resource utilization or the
utility of technologies that would be
more appropriate for beneficiaries.
The commenters also provided
examples of base DRG assignments
under the current CMS DRGs that are
different than those under the CS DRG.
For instance, one commenter indicated
that high dose interleukin-2 (HD IL2) is
used to treat otherwise terminal cancer
patients with metastatic renal cell
cancer and melanoma. HD IL2 can
evoke an immune response that
eradicates the tumor and provides a
potential opportunity for recovery. In
the FY 2004 IPPS final rule, CMS
created a new procedure code for HD
IL2 therapy and assigned these patients
to DRG 492. The commenter reported
improved access to HD IL2 therapy as a
result of these changes. However, the
commenter was concerned that these
patients could potentially be assigned to
a number of different DRGs under the
CS DRGs with a weighted average
reduction in the relative weight of 58
percent. The commenter suggested
revising the CS DRG to take into account
the complexity associated with
providing HD IL2 therapy. Other
commenters noted:
• Some patients in need of
ventricular assist devices (VAD) are
currently paid in the same group as
heart transplant patients using the CMS
DRGs. Other heart assist devices are
assigned to DRG 525 (Other Heart Assist
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Implant). These patients will be paid in
the same group as implantable cardiac
defibrillator patients under the CS
DRGs. The commenters noted that it is
possible that payment for these kinds of
cases could decline by more than 70
percent under the proposed rule. The
commenter believed that the assignment
under the CS DRGs will not recognize
higher resources associated with
treating VAD patients relative to those
in need of implantable cardiac
defibrillators.
• Bare metal and drug-eluting
coronary stents would be assigned to the
same CS DRG eliminating the
distinction currently made for these two
different kinds of stents in the CMS
DRGs. The commenters noted that CMS
created separate DRGs for drug eluting
and bare metal stents to recognize the
higher costs of drug eluting stents.
• Defibrillator device replacement
cases are currently assigned to DRG 551
(Permanent Cardiac Pacemaker Implant
With Major Cardiovascular Diagnoses or
AICD Lead or Generator). The
commenters were concerned that these
cases would be assigned to the DRGs for
Permanent Cardiac Pacemaker Implant
With & W/O AMI, Heart Failure or
Shock and the cases would revert back
to classification based on presence or
absence of heart failure, AMI, or shock,
rather than an MCV.
• Patients receiving tPA thrombolytic
therapy for stroke are currently assigned
to DRG 559 (Acute Ischemic Stroke
With Use of a Thrombolytic Agent).
CMS revised the DRGs in FY 2006 to
provide a separate DRG for stroke
patients being treated with a reperfusion
agent. According to the commenter,
these patients will be paid in the same
group with all stroke cases under CS
DRGs undoing the change that CMS
made in FY 2006 according to the
commenter.
• In FY 2006, CMS created separate
DRGs for the revision of hip or knee
replacement (DRG 545, Revision of Hip
or Knee Replacement) to distinguish the
higher resources associated with
revisions from original replacements.
Under CS DRGs, these cases would be
assigned to the same group as the
original replacement (bilateral or single)
of the specific joint. The commenters
were concerned that CMS’ proposal to
adopt cCS DRGs will undo a proposal
that it adopted just 1 year ago.
• Combined anterior/posterior spinal
fusion cases are currently assigned to
DRG 496 (Combined Anterior/Posterior
Spinal Fusion). This procedure requires
two separate incisions and turning the
patient over during surgery. The
commenter expressed concern that
under the CS DRG system, these cases
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
would be paid in the same group as all
spinal fusions and the new DRGs would
not recognize higher costs associated
with treating these patients.
• The APR DRG and CS DRG systems
do not have DRGs for lung transplants
alone or combined kidney/pancreas
transplants. The commenter suggested
that there should be separate DRGs for
these transplants in addition to liver/
intestinal transplants. The commenter
indicated that lung transplants alone
have lower costs and should not be in
the same DRG as combined transplants.
Response: In the vast majority of
clinical situations, severity of illness
and treatment complexity are directly
related and are therefore addressed in
the CS DRGs. As discussed in the
proposed rule, there are a number of
clinical situations, primarily related to
the use of specific technologies, in
which low severity patients receive care
with high treatment complexity and
cost. We acknowledge that further
refinements are needed to the proposed
CS DRG system before it will be ready
for adoption. In the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule, we noted a number of
concerns we had with adopting the CS
DRGs in FY 2007 (71 FR 24027). Among
them was our concern that we might
need additional time to refine the CS
DRGs to better account for complexity
as well as severity. The commenters
have brought some important issues to
our attention that we believe should be
carefully considered before we adopt
the CS DRGs. We will consider these
issues if we were to make further
modifications to the CS DRGs and
propose adopting them for FY 2008.
However, as we indicate elsewhere in
this final rule, we have engaged a
contractor to assist us with completing
an evaluation of alternative DRG
systems that may better recognize
severity than the current CMS DRGs and
meet other criteria that would make
them suitable to adopt for purposes of
payment under the IPPS. We expect to
complete this evaluation of alternative
DRG systems quickly this fall as part of
moving forward on adopting a revised
DRG system that better recognizes
severity in the IPPS rulemaking for FY
2008. It is possible that some of the
alternatives that we evaluate for better
recognizing severity in the DRGs will be
based on the current CMS DRGs. If we
were to develop a clinical severity
concept that uses the current CMS DRGs
as the starting point, it is possible that
the issues raised by the commenters will
no longer be a concern. If, however, we
were to propose adopting the CS DRGs
for FY 2008, we would consider the
issues raised by the commenters as we
make further refinements to this DRG
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
system so it accounts for complexity as
well as severity as a proxy for relative
resource use.
Comment: One commenter suggested
a way of accounting for therapeutic
complexity when assigning a patient
under the CS DRGs. The commenter
indicated that the patient should be
assigned to a severity of illness subclass
based on whether they received a
separately identifiable technology that
provides a clinical benefit and results in
significantly higher case costs
independent of severity level relative to
the base DRG. The commenter also
recommended that complexity levels be
superimposed on the proposed severity
of illness levels, such that either
severity or complexity, or a combination
of the two, would increase the
classification of a case. The
classifications would be defined as
severity of illness or complexity (1–4).
Response: We will further consider
how to incorporate complexity into the
assignment of a patient to a severity of
illness subclass under either the CS
DRGs if we propose to adopt them in FY
2008 or the alternative DRG system that
we will consider once we complete our
evaluation of potential DRG systems. It
may be possible to assign a case to a
severity of illness subclass under either
the CS DRGs, the alternative system we
plan to evaluate or even underrefined
CMS DRGs by using the procedures or
services that are provided to the patient
as a measure of resource use (that is,
complexity). We agree that the use of a
separately identifiable procedure or
technology may be useful in
determining the assignment of a patient
to a specific subclass of a base DRG
much like what occurs today under the
CMS DRGs when assigning patients
with placement of a bare metal or drugeluting stent to separate DRGs.
Comment: Some commenters were
concerned that CMS did not propose to
adopt the already widely used APR
DRGs endorsed by MedPAC, but rather
proposed to adopt CMS’-developed CS
DRGs. Some commenters stated that the
CMS analysis that resulted in the CS
DRGs is skewed because Medicare uses
a truncated list of diagnosis and
procedure codes. The commenter noted
that CMS does not use comparable data
to what 3M uses for the complete APR
DRGs. Another commenter stated that
the APR DRGs are the most advanced
DRG classification system available
yielding the most clinically
homogenous groupings and the greatest
predictive power. This commenter
believed that it provides a sound basis
for developing CS DRGs.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Response: MedPAC did not endorse
using the APR DRGs.6 However,
MedPAC’s analysis that led to their
recommendation to refine the current
DRGs to more fully account for
difference in severity of illness among
patients was based on the APR DRGs.
Even though MedPAC’s analysis was
based on the APR DRGs, it recognized
that CMS would have to consider a
number of different factors when
making decisions in the design of a DRG
system. For instance, MedPAC noted
that the large number of DRGs might
mean that CMS would be faced with
establishing weights in many categories
that have few cases and thus potentially
creating unstable estimates. To avoid
creating refined DRGs with unstable
relative weights, MedPAC
recommended that the Secretary should
be selective in adopting fine clinical
distinctions similar to those reflected in
the APR DRGs. Refining the DRGs will
require carefully weighing the benefits
of more accurate and economic
distinctions against the potential for
instability in relative weights based on
a small number of cases.7 We do not
believe that MedPAC expected that we
would adopt the APR DRGs without any
changes.
Comment: Some commenters stated
concerns with merging of dissimilar
patient groups in the CS DRG system.
Combining clinically dissimilar groups
across the severity dimension has the
potential to render the groups far less
clinically meaningful. It is anticipated
that such groups would have to be
restructured frequently as treatment
patterns change for primarily very ill
patients. Some commenters stated that it
seems that more categories may have
been consolidated than necessary,
giving up clinical and statistical
homogeneity unnecessarily. It was
noted that this is especially important if
the CS DRGs are envisioned as part of
the basis for evolving efforts towards
value-based purchasing where such
measures as post-admission
complications and readmissions need to
be evaluated on a risk-adjusted basis.
An alternative approach was suggested
to keep the patient groups separate from
a classification perspective, but merge
from a payment analysis perspective.
Response: As discussed above, the CS
DRGs are based on the APR DRG
system. The APR DRG system is
comprised of 314 base DRGs, which are
divided into four severity of illness
subclasses. We believe that the APR
6 Medicare Payment Advisory Commission.
March, 2005. Report to the Congress, PhysicianOwned Specialty Hospitals, page 76.
7 Ibid, page 41.
PO 00000
Frm 00039
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47907
DRG greatly improve recognition of
resource use and clinical similarity of
patients. However, in our analysis of the
APR DRG system, we observed that
cases assigned severity of illness
subclass 4 within an MDC have similar
average charges. Furthermore, our
clinical consultants frequently
considered the severity of illness
subclass 4 patients across DRGs within
an MDC to have a closer clinical
resemblance than to lower severity
patients in their respective DRGs
because, in severely ill patients,
comorbidities have a greater impact on
severity than the reason for admisssion.
Treatment patterns will evolve for these
multiple comorbidities leading to
severity level 4 (sepsis, shock, acute
renal failure, among others). However,
to the extent that these multiple
comorbidities will change (for example,
better treatment of septic shock so that
this occurs less frequently) they should
do so equally across all patients within
an MDC. With respect to the comment
about maintaining more DRG groups for
purposes other than payment under the
IPPS, we proposed to adopt the CS
DRGs only for Medicare inpatient
hospital payment. We chose to
consolidate the APR DRGs to increase
administrative simplicity, minimize the
impact on existing claim processing
systems, and avoid having multiple
DRGs with low case volumes and
similar weights. The commenter’s
suggestion would essentially result in
many more DRGs having exactly the
same weight. Therefore, we do not see
a need to adopt the commenter’s
suggestion. However, a hospital or any
other entity can use an alternative
patient classification system for the
other purposes suggested in the
comment.
Comment: Some commenters stated
that the CS DRGs are problematic
because they were not designed to
accommodate non-Medicare
populations. The commenters indicated
that many hospitals use DRGs for
quality and other outcome
measurements and that the proposed CS
DRGs may not be clinically appropriate
for these purposes.
In addition, another commenter stated
that private health insurance company
contracts use the CMS DRG relative
weights as the payment basis for
inpatient services delivered to members
under private health insurance plans.
The commenter stated that because
these contracts are typically negotiated
based on a fairly static assumption of
CMS DRGs (including classification and
weights), the proposed redistribution
will disrupt virtually every contract
because of the varying services
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47908
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
consumed by members covered under
private health insurance. The
commenter urged CMS to provide a
greater lead time in implementing
changes to the DRG system and relative
weight methodology to allow health
insurers more time to model the impact
of the methodological changes to their
hospital contracts.
Response: We acknowledge that
Medicare DRGs are sometimes used by
non-Medicare payers for their own
purposes. However, CMS’ primary focus
of updates to the Medicare DRG
classification system is on changes
relating to payment for services
furnished to Medicare beneficiaries, not
the obstetric, pediatric, or neonatal
population. Cases involving these
patients are found far less frequently
among Medicare beneficiaries than in
the general population. In fact, we
applied consolidations to the APR DRGs
to develop the CS DRGs to recognize
that the APR DRGs were developed to
accommodate all patient populations
and there would be many DRGs with
few Medicare cases or insufficient
differences in the relative weights to
warrant us maintaining a separate DRG.
We encourage other payers that use
Medicare’s DRG system for payment to
make appropriate modifications for
patient populations that are found
infrequently among Medicare
beneficiaries such as neonates and
children. Again, as we stated above, a
hospital or any other entity can use an
alternative patient classification system
for purposes other than Medicare
payment.
In response to the commenter’s
concern with regard to the impact on
private health insurance plans, we are
improving our relative weight
methodology to make Medicare
payments more accurate. We utilize
Medicare specific data to calculate the
relative weights designed to pay
Medicare costs. We have a fiduciary
responsibility to administer the trust
fund in order to provide quality care for
our beneficiaries and that, not private
payer contracts, is our foremost concern.
However, as we noted earlier in this
section, we are postponing the
implementation of the HSRV
methodology while we study its impact
on charge compression. Instead, we are
using a more similar approach to
calculating the IPPS relative weights
that is used in the OPPS. That is, rather
than using a hospital-specific relative
weighting methodology, we are
standardizing charges to remove
relevant payment factor adjustments
and then adjusting those charges to
costs using national cost center CCRs.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
In addition, we are adopting a 3-year
transition of the relative weights. We
believe this transition may also mitigate
any potential impacts to private payer
contracts from the changes to the DRG
relative weights. During the first year of
the transition, the relative weights will
be based on a blend of 33 percent of the
cost-based weights and 67 percent of the
charge weights. In the second year of the
transition, the relative weights will be
based on a blend of 33 percent of the
charge weights and 67 percent of the
cost-based weights. In the third year of
the transition, the relative weights will
be based on 100 percent of the costbased weights.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that CMS seek further refinements to the
DRGs for mental services. The
commenter suggested that these DRGs
have been underpaid for many years.
Response: We will consider whether
the psychiatric DRGs need further
refinements as we proceed to refine the
DRG system to better recognize severity
for FY 2008. We note that the
application of cost-based weights will
increase Medicare’s payments for the
psychiatric DRGs in FY 2007.
Comment: Some commenters inquired
how other prospective payment systems
such as the IPF PPS and LTCH PPS that
rely upon the IPPS DRG classifications
would be affected by the changes to
adopt CS DRGs.
Response: We did not propose any
changes to the DRG classifications
systems used under the IPF PPS or the
LTCH PPS in the IPPS proposed rule.
However, we acknowledge that these
PPSs use the IPPS DRG classifications to
make payment determinations.
Furthermore, we note that the
refinements we are adopting to the
current CMS DRG system to better
recognize severity (which are discussed
in detail in section II.C.7. of this final
rule) will be applicable under the IPF
PPS and LTCH PPS, just as past annual
updates to the IPPS DRG
classifications). We will need to
consider whether corresponding
changes need to be made to these other
payment systems once final decisions
are made about how DRG classification
will occur under the IPPS in the future.
Payment rate and policy changes to the
IPF PPS and LTCH PPS went into effect
for RY 2007 on July 1, 2006. These PPSs
are using the Version 23 IPPS GROUPER
for the first 3 months of RY 2007 (July
2006 through September 2006).
Consistent with the IPPS, the IPF PPS
will use Version 24 of the IPPS
GROUPER, effective October 1, 2006. No
further changes will be made to the IPF
PPS until next July. Under the LTCH
PPS, changes to the LTC–DRGs were
PO 00000
Frm 00040
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
proposed for FY 2007, based on the
proposed Version 24 IPPS GROUPER
(71 FR 24049 through 24068), and
changes to the LTC–DRGs that will be
effective October 1, 2006, based on the
finalized Version 24 IPPS GROUPER
(presented in this final rule) are
discussed in section II.F. of the
preamble of this final rule. Any changes
to the DRG classification systems for
these prospective payment systems
would be undertaken through notice
and comment rulemaking in their
respective proposed rules.
Comment: One commenter stated that
it was not clear how the judgment was
made for the MDC 11 severity subclass
4 example shown that these average
charge values were sufficiently similar
to consolidate. The commenter
suggested that CMS provide further
information about the criteria and
considerations it used to judge
categories as low volume and
potentially unstable and to judge the
mean charges (or costs) as sufficiently
similar to warrant consolidation. One
commenter expressed concern about the
consolidations related to obstetrics and
psychiatric care services.
Response: As discussed above, the CS
DRGs are based on APR DRGs that are
divided into severity subclasses 2
through 4 subclasses which greatly
increase the resource and clinical
similarity of the patients. Furthermore,
as discussed above, our clinical
consultants frequently considered the
level 4 severity patients across DRGs
within an MDC to have a closer clinical
resemblance than to lower severity
patients in their respective DRGs. In
consolidating the severity level 4
patients in an MDC, volume was a
primary consideration along with the
extent of clinical difference. For
example, in MDC 11 severity level 4,
kidney transplants were kept in a
separate group and not consolidated
with the other MDC 11 surgical DRGs
because of the clinical distinctiveness of
patients having a major organ
transplant.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern that patients may need to suffer
adverse consequences in order for the
case to be assigned to a higher severity
level. The commenter believed that the
severity grouping should reflect
complexity and patient benefit as well
and should allow for an increased
severity/complexity level even without
adverse patient consequences.
Response: The current DRG system
assigns a CC status to most patients with
a complication or adverse event that
occurs after admission. Although in the
CS DRGs post admission complications
can result in an increase in a patient’s
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
severity level, patients are primarily
assigned to the higher severity levels
(levels 3 and 4) based on the presence
of multiple serious comorbidities in
multiple organ systems rather than a
single adverse event. Thus, unlike the
current DRGs in which a single post
admission complication can place the
patient in a higher paying DRG, the CS
DRGs in general require multiple
significant problems to be present in
order for a higher severity level to be
assigned. In general, these patients will
be more costly to treat. The system does
not reward ‘‘adverse’’ consequences as
suggested by the commenter but instead
recognizes severity of illness will also
be associated, at least in part, with
resource use.
Patients are increasingly admitted to
the hospital at high severity of illness.
Adverse consequences can and do occur
within the hospital. However, some of
those consequences are unavoidable
(particularly for patients who are
admitted at a high severity of illness).
Section 5001(c) of Pub. L. 109–171
requires that, beginning in FY 2009, we
select diagnosis codes associated with at
least two conditions that result in
assignment of a higher weighted DRG
and that reasonably could be prevented
through the application of evidencebased guidelines. Beginning with
discharges in FY 2009, section 5001(c)
requires that we not assign cases to
higher weighted DRGs based on the
presence of these preventable
conditions. Section 5001(c) also
mandates that, for discharges on or after
October 1, 2007, we require a hospital
to include the secondary diagnosis of a
patient at admission as part of the
information required to be reported by
a hospital for payment purposes. We
believe that the concerns of the
commenter will be addressed when we
implement section 5001(c) of Pub. L.
109–171.
Comment: A number of comments
supported CMS’ goal of improving
payment accuracy. However, the
commenters stated that the need for and
best approach to changing the patient
classification system has not been
objectively demonstrated. One
commenter provided a sophisticated
statistical analysis that it asserted
confirms MedPAC’s conclusion that
changes are needed to improve payment
accuracy. However, this commenter
suggested the greatest improvement in
cost-margin consistency resulted from
switching the basis for the DRG weights
from charges to cost and neither the
HSRVcc methodology nor the CS DRGs
improved payment accuracy. Other
commenters indicated that more careful
analysis is needed, along with greater
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
access to the details of the CS DRG
methodology. The commenters
identified the following concerns:
• Validation. The commenters
indicated that it is unclear whether
there is a need for a new patient
classification system. The commenters
stated that the implication of moving
from a resource-based system to a
severity-based payment system must be
more fully explored and understood.
They indicated that CMS provided no
analysis that shows that the proposed
changes result in an improved hospital
payment system compared to the
existing DRG system or APR DRGs.
• Budget neutrality adjustment. The
commenter indicated that the proposed
rule did not address an adjustment for
improved documentation and coding or
even a methodology for determining
one. The commenter suggested that
CMS not apply an adjustment for more
comprehensive documentation and
coding that increases perceived but not
real case mix until there is evidence that
one is needed. The commenter
requested that CMS monitor actual
changes in coding and documentation
practices associated with
implementation of inpatient payment
reforms to determine if any base
payment adjustments are needed rather
than adjust payments in anticipation of
such changes.
• Availability of the GROUPER. Many
commenters stated that the proprietary
nature and lack of transparency of the
proposed CS DRG GROUPER are
concerns. The current DRG GROUPER
logic has been in the public domain
since the inception of IPPS. Without the
new GROUPER logic, the commenters
believed that it is virtually impossible
for anyone to thoroughly analyze the
system and comment. The commenters
urged that CMS make any new
classification system widely available to
the public on the same terms as the
current DRG system. Some commenters
stated that CMS should provide the
GROUPER for the CS DRGs and open a
new public comment period. Several
commenters were concerned about the
cost of the GROUPER if the CS DRGs
were implemented.
• Too few diagnoses and procedures
considered. The commenters are
concerned that the current CMS
GROUPER does not use all diagnosis
and procedures that affect a patient’s
severity of illness and/or the resources
utilized. The commenters believed that
the number of secondary diagnoses may
be an important factor in determining
differences in patient characteristics.
Response: With respect to the
comment about the need for a new
patient classification system, the
PO 00000
Frm 00041
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47909
proposed rule noted that we modeled
the CS DRGs and observed a 12-percent
increase in the explanatory power (or Rsquare statistic) of the DRG system to
explain hospital charges. That is, we
found more uniformity among hospital
total charges within the CS DRGs than
we did with Medicare’s current DRG
system (71 FR 24027). Thus, we believe
that there is clear evidence that
improvements can be made to the
current DRG system that will reduce
heterogeneity among patients within a
given DRG. While this statistic indicates
that the current CMS DRG system can be
refined to improve payment accuracy,
we agree that it does not necessarily
mean we should adopt the system we
proposed. As suggested by the
commenters, there are a number of other
evaluation criteria that we need to
consider before deciding whether to
adopt the CS DRGs or a potential
alternative. We describe these criteria in
more detail below. With respect to the
comments about a budget neutrality
adjustment to account for potential
improvements in documentation and
coding, we discuss the comments and
our responses on this issue more fully
in the next section of this final rule. The
comment about the availability of the
GROUPER is related to a number of
detailed comments we received about
the potential for Medicare to adopt a
proprietary DRG system. We have
provided a more detailed description of
these comments and our responses
below. With respect to the comment
about fully utilizing all of the diagnosis
and procedure codes submitted on the
claim, we note that CMS does not
process codes submitted electronically
on the 837i electronic format beyond the
first 9 diagnosis codes and the first 6
procedure codes. While HIPAA requires
CMS to accept up to 25 ICD–9–CM
diagnosis and procedure codes on the
HIPAA 837i electronic format, it does
not require that CMS process that many
diagnosis and procedure codes. As
suggested by the commenters, there may
be value in retaining additional data on
patient conditions that would result
from expanding Medicare’s data system
so it can accommodate additional
diagnosis and procedure codes. We will
consider this issue while we
contemplate refinements to our DRG
system to better recognize patient
severity. However, extensive lead time
is required to allow for modifications to
our internal and contractors’ electronic
systems in order to process and store
this additional information. We are
unable to move forward with this
recommendation without carefully
evaluating implementation issues. One
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47910
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
issue that we expect to consider in
deciding whether to adopt such a major
systems change is how frequently
information beyond the ninth diagnosis
code and sixth procedure code affects
DRG assignment. Given the cost of an
infrastructure change to accommodate
this request, we want to be certain that
there are sufficient benefits to justify the
costs. Again, we will continue to
carefully evaluate this request to expand
the process capacity of our systems.
Comment: Some commenters stated
that the CS DRG grouping methodology
based on average charges is inconsistent
with the proposed changes to adopt cost
relative weights. The commenters
recommended using the HSRVcc
methodology to determine cost-based
weights for consolidating the APR DRGs
into CS DRGs.
Response: As explained above, we are
not adopting the HSRVcc methodology
for FY 2007 because of our concerns
about the interaction of charge
compression with the hospital-specific
portion of the cost weight methodology.
Instead, we are setting relative weights
based on the estimated cost of the DRGs
where cost is determined by applying
the national average CCRs to the
standardized charges for each DRG in
each of the 13 cost centers. In general,
when we consider whether to further
distinguish types of cases within a DRG
in order to create a new DRG or to
reassign these cases to a different DRG,
we are comparing cases that are
clinically similar. Therefore, it is
possible or even likely that these cases
will be using the same mix of routine
and ancillary services and the results of
the analysis will be similar whether the
cases are compared based on average
costs or charges. That is, the cases will
be using services that have comparable
charge markups over costs and the
analysis will produce the same
conclusion whether the comparison
between cases is based on costs or
charges. The major differences between
cost and charge weights will occur
when comparing across clinically
dissimilar services that use a different
mix of routine and ancillary services
with variable markups. For this reason,
we believe that we can continue to do
our initial evaluation of potential DRG
changes using average charges. Given
the complexity associated with
developing cost-based weights, we
believe our preliminary analysis for
evaluating whether to make a DRG
change should use charges as a proxy
for costs. However, we will consider the
commenters’ suggestion and, to the
extent feasible, consider whether it is
possible to evaluate potential DRG
changes using costs as well as charges.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Comment: Numerous comments
expressed concerns about the use of a
proprietary DRG classification system.
The commenters indicated that the
current DRG GROUPER logic has been
in the public domain since the
inception of the IPPS. Many
commenters noted that the source code,
logic and documentation for the current
DRG system can be purchased through
the National Technical Information
Service. The commenters stressed the
importance of maintaining transparency
within the DRG system (that is, any new
DRG system should be available to the
public on the same terms as the current
one). The commenters stated that any
methodology used for the Medicare
GROUPER must not be based on a
proprietary system. One commenter
questioned how future DRG refinements
would be made if the underlying system
is owned by 3M.
A number of commenters were
concerned that it was not possible to
thoroughly analyze the proposed CS
DRGs and provide comments without
the GROUPER logic. Other commenters
stated that limited information on the
proposed CS DRGs hampered their
ability to conduct modeling of the new
system. Some commenters raised
serious concerns allowing CMS to
assign the CS DRG without hospitals
having the ability to group the case
themselves. According to the
commenters, without the CS DRG
information, revenue and patient
receivables cannot be recorded
accurately. The commenters stated that
hospitals must have the ability to
accurately estimate payments in
evaluating strategic initiatives, business
plans, budgets, marketing, staffing, and
other critical decisions. Commenters
noted that CMS provided a link to a web
tool on the 3M Web site that allowed
hospitals to conduct their own analyses
of the impact of moving to CS DRGs.
However, these commenters stated that
the reality was that if a hospital does not
have its own APR DRG GROUPER
software, it can only obtain CS DRG
information one case at a time by
entering specific diagnostic and
procedure codes.
Several commenters stated that if CS
DRGs are adopted and the GROUPER
remains proprietary, they would be
limited in their ability to educate and
assist hospitals in use of the new
system. One commenter indicated that
the current 3M product is proprietary
and not available in the public domain
for hospitals or their software vendors
who develop and support their patient
account billing and case management
software. The commenter also stated
that it does not have any access to the
PO 00000
Frm 00042
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
underlying codes, conditions and edits
utilized by 3M with its product and as
a result could not accurately comment
on the interaction between severity and
complexity associated with individual
claims in contrast to resource
consumption. The commenter stated
that, although hospitals are not required
to have a GROUPER, hospitals that hold
compliance as a top priority rely on a
grouper/encoder to ensure that claims
meet all edits prior to submission.
Several commenters stated that a
single company’s monopoly over the
DRG system would be costly to
hospitals. The commenters indicated
that it would be more difficult to obtain
the system to integrate it into hospitals’
existing systems. The commenters
reported that Maryland hospitals report
a GROUPER price of $20,000 per
hospital with the ultimate price varying
based on criteria such as whether it is
used on a mainframe or personal
computer. Another commenter
expressed concerns that only 3M would
be providing access to the GROUPER.
The commenter stated that with over
4,000 hospitals requiring a new severityadjusted DRG GROUPER, it is not
feasible or reasonable to expect that one
vendor could service all the hospitals
nationally in the few months between
the posting of the final IPPS rule and an
October 1, 2006 implementation. The
commenter stated that having 3M
maintain control of the GROUPER
software limits access by other software
vendors to begin reprogramming of the
many computer systems that would
need to be loaded with the CS DRGs that
is currently incompatible with the CMS
DRGs. The commenter stated that there
will need to be sufficient time between
making the GROUPER available and
implementation so that hospitals can
test their systems, and study the impact
on their facilities.
Another commenter stated that it
offered software that hospitals and
health plans utilize in managing the
billing, coding, and payment for
inpatient hospital services under the
DRGs. The development of software
related to Medicare’s DRG system by
private companies is possible only
because the current DRG methodology is
available in the public domain. The
commenter also noted that the public
can obtain full access to the details
underlying the CMS DRG system by
purchasing information and software
from the National Technical Information
Service for a nominal charge in a timely
manner well in advance of the
implementation of changes. The
commenter noted the information was
available to all of the public
simultaneously and no company
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
currently has a competitive advantage in
producing DRG products. The
commenter added that CMS currently
engages in an open and comprehensive
discussion about the structure of the
DRG methodology through a variety of
mechanisms including notices
published in the Federal Register. CMS
releases sufficient detail about its
methodology in electronic formats to
enable providers, health plans, and
vendors to develop and validate their
own computer programs. The
commenter expressed concern that
unfettered access to the underpinnings
of the DRG system would not continue
to be available under the CMS proposal
to adopt CS DRGs. The commenter
suggested the following criteria that a
new DRG system should meet in order
to be adopted by Medicare:
• Software distribution comparable to
what is currently made available, which
includes:
• GROUPER source code which
produces all pertinent return
information;
• All underlying tables that drive the
GROUPER with documentation;
• A complete set of test cases to
validate the functioning of the software;
• Complete system and user
documentation;
• Contact people who can and will
respond to questions in a timely
fashion;
• The right to redistribute the
methodology to business partners and
consultants;
• The right to translate source code to
other technology environments and to
integrate it into other systems;
• Pre-releases of software and
documentation well in advance of
planned implementations; and
• An open inclusive process for
considering future enhancements.
The commenter indicated that the
agency must also ensure that whatever
refinement methodology is adopted is
open to public discussion and scrutiny,
now and on an ongoing basis. The
commenter stated that transparency is
critical to advancing affordability in our
health care system.
Response: With respect to making
information available for the public to
analyze the proposed DRGs, we were
cognizant of this issue and attempted to
provide as much information as possible
that would allow the public an
opportunity to comment meaningfully
on the proposed CS DRGs. We provided
the following data files on the CMS Web
site at no cost to the public to assist with
understanding our proposed rule:
• Provider Specific File.
• Impact file for IPPS FY 2007
Proposed Rule.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
• CCRs and Weighting Factors.
• DRG Relative Weights.
• CS DRG HSRVcc relative weights.
• CAH List for FY 2007 Proposed
Rule.
In addition to this information, we
made available for purchase both the FY
2004 and FY 2005 MedPAR data that
were used in simulating the policies in
the IPPS proposed rule. We also
discussed the proposed rule in at least
two national teleconferences that were
open to the public. One of these calls
was a Special Hospital Open Door call
that was scheduled for 1 and 1⁄2 hours
and was completely devoted to
explaining the IPPS proposed rule and
answering questions from the public.
There were over 1,100 calls into this
national teleconference. Finally, we
were able to provide access to a Web
tool on 3M’s Web site that would allow
an end user to build case examples
using the proposed CS DRGs. While the
commenters are correct that these case
examples could only be analyzed one at
a time, the tool did provide a detailed
explanation of how the severity of
illness was assigned and the
demographic and diagnostic
information that went into that
determination. Further, other
information about the CS DRGs and
APR DRGs were available at that Web
site, including access to the APR DRG
definitions manual.
We acknowledge the many comments
suggesting that the logic of Medicare’s
DRG system should continue to remain
in the public domain as it has since the
inception of PPS. We also acknowledge
the commenters’ concern about the
impact of moving to a proprietary
system and the potential for limiting
public access to the underlying
GROUPER logic relative to the current
CMS DRGs. We note that the issues
associated with using a proprietary DRG
system were well illustrated in a public
comment that we received from the
Maryland Health Services Cost Review
Commission (HSCRC). Maryland
adopted the APR DRGs in June 2004.
The commenter noted that ‘‘despite the
advance notice, a number of hospitals
had not acquired the APR DRG
GROUPER until near the time for full
implementation to begin. In addition to
acquiring the GROUPER, hospitals had
to deal with issues of integrating the
GROUPER with other hospital systems,
which was at times difficult with
proprietary systems.’’ The commenter
further noted that Maryland has 47
acute care hospitals and ‘‘moving the
nation’s entire hospital industry to a
new system in a short period is likely
to be much more difficult.’’ The
commenter indicated that ‘‘CMS has the
PO 00000
Frm 00043
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47911
opportunity to avoid some of the
transition issues the HSCRC faced by
placing the CS DRG logic in the public
domain or by requiring open licensing
of the GROUPER at reasonable rates.’’
The commenter noted that consultants
and vendors to hospitals have struggled
to obtain access to the GROUPER as
they advised their clients.
The public comments and Maryland’s
experience with APR DRGs have led to
many commenters recommending that
Medicare should adopt a new DRG
system that is in the public domain. As
we evaluate alternative severity
classification systems, we will use
public access to the system as an
important element in evaluating
whether each system can be adopted by
Medicare. We will continue to strive to
promote transparency in our decision
making as well as in future payment and
classification systems, as we have done
in the past.
Comment: A number of commenters
suggested that a more straightforward
approach to achieving the same or
similar objective would be for CMS to
refine the current DRG classification
system by retaining the current base
DRGs (eliminating the current paired
DRGs with and without CC) and adding
3–4 levels of severity, rather than using
APR DRGs. This option would preserve
the many policy decisions that CMS has
made over the last 20 years that are
already incorporated into the DRG
system and yet adjust hospital payments
to reflect the cost of care based on
patient needs and conditions. Other
commenters suggested designating
certain DRGs as device-dependent to
ensure that device costs are
appropriately reflected in the claims file
data. Some commenters suggested that
CMS retain the current DRG system but
revise the CC list as an alternative
approach to better recognizing severity
of illness in the DRG system.
Several commenters stated that CMS
did not conduct an objective study of
the CS DRGs although alternatives for
the APR DRG system are readily
available. These commenters asked
whether CMS considered adopting an
alternative DRG system that could also
better recognize severity.
Two commenters proposed alternative
severity of illness systems to the APR
DRG system. One commenter suggested
that we use the Refined DRG (RDRG)
severity of illness system which is
supported by Health Systems
Consultants, Inc, that contains 1,274
groups with 350 base DRGs. The
commenter explained that each of the
medical base DRGs is divided into three
severity classes and each of the surgical
base DRGs is divided into four severity
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47912
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
classes. In addition, there are neonate
groups based on birth weight, seven
DRGs that do not have severity classes
and an early death group in each MDC
created to remove low outliers
according to the commenter. The
commenter noted that the research for
the RDRG system was undertaken
between 1986 and 1989 under a Health
Care Financing Administration (now
CMS) cooperative agreement. The
commenter indicated that the RDRG
system has been updated annually using
the current CMS complications and
comorbidities list since 1989. Solucient,
LLC has also used the previous HCFA
DRG severity work to develop a risk
adjusted DRG system which they refer
to as Refined Diagnosis Related Group
(R–DRG). Solucient also reports that
they have updated their system
annually with ICD–9–CM code changes.
Another commenter noted that HSS/
Ingenix has developed an all-payer
severity-adjusted DRG system (APS–
DRGs) which contains 1,130 case-mix
cells with 376 consolidated DRGs plus
2 error categories. The commenter
indicated that, outside of MDC 15, all
consolidated DRGs are divided
uniformly into three severity levels. The
commenter also indicated that the
number of severity levels within MDC
15 depends upon the consolidated DRG
in the APS–DRG system.
One commenter stated that based on
their analysis none of the off-the-shelf
Version 23 DRG systems is the best
alternative. Rather, it was recommended
that a hybrid system be created which
would combine the best features of each
system. The commenter stated that the
proposed CS DRG system or the current
CMS DRG system would be the
preferred systems to modify. One
commenter stated that the use of
objective, physiologic data on admission
to enhance claims data significantly
improves the accuracy of any severity
stratification. The commenter suggested
that CMS conduct one or more
demonstration projects studying claims
data enhanced with objective, timestamped electronically captured
laboratory results as an alternative
approach for severity adjustment for
payment and quality assessment
purposes.
Response: The approach suggested in
the comments to incorporating severity
measures into the current CMS DRG
system may be a viable option that we
will evaluate in the coming year. With
respect to the comment that we
undertake demonstration projects to
study alternative ways of better
recognizing severity in the DRG system,
we are concerned that such an endeavor
could not be completed in time for FY
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
2008 implementation. We believe it is
very important to make improvements
to the DRG system to better recognize
severity rapidly and there are a number
of different ways that improvements in
payment accuracy can be achieved
without undertaking a lengthy
demonstration project. As suggested by
the commenters, much research has
already been completed on alternative
DRG systems. We believe it is likely that
at least one of these systems (or
potentially a system that we develop
ourselves based on our own prior
research) will be suitable to achieve our
goal of improvements in payment
accuracy by FY2008. We are currently
in the process of engaging a research
contractor to evaluate the 3M Severity of
Illness DRG products along with the
other DRG severity systems that have
come to our attention during the
comment process.
As indicated above, we will use
public access to the system as an
important element in evaluating
whether each system can be adopted by
Medicare. With respect to the CS DRGs
and potentially the other systems
described in the public comments, there
may be licensing issues. We proposed to
use the CS DRGs beginning in FY 2008.
While they were developed under a
contract with the Federal government,
the CS DRGs are essentially a variant of
the APR DRGs that are copyrighted by
3M. The APS–DRGs are a proprietary
product owned by HSS/Ingenix, a
division of United Health Care.
However, HSS/Ingenix has indicated
that, should we decide to adopt their
product, it would make its DRG system
available to the public under the same
terms as the current CMS DRGs (that is,
the source code, logic and
documentation can be purchased
through the National Technical
Information Service). The RDRG system
is supported by Health Systems
Consultants.
There are other issues of note with
respect to the DRG systems mentioned
in the comments and Medicare’s efforts
to adopt a DRG system that better
recognizes severity. In the late 1980’s,
CMS (then HCFA) funded a Yale
University contract for the development
of refined severity DRGs. The severity
DRGs developed under this contract
formed the basis for most of the severity
DRG systems available today, including
the Ingenix APS–DRGs, the 3M APR
DRGs, the Health Systems Consultants
RDRGs and the Australian government’s
AR–DRGs. In the mid-1990’s, CMS (then
HCFA) also adapted the Yale system
and developed a potential severity DRG
system, which was described in the
PO 00000
Frm 00044
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Health Care Financing Review.8
Although the APR DRGs have departed
from the Yale approach to a greater
extent than have the other systems, both
the 3M product and the APS–DRGs
were derived from the 1989 Yale
severity system that is in the public
domain. Given that the Yale system is
in the public domain and CMS
considered adopting a severity DRG
system based on it in the mid 1990’s, we
will also consider updating our prior
work part of our initiative to identify
and implement a severity DRG system
for use by Medicare in FY 2008.
Consistent with the sentiment expressed
in the public comments, this option
would have the advantage of using the
current DRGs as a starting point and
retaining the benefit of the many DRG
decisions we have made in recent years.
The DRG system we considered in the
mid-1990’s used a base DRG with 3
levels of severity depending upon
whether the patient had no CC, a CC, or
a major CC. During this past winter,
CMS began a comprehensive review of
over 13,000 diagnosis codes to
determine whether they should be
classified as CCs when present as a
secondary diagnosis. Under this option,
we could continue this review of the CC
list, classifying them into one of the
three categories described above in
conjunction with updating the severity
DRG system that we considered in mid1990’s.
c. Changes to CMI From a New DRG
System
After the 1983 implementation of the
IPPS DRG classification system, CMS
observed unanticipated growth in
inpatient hospital case-mix (the average
relative weight of all inpatient hospital
cases) that is used as proxy
measurement for severity of illness.
There are three factors that determine
changes in a hospital’s CMI:
(1) Admitting and treating a more
resource intensive patient-mix (due, for
example, to technical changes that allow
treatment of previously untreatable
conditions and/or an aging population);
(2) Providing services (such as higher
cost surgical treatments, medical
devices, and imaging services) on an
inpatient basis that previously were
more commonly furnished in an
outpatient setting; and
(3) Changes in documentation (more
complete medical records) and coding
practice (more accurate and complete
coding of the information contained in
the medical record).
8 Edwards, Nancy et al., ‘‘Refinement of Medicare
Diagnosis Related Groups to Incorporate a Measure
of Severity,’’Health Care Financing Review, Winter
1994, pages 45–64.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Changes in CMI as a result of
improved documentation and coding do
not represent real increases in
underlying resource demands. For the
implementation of the IPPS in 1983,
improved documentation and coding
were found to be the primary cause in
the underprojection of CMI increases,
accounting for as much as 2 percent in
the annual rate of CMI growth observed
post-PPS.9
We believe that adoption of CS DRGs
would create a risk of increased
aggregate levels of payment as a result
of increased documentation and coding.
MedPAC notes that ‘‘refinements in
DRG definitions have sometimes led to
substantial unwarranted increases in
payments to hospitals, reflecting more
complete reporting of patients’
diagnoses and procedures.’’ MedPAC
further notes that ‘‘refinements to the
DRG definitions and weights would
substantially strengthen providers’
incentives to accurately report patients’
comorbidities and complications.’’ To
address this issue, MedPAC
recommended that the Secretary
‘‘project the likely effect of reporting
improvements on total payments and
make an offsetting adjustment to the
national average base payment
amounts.’’ 10
The Secretary has broad discretion
under section 1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the
Act to adjust the standardized amount
so as to eliminate the effect of changes
in coding or classification of discharges
that do not reflect real changes in casemix. While we modeled the changes to
the DRG system and relative weights for
the proposed rule to ensure budget
neutrality, we are concerned that the
large increase in the number of DRGs
will provide opportunities for hospitals
to do more accurate documentation and
coding of information contained in the
medical record. Coding that has no
effect on payment under the current
DRG system may result in a case being
assigned to a higher paid DRG under a
system that better recognizes severity.
Thus, more accurate and complete
documentation and coding may occur
under a DRG system that better
recognizes severity because it will result
in higher payments than the current
CMS DRGs. In the FY2007 IPPS
proposed rule, we solicited comments
on this issue.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that CMS should delay implementation
of the proposed changes to the DRG
9 Carter, Grace M. and Ginsburg, Paul: The
Medicare Case Mix Index Increase, Medical Practice
Changes, Aging and DRG Creep, Rand, 1985.
10 Medicare Payment Advisory Commission:
Report to Congress on Physician-Owned Specialty
Hospitals, March 2005, p. 42.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
system until it conducts nationwide
coding and documentation education,
particularly to physicians. The
commenter also suggested that CMS
should find a method to provide
physicians who practice in hospitals
with web-based documentation training
and incentives document correctly.
Response: The proposed CS DRG
system is based on the reporting of
current ICD–9–CM diagnosis and
procedure codes. The proposed changes
do not require any changes for hospitals
or physicians in how they code or
document information in the medical
record. For this reason, we do not
believe there is a need for any changes
to education and training that occurs
with respect to documentation and
coding.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern that the proposed
rule did not provide any type of analysis
to justify or support the need for an
adjustment to the IPPS rates for
anticipated changes in case mix from a
new DRG system. These commenters
noted that CMS did not provide a
specific adjustment amount in the
proposed rule. The commenters stated
their view that it is the responsibility of
CMS to provide adequate notice and the
opportunity for meaningful public
comments in response to such a specific
proposal before any adjustment can be
applied. One commenter recognized
that CMS is authorized to make
adjustments for changes in coding that
are likely to occur. However, absent
strong evidence, they urged CMS to
avoid making negative adjustments to
the standardized amount for anticipated
increases in case mix. Another
commenter provided two suggestions to
CMS. The first suggestion was for CMS
to share its thought process on how the
standardized amount would be adjusted
and allow the public an opportunity to
provide comments on this basic set of
criteria. The second suggestion was that
CMS should make a commitment to
adjust future base payment levels if it is
determined that the initial adjustment
projections are inaccurate. Another
commenter stated that any adjustment
to the standardized amount in an
attempt to account for increased
documentation and coding is
unnecessary and unwarranted. The
commenter asserted that it is virtually
impossible to objectively distinguish
real changes in case mix from those that
occur due to improved coding and
documentation. This commenter stated
claims are coded using the official
coding guidelines that are the same
regardless of the DRG system being
used. Another commenter requested
that CMS not overestimate the growth in
PO 00000
Frm 00045
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47913
CMI as a result of improved coding.
This commenter asserted there are many
needs for accurate data collection in a
hospital setting and coders do not stop
reviewing a medical record after
locating the first CC that assigns the
patient to a higher weighted DRG. The
commenter maintained that several
hospitals ask coders to assign codes to
many of the non-invasive procedures
that do not affect DRG assignment. This
same commenter also stated they
believe the increase in CMI will not be
as significant as CMS anticipates.
One commenter representing the State
of Maryland shared the state’s
experience with case mix index changes
after adoption of the APR DRG system.
The commenter stated correct coding
resulting in maximum reimbursement
under the CMS DRGs could understate
a hospital’s case mix under the APR
DRGs. Facilities that have tried to
improve their coding productivity by
seeking to maximize reimbursement
under Medicare may not obtain an
accurate representation of its patient’s
severity of illness under APR DRGs.
According to the commenter, hospitals
have a financial incentive to improve
their clinical documentation and to
code more completely when APR DRGs
(or CS DRGs which are based on APR
DRGs) are used for reimbursement.
The commenter also indicated that
case mix growth exceeded four percent
for the State’s hospitals on average, as
they began to prepare for the full
transition to APR DRGs. Case mix
growth in this current fiscal year is
about the same. As such, the State has
established a policy for FY 2006,
limiting the amount of case mix growth
experienced for each hospital until the
coding patterns become stable. In
addition, an appeals process for
hospitals with services that generate
rising case mix growth due to
complexity has also been established.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ concerns and feedback
regarding potential adjustments to the
national standardized amount to
account for improvements in
documentation and coding that may
cause the case-mix index to increase
absent real case-mix growth. The
commenters are correct that we did not
propose a specific adjustment for
improved documentation and coding.
As stated in the proposed rule, we were
soliciting comments on the possibility
of changes in the case mix index as a
result of the increase in the number of
DRGs within the proposed CS DRGs. We
will continue to analyze this issue as we
evaluate alternative DRG systems that
may better recognize severity of illness
for implementation in FY 2008. We
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47914
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
acknowledge the commenters’ request to
provide an opportunity for public
comment before CMS adopts a specific
adjustment to the standardized amounts
for improved documentation and
coding. As stated earlier, we intend to
propose further changes to better
recognize severity in the DRG system for
FY 2008. If we decide to make an
adjustment to the standardized amount
to account for improvements in
documentation and coding, we will
provide the specific level adjustment
and the data and analysis underlying it
in a proposed rule that will allow for an
opportunity for public comment.
We disagree with the commenters that
suggested there is no need for an
adjustment to the IPPS standardized
amounts to account for improvements in
documentation that increase case mix
and, therefore, payments. As presented
above and in the proposed rule,
Medicare’s experience since the original
inception of the IPPS and long-standing
research provide substantiation that
improvements in documentation and
coding that increase case-mix and
payment will occur when the
opportunity arises through the
expansion of the DRG system. Further,
the comment representing the State of
Maryland made clear that when CS
DRGs ‘‘are used for reimbursement,
hospitals have the financial incentive to
improve their clinical documentation
and to code administrative records more
completely.’’ 11 MedPAC also noted that
‘‘adopting our recommended
refinements to the DRG definitions and
weights would substantially strengthen
providers’ incentives to accurately
report patients’ comorbidities and
complications.’’ 12
Comment: One commenter stated that,
in its experience, a change to the
severity of illness grouping logic will
result in an increase to the rate of
change in case-mix. Because any effect
will not be revenue neutral, the
commenter questioned if and how CMS
intends to address the change in casemix, for example, regulating the change
or setting a cap for hospitals. The
commenter indicated that case-mix
could rapidly decline as well as rapidly
increase at the hospital-specific level
and asked if CMS had a mechanism to
address that issue, as well. The
commenter also recommended that
hospitals with improved case mix due
to improved coding accuracy and
internal documentation should be
entitled to the full CMI benefit.
11 Redmon, Patrick, D., Comment Letter to CMS
on the FY 2007 IPPS Proposed Rule, June 12, 2006.
12 MedPAC, p. 42.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s concern and agree that the
severity of illness grouping logic will
affect case-mix. Also, we have known
since the development of a PPS for
capital payments that changes in casemix affect capital payments to certain
hospitals as much, or more than,
operating payments. However, we do
not know, at this point, the extent and
direction of the impact to case-mix that
the severity of illness grouping logic
would have, or how rapidly the changes
to case-mix would occur. When a
decision is made regarding
implementing the severity logic, we will
be carefully scrutinizing the data and a
myriad of variables to ascertain its effect
and whether or not adjustments or
interventions are necessary.
4. Effect of CS DRGs on the Outlier
Threshold
In its March 2005 Report to Congress
on Physician-Owned Specialty
Hospitals, MedPAC recommended that
Congress amend the law to give the
Secretary authority to adjust the DRG
relative weights to account for the
differences in the prevalence of highcost outlier cases. MedPAC
recommended DRG-specific outlier
thresholds that would be financed by
each DRG rather than through an acrossthe-board adjustment to the
standardized amounts. Furthermore, in
comments that MedPAC submitted
during the comment period for the FY
2006 IPPS proposed rule, MedPAC
stated its belief that the current policy
makes DRGs with a high prevalence of
outliers profitable for two reasons: 1)
These DRGs receive more in outlier
payments than the 5.1 percent that is
removed from the national standardized
amount; and 2) the relative weight
calculation results in these DRGs being
overvalued because of the high
standardized charges of outlier cases.
MedPAC also noted that, under its
recommendations, outlier thresholds in
each DRG would reduce the distortion
in the relative weights that comes from
including the outlier cases in the
calculation of the weight and would
correct the differences in profitability
that stem from using a uniform outlier
offset for all cases. MedPAC added that
its recommendation would help make
relative profitability more uniform
across all DRGs.
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47481), we responded to MedPAC’s
recommendation on outliers by noting
that a change in policy to replace the 5.1
percent offset to the standardized
amount would require a change in law.
However, because the Secretary has
broad discretion to consider all factors
PO 00000
Frm 00046
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
that change the relative use of hospital
resources in the calculation of the DRG
relative weights, we stated we would
consider changes that would reduce or
eliminate the effect of high-cost outliers
on the DRG relative weights. At this
time, we have not completed a detailed
analysis of MedPAC’s outlier
recommendation because we do not
have the authority to adopt such a
change under current law. Instead, we
have focused our resources on analyzing
MedPAC’s recommendations with
respect to adopting severity DRGs and
calculating cost-based HSRV weights
that can be adopted without a change in
law. While we intend to study
MedPAC’s recommendation in more
detail at a future date, we note that
changes to the DRG system that better
recognize severity would have
important implications for the outlier
threshold. In the proposed rule, we
analyzed how the outlier threshold
would be affected by adopting the CS
DRGs.
Using FY 2004 Medicare charge data,
3M Health Information Systems
simulated the effect of adopting CS
DRGs in conjunction with HSRVcc
weights (described) on the FY 2006
outlier threshold using the same
estimation parameters used by CMS in
the FY 2006 final rule (that is, the
charge inflation factor of 14.94 percent)
(70 FR 47494). Under these
assumptions, 3M Health Information
Systems estimated that the outlier
threshold would be reduced from
$23,600 under the current system to
$18,758 under the CS DRGs with
HSRVcc weights. By increasing the
number of DRGs to better recognize
severity, the DRG system itself would
provide better recognition for cases that
are currently paid as outliers. That is,
many cases that are high-cost outlier
cases under the current DRG system
would be paid using a severity of illness
subclass 3 or 4 under the CS DRGs and
could potentially be paid as nonoutlier
cases.
Comment: Some commenters noted
that there was only a limited discussion
of the CS DRGs’ effect on the outlier
threshold and no information about
application of the postacute care
transfer payment policy. Some
commenters inquired how policy areas
such as outliers and new technology
will be affected by the proposed DRG
changes.
Response: We will consider further
the application of the postacute care
transfer payment policy as we make
changes to the DRG system. With
respect to outliers, we discussed this
issue in the proposed rule. We noted
that better recognition of severity in the
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
DRG system will result in some cases
that are currently paid as outliers
becoming nonoutliers. Under current
law, we are required to establish an
estimated outlier threshold so that
between 5 and 6 percent of estimated
IPPS payments are made as outlier
payments. Our longstanding policy has
been to set the outlier threshold so that
estimated outlier payments equal 5.1
percent of estimated IPPS payments. If
we were to continue this longstanding
policy, we would expect DRG
refinements that better recognize
severity to lead to a reduction in the
outlier threshold. In the proposed rule,
using the same data and assumptions
used for the FY 2006 final rule, we
estimated that adoption of the CS DRGs
would reduce the outlier threshold from
$23,600 to $18,758.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS continue to
provide the additional payment for
blood clotting factor administered to
hemophiliac inpatients in the future
even if severity-adjusted DRGs are
implemented.
Response: Section 1886(a)(4) of the
Act excludes the costs of administering
blood clotting factors to inpatients with
hemophilia from the definition of
‘‘operating costs of inpatient hospital
services.’’ Therefore, under the statute,
payment for blood clotting factor
provided to hemophiliac inpatients is
not included in Medicare’s IPPS
payment and is paid separately. For this
reason, we will continue to apply
Medicare’s policy of paying separately
for blood clotting factor provided to
hemophiliac inpatients.
5. Impact of Refinement of DRG System
on Payments
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24020), using the FY 2004 MedPAR
claims data, we simulated the payment
impacts of moving to the CS DRG
GROUPER and the alternative HSRVcc
method for developing HSRV weights.
These payment simulations did not
make any adjustments for changes in
coding or case-mix. For purposes of this
analysis, estimated payments were held
budget neutral to estimated FY 2006
payments because we have a statutory
requirement to make any changes to the
weights or GROUPER budget neutral.
Based on the results of this impact
analysis, in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule, we proposed to adopt both the
HSRVcc weighting methodology for FY
2007 and the CS DRGs for FY 2008.
Later in the proposed rule (71 FR 24028)
and in the Appendix A—Regulatory
Impact Analysis (71 FR 24404), we
modeled the effect of only adopting
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Title
14 ...
75 ...
76 ...
79 ...
87 ...
88 ...
89 ...
104
105
110
113
121
124
125
127
138
143
144
174
182
188
210
277
296
316
320
493
497
515
541
INTRACRANIAL HEMORRHAGE OR CEREBRAL INFARCTION .................................
MAJOR CHEST PROCEDURES ....................................................................................
OTHER RESP SYSTEM O.R. PROCEDURES W CC ...................................................
RESPIRATORY INFECTIONS & INFLAMMATIONS AGE >17 W CC ...........................
PULMONARY EDEMA & RESPIRATORY FAILURE .....................................................
CHRONIC OBSTRUCTIVE PULMONARY DISEASE .....................................................
SIMPLE PNEUMONIA & PLEURISY AGE >17 W CC ...................................................
CARDIAC VALVE & OTH MAJOR CARDIOTHORACIC PROC W CARD CATH .........
CARDIAC VALVE & OTH MAJOR CARDIOTHORACIC PROC W/O CARD CATH ......
MAJOR CARDIOVASCULAR PROCEDURES W CC ....................................................
AMPUTATION FOR CIRC SYSTEM DISORDERS EXCEPT UPPER LIMB & TOE .....
CIRCULATORY DISORDERS W AMI & MAJOR COMP, DISCHARGED ALIVE ..........
CIRCULATORY DISORDERS EXCEPT AMI, W CARD CATH & COMPLEX DIAG .....
CIRCULATORY DISORDERS EXCEPT AMI, W CARD CATH W/O COMPLEX DIAG
HEART FAILURE & SHOCK ...........................................................................................
CARDIAC ARRHYTHMIA & CONDUCTION DISORDERS W CC .................................
CHEST PAIN ...................................................................................................................
OTHER CIRCULATORY SYSTEM DIAGNOSES W CC ................................................
G.I. HEMORRHAGE W CC .............................................................................................
ESOPHAGITIS, GASTROENT & MISC DIGEST DISORDERS AGE >17 W CC ..........
OTHER DIGESTIVE SYSTEM DIAGNOSES AGE >17 W CC ......................................
HIP & FEMUR PROCEDURES EXCEPT MAJOR JOINT AGE >17 W CC ...................
CELLULITIS AGE >17 W CC ..........................................................................................
NUTRITIONAL & MISC METABOLIC DISORDERS AGE >17 W CC ............................
RENAL FAILURE .............................................................................................................
KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT INFECTIONS AGE >17 W CC .......................................
LAPAROSCOPIC CHOLECYSTECTOMY W/O C.D.E. W CC .......................................
SPINAL FUSION EXCEPT CERVICAL W CC ................................................................
CARDIAC DEFIBRILLATOR IMPLANT W/O CARDIAC CATH ......................................
ECMO OR TRACH W MV 96+HRS OR PDX EXC FACE, MOUTH & NECK W MAJ
O.R..
TRACH W MV 96+HRS OR PDX EXC FACE, MOUTH & NECK W/O MAJ O.R. ........
MAJOR JOINT REPLACEMENT OR REATTACHMENT OF LOWER EXTREMITY .....
REVISION OF HIP OR KNEE REPLACEMENT .............................................................
542
544
545
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
HSRVcc relative weights using the FY
2005 MedPAR claims data applying the
traditional statutory budget neutrality
requirements.
For reasons described in more detail
above, we are adopting cost-based
weights in this final rule. However, we
are not adopting our proposal to
standardize charges on MedPAR claims
using HSRVs until we further research
issues related to charge compression.
Further, as described in more detail
above, we are modifying our proposed
plan to adopt the CS DRG system for FY
2008. Rather, we will evaluate the CS
DRGs along with the other DRG severity
systems that have come to our attention
during the comment process and
consider updating the work we did to
develop a severity DRG system in the
mid-1990’s before adopting a system
that better recognizes severity for FY
2008.
In the proposed rule, we presented
the impact of the proposed changes on
specific high volume DRGs. For
comparison purposes, in the following
table we are showing the percent
changes in weight for these DRGs
presented in the proposed rule and the
percent changes in weights for these
DRGs under the policies we are
finalizing in this rule:
Proposed
rule
(percent)
DRG
Frm 00047
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47915
Final rule (w/o
transition)
(percent)
Final rule (with
transition)
(percent)
3.8
1.4
¥3.4
7.6
10.9
8.3
9.7
¥11.0
¥7.2
¥5.4
5.0
4.7
¥19.7
¥28.9
2.8
2.7
¥10.5
4.2
11.2
5.6
5.7
3.8
15.2
10.6
8.3
10.9
¥4.0
¥13.4
¥20.6
3.6
1.8
0.0
¥1.7
2.0
0.0
1.8
2.1
¥3.1
¥2.3
¥3.3
3.4
0.7
¥9.3
¥14.6
3.7
2.5
¥6.2
2.2
2.9
¥1.1
1.0
2.2
9.1
5.3
3.7
5.3
¥4.6
0.5
0.3
¥2.9
0.6
0.0
¥0.6
0.7
0.0
0.6
0.7
¥1.0
¥0.8
¥1.1
1.1
0.2
¥3.1
¥4.9
1.2
0.8
¥2.1
0.7
1.0
¥0.4
0.3
0.7
3.0
1.8
1.2
1.8
¥1.5
0.2
0.1
¥1.0
8.4
¥3.7
¥5.8
¥0.8
2.6
1.8
¥0.3
0.9
0.6
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47916
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Proposed
rule
(percent)
DRG
Title
547
548
550
551
CORONARY BYPASS W CARDIAC CATH W MAJOR CV DX .....................................
CORONARY BYPASS W CARDIAC CATH W/O MAJOR CV DX .................................
CORONARY BYPASS W/O CARDIAC CATH W/O MAJOR CV DX .............................
PERMANENT CARDIAC PACEMAKER IMPL W MAJ CV DX OR AICD LEAD OR
GNRTR.
OTHER PERMANENT CARDIAC PACEMAKER IMPLANT W/O MAJOR CV DX ........
OTHER VASCULAR PROCEDURES W CC W MAJOR CV DX ...................................
OTHER VASCULAR PROCEDURES W CC W/O MAJOR CV DX ................................
PERCUTANEOUS CARDIOVASC PROC W NON-DRUG-ELUTING STENT W/O MAJ
CV DX.
PERCUTANEOUS CARDIOVASCULAR PROC W DRUG-ELUTING STENT W
MAJOR CV DX.
PERCUTANEOUS CARDIOVASCULAR PROC W DRUG-ELUTING STENT W/O
MAJ CV DX.
552
553
554
556
557
558
We received a number of comments,
which we discuss below, expressing
concern over the magnitude of the
changes we proposed to the relative
weight methodology and the effects on
the DRG weights. As shown in this table
above, the impact of the transitional cost
based weights computed without using
the HSRVcc method of standardization
is significantly less than the impacts
projected in the proposed rule. As a
further demonstration of the manner in
which our final policy mitigates the
impacts of the proposed rule, we are
presenting the following two tables
showing the number of DRGs
experiencing percent gains and losses in
their relative weights in the proposed
Final rule (w/o
transition)
(percent)
Final rule (with
transition)
(percent)
¥8.9
¥11.9
¥5.8
¥13.0
¥5.5
¥6.2
¥3.8
1.3
¥1.8
¥2.1
¥1.3
0.4
¥15.0
¥5.8
¥6.5
¥34.9
1.0
¥0.5
¥1.4
¥16.2
0.3
¥0.2
¥0.5
¥5.4
¥25.5
¥10.4
¥3.5
¥34.5
¥13.8
¥4.6
and final rules. We also are showing the
number of providers experiencing
percent gains and losses in case mix due
to the proposed and final changes. As
shown in the tables, the more extreme
percent changes are greatly reduced
with our final policies.
COMPARISON OF THE NUMBER OF DRGS EXPERIENCING PERCENT GAINS/LOSSES IN RELATIVE WEIGHTS IN THE
PROPOSED RULE RELATIVE TO THE FINAL RULE TRANSITION
Percent change in DRG weight
Final rule
(with transition)
Proposed rule
More than ¥10% .....................................................................................................................................
Between ¥5 and ¥10% .........................................................................................................................
Between ¥1 and ¥5% ...........................................................................................................................
Between ¥1 and +1% ............................................................................................................................
Between 1% and 5% ...............................................................................................................................
Between 5% and 10% .............................................................................................................................
More than +10% ......................................................................................................................................
32
42
49
42
111
97
153
0
1
78
308
130
12
7
COMPARISON OF THE NUMBER OF HOSPITALS EXPERIENCING PERCENT GAINS/LOSSES IN CASE-MIX INDEX IN THE
PROPOSED RULE RELATIVE TO THE FINAL RULE TRANSITION
Percent change in case-mix index
More than ¥10% .....................................................................................................................................
Between ¥5 and ¥10% .........................................................................................................................
Between ¥1 and ¥5% ...........................................................................................................................
Between ¥1 and +1% ............................................................................................................................
Between 1% and 5% ...............................................................................................................................
Between 5% and 10% .............................................................................................................................
More than +10% ......................................................................................................................................
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
For additional comparison purposes
between the proposed and final rule
relative weights and DRG changes, the
following table shows the estimated
payment impacts on case mix change by
hospital group that we projected for the
40
103
597
416
1493
794
79
All hospitals ..................................................................................................................................
By Geographic Location:
Urban hospitals ........................................................................................................................
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00048
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
0
0
30
2,067
1,450
28
20
proposed rule and also shows the
estimated payment impacts that we are
finalizing in this rule.
Proposed rule
Column 1
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Final rule
(with transition)
Proposed rule
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
Severity
changes in
DRGs
Severity DRG
changes &
cost weights
(with transition)
0.0
0.0
0.0
¥0.3
0.0
0.0
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Proposed rule
Column 1
Large urban areas (populations over 1 million) .......................................................................
Other urban areas (populations of 1 million or fewer) .............................................................
Rural hospitals .........................................................................................................................
Bed Size (Urban):
0–99 beds ................................................................................................................................
100–199 beds ..........................................................................................................................
200–299 beds ..........................................................................................................................
300–499 beds ..........................................................................................................................
500 or more beds .....................................................................................................................
Bed Size (Rural):
0–49 beds ................................................................................................................................
50–99 beds ..............................................................................................................................
100–149 beds ..........................................................................................................................
150–199 beds ..........................................................................................................................
200 or more beds .....................................................................................................................
Urban by Region:
New England ............................................................................................................................
Middle Atlantic ..........................................................................................................................
South Atlantic ...........................................................................................................................
East North Central ...................................................................................................................
East South Central ...................................................................................................................
West North Central ..................................................................................................................
West South Central ..................................................................................................................
Mountain ...................................................................................................................................
Pacific .......................................................................................................................................
Puerto Rico ..............................................................................................................................
Rural by Region:
New England ............................................................................................................................
Middle Atlantic ..........................................................................................................................
South Atlantic ...........................................................................................................................
East North Central ...................................................................................................................
East South Central ...................................................................................................................
West North Central ..................................................................................................................
West South Central ..................................................................................................................
Mountain ...................................................................................................................................
Pacific .......................................................................................................................................
By Payment Classification:
Urban hospitals ........................................................................................................................
Large urban areas (populations over 1 million) .......................................................................
Other urban areas (populations of 1 million or fewer) .............................................................
Rural areas ...............................................................................................................................
Teaching Status:
Non–teaching ...........................................................................................................................
Fewer than 100 Residents .......................................................................................................
100 or more Residents ............................................................................................................
Urban DSH:
Non–DSH .................................................................................................................................
100 or more beds .....................................................................................................................
Less than 100 beds .................................................................................................................
Rural DSH:
SCH ..........................................................................................................................................
RRC ..........................................................................................................................................
Other Rural: ..............................................................................................................................
100 or more beds .....................................................................................................................
Less than 100 beds .................................................................................................................
Urban teaching and DSH:
Both teaching and DSH ...........................................................................................................
Teaching and no DSH .............................................................................................................
No teaching and DSH ..............................................................................................................
No teaching and no DSH .........................................................................................................
Rural Hospital Types:
RRC ..........................................................................................................................................
SCH ..........................................................................................................................................
MDH .........................................................................................................................................
SCH and RRC ..........................................................................................................................
MDH and RRC .........................................................................................................................
Type of Ownership:
Voluntary ..................................................................................................................................
Proprietary ................................................................................................................................
Government ..............................................................................................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
18:47 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00049
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
Severity
changes in
DRGs
47917
Severity DRG
changes &
cost weights
(with transition)
0.1
¥0.9
2.7
0.0
0.0
¥0.1
0.1
¥0.2
0.2
0.5
1.8
0.0
¥1.1
¥1.5
0.3
0.0
¥0.1
0.0
0.0
0.1
0.3
¥0.1
0.1
¥0.2
5.5
4.3
2.8
1.0
¥0.2
¥0.1
¥0.2
–0.2
0.1
¥0.2
0.3
0.3
0.2
0.1
¥0.2
0.3
0.1
¥0.7
¥0.4
¥0.8
¥1.4
¥0.7
¥1.4
0.6
3.3
0.3
0.0
¥0.1
0.0
¥0.2
0.1
0.0
0.2
¥0.1
¥0.4
0.1
0.2
¥0.2
0.0
¥0.3
¥0.2
¥0.1
¥0.1
0.2
0.1
1.8
2.8
3.4
1.9
2.9
1.7
3.5
2.4
3.5
0.1
0.0
¥0.3
¥0.1
0.0
¥0.1
¥0.2
¥0.1
¥0.4
0.5
0.4
0.2
0.1
0.0
0.1
0.1
0.2
0.3
¥0.3
0.1
¥0.9
2.6
0.0
0.0
0.0
¥0.1
0.0
0.1
¥0.2
0.2
1.1
¥0.8
¥0.8
0.0
¥0.1
0.0
0.2
¥0.1
¥0.2
¥1.1
¥0.2
3.5
0.1
¥0.1
0.1
0.0
0.0
0.4
4.2
1.3
—0.2
¥0.1
0.2
0.0
4.2
5.5
0.1
¥0.1
0.3
0.2
¥0.6
¥1.7
1.1
¥1.0
0.0
0.1
0.0
0.1
¥0.1
¥0.1
0.2
0.0
4.8
0.9
3.9
5.1
1.0
0.1
0.0
¥0.3
¥0.1
¥0.3
0.3
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.0
¥0.3
0.2
1.3
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.1
0.0
18AUR2
47918
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Proposed rule
Column 1
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Medicare Utilization as a Percent of Inpatient Days:
0–25 .........................................................................................................................................
25–50 .......................................................................................................................................
50–65 .......................................................................................................................................
Over 65 ....................................................................................................................................
Hospitals Reclassified by the Medicare Geographic Classification Review Board:
FY 2005 Reclassifications:.
Urban Hospitals Reclassified by the Medicare Geographic Classification Review Board:
First Half FY 2007 Reclassifications ....................................................................................
Urban Nonreclassified, First Half FY 2007 ..............................................................................
All Urban Hospitals Reclassified Second Half FY 2007 ..........................................................
Urban Nonreclassified Hospitals Second Half FY 2007 ..........................................................
All Rural Hospitals Reclassified Second Half FY 2007 ...........................................................
Rural Nonreclassified Hospitals Second Half FY 2007 ...........................................................
All Section 401 Reclassified Hospitals ....................................................................................
Other Reclassified Hospitals (Section 1886(d)(8)(B)) .............................................................
Section 508 Hospitals ..............................................................................................................
Cardic Specialty Hospitals ...........................................................................................................
We are discussing specific comments
and responses relevant to our impact
analysis below. The changes that we are
adopting in this final rule are illustrated
in our regulatory impact analysis.
Comment: Some commenters
expressed concern that the proposed
rule discusses the impact of moving to
CS DRGs using FY 2004 inpatient
claims rather than FY 2005 claims to
estimate impact. Some commenters
stated that using 2 separate years of
claims data to show the impact of major
changes made it impossible to assess the
overall impact of the changes with any
reasonable level of confidence.
Response: Because of the long lead
time to develop the methodology and
our proposed rule, we used the FY 2004
MedPAR data to calculate HSRVcc
weights and model the CS DRGs for
purposes of the analysis shown on pages
24007–24011, 24020–24026 of the FY
2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR24007–
24011, 24020–24026). At the time we
were developing provisions of the
proposed rule, FY 2005 MedPAR data
were unavailable to us. Given the public
interest in prompt publication of the
rule, we decided not to replicate all of
the analysis that we provided in section
II.C. of the proposed rule based on the
FY 2004 data once the new FY 2005
data became available to us. We
believed delaying publication of the
proposed rule to revise our analysis so
all of the payment impacts were shown
based on FY 2005 data was not in the
public interest. Once we developed the
methodology and the analysis for the
proposed rule, we calculated the
relative weights using the HSRVcc
methodology that we were proposing to
adopt for FY 2007 using the FY 2005
MedPAR. We modeled the HSRVcc
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
relative weights using the FY 2005
MedPAR because we would be using
these data to calculate actual relative
weights that would be used to
determine FY 2007 hospital payments.
We believed it was important to model
our FY 2007 proposal as closely to how
payments would be determined to
provide the most meaningful
opportunity for public comment. For
purposes of providing the payment
impacts shown on pages 24028–24030
and the Appendix A—Regulatory
Impact Analysis (71 FR24404) and the
methodological description shown on
pages 24044–24049 of the proposed
rule, we used FY 2005 MedPAR data.
We disagree with the commenters that
providing separate analyses using 2
years of data makes it more difficult to
understand and assess the payment
impacts. Rather, we believe that
providing these analyses makes it easier
to understand how relative weights will
change solely as a result of updating the
data.
Comment: MedPAC was pleased that
CMS proposed three of MedPAC’s four
recommended changes to the IPPS
system. However, the MedPAC
expressed concern the proposal not to
implement the severity changes until FY
2008. They stated that it is important to
correct for differences in patients’
severity concurrently with the
corrections for charging distortions.
MedPAC believed that all of the
proposed policy changes to the IPPS
should happen concurrently. MedPAC
stated that failure to adopt all of the
changes would leave some payment
distortions in place, thereby continuing
to favor some kinds of patients over
others. According to MedPAC, adopting
PO 00000
Frm 00050
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Severity
changes in
DRGs
Severity DRG
changes &
cost weights
(with transition)
2.7
¥0.5
0.3
0.3
0.2
0.0
¥0.1
0.0
0.3
0.0
0.0
¥0.1
¥0.5
¥0.3
¥0.3
¥0.3
1.6
4.5
2.9
4.6
¥0.5
¥11.2
0.1
0.0
0.0
0.0
¥0.1
¥0.1
¥0.1
¥0.2
¥0.1
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.1
0.3
0.2
0.4
0.0
¥2.3
all of the policies would create the most
accurate payments and prevent
hospitals from facing unjustified shifts
in their payments that may occur under
partial adoption of the payment reforms.
MedPAC stated that concerns about
giving hospitals time to adapt to the
changes may be better managed by
implementing all changes in FY 2007
and then giving hospitals a transition
period. Another commenter asked that
CMS implement both of these proposed
changes in FY 2007 for the following
reasons:
• MedPAC’s analysis revealed
significant inaccuracy in the current
payment system and recommended
implementation of both the new
severity-refined DRGs and a revised
method for the weights at the same time.
• It is inequitable to remove the
subsidy provided by the overpayments
for cardiac and orthopedic surgery prior
to correcting the underpayments for the
most severely ill patients.
• It is not reasonable to ask that some
hospitals experience financial losses
from implementing the new weights this
year if implementing severity would
offset some or all of these losses. To
stagger implementation will cause
providers to experience unnecessary
payment fluctuation between FY 2007
and FY 2008.
The commenter further added that a
delay is not beneficial to taxpayers as
hospitals will have more time to upcode and increase their Medicare
payments. Many commenters agreed
with MedPAC that the cost weights and
severity-adjusted DRGs should be
implemented simultaneously. However,
these commenters suggested
implementation no sooner than FY 2008
to limit sharp fluctuations in payments
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
to hospitals from year to year. Many
commenters opposed a two-step
implementation, whereby CMS would
implement cost-based weights in one
year and a new DRG system to better
account for patient severity in a
subsequent year. They noted that each
of these two major reforms significantly
redistributes payments, often in offsetting directions. They stated that large
swings in payments between the two
reforms would create unnecessary
volatility and have a profound impact
on hospitals’ ability to plan effectively,
especially for necessary major medical
equipment purchases and other capital
expenditures. Therefore, they
recommended that CMS implement
both cost-based weights and severityadjusted DRGs concurrently. While
some commenters urged CMS to
implement both payment reforms
concurrently in FY 2007, other
commenters advised delaying until at
least FY 2008 to allow enough time to
improve the proposed methodologies
and underlying cost data to ensure
accuracy of payments. Some
commenters stated that the cost-based
weights methodology should be
implemented after the severity adjusted
DRG methodology.
Response: Although we are not
adopting the CS DRGs this year, we
agree that it is important to smooth the
transition for our current DRG system to
a more accurate payment system. As
indicated above, we have decided to
adopt traditional cost-based weights for
FY 2007 without the HSRV part of the
methodology and we are making
refinements that will create 20 new
CMS DRGs, modify 32 others across 13
different clinical areas involving
1,666,476 cases that would improve the
CMS DRG system’s recognition of
severity of illness for FY 2007. We
believe it is appropriate to take steps
toward transitioning the IPPS to a
severity based DRG system for FY 2007
by applying some of the severity logic
from our proposal to the CMS DRGs
where appropriate. By revising the CMS
DRGs, we are offering hospitals an
interim step toward severity DRGs.
Hospitals would be able to take
advantage of the improved recognition
of severity within the context of the
more familiar CMS DRGs. This interim
step affords us the opportunity to adopt
some of the more basic components of
a severity DRG system, such as specific
splits in DRGs that lead to groups with
greater resource utilization.
Comment: Some commenters were
concerned that CMS has not taken into
account all of MedPAC’s
recommendations for reforming the
IPPS.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Response: We believe the commenters
were expressing concern that we did not
analyze MedPAC’s recommendation to
adjust the relative weights to account for
differences in the prevalence of outlier
cases. As explained above, we placed
most of our attention and resources on
the recommendations related to
refinement of the current DRGs to more
fully account for differences in severity
of illness among patients as we do not
have the statutory authority to make the
specific changes to our outlier policy
that MedPAC recommended. While we
have not made MedPAC’s
recommendation regarding outliers a
central focus of our analysis, we do
intend to examine this issue in more
detail over the next year.
Comment: One commenter stated that
the annual impact of the changes to the
proposed CS DRG system will reduce
payments for its institution by an
additional $2.7 million per year. The
commenter suggested that community,
not for profit hospitals be exempt from
these proposed changes as this is not the
group of hospitals that were the
intended target of these changes. One
commenter stated that the efforts to
address issues identified in the MedPAC
report should begin and end with the
specialty hospital subset and should not
occur in conjunction with payment
systems at large for all other hospital
facilities.
A few commenters urged CMS to
further analyze and evaluate the impact
of the proposed HSRVcc methodology
on access to Centers of Excellence. They
noted that the proposed changes are
particularly significant for large volume
hospitals and may have a negative
impact on the Centers of Excellence.
Any negative impact to these Centers
could impede beneficiary access to high
quality services. Several commenters
stated that although CMS’ intent may
have been to eliminate reimbursement
incentives for specialty hospitals to
select the most profitable cases, the
proposed methodology appears to
negatively affect all hospitals serving
the most prevalent diagnoses
(cardiology, orthopedic joint
replacement, and neurosurgery) within
the Medicare population. The
commenters stated that efforts to
address issues identified in the MedPAC
report should be limited to specialty
hospitals. The payment systems at large
that affect all other hospital facilities
should not be changed. These
commenters suggested that CMS address
the reimbursement incentives of
specialty hospitals by implementing a
separate payment system for specialty
hospitals, rather than implement a
proposed policy that could negatively
PO 00000
Frm 00051
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47919
impact all hospitals. Several
commenters suggested implementing
the proposal only for specialty hospitals
while deferring the proposed payment
reforms for full-service hospitals to
afford more time to study the
implications of the HSRVcc as a method
of general applicability. Another
commenter stated that care for Medicare
beneficiaries in rural areas will be
adversely affected by the proposed
adoption of HSRVcc weights because of
the dramatic impact on specialized
services provided by rural referral
centers that are not available at other
smaller hospitals in rural communities.
The commenter suggested that the
future viability of these specialized
services may be at risk. Therefore, the
commenter recommended that CMS
recognize the unique impact of the
proposed changes on rural referral
centers by excluding these hospitals
from the change.
Response: Payments under a
prospective payment system are
predicated on averages. Therefore, we
do not believe it would be appropriate
to exclude certain hospital groups from
implementation of the changes we are
adopting to use cost-based weights or
better recognize severity in the DRG
system. While these changes are
expected to reduce incentives for
hospitals to ‘‘cherry pick’’ or treat only
the most profitable patients, the
objective of these proposed revisions is
to improve the accuracy of payments,
leading to better incentives for hospital
quality and efficiency and ensure that
payment rates relate more closely to
patient resource needs. Even though few
hospitals will have a large increase or
decrease in overall Medicare payments,
there may be a significant increase or
decrease in payment for individual
cases within a hospital. Under certain
circumstances, the current DRG system
benefits hospitals that focus on treating
less severely ill patients. Adjusting
payment for the severity of the patient
will remove the incentives to
systematically choose one patient over
another. Currently, the DRGs overpay
for some types of cases and underpay
for others because the relative weight
system is based on charges and the DRG
system does not sufficiently distinguish
more or less resource intensive patients
based on severity of illness. The changes
we are making to account for costs in
the DRG relative weights and improve
recognition of severity within the DRG
system will significantly increase
payment accuracy at both the patient
and hospital level.
For these reasons, we believe these
changes should apply to all hospitals
paid using the IPPS, regardless of
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47920
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
whether a hospital is a specialty
hospital or a rural referral center. We
have made significant changes to our
proposal and the impacts shown in this
final rule may be very different for an
individual hospital than those we
showed in the proposed rule. The
impact on any specific hospital will
depend on the types of cases it treats.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that in order to analyze and comment,
a crosswalk between the current DRGs
and the severity DRGs should be made
available.
Response: As indicated earlier, we
provided a number of resources during
the comment period to assist
commenters in analyzing our proposal.
We provided a number of data files
listed earlier on the CMS Web site at no
cost to the public. In addition to this
information, we made available for
purchase both the FY 2004 and FY 2005
MedPAR data that were used in
simulating the policies in the FY 2007
IPPS proposed rule. We also provided
access to a Web tool on 3M’s Web site
that would allow an end user to build
case examples using the proposed CS
DRGs.
Comment: One commenter stated that
the best estimates on a hospital specific
basis, of the incremental effects on
payment of CMS’ changes to the DRG
system should be published in the FY
2007 IPPS final rule. The commenter
also suggested that CMS release impact
files by hospitals far in advance of any
implementation.
Response: Information to determine
hospital-specific impacts is available on
the CMS Web site at: https://www.cms.
hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/FFD/
list.asp#TopOfPage. Click on: ‘‘Acute
Inpatient—Files for Download https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/
FFD/list.asp.’’ For the proposed rule
impact file, click on ‘‘Impact file for
IPPS FY 2007 Proposed Rule https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/
FFD/itemdetail.asp?filter
Type=none&filterByDID=-99&
sortByDID=2>&sortOrder=ascending&
itemID=CMS061736.’’ Similar
information for the final rule will also
be available on the CMS Web site
shortly after the publication of this final
rule. We note that some level of
familiarity with data concepts and
Medicare payment variables will be
necessary for hospitals to use these files
and simulate a payment analysis for
their own facility. Using the latest data
available at the time this final rule was
prepared, we estimated impacts by
category of hospital, and the tables
displaying these impacts are published
in the impact section of this final rule.
Space limitations preclude us from
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
being able to provide hospital-level
impacts. In addition, to the extent that
adjustments for providers such as the
IME adjustment, DSH adjustment, and/
or operating and capital CCRs may be
updated for FY 2007 subsequent to the
publication of this final rule, the actual
impacts on individual providers may
differ slightly from those we estimated.
We believe that by providing the
payment variables and other
information electronically on the CMS
Web site, hospitals have the flexibility
to simulate and develop their own
impact analyses that may be better
suited to their needs than any analysis
CMS would do at the hospital level.
Comment: Some commenters stated
that CMS needs to extend the comment
period to allow hospitals additional
time to evaluate the effects of these
proposed changes.
Response: One of the reasons that we
proposed adopting the CS DRGs for FY
2008 was to give hospitals more than
the 60-day public comment period and
the additional 60-day delay between the
publication of the final rule and
implementation on October 1, 2006, to
fully understand and plan for the
change to the CS DRG system. As
indicated earlier, we are not adopting
CS DRGs for FY 2007. Therefore, we do
not see a need to extend the 60-day
public comment period. Although we
are not extending the 60-day public
comment period, we will involve
hospitals and other stakeholders in our
plans for moving to a severity DRG
system for FY 2008. We are interested
in public input on the types of criteria
that we should consider and how to
evaluate improved payment accuracy as
we consider changes to the DRG system
to better recognize severity of illness.
Comment: Some commenters
encouraged CMS to review the cost/
benefit of implementing the cost-based
weight methodology and a severityadjusted DRG system in conjunction
with changes to the CMS UB04 claim
form and the adoption of ICD–10–CM.
The commenters suggested that
implementing these changes
simultaneously could help alleviate the
additional cost of multiple system
upgrades both for the hospital and the
fiscal intermediaries. Some commenters
stated that CMS should conduct a single
independent study to determine the
impact that implementation of this
methodology will have on coding and
billing productivity or hospital cash
flow. Some commenters stated that
implementing the significant DRG
changes proposed by CMS is only a
temporary solution until a more refined
DRG system can be adopted with more
specific clinical classification systems
PO 00000
Frm 00052
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
such as ICD–10–CM and ICD–10–PCS
that will be capable of fully recognizing
a patient’s severity of illness and the
services provided to treat that condition.
Response: We believe that it is
important to improve the payment
accuracy in the hospital IPPS by
implementing these changes when
appropriate. The IPPS payment reforms
that we have proposed do not require
information system changes for
hospitals similar to those that will be
required for adoption of ICD–10 or a
new HIPAA compliant transaction
system. The relative weights are merely
one component in a payment formula
for calculating Medicare’s IPPS payment
rate. Although there will be increases
and decreases in the relative weights
that are used in the payment formula for
different DRGs, this payment change
does not require hospitals to make any
computer system changes. Similarly, the
changes to adopt a severity DRG system
will also not necessarily require
hospitals to make any upgrades to their
computer systems. The proposed DRG
system or any alternative that we
consider would use the same ICD–9–CM
diagnosis and procedures codes as the
current CMS DRGs. Although it seems
likely that hospitals will want to acquire
the DRG system that Medicare will use,
we do not expect that substituting one
DRG GROUPER for another should be
burdensome and require upgrades to
hospital information systems. With
regard to the comment that a more
refined DRG system can only be adopted
with more specific classification
systems such as ICD–10–CM and ICD–
10–PCS, the Secretary is evaluating
whether we should adopt ICD–10.
Comment: One commenter supported
the decision to use the CS DRGs, noting
that use of a 3-digit DRG number would
avoid the undue health programming
costs that move limited financial
resources away from initiatives focused
on improving quality care and access to
health care. However, the commenter
also indicated that the number of digits
in the DRG number should not be a
factor in choosing the best severity
classification system.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s support for our proposal as
well as the comment that the DRG
classification system used by Medicare
should not be dependent upon the
number of digits in the DRG number.
We will consider any information
system infrastructure issues as we
evaluate alternative DRG systems.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that the reasons CMS gave in the
proposed rule for not implementing CS
DRGs for FY 2007 are valid. The
commenters stated that they are all the
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
more valid because hospitals now
would have less time to prepare if CMS
were to implement its proposed severity
adjusted DRGs this October 1.
Response: We agree. The proposed
change to adopt CS DRGs represents a
major change to how hospitals are paid
for Medicare inpatient services. We will
not be implementing the CS DRGs for
FY 2007. However, we do plan to
evaluate potential alternative DRG
systems that better recognize severity
than the current CMS DRGs for FY 2008.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that the CS DRG system’s reliance on
3M’s proprietary APR DRG grouping
logic and software may not be in
compliance with Pub. L. 104–113, the
National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act of 1995. The
commenter recommended that we
participate in the formation of expert
committees with a proven consensus
standards body to develop a
standardized DRG classification and
severity-adjustment system for the IPPS.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s support for the use of a
consensus standards body to develop a
severity-adjusted DRG system. The
National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act of 1995 directs
Federal agencies to use voluntary
consensus standards in lieu of
government-unique standards, except
where inconsistent with law or
otherwise impractical. As we move
toward implementing a severityadjusted DRG system, we will carefully
consider whether it would be
appropriate to involve a voluntary
consensus standards body in the
process.
Comment: Some commenters stated a
transition (blended) period with stop
loss protections should be provided
over a period of one to three years.
Other commenters suggested a longer
transition period given the magnitude of
payment distribution across DRGs and
hospitals. The commenters believe that
the transition approach would be
consistent with many other major
changes that have been implemented
gradually over the years, including the
capital prospective payment system.
The commenters suggested that a
minimum of 1 year should be allowed
for the development of software systems
to handle these changes.
Response: We agree that these
changes should be implemented over a
transitional period. As we indicated
earlier, we are revising the current DRG
system to better recognize severity
(which is discussed in detail in section
II.C.7. of the preamble of this final rule)
and are also adopting cost-based
weights for FY 2007. We are providing
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
for a transition period of 3 years with
the relative weights becoming an
increasing blend of costs weights as the
transition proceeds. We also believe that
the 20 new DRGs we are adopting for
2007 will improve the transition from
our current system to a more
sophisticated severity DRG system in FY
2008.
Comment: One commenter noted that
MedPAC recommended excluding
statistical and high cost outliers from
the computation of the DRG weights in
order that the weights reflect the average
cost of the inlier case only. MedPAC
further recommended shifting the
financing of the outlier pool from all
cases to cases in the DRGs with the
highest prevalence of outliers. The
commenter noted that outlier cases
occur most frequently in high-weighted
DRGs. Therefore, MedPAC’s proposal of
accounting for the high prevalence of
outliers in the DRGs would compound
the weight compression caused by the
HSRV methodology. The commenter
believed that each proposal by MedPAC
(to exclude statistical and high cost
outliers from the computation of the
DRGs) would exacerbate payment
inaccuracies, and the two proposals
combined would be deleterious. The
commenter stated that it would further
analyze MedPAC’s proposal to test their
theory empirically.
Another commenter was also
concerned about MedPAC’s
recommendation to adjust the DRGs to
account for the prevalence of high-cost
cases. The commenter explained that
reducing the relative weights to finance
the outlier pool will adversely affect
payment for hospitals specializing in
the most complex patients. Hospitals
may be discouraged from developing the
capacity to treat high cost outliers and
responding to the needs of their
community according to the commenter.
Meanwhile, the commenter suggested
that hospitals that have the capacity to
treat the highest cost and most complex
cases may abandon such an
infrastructure because it will be too
costly to maintain.
One commenter supported MedPAC’s
proposal and believed that
implementing MedPAC’s proposal
would support the goal of achieving
payment accuracy. The commenter
explained that the current system
provides double reward for DRGs with
a high prevalence of outliers. The
commenter recommended that CMS
seek legislative authority to implement
MedPAC’s proposal of DRG specific
outlier thresholds.
Another commenter was supportive of
MedPAC’s recommendation and noted
that MedPAC stated in a letter to CMS
PO 00000
Frm 00053
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47921
that ‘‘failure to adopt any of (MedPAC’s)
recommendations would leave some
payment distortions in place, thereby
continuing to favor some patients over
others.’’ Therefore, the commenter
recommended that CMS implement all
of MedPAC’s recommendations
simultaneously when Congress has
granted CMS authority to adopt
MedPAC’s outlier recommendation.
One commenter was concerned that
CMS provided only ‘‘minimal’’ analysis
of the effect of the DRG refinements on
the outlier threshold. Noting that the 5.1
percent set aside for outlier payments
could be significantly reduced with the
adoption of severity DRG refinements,
the commenter believed that
implementation of severity DRGs is
premature until the Secretary
determines whether statutory changes
are needed to determine the percentage
of total IPPS payments that should be
made as outliers.
One commenter recommended that,
even though CMS does not have the
authority to change the outlier policy, it
should review creating DRG-specific or
day outliers under a severity DRG
system. Another commenter
recommended that CMS reduce
payments for outliers and eventually
eliminate them upon implementing
severity DRGs.
Response: We thank the commenters
for taking the time to comment on
MedPAC’s recommendation. As noted
above, we do not have the statutory
authority to implement MedPAC’s
recommendation, and, therefore, we
placed most of our attention and
resources on the recommendations
related to refinement of the current
DRGs to more fully capture differences
in severity of illness among patients.
However, we intend to examine
MedPAC’s recommendation regarding
outliers in more detail in the future and
will consider the comments we received
on the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule.
6. Conclusions
As we describe in more detail below,
we believe that adopting cost-based
weights and making improvements to
the DRG system to better recognize
severity has the potential to result in
significant improvements to Medicare’s
IPPS payments. This final rule
implements a cost weight methodology
effective for FY 2007. Further, we are
creating 20 new CMS DRGs and
modifying 32 others across 13 different
clinical areas involving 1,666,476 cases
that would improve the CMS DRG
system’s recognition of severity of
illness for FY 2007. Further, as
suggested by MedPAC and others, we
are adopting these changes over a
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47922
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
transition period while we plan further
improvements to the IPPS for FY 2008.
In developing our proposed and final
policies, we considered a range of
alternatives outlined below, and we
solicited comments on both the
proposal and the alternatives. We asked
commenters to consider both the CS
DRGs and alternative severity
adjustment methods for accounting for
severity more comprehensively in the
DRG payment system. For example,
under one alternative in the proposed
rule, we would implement the CS DRGs
in FY 2007 along with the HSRVcc
weighting methodology. In this event, as
discussed above, to maintain budget
neutrality, we would also implement in
FY 2007 an adjustment to the
standardized amounts to eliminate the
effect of changes in coding or
classification of discharges that do not
reflect real changes in case-mix.
Although we did receive comments in
support of this idea, many commenters
requested that we not adopt the CS
DRGs and the HSRVcc weights for FY
2007. Many of these commenters
suggested delaying implementation of
both proposals until at least FY 2008.
Under another alternative, we would
have adopted and implemented CS
DRGs in FY 2008. Although we did
receive comments in support of this
idea, we also received many comments
raising important concerns about
licensing and proprietary issues
potentially associated with use of the CS
DRGs. The commenters asked us not to
adopt the CS DRGs unless we could
make them available on the same terms
as the current CMS DRGs. Yet other
commenters objected to our proposed
implementation of the CS DRGs unless
we evaluated alternatives and better
justified why there is a need to adopt a
revised DRG system. Under yet another
alternative, we would consider partially
implementing the CS DRGs in FY 2007
and complete implementation in FY
2008. However, we noted that there
were practical difficulties associated
with partial implementation of CS DRGs
because cases in a single DRG under the
current CMS DRG system may group to
multiple DRGs and MDCs under the CS
DRG system. Conversely, cases that
group to multiple MDCs and DRGs
under the current system may group to
a single MDC and DRG under the
current CS DRG system. We did not
receive any comments supporting the
idea of partial adoption of the CS DRGs.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule,
we discussed in some detail an
alternative to partially adopting CS
DRGs that would apply a clinical
severity concept to an expanded set of
DRGs in FY 2007. For example, we have
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
received correspondence that raised the
concern that hospitals may have
incentives under the current DRG
system to avoid severely ill, resourceintensive back and spine surgical cases
(as discussed in section II.D.3.b. of the
proposed rule; the correspondence
specifically requested that we apply a
clinical severity concept to DRG 546). In
the proposed rule, we noted that other
surgical DRGs may not accurately
recognize case severity. Because of the
frequency of DRG use and the potential
for risk selection, we pointed out that
certain DRGs may be particularly
important in creating a financial
incentive for hospitals to select a less
severely ill patient whose case would be
assigned to the same DRG as a more
severely ill patient.
Therefore, while we proposed to
adopt the CS DRGs in FY 2008, we were
considering whether to make more
limited changes to the current DRG
system to better recognize severity of
illness in FY 2007. In the FY 2006 IPPS
final rule (70 FR 47474 through 47478),
we took steps to better recognize
severity of illness among cardiovascular
patients. For all DRGs except cardiac
DRGs, we currently distinguish between
more and less complex cases based on
the presence or absence of a CC.
However, the diagnoses that we
designate as CCs are the same across all
base DRGs. Because the CC list is not
dependent on the patient’s underlying
condition, CCs may not accurately
recognize severity in a given case. The
changes we made in FY 2006 to the
cardiac DRGs significantly improved
recognition of severity between patients
by distinguishing between more and
less severe cases based on the presence
or absence of a MCV. In the proposed
rule, we indicated that we were
considering whether a similar approach
applied to other DRGs would improve
payment.
Much like the approach we took last
year to identify MCV conditions that
represented higher severity in
cardiovascular patients, in the proposed
rule, we indicated that we planned to
examine which conditions identified
more severely ill cases in selected MDCs
and DRGs. We solicited comments as to
whether it would be appropriate to
adopt these types of limited changes in
FY 2007 as an intermediate step to
adopting CS DRGs in FY 2008. There
were a number of comments that
suggested we should make
improvements to our current DRG
system rather than adopting the CS
DRGs. A number of comments
expressed support for using the current
DRG system as the starting point for
revising the DRG system to better
PO 00000
Frm 00054
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
recognize severity to avoid losing the
many positive changes that have been
made over the years to the CMS DRGs.
We also encouraged commenters to send
us suggestions regarding potential
changes that could be made to the
current DRG system to better recognize
severity of illness. As indicated below,
some commenters did provide us with
specific suggestions for how we could
revise the current DRGs.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule,
we also discussed an additional
alternative under which we would
implement the CS DRGs in FY 2007 and
the HSRVcc methodology in FY 2008.
We did receive one comment supporting
this idea. However, as we have
discussed elsewhere, we believe that we
should not adopt CS DRGs in FY 2007,
but rather evaluate severity DRG
systems for adoption in FY 2008.
With respect to the relative weight
calculations, we believe that adopting
HSRVcc weights has the potential to
significantly improve payment equity
between DRGs. As MedPAC notes, a
‘‘survey of hospitals’ charging practices
suggests that hospitals use diverse
strategies for setting service charges and
raising them over time.’’ MedPAC found
that data from the Medicare cost reports
indicate that hospital markups for
ancillary services (for example,
operating room, radiology, and
laboratory) are generally higher than for
routine services (for example, intensive
care unit and room and board).13 Thus,
MedPAC has concluded that the relative
weights for DRGs that use more
ancillary services may be too high
compared to other DRGs where the
routine costs account for a higher
proportion of hospital costs. Although
we agree with MedPAC’s conclusion,
the public comments raised important
issues about the effect of charge
compression on the relative weights
using the HSRVcc methodology. These
commenters argued that the HSRV
calculation exacerbates the effect of
charge compression or the practice of
hospitals applying higher percentage
markups on lower cost items and lower
percentage markups on higher cost
items. As we indicated above, we have
engaged a contractor to assist us with
studying whether charge compression is
an actual phenomenon and how it
affects the HSRV methodology. As part
of this analysis, we will study an
adjustment for charge compression
suggested in the public comments and
will consider adopting HSRV weights in
the future. Nevertheless, in the interim,
we believe it is important to adopt a
methodology for calculation of DRG
13 Ibid,
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
p. 26.
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
relative weights that takes costs into
account. We have revised the CCRs that
we used to develop cost-based weights
based on the public comments.
Although they do not show the same
differentials indicated in the proposed
rule, they continue to support
MedPAC’s conclusion that a system
based on charges pays too much for
some types of cases and pays too little
for others. As indicated above, we
summarized hospital-level cost and
charge information to 2 routine and 11
ancillary departmental cost centers and
found that national average routine cost
center CCRs ranged from 50 percent
(intensive care unit days) to 56 percent
(routine days), while ancillary cost
center CCRs ranged from 16 percent
(anesthesiology) to 46 percent (labor and
delivery room).
MedPAC also found that relative
profitability ratios were higher among
cardiovascular surgical DRGs than the
medical DRGs.14 We believe the relative
profitability of the surgical
cardiovascular DRGs has been an
important factor in the development of
specialty heart hospitals. Our payment
impact analysis indicates that this issue
will be addressed by adopting costbased weights. Moving from the current
system of charge-based weights to costbased weights increases payment in the
medical DRGs relative to the surgical
DRGs. We expected this result, given
that routine costs will generally account
for a higher proportion of total costs in
the medical DRGs than in the surgical
DRGs. In the proposed rule, we
estimated that all of our combined
changes would, on average, increase the
medical DRG weights by approximately
7.3 percent while reducing the surgical
DRG weights by approximately 6.9
percent. Implementing the cost-based
weights without utilizing the HSRV
standardization method under the 3year transition period where the weights
for FY 2007 will be based on 33 percent
of the cost-based weight and 67 percent
of the charge weight will lessen the
effects of redistribution between
medical and surgical DRGs. In this final
rule, we estimate that the increase in the
average medical DRG weight will be 0.9
percent and that the decrease in the
average surgical DRG weight will be 1.2
percent. The pattern of increasing
medical weights and decreasing surgical
weights still holds true. However, by
adopting the cost based weights in a
transition period, we are mitigating the
larger swings in payments that our
proposed policies adopted in full would
have caused.
Although adopting HSRVcc weights
would result in the most significant
improvement in hospital payment-tocost ratios among the changes to the
IPPS recommended by MedPAC,15 we
have concerns about implementing this
methodology until we can further study
whether the relative weights might be
affected by charge compression. For this
reason, we are adopting cost-based
weights without HSRV for FY 2007.
However, we will consider applying the
HSRV methodology in subsequent years
if our analysis of charge compression
suggests the issue is not a concern or,
if appropriate, we can apply an
adjustment that would account for its
effects.
Based on our analysis, we concur
with MedPAC that the CS DRGs would
account more completely for differences
in severity of illness and associated
costs among hospitals. MedPAC
observed some modest improvements in
hospitals’ payment-to-cost ratios from
adopting APR DRGs.16 We modeled the
CS DRGs discussed above and observed
a 12-percent increase in the explanatory
power (or R-square statistic) of the DRG
system to explain total hospital charges.
That is, we found more uniformity
among hospital total charges within the
CS DRG system than we did with
Medicare’s current DRG system. While
we believe the CS DRG system that we
described above has the potential to
improve the IPPS, we have the
following concerns about adopting it for
FY 2007:
• Further adjustments are needed to
the proposed DRG system. In the
proposed rule, we indicated that further
adjustments need to be made to the
proposed CS DRGs to account for
situations where less severely ill
patients may be more resource-intensive
because they need expensive medical
technology. The CS DRGs assign a
patient to a DRG based on severity of
illness but do not recognize increased
complexity due to the types of services/
technology provided. In addition, the
CS DRGs do not incorporate many of the
changes to the base DRG assignments
that have been made over the years to
the CMS DRGs. There was significant
interest in the public comments in
either revising the CS DRGs to reflect
these changes or use the CMS DRGs at
the starting point to better recognize
severity. The public comments provided
a number of examples where we need to
consider whether further changes are
needed to the CS DRGs before they are
ready for implementation.
15 Ibid,
14 Ibid,
p. 29.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16 Ibid,
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
p. 37.
p.37.
Frm 00055
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47923
• Use of a proprietary DRG system.
The commenters raised valid points
about adopting a proprietary DRG
system, including concerns about the
availability, price and transparency of
logic of the APR DRGs that are currently
in use in Maryland. The CS DRGs are a
variant of the APR DRG system. As we
evaluate alternative severity
classification systems, we will use
public access to the system as an
important element in evaluating
whether each system can be adopted for
Medicare. We will continue to strive to
promote transparency in our
decisionmaking as well as in future
payment and classification systems as
we have done in the past.
• No alternatives have been
evaluated. We have not evaluated
alternative DRG systems that could also
better recognize severity. We have
received comments suggesting that
alternative DRG systems can better
recognize severity than the CS DRGs. It
appears that all of the DRG systems that
were raised in the public comments as
potential alternatives to the CS DRGs are
proprietary systems. However, it is
possible that we could use one of these
systems if it were made available in the
public domain on the same terms as the
current CMS DRGs. Further, as
discussed above, CMS (then HCFA) did
work on developing a severity DRG
system in the mid-1990’s. It is possible
that we could update this work and
adopt a system that better recognizes
severity based on the current CMS DRGs
for FY 2008 that does not raise the
licensing issues that are involved with
using prioprietary systems.
Therefore, for the reasons indicated
above, we are not adopting the CS DRGs
for FY 2007. However, we are creating
20 new CMS DRGs and modifying 32
others across 13 different clinical areas
involving 1,666,476 cases that would
improve the CMS DRG system’s
recognition of severity of illness for FY
2007. Furthermore, as discussed earlier,
we have engaged a contractor to assist
us with evaluating alternative DRG
systems that were raised as potential
alternatives to the 3M Severity of Illness
DRG products in the public comments.
Finally, we will consider the review that
we have undertaken of the 13,000 codes
on the CC list as part of making further
refinements to the current CMS DRGs to
better recognize severity of illness based
on the work that CMS (then HCFA) did
in the mid-1990’s to adopt severity
DRGs. Again, we expect to complete this
work in time for proposing changes to
the DRG system to better recognize
severity of illness by FY 2008.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47924
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
7. Severity Refinements to CMS DRGs
In response to the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule, we received a number of
public comments that supported the
refinement of the current CMS DRGs so
that they better capture severity. Several
commenters supported the expanded
use of a clinical severity concept similar
to the approach used in FY 2006 to
refine the cardiac DRGs. One
commenter urged CMS to expand the set
of DRGs to which this clinical severity
concept would apply, including the
DRGs that capture the implanting of
defibrillators. Another commenter
expressed support for additional
modifications to the current DRGs to
better capture severity and complexity
of patients. Another commenter
recommended that CMS start with the
current DRG system and provide
overlays for severity, complexity and
patient benefit. One commenter
suggested that CMS develop severity
levels within all of the existing DRGs (or
pairs of DRGs, in the cases where CC or
MCV splits now exist), or identify
specific DRGs that may be most
appropriate for severity adjustments.
Several commenters recommended
specific adjustments to better capture
severity for septicemia, headache, and
mechanical ventilation patients. (The
DRG recommendations are discussed
below under the specific DRG topic.)
We recognize the importance of
having a classification system that
recognizes cases that utilize greater
resources and have higher levels of
severity of illness. While we discussed
moving to a new DRG system such as
the CS DRGs for FY 2007, we stated that
we were also interested in improving
the current DRGs so that they better
capture patients with greater severity of
illness as early as FY 2007. We solicited
comments in the proposed rule on
whether it would be appropriate in FY
2007 to apply a clinical severity concept
to an expanded set of DRGs, similar to
the approach we used in FY 2006 to
refine cardiac DRGs based on the
presence or absence of an MCV.
We believe it is appropriate to move
in a direction toward a DRG system that
better recognizes severity. Our strategy
involves following recommendations
received as part of public comments and
implementing some of the severity logic
in the proposed CS DRGs in the CMS
DRGs where appropriate. By doing so,
we would be taking an interim step
toward better recognizing severity in the
DRG system. Hospitals would be able to
take advantage of a portion of improved
severity logic in the proposed CS DRGs
within the context of the more familiar
CMS DRGs. This interim step would
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
also afford hospitals a more detailed
understanding of some of the basic
types of DRG logic used in the proposed
CS DRG system. Obviously, we were not
able to adopt some of the more
sophisticated logic involved in the 18
steps included in the proposed CS DRG
system. However, we were able to adopt
some of the more basic components
such as specific splits in DRGs that lead
to groups with greater resource
utilization.
We began our process of adopting
some of the severity logic within the
proposed CS DRGs by first comparing
the current CMS DRGs to the base DRGs
in the proposed CS DRGs to identify
areas where improvements could be
made to better account for severity of
illness and resource utilization. We
used two general approaches to evaluate
potential DRG changes. First, we
analyzed where the assignment of a case
to a DRG differed under the CMS DRGs
and the proposed base CS DRGs.
Second, we analyzed whether there was
a list of ‘‘major conditions’’ that could
be used to revise any DRGs to better
recognize severity, similar to the
changes to the cardiovascular DRGs
involving MCVs we established in last
year’s final rule. We used the diagnoses
listed as ‘‘major’’ or ‘‘extreme’’ under
the proposed CS DRGs for this review.
The changes described below will result
in better recognition of severity in the
current DRG system and, like the
changes we made last year to reform the
cardiovascular DRGs based on MCVs,
represent an excellent next step in
refining the Medicare inpatient hospital
payment system so our payments are
better targeted to specific patients based
on their costs of care.
We began our review by focusing on
the cardiac and orthopedic DRGs
because of our concerns that cardiac,
orthopedic, and surgical hospitals have
taken advantage of opportunities in the
DRG system to specialize in the least
complex and most profitable inpatient
cases. However, with respect to
orthopedic and surgical specialty
hospitals, we considered that they have
very small inpatient volume and the
issues that are leading to their creation
are generally unrelated to profit
opportunities in the IPPS. Although we
did review the orthopedic DRGs, we
generally did not find opportunities
within the current DRG system to make
further refinements for severity of
illness. We were also unable to find a
strong basis to subdivide further most of
the cardiovascular DRGs. In last year’s
IPPS rule, we already made significant
changes to the DRG system to better
account for severity of illness in the
DRGs frequently performed by cardiac
PO 00000
Frm 00056
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
hospitals. As mentioned earlier, this
DRG change involved splitting some
cardiac DRGs based on the presence or
absence of an MCV. We then conducted
a comparison of the base DRGs in the
CMS DRG system and proposed CS
DRGs. We analyzed data to identify
specific CMS DRGs with wide ranges in
charges that had been subdivided or in
other ways modified under the
proposed CS DRGs. As stated earlier,
this process did not allow CMS to use
the more sophisticated logic involved in
the proposed CS DRGs to differentiate
groups with greater severity. However,
we were able to identify a group of
DRGs that could be created to better
align our payments based on severity of
illness. We used our own analysis along
with specific recommendations received
during the comment period to develop
further severity refinements to the
current DRGs.
We identified 20 new CMS DRGs
involving 13 different clinical areas that
would improve the CMS DRG system’s
recognition of severity of illness. Twelve
of the new DRGs are medical and 8 are
surgical. The 20 new DRGs are
constructed through a combination of
approaches used in the proposed CS
DRGs to refine the base DRGs such as:
• Subdividing existing DRGs through
the use of diagnosis codes.
• Subdividing DRGs based on
specific surgical procedures.
• Selecting cases with specific
diagnosis and/or procedure codes and
assigning them to a new DRG which
better accounts for their resource use
and severity.
We also modified 32 DRGs to better
capture differences in severity. The new
and revised DRGs were selected from 40
current DRGs which contain 1,666,476
cases and represent a number of body
systems. In creating these 20 new DRGs,
we are deleting 8 existing DRGs and
modifying 32 existing DRGs. The
specific DRG changes are described
below:
a. MDC 1 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Nervous System)
(1) Nervous System Infection Except
Viral Meningitis
Under our current DRG system, all
nervous system infections except viral
meningitis are assigned to CMS DRG 20
(Nervous System Infection Except Viral
Meningitis). By combining all nervous
system infections except viral
meningitis into one DRG, we are
grouping together patients with wide
ranges of severity. Under our proposed
CS DRGs, there are separate DRGs that
distinguish bacterial infection and
tuberculosis from other infections of the
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
nervous system. The CS DRGs divided
these cases in order to better recognize
severity. The codes which describe
bacterial infection and tuberculosis are
listed below.
We then divided the cases within
CMS DRG 20 based on the presence or
absence of bacterial infections and
tuberculosis of the nervous system. Our
medical advisors support dividing these
cases in this manner to better recognize
severity of illness. The data indicated
that these are two distinctly different
groups with significant differences in
severity. The bacterial and tuberculosis
infection group had average charges of
$47,034 compared to the $36,507
average charges for cases with other
types of infection of the nervous system.
Clearly these charge data support the
fact that the bacterial and tuberculous
infection group has a significantly
greater degree of severity. The chart
below illustrates these data:
Number of
cases
DRG
CMS DRG 20 ...............................................................................................................................
DRG 20 with Bacterial & TB Infections of Nervous System .......................................................
DRG 20 w/o Bacterial & TB Infections of Nervous System ........................................................
The data support the creation of two
separate DRGs for these two groups of
patients. Therefore, we are deleting DRG
20 and creating the following two new
DRGs:
• DRG 560 (Bacterial & Tuberculosis
Infections of Nervous System).
• DRG 561 (Non-Bacterial Infections
of Nervous System Except Viral
Meningitis).
Diagnosis
code
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
013.10
013.11
013.12
013.13
013.14
013.15
013.16
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
013.20
013.21
013.22
013.23
013.24
013.25
013.26
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
013.30
013.31
013.32
013.33
013.34
013.35
013.36
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
003.21
013.00
013.01
013.02
013.03
013.04
013.05
013.06
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
013.40
013.41
013.42
013.43
013.44
013.45
013.46
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
013.50
013.51
013.52
013.53
013.54
......
......
......
......
......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
47925
6,130
3,310
2,820
Average
length of stay
9.88
10.1
9.54
Average
charges
$42,191.76
47,034.42
36,507.64
The ICD–9–CM diagnosis codes
assigned to each new DRG are as
follows.
The new DRG 560 will have principal
diagnosis codes listed in the following
table.
DRG 560 diagnosis code titles
Salmonella meningitis.
Tuberculous meningitis, unspecified examination.
Tuberculous meningitis, bacteriological or histological examination not done.
Tuberculous meningitis, bacteriological or histological examination results unknown (at present).
Tuberculous meningitis, tubercle bacilli found (in sputum) by microscopy.
Tuberculous meningitis, tubercle bacilli not found (in sputum) by microscopy, but found by bacterial culture.
Tuberculous meningitis, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed histologically.
Tuberculous meningitis, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological or histological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed by other
methods (inoculation of animals).
Tuberculoma of meninges, unspecified examination.
Tuberculoma of meninges, bacteriological or histological examination not done.
Tuberculoma of meninges, bacteriological or histological examination results unknown (at present).
Tuberculoma of meninges, tubercle bacilli found (in sputum) by microscopy.
Tuberculoma of meninges, tubercle bacilli not found (in sputum) by microscopy, but found by bacterial culture.
Tuberculoma of meninges, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed histologically.
Tuberculoma of meninges, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological or histological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed by
other methods (inoculation of animals).
Tuberculoma of brain, unspecified examination.
Tuberculoma of brain, bacteriological or histological examination not done.
Tuberculoma of brain, bacteriological or histological examination results unknown (at present).
Tuberculoma of brain, tubercle bacilli found (in sputum) by microscopy.
Tuberculoma of brain, tubercle bacilli not found (in sputum) by microscopy, but found by bacterial culture.
Tuberculoma of brain, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed histologically.
Tuberculoma of brain, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological or histological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed by other
methods (inoculation of animals).
Tuberculous abscess of brain, unspecified examination.
Tuberculous abscess of brain, bacteriological or histological examination not done.
Tuberculous abscess of brain, bacteriological or histological examination results unknown (at present).
Tuberculous abscess of brain, tubercle bacilli found (in sputum) by microscopy.
Tuberculous abscess of brain, tubercle bacilli not found (in sputum) by microscopy, but found by bacterial culture.
Tuberculous abscess of brain, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed histologically.
Tuberculous abscess of brain, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological or histological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed by
other methods (inoculation of animals).
Tuberculoma of spinal cord, unspecified examination.
Tuberculoma of spinal cord, bacteriological or histological examination not done.
Tuberculoma of spinal cord, bacteriological or histological examination results unknown (at present).
Tuberculoma of spinal cord, tubercle bacilli found (in sputum) by microscopy.
Tuberculoma of spinal cord, tubercle bacilli not found (in sputum) by microscopy, but found by bacterial culture.
Tuberculoma of spinal cord, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed histologically.
Tuberculoma of spinal cord, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological or histological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed by
other methods (inoculation of animals).
Tuberculous abscess of spinal cord, unspecified examination.
Tuberculous abscess of spinal cord, bacteriological or histological examination not done.
Tuberculous abscess of spinal cord, bacteriological or histological examination results unknown (at present).
Tuberculous abscess of spinal cord, tubercle bacilli found (in sputum) by microscopy.
Tuberculous abscess of spinal cord, tubercle bacilli not found (in sputum) by microscopy, but found by bacterial culture.
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00057
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47926
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Diagnosis
code
DRG 560 diagnosis code titles
013.55 ......
Tuberculous abscess of spinal cord, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed histologically.
Tuberculous abscess of spinal cord, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological or histological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed by other methods (inoculation of animals).
Tuberculous encephalitis or myelitis, unspecified examination.
Tuberculous encephalitis or myelitis, bacteriological or histological examination not done.
Tuberculous encephalitis or myelitis, bacteriological or histological examination results unknown (at present).
Tuberculous encephalitis or myelitis, tubercle bacilli found (in sputum) by microscopy.
Tuberculous encephalitis or myelitis, tubercle bacilli not found (in sputum) by microscopy, but found by bacterial culture.
Tuberculous encephalitis or myelitis, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed histologically.
Tuberculous encephalitis or myelitis, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological or histological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed by other methods (inoculation of animals).
Other specified tuberculosis of central nervous system, unspecified examination.
Other specified tuberculosis of central nervous system, bacteriological or histological examination not done.
Other specified tuberculosis of central nervous system, bacteriological or histological examination results unknown (at present).
Other specified tuberculosis of central nervous system, tubercle bacilli found (in sputum) by microscopy.
Other specified tuberculosis of central nervous system, tubercle bacilli not found (in sputum) by microscopy, but found by bacterial
culture.
Other specified tuberculosis of central nervous system, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological examination, but tuberculosis
confirmed histologically.
Other specified tuberculosis of central nervous system, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological or histological examination, but
tuberculosis confirmed by other methods (inoculation of animals).
Unspecified tuberculosis of central nervous system, unspecified examination.
Unspecified tuberculosis of central nervous system, bacteriological or histological examination not done.
Unspecified tuberculosis of central nervous system, bacteriological or histological examination results unknown (at present).
Unspecified tuberculosis of central nervous system, tubercle bacilli found (in sputum) by microscopy.
Unspecified tuberculosis of central nervous system, tubercle bacilli not found (in sputum) by microscopy, but found by bacterial culture.
Unspecified tuberculosis of central nervous system, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed histologically.
Unspecified tuberculosis of central nervous system, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological or histological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed by other methods (inoculation of animals).
Meningococcal meningitis.
Meningococcal encephalitis.
Gonococcal meningitis.
Hemophilus meningitis.
Pneumococcal meningitis.
Streptococcal meningitis.
Staphylococcal meningitis.
Meningitis in other bacterial diseases classified elsewhere.
Anaerobic meningitis.
Meningitis due to gram-negative bacteria, not elsewhere classified.
Meningitis due to other specified bacteria.
Meningitis due to unspecified bacterium.
Intracranial abscess.
Intraspinal abscess.
Intracranial and intraspinal abscess of unspecified site.
Acute infective polyneuritis.
013.56 ......
013.60
013.61
013.62
013.63
013.64
013.65
......
......
......
......
......
......
013.66 ......
013.80
013.81
013.82
013.83
013.84
......
......
......
......
......
013.85 ......
013.86 ......
013.90
013.91
013.92
013.93
013.94
......
......
......
......
......
013.95 ......
013.96 ......
036.0 ........
036.1 ........
098.82 ......
320.0 ........
320.1 ........
320.2 ........
320.3 ........
320.7 ........
320.81 ......
320.82 ......
320.89 ......
320.9 ........
324.0 ........
324.1 ........
324.9 ........
357.0 ........
The new DRG 561 will have principal
diagnosis codes listed in the following
table.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Diagnosis
code
006.5 ........
045.00 ......
045.01 ......
045.02 ......
045.03 ......
045.10 ......
045.11 ......
045.12 ......
045.13 ......
045.90 ......
045.91 ......
045.92 ......
045.93 ......
049.8 ........
VerDate Aug<31>2005
DRG 561 diagnosis code titles
Amebic brain abscess.
Acute paralytic poliomyelitis specified as bulbar, unspecified type of poliovirus.
Acute paralytic poliomyelitis specified as bulbar, poliovirus type i.
Acute paralytic poliomyelitis specified as bulbar, poliovirus type ii.
Acute paralytic poliomyelitis specified as bulbar, poliovirus type iii.
Acute poliomyelitis with other paralysis, unspecified type of poliovirus.
Acute poliomyelitis with other paralysis, poliovirus type i.
Acute poliomyelitis with other paralysis, poliovirus type ii.
Acute poliomyelitis with other paralysis, poliovirus type iii.
Unspecified acute poliomyelitis, unspecified type poliovirus.
Unspecified acute poliomyelitis, poliovirus type i.
Unspecified acute poliomyelitis, poliovirus type ii.
Unspecified acute poliomyelitis, poliovirus type iii.
Other specified non-arthropod-borne viral diseases of central nervous system.
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00058
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Diagnosis
code
049.9 ........
052.0 ........
052.2 ........
053.14 ......
054.3 ........
054.74 ......
055.0 ........
056.01 ......
056.09 ......
062.0 ........
062.1 ........
062.2 ........
062.3 ........
062.4 ........
062.5 ........
062.8 ........
062.9 ........
063.0 ........
063.1 ........
063.2 ........
063.8 ........
063.9 ........
064 ...........
066.2 ........
071 ...........
072.2 ........
090.40 ......
090.41 ......
090.42 ......
090.49 ......
091.81 ......
094.2 ........
094.3 ........
094.81 ......
100.81 ......
100.89 ......
112.83 ......
114.2 ........
115.01 ......
115.11 ......
115.91 ......
130.0 ........
321.0 ........
321.1 ........
321.2 ........
321.3 ........
321.4 ........
321.8 ........
322.0 ........
322.1 ........
322.2 ........
322.9 ........
323.01 ......
323.02 ......
323.1 ........
323.2 ........
323.41 ......
323.42 ......
323.51 ......
323.52 ......
323.61 ......
323.62 ......
323.63 ......
323.81 ......
323.82 ......
323.9 ........
341.20 ......
341.21 ......
341.22 ......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
DRG 561 diagnosis code titles
Unspecified non-arthropod-borne viral diseases of central nervous system.
Postvaricella encephalitis.
Postvaricella myelitis.
Herpes zoster myelitis.
Herpetic meningoencephalitis.
Herpes simplex myelitis.
Postmeasles encephalitis.
Encephalomyelitis due to rubella.
Rubella with other neurological complications.
Japanese encephalitis.
Western equine encephalitis.
Eastern equine encephalitis.
St. Louis encephalitis.
Australian encephalitis.
California virus encephalitis.
Other specified mosquito-borne viral encephalitis.
Mosquito-borne viral encephalitis, unspecified.
Russian spring-summer (taiga) encephalitis.
Louping ill.
Central European encephalitis.
Other specified tick-borne viral encephalitis.
Tick-borne viral encephalitis, unspecified.
Viral encephalitis transmitted by other and unspecified arthropods.
Venezuelan equine fever.
Rabies.
Mumps encephalitis.
Juvenile neurosyphilis, unspecified.
Congenital syphilitic encephalitis.
Congenital syphilitic meningitis.
Other juvenile neurosyphilis.
Acute syphilitic meningitis (secondary).
Syphilitic meningitis.
Asymptomatic neurosyphilis.
Syphilitic encephalitis.
Leptospiral meningitis (aseptic).
Other specified leptospiral infections.
Candidal meningitis.
Coccidioidal meningitis.
Histoplasma capsulatum meningitis.
Histoplasma duboisii meningitis.
Histoplasmosis meningitis, unspecified.
Meningoencephalitis due to toxoplasmosis.
Cryptococcal meningitis.
Meningitis in other fungal diseases.
Meningitis due to viruses not elsewhere classified.
Meningitis due to trypanosomiasis.
Meningitis in sarcoidosis.
Meningitis due to other nonbacterial organisms classified elsewhere.
Nonpyogenic meningitis.
Eosinophilic meningitis.
Chronic meningitis.
Meningitis, unspecified.
Encephalitis and encephalomyelitis in viral diseases classified elsewhere.
Myelitis in viral diseases classified elsewhere.
Encephalitis, myelitis, and encephalomyelitis in rickettsial diseases classified elsewhere.
Encephalitis, myelitis, and encephalomyelitis in protozoal diseases classified elsewhere.
Other encephalitis and encephalomyelitis due to infection classified elsewhere.
Other myelitis due to infection classified elsewhere.
Encephalitis and encephalomyelitis following immunization procedures.
Myelitis following immunization procedures.
Infectious acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM).
Other postinfectious encephalitis and encephalomyelitis.
Postinfectious myelitis.
Other causes of encephalitis and encephalomyelitis.
Other causes of myelitis.
Unspecified causes of encephalitis, myelitis, and encephalomyelitis.
Acute (transverse) myelitis NOS.
Acute (transverse) myelitis in conditions classified elsewhere.
Idiopathic transverse myelitis.
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00059
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47927
47928
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
differentiated from other patients in the
DRG. The commenter suggested
splitting these DRGs into two or more
new DRGs to better capture severity.
Alternatively, the commenter suggested
that CMS examine how the APR DRG
system handles these types of cases.
Response: Under both the APR DRGs
and our proposed CS DRGs, seizure and
headache cases are assigned to separate
DRGs while these cases are grouped
together in the CMS DRGs. Both severity
DRG systems recognize different levels
of severity for these two groups of
patients. Our medical advisors found
that seizure and headache patients are
clinically different, with seizure
patients having a higher level of
severity. We also analyzed data for
(2) Seizure and Headache
Comment: One commenter stated that
the current DRGs do not adequately
capture the severity of patients with
more severe types of headaches. The
commenter further noted that seizures
and headaches represent distinctly
different levels of severity, yet they are
grouped together in the CMS DRGs:
• CMS DRG 24 (Seizure & Headache
Age >17 with CC).
• CMS DRG 25 (Seizure & Headache
Age >17 without CC).
• CMS DRG 26 (Seizure & Headache
Age 0–17).
The commenter stated that more
severely ill patients, such as those with
intense migraine headaches, should be
patients with seizures versus those who
are admitted with headaches and found
that seizure cases have higher average
charges than headaches. We did not
have enough cases to analyze potential
DRG changes for DRG 26. As the chart
below shows, seizure patients age
greater than 17 have average charges of
$17,125 with CC and $10,540 without
CC. Headache patients greater than 17
years of age have average charges of
$11,618. The data did not support
creating a split for headache patients
greater than 17 years with and without
CC. The difference in average charges
for these groups was only $2,596
($12,591 with CC as compared to $9,995
for those without a CC).
DRGS 24, 25, AND 26
Number of
cases
DRG
24 .................................................................................................................................................
25 .................................................................................................................................................
26 .................................................................................................................................................
60,186
25,816
21
Average
length of stay
4.67
3.13
4.05
Average
charges
$16,403.55
10,419.00
17,396.43
SEIZURES AGE >17 WITH AND WITHOUT CC
Number of
cases
DRG
With CC .......................................................................................................................................
Without CC ..................................................................................................................................
50,605
20,065
Average
length of stay
4.8
3.1
Average
charges
$17,125.19
10,540.27
HEADACHES > 17
Average
length of stay
DRG
15,332 ......................................................................................................................................................................
3.4
Average
charges
$11,618.15
HEADACHES >17 WITH AND WITHOUT CC
Number of
cases
DRG
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
With CC .......................................................................................................................................
Without CC ..................................................................................................................................
The data also support creating
separate DRGs for seizure and headache
patients greater than 17 years of age.
The data further support an additional
split for seizure patients based on the
presence of a complication or
comorbidity (CC). Seizure cases with a
CC have $6,585 greater average charges
compared to cases without a CC. The
data are less compelling for creating a
split based on the presence of a CC for
headache cases, since the difference in
average charges is only $2,596.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
18:47 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
The clinical data and our medical
advisors support the creation of separate
DRGs for these two groups of patients.
Therefore, we are deleting the following
DRGs:
• DRG 24 (Seizure & Headache
Age >17 with CC).
• DRG 25 (Seizure & Headache
Age >17 without CC).
We are creating the following three
new DRGs:
PO 00000
Frm 00060
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
9,581
5,751
Average
length of stay
3.7
2.9
Average
charges
$12,591,92
9,995.85
• DRG 562 (Seizure Age >17 with
CC).
• DRG 563 (Seizure Age >17 without
CC).
• DRG 564 (Headaches Age >17).
The ICD–9–CM codes and DRG logic
for cases assigned to these new DRGs
will be as follows.
New DRG 562 will have the following
principal diagnosis codes and age
greater than 17 years with a CC.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
47929
Diagnosis
code
Diagnosis code title
345.00 ......
345.01 ......
345.10 ......
345.11 ......
345.2 ........
345.3 ........
345.40 ......
Generalized nonconvulsive epilepsy, without mention of intractable epilepsy.
Generalized nonconvulsive epilepsy, with intractable epilepsy.
Generalized convulsive epilepsy, without mention of intractable epilepsy.
Generalized convulsive epilepsy, with intractable epilepsy.
Petit mal status, epileptic.
Grand mal status, epileptic.
Localization-related (focal) (partial) epilepsy and epileptic syndromes with complex partial seizures, without mention of intractable
epilepsy.
Localization-related (focal) (partial) epilepsy and epileptic syndromes with complex partial seizures, with intractable epilepsy.
Localization-related (focal) (partial) epilepsy and epileptic syndromes with simple partial seizures, without mention of intractable epilepsy.
Localization-related (focal) (partial) epilepsy and epileptic syndromes with simple partial seizures, with intractable epilepsy.
Infantile spasms, without mention of intractable epilepsy.
Infantile spasms, with intractable epilepsy.
Epilepsia partialis continua, without mention of intractable epilepsy.
Epilepsia partialis continua, with intractable epilepsy.
Other forms of epilepsy and recurrent seizures, without mention of intractable epilepsy.
Other forms of epilepsy and recurrent seizures, with intractable epilepsy.
Epilepsy, unspecified, without mention of intractable epilepsy.
Epilepsy, unspecified, with intractable epilepsy.
Febrile convulsions (simple), unspecified.
Complex febrile convulsions.
Other convulsions.
345.41 ......
345.50 ......
345.51
345.60
345.61
345.70
345.71
345.80
345.81
345.90
345.91
780.31
780.32
780.39
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
New DRG 563 will have the principal
diagnosis codes listed above for DRG
562, age greater than 17 years, but no
complication/comorbidity.
Diagnosis
code
307.81 ......
310.2 ........
346.00 ......
346.01 ......
346.10 ......
346.11 ......
346.20 ......
346.21 ......
346.80 ......
346.81 ......
346.90 ......
346.91 ......
348.2 ........
349.0 ........
437.4 ........
784.0 ........
Diagnosis code title
Tension headache.
Postconcussion syndrome.
Classical migraine without mention of intractable migraine.
Classical migraine with intractable migraine, so stated.
Common migraine without mention of intractable migraine.
Common migraine with intractable migraine, so stated.
Variants of migraine without mention of intractable migraine.
Variants of migraine with intractable migraine, so stated.
Other forms of migraine without mention of intractable migraine.
Other forms of migraine with intractable migraine, so stated.
Migraine, unspecified without mention of intractable migraine.
Migraine, unspecified with intractable migraine, so stated.
Benign intracranial hypertension.
Reaction to spinal or lumbar puncture.
Cerebral arteritis.
Headache.
b. MDC 4 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Respiratory System): Respiratory System
Diagnosis With Ventilator Support
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Medical patients who are treated with
mechanical ventilation for respiratory
failure are currently assigned to DRG
475 (Respiratory System Diagnosis with
Ventilator Support). This DRG includes
patients who are on a mechanical
ventilator for only a few hours as well
as patients who are on mechanical
ventilation for several days. The
VerDate Aug<31>2005
New DRG 564 will have the principal
diagnosis codes listed as follows and an
age greater than 17 years.
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
proposed CS DRGs divide these patients
into two groups, those on ventilator
support for 96 or more hours and those
on ventilator support for less than 96
hours. The CS DRGs recognize the
difference in severity between these two
groups of patients. Our medical advisors
agree that medical patients who are
treated with mechanical ventilation for
respiratory failure for 96 or more hours
in most cases are more severely ill than
patients who are treated with
mechanical ventilation for fewer than 96
PO 00000
Frm 00061
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
hours. A review of these cases illustrates
a significant difference in average
charges for patients on ventilator
support for 96 or more hours which
supports the greater severity of these
patients. The chart below shows that
patients on ventilator support for 96 or
more hours have average charges of
$83,058 compared to $38,300 for
patients on ventilator support for less
than 96 hours, a difference of $44,758 in
charges. The following chart
summarizes these data.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47930
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
DRG 475 RESPIRATORY SYSTEM DIAGNOSIS WITH VENTILATOR SUPPORT
Number of
cases
DRG
DRG 475 ..................................................................................................................................................
DRG 475 with Ventilator Support 96+ Hours ..........................................................................................
DRG 475 with Ventilator Support <96 Hours ..........................................................................................
The proposed CS DRGs do a much
better job of identifying patients on
ventilator support who have higher
levels of severity and utilize
significantly more resources. Therefore,
we will adopt the approach used under
the CS DRG system and split these
patients based on whether or not the
patients are on mechanical ventilation
for 96 hours. We are deleting DRG 475
and creating the following two new
DRGs:
• DRG 565 (Respiratory System
Diagnosis with Ventilator Support 96+
Hours).
• DRG 566 (Respiratory System
Diagnosis with Ventilator Support < 96
Hours).
The DRG logic for these two new
DRGs is as follows.
New DRG 565 will have a respiratory
system diagnosis and procedure code
96.72 (Continuous mechanical
ventilation for 96 consecutive hours or
more).
New DRG 566 will have a respiratory
system diagnosis and the following
procedure codes:
96.70 (Continuous mechanical
ventilation of unspecified duration).
96.71 (Continuous mechanical
ventilation for less than 96 consecutive
hours).
c. MDC 6 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Digestive System)
(1) Major Esophageal Disorders and
Major Gastrointestinal and Peritoneal
Infections
The proposed CS DRGs assign major
esophageal disorders to a single DRG
because these disorders have been
shown to have a higher level of severity
than do other types of esophageal
disorders. Under the current CMS DRGs
these disorders are dispersed
throughout 8 separate DRGs. The
conditions included in the list of major
esophageal disorders are described in
the table below. The proposed CS DRGs
also assign specific gastrointestinal and
peritoneal infections that represent a
high level of severity into a single DRG.
These conditions are assigned to the
same group of eight CMS DRGs
mentioned above within CMS’ current
DRGS. The conditions considered
gastrointestinal and peritoneal
infections are described in the table
below.
114,199
44,836
69,363
Average
length of
stay
10.64
15.30
7.64
Average
charges
$55,873.15
83,058.24
38,300.81
Our data show that the two groups of
cases assigned to major esophageal
disorders and to the gastrointestinal and
peritoneal infections represent
significantly greater severity levels and
have higher average charges than do
other cases in the eight CMS DRGs. The
eight current CMS DRGs to which these
two groups of higher severity cases as
assigned are as follows:
• CMS DRG 174 (G.I. Hemorrhage
with CC).
• CMS DRG 175 (G.I. Hemorrhage
without CC).
• CMS DRG 182 (Esophagitis,
Gastroenteritis & Miscellaneous
Digestive Disorders Age >17 with CC).
• CMS DRG 183 (Esophagitis,
Gastroenteritis & Miscellaneous
Digestive Disorders Age >17 without
CC).
• CMS DRG 184 (Esophagitis,
Gastroenteritis & Miscellaneous
Digestive Disorders Age 0–17).
• CMS DRG 188 (Digestive System
Diagnoses Age >17 with CC).
• CMS DRG 189 (Digestive System
Diagnoses Age >17 without CC).
• CMS DRG 190 (Digestive System
Diagnoses Age 0–17).
DRGS 174, 175, 182, 183, 184, 188, 189, AND 190
Number of
cases
DRG
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
174
174
175
175
182
182
183
183
184
184
188
189
189
190
190
190
..............................................................................................................................................
w/o Major Esophageal Disorders or Gastrointestinal and Peritoneal Infections ................
..............................................................................................................................................
w/o Major Esophageal Disorders or Gastrointestinal and Peritoneal Infections ................
..............................................................................................................................................
w/o Major Esophageal Disorders or Gastrointestinal and Peritoneal Infections ................
..............................................................................................................................................
w/o Major Esophageal Disorders or Gastrointestinal and Peritoneal Infections ................
..............................................................................................................................................
w/o Major Esophageal Disorders or Gastrointestinal and Peritoneal Infections ................
..............................................................................................................................................
w/o Major Esophageal Disorders or Gastrointestinal and Peritoneal Infections ................
..............................................................................................................................................
w/o Major Esophageal Disorders or Gastrointestinal and Peritoneal Infections ................
..............................................................................................................................................
w/o Major Esophageal Disorders or Gastrointestinal and Peritoneal Infections ................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00062
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
249,359
241,508
28,485
27,816
282,619
243,563
77,582
74,899
66
60
88,970
87,210
12,454
12,123
58
45
18AUR2
Average
length of
stay
4.69
4.69
2.86
2.87
4.48
4.07
2.89
2.84
4.38
3.88
5.45
5.43
3.06
3.02
5.02
5.13
Average
charges
$16,987.26
16,934.86
9,573.73
9,934.86
14,269.01
13,124.03
9,933.62
9,845.81
12,116.67
10,053.38
18,278.19
18,194.27
9,963.90
9,855.31
14,156.52
14,829.47
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
peritoneal infection have average
charges ranging from $9,845 to $18,194.
Average
The average charges for major
Number of
Average
length of
esophageal disorders are $18,410, while
cases
charges
stay
average charges for major
10,633 ...........
4.7
$18,410.30 gastrointestinal disorders and peritoneal
infections are $20,861. Removing these
higher severity cases from the eight
MAJOR GASTROINTESTINAL AND
DRGs does not have a significant impact
PERITONEAL INFECTIONS
on the DRG weights for the remaining
cases. Most of the higher severity cases
Average
are being removed from DRG 182. There
Number of
Average
length of
cases
charges
were 282,619 cases in this DRG. By
stay
removing the two new groups of cases,
41,736 ...........
6.9
$20,861.06 the DRG has 243,563 cases remaining.
The average charge for DRG 182 with
As can be seen from the tables above,
the remaining cases decreases from
cases assigned to these eight DRGs
$14,269 to $13,124. Therefore, the
without a major esophageal disorder or
impact on the remaining cases is not
a major gastrointestinal disorder and
that significant. However, reassigning
MAJOR ESOPHAGEAL DISORDERS
Diagnosis
code
017.80
017.81
017.82
017.83
017.84
017.85
017.86
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
112.84 ......
456.0 ........
456.1 ........
456.20 ......
530.4 ........
530.7 ........
530.82 ......
530.84 ......
750.3 ........
750.4 ........
862.22 ......
947.2 ........
Tuberculosis of esophagus, unspecified examination.
Tuberculosis of esophagus, bacteriological or histological examination not done.
Tuberculosis of esophagus, bacteriological or histological examination results unknown (at present).
Tuberculosis of esophagus, tubercle bacilli found (in sputum) by microscopy.
Tuberculosis of esophagus, tubercle bacilli not found (in sputum) by microscopy, but found by bacterial culture.
Tuberculosis of esophagus, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed histologically.
Tuberculosis of esophagus, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological or histological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed by
other methods (inoculation of animals).
Candidal esophagitis.
Esophageal varices with bleeding.
Esophageal varices without mention of bleeding.
Esophageal varices in diseases classified elsewhere, with bleeding.
Perforation of esophagus.
Gastroesophageal laceration-hemorrhage syndrome.
Esophageal hemorrhage.
Tracheoesophageal fistula.
Congenital tracheoesophageal fistula, esophageal atresia and stenosis.
Other specified congenital anomalies of esophagus.
Injury to esophagus without mention of open wound into cavity.
Burn of esophagus.
codes (removing them from DRGs 182,
183, 184, 188, 189, and 190):
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Diagnosis
code
VerDate Aug<31>2005
cases with major esophageal and
gastrointestinal disorders and peritoneal
infections to two new DRGs has the
effect of creating two groups which have
higher levels of severity and use
significantly greater resources. Our
medical advisors agree that these two
groups represent higher levels of
severity and that it is appropriate to
move these two groups of cases out of
their existing assignments and into the
following two new DRGs:
• DRG 571 (Major Esophageal
Disorders)
• DRG 572 (Major Gastrointestinal
Disorders and Peritoneal Infections)
We are creating new DRG 571 with
the following ICD–9–CM diagnosis
codes (removing them from DRGs 174,
175, 182, 183, 184, 188, 189, and 190):
Major esophageal disorders diagnosis code titles
We are creating new DRG 572 with
the following ICD–9–CM diagnosis
001.0 ........
001.1 ........
001.9 ........
003.0 ........
004.0 ........
004.1 ........
004.2 ........
004.3 ........
004.8 ........
004.9 ........
005.0 ........
005.2 ........
005.3 ........
005.4 ........
005.81 ......
005.89 ......
006.0 ........
006.1 ........
006.2 ........
007.0 ........
007.1 ........
47931
Major esophageal disorders diagnosis code titles
Cholera due to vibrio cholerae.
Cholera due to vibrio cholerae el tor.
Cholera, unspecified.
Salmonella gastroenteritis.
Shigella dysenteriae.
Shigella flexneri.
Shigella boydii.
Shigella sonnei.
Other specified shigella infections.
Shigellosis, unspecified.
Staphylococcal food poisoning.
Food poisoning due to clostridium perfringens (c. welchii).
Food poisoning due to other clostridia.
Food poisoning due to vibrio parahaemolyticus.
Food poisoning due to vibrio vulnificus.
Other bacterial food poisoning.
Acute amebic dysentery without mention of abscess.
Chronic intestinal amebiasis without mention of abscess.
Amebic nondysenteric colitis.
Balantidiasis.
Giardiasis.
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00063
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47932
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Diagnosis
code
Major esophageal disorders diagnosis code titles
007.2 ........
007.3 ........
007.4 ........
007.5 ........
007.8 ........
007.9 ........
008.00 ......
008.01 ......
008.02 ......
008.03 ......
008.04 ......
008.09 ......
008.1 ........
008.2 ........
008.3 ........
008.41 ......
008.42 ......
008.43 ......
008.44 ......
008.45 ......
008.46 ......
008.47 ......
008.49 ......
008.5 ........
4.00 ..........
014.01 ......
014.02 ......
014.03 ......
014.04 ......
014.05 ......
014.06 ......
Coccidiosis.
Intestinal trichomoniasis.
Cryptosporidiosis.
Cyclosporiasis.
Other specified protozoal intestinal diseases.
Unspecified protozoal intestinal disease.
Intestinal infection due to e. coli, unspecified.
Intestinal infection due to enteropathogenic e. coli.
Intestinal infection due to enterotoxigenic e. coli.
Intestinal infection due to enteroinvasive e. coli.
Intestinal infection due to enterohemorrhagic e. coli.
Intestinal infection due to other intestinal e. coli infections.
Intestinal infection due to arizona group of paracolon bacilli.
Intestinal infection due to aerobacter aerogenes.
Intestinal infection due to proteus (mirabilis) (morganii).
Intestinal infection due to staphylococcus.
Intestinal infection due to pseudomonas.
Intestinal infection due to campylobacter.
Intestinal infection due to yersinia enterocolitica.
Intestinal infection due to clostridium difficile.
Intestinal infection due to other anaerobes.
Intestinal infection due to other gram-negative bacteria.
Intestinal infection due to other organisms.
Bacterial enteritis, unspecified.
Tuberculous peritonitis, unspecified examination.
Tuberculous peritonitis, bacteriological or histological examination not done.
Tuberculous peritonitis, bacteriological or histological examination results unknown (at present).
Tuberculous peritonitis, tubercle bacilli found (in sputum) by microscopy.
Tuberculous peritonitis, tubercle bacilli not found (in sputum) by microscopy, but found by bacterial culture.
Tuberculous peritonitis, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed histologically.
Tuberculous peritonitis, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological or histological examination, but tuberculosis confirmed by other
methods (inoculation of animals).
Other tuberculosis of intestines and mesenteric glands, unspecified examination.
Other tuberculosis of intestines and mesenteric glands, bacteriological or histological examination not done.
Other tuberculosis of intestines and mesenteric glands, bacteriological or histological examination results unknown (at present).
Other tuberculosis of intestines and mesenteric glands, tubercle bacilli found (in sputum) by microscopy.
Other tuberculosis of intestines and mesenteric glands, tubercle bacilli not found (in sputum) by microscopy, but found by bacterial
culture.
Other tuberculosis of intestines and mesenteric glands, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological examination, but tuberculosis
confirmed histologically.
Other tuberculosis of intestines and mesenteric glands, tubercle bacilli not found by bacteriological or histological examination, but
tuberculosis confirmed by other methods (inoculation of animals).
Enteric tularemia.
Gastrointestinal anthrax.
Diphtheritic peritonitis.
Abdominal actinomycotic infection.
Syphilitic peritonitis.
Gonococcal peritonitis.
Cysticercosis.
Sparganosis (larval diphyllobothriasis).
Hymenolepiasis.
Other specified cestode infection.
Cestode infection, unspecified.
Ancylostomiasis due to ancylostoma duodenale.
Necatoriasis due to necator americanus.
Ancylostomiasis due to ancylostoma braziliense.
Ancylostomiasis due to ancylostoma ceylanicum.
Other specified ancylostoma.
Ancylostomiasis and necatoriasis, unspecified.
Acute appendicitis with generalized peritonitis.
Acute appendicitis with peritoneal abscess.
Peritonitis in infectious diseases classified elsewhere.
Pneumococcal peritonitis.
Peritonitis (acute) generalized.
Peritoneal abscess.
Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis.
Other suppurative peritonitis.
Psoas muscle abscess.
Other retroperitoneal abscess.
Other retroperitoneal infections.
Other specified peritonitis.
Unspecified peritonitis.
Abscess of intestine.
014.80
014.81
014.82
014.83
014.84
......
......
......
......
......
014.85 ......
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
014.86 ......
021.1 ........
022.2 ........
032.83 ......
039.2 ........
095.2 ........
098.86 ......
123.1 ........
123.5 ........
123.6 ........
123.8 ........
123.9 ........
126.0 ........
126.1 ........
126.2 ........
126.3 ........
126.8 ........
126.9 ........
540.0 ........
540.1 ........
567.0 ........
567.1 ........
567.21 ......
567.22 ......
567.23 ......
567.29 ......
567.31 ......
567.38 ......
7.39 ..........
567.89 ......
567.9 ........
569.5 ........
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00064
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
(2) Principal or Secondary Diagnosis of
Major Gastrointestinal Diagnosis
We examined the diagnosis codes
assigned to MDC 6 for severity using the
proposed CS DRGs and created a list of
diagnosis codes that are identified as
major or extreme in the APR DRGs or
the consolidated severity DRGs. We
refer to this set of higher severity
diagnosis codes as Major
Gastrointestinal Diagnoses. The list of
higher severity diagnosis codes
considered to be a Major
Gastrointestinal Diagnosis is provided
in the table below showing new DRG
569.
We then examined DRGs 148 and 149
(Major Small & Large Bowel Procedures
with and without CC, respectively) and
DRGs 154 through 156 (Stomach,
Esophageal & Duodenal Procedures Age
>17 with and without CC and Age 0–17,
respectively) when these Major
Gastrointestinal Diagnoses were present
as either a principal or secondary
diagnosis. In general, these Major
Gastrointestinal Diagnoses represent or
are associated with the reason for
performing the surgical procedure in
DRGs 148 and 149 and DRGs 154
through 156 and are the most serious
diagnoses that necessitate surgery. As
the following tables illustrate, the
presence of these Major Gastrointestinal
Diagnoses identifies patients with a
higher level of severity. The presence of
these Major Gastrointestinal Diagnoses
leads to significantly higher average
charges for these two groups of surgical
patients, particularly for cases currently
assigned to DRGs 148 and 154 which are
the surgical procedures that include the
presence of a CC. The surgical patients
with Major Gastrointestinal Diagnoses
would not only be considered to have a
greater level of severity and be more
expensive, they would also be assigned
to the surgical DRG that includes a CC.
The tables below show that patients in
DRG 148 with a Major Gastrointestinal
47933
Diagnosis have average charges of
$70,001.16 compared to average charges
of $43,809.03 when a Major
Gastrointestinal Diagnosis is not
present. The difference in charges for
cases in DRG 149 was not as great. The
difference in average charges was
$29,103.84 for DRG 149 when a Major
Gastrointestinal Diagnosis was present
and $23,077.84 when it was not. The
number of cases with a Major
Gastrointestinal Diagnosis was
significantly larger for DRG 148 (58,153
cases compared to only 1,822 in DRG
149). Similar findings occur for DRGs
154, 155, and 156. Cases with a Major
Gastrointestinal Diagnosis occur with
significantly greater numbers in DRG
154 (9,924 compared to only 357 in DRG
155 and none in DRG 156). The average
charges for cases with a Major
Gastrointestinal Diagnosis were
$84,270.92 for DRG 154, and only
$29,193.81 for DRG 155.
DRGS 148, 149, 154, 155, AND 156
Number of
cases
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
148
148
148
149
149
149
154
154
154
155
155
155
156
156
156
..............................................................................................................................................
with PDX/SDX of Major GI Diagnoses ................................................................................
w/o PDX/SDX Major GI Diagnoses .....................................................................................
..............................................................................................................................................
with PDX/SDX of Major GI Diagnoses ................................................................................
w/o PDX/SDX Major GI Diagnoses .....................................................................................
..............................................................................................................................................
with PDX/SDX of Major GI Diagnoses ................................................................................
w/o PDX/SDX Major GI Diagnoses .....................................................................................
..............................................................................................................................................
with PDX/SDX of Major GI Diagnoses ................................................................................
w/o PDX/SDX Major GI Diagnoses .....................................................................................
..............................................................................................................................................
with PDX/SDX of Major GI Diagnoses ................................................................................
w/o PDX/SDX Major GI Diagnoses .....................................................................................
Our medical advisors agree that these
gastrointestinal surgical patients with a
Major Gastrointestinal Diagnosis are
more severely ill and represent patients
with a higher level of severity. They
support subdividing cases in DRG 148
and 154 based on the presence of a
Major Gastrointestinal Diagnosis to
better capture patients with higher level
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Diagnosis
code
008.41
008.42
008.43
008.45
008.46
008.49
014.04
098.86
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
of severity. A summary of these changes
is provided below.
We are deleting DRG 148 and creating
the following two new DRGs:
• DRG 569 (Major Small & Large
Bowel Procedures with CC with Major
Gastrointestinal Diagnosis)
• DRG 570 (Major Small & Large
Bowel Procedures with CC without
Major Gastrointestinal Diagnosis)
Average
length of
stay
126,156
58,153
68,003
18,471
1,822
16,649
25,617
9,924
15,693
5,679
357
5,322
4
0
4
11.92
14.24
9.94
5.66
7.66
5.44
12.95
15.59
11.28
3.96
7.10
3.75
9.25
0
9.25
Intestinal infection due to staphylococcus.
Intestinal infection due to pseudomonas.
Intestinal infection due to campylobacter.
Intestinal infection due to clostridium difficile.
Intestinal infection due to other anaerobes.
Intestinal infection due to other organisms.
Tuberculous peritonitis, tubercle bacilli not found (in sputum) by microscopy, but found by bacterial culture.
Gonococcal peritonitis.
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00065
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
$55,882.59
70,001.16
43,809.03
23,672.25
29,103.84
23,077.84
66,257.17
84,270.92
54,865.56
21,543.88
29,193.81
21,030.50
48,015.50
0
48,015.50
The DRG logic for new DRGs 569 and
570 is as follows.
New DRG 569 will have a principal
diagnosis from MDC 6 and one of the
following codes as either the principal
or secondary diagnosis. This DRG will
also have an operating room procedure
from current DRG 148 and a
Complication/Comorbidity (as defined
in CMS DRG GROUPER Version 24.0).
Principal or secondary diagnosis—major gastrointestinal diagnosis diagnosis code title
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Average
charges
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47934
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Diagnosis
code
456.0 ........
456.20 ......
530.21 ......
530.4 ........
530.7 ........
530.84 ......
531.00 ......
531.21 ......
531.40 ......
531.41 ......
531.50 ......
531.60 ......
531.91 ......
532.00 ......
532.10 ......
532.11 ......
532.20 ......
532.31 ......
532.40 ......
532.41 ......
532.50 ......
532.60 ......
533.00 ......
533.10 ......
533.21 ......
533.40 ......
533.41 ......
533.50 ......
533.51 ......
533.60 ......
533.91 ......
534.00 ......
534.40 ......
534.41 ......
534.50 ......
534.51 ......
534.91 ......
535.01 ......
535.11 ......
535.21 ......
535.31 ......
535.41 ......
535.51 ......
535.61 ......
537.3 ........
537.83 ......
540.0 ........
540.1 ........
550.00 ......
550.01 ......
550.02 ......
551.00 ......
551.1 ........
551.20 ......
551.21 ......
551.29 ......
551.3 ........
551.8 ........
551.9 ........
557.0 ........
557.1 ........
557.9 ........
560.0 ........
560.2 ........
560.31 ......
560.81 ......
560.89 ......
560.9 ........
562.02 ......
562.03 ......
562.12 ......
562.13 ......
564.7 ........
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Principal or secondary diagnosis—major gastrointestinal diagnosis diagnosis code title
Esophageal varices with bleeding.
Esophageal varices in diseases classified elsewhere, with bleeding.
Ulcer of esophagus with bleeding.
Perforation of esophagus.
Gastroesophageal laceration-hemorrhage syndrome.
Tracheoesophageal fistula.
Acute gastric ulcer with hemorrhage, without mention of obstruction.
Acute gastric ulcer with hemorrhage and perforation, with obstruction.
Chronic or unspecified gastric ulcer with hemorrhage, without mention of obstruction.
Chronic or unspecified gastric ulcer with hemorrhage, with obstruction.
Chronic or unspecified gastric ulcer with perforation, without mention of obstruction.
Chronic or unspecified gastric ulcer with hemorrhage and perforation, without mention of obstruction.
Gastric ulcer, unspecified as acute or chronic, without mention of hemorrhage or perforation, with obstruction.
Acute duodenal ulcer with hemorrhage, without mention of obstruction.
Acute duodenal ulcer with perforation, without mention of obstruction.
Acute duodenal ulcer with perforation, with obstruction.
Acute duodenal ulcer with hemorrhage and perforation, without mention of obstruction.
Acute duodenal ulcer without mention of hemorrhage or perforation, with obstruction.
Chronic or unspecified duodenal ulcer with hemorrhage, without mention of obstruction.
Chronic or unspecified duodenal ulcer with hemorrhage, with obstruction.
Chronic or unspecified duodenal ulcer with perforation, without mention of obstruction.
Chronic or unspecified duodenal ulcer with hemorrhage and perforation, without mention of obstruction.
Acute peptic ulcer of unspecified site with hemorrhage, without mention of obstruction.
Acute peptic ulcer of unspecified site with perforation, without mention of obstruction.
Acute peptic ulcer of unspecified site with hemorrhage and perforation, with obstruction.
Chronic or unspecified peptic ulcer of unspecified site with hemorrhage, without mention of obstruction.
Chronic or unspecified peptic ulcer of unspecified site with hemorrhage, with obstruction.
Chronic or unspecified peptic ulcer of unspecified site with perforation, without mention of obstruction.
Chronic or unspecified peptic ulcer of unspecified site with perforation, with obstruction.
Chronic or unspecified peptic ulcer of unspecified site with hemorrhage and perforation, without mention of obstruction.
Peptic ulcer of unspecified site, unspecified as acute or chronic, without mention of hemorrhage or perforation, with obstruction.
Acute gastrojejunal ulcer with hemorrhage, without mention of obstruction.
Chronic or unspecified gastrojejunal ulcer with hemorrhage, without mention of obstruction.
Chronic or unspecified gastrojejunal ulcer, with hemorrhage, with obstruction.
Chronic or unspecified gastrojejunal ulcer with perforation, without mention of obstruction.
Chronic or unspecified gastrojejunal ulcer with perforation, with obstruction.
Gastrojejunal ulcer, unspecified as acute or chronic, without mention of hemorrhage or perforation, with obstruction.
Acute gastritis with hemorrhage.
Atrophic gastritis with hemorrhage.
Gastric mucosal hypertrophy with hemorrhage.
Alcoholic gastritis with hemorrhage.
Other specified gastritis with hemorrhage.
Unspecified gastritis and gastroduodenitis with hemorrhage.
Duodenitis with hemorrhage.
Other obstruction of duodenum.
Angiodysplasia of stomach and duodenum with hemorrhage.
Acute appendicitis with generalized peritonitis.
Acute appendicitis with peritoneal abscess.
Unilateral or unspecified inguinal hernia, with gangrene.
Recurrent unilateral or unspecified inguinal hernia, with gangrene.
Bilateral inguinal hernia, with gangrene.
Unilateral or unspecified femoral hernia with gangrene.
Umbilical hernia with gangrene.
Unspecified ventral hernia with gangrene.
Incisional ventral hernia, with gangrene.
Other ventral hernia with gangrene.
Diaphragmatic hernia with gangrene.
Hernia of other specified sites, with gangrene.
Hernia of unspecified site, with gangrene.
Acute vascular insufficiency of intestine.
Chronic vascular insufficiency of intestine.
Unspecified vascular insufficiency of intestine.
Intussusception.
Volvulus.
Gallstone ileus.
Intestinal or peritoneal adhesions with obstruction (postoperative) (postinfection).
Other specified intestinal obstruction.
Unspecified intestinal obstruction.
Diverticulosis of small intestine with hemorrhage.
Diverticulitis of small intestine with hemorrhage.
Diverticulosis of colon with hemorrhage.
Diverticulitis of colon with hemorrhage.
Megacolon, other than hirschsprung’s.
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00066
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Diagnosis
code
567.0 ........
567.1 ........
567.21 ......
567.22 ......
567.23 ......
567.29 ......
567.31 ......
567.38 ......
567.39 ......
567.81 ......
567.9 ........
568.81 ......
569.5 ........
569.83 ......
569.85 ......
578.0 ........
750.3 ........
863.30 ......
863.31 ......
863.39 ......
863.50 ......
863.51 ......
863.52 ......
863.53 ......
863.54 ......
863.55 ......
863.59 ......
863.90 ......
863.95 ......
863.99 ......
868.13 ......
947.3 ........
Principal or secondary diagnosis—major gastrointestinal diagnosis diagnosis code title
Peritonitis in infectious diseases classified elsewhere.
Pneumococcal peritonitis.
Peritonitis (acute) generalized.
Peritoneal abscess.
Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis.
Other suppurative peritonitis.
Psoas muscle abscess.
Other retroperitoneal abscess.
Other retroperitoneal infections.
Choleperitonitis.
Unspecified peritonitis.
Hemoperitoneum (nontraumatic).
Abscess of intestine.
Perforation of intestine.
Angiodysplasia of intestine with hemorrhage.
Hematemesis.
Congenital tracheoesophageal fistula, esophageal atresia and stenosis.
Injury to small intestine, unspecified site, with open wound into cavity.
Injury to duodenum with open wound into cavity.
Other injury to small intestine with open wound into cavity.
Injury to colon, unspecified site, with open wound into cavity.
Injury to ascending (right) colon with open wound into cavity.
Injury to transverse colon with open wound into cavity.
Injury to descending (left) colon with open wound into cavity.
Injury to sigmoid colon with open wound into cavity.
Injury to rectum with open wound into cavity.
Other injury to colon and rectum with open wound into cavity.
Injury to gastrointestinal tract, unspecified site, with open wound into cavity.
Injury to appendix with open wound into cavity.
Injury to other and unspecified gastrointestinal sites with open wound into cavity.
Injury to peritoneum with open wound into cavity.
Burn of gastrointestinal tract.
New DRG 570 will have an operating
room procedure code from current CMS
DRG 148 and a principal diagnosis from
MDC 6, except for a principal or
secondary diagnosis listed above in the
Major Gastrointestinal Diagnosis list and
will have a Complication/Comorbidity.
We also are deleting DRG 154 and
creating two new DRGs as follows:
• DRG 567 (Stomach, Esophageal &
Duodenal Procedures Age >17 with
Complication/Comorbidity with Major
Gastrointestinal Diagnosis)
• DRG 568 (Stomach, Esophageal &
Duodenal Procedures Age >17 with
Complication/Comorbidity without
Major Gastrointestinal Diagnosis)
New DRG 567 will have a principal
diagnosis from MDC 6 with either a
principal or secondary diagnosis of a
Major Gastrointestinal Diagnosis (see
list of Major Gastrointestinal Diagnoses
listed above). New DRG 567 will also
have an operating room procedure from
current CMS DRG 154 and a CC. New
DRG 568 will have a principal diagnosis
from MDC 6, except it will not have a
principal or secondary diagnosis from
the list of Major Gastrointestinal
Diagnoses. It will also have an operating
room procedure from current CMS DRG
154 and a CC.
d. MDC 11 (Diseases and Disorders of
the Kidney and Urinary Tract): Major
Bladder Procedures
Under our proposed CS DRGs, cases
with a major bladder procedure were
found to have a higher level of severity
than were cases with other types of
bladder procedures. Therfore, cases
with a major bladder procedure are
assigned to a single DRG in the CS
DRGs. The procedures classified as a
major bladder procedure are as follows:
MAJOR BLADDER PROCEDURES
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Procedure
code
57.6 ..........
57.71 ........
57.79 ........
57.83 ........
57.84 ........
57.85 ........
57.86 ........
57.87 ........
57.88 ........
57.89 ........
VerDate Aug<31>2005
47935
Description
Partial cystectomy.
Radical cystectomy.
Other total cystectomy.
Repair of fistula involving bladder and intestine.
Repair of other fistula of bladder.
Cystourethroplasty and plastic repair of bladder neck.
Repair of bladder exstrophy.
Reconstruction of urinary bladder.
Other anastomosis of bladder.
Other repair of bladder.
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00067
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47936
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
The CMS DRGs assign these cases to
one of the five following DRGs:
• DRG 303 (Kidney, Ureter & Major
Bladder Procedures for Neoplasm).
• DRG 304 (Kidney, Ureter & Major
Bladder Procedures for Non-Neoplasm
with CC)
• DRG 305 (Kidney, Ureter & Major
Bladder Procedures for Non-Neoplasm
without CC)
• DRG 308 (Minor Bladder
Procedures with CC)
• DRG 309 (Minor Bladder
Procedures without CC)
Our medical advisors support creating
a new DRG for major bladder
procedures because they represent cases
with higher levels of severity, are
clinically different, and use greater
resources. We examined data on cases
containing a major bladder procedure
Number of
cases
DRGs
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
303
303
304
304
305
305
308
308
309
309
and determined they represent cases
with a higher level of severity and
utilize significantly more resources than
other cases within the DRGs where they
are currently assigned. Cases with a
major bladder procedure had average
charges of $53,434 compared to $14,976
to $38,119 for other cases within the
five DRGs where the patient did not
have a major bladder procedure. The
tables below illustrate these data.
..............................................................................................................................................
Without Major Bladder Procedures .....................................................................................
..............................................................................................................................................
Without Major Bladder Procedures .....................................................................................
..............................................................................................................................................
Without Major Bladder Procedures .....................................................................................
..............................................................................................................................................
Without Major Bladder Procedures .....................................................................................
..............................................................................................................................................
Without Major Bladder Procedures .....................................................................................
into new DRG 573 (Major Bladder
Procedures). A summary of these
Number of Average length
Average
changes is as follows:
cases
of stay
charges
We are renaming the following three
DRGs:
6,354 ........
10.8
$53,434.93
• DRG 303—‘‘ Kidney and Ureter
Procedures for Neoplasm’’
Therefore, we are moving these
procedures out of their current DRGs
• DRG 304—‘‘ Kidney and Ureter
(DRG 303, 304, 305, 308, and 309) and
Procedures for Non-Neoplasm With CC’’
MAJOR BLADDER PROCEDURES
23,328
18,909
13,257
12,835
2,827
2,776
6,358
5,180
3,104
2,820
57.6 ..........
57.71 ........
57.79 ........
57.83 ........
57.84 ........
57.85 ........
57.86 ........
57.87 ........
57.88 ........
57.89 ........
Description
Partial cystectomy.
Radical cystectomy.
Other total cystectomy.
Repair of fistula involving bladder and intestine.
Repair of other fistula of bladder.
Cystourethroplasty and plastic repair of bladder neck.
Repair of bladder exstrophy.
Reconstruction of urinary bladder.
Other anastomosis of bladder.
Other repair of bladder.
e. MDC 16 (Diseases and Disorders of
the Blood and Blood Forming Organs
and Immunological Disorders): Major
Hematological and Immunological
Diagnoses
Under our proposed CS DRGs, major
hematological and immunological
diagnoses were found to identify cases
with a higher level of severity. They are
assigned to a single DRG under the CS
DRGs. The diagnoses considered to be
major hematological and immunological
diagnoses include the following
conditions:
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Diagnosis
code
279.11 ......
279.12 ......
279.13 ......
279.19 ......
279.2 ........
283.0 ........
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Major hematological and immunological code titles
Digeorge’s syndrome.
Wiskott-aldrich syndrome.
Nezelof’s syndrome.
Other deficiency of cell-mediated immunity.
Combined immunity deficiency.
Autoimmune hemolytic anemias.
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00068
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
7.28
6.33
8.35
8.19
3.10
3.02
6.15
5.30
1.98
1.72
Average
charges
$37,510.79
32,867.55
38,800.38
38,119.74
19,528.35
19,295.59
27,982.54
24,017.30
15,446.61
14,976.79
• DRG 305—‘‘ Kidney and Ureter
Procedures for Non-Neoplasm Without
CC’’
We are removing the following
procedure codes from DRG 303–305,
308, and 309 and assigning them to new
DRG 573. New DRG 573 will contain the
following procedure codes.
MAJOR BLADDER PROCEDURES
Procedure
code
Average
length of
stay
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Diagnosis
code
283.10 ......
283.19 ......
283.2 ........
283.9 ........
284.8 ........
284.9 ........
288.1 ........
288.2 ........
996.85 ......
47937
Major hematological and immunological code titles
Non-autoimmune hemolytic anemia, unspecified.
Other non-autoimmune hemolytic anemias.
Hemoglobinuria due to hemolysis from external causes.
Acquired hemolytic anemia, unspecified.
Other specified aplastic anemias.
Aplastic anemia, unspecified.
Functional disorders of polymorphonuclear neutrophils.
Genetic anomalies of leukocytes.
Complications of transplanted bone marrow.
These conditions are currently
assigned to the following four CMS
DRGs:
• DRG 395 (Red Blood Cell Disorders
Age >17)
• DRG 396 (Red Blood Cell Disorders
Age 0–17)
• DRG 398 (Reticuloendothelial &
Immunity Disorders with CC)
• DRG 399 (Reticuloendothelial &
Immunity Disorders without CC)
Our medical advisors agree that major
hematological and immunological
disorders are found in patients with
significantly greater levels of severity
and are different from other conditions
in the four DRGs where they are
assigned. Our data analysis shows that
major hematological and immunological
diseases identify patients with
significantly greater levels of severity.
They are more resource intensive than
other conditions assigned to these four
DRGs. Cases with major hematological
and immunological conditions had
average charges of $21,276 compared to
$11,066 to $18,791 for the other
conditions where these cases are
currently assigned. Most of the
nonhematological and immunological
cases (96,557) are assigned to DRG 395
and have an average charge of $12,977.
DRGS 395, 396, 398, AND 399
Number of
cases
DRG
DRG 395 ..................................................................................................................................................
DRG 395 Without Major Hematological Diagnosis excluding Sickle Cell Crisis & Coagulation Disorders ...................................................................................................................................................
DRG 396 ..................................................................................................................................................
DRG 396 Without Major Hematological Diagnosis excluding Sickle Cell Crisis & Coagulation Disorders ...................................................................................................................................................
DRG 398 ..................................................................................................................................................
DRG 398 Without Major Hematological Diagnosis excluding Sickle Cell Crisis & Coagulation Disorders ...................................................................................................................................................
DRG 399 ..................................................................................................................................................
DRG 399 Without Major Hematological Diagnosis excluding Sickle Cell Crisis & Coagulation Disorders ...................................................................................................................................................
We are creating a new CMS DRG 574
(Major Hematologic/Immunologic
Diagnoses Except Sickle Cell Crisis and
Coagulation Disorders). We are
removing the codes mentioned in the
Average
table above from DRGs 395, 396, 398,
charges
and 399 and assigning them to new DRG
$21,276.25 574. We also are assigning the new
diagnosis codes indicated by an asterisk
MAJOR HEMATOLOGICAL DIAGNOSIS
EXCLUDING SICKLE CELL CRISIS &
COAGULATION DISORDERS
Number of
cases
Average length
of stay
25,087 ......
5.6
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Diagnosis
code
279.11 ......
279.12 ......
279.13 ......
279.19 ......
279.2 ........
283.0 ........
283.10 ......
283.19 ......
283.2 ........
283.9 ........
284.01 * ....
284.09 * ....
284.8 ........
284.9 ........
288.00 * ....
VerDate Aug<31>2005
4.28
$14,078.78
96,557
19
4.10
2.95
12,977.20
10,406.05
17
17,608
3.06
5.71
11,066.94
19,902.21
6,381
1,552
3.28
3.38
18,791.32
11,277.35
1,011
3.28
11,207.22
(*) to new DRG 574. These new codes
also capture major hematological and
immunological conditions and were
created to provide more detail than the
current codes in this section of ICD–9–
CM. The DRG assignments for these new
codes are also shown in Table 6A of the
Addendum to this final rule.
Digeorge’s syndrome.
Wiskott-aldrich syndrome.
Nezelof’s syndrome.
Other deficiency of cell-mediated immunity.
Combined immunity deficiency.
Autoimmune hemolytic anemias.
Non-autoimmune hemolytic anemia, unspecified.
Other non-autoimmune hemolytic anemias.
Hemoglobinuria due to hemolysis from external causes.
Acquired hemolytic anemia, unspecified.
Constitutional red blood cell aplasia.
Other constitutional aplastic anemia.
Other specified aplastic anemias.
Aplastic anemia, unspecified.
Neutropenia, unspecified.
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00069
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Average
charges
109,874
Major hematological and immunological code titles
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Average
length of
stay
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47938
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Diagnosis
code
288.01 * ....
288.02 * ....
288.03 * ....
288.04 * ....
288.09 * ....
288.1 ........
288.2 ........
996.85 ......
Major hematological and immunological code titles
Congenital neutropenia.
Cyclic neutropenia.
Drug induced neutropenia.
Neutropenia due to infection.
Other neutropenia.
Functional disorders of polymorphonuclear neutrophils.
Genetic anomalies of leukocytes.
Complications of transplanted bone marrow.
f. MDC 18 (Infections and Parasitic
Diseases (Systemic or Unspecified
Sites)): O.R. Procedure for Patients With
Infectious and Parasitic Diseases
Under the APR DRG system, cases in
DRG 415 (O.R. Procedure for Infectious
and Parasitic Diseases) are subdivided
based on the presence or absence of one
of the following principal diagnosis
codes, which we are referring to as
Postoperative or Post-Traumatic
Infection:
• 958.3, Posttraumatic wound
infection, not elsewhere classified
• 998.51, Infected postoperative
seroma
• 998.59, Other postoperative
infection
• 999.3, Infection complicating
medical care, not elsewhere classified
Number of
cases
DRG
Redefinition of DRG 415
415 ....
A ........
O.R. Procedure for Infectious & Parasitic Diseases ............................................................
O.R. Procedure with Principal Diagnosis Except Postoperative or Post-Traumatic Infection.
O.R. Procedure with Principal Diagnosis of Postoperative or Post-Traumatic Infection .....
B ........
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
The APR DRG system found cases
with one of the above infection codes to
represent a higher level of severity. Our
medical advisors examined cases in the
current CMS DRG system in DRG 415
and found that the presence of one of
these infection codes as a principal
diagnosis led to significantly higher
levels of severity. Charge data also
support this conclusion. The following
table illustrates our findings.
As can be seen from the above table,
cases in DRG 415 with a principal
diagnosis except for postoperative or
post-traumatic infection have average
charges of $74,964.28. Cases with a
principal diagnosis of postoperative or
postπtraumatic infection have average
charges of $43,154.68, or $31,809.60
less. Therefore, cases without one of the
four infection codes, 958.3, 998.51,
998.59, and 999.3, have significantly
higher severity levels than do cases that
contain one of the four infection codes.
Accordingly, we are deleting DRG 415
and divide the cases into two new DRGs
as follows:
• DRG 578, Infectious and Parasitic
Diseases with O.R. Procedure
• DRG 579, Postoperative or Posttraumatic Infection with O.R. Procedure
Cases will be assigned to new DRG
578 if they were previously in DRG 415,
but do not contain one of the following
principal diagnosis codes:
• 958.3, Posttraumatic wound
infection, not elsewhere classified
• 998.51, Infected postoperative
seroma
• 998.59, Other postoperative
infection
• 999.3, Infection complicating
medical care, not elsewhere classified
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Cases will be assigned to DRG 579 if
they were previously assigned to DRG
415 and contain one of the four
principal diagnosis codes listed above.
g. Severe Sepsis
Comment: As an alternative to the
proposed CS DRGs, commenters
recommended a new DRG to identify
patients with severe sepsis associated
with respiratory failure requiring
mechanical ventilation. One commenter
suggested using an approach to better
recognize severity of illness that is
similar to the change CMS implemented
in the FYa2006 final rule for major
cardiovascular conditions (MCVs). This
approach involved examining the MCVs
which could be present as either a
principal or secondary diagnosis leading
to greater severity of illness and
resource consumption. Another option
suggested by two commenters involved
modifying DRGa416 (Septicemia Age
>17) so that it would be split based on
mechanical ventilation greater than 96
hours (code 96.72). The commenter
stated that patients on mechanical
ventilation for greater than 96 hours
have a greater severity of illness than do
those who are not on mechanical
PO 00000
Frm 00070
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Average
length of
stay
Average
charges
52,458
33,077
14.03
15.90
$63,211.99
74,964.28
19,381
10.8
43,154.68
ventilation for 96 or more hours.
Another commenter recommended
considering mechanical ventilation as a
pre-MDC DRG on the basis of the
mechanical ventilation greater than 96
hours procedure code (96.72) to better
recognize patients with a greater
severity level. This commenter also
provided an option to add systemic
infections (038.x) as an acceptable
principal diagnosis for DRG 475 when
reported in conjunction with
mechanical ventilation or tracheostomy.
One commenter maintained that the
clinical reason to address a new DRG for
severe sepsis is related to proper
recognition and treatment for this group
of patients with a greater degree of
severity. This commenter stated
clinicians are getting better at
understanding the importance of early
recognition and treatment. As sepsis
presents with organ dysfunction,
treatments must be prompt or mortality
rapidly increases according to the
commenter.
Response: We analyzed data for
patients in DRG 416 and 417 who are on
mechanical ventilation for 96 or more
hours. The following table shows our
findings.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Number of
cases
DRGs
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
416
416
416
417
417
417
..............................................................................................................................................
With Mechanical Ventilation 96 Hours (96.72) ...................................................................
Without Mechanical Ventilation 96 + Hours ........................................................................
..............................................................................................................................................
With Mechanical Ventilation 96 + Hours .............................................................................
Without Mechanical Ventilation 96 + Hours ........................................................................
The data clearly show that DRG 416
septicemia patients who are on
mechanical ventilation for 96 or more
hours have a significantly greater
severity of illness level and use greater
resources than do other patients in DRG
416. Those patients on mechanical
ventilation for 96 or more hours had
average charges of $94,994 compared to
$25,709 for other patients in DRG 416.
We found no cases in DRG 417 with
patients who reported mechanical
ventilation for 96 or more hours.
Therefore, we agree with the
commenters that patients in DRG 416
who are on long term mechanical
ventilation of 96 or more hours have
greater severity of illness and use
significantly greater resources. These
patients should be assigned to a separate
DRG to better reflect their higher
severity level. Because we have no data
on patients in DRG 417, we are not
modifying that DRG at this time.
Because the data on DRG 416 are
compelling, we are deleting DRG 416
and splitting these cases into two new
DRGs based on whether or not the
patient is on mechanical ventilation for
96 or more hours. These two new DRGs
are as follows:
• DRG 575 (Septicemia with
Mechanical Ventilation 96 + Hours Age
>17)
• DRG 576 (Septicemia without
Mechanical Ventilation 96 + Hours Age
>17)
Cases will be assigned to DRG 575
when they have a principal diagnosis
from current DRG 416 and code 96.72
(Continuous mechanical ventilation for
96 consecutive hours or more). Cases
will be assigned to DRG 576 when they
have a principal diagnosis from current
DRG 416 and do not have code 96.72.
We note that this DRG split is similar
to the change we are making in MDC 4,
for DRG 475 which was discussed
earlier. The creation of these two new
DRGs is distinct from the request to
create a separate DRG for severe sepsis,
which is discussed in section II.D.7. of
this final rule.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
D. Changes to Specific DRG
Classifications
1. Pre-MDCs
a. Heart Transplant or Implant of Heart
Assist System: Addition of Procedure to
DRG 103
Based on public comments, we are
assigning an additional procedure code
to DRG 103 (Heart Transplant or
Implant of Heart Assist System) under
the pre-MDCs. In the FY 2006 IPPS final
rule (70 FR 47297), we addressed
suggestions concerning the placement of
codes for external heart assist systems in
DRG 103. Although we found that
charges associated with code 37.65
(Implant of external heart assist system)
were more than $100,000 lower than the
average charges for all cases in DRG 103,
we found that there was a subgroup of
patients who were comparable in
resource use and length of stay to other
cases included in DRG 103. Those
patients received both the external heart
assist device (code 37.65) and later had
the device removed (code 37.64,
Removal of heart assist system) after a
lengthy period of rest and recovery of
their native hearts. We note that
commenters provided external data
indicating that survival rates are
improving for patients receiving more
advanced versions of these devices. In
addition, commenters provided
information indicating that longer
periods of support with the external
heart assist device are improving
patients’ survival chances and
opportunity to be discharged with their
native heart. These data show a 50percent survival rate with an average
total length of stay of 43 days for all
AMI heart recovery patients. On
average, a surviving patient will receive
31 days of average support time
followed by an additional 38 days in the
hospital after the device is removed.
Based on information considered from a
later year than our MedPAR data, it is
clear that patients weaned from the
external heart assist system have longer
lengths of stay and are very different
from the average patients having this
procedure that were in our FY 2004
data.
PO 00000
Frm 00071
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
272,603
10.369
262,234
31
0
31
Average
length of
stay
7.45
15.55
7.13
6.35
0
6.35
47939
Average
charges
$28,344.81
94,994.49
25,709.42
27,131.58
0
27,131.58
Given the newness of this procedure
and the latest generation of this device,
the Medicare charge data included a
limited number of patients having the
device implanted and removed.
However, the Medicare charge data did
support that patients receiving both an
implant and removal of an external
heart assist system in a single hospital
stay had an average length of stay
exceeding 50 days and average charges
of $378,000 that are more comparable to
patients in DRG 103 than DRG 525
(Other Heart Assist System Implant).
Accordingly, in FY 2006, we revised
DRG 103 so that both implantation and
removal of an external heart assist
device in the same hospitalization
would group to DRG 103.
However, we did not consider those
cases where an external heart assist
system is switched during a
hospitalization, and replaced with
another external heart assist system, that
is subsequently removed. The ICD–9–
CM coding structure specifies that the
replacement of the system be coded to
37.63 (Repair of heart assist system),
and not to 37.65. These cases are
assigned to DRG 525 not DRG 103 even
though the cases are comparable in
resources expended, length of stay, etc.,
to other patients where the device is
implanted and explanted during the
same hospital stay.
Based on public comments, we
believe that DRG 103 should be revised
to take this situation into account.
Therefore, we are reconfiguring DRG
103 in the following manner: Those
patients who have both the replacement
of an external heart assist system (code
37.63) and the explantation of that
system (code 37.64) prior to the hospital
discharge will be assigned to DRG 103.
By making this change, Medicare will
be making higher payments for patients
who receive both a replacement and an
explant of an external heart assist
system during a single hospital stay.
Our intent in making this change is to
recognize the higher costs of patients
who have a longer length of stay and are
discharged alive with their native heart.
Cases in which a heart transplant also
occurs during the same hospitalization
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47940
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
episode will continue to be assigned to
DRG 103.
b. Pancreas Transplants
On July 1, 1999, we issued coverage
policy that specified that pancreas
transplants were only covered when
performed simultaneously with or after
a Medicare covered kidney transplant. A
noncoverage policy for pancreas
transplant remained in effect for
patients who had not experienced end
stage renal failure secondary to diabetes.
On July 29, 2005, we opened a national
coverage determination (NCD) to
determine whether pancreas transplant
alone, that is, without a kidney
transplant, is a reasonable and necessary
service for Medicare beneficiaries. On
April 26, 2006, we published the NCD
for pancreas transplants on our Web site
at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/mcd/
viewncd.asp?ncd_id=260.3&_
version=3&basket=ncd%3A260%2E3%
3A3%3APancreas+Transplants. The
NCD specifies the limited circumstances
where the evidence is adequate to
conclude that pancreas transplant alone
is reasonable and necessary for
Medicare beneficiaries.
Medicare coverage of pancreas
transplants alone is limited to
transplants in those facilities that are
Medicare-approved for kidney
transplantation. A listing of approved
transplant centers can be found at:
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
ESRDGeneralInformation/02_Data.
asp#TopOfPage. The CMS NCD
includes several criteria for the coverage
of pancreas transplants alone, including
having a diagnosis of Type I diabetes.
(We refer readers to section 260.3 of the
Medicare National Coverage Manual for
the entire language of the NCD.)
Because we had issued a proposed
NCD and a final NCD was not expected
to be completed until late April 2006
(after completion of the proposed rule),
we used the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule to indicate the coding changes that
we would make to DRG 513 (Pancreas
Transplant) in FY 2007 if Medicare’s
final decision memorandum would have
continued the program’s national
noncoverage of pancreas transplants (71
FR 24030). In addition, we also
indicated the conforming changes that
we would make to the MCE
‘‘NonCovered Procedure’’ edit if
Medicare coverage was established for
pancreas transplants alone. That
discussion was included in section
II.D.6. of the preamble of the proposed
rule (71 FR 24039), which described
proposed changes to the MCE.
Because the April 2006 Medicare final
decision memorandum stated that the
performance of pancreas transplants
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
alone is reasonable and necessary for
Medicare beneficiaries in limited
circumstances, the logic for the
determination of patient case
assignment to DRG 513 in the FY 2006
GROUPER program needs to be
modified to remove the requirement that
patients also have kidney disease.
Therefore, because the NCD was
finalized, we are modifying DRG 513 to
consist of the following logic: List A (the
diabetes codes) of the required principal
or secondary diagnosis codes remains
the same, as does the required operating
room procedures (codes 52.80
(Pancreatic transplant NOS), and 52.82,
(Homotransplant of pancreas)). List B is
removed from the logic; the following
codes will no longer be required as a
principal or secondary diagnosis:
• 403.01, Hypertensive kidney
disease, malignant, with chronic kidney
disease
• 403.11, Hypertensive kidney
disease, benign, with chronic kidney
disease
• 403.91, Hypertensive kidney
disease, unspecified, with chronic
kidney disease
• 404.02, Hypertensive heart and
kidney disease, malignant, with chronic
kidney disease
• 404.03, Hypertensive heart and
kidney disease, malignant, with heart
failure and chronic kidney disease
• 404.12, Hypertensive heart and
kidney disease, benign, with chronic
kidney disease
• 404.13, Hypertensive heart and
kidney disease, benign, with heart
failure and chronic kidney disease
• 404.92, Hypertensive heart and
kidney disease, unspecified, with
chronic kidney disease
• 404.93, Hypertensive heart and
kidney disease, unspecified, with heart
failure and chronic kidney disease
• 585.1, Chronic kidney disease,
Stage I
• 585.2, Chronic kidney disease,
Stage II (mild)
• 585.3, Chronic kidney disease,
Stage III (moderate)
• 585.4, Chronic kidney disease,
Stage IV (severe)
• 585.5, Chronic kidney disease,
Stage V
• 585.6, End stage renal disease
• 585.9, Chronic kidney disease,
unspecified
• V42.0, Organ or tissue replaced by
transplant, kidney
• V43.89, Organ or tissue replaced by
other means, other organ or tissue, other
We note that DRG 513 remains in the
pre-MDC hierarchy.
Comment: Five commenters
supported the proposed coding changes
to DRG 513 and the MCE.
PO 00000
Frm 00072
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenters. Accordingly, as the
NCD for pancreas transplants alone was
approved, in this final rule, we are
adopting the changes as described above
to DRG 513 and the MCE logic.
2. MDC 1 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Nervous System)
a. Implantation of Intracranial
Neurostimulator System for Deep Brain
Stimulation (DBS)
Deep-brain stimulation (DBS) is
designed to deliver electrical
stimulation to the subthalamic nucleus
or internal globus pallidus to ameliorate
symptoms caused by abnormal
neurotransmitter levels that lead to
abnormal cell-to-cell electrical impulses
in Parkinson’s disease and essential
tremor. DBS implants for essential
tremor are unilateral, with
neurostimulation leads on one side of
the brain. DBS implants for Parkinson’s
disease are bilateral, requiring
implantation of neurostimulation leads
in both the left and right sides of the
brain.
The implantation of a full DBS system
requires two types of procedures. First,
surgeons implant leads containing
electrodes into the targeted sections of
the brain where neurostimulation
therapy is to be delivered. Second, a
neurostimulator pulse generator is
implanted in the pectoral region and
extensions from the neurostimulator
pulse generator are then tunneled under
the skin along the neck and connected
with the proximal ends of the leads
implanted in the brain. Hospitals stage
the two procedures required for a fullsystem DBS implant.
In FY 2005, to better account for these
two types of procedures, we revised
procedure code 02.93 (Implantation or
replacement of intracranial
neurostimulator lead(s)) for the lead
placement and created three new
procedures codes for the pulse
generator: 86.94 (Insertion or
replacement of single array
neurostimulator pulse generator); 86.95
(Insertion or replacement of dual array
neurostimulator pulse generator); and
86.96 (Insertion or replacement of other
neurostimulator pulse generator). We
published the new procedure codes and
revised procedure code titles in Tables
6B and 6F of the FY 2005 IPPS final rule
(69 FR 49627 and 49641).
In FY 2006, we made further
refinements to the pulse generator codes
to identify rechargeable pulse
generators. We published the new
procedure codes and revised procedure
code titles in Tables 6B and 6F of the
FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR 47637
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
and 47639). The current list of pulse
generators codes are:
• 86.94 (Insertion or replacement of
single array neurostimulator pulse
generator, not specified as rechargeable);
• 86.95 (Insertion or replacement of
dual array neurostimulator pulse
generator, not specified as rechargeable);
• 86.96 (Insertion or replacement of
other neurostimulator pulse generator);
• 86.97 (Insertion or replacement of
single array neurostimulator
rechargeable generator); and
• 86.98 (Insertion or replacement of
dual array neurostimulator rechargeable
generator).
Kinetra is an implantable dual array
neurostimulator pulse generator that is
approved for a new technology add-on
payment through FYA2006. For more
information about the new technology
add-on payment, please refer to section
II.G.3.a. of this preamble.
Medtronic, the manufacturer of
Kinetra, argues that the new
technology add-on payment provision is
designed to recognize the higher costs of
new medical innovations for the initial
period the technology is available on the
market, and until the associated costs
and charges related to the technology
are available in the MedPAR database
and can be used to recalibrate the DRG
weights. Medtronic also argues that,
once a technology is no longer eligible
for new technology add-on payments,
the new technology add-on payment
provision is designed to support the
reclassification of the technology to
other clinically coherent DRGs with
comparable resource costs.
With the conclusion of the new
technology add-on payment, Medtronic
is concerned that Kinetra will be
inadequately paid in DRG 1
(Craniotomy Age >17 With CC) or DRG
2 (Craniotomy Age >17 Without CC)
under MDC 1. Medtronic recommended
that CMS reassign the full-system
Kinetra implants to DRG 543
(Craniotomy with Implant of Chemo
Agent or Acute Complex CNS Principal
Diagnosis) under MDC 1. To
accommodate this recommendation,
procedure codes 02.93 and 86.95 would
have to be reassigned to DRG 543 and
the title for DRG 543 would have to be
revised to ‘‘Craniotomy with
Implantation of Major Device or Acute
Complex CNS Principal Diagnosis.’’
Medtronic argued that DRG 543 would
be a ‘‘clinically-consistent DRG that
more appropriately reflects the resource
utilization associated with full-system
[deep brain stimulation] procedures.’’
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
Medtronic also emphasized that its
proposal would only apply to fullsystem Kinetra implants when both the
leads and generators are implanted
during a single inpatient stay and
procedure codes 02.93 and 86.95 both
appear on the claim. Medtronic believes
the current DRG assignment is
appropriate for partial system implants.
Medtronic provided an analysis of FY
2004 MedPAR data. Procedure code
86.95 was not created until FY 2005 so
Medtronic used procedure codes 02.93
and 86.09 (Other incision of skin and
subcutaneous tissue) to identify the full
system. It identified 193 cases assigned
to DRG 1 with average charges of
approximately $69,155, and 532 cases
assigned to DRG 2 with average charges
of approximately $56,113.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule we
indicated that we have reviewed the
latest data for the full-system DBS
implants assigned to DRG 1 or DRG 2 in
the FY 2005 MedPAR file. We identified
cases with procedure codes 02.93 and
86.95 for full-system dual array cases.
We also identified cases with reported
codes 02.93 and 86.96 for those fullsystem cases where the type of pulse
generator was not specified. The
following table displays our results:
Number of
cases
DRG
1—All Cases ...............................................................................................................................
1—Cases with 02.93 and 86.95 (Kinetra) ................................................................................
1—Cases with 02.93 and 86.96 (Unspecified) ..........................................................................
2—All Cases ...............................................................................................................................
2—Cases with 02.93 and 86.95 (Kinetra) ................................................................................
2—Cases with 02.93 and 86.96 (Unspecified) ..........................................................................
543—All cases ............................................................................................................................
These data showed that
approximately one-quarter of the fullsystem dual array neurostimulator pulse
generator cases are assigned to DRG 1
and approximately three-quarters of
these cases are assigned to DRG 2. In
both DRGs, the average length of stay
was shorter for the full-system array
neurostimulator pulse generator cases
than for all other cases. However, the
average charges for the full-system dual
array neurostimulator pulse generator
cases are approximately $18,000 and
$27,000 higher than the average charges
for DRGs 1 and 2, respectively. The
average charges for these cases in DRG
1 are comparable to those for DRG 543.
However, the more commonly occurring
cases in DRG 2 have average charges
that are less than those in DRG 543 by
nearly $12,000. We reviewed all of the
procedures that will result in a case
being assigned to DRGs 1 and 2. Unlike
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
the full-system DBS implants, we
believe for most of the cases assigned to
these DRGs, there will be no device cost
to the hospital. For this reason, we
believe the higher average charges and
lower length of stay for cases involving
full-system dual array neurostimulator
pulse generators are likely accounted for
by the cost of the device. While it is
possible that the cost of the device itself
will make the full-system DBS implants
more expensive than other cases in the
DRG, the hospital’s charge markup may
also explain the higher charges but
lower average length of stay. As
indicated in section II.G.3.a. of this final
rule, the national average CCR for
medical equipment and supplies is
approximately 34 percent. Thus, the
actual cost to the hospital of the case
including the full-system dual array
neurostimulator pulse generator may be
PO 00000
Frm 00073
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47941
23,037
51
101
9,707
146
249
5,192
Average
length of
stay
9.61
5.18
4.86
4.41
2.40
2.12
11.71
Average
charges
$55,494
73,020
53,356
32,791
59,414
47,047
71,138
much lower than the charges would
suggest.
With respect to whether the cost of
the technology itself, absent a charge
markup, makes the case more
expensive, in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule, we stated that we
intended to address this issue as we
make further refinements to the DRG
system to address severity of illness as
discussed in section II.C. of this
preamble.
Comment: Several commenters
opposed CMS’ proposed decision to
retain the current assignment of
implantable dual array neurostimulator
pulse generator cases in DRGs 1 and 2.
Several commenters stated that CMS
should recognize the higher resources
associated with this technology and
reassign implantable dual array
neurostimulator pulse generator cases to
DRG 543. Two commenters disagreed
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47942
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
with CMS’ statements that markups
associated with Kinetra may overstate
the total charges of the implant
procedure. Medtronic submitted
information on charge compression in
which the company contends that it
conclusively finds the hospital charge
markups for implantable devices are in
fact significantly lower than for other,
lower cost supplies and equipment.
Medtronic and one other commenter
argued that the total charges found in
the FY 2005 MedPAR data associated
with implantable dual array
neurostimulator pulse generator
procedures may be understated relative
to other procedures in DRG 1, DRG 2
and DRG 543 and that reassignment of
this technology to DRG 543 is fully
warranted. The commenters stated that
the implementation of the CS DRGs
should be deferred to at least FY 2008
and not be a factor in CMS’ decision to
make DRG reassignments this year.
Response: With regard to the issue of
charge compression, we are studying
this issue in our effort to improve
payment accuracy in the IPPS. The
average charges for the 51 cases in DRG
1 where the patient received a dual
array neurostimulator are $17,426 or 31
percent higher than the rest of the cases
in DRG 1. The average charges are
comparable to those for DRG 543
($73,020 for dual array neurostimulator
cases and $71,138 for DRG 543).
The average charges for the 146 cases
in DRG 2 are $26,623 or 81 percent
higher than the rest of the cases in DRG
2 and only $12,000 less than the average
charges for DRG 543. Based on these
data, we believe that the dual array
neurostimulator cases will be more
accurately paid in DRG 543 than DRGs
1 and 2. We will be implementing this
change to the DRG assignment for the
full-system dual array neurostimulator
cases for FY 2007. Implantable dual
array neurostimulator pulse generator
procedure cases reported with ICD–9–
CM procedure codes 02.93 and 86.95
will be reassigned to DRG 543. We are
changing the DRG title for DRG 543 to
‘‘Craniotomy With Major Device
Implant or Acute Complex CNS
Principal Diagnosis.’’
b. Carotid Artery Stents
Background: Stroke is the third
leading cause of death in the United
States and the leading cause of serious,
long-term disability. Approximately 70
percent of all strokes occur in people
age 65 and older. The carotid artery,
located in the neck, is the principal
artery supplying the head and neck with
blood. Accumulation of plaque in the
carotid artery can lead to stroke either
by decreasing the blood flow to the
brain or by the plaque breaking free and
lodging in the brain or other arteries
leading to the head. The percutaneous
transluminal angioplasty (PTA)
procedure involves inflating a balloonlike device in the narrowed section of
the carotid artery to reopen the vessel.
A carotid stent is then deployed in the
artery to prevent the vessel from closing
or restenosing. A distal filter device
(embolic protection device) may also be
present, which is intended to prevent
pieces of plaque from entering the
bloodstream.
Effective July 1, 2001, Medicare
covered PTA of the carotid artery
concurrent with carotid stent placement
when furnished in accordance with the
FDA-approved protocols governing
Category B Investigational Device
Exemption (IDE) clinical trials. PTA of
the carotid artery, when provided solely
for the purpose of carotid artery dilation
concurrent with carotid stent
placement, was considered to be a
reasonable and necessary service only
when provided in the context of such
clinical trials and, therefore, was
considered a covered service for the
purposes of those trials. Performance of
PTA in the carotid artery when used to
treat obstructive lesions outside of
approved protocols governing Category
B IDE clinical trials remained
noncovered until the release of the
October 12, 2004 NCD for PTA of the
carotid artery in post-approval studies.
This decision extended coverage of PTA
in the carotid artery concurrent with
placement of an FDA-approved carotid
stent for an FDA-approved indication
when furnished in accordance with the
FDA-approved protocols governing
post-approval studies. On March 17,
2005, CMS released an NCD that
extended coverage to patients at high
risk for carotid endarterectomy (CEA)
who also have symptomatic carotid
artery stenosis ≥70 percent. Procedures
must be performed in CMS-approved
Number of
cases
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
DRG
533—All
533 with
533 with
534—All
534 with
VerDate Aug<31>2005
facilities and with FDA-approved
carotid artery stent(s) with distal
embolic protection. (Section 20.7 of the
NCD manual which discusses this
decision may be viewed at the Web site:
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/manuals/
downloads/ncd103c1_Part1.pdf.
Placement of a carotid artery stent in
patients who have had a disabling
stroke (modified Rankin scale ≥3) is
excluded from coverage.
We established codes for carotid
artery stent procedures for use with
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2004, for inpatients who were
enrolled in an FDA-approved clinical
trial and who were using on-label FDAapproved stents and embolic protection
devices. These codes are as follows:
• 00.61 (Percutaneous angioplasty or
atherectomy of precerebral (extracranial
vessel(s)); and
• 00.63 (Percutaneous insertion of
carotid artery stent(s)).
We assigned procedure code 00.61 to
four MDCs and seven DRGs. The most
likely clinical scenario is that in which
cases are assigned to MDC 1 (Diseases
and Disorders of the Nervous System) in
DRGs 533 (Extracranial Procedures with
CC) and 534 (Extracranial Procedures
without CC). Other DRG assignments
can be found in Table 6B of the
Addendum to the FY 2005 IPPS final
rule (69 FR 49624). Code 00.63 is not
considered a procedure code itself and
should be used in combination with
code 00.61.
Based on the results of evaluation of
PTA and carotid stents for our FY 2006
final rule (70 FR 47300, August 12,
2005), we did not find sufficient
evidence to warrant a DRG change at
that time.
We again reviewed the PTA and
insertion of a carotid stent(s) for the FY
2007 proposed rule, as manufacturer
representatives suggested that we assign
all carotid stenting cases to DRG 533
only, bypassing DRG 534. As we
indicated in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule (71 FR 24032), we reviewed the FY
2005 MedPAR data on all cases in DRGs
533 and 534 and on those cases
containing code 00.61 in combination
with 00.63. The following table displays
those results:
cases ............................................................................................................................
codes 00.61 and 00.63 reported .................................................................................
code 00.61 and without 00.63 .....................................................................................
cases ............................................................................................................................
codes 00.61 and 00.63 reported .................................................................................
44,031
2,400
99
40,381
2,056
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
18AUR2
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00074
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
Average
length of
stay (Days)
3.65
2.94
5.95
1.72
1.52
Average
charges
$26,376
33,344
46,591
17,196
25,000
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Number of
cases
DRG
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG 534 with code 00.61 and without 00.63 .....................................................................................
We found that 5.5 and 5.1 percent of
the cases in DRGs 533 and 534,
respectively, involved placement of a
carotid artery stent. In DRG 533, the
average length of stay was 19.4 percent
shorter for the carotid stenting cases
than for all other cases. In DRG 534, the
average length of stay was 11.6 percent
shorter for the carotid stenting cases
than for all other cases. However, the
average charges for the carotid stent
cases were higher by $6,968 in DRG 533
and $7,804 in DRG 534. We reviewed all
of the procedures that would result in
a case being assigned to DRGs 533 and
534. Unlike the carotid artery stent
placements, we believe that, for most of
the other cases assigned to these DRGs,
there will be no device cost to the
hospital. For this reason, we believe the
higher average charges and lower length
of stay for the cases involving carotid
artery stents could be accounted for by
the cost of the device. We discussed the
possibility that the cost of the device
itself makes the stent cases more
expensive than other cases in the DRG,
and that the hospital’s charge markup
may also explain the higher charges but
lower average length of stay. We also
suggested that we intended to address
this issue as we make further
refinements to the CS DRG system
previously described. The use of a
carotid stent or stents may increase
complexity and resource use even
though the patient is not necessarily
more severely ill. We indicated that we
believed that the CS DRG system we
proposed would need to be further
refined to assign cases based on
complexity as well as severity to
account for technologies such as carotid
stents that increase costs. For this
reason, we did not propose a change to
the current DRG assignment for these
cases.
Comment: More than a dozen
commenters addressed this topic. State
hospital associations, in particular, were
unanimous in their recommendation
that all carotid stenting cases should
immediately be assigned only to DRG
533, bypassing DRG 534 entirely. The
commenters suggested this solution to
increase payments to hospitals in order
that the higher costs associated with
carotid stents are recognized within the
existing DRG system.
Response: We are opposed to this
suggestion. The DRGs comprise a native
structure of the types of patients within
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
each DRG category. Further, this
structure is based on an organizing
principle. For example, cases in DRGs
533 and 534 are organized on the
principle of surgical approach
(extracranial procedures) as well as the
presence or absence of CCs. To ignore
the structure of the DRG solely for the
purpose of increasing payment would
set an unwelcome precedent for
defining all of the other DRGs in the
system.
Comment: Several commenters
mentioned that, while CMS suggested
that the higher average charges and
lower lengths of stay for cases involving
carotid artery stents are likely accounted
for by the cost of the device, CMS
provided no evidence to support this
assertion.
Response: The average length of stay
for patients in DRGs 533 and 534 with
the placement of carotid stent(s) are 19.4
and 11.6 percent shorter than the other
patients assigned to DRGs 533 and 534,
respectively. Therefore, a long length of
stay is not the reason for the higher
average charges. We based our assertion
on the contribution of the cost of the
device to the total cost of the patients in
these DRGs compared to other cases in
the DRG with longer lengths of stay. We
note that the next comment suggests
that our analysis is correct that the
higher charges for the carotid artery
stent cases relative to other cases in the
DRG are, in part, associated with higher
supply costs.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that CMS create a new pair of DRGs
with and without MCVs until the
adequacy of payment under the severity
adjustment methodology is fully
assessed. This commenter noted that,
while length of stay and operating room
costs are lower for carotid stenting,
supply and radiology charges associated
with the stent and the angiography are
higher, resulting in higher overall costs
for carotid stenting.
Response: While we recognize the
creativity of this approach, we note that
the MCVs are applicable to cases in
MDC 5 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Circulatory System), while DRGs 533
and 534 are in MDC 1 (Diseases and
Disorders of the Nervous System). Such
an approach for MDC 1 might have
merit, but we would want to evaluate
the entire MDC thoroughly before
creating such a list of complicating
diagnoses. We will further consider this
PO 00000
Frm 00075
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
55
Average
length of
stay (Days)
2.31
47943
Average
charges
27,895
concept as we evaluate severity DRG
systems for adoption in FY 2008.
Comment: One commenter, while
urging CMS to reconsider our decision
not to assign all carotid cases to DRG
533, noted that the current National
Coverage Determination on CAS
[Carotid Artery Stenting] very clearly
states that only those patients who are
at high risk for [open] surgery due to the
presence of a detailed list of
complications or comorbidities are
eligible for carotid artery stenting.
Therefore, by CMS’ own
characterization, all patients undergoing
carotid artery stenting have
complications and comorbidities and
should be assigned to DRG 533.
Response: This assumption is
theoretically correct. However, the
detailed list of comorbidities or
anatomical risk factors that are required
to support the surgeon’s decision to
perform carotid stenting instead of a
carotid endarterectomy is not the same
as the CMS list of CCs. For example,
amaurosis fugax, code 362.34 (Transient
arterial occlusion) is recognized as a risk
factor which would justify carotid
stenting, but is not recognized by the
CMS GROUPER as a diagnosis defined
as a CC.
Comment: Several commenters
suggested that CMS create two new
DRGs for the carotid stent cases.
Response: We note that the number of
procedures has increased from the data
reported in the FY 2006 IPPS final rule
(70 FR 47300), thus indicating
acceptance of this procedure by the
medical community as a main-stream
surgical alternative. In FY 2006, as the
specific codes for carotid stenting had
only been in use since October 1, 2004,
we used the existing codes 39.50
(Angioplasty or atherectomy of other
noncoronary vessel(s)) and 39.90
(Insertion of non-drug-eluting
peripheral vessel stent(s)), in
combination with principal diagnosis
code 433.10 (Occlusion and stenosis of
carotid artery, without mention of
cerebral infarction) as a proxy for the
number of cases involved in clinical
trials. In DRG 533, we had 1,586 cases
with the proxy codes reported, and in
DRG 534, there were 1,397 cases. In FY
2005, the patients represented 3.5
percent and 3.3 percent of all cases in
DRGs 533 and 534, respectively. That
figure has now climbed to 2,400 cases
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47944
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
and 2,056 cases, and 5.5 percent and 5.1
percent, respectively.
In addition, the difference in the
average charges are 26 percent higher
for carotid artery stent cases in DRG 533
than for the average charges in all cases
in that DRG, and 45 percent higher
using the same parameters for DRG 534.
We believe these data are compelling
enough to warrant creation of a new
DRG.
Accordingly, we are creating DRG 583
(Carotid Artery Stent Procedure). This
DRG will be located in MDC 1, and will
be hierarchically ordered above DRGs
533 and 534. DRG 583 will contain two
procedure codes. Code 00.61 will
determine the DRG, and will be
combined with code 00.63. Both codes
must be reported in order for cases to be
assigned to this DRG.
We are not splitting this DRG based
on the presence or absence of a CC as
suggested by the commenters. One
criterion for splitting a DRG based on
the presence or the absence of a CC is
that it must have an impact of at least
$40 million. In this situation, the overall
average of the charges for all cases in
DRGs 533 and 534 is $30,193. We then
subtracted the actual average charges for
only the carotid stent cases in both
DRGs 533 and 534, and multiplied that
figure by the actual number of cases. For
DRG 533 and DRG 534, we estimate an
impact of approximately $10 million
each. Added together, the total impact
would be $20 million, falling short of
our threshold of a $40 million impact to
create a CC/non-CC split. Therefore, we
are not creating a CC/non-CC split in the
DRG for carotid artery stenting at this
time.
We reiterate that coverage of the
carotid artery stent procedure is limited
to patients at risk of developing a stroke
due to narrowing or stenosis of the
carotid artery. Diagnosis code 433.10
(Occlusion and stenosis of carotid artery
without mention of cerebral infarction)
should be used to identify the site of the
procedure in the carotid artery. If it is
necessary to identify bilateral occlusion
or stenosis, diagnosis code 433.30
(Occlusion and stenosis of multiple and
bilateral arteries without mention of
cerebral infarction) may also be used.
These codes should be used together, as
code 433.30 contains arterial sites that
are not currently covered for Medicare
patients. Reporting of code 433.30 alone
will cause the case to fail the editing
system at the fiscal intermediary, and
the case could be denied.
Inclusion of the fifth digit of ‘‘1’’ (with
cerebral infarction) with either 433.1x or
433.3x will cause the claim to be
rejected.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
3. MDC 5 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Circulatory System)
a. Insertion of Epicardial Leads for
Defibrillator Devices
As we indicated in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24033), we
received a comment indicating that a
change in coding advice for the
insertion of epicardial leads for CRT–D
defibrillator devices affects DRG
assignment. The commenter noted that
the Third Quarter 2005 issue of the
American Hospital Association’s
publication Coding Clinic for ICD–9–CM
instructs coders to assign code 37.74
(Insertion or replacement of epicardial
lead [electrode] into atrium) for
pacemaker or defibrillator leads inserted
through use of a thoracotomy into the
epicardium. While the use of code 37.74
is standard coding practice for
pacemakers, the advice is new for
defibrillators. This coding advice was
discussed at the ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee meeting held on September
29 and 30, 2005. Participants at the
Committee meeting proposed
modifications for the code category 37.7
(insertion, revision, replacement, and
removal of pacemaker leads; insertion of
temporary pacemaker system; and
revision of cardiac device pocket).
These modifications involved
expanding the category so that the codes
for leads would no longer be restricted
to pacemakers. This change would
guide coders to use code 37.74 for the
insertion of epicardial leads for both
defibrillators and pacemakers for the
ICD–9–CM and will become effective on
October 1, 2006.
The commenter indicated that this
coding advice would restrict some
defibrillator cases from being assigned
to the defibrillator DRGs. Specifically,
the commenter expressed concerns
about the DRG logic for the following
DRGs:
• DRG 515 (Cardiac Defibrillator
Implant without Cardiac Catheter)
• DRG 535 (Cardiac Defibrillator
Implant with Cardiac Catheter with
AMI/Heart Failure/Shock)
• DRG 536 (Cardiac Defibrillator
Implant with Cardiac Catheter without
AMI/Heart Failure/Shock)
Cases are assigned to one of these
three DRGs when a total defibrillator
system, including both the device and
one or more leads, is implanted. The
implant could be represented by the
ICD–9–CM codes for the total system,
that is, code 00.51 (Implantation of
cardiac resynchronization defibrillator,
total system [CRT–D]) or code 37.94
(Implantation or replacement of
automatic cardioverter/defibrillator,
PO 00000
Frm 00076
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
total system [AICD]). Cases can also be
assigned to DRGs 515, 535, and 536
when a combination of a device and a
lead code is reported. The following
combinations of defibrillator device and
lead codes are present in the current
DRG logic:
• 00.52 (Implantation or replacement
of transvenous lead [electrode] into left
ventricular coronary venous system)
and 00.54 (Implantation or replacement
of cardiac resynchronization
defibrillator, pulse generator device
only [CRT–D])
• 37.95 (Implantation of automatic
cardioverter/defibrillator lead(s) only)
and 00.54 (Implantation or replacement
of cardiac resynchronization
defibrillator, pulse generator device
only [CRT–D])
• 37.95 (Implantation of automatic
cardioverter/defibrillator lead(s) only)
and 37.96 (Implantation of automatic
cardioverter/defibrillator pulse
generator only)
• 37.97 (Replacement of automatic
cardioverter/defibrillator lead(s) only)
and 00.54 (Implantation or replacement
of cardiac resynchronization
defibrillator, pulse generator device
only [CRT–D])
• 37.97 (Replacement of automatic
cardioverter/defibrillator lead(s) only)
and 37.98 (Replacement of automatic
cardioverter/defibrillator pulse
generator only)
A DRG logic issue has arisen
concerning the instruction to use code
37.74 for epicardial leads inserted with
CRT–D defibrillators. The new
combination of a defibrillator device
with an epicardial lead (code 37.74) is
not included in DRGs 515, 535, and 536.
The commenter recommended that the
following combinations be added to
DRGs 515, 535, and 536 so that all types
of defibrillator device and lead
combinations would be included: code
37.74 and code 00.54; code 37.74 and
code 37.96; and code 37.74 and code
37.98.
We agree that these three
combinations should be added to the
list of combination codes included in
DRGs 515, 535, and 536. This change
would result in all combinations of
defibrillator devices and leads being
assigned to one of the defibrillator
DRGs. Therefore, in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule, we proposed to add these
three combinations to the list of
procedure combinations under DRGs
515, 535, and 536.
Comment: A number of commenters
supported adding the new combinations
of defibrillator devices with the
epicardial leads to DRGs 515, 535, and
536. One commenter stated that this
change would bring the DRGs into
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
alignment with the change in coding
advice to assign code 37.74 in
conjunction with implantation of CRT–
D defibrillators.
Response: We appreciate the support
of commenters and agree that this
change would bring the DRGs into
alignment with the change in coding
advice.
In this final rule, we are adding the
following combinations of device and
lead codes to DRGs 515, 535, and 536:
code 37.74 and code 00.54; code 37.74
and code 37.96; and code 37.74 and
code 37.98.
b. Application of Major Cardiovascular
Diagnoses (MCVs) List to Defibrillator
DRGs
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47289 and 47474 through 47479), we
addressed a comment we had received
in response to the FY 2006 proposed
rule which noted that section 507(c) of
Pub. L. 108–173 required MedPAC to
conduct a study to determine how the
DRG system should be updated to better
reflect the cost of delivering care in a
hospital setting. The commenter noted
that MedPAC reported that the ‘‘cardiac
surgery DRGs have high relative
profitability ratios.’’ While the
commenter acknowledged that it may
take time to conduct and complete a
thorough evaluation of the MedPAC
payment recommendations for all DRGs,
the commenter strongly encouraged
CMS to revise the cardiac DRGs through
patient severity refinement as part of the
IPPS final rule effective for FY 2006.
In response to this comment, we
performed an extensive review of the
cardiovascular DRGs in MDC 5,
particularly those DRGs that were
commonly billed by specialty hospitals.
We observed that there was some
overlap between the lists of
cardiovascular complications and
complex diagnoses and that these lists
were already used to segregate patients
into DRGs that used greater resources.
Because the hospital industry already
was familiar with the major
complication and complex diagnosis
lists used within the cardiovascular
DRGs, we began our analysis with these
two overlapping lists.
The two lists were originally
developed for the current DRG system
because they contained conditions that
could have an impact on the resources
needed to treat a patient with
cardiovascular complications. Many of
the conditions were cardiovascular
diagnoses and, therefore, would be
classified to MDC 5. However, we
determined that some of the diagnoses
were not cardiovascular, but would still
have an impact on a patient with
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
cardiovascular complications. The
conditions that were not cardiovascular
diagnoses were not assigned to MDC 5
if they were the principal diagnosis.
We reviewed the conditions on the
two overlapping lists and identified
conditions that we believed would lead
to a more complicated patient stay
requiring greater resource use. We
referred to these conditions as ‘‘major
cardiovascular conditions (MCVs).’’ The
MCVs could be present as either a
principal diagnosis or a secondary
diagnosis and lead to greater resource
consumption. The complete list of
MCVs was published in the FY 2006
IPPS final rule (70 FR 47477 and 47478).
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule, we
also adopted new DRGs 547 through
558, effective October 1, 2005 (70 FR
47475 and 47476). However, we
emphasized that the refinements to the
DRGs were being taken as an interim
step to better recognize severity in the
DRG system for FY 2006 until we could
complete a more comprehensive
analysis of the APR DRG system and the
CC list as part of a complete analysis of
the MedPAC recommendations that we
planned to perform for FY 2007 (and
which was addressed in section II.C. of
the preamble of the FY 2007 proposed
rule).
Since publication of the FY 2006 IPPS
final rule, we have received a question
from a commenter as to why we did not
apply the MCV list to the following
defibrillator DRGs: 515, 535, and 536.
The commenter noted that the
pacemaker DRGs were revised using the
MCV list, but the defibrillator DRGs
were not.
As noted above, for FY 2006, we
created new DRGs 546 through 558 to
identify cases with more costly and
severely ill patients as an interim step
to evaluating severity DRGs. We
analyzed for the first time last year data
on cases within MDC 5 and presented
data that showed significant difference
for patients in certain DRGs based on
the presence or absence of an MCV. This
split did not work for the defibrillator
DRGs, as we could not identify groups
with significantly different resource use.
For instance, splitting DRG 515 based
on the presence of an MCV would lead
to two groups with differences in
charges of only $3,430 ($89,341 for
those with an MCV and $85,911 for
those without an MCV). In the data we
displayed in the FY 2006 IPPS final
rule, the differences for DRGs selected
for an MCV split ranged from $10,319 to
$21,035. Splitting DRG 515 based on an
MCV would produce a difference in
charges of only 10.1 percent as
compared to differences of 28.7 to 47.7
percent for DRGs 547 through 558.
PO 00000
Frm 00077
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47945
Therefore, the data did not support
including DRG 515 among those split
based on the presence or absence of an
MCV. Similar results were found when
DRG 536 was split by an MCV. There
was only an 8.1 percent difference in
charges between the two groups. We
also identified other problems with
splitting DRG 535 based on the presence
or absence of an MCV. Some of the
codes a claim must include for the case
to be grouped to DRG 535 under our
current system are also codes on the
MCV list. Therefore, applying the MCV
list to DRG 535 would result in all cases
being assigned to the DRG with an MCV
and none to the DRG without an MCV.
For these reasons, we did not subdivide
DRGs 515, 535, and 536 based on the
presence or absence of an MCV.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule,
we indicated that we had decided not to
propose additional refinements of the
DRGs based on MCVs for FY 2007
because of our efforts to propose a
broader refinement of the DRG system,
as discussed in detail in section II.C. of
the proposed rule. However, as
discussed further in section II.C. of the
preamble of the proposed rule, we
solicited comments on whether it would
be appropriate in FY 2007 to apply a
clinical severity concept to an expanded
set of DRGs, similar to the approach we
used in FY 2006 to refine cardiac DRGs
based on the presence or absence of an
MCV.
Comment: Commenters agreed with
the recommendation that we not
subdivide DRGs 515, 535, and 536 based
on MCV. However, one commenter
expressed concerns about how the
current DRGs were achieving their goal
of identifying patients with greater
severity of illness. Other commenters
opposed the proposal to delay refining
defibrillator DRGs based on MCVs.
These commenters believed it was
appropriate for CMS to apply a clinical
severity concept similar to the approach
used in FY 2006 to refine cardiac DRGs
to an expanded set of DRGS (for
example, defibrillator DRGs) based on
the presence or absence of an MCV.
Response: We agree with the
commenters who suggested that our goal
should be to reform the Medicare DRG
system to develop a better means of
capturing severity of illness and
complexity. As discussed in section II.C.
of the preamble of the proposed rule, we
solicited comments on whether it would
be appropriate in FY 2007 to apply a
clinical severity concept to an expanded
set of DRGs, similar to the approach we
used in FY 2006 to refine cardiac DRGs
based on the presence or absence of an
MCV. As discussed in section II.C.7., we
are implementing revisions to the
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47946
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
current DRGs to better recognize
severity of illness. However, the
analysis we have performed to this
point does not support splitting
defibrillator DRGs based on the
presence or absence of an MCV. As
stated earlier, simply applying the
MCVs to the defibrillator DRGs in DRGs
515, 535, and 536 would not lead to
significant improvements for DRG 515.
Applying the MCV list to DRG 535
would result in all cases being assigned
to the DRG with an MCV and none to
the DRG without an MCV. For these
reasons, we did not subdivide DRGs
515, 535, and 536 based on the presence
or absence of an MCV.
While we did not find additional
severity improvements for defibrillator
cases, we will continue to study this
area and look for further improvements.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
4. MDC 8 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Musculoskeletal System and Connective
Tissue)
a. Hip and Knee Replacements
In the FY 2006 final rule (70 FR
47303), we deleted DRG 209 (Major
Joint and Limb Reattachment
Procedures of Lower Extremity) and
created new DRGs 544 (Major Joint
Replacement or Reattachment of Lower
Extremity) and 545 (Revision of Hip or
Knee Replacement) to help resolve
payment issues for hospitals that
perform revisions of joint replacements
because we found revisions of joint
replacements to be significantly more
resource intensive than original hip and
knee replacements. DRG 544 includes
the following code assignments:
• 81.51, Total hip replacement
• 81.52, Partial hip replacement
• 81.54, Total knee replacement
• 81.56, Total ankle replacement
• 84.26, Foot reattachment
• 84.27, Lower leg or ankle
reattachment
• 84.28, Thigh reattachment
DRG 545 includes the following
procedure code assignments:
• 00.70, Revision of hip replacement,
both acetabular and femoral
components
• 00.71, Revision of hip replacement,
acetabular component
• 00.72, Revision of hip replacement,
femoral component
• 00.73, Revision of hip replacement,
acetabular liner and/or femoral head
only
• 00.80, Revision of knee
replacement, total (all components)
• 00.81, Revision of knee
replacement, tibial component
• 00.82, Revision of knee
replacement, femoral component
• 00.83, Revision of knee
replacement, patellar component
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
• 00.84, Revision of knee
replacement, tibial insert (liner)
• 81.53, Revision of hip replacement,
not otherwise specified
• 81.55, Revision of knee
replacement, not otherwise specified
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47305), we indicated that the American
Association of Orthopaedic Surgeons
had requested that, once we receive
claims data using the two DRG
procedure code assignments, we closely
examine data from the use of the codes
under the two DRGs to determine if
future additional DRG modifications are
needed.
After publication of the FY 2006 IPPS
final rule, a number of hospitals and
coding personnel advised us that the
DRG logic for DRG 471 (Bilateral or
Multiple Major Joint Procedures of
Lower Extremity), which utilizes the
new and revised hip and knee
procedure codes under DRGs 544 and
545, also includes codes that describe
procedures that are not bilateral or that
do not involve multiple major joints.
DRG 471 was developed to include
cases where major joint procedures such
as revisions or replacements were
performed either bilaterally or on two
joints of one lower extremity. We
changed the logic for DRG 471 last year
for the first time when we added the
new and revised codes. The commenters
indicated that, by adding the more
detailed codes that do not include total
revisions or replacements to the list of
major joint procedures to DRG 471, we
are assigning cases to DRG 471 that do
not have bilateral or multiple joint
procedures. For example, when a
hospital reports a code for revision of
the tibial component (code 00.81) and
patellar component of the right knee
(code 00.83), the current DRG logic
assigns the case to DRG 471. The
commenters indicated that this code
assignment is incorrect because only
one joint has undergone surgery, but
two components were used. One
commenter indicated that ICD–9–CM
does not identify left/right laterality.
Therefore, it is difficult to use the
current coding structure to determine if
procedures are performed on the same
leg or on both legs. The commenters
raised a concern about whether CMS
intended to pay hospitals using DRG
471 for procedures performed on one
joint. The commenters indicated that
the DRG assignments for these codes
would also make future data analysis
misleading. The commenters
recommended removing codes from
DRG 471 that do not specifically
identify bilateral or multiple joint
procedures.
PO 00000
Frm 00078
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
We agree that the new and revised
joint procedure codes should not be
assigned to DRG 471 unless they
include bilateral and multiple joints.
Therefore, in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24035), we
proposed to remove the following codes
from DRG 471:
• 00.71, Revision of hip replacement,
acetabular component
• 00.72, Revision of hip replacement,
femoral component
• 00.73, Revision of hip replacement,
acetabular liner and/or femoral head
only
• 00.81, Revision of knee
replacement, tibial component
• 00.82, Revision of knee
replacement, femoral component
• 00.83, Revision of knee
replacement, patellar component
• 00.84, Revision of total knee
replacement, tibial insert (liner)
• 81.53, Revision of hip replacement,
not otherwise specified
• 81.55, Revision of knee
replacement, not otherwise specified
The proposed revised DRG 471 would
then contain only the following codes:
• 00.70, Revision of hip replacement,
both acetabular and femoral
components
• 00.80, Revision of knee
replacement, total (all components)
• 81.51, Total hip replacement
• 81.52, Partial hip replacement
• 81.54, Total knee replacement
• 81.56, Total ankle replacement
We proposed to assign the codes
removed from DRG 471 (codes 00.71,
00.72, 00.73, 00.81, 00.82, 00.83, 00.84,
81.53, and 81.55) to DRG 545 when used
either alone or in combination. This list
of codes removed from DRG 471 and
added to DRG 545 includes partial
revisions of the knee and hip as well as
unspecified joint procedures such as
code 81.55 where it is not clear if the
revision is total or partial.
Comment: Several comments
supported our proposals to remove
codes 00.71, 00.72, 00.73, 00.81, 00.82,
00.83, 00.84, 81.53, and 81.55 from the
combinations assigned to DRG 471 and
assign cases with these codes to DRG
545. The commenters agreed that these
codes should be removed from DRG 471
because they do not represent bilateral
and multiple joint revisions or
replacements.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters support to remove codes
00.71, 00.72, 00.73, 00.81, 00.82, 00.83,
00.84, 81.53, and 81.55 from the
combinations assigned to DRG 471.
These cases will be assigned to DRG
545.
We are finalizing the changes to DRG
471 and DRG 545 that we proposed.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
• 737.31, Resolving infantile
idiopathic scoliosis
• 737.32, Progressive infantile
idiopathic scoliosis
• 737.33, Scoliosis due to radiation
• 737.34, Thoracogenic scoliosis
• 737.39, Other kyphoscoliosis and
scoliosis
• 737.8, Other curvatures of spine
• 737.9, Unspecified curvature of
spine
• 754.2, Congenital scoliosis
• 756.51, Osteogenesis imperfecta
The secondary diagnoses that will
lead to DRG 546 assignment are:
• 737.40, Curvature of spine,
unspecified
• 737.41, Curvature of spine
associated with other conditions,
kyphosis
• 737.42, Curvature of spine
associated with other conditions,
lordosis
• 737.43, Curvature of spine
associated with other conditions,
b. Spinal Fusion
scoliosis
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
After publication of the FY 2006 IPPS
47307), we created new DRG 546
final rule, we received a comment
(Spinal Fusions Except Cervical with
stating that creating new DRG 546 was
Curvature of the Spine or Malignancy).
insufficient to address clinical severity
DRG 546 is composed of all noncervical and resource differences among spinal
spinal fusions previously assigned to
fusion cases that involve fusing multiple
DRGs 497 (Spinal Fusion Except
levels of the spine. Specifically, the
Cervical with CC) and 498 (Spinal
commenter suggested that the spinal
Fusion Except Cervical without CC) that fusion DRGs be further modified to
have a principal or secondary diagnosis incorporate Bone Morphogenic Protein
of curvature of the spine or a principal
(BMP), code 84.52 (Insertion of
diagnosis of a malignancy. The
recombinant bone morphogenetic
principal diagnosis codes that lead to
protein). The commenter also suggested
DRG 546 assignment are the following:
that CMS apply a clinical severity
• 170.2, Malignant neoplasm of
concept to all back and spine surgical
vertebral column, excluding sacrum and cases similar to the approach that we
coccyx
used for the MCVs to refine the cardiac
• 198.5, Secondary malignant
DRGs in the final rule for FY 2006. The
neoplasm of bone and bone marrow
commenter recommended recognizing
• 213.2, Benign neoplasm of bone and
additional conditions that reflect higher
articular cartilage; vertebral column,
resource needs, regardless of whether
excluding sacrum and coccyx
they are principal or secondary
• 238.0, Neoplasm of uncertain
diagnoses. The commenter also
behavior of other and unspecified sites
suggested that the spine DRGs be further
and tissues; Bone and articular cartilage
subdivided based on the use of specific
• 239.2, Neoplasms of unspecified
spinal devices such as artificial discs.
nature; bone, soft tissue, and skin
These changes would entail the creation
• 732.0, Juvenile osteochondrosis of
of 10 new spine DRGs in addition to
spine
other changes requested.
• 733.13, Pathologic fracture of
Response: We agree that it is
vertebrae
• 737.0, Adolescent postural kyphosis important to recognize severity when
classifying patients into specific DRGs.
• 737.10, Kyphosis (acquired)
In response to recommendations made
(postural)
by MedPAC last year that are discussed
• 737.11, Kyphosis due to radiation
• 737.12, Kyphosis, postlaminectomy in section II.C. of this final rule, we are
conducting a comprehensive analysis of
• 737.19, Kyphosis (acquired), other
the entire DRG system to determine
• 737.20, Lordosis (acquired)
whether to undertake significant reform
(postural)
to better recognize severity of illness. At
• 737.21, Lordosis, postlaminectomy
this time, we believe it is premature to
• 737.22, Other postsurgical lordosis
develop a severity adjustment for spine
• 737.29, Lordosis (acquired), other
surgeries while we are considering a
• 737.30, Scoliosis [and
more systematic approach to capturing
kyphoscoliosis], idiopathic
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Further, as we indicated in the proposed
rule, we plan to perform extensive data
analysis on the new and revised joint
procedure codes as we receive billing
data to determine if future refinements
of these DRGs are needed. In addition,
as indicated in section II.C. of the
preamble of the proposed rule, we are
planning in the future to adopt a revised
DRG system for the IPPS that addresses
severity of illness. We encouraged
commenters to evaluate how the new
and revised joint procedures should be
addressed in such a revised system. We
received comments indicating that the
CS DRGs that we proposed do not
distinguish between patients receiving
an original joint replacement from a
revision. As we indicate elsewhere in
this final rule, we will evaluate these
issues as we develop our plans for
adopting a revised DRG system that
addresses severity of illness.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00079
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47947
severity of illness across all DRGs. We
also believe it would be premature to
make revisions to DRG 546 because this
DRG was created on October 1, 2005,
and we do not yet have data to analyze
its impact. Given the number of
innovations occurring in spinal surgery
over the last several years (for example,
artificial spinal disc prostheses,
kyphoplasty, and vertebroplasty), we
agree that additional analysis of the
spine DRGs would be warranted if we
were to continue with the current DRG
system and not adopt CS DRGs.
However, as discussed above, in the FY
2007 IPPS proposed rule, we proposed
to develop a severity-adjusted DRG
system. For this reason, we are not
further researching this issue for FY
2007. However, in the proposed rule, we
encouraged commenters to examine the
proposed CS DRG system described in
section II.C. of the preamble of the
proposed rule to determine whether
there is a better recognition of severity
of illness and resource use in that
system.
Comment: One commenter stated that
it was premature to consider splitting
the spinal fusion DRGs into potentially
up to 10 new DRGs at this time. The
commenter stated there is a need for
additional data analysis prior to
recommending new DRGs.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that it is premature to
consider splitting the spinal fusion
DRGs into as many as 10 new DRGs. We
will continue to study this area. In the
meantime, we will not modify the
spinal fusion DRGs for October 1, 2006.
c. CHARITETM Spinal Disc Replacement
Device
CHARITETM is a prosthetic
intervertebral disc. On October 26, 2004,
the FDA approved the CHARITETM
Artificial Disc for single level spinal
arthroplasty in skeletally mature
patients with degenerative disc disease
between L4 and S1. On October 1, 2004,
we created new procedure codes for the
insertion of spinal disc prostheses
(codes 84.60 through 84.69). We
provided the DRG assignments for these
new codes in Table 6B of the FY 2005
IPPS proposed rule (69 FR 28673). We
received comments on the FY 2005
proposed rule recommending that we
change the assignments for these codes
from DRG 499 (Back and Neck
Procedures Except Spinal Fusion With
CC) and DRG 500 (Back and Neck
Procedures Except Spinal Fusion
Without CC) to the DRGs for spinal
fusion, DRG 497 (Spinal Fusion Except
Cervical With CC) and DRG 498 (Spinal
Fusion Except Cervical Without CC) for
procedures on the lumbar spine and to
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47948
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
DRGs 519 and 520 for procedures on the
cervical spine. In the FY 2005 IPPS final
rule (69 FR 48938, August 11, 2004), we
indicated that DRGs 497 and 498 are
limited to spinal fusion procedures.
Because the surgery involving the
CHARITETM Artificial Disc is not a
spinal fusion, we decided not to include
this procedure in these DRGs. However,
we stated that we would continue to
analyze this issue and solicited further
public comments on the DRG
assignment for spinal disc prostheses.
In the FY 2006 final rule (70 FR
47353, August 12, 2005), we noted that,
if a product meets all of the criteria for
Medicare to pay for the product as a
new technology under section
1886(d)(5)(K) of the Act, there is a clear
preference expressed in the statute for
us to assign the technology to a DRG
based on similar clinical or anatomical
characteristics or costs. However, for FY
2006, we did not find that the
CHARITETM Artificial Disc met the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion and, thus, did not qualify as a
new technology. Consequently, we did
not address the DRG classification
request made under the authority of this
provision of the Act.
However, we did evaluate whether to
reassign the CHARITETM Artificial Disc
to different DRGs using the Secretary’s
authority under section 1886(d)(4) of the
Act (70 FR 47308, August 12, 2005). We
indicated that we did not have Medicare
charge information to evaluate DRG
changes for cases involving an implant
of a prosthetic intervertebral disc like
the CHARITETM and did not make a
change in its DRG assignments. We
stated that we would consider whether
changes to the DRG assignments for the
CHARITETM Artificial Disc were
warranted for FY 2007, once we had
information from Medicare’s data
system that would assist us in
evaluating the costs of these patients.
As we discussed in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24036), we
received correspondence regarding the
DRG assignments for the CHARITETM
Artificial Disc, code 84.65 (Insertion of
total spinal disc prosthesis,
lumbosacral). The commenter had
previously submitted an application for
the CHARITETM Artificial Disc for new
technology add-on payments for FY
2006 and had requested a reassignment
of cases involving CHARITETM
implantation to DRGs 497 and 498. The
commenter asked that we examine
claims data for FY 2005 and reassign
procedure code 84.65 from DRGs 499
and 500 into DRGs 497 and 498. The
commenter again stated the view that
cases with the CHARITETM Artificial
Disc reflect comparable resource use
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
and similar clinical indications as do
those in DRGs 497 and 498. If CMS were
to reject reassignment of the
CHARITETM Artificial Disc to DRGs 497
and 498, the commenter suggested
creating two separate DRGs for lumbar
disc replacements.
On February 15, 2006, we posted a
proposed national coverage
determination (NCD) on the CMS Web
site seeking public comment on our
proposed finding that the evidence is
not adequate to conclude that lumbar
artificial disc replacement with the
CHARITETM Artificial Disc is reasonable
and necessary. The proposed NCD
stated that lumbar artificial disc
replacement with the CHARITETM
Artificial Disc is generally not indicated
in patients over 60 years old. Further, it
stated that there is insufficient evidence
among either the aged or disabled
Medicare population to make a
reasonable and necessary determination
for coverage. With an NCD pending to
make spinal arthroplasty with the
CHARITETM Artificial Disc noncovered,
we indicated in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule that we did not believe it
was appropriate at that time to reassign
procedure code 84.65 from DRGs 499
and 500 to DRGs 497 and 498.
After considering the public
comments and additional evidence
received, we made a final NCD on May
16, 2006, that Medicare would not cover
the CHARITETM Artificial Disc for the
Medicare population over 60 years of
age. For Medicare beneficiaries 60 years
of age and under, local Medicare
contractors have the discretion to
determine coverage for lumbar artificial
disc replacement procedures involving
the CHARITETM Artificial Disc. The
final NCD can be found at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/mcd/
viewncd.asp:ncd_;id-150.10&ncd
_version1&basket=ncd%3A150%2E10%
3A1%3ALumbar+Artificial+Disc+
Replacement%280ADR%29.
Comment: Some commenters agreed
with our proposed decision not to
reassign CHARITETM Artificial Disc at
this time to the spinal fusion DRGs.
Other commenters disagreed with our
proposal not to move code 84.65
(CHARITETM) from DRGs 499 and 500 to
DRGs 497 and 498. One commenter
noted that the national noncoverage
determination for the CHARITETM
Artificial Disc only applies to patients
over 60 years of age. The commenter
further noted that local Medicare
carriers have the discretion to make
coverage decisions for Medicare
beneficiaries who are under 60 years of
age. The commenter stated that patients
who receive the CHARITETM Artificial
Disc are candidates for a fusion
PO 00000
Frm 00080
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
procedure involving an anterior surgical
approach. The commenter goes on to
state that the CHARITETM Artificial Disc
is an alternative therapy to spinal fusion
for patients with similar diagnoses. The
commenter supplied data from FY 2005
MedPAR file in support of its request for
a DRG change. These data included 54
cases that were assigned to DRGs 499
and 500. The 23 cases in DRG 499 had
mean charges of $61,750, while the 31
cases assigned to DRG 500 had mean
charges of $53,802. These data compare
to mean charges of $26,974 for all cases
in DRG 499 and $17,731 for all cases in
DRG 500. The commenter reported
mean charges of $71,581 for DRG 497
and $55,489 for DRG 498. The
commenter stated that the 54
CHARITETM cases are more similar in
average charges to all cases in DRGs 497
and 498 than to DRGs 499 and 500.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that it is not appropriate to
consider a DRG revision at this time for
the CHARITETM Artificial Disc, given
the recent decision to limit coverage for
surgical procedures involving this
device. Although we have reviewed the
Medicare charge data, we are concerned
that there are a very small number of
cases for patients under 60 years of age
who have received the CHARITETM
Artificial Disc. We believe it appropriate
to base the decision on a DRG change
on charge data only on the population
for which the procedure is covered. We
have an extremely small number of
cases for patients under 60 on which to
base such a decision. For this reason, we
do not believe it is appropriate to
modify the DRGs at this time for
CHARITETM cases.
5. MDC 18 (Infectious and Parasitic
Diseases (Systemic or Unspecified
Sites)): Severe Sepsis
In FYs 2005 and 2006, we considered
requests for the creation of a separate
DRG for the diagnosis of severe sepsis.
Severe sepsis is described by ICD–9–CM
code 995.92 (Systemic inflammatory
response syndrome due to infection
with organ dysfunction). Patients
admitted with sepsis as a principal
diagnosis currently are assigned to DRG
416 (Septicemia Age > 17) and DRG 417
(Septicemia Age 0–17) in MDC 18
(Infectious and Parasitic Diseases
(Systemic or Unspecified Sites)). The
commenter requested that all cases in
which severe sepsis is present on
admission, as well as those cases in
which it develops after admission
(which are currently classified
elsewhere), be included in this new
DRG. In both FY 2005 and FY 2006 (69
FR 48975 and 70 FR 47309), we did not
believe the current clinical definition of
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
severe sepsis was specific enough to
identify a meaningful cohort of patients
in terms of clinical coherence and
resource utilization to warrant a
separate DRG. Sepsis is found across
hundreds of medical and surgical DRGs,
and the term ‘‘organ dysfunction’’
implicates numerous currently existing
diagnosis codes. While we recognize
that Medicare beneficiaries with severe
sepsis are quite ill and require extensive
hospital resources, in the past we have
not found that they can be identified
adequately to justify removing them
from all of the other DRGs in which they
appear. For this reason, we did not
create a new DRG for severe sepsis for
FY 2005 or FY 2006. We indicated that
we would continue to work with
National Center for Health Statistics
(NCHS) to improve the codes so that our
data on these patients improve. We also
indicated that we would continue to
examine data on these patients as we
consider future modifications.
For the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule,
we again received a request to consider
creating a separate DRG for patients
diagnosed with severe sepsis (71 FR
24037). The information and data
available to us from hospital bills with
respect to identifying patients with
severe sepsis have not changed since
last year. However, the NCHS discussed
modifications to the current ICD–9–CM
diagnosis codes for systemic
inflammatory response syndrome
(SIRS), codes 995.91 through 995.94
(which include severe sepsis) at the
September 29–30, 2005 ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee meeting. During the meeting,
it became clear that there is still
confusion surrounding the use of these
codes. As a result of the meeting and the
comments received, the Committee
made modifications to the set of SIRS
codes. These modifications are reflected
in Table 6E, Revised Diagnosis Code
Titles, of the Addendum to this final
rule.
We believe that implementation of the
modified SIRS diagnosis codes and the
updated coding guidelines over the next
year could begin the process of
improving data for this group of
patients. The desired outcome is to be
able to better evaluate Medicare
beneficiaries with severe sepsis with
regard to their clinical coherence,
resource utilization, and charges.
Therefore, in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule, we did not propose to
create a new DRG for severe sepsis for
FY 2007.
Comment: Numerous commenters
asked for changes to the current sepsis
classification. The commenters agreed
that coding of systemic inflammatory
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
response syndrome (SIRS), sepsis,
septicemia, severe sepsis, and septic
shock has been confusing to the
provider community in the last few
years. Specifically, one commenter
stated coding guidelines have been
revised based on clinical definitions,
which in turn has affected the DRG
classification for sepsis. Another
commenter referenced the ICD–9–CM
Code Book tabular section and the
American Hospital Association’s (AHA)
fourth quarter (4Q) 2003 Coding Clinic,
‘‘for patients with severe sepsis, the
code for the systemic infection (038.x)
or trauma should be sequenced first,
followed by either code 995.92
(Systemic Inflammatory Response
Syndrome due to infectious process
with organ dysfunction) or code 995.94
(Systemic inflammatory response
syndrome due to noninfectious process
with organ dysfunction). Codes for the
specific organ dysfunction should also
be assigned.’’ The commenter stated that
as a result of this coding guideline,
respiratory failure cannot be sequenced
as the principal diagnosis because it is
considered an organ dysfunction of the
patient’s sepsis. However, reverting
sequencing instructions would be
confusing and again disrupt the data
according to some of the commenters.
As a result, many commenters stated
that a new DRG for severe sepsis is not
appropriate due to the inconsistent data.
Response: We agree that there has
been a great deal of confusion in the
coding and sequencing of cases with
severe sepsis and SIRS. The commenters
are correct that the coding directives
lead cases with severe sepsis that are on
mechanical ventilation for respiratory
failure to be assigned to DRG 416
(Septicemia Age >17) and DRG 417
(Septicemia Age 0 >17) instead of DRG
475 (Respiratory System Diagnosis with
Ventilator Support). As stated in the
proposed rule, we have continued to
work with NCHS to improve the codes
so that our data on these patients
improve. We believe that
implementation of the modified SIRS
diagnosis codes and the updated coding
guidelines over the next year will
further improve the coding of this
subset of patients.
Comment: One commenter presented
its analysis of the MedPAR data and
again requested the creation of two new
DRGS for severe sepsis, one medical and
one surgical. The other option suggested
by the commenter was to split DRGs 415
and 416 into DRGs with and without
severe sepsis cases. The commenter
expressed concern that, while there has
been some confusion over the use of the
SIRS family of codes (995.90–995.94)
over the past three years, the confusion
PO 00000
Frm 00081
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47949
has been mainly associated with the
other codes and not the severe sepsis
code (995.92). The commenter provided
information concerning the definition of
severe sepsis and its adoption following
a 1992 consensus panel of the American
College of Chest Physicians and the
Society of Critical Care Medicine.
According to the commenter, the panel
defined severe sepsis as a systemic
inflammatory response to infection that
leads to acute organ dysfunction. The
commenter noted this definition has
been used successfully to identify
thousands of patients with severe sepsis
and in more than 30 large-scale clinical
trials. The commenter also stated severe
sepsis cases are clinically coherent with
a common underlying problem (SIRS)
leading to complications (acute organ
dysfunction) and are managed similarly,
receiving advanced life support in
intensive care units. The commenter
also provided examples to demonstrate
how clinical coherence leads to resource
use coherence.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s analysis of the data. As
stated above, there has been significant
confusion over the use of the sepsis
codes. While the definition may be well
understood among the individuals
involved with the clinical trials, there
has been uncertainty in the application
of the codes as evidenced by repeated
discussions at the ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee meetings and comments
received in response to the proposed
rule. We note that the National Center
for Health Statistics has revised the
sepsis and systemic inflammatory
response syndrome codes in response to
suggestions made at the Committee
meetings. These revisions are shown in
Table 6E of the Addendum to this final
rule and will go into effect on October
1, 2006 (codes 995.91 through 995.94).
We did not propose a new DRG for
severe sepsis for FY 2007 in the
proposed rule due to the data
inconsistencies and difficulty expressed
with properly assigning the sepsis
codes, among other reasons cited
previously.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule,
we also solicited comments on the
proposal we were considering to adopt
a CS DRG system. We noted it is
possible that the proposed system
would better recognize the extensive
resources that hospitals use to treat
patients with severe sepsis. We
encouraged commenters to examine the
proposed system and provide
comments. The comments and
responses on this proposal are discussed
in section II.C of this final rule.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47950
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Therefore, in this FY 2007 final rule
we are not creating new DRGs for
medical or surgical severe sepsis cases
as requested by the commenter.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
6. Medicare Code Editor (MCE) Changes
As explained under section II.B.1. of
this preamble, the Medicare Code Editor
(MCE) is a software program that detects
and reports errors in the coding of
Medicare claims data. Patient diagnoses,
procedure(s), discharge status, and
demographic information go into the
Medicare claims processing systems and
are subjected to a series of automated
screens. The MCE screens are designed
to identify cases that require further
review before classification into a DRG.
For FY 2007, we proposed to make
several changes to the MCE edits (71 FR
24038 and 24039). We received one
comment on this topic. As a result of
new and modified codes approved after
the annual spring ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance meeting,
we make changes to the MCE. In the
past, in both the IPPS proposed and
final rules, we only provided the list of
changes to the MCE in the IPPS that
were brought to our attention after the
prior year’s final rule. We historically
have not listed the changes we have
made to the MCE as a result of the new
and modified codes approved after the
annual spring ICD–9–CM Coordination
and Maintenance meeting. These
changes are approved too late in the
rulemaking schedule for inclusion in
the proposed rule. Furthermore,
although our MCE policies have been
described in our proposed and final
rules, we have not provided the detail
of each new or modified diagnosis and
procedure code edit in the final rule.
However, in response to a public
comment and in the interest of making
the IPPS more transparent, we are
including in this final rule a
comprehensive list of all the changes to
the MCE edits for the next fiscal year as
a result of coding changes.
a. Edit: Newborn Diagnoses
We proposed to add code 780.92
(Excessive crying of infant (baby)) to the
‘‘Newborn Diagnoses’’ edit in the MCE.
This edit is structured for patients with
an age of ‘‘0’’. In the Tabular portion of
the ICD–9–CM diagnosis codes, the
‘‘excludes’’ note at code 780.92 states
that this code ‘‘excludes excessive
crying of child, adolescent or adult’’ and
sends the coder to code 780.95 (Other
excessive crying. (The new title of this
code, shown on Table 6E of the
Addendum to this final rule is
‘‘Excessive crying of child, adolescent,
or adult’’.) To make a conforming
change, we also proposed that code
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
780.92 be removed from the ‘‘Pediatric
Diagnoses—Age 0 Through 17’’ edit.
We did not receive any public
comments on the proposed edit and,
therefore, are adopting it as final.
In addition, there were diagnosis
codes discussed at the March 2006 ICD–
9–CM Coordination and Maintenance
meeting that were approved too late in
the rulemaking schedule for inclusion
in the proposed rule. Therefore, the
following ICD–9–CM diagnosis codes
are added to the ‘‘Newborn Diagnosis’’
MCE edit for FY 2007:
• 768.7, Hypoxic-ischemic
encephalopathy (HIE)
• 770.87, Respiratory arrest of
newborn
• 770.88, Hypoxemia of newborn
• 775.81, Other acidosis of newborn
• 775.89, Other neonatal endocrine
and metabolic disturbances
• 779.85, Cardiac arrest of newborn
Because diagnosis code 775.8 (Other
transitory neonatal endocrine and
metabolic disturbances) was expanded
to the fifth-digit level, this code is being
deleted from the Newborn Diagnosis
edit.
b. Edit: Diagnoses for Pediatric—Age 0–
17 Years Old
We are adding the following new
diagnosis codes to the edit for diagnosis
for pediatrics—age 0–17 years old:
• V85.51, Body Mass Index, pediatric,
less than 5th percentile for age
• V85.52, Body Mass Index, pediatric,
5th percentile to less than 85th
percentile for age
• V85.53, Body Mass Index, pediatric,
85th percentile to less than 95th
percentile for age
• V85.54, Body Mass Index, pediatric,
greater than or equal to 95th percentile
for age
c. Edit: Maternity Diagnoses—Age 12
through 55
We are adding the following new
codes to the edit for maternity
diagnoses—age 12 through 55:
• 649.00, Tobacco use disorder
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, unspecified as to
episode of care or not applicable
• 649.01, Tobacco use disorder
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, delivered, with or
without mention of antepartum
condition
• 649.02, Tobacco use disorder
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, delivered, with
mention of postpartum complication
• 649.03, Tobacco use disorder
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, antepartum condition
or complication
PO 00000
Frm 00082
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
• 649.04, Tobacco use disorder
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, postpartum condition
or complication
• 649.10, Obesity complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, unspecified as to episode
of care or not applicable
• 649.11, Obesity complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, delivered, with or without
mention of antepartum condition
• 649.12, Obesity complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, delivered, with mention of
postpartum complication
• 649.13, Obesity complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, antepartum condition or
complication
• 649.14, Obesity complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, postpartum condition or
complication
• 649.20, Bariatric surgery status
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, unspecified as to
episode of care or not applicable
• 649.21, Bariatric surgery status
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, delivered, with or
without mention of antepartum
condition
• 649.22, Bariatric surgery status
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, delivered, with
mention of postpartum complication
• 649.23, Bariatric surgery status
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, antepartum condition
or complication
• 649.24, Bariatric surgery status
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, postpartum condition
or complication
• 649.30, Coagulation defects
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, unspecified as to
episode of care or not applicable
• 649.31, Coagulation defects
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, delivered, with or
without mention of antepartum
condition
• 649.32, Coagulation defects
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, delivered, with
mention of postpartum complication
• 649.33, Coagulation defects
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, antepartum condition
or complication
• 649.34, Coagulation defects
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, postpartum condition
or complication
• 649.40, Epilepsy complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, unspecified as to episode
of care or not applicable
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
• 649.41, Epilepsy complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, delivered, with or without
mention of antepartum condition
• 649.42, Epilepsy complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, delivered, with mention of
postpartum complication
• 649.43, Epilepsy complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, antepartum condition or
complication
• 649.44, Epilepsy complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, postpartum condition or
complication
• 649.50, Spotting complicating
pregnancy unspecified as to episode of
care or not applicable
• 649.51, Spotting complicating
pregnancy delivered, with or without
mention of antepartum condition
• 649.53, Spotting complicating
pregnancy antepartum condition or
complication
• 649.60, Uterine size date
discrepancy, unspecified as to episode
of care or not applicable
• 649.61, Uterine size date
discrepancy, delivered, with or without
mention of antepartum condition
• 649.62, Uterine size date
discrepancy, delivered, with mention of
postpartum complication
• 649.63, Uterine size date
discrepancy, antepartum condition or
complication
• 649.64, Uterine size date
discrepancy, postpartum condition or
complication
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
d. Edit: Diagnoses Allowed for Females
Only
The following codes are now invalid
codes, as shown in Table 6C of the
Addendum to the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule and this final rule. In the
FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule, we
proposed to remove them from the
‘‘Diagnosis Allowed for Females Only’’
edit in the MCE.
• 616.8, Other specified inflammatory
diseases of cervix, vagina, and vulva
• 629.8, Other specified disorders of
female genital organs
Codes 616.8 and 629.8 have been
expanded to the fifth-digit level.
Therefore, we proposed to place the
following expanded codes in the
‘‘Diagnoses Allowed for Females Only’’
edit.
• 616.81, Mucositis (ulcerative) of
cervix, vagina, and vulva
• 616.89, Other inflammatory disease
of cervix, vagina, and vulva
• 629.81, Habitual aborter without
current pregnancy
• 629.89, Other specified disorders of
female genital organs
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
The following two codes have revised
descriptions (as shown in Table 6E of
the Addendum to this final rule) which
specify gender. Therefore, we proposed
to add them to ‘‘Diagnoses Allowed for
Females Only’’ edit.
• V26.31, Testing of female for
genetic disease carrier status
• V26.32, Other genetic testing of
female
We did not receive any public
comments on the proposed changes to
this edit. Therefore, we are adopting the
changes as final.
In addition, we are adding the
following new ICD–9–CM codes to this
edit:
• 618.84, Cervical stump prolapse
• 629.29, Other female genital
mutilation status
• 649.00, Tobacco use disorder
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, unspecified as to
episode of care or not applicable
• 649.01, Tobacco use disorder
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, delivered, with or
without mention of antepartum
condition
• 649.02, Tobacco use disorder
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, delivered, with
mention of postpartum complication
• 649.03, Tobacco use disorder
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, antepartum condition
or complication
• 649.04, Tobacco use disorder
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, postpartum condition
or complication
• 649.10, Obesity complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, unspecified as to episode
of care or not applicable
• 649.11, Obesity complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, delivered, with or without
mention of antepartum condition
• 649.12, Obesity complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, delivered, with mention of
postpartum complication
• 649.13, Obesity complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, antepartum condition or
complication
• 649.14, Obesity complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, postpartum condition or
complication
• 649.20, Bariatric surgery status
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, unspecified as to
episode of care or not applicable
• 649.21, Bariatric surgery status
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, delivered, with or
without mention of antepartum
condition
PO 00000
Frm 00083
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47951
• 649.22, Bariatric surgery status
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, delivered, with
mention of postpartum complication
• 649.23, Bariatric surgery status
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, antepartum condition
or complication
• 649.24, Bariatric surgery status
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, postpartum condition
or complication
• 649.30, Coagulation defects
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, unspecified as to
episode of care or not applicable
• 649.31, Coagulation defects
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, delivered, with or
without mention of antepartum
condition
• 649.32, Coagulation defects
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, delivered, with
mention of postpartum complication
• 649.33, Coagulation defects
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, antepartum condition
or complication
• 649.34, Coagulation defects
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, postpartum condition
or complication
• 649.40, Epilepsy complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, unspecified as to episode
of care or not applicable
• 649.41, Epilepsy complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, delivered, with or without
mention of antepartum condition
• 649.42, Epilepsy complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, delivered, with mention of
postpartum complication
• 649.43, Epilepsy complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, antepartum condition or
complication
• 649.44, Epilepsy complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, postpartum condition or
complication
• 649.50, Spotting complicating
pregnancy unspecified as to episode of
care or not applicable
• 649.51, Spotting complicating
pregnancy delivered, with or without
mention of antepartum condition
• 649.53, Spotting complicating
pregnancy antepartum condition or
complication
• 649.60, Uterine size date
discrepancy, unspecified as to episode
of care or not applicable
• 649.61, Uterine size date
discrepancy, delivered, with or without
mention of antepartum condition
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47952
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
• 649.62, Uterine size date
discrepancy, delivered, with mention of
postpartum complication
• 649.63, Uterine size date
discrepancy, antepartum condition or
complication
• 649.64, Uterine size date
discrepancy, postpartum condition or
complication
• 795.06, Papanicolaou smear of
cervix with cytologic evidence of
malignancy
• 795.82, Elevated cancer antigen 125
[CA 125]
In addition, the following codes were
expanded to the fourth digit and,
therefore, are removed from this edit:
• 68.4, Total abdominal hysterectomy
• 68.6, Radical abdominal
hysterectomy
• 68.7, Radical vaginal hysterectomy
g. Edit: Manifestations Not Allowed as
Principal Diagnosis
We proposed to add the following
codes to the ‘‘Manifestations Not
Allowed as Principal Diagnosis’’ edit in
the MCE:
• 362.03, Nonproliferative diabetic
e. Edit: Diagnoses Allowed for Males
retinopathy, NOS
Only
• 362.04, Mild nonproliferative
diabetic retinopathy
Code 608.2 (Torsion of testis) is now
• 362.05, Moderate nonproliferative
an invalid code (as shown in Table 6C
diabetic retinopathy
of the Addendum to the proposed rule
• 362.06, Severe nonproliferative
and this final rule). Therefore, we
diabetic retinopathy
proposed to remove it from the
• 362.07, Diabetic macular edema.
‘‘Diagnoses Allowed for Males Only’’
We did not receive any public
edit. This code has been expanded to
comments concerning this proposed
the fifth-digit level. We proposed to
change. Therefore, we are adopting the
place the following expanded codes in
above proposed changes as final.
the ‘‘Diagnoses Allowed for Males
In addition, we are adding the
Only’’ edit:
following new codes to this edit:
• 608.20, Torsion of testis,
• 284.2, Myelophthisis
unspecified
• 289.83, Myelofibrosis
• 608.21, Extravaginal torsion of
• 323.01, Encephalitis and
spermatic cord
encephalomyelitis in viral diseases
• 608.22 Intravaginal torsion of
classified elsewhere
spermatic cord
• 323.02, Myelitis in viral diseases
• 608.23, Torsion of appendix testis
classified elsewhere
• 608.24, Torsion of appendix
• 323.41, Other encephalitis and
epididymis
encephalomyelitis due to infection
The following codes have been
classified elsewhere
created effective for FY 2007 and are
• 323.42, Other myelitis due to
gender specific. Therefore, we proposed
infection classified elsewhere
to add them to the ‘‘Diagnosis Allowed
• 323.61, Infectious acute
for Males Only’’ edit.
disseminated encephalomyelitis
• V26.34, Testing of male for genetic
(ADEM)
disease carrier status
• 323.62, Other postinfectious
• V26.35, Encounter for testing of
encephalitis and encephalomyelitis
male partner of habitual aborter
• 323.63, Postinfectious myelitis
• V26.39, Other genetic testing of
• 323.71, Toxic encephalitis and
male
encephalomyelitis
We did not receive any public
• 323.72, Toxic myelitis
comments on our proposed changes to
• 341.21, Acute (transverse) myelitis
this edit. Therefore, we are adopting the
in conditions classified elsewhere
changes as final.
The following codes have been
f. Edit: Procedures Allowed for Females expanded to the fifth-digit level of
Only
specificity, which results in making the
The following new codes are added to four-digit code invalid. Therefore, these
codes are removed from the
the list of female procedures:
• 68.41, Laparoscopic total abdominal manifestation edit:
• 323.0, Encephalitis in viral diseases
hysterectomy
• 68.49, Other and unspecified total
classified elsewhere
• 323.4, Other encephalitis due to
abdominal hysterectomy
• 68.61, Laparoscopic radical
infection classified elsewhere
• 323.6, Postinfectious encephalitis
abdominal hysterectomy
• 323.7, Toxic encephalitis
• 68.69, Other and unspecified
In the proposed rule, we had
radical abdominal hysterectomy
• 68.71, Laparoscopic radical vaginal suggested we would remove code
525.10 (Acquired absence of teeth,
hysterectomy [LRVH]
• 68.79, Other and unspecified
unspecified) from this edit in the MCE.
radical vaginal hysterectomy
However, all codes in subcategory 525.1
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00084
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
(Loss of teeth due to trauma, extraction,
or periodontal disease) are considered
manifestation codes. Therefore, we are
retracting this proposal, and are leaving
code 525.10 in this edit.
h. Edit: Nonspecific Principal Diagnosis
We proposed to add the following
codes to the ‘‘Nonspecific Principal
Diagnosis’’ edit in the MCE:
• 255.10, Hyperaldosteronism,
unspecified
• 323.9, Unspecified causes of
encephalitis, myelitis, and
encephalomyelitis
• 770.10, Fetal and newborn
aspiration, unspecified.
• 780.31, Febrile convulsions
(simple), unspecified
Codes 255.10, 323.9, and 780.31
appear on Table 6E, Revised Diagnosis
Codes, and are being included in this
edit because of their revised
descriptions. Code 770.10 was
inadvertently left off this list for FY
2006 when the code was created.
We did not receive any public
comments on the proposed changes to
this edit. Therefore, we are adopting the
proposed changes as final. In addition,
we are adding the following codes to
this edit:
• 238.75, Myelodysplastic syndrome,
unspecified
• 276.50, Volume depletion NOS
• 277.30, Amyloidosis, unspecified
• 288.00, Neutropenia, unspecified
• 288.50, Leukocytopenia,
unspecified
• 288.60, Leukocytosis, unspecified
• 341.20, Acute (transverse) myelitis
NOS
• 379.60, Inflammation (infection) of
postprocedural bleb, unspecified
• 523.30, Aggressive periodontitis,
unspecified
• 523.40, Chronic periodontitis,
unspecified
• 525.60, Unspecified unsatisfactory
restoration of tooth
• 528.00, Stomatitis and mucositis,
unspecified
• 608.20, Torsion of testis,
unspecified
• 649.00, Tobacco use disorder
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, unspecified as to
episode of care or not applicable
• 649.10, Obesity complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, unspecified as to episode
of care or not applicable
• 649.20, Bariatric surgery status
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, unspecified as to
episode of care or not applicable
• 649.30, Coagulation defects
complicating pregnancy, childbirth, or
the puerperium, unspecified as to
episode of care or not applicable
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
• 649.40, Epilepsy complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, unspecified as to episode
of care or not applicable
• 649.50, Spotting complicating
pregnancy, childbirth, or the
puerperium, unspecified as to episode
of care or not applicable
• 649.60, Uterine size date
discrepancy, unspecified as to episode
of care or not applicable
• 958.90, Compartment syndrome,
unspecified
• 995.20, Unspecified adverse effect
of unspecified drug, medicinal and
biological substance
• 995.22, Unspecified adverse effect
of anesthesia
• 995.23, Unspecified adverse effect
of insulin
• 995.29, Unspecified adverse effect
of other drug, medicinal and biological
substance
We are removing the following codes
from this edit:
• 362.03, Nonproliferative diabetic
retinopathy NOS
• 525.10, Acquired absence of teeth,
unspecified
• 793.9, Other nonspecific abnormal
findings on radiological and other
examinations of body structure
Comment: Two commenters suggested
that the expanded code (793.99, Other
nonspecific abnormal findings on
radiological and other examinations of
body structure) be added back into this
edit.
Response: We will not act on those
suggestions at this time, as we believe
that code 739.9 should not originally
have been in the edit as it is more like
an ‘‘other’’ code than a ‘‘nonspecific’’
code.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
i. Edit: Unacceptable Principal
Diagnosis
Most V-codes describe an individual’s
health status, but these codes are not
usually a current illness or injury.
Therefore, most V-codes are included in
the ‘‘Unacceptable Principal Diagnosis’’
edit. The following codes became
invalid (as shown in Table 6C of the
Addendum to the proposed rule and
this final rule) for FY 2007, and we
proposed to remove them from this edit:
• V18.5, Family history, digestive
disorders
• V58.3, Attention to surgical
dressings and sutures
• V72.1, Examination of ears and
hearing
The following V-codes represent
either fifth-digit extensions of the above
codes, or new codes that were created
effective October 1, 2006 (Table 6A of
the Addendum to the proposed rule and
this final rule). Therefore, we proposed
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
to add the following codes to the
‘‘Unacceptable Principal Diagnosis’’
edit:
• V18.51, Family history, colonic
polyps
• V18.59, Family history, other
digestive disorders
• V26.34, Testing of male for genetic
disease carrier status
• V26.35, Encounter for testing of
male partner of habitual aborter
• V26.39, Other genetic testing of
male
• V45.86, Bariatric surgery status
• V58.30, Encounter for change or
removal of nonsurgical wound dressing
• V58.31, Encounter for change or
removal of surgical wound dressing
• V58.32, Encounter for removal of
sutures
• V72.11, Encounter for hearing
examination following failed hearing
screening
• V72.19, Other examination of ears
and hearing
• V82.71, Screening for genetic
disease carrier status
• V82.79, Other genetic screening
• V85.51, Body mass index, pediatric,
less than 5th percentile for age
• V85.52, Body mass index, pediatric,
5th percentile to less than 85th
percentile for age
• V85.53, Body mass index, pediatric,
85th percentile to less than 95th
percentile for age
• V85.54, Body mass index, pediatric,
greater than or equal to 95th percentile
for age
• V86.0, Estrogen receptor positive
status [ER+]
• V86.1, Estrogen receptor negative
status [ER¥]
We did not receive any public
comments on these proposed edits.
Therefore, we are adopting the proposed
changes as final.
j. Edit: Nonspecific O.R. Procedures
We proposed to remove code 00.29
(Intravascular imaging unspecified
vessel(s)) from the ‘‘Nonspecific O.R.
Procedure’’ edit in the MCE. This code
was erroneously placed in this edit; it is
not considered an O.R. procedure.
We did not receive any public
comments on these proposed edits.
Therefore, we are adopting the proposed
changes as final.
In addition, we are removing code
68.39 (Other subtotal abdominal
hysterectomy) from this edit. Code 68.39
is not a nonspecific code, it is
considered other, and was originally
included in this edit in error.
k. Edit: Noncovered Procedures
Under the proposed changes to DRG
513 (Pancreas Transplant) under the
PO 00000
Frm 00085
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47953
Pre-MDCs described in section II.D.1. of
the preamble of the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule, a patient must have a
history of medically uncontrollable,
insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus,
that is, Type I diabetes mellitus.
Therefore, to conform the ‘‘Noncovered
Procedures’’ Edit in the MCE to these
proposed changes, we proposed to
revise Diagnosis List 1 in this edit to
include only the following codes:
• 250.01, Diabetes mellitus without
mention of complication, type I
[juvenile type], not stated as
uncontrolled
• 250.03, Diabetes mellitus without
mention of complication, type I
[juvenile type], uncontrolled
• 250.11, Diabetes with ketoacidosis,
type I [juvenile type], not stated as
uncontrolled
• 250.13, Diabetes with ketoacidosis,
type I [juvenile type], uncontrolled
• 250.21, Diabetes with
hyperosmolarity, type I [juvenile type],
not stated as uncontrolled
• 250.23, Diabetes with
hyperosmolarity, type I [juvenile type],
uncontrolled
• 250.31, Diabetes with other coma,
type I [juvenile type], not stated as
uncontrolled
• 250.33, Diabetes with other coma,
type I [juvenile type], uncontrolled
• 250.41, Diabetes with renal
manifestations, type I [juvenile type],
not stated as uncontrolled
• 250.43, Diabetes with renal
manifestations, type I [juvenile type],
uncontrolled
• 250.51, Diabetes with ophthalmic
manifestations, type I [juvenile type],
not stated as uncontrolled
• 250.53, Diabetes with ophthalmic
manifestations, type I [juvenile type],
uncontrolled
• 250.61, Diabetes with neurological
manifestations, type I [juvenile type],
not stated as uncontrolled
• 250.63, Diabetes with neurological
manifestations, type I [juvenile type],
uncontrolled
• 250.71, Diabetes with peripheral
circulatory disorders, type I [juvenile
type], not stated as uncontrolled
• 250.73, Diabetes with peripheral
circulatory disorders, type I [juvenile
type], uncontrolled
• 250.81, Diabetes with other
specified manifestations, type I [juvenile
type], not stated as uncontrolled
• 250.83, Diabetes with other
specified manifestations, type I [juvenile
type], uncontrolled
• 250.91, Diabetes with unspecified
complication, type I [juvenile type], not
stated as uncontrolled
• 250.93, Diabetes with unspecified
complication, type I [juvenile type],
uncontrolled
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47954
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
In addition, we proposed to remove
Diagnosis List 2 from the ‘‘Noncovered
Procedures’’ edit, which is comprised of
the following codes:
• 403.01, Hypertensive kidney
disease, malignant, with chronic kidney
disease
• 403.11, Hypertensive kidney
disease, benign, with chronic kidney
disease
• 403.91, Hypertensive kidney
disease, unspecified, with chronic
kidney disease
• 404.02, Hypertensive heart and
kidney disease, malignant, with chronic
kidney disease
• 404.03, Hypertensive heart and
kidney disease, malignant, with heart
failure and chronic kidney disease
• 404.12, Hypertensive heart and
kidney disease, benign, with chronic
kidney disease
• 404.13, Hypertensive heart and
kidney disease, benign, with heart
failure and chronic kidney disease
• 404.92, Hypertensive heart and
kidney disease, unspecified, with
chronic kidney disease
• 404.93, Hypertensive heart and
kidney disease, unspecified, with heart
failure and chronic kidney disease
• 585.1, Chronic kidney disease,
Stage I
• 585.2, Chronic kidney disease,
Stage II (mild)
• 585.3, Chronic kidney disease,
Stage III (moderate)
• 585.4, Chronic kidney disease,
Stage IV (severe)
• 585.5, Chronic kidney disease,
Stage V
• 585.6, End stage renal disease
• 585.9, Chronic kidney disease,
unspecified
• V42.0, Organ or tissue replaced by
transplant, kidney
• V43.89, Organ or tissue replaced by
other means, other organ or tissue, other
All of the comments we received
regarding this proposal were favorable.
Therefore, we are adopting the above
changes as final.
Lumbar Artificial Disc: CMS has
found that lumbar artificial disc
replacement (LADR) with the ChariteTM
lumbar artificial disc is not reasonable
and necessary for the Medicare
population over 60 years of age.
Therefore, we issued a national
noncoverage determination for LADR
with the ChariteTM lumbar artificial disc
for Medicare patients over 60 years of
age. For Medicare beneficiaries 60 years
of age and under, there is no national
coverage determination, leaving such
determinations to be made on a local
basis. The coverage decision memo can
be viewed on the CMS Web site at
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/mcd/
viewdecisionmemo.asp?id=170.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
To conform to this decision,
procedure code 84.65 (Insertion of total
spinal disc prosthesis, lumbosacral) is
put on the Non-Covered Procedure edit
except when the patient is 60 years of
age or less. The logic will be as follows:
84.65, Insertion of total spinal disc
prosthesis, lumbosacral
AND
Age <=61
l. Edit: Bilateral Procedure
We proposed to remove the following
codes from the Bilateral Procedure edit,
as these are adjunct codes. They are not
O.R. codes recognized by the GROUPER
as procedures, and the edit was created
in error last year.
• 00.74, Hip replacement bearing
surface, metal-on-polyethylene
• 00.75, Hip replacement bearing
surface, metal-on-metal
• 00.76, Hip replacement bearing
surface, ceramic-on-ceramic
We did not receive any public
comments on these proposed edits.
Therefore, we are adopting the proposed
changes as final.
In addition, we are deleting the
following joint revision codes from this
edit, as they should not have been
added last year.
• 00.71, Revision of hip replacement,
acetabular component
• 00.72, Revision of hip replacement,
femoral component
• 00.73, Revision of hip replacement,
acetabular liner and/or femoral head
only
• 00.81, Revision of knee
replacement, tibial component
• 00.82, Revision of knee
replacement, femoral component
• 00.83, Revision of knee
replacement, patellar component
• 00.84, Revision of total knee
replacement, tibial insert (liner)
• 81.53, Revision of hip replacement
not otherwise specified
• 81.55, Revision of knee replacement
not otherwise specified
7. Surgical Hierarchies
Some inpatient stays entail multiple
surgical procedures, each one of which,
occurring by itself, could result in
assignment of the case to a different
DRG within the MDC to which the
principal diagnosis is assigned.
Therefore, it is necessary to have a
decision rule within the GROUPER by
which these cases are assigned to a
single DRG. The surgical hierarchy, an
ordering of surgical classes from most
resource-intensive to least resourceintensive, performs that function.
Application of this hierarchy ensures
that cases involving multiple surgical
procedures are assigned to the DRG
PO 00000
Frm 00086
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
associated with the most resourceintensive surgical class.
Because the relative resource intensity
of surgical classes can shift as a function
of DRG reclassification and
recalibrations, we reviewed the surgical
hierarchy of each MDC, as we have for
previous reclassifications and
recalibrations, to determine if the
ordering of classes coincides with the
intensity of resource utilization.
A surgical class can be composed of
one or more DRGs. For example, in
MDC 11, the surgical class ‘‘kidney
transplant’’ consists of a single DRG
(DRG 302) and the class ‘‘kidney, ureter
and major bladder procedures’’ consists
of three DRGs (DRGs 303, 304, and 305).
Consequently, in many cases, the
surgical hierarchy has an impact on
more than one DRG. The methodology
for determining the most resourceintensive surgical class involves
weighting the average resources for each
DRG by frequency to determine the
weighted average resources for each
surgical class. For example, assume
surgical class A includes DRGs 1 and 2
and surgical class B includes DRGs 3, 4,
and 5. Assume also that the average
charge of DRG 1 is higher than that of
DRG 3, but the average charges of DRGs
4 and 5 are higher than the average
charge of DRG 2. To determine whether
surgical class A should be higher or
lower than surgical class B in the
surgical hierarchy, we would weight the
average charge of each DRG in the class
by frequency (that is, by the number of
cases in the DRG) to determine average
resource consumption for the surgical
class. The surgical classes would then
be ordered from the class with the
highest average resource utilization to
that with the lowest, with the exception
of ‘‘other O.R. procedures’’ as discussed
below.
This methodology may occasionally
result in assignment of a case involving
multiple procedures to the lowerweighted DRG (in the highest, most
resource-intensive surgical class) of the
available alternatives. However, given
that the logic underlying the surgical
hierarchy provides that the GROUPER
search for the procedure in the most
resource-intensive surgical class, in
cases involving multiple procedures,
this result is sometimes unavoidable.
We note that, notwithstanding the
foregoing discussion, there are a few
instances when a surgical class with a
lower average charge is ordered above a
surgical class with a higher average
charge. For example, the ‘‘other O.R.
procedures’’ surgical class is uniformly
ordered last in the surgical hierarchy of
each MDC in which it occurs, regardless
of the fact that the average charge for the
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
DRG or DRGs in that surgical class may
be higher than that for other surgical
classes in the MDC. The ‘‘other O.R.
procedures’’ class is a group of
procedures that are only infrequently
related to the diagnoses in the MDC, but
are still occasionally performed on
patients in the MDC with these
diagnoses. Therefore, assignment to
these surgical classes should only occur
if no other surgical class more closely
related to the diagnoses in the MDC is
appropriate.
A second example occurs when the
difference between the average charges
for two surgical classes is very small.
We have found that small differences
generally do not warrant reordering of
the hierarchy because, as a result of
reassigning cases on the basis of the
hierarchy change, the average charges
are likely to shift such that the higherordered surgical class has a lower
average charge than the class ordered
below it.
Based on the preliminary
recalibration of the DRGs, in the FY
2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR 24039),
we proposed to revise the surgical
hierarchy for Pre-MDCs, MDC 1
(Diseases and Disorders of the Nervous
System), MDC 2 (Diseases and Disorders
of the Eye), MDC 3 (Diseases and
Disorders of the Ear, Nose, Mouth, and
Throat), MDC 8 (Diseases and Disorders
of the Musculoskeletal System and
Connective Tissue), MDC 10 (Endocrine,
Nutritional and Metabolic Diseases and
Disorders), and MDC 13 (Diseases and
Disorders of the Female Reproductive
System) as follows:
In Pre-MDCs, we proposed to reorder
DRG 481 (Bone Marrow Transplant)
above DRG 513 (Pancreas Transplant).
In MDC 1, we proposed to reorder
DRGs 531-532 (Spinal Procedures, With
CC and Without CC, respectively) above
DRGs 529-530 (Ventricular Shunt
Procedures, With CC and Without CC,
respectively).
In MDC 2, we proposed to reorder
DRG 42 (Intraocular Procedures Except
Retina, Iris and Lens) above DRG 36
(Retinal Procedures).
In MDC 3, we proposed to reorder
DRGs 168-169 (Mouth Procedures, With
CC and Without CC, respectively) above
DRG 57 (T&A Procedures, Except
Tonsillectomy and/or Adenoidectomy
Only, Age > 17) and DRG 58 (T&A
Procedures, Except Tonsillectomy and/
or Adenoidectomy Only, Age 0–17).
In MDC 8, we proposed to reorder
DRG 213 (Amputation for
Musculoskeletal System and Connective
Tissue Disorders) above DRG 216
(Biopsies of Musculoskeletal System
and Connective Tissue).
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
In MDC 10, we proposed to reorder
DRG 285 (Amputation of Lower Limb
for Endocrine, Nutritional and
Metabolic Diseases and Disorders) above
DRG 288 (O.R. Procedures for Obesity).
In MDC 13, we proposed to reorder
DRG 363 (D&C, Conization and RadioImplant, for Malignancy) and DRG 364
(D&C, Conization and Radio-Implant,
Except for Malignancy) above DRG 360
(Vagina, Cervix, and Vulva Procedures).
We did not receive any public
comments on the proposed changes to
the surgical hierarchy described above.
Based on a test of the proposed
revisions using the March 2006 update
of the FY 2005 MedPAR file and the
revised GROUPER software, we found
that the revisions are still supported by
the data. Therefore, we are
incorporating these proposed revisions
to the surgical hierarchy as final for FY
2007. In addition, because, in this final
rule, we are deleting 8 DRGs and
creating 20 new DRGs as discussed
under section II.D.7. of this preamble,
we are reordering the following DRGs in
MDC 1 (Diseases and disorders of the
Nervous System), MDC 6 (Diseases and
Disorders of the Digestive System), MDC
11 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Kidney and urinary Tract), and MDC 18
(Infectious and Parasitic Diseases
(Systemic or Unspecified Sites)):
• In MDC 1, we are reordering DRG
577 (Carotid Artery Stent Procedure)
above DRG 533 (Extracranial Procedures
With CC).
• In MDC 6, we are reordering DRGs
567 and 568 (Stomach, Esophageal and
Duodenal Procedures Age >17 With CC
With and Without Major GI Diagnoses,
respectively) above DRG 155 (Stomach,
Esophageal and Duodenal Procedures
Age >17 Without CC);
• In MDC 6, we are reordering DRGs
569-570 (Major Small and Large Bowel
Procedures With CC With and Without
Major GI Diagnoses, respectively) above
DRG 149 (Major Small and Large Bowel
Procedures Without CC).
• In MDC 11, we are reordering DRG
573 (Major Bladder Procedures) above
DRG 303 (Kidney, Ureter and Major
Bladder Procedures for Neoplasm).
• In MDC 18, we are reordering DRG
578 (Infections and Parasite Diseases
With O.R. Procedure) above DRG 579
(Postoperative or Post-Traumatic
Infections With O.R. Procedure).
8. Refinement of Complications and
Comorbidities (CC) List
a. Background
As indicated earlier in this preamble,
under the IPPS DRG classification
system, we have developed a standard
list of diagnoses that are considered
PO 00000
Frm 00087
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47955
complications or comorbidities (CCs).
Historically, we developed this list
using physician panels that classified
each diagnosis code based on whether
the diagnosis, when present as a
secondary condition, would be
considered a substantial complication or
comorbidity. A substantial complication
or comorbidity was defined as a
condition that, because of its presence
with a specific principal diagnosis,
would cause an increase in the length of
stay by at least 1 day in at least 75
percent of the patients.
b. Comprehensive Review of the CC List
In previous years, we have made
changes to the standard list of CCs,
either by adding new CCs or deleting
CCs already on the list, but we have
never conducted a comprehensive
review of the list. Given the long period
of time that had elapsed since the
original CC list was developed, the
incremental nature of changes to it, and
changes in the way inpatient care is
delivered, and in partial response to
recommendations in MedPAC’s March
2005 Report to Congress on PhysicianOwned Specialty Hospitals, for the FY
2006 IPPS final rule, we reviewed the
121-paired DRGs that were split on the
presence or absence of a CC among the
3,285 diagnosis codes on the CC list. We
presented the results of that review and
summarized public comments that we
received in the FY 2006 proposed rule
on the review results in the FY 2006
IPPS final rule (70 FR 47313 through
47315). Further analysis of the CC list
and refinement to recognize the effects
of differences in severity of illness
among patients is discussed in section
II.C. of the preamble of the proposed
rule as part of our efforts to develop a
CSDRG system for use in the IPPS.
During this past winter, CMS began a
comprehensive review of over 13,000
diagnosis codes to determine whether
they should be classified as CCs when
present as a secondary diagnosis.
Although we did not complete this
review because of the work we did to
develop the CS DRGs, we are
considering whether to continue our
analysis of the CC list as part of an effort
to develop and adopt a severity DRG
system that is in the public domain for
FY 2008. As we explained in more
detail above, we may update the work
we did to develop a severity DRG
system in the mid-1990s that classified
patients into a base DRG that was
further subdivided based on three levels
of severity depending upon whether the
patient had no CC, a CC, or a major CC
in conjunction with continuing our
review of the CC list.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47956
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
c. CC Exclusions List for FY 2007
In the September 1, 1987 final notice
(52 FR 33143) concerning changes to the
DRG classification system, we modified
the GROUPER logic so that certain
diagnoses included on the standard list
of CCs would not be considered valid
CCs in combination with a particular
principal diagnosis. We created the CC
Exclusions List for the following
reasons: (1) To preclude coding of CCs
for closely related conditions; (2) to
preclude duplicative or inconsistent
coding from being treated as CCs; and
(3) to ensure that cases are appropriately
classified between the complicated and
uncomplicated DRGs in a pair. As we
indicated above, we developed a list of
diagnoses, using physician panels, to
include those diagnoses that, when
present as a secondary condition, would
be considered a substantial
complication or comorbidity. In
previous years, we have made changes
to the list of CCs, either by adding new
CCs or deleting CCs already on the list.
We did not propose to delete any of the
diagnosis codes on the CC list for FY
2007.
In the May 19, 1987 proposed notice
(52 FR 18877) and the September 1,
1987 final notice (52 FR 33154), we
explained that the excluded secondary
diagnoses were established using the
following five principles:
• Chronic and acute manifestations of
the same condition should not be
considered CCs for one another.
• Specific and nonspecific (that is,
not otherwise specified (NOS))
diagnosis codes for the same condition
should not be considered CCs for one
another.
• Codes for the same condition that
cannot coexist, such as partial/total,
unilateral/bilateral, obstructed/
unobstructed, and benign/malignant,
should not be considered CCs for one
another.
• Codes for the same condition in
anatomically proximal sites should not
be considered CCs for one another.
• Closely related conditions should
not be considered CCs for one another.
The creation of the CC Exclusions List
was a major project involving hundreds
of codes. We have continued to review
the remaining CCs to identify additional
exclusions and to remove diagnoses
from the master list that have been
shown not to meet the definition of a
CC.17
17 See the FY 1989 final rule (53 FR 38485,
September 30, 1988), for the revision made for the
discharges occurring in FY 1989; the FY 1990 final
rule (54 FR 36552, September 1, 1989), for the FY
1990 revision; the FY 1991 final rule (55 FR 36126,
September 4, 1990), for the FY 1991 revision; the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
As we proposed, we are making
limited revisions to the CC Exclusions
List to take into account the changes
that will be made in the ICD–9–CM
diagnosis coding system effective
October 1, 2006. (See section II.D.10. of
this preamble for a discussion of ICD–
9–CM changes.) We are making these
changes in accordance with the
principles established when we created
the CC Exclusions List in 1987.
Tables 6G and 6H in the Addendum
to this final rule contain the revisions to
the CC Exclusions List that will be
effective for discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2006. Each table shows
the principal diagnoses with changes to
the excluded CCs. Each of these
principal diagnoses is shown with an
asterisk, and the additions or deletions
to the CC Exclusions List are provided
in an indented column immediately
following the affected principal
diagnosis.
CCs that are added to the list are in
Table 6G—Additions to the CC
Exclusions List. Beginning with
discharges on or after October 1, 2006,
the indented diagnoses will not be
recognized by the GROUPER as valid
CCs for the asterisked principal
diagnosis.
CCs that are deleted from the list are
in Table 6H—Deletions from the CC
Exclusions List. Beginning with
discharges on or after October 1, 2006,
the indented diagnoses will be
recognized by the GROUPER as valid
CCs for the asterisked principal
diagnosis.
Copies of the original CC Exclusions
List applicable to FY 1988 can be
obtained from the National Technical
Information Service (NTIS) of the
Department of Commerce. It is available
in hard copy for $152.50 plus shipping
FY 1992 final rule (56 FR 43209, August 30, 1991)
for the FY 1992 revision; the FY 1993 final rule (57
FR 39753, September 1, 1992), for the FY 1993
revision; the FY 1994 final rule (58 FR 46278,
September 1, 1993), for the FY 1994 revisions; the
FY 1995 final rule (59 FR 45334; September 1,
1994), for the FY 1995 revisions; the FY 1996 final
rule (60 FR 45782, September 1, 1995), for the FY
1996 revisions; the FY 1997 final rule (61 FR 46171,
August 30, 1996), for the FY 1997 revisions; the FY
1998 final rule (62 FR 45966, August 29, 1997) for
the FY 1998 revisions; the FY 1999 final rule (63
FR 40954, July 31, 1998), for the FY 1999 revisions;
the FY 2001 final rule (65 FR 47064, August 1,
2000), for the FY 2001 revisions; the FY 2002 final
rule (66 FR 39851, August 1, 2001), for the FY 2002
revisions; the FY 2003 final rule (67 FR 49998,
August 1, 2002), for the FY 2003 revisions; the FY
2004 final rule (68 FR 45364, August 1, 2003), for
the FY 2004 revisions; the FY 2005 final rule (69
FR 49848, August 11, 2004), for the FY 2005
revisions; and the FY 2006 final rule (70 FR 47640,
August 12, 2005), for the FY 2006 revisions. In the
FY 2000 final rule (64 FR 41490, July 30, 1999), we
did not modify the CC Exclusions List because we
did not make any changes to the ICD–9–CM codes
for FY 2000.
PO 00000
Frm 00088
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
and handling. A request for the FY 1988
CC Exclusions List (which should
include the identification accession
number (PB) 88–133970) should be
made to the following address: National
Technical Information Service, United
States Department of Commerce, 5285
Port Royal Road, Springfield, VA 22161;
or by calling (800) 553–6847.
Users should be aware of the fact that
all revisions to the CC Exclusions List
(FYs 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993,
1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999,
2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, and 2006)
and those in Tables 6G and 6H of this
final rule for FY 2007 must be
incorporated into the list purchased
from NTIS in order to obtain the CC
Exclusions List applicable for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2006. (Note: There was no CC
Exclusions List in FY 2000 because we
did not make changes to the ICD–9–CM
codes for FY 2000.)
Alternatively, the complete
documentation of the GROUPER logic,
including the current CC Exclusions
List, is available from 3M/Health
Information Systems (HIS), which,
under contract with CMS, is responsible
for updating and maintaining the
GROUPER program. The current DRG
Definitions Manual, Version 23.0, is
available for $225.00, which includes
$15.00 for shipping and handling.
Version 24.0 of this manual, which will
include the final FY 2007 DRG changes,
will be available in hard copy for
$250.00. Version 24.0 of the manual is
also available on a CD for $200.00; a
combination hard copy and CD is
available for $400.00. These manuals
may be obtained by writing 3M/HIS at
the following address: 100 Barnes Road,
Wallingford, CT 06492; or by calling
(203) 949–0303. Please specify the
revision or revisions requested.
9. Review of Procedure Codes in DRGs
468, 476, and 477
Each year, we review cases assigned
to DRG 468 (Extensive O.R. Procedure
Unrelated to Principal Diagnosis), DRG
476 (Prostatic O.R. Procedure Unrelated
to Principal Diagnosis), and DRG 477
(Nonextensive O.R. Procedure Unrelated
to Principal Diagnosis) to determine
whether it would be appropriate to
change the procedures assigned among
these DRGs.
DRGs 468, 476, and 477 are reserved
for those cases in which none of the
O.R. procedures performed are related
to the principal diagnosis. These DRGs
are intended to capture atypical cases,
that is, those cases not occurring with
sufficient frequency to represent a
distinct, recognizable clinical group.
DRG 476 is assigned to those discharges
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
in which one or more of the following
prostatic procedures are performed and
are unrelated to the principal diagnosis:
• 60.0, Incision of prostate
• 60.12, Open biopsy of prostate
• 60.15, Biopsy of periprostatic tissue
• 60.18, Other diagnostic procedures
on prostate and periprostatic tissue
• 60.21,Transurethral prostatectomy
• 60.29, Other transurethral
prostatectomy
• 60.61, Local excision of lesion of
prostate
• 60.69, Prostatectomy, not elsewhere
classified
• 60.81, Incision of periprostatic
tissue
• 60.82, Excision of periprostatic
tissue
• 60.93, Repair of prostate
• 60.94, Control of (postoperative)
hemorrhage of prostate
• 60.95, Transurethral balloon
dilation of the prostatic urethra
• 60.96, Transurethral destruction of
prostate tissue by microwave
thermotherapy
• 60.97, Other transurethral
destruction of prostate tissue by other
thermotherapy
• 60.99, Other operations on prostate
All remaining O.R. procedures are
assigned to DRGs 468 and 477, with
DRG 477 assigned to those discharges in
which the only procedures performed
are nonextensive procedures that are
unrelated to the principal diagnosis.18
For FY 2007, we did not propose to
change the procedures assigned among
these DRGs. We did not receive any
comments on our proposal and,
therefore, are adopting it as final.
18 The original list of the ICD–9–CM procedure
codes for the procedures we consider nonextensive
procedures, if performed with an unrelated
principal diagnosis, was published in Table 6C in
section IV of the Addendum to the FY 1989 final
rule (53 FR 38591). As part of the FY 1991 final rule
(55 FR 361.35), the FY 1992 final rule (56 FR
43212), the FY 1993 final rule (57 FR 23625), the
FY 1994 final rule (58 FR 46279), the FY 1995 final
rule (59 FR 45336), the FY 1996 final rule (60 FR
45783), the FY 1997 final rule (61 FR 46173), and
the FY 1998 final rule (62 FR 45981), we moved
several other procedures from DRG 468 to DRG 477,
and some procedures from DRG 477 to DRG 468.
No procedures were moved in FY 1999, as noted
in the final rule (63 FR 40962); in FY 2000 (64 FR
41496); in FY 2001 (65 FR 47064); or in FY 2002
(66 FR 39852). In the FY 2003 final rule (67 FR
49999) we did not move any procedures from DRG
477. However, we did move procedure codes from
DRG 468 and placed them in more clinically
coherent DRGs. In the FY 2004 final rule (68 FR
45365), we moved several procedures from DRG
468 to DRGs 476 and 477 because the procedures
are nonextensive. In the FY 2005 final rule (69 FR
48950), we moved one procedure from DRG 468 to
477. In addition, we added several existing
procedures to DRGs 476 and 477. In FY 2006 (70
FR 47317), we moved one procedure from DRG 468
and assigned it to DRG 477. In FY 2007, we moved
one procedure from DRG 468 and assigned it to
DRGs 479, 553, and 554.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
a. Moving Procedure Codes From DRG
468 or DRG 477 to MDCs
We annually conduct a review of
procedures producing assignment to
DRG 468 or DRG 477 on the basis of
volume, by procedure, to see if it would
be appropriate to move procedure codes
out of these DRGs into one of the
surgical DRGs for the MDC into which
the principal diagnosis falls. The data
are arrayed in two ways for comparison
purposes. We look at a frequency count
of each major operative procedure code.
We also compare procedures across
MDCs by volume of procedure codes
within each MDC.
We identify those procedures
occurring in conjunction with certain
principal diagnoses with sufficient
frequency to justify adding them to one
of the surgical DRGs for the MDC in
which the diagnosis falls. Based on this
year’s review, as proposed, we are not
removing any procedures from DRG 477
with assignment to one of the surgical
DRGs. We did not receive any
comments on our proposal, and,
therefore, there will be no change to
DRG 477.
However, we did receive a comment
regarding DRG 468 after the publication
of the proposed rule. The comment
addressed advances in treatment
technology for hypertension and noted
that two procedure codes cause cases to
be assigned to DRG 468 instead of more
appropriately to DRGs in MDC 5.
Therefore, we are moving the following
two codes into MDC 5, DRG 479 (Other
Vascular Procedures without CC), and
paired DRGs 553 and 554 (Other
Vascular Procedures with CC with and
without Major CV Diagnosis,
respectively):
• 04.92, Implantation or replacement
of peripheral neurostimulator lead(s)
• 86.96, Insertion or replacement of
other neurostimulator pulse generator
b. Reassignment of Procedures Among
DRGs 468, 476, and 477
We also annually review the list of
ICD–9–CM procedures that, when in
combination with their principal
diagnosis code, result in assignment to
DRGs 468, 476, and 477, to ascertain if
any of those procedures should be
reassigned from one of these three DRGs
to another of the three DRGs based on
average charges and the length of stay.
We look at the data for trends such as
shifts in treatment practice or reporting
practice that would make the resulting
DRG assignment illogical. If we find
these shifts, we would propose to move
cases to keep the DRGs clinically similar
or to provide payment for the cases in
a similar manner. Generally, we move
PO 00000
Frm 00089
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47957
only those procedures for which we
have an adequate number of discharges
to analyze the data.
We did not propose to move any
procedure codes from DRG 476 to DRGs
468 or 477, or from DRG 477 to DRGs
468 or 476 for FY 2007. We did not
receive any public comments on our
proposal and; therefore, are adopting it
as final.
c. Adding Diagnosis or Procedure Codes
to MDCs
Based on our review this year, as we
proposed, we are not adding any
diagnosis codes to MDCs for FY 2007.
We did not receive any public
comments on our proposal and,
therefore, are adopting it as final.
10. Changes to the ICD–9–CM Coding
System
As described in section II.B.1. of this
preamble, the ICD–9–CM is a coding
system used for the reporting of
diagnoses and procedures performed on
a patient. In September 1985, the ICD–
9–CM Coordination and Maintenance
Committee was formed. This is a
Federal interdepartmental committee,
co-chaired by the National Center for
Health Statistics (NCHS), the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, and
CMS, charged with maintaining and
updating the ICD–9–CM system. The
Committee is jointly responsible for
approving coding changes, and
developing errata, addenda, and other
modifications to the ICD–9–CM to
reflect newly developed procedures and
technologies and newly identified
diseases. The Committee is also
responsible for promoting the use of
Federal and non-Federal educational
programs and other communication
techniques with a view toward
standardizing coding applications and
upgrading the quality of the
classification system.
The Official Version of the ICD–9–CM
contains the list of valid diagnosis and
procedure codes. (The Official Version
of the ICD–9–CM is available from the
Government Printing Office on CD–
ROM for $25.00 by calling (202) 512–
1800.) The Official Version of the ICD–
9–CM is no longer available in printed
manual form from the Federal
Government; it is only available on CD–
ROM. Users who need a paper version
are referred to one of the many products
available from publishing houses.
The NCHS has lead responsibility for
the ICD–9–CM diagnosis codes included
in the Tabular List and Alphabetic
Index for Diseases, while CMS has lead
responsibility for the ICD–9–CM
procedure codes included in the
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47958
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Tabular List and Alphabetic Index for
Procedures.
The Committee encourages
participation in the above process by
health-related organizations. In this
regard, the Committee holds public
meetings for discussion of educational
issues and proposed coding changes.
These meetings provide an opportunity
for representatives of recognized
organizations in the coding field, such
as the American Health Information
Management Association (AHIMA), the
American Hospital Association (AHA),
and various physician specialty groups,
as well as individual physicians, health
information management professionals,
and other members of the public, to
contribute ideas on coding matters.
After considering the opinions
expressed at the public meetings and in
writing, the Committee formulates
recommendations, which then must be
approved by the agencies.
The Committee presented proposals
for coding changes for implementation
in FY 2007 at a public meeting held on
September 29–30, 2005, and finalized
the coding changes after consideration
of comments received at the meetings
and in writing by December 2, 2005.
Those coding changes were announced
in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule and
are listed in Tables 6A through 6F in the
Addendum to this final rule. The
Committee held its 2006 meeting on
March 23–24, 2006. Proposed new
codes for which there was a consensus
of public support and for which
complete tabular and indexing changes
can be made by May 2006 will be
included in the October 1, 2006 update
to ICD–9–CM. Code revisions that were
discussed at the March 23–24, 2006
Committee meeting could not be
finalized in time to include them in the
FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule. These
additional codes are included in Tables
6A through 6F of this final rule and are
marked with an asterisk (*).
Copies of the minutes of the
procedure codes discussions at the
Committee’s September 29–30, 2005
meeting can be obtained from the CMS
Web site: https://cms.hhs.gov/
ICD9ProviderDiagnosticCodes/
03_meetings.asp. The minutes of the
diagnosis codes discussions at the
September 29–30, 2005 meeting are
found at: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/
icd9.htm. Paper copies of these minutes
are no longer available and the mailing
list has been discontinued. These Web
sites also provide detailed information
about the Committee, including
information on requesting a new code,
attending a Committee meeting, and
timeline requirements and meeting
dates.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
We encourage commenters to address
suggestions on coding issues involving
diagnosis codes to: Donna Pickett, CoChairperson, ICD–9–CM Coordination
and Maintenance Committee, NCHS,
Room 2402, 3311 Toledo Road,
Hyattsville, MD 20782. Comments may
be sent by E–mail to: dfp4@cdc.gov.
Questions and comments concerning
the procedure codes should be
addressed to: Patricia E. Brooks, CoChairperson, ICD–9–CM Coordination
and Maintenance Committee, CMS,
Center for Medicare Management,
Hospital and Ambulatory Policy Group,
Division of Acute Care, C4–08–06, 7500
Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21244–1850. Comments may be sent by
E–mail to:
patricia.brooks2@cms.hhs.gov.
The ICD–9–CM code changes that
have been approved will become
effective October 1, 2006. The new ICD–
9–CM codes are listed, along with their
DRG classifications, in Tables 6A and
6B (New Diagnosis Codes and New
Procedure Codes, respectively) in the
Addendum to this proposed rule. As we
stated above, the code numbers and
their titles were presented for public
comment at the ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee meetings. Both oral and
written comments were considered
before the codes were approved. In the
FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule, we only
solicited comments on the proposed
classification of these new codes.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern about the DRG assignment for
codes 629.81 (Habitual aborter without
current pregnancy) and 629.89 (Other
specified disorders of female genital
organs). The commenter indicated that
CMS proposed to assign both codes to
DRG 368 (Infections, Female
Reproductive System) within MDC–18.
The commenter posited that CMS may
have erred in listing the DRG
assignment as DRG 368 and instead
intended to assign the code to DRG 369
(Menstrual and Other Female
Reproductive System Disorders) since
these conditions are not infections.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that codes 629.81 and
629.89 do not represent infections and
should not be assigned to DRG 368
within MDC 18. They should instead be
assigned to DRG 369 as the commenter
suggested. Therefore, we are changing
the DRG assignment for codes 629.81
and 629.89 from DRG 368 to DRG 369.
This change is shown in Table 6A of the
Addendum to this final rule.
Comment: One commenter asked
whether the footnotes for codes 995.20
through 995.29 in Table 6A of the
Addendum to the proposed rule was in
PO 00000
Frm 00090
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
error. The commenter stated that the
predecessor code, 995.2 (Unspecified
adverse effect of drug, medicinal and
biological substance) is considered a
secondary diagnosis of a ‘‘major
problem’’ diagnosis that will assign a
patient to DRGs 387 (Prematurity with
Major Problems) and DRG 389 (Full–
Term Neonate with Major Problems)
when present only as a secondary
diagnosis. However, the commenter
added, the footnote on the expanded
codes 995.20 through 995.29 lists them
as principal or secondary diagnoses that
will assign a patient to DRGs 387 and
389 for neonates with major problems.
The specific codes are as follows:
• 995.20 (Unspecified adverse effect
of unspecified drug, medicinal and
biological substance)
• 995.21 (Arthus phenomenon)
• 995.22 (Unspecified adverse effect
of anesthesia)
• 995.23 (Unspecified adverse effect
of insulin)
• 995.27 (Other drug allergy)
• 995.29 (Unspecified adverse effect
of other drug, medicinal and biological
substance)
Response: The commenter is correct
that we made an error in the footnote.
The predecessor code 995.2 when
present as a secondary diagnosis, will be
a major problem that assigns the patient
to DRGs 387 and 389. The footnote
should have indicated codes 995.20
through 995.29 will only assign patients
DRGs 387 and 389 when present as a
secondary diagnosis. We have corrected
the footnote in Table 6A of the
Addendum to this final rule.
For codes that have been replaced by
new or expanded codes, the
corresponding new or expanded
diagnosis codes are included in Table
6A. New procedure codes are shown in
Table 6B. Diagnosis codes that have
been replaced by expanded codes or
other codes or have been deleted are in
Table 6C (Invalid Diagnosis Codes).
These invalid diagnosis codes will not
be recognized by the GROUPER
beginning with discharges occurring on
or after October 1, 2006. Table 6D
contains invalid procedure codes. These
invalid procedure codes will not be
recognized by the GROUPER beginning
with discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 2006. Revisions to diagnosis
code titles are in Table 6E (Revised
Diagnosis Code Titles), which also
includes the DRG assignments for these
revised codes. Table 6F includes revised
procedure code titles for FY–2007.
In the September 7, 2001 final rule
implementing the IPPS new technology
add-on payments (66 FR 46906), we
indicated we would attempt to include
proposals for procedure codes that
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
would describe new technology
discussed and approved at the April
meeting as part of the code revisions
effective the following October. As
stated previously, ICD–9–CM codes
discussed at the March 23–24, 2006
Committee meeting that received
consensus and that were finalized by
May 2006, are included in Tables 6A
through 6F of the Addendum to this
final rule.
Section 503(a) of Pub. L. 108–173
included a requirement for updating
ICD–9–CM codes twice a year instead of
a single update on October 1 of each
year. This requirement was included as
part of the amendments to the Act
relating to recognition of new
technology under the IPPS. Section
503(a) amended section 1886(d)(5)(K) of
the Act by adding a clause (vii) which
states that the ‘‘Secretary shall provide
for the addition of new diagnosis and
procedure codes in April 1 of each year,
but the addition of such codes shall not
require the Secretary to adjust the
payment (or diagnosis–related group
classification) * * * until the fiscal year
that begins after such date.’’ This
requirement improves the recognition of
new technologies under the IPPS system
by providing information on these new
technologies at an earlier date. Data will
be available 6 months earlier than
would be possible with updates
occurring only once a year on October
1.
While section 1886(d)(5)(K)(vii) of the
Act states that the addition of new
diagnosis and procedure codes on April
1 of each year shall not require the
Secretary to adjust the payment, or DRG
classification, under section 1886(d) of
the Act until the fiscal year that begins
after such date, we have to update the
DRG software and other systems in
order to recognize and accept the new
codes. We also publicize the code
changes and the need for a mid-year
systems update by providers to capture
the new codes. Hospitals also have to
obtain the new code books and encoder
updates, and make other system changes
in order to capture and report the new
codes.
The ICD–9–CM Coordination and
Maintenance Committee holds its
meetings in the spring and fall in order
to update the codes and the applicable
payment and reporting systems by
October 1 of each year. Items are placed
on the agenda for the ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee meeting if the request is
received at least 2 months prior to the
meeting. This requirement allows time
for staff to review and research the
coding issues and prepare material for
discussion at the meeting. It also allows
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
time for the topic to be publicized in
meeting announcements in the Federal
Register as well as on the CMS Web site.
The public decides whether or not to
attend the meeting based on the topics
listed on the agenda. Final decisions on
code title revisions are currently made
by March 1 so that these titles can be
included in the IPPS proposed rule. A
complete addendum describing details
of all changes to ICD–9–CM, both
tabular and index, is publicized on CMS
and NCHS Web pages in May of each
year. Publishers of coding books and
software use this information to modify
their products that are used by health
care providers. This 5-month time
period has proved to be necessary for
hospitals and other providers to update
their systems.
A discussion of this timeline and the
need for changes are included in the
December 4–5, 2005 ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee minutes. The public agreed
that there was a need to hold the fall
meetings earlier, in September or
October, in order to meet the new
implementation dates. The public
provided comment that additional time
would be needed to update hospital
systems and obtain new code books and
coding software. There was considerable
concern expressed about the impact this
new April update would have on
providers.
In the FY 2005 IPPS final rule, we
implemented section 1886(d)(5)(K)(vii)
of the Act, as added by section 503(a)
of Pub. L. 108–173, by developing a
mechanism for approving, in time for
the April update, diagnosis and
procedure code revisions needed to
describe new technologies and medical
services for purposes of the new
technology add-on payment process. We
also established the following process
for making these determinations. Topics
considered during the Fall ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee meeting are considered for
an April 1 update if a strong and
convincing case is made by the
requester at the Committee’s public
meeting. The request must identify the
reason why a new code is needed in
April for purposes of the new
technology process. The participants at
the meeting and those reviewing the
Committee meeting summary report are
provided the opportunity to comment
on this expedited request. All other
topics are considered for the October 1
update. Participants at the Committee
meeting are encouraged to comment on
all such requests. There were no
requests for an expedited April 1, 2006
implementation of an ICD–9–CM code
at the September 29–30, 2005
PO 00000
Frm 00091
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47959
Committee meeting. Therefore, there
were no new ICD–9–CM codes
implemented on April 1, 2006.
We believe that this process captures
the intent of section 1886(d)(5)(K)(vii) of
the Act. This requirement was included
in the provision revising the standards
and process for recognizing new
technology under the IPPS. In addition,
the need for approval of new codes
outside the existing cycle (October 1)
arises most frequently and most acutely
where the new codes will capture new
technologies that are (or will be) under
consideration for new technology addon payments. Thus, we believe this
provision was intended to expedite data
collection through the assignment of
new ICD–9–CM codes for new
technologies seeking higher payments.
Current addendum and code title
information is published on the CMS
Web page at: www.cms.hhs.gov/
icd9ProviderDiagnosticCodes/
01_overview.asp#TopofPage.
Information on ICD–9–CM diagnosis
codes, along with the Official ICD–9–
CM Coding Guidelines, can be found on
the Web page at: www.cdc.gov/nchs/
icd9.htm. Information on new, revised,
and deleted ICD–9–CM codes is also
provided to the AHA for publication in
the Coding Clinic for ICD–9–CM. AHA
also distributes information to
publishers and software vendors.
CMS also sends copies of all ICD–9–
CM coding changes to its contractors for
use in updating their systems and
providing education to providers.
These same means of disseminating
information on new, revised, and
deleted ICD–9–CM codes will be used to
notify providers, publishers, software
vendors, contractors, and others of any
changes to the ICD–9–CM codes that are
implemented in April. The code titles
are adopted as part of the ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee process. Thus, although we
publish the code titles in the IPPS
proposed and final rules, they are not
subject to comment in the proposed or
final rules. We will continue to publish
the October code updates in this manner
within the IPPS proposed and final
rules. For codes that are implemented in
April, we will assign the new procedure
code to the same DRG in which its
predecessor code was assigned so there
will be no DRG impact as far as DRG
assignment. This mapping was specified
by section 1886(d)(5)(K)(vii) of the Act
as added by section 503(a) of Pub. L.
108–173. Any midyear coding updates
will be available through the Web sites
indicated above and through the Coding
Clinic for ICD–9–CM. Publishers and
software vendors currently obtain code
changes through these sources in order
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47960
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
to update their code books and software
systems. We will strive to have the April
1 updates available through these Web
sites 5 months prior to implementation
(that is, early November of the previous
year), as is the case for the October 1
updates.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that the Secretary use the
regulatory process to replace ICD–9–CM
with ICD–10–CM and ICD–10–PCS
expeditiously. Several commenters
indicated that the April 2005 ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee meeting included
discussions of limiting the creation of
new procedure codes in order to allow
the classification system to last at least
2 more years. ICD–9–CM procedure
code categories 00 and 17 were created
to identify a diverse group of procedures
and interventions affecting all body
systems. The commenters stressed that
the establishment of these code
categories represented a deviation from
the normal structure of ICD–9–CM and
was a stopgap measure to accommodate
new technology when there are no other
codes available in the corresponding
body system chapters (for example,
musculoskeletal system and circulatory
system). The commenters indicated that
category 00 is now full, and the ICD–9–
CM Coordination and Maintenance
Committee is considering proposals for
codes in category 17. The commenters
stated that at the April Coordination and
Maintenance meeting a proposal was
presented that would in effect leave
only 80 codes available in the new
category 17. The commenters stated that
in recent years, as many as 50 new
procedure codes have been created in a
single year. The commenters strongly
recommended that the Secretary use the
regulatory process to implement ICD–
10–CM and ICD–10–PCS in place of
ICD–9–CM expeditiously.
Several commenters indicated that
limitations with ICD–9–CM make data
collected with these codes less precise.
The commenters stated that systems
such as the CS DRGs could make use of
the more detailed information in ICD–
10–CM and ICD–10–PCS to group
claims more accurately and better
identify differences in severity and
complexity. Similar comments were
received from a number of other
individuals.
Response: We agree that it is
important to have an accurate and
precise coding system. The Department
will continue to study whether to adopt
ICD–10–CM. In the interim, we continue
to update both ICD–9–CM and ICD–10–
PCS.
Comment: A number of commenters
expressed concern that only nine
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
diagnosis codes and six procedure codes
are processed by Medicare. The
commenters recommended that CMS
modify its systems so that the number
of diagnoses codes processed would
increase from 9 to 25 and the number
of procedures processed would increase
from 6 to 25. The commenters stated
that hospitals submit claims to CMS in
electronic format, and that the HIPAA
compliant electronic transaction
standard, HIPAA 837i, allows up to 25
diagnoses and 25 procedures. The
commenters stated that CMS does not
require its fiscal intermediaries to
process codes beyond the first nine
diagnosis codes and six procedure
codes. The commenters indicated that
complex classification systems such as
the proposed CS DRGs could make use
of the information in these additional
codes to better classify the patients.
One commenter stated that an
incremental step in working towards a
refined DRG system is to have CMS
systems process 25 diagnosis and
procedure codes.
Response: The commenters are correct
that CMS does not process codes
submitted electronically on the 837i
electronic format beyond the first 9
diagnosis codes and first 6 procedure
codes. While HIPAA requires CMS to
accept up to 25 ICD–9–CM diagnosis
and procedure codes on the HIPAA 837i
electronic format, it does not require
that CMS process that many diagnosis
and procedure codes.
As suggested by the commenters,
there is value in retaining additional
data on patient conditions that would
result from expanding Medicare’s data
system so it can accommodate
additional diagnosis and procedure
codes. We have been considering this
issue while we contemplated
refinements to our DRG system to better
recognize patient severity of illness.
However, extensive lead time is
required to allow for modifications to
our internal and contractors’ electronic
systems in order to process and store
this additional information. We are
unable to move forward with this
recommendation without carefully
evaluating implementation issues. We
will continue to carefully evaluate this
request to expand the process capacity
of our systems.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern about the process involved with
updating the ICD–9–CM Coding
Guidelines. The guidelines are updated
by the cooperating parties of ICD–9–CM,
including representatives from the
Centers for Disease and Prevention
Control (CDC), CMS, the AHA, and the
AHIMA. The commenter complimented
CMS staff for becoming more ‘‘provider
PO 00000
Frm 00092
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
friendly’’ and using such tools as the
open door forum to involve providers in
policy discussions. The commenter
requested that some of the coding
guideline discussions be held in an
open meeting so that providers could
give input.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that it is important to
involve the provider community in
activities involving the updating of ICD–
9–CM codes and guidelines. The
Department utilizes the ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee to discuss proposed changes
to the coding system. At times, this
Committee also addresses coding
guidelines that affect code selection.
The current process of approving new
and revised coding guidelines involves
approval by all four cooperating parties.
It is our understanding that AHA and
AHIMA actively seek input from their
members on coding issues. AHA and
AHIMA use this input when they are
voting on coding issue to be published
in the AHA’s Coding Clinic for ICD–9–
CM and on coding guidelines. We will
refer these concerns to the cooperating
parties so that they may discuss
improvements which could be made in
obtaining providers’ input into coding
guidelines. We will also welcome
recommendations on specific coding
guideline issues that providers wish to
be included in future agendas of the
ICD–9–CM Coordination and
Maintenance Committee. The
Committee recently discussed coding
guidelines for septicemia. We will
continue to work with the provider
community to offer a public forum for
discussion of ICD–9–CM code revisions
and guidelines.
11. Other Issues
a. Chronic Kidney Disease
Comment: Two commenters
expressed concern regarding the revised
diagnosis codes for chronic kidney
disease and their DRG assignments
which appeared in Table 6E of the
Addendum to the proposed rule. The
following codes were identified as being
classified to DRGs 331, 332, and 333
(Other kidney and urinary tract
diagnoses with and without CC, and age
0–17, respectively) in MDC 11 (Diseases
and Disorders of the Kidney and
Urinary Tract):
• 403.00 (Hypertensive chronic
kidney disease, malignant, with chronic
kidney disease stage I through stage IV,
or unspecified)
• 403.10 (Hypertensive chronic
kidney disease, benign, with chronic
kidney disease stage I through stage IV,
or unspecified)
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
• 403.90 (Hypertensive chronic
kidney disease, unspecified, with
chronic kidney disease stage I through
stage IV, or unspecified)
The commenters stated that revisions
made to these three codes will go into
effect October 1. These changes would
add the concept of chronic kidney
disease to the three codes. Therefore,
these three codes should be assigned to
the same DRGs as other codes for
chronic kidney disease. The codes with
chronic kidney disease are assigned to
DRGs 315 (Other kidney and urinary
tract procedures) and 316 (Renal failure)
and not to DRGs 331 through 333 where
they were proposed.
Response: The commenters are
correct. The three codes listed above
were modified to include the concept of
chronic kidney disease. As such, they
should be assigned to DRG 315 (Other
Kidney and Urinary Tract Procedures)
and DRG 316 (Renal Failure) (and not to
DRGs 331 through 333. We have made
these changes in Table 6E of the
Addendum to this final rule. Therefore,
we will assign codes 403.00, 403.10, and
403.90 to DRG 315–316.
b. Bronchial Valve
Comment: Two commenters that
manufacture minimally invasive
surgical therapies for patients with
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
addressed the establishment of a new
code for the insertion of a bronchial
valve. This topic was discussed at the
March 23–24, 2006 meeting of the ICD–
9–CM Coordination and Maintenance
Committee. (A complete summary
report of the meeting including
handouts can be found at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/
ICD9ProviderDiagnosticCodes/
03_meetings.asp#TopofPage.) CMS
created a new code for endoscopic
insertion of a bronchial valve: code
33.71 (Endoscopic insertion or
replacement of bronchial valve(s)). The
new code is listed in Table 6B of the
Addendum to this final rule. The
predecessor codes that are currently
used for this procedure are:
• 33.22, Fiber-optic bronchoscopy
• 96.05, Other intubation of
respiratory tract
The commenters expressed support
for the creation of the new code, but
requested that the code not be assigned
to the same DRG as its predecessor
codes. The predecessor codes are
assigned to a medical DRG if the patient
is admitted with a respiratory diagnosis.
If the patient is admitted with a history
of malignancy, the patient would be
assigned to DRG 412 (History of
Malignancy with Endoscopy). The
commenters requested that code 33.71
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
be assigned to DRG 75 (Major Chest
Procedure). Although the commenters
acknowledged that CMS has no data on
which to evaluate this request, they
recommended that CMS use a
combination of the diagnosis of air leaks
and treatment with scarification as a
proxy for cases that receive a bronchial
valve. The commenters stated that these
patients are clinically similar and can be
expected to have similar resource
intensity to patients that would receive
an endobronchial insertion or
replacement of bronchial valves.
The commenters undertook their own
data analysis using the FY 2005
MedPAR file. They used the following
diagnosis procedure codes to identify
the proxy patients:
• 512.0, Spontaneous tension
pneumothorax
• 512.8, Other spontaneous
pneumothorax
• 34.6, Scarification of the pleura
Using these codes, the companies
identified 490 patients which were
assigned to DRG 75. These patients had
average charges of $56,711 as compared
to $49,698 for all patients in DRG 75.
The commenters stated that, although
the resource utilization for scarification
(and by inference, valve implantation)
appears to be higher than the average for
DRG 75, they believed it would still be
reasonable to initially assign code 33.71
to DRG 75 until actual cost data can be
gathered using the new procedure code.
Response: We do not agree that the
endoscopic insertion of a bronchial
valve is clinically similar to
scarification of the pleura. The
commenters themselves indicate that
insertion of the bronchial valve is a
minimally invasive procedure.
Scarification of the pleura is a
significantly invasive procedure.
Furthermore, the bronchial valves are
inserted into patients admitted with
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease,
not spontaneous pneumothorax.
Therefore, we do not agree with using
the pneumothorax diagnoses as a proxy
for patients who will receive the
bronchial valve.
The bronchial valve code 33.71 will
go into effect on October 1, 2006. At this
time, we have no information that
suggests we should assign this new code
to a DRG that is different than the
predecessor codes. For this reason, we
are classifying code 33.71, Endoscopic
insertion or replacement of bronchial
valve(s) as a nonoperating room
procedure that will be assigned to DRG
412. This classification is listed in Table
6B of the Addendum to this final rule.
Once we receive data using the new
code, we will evaluate this issue further.
PO 00000
Frm 00093
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47961
c. Female Reproductive System
Reconstruction Procedures
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS consider
revising the current procedure code
assignments for DRG 356 (Female
Reproductive System Reconstructive
Procedures) under MDC 13 (Diseases
and Disorders of the Female
Reproduction System) to better reflect
the clinical coherence of those
procedures that are specific to
maintaining reproductive health. The
proposal suggested by the commenter
would distinguish procedures that are
intended to ensure the reproductive
function of a woman from urinary
conditions that cause discomfort and
emptying the bladder. The commenter
suggested revising DRG 356 to limit it to
procedures that are specific to
maintaining reproductive health while
creating four new DRGs that would be
clinically similar for procedures
performed to repair pelvic floor defects
which cause urinary incontinence. The
commenter stated these new DRGs
would be timely with the procedure
code proposal they are planning to
present at the September 28–29, 2006
ICD–9–CM Coordination and
Maintenance Committee meeting.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s recommendation to create
four new DRGs in order to recognize the
clinical coherence of procedures
specific to maintaining reproductive
health. There are two aspects to the
commenter’s proposal. The first part of
the proposal would limit DRG 356 to
procedures that are intended to
maintain reproductive health. The
second part of the commenter’s proposal
would create four new DRGs for
repairing pelvic floor defects that create
urinary incontinence. These four new
DRGs would consist of two new DRG
pairs (each split based on whether or
not the patient has a CC) that would
separate patients based on whether or
not they had a graft procedure.
The commenter provided no data to
support its proposal. Further, two of the
four new DRGs being requested by the
commenter would be based on new and
revised procedure codes that have not
yet been proposed or created. Therefore,
we are unable to evaluate the request at
this time. We may consider this
proposal further in the future if the ICD–
9–CM Coordination and Maintenance
Committee creates the new codes being
requested by the commenter and further
data are made available for review.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47962
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
d. Devices That Are Replaced Without
Cost or Where Credit for a Replaced
Device Is Furnished to the Hospital
In recent years, there have been
several field actions and recalls with
regard to failure of implantable cardiac
defibrillators (ICDs) and pacemakers. In
many of these cases, the manufacturers
have offered replacement devices
without cost to the hospital or credit for
the device being replaced if the patient
required a more expensive device. In
some circumstances, manufacturers
have also offered, through a warranty
package, to pay specified amounts for
unreimbursed expenses to persons who
had replacement devices implanted. In
addition, we believe that incidental
device failures that are covered by
manufacturer warranties occur
routinely. While we understand that
some device malfunctions may be
inevitable as medical technology grows
increasingly sophisticated, we believe
that early recognition of problems
would reduce the number of people
with the potential to be adversely
affected by these device problems. The
medical community needs heightened
and early awareness of patterns of
device failures, voluntary field actions,
and recalls so that it can take
appropriate action to care for Medicare
beneficiaries. Systematic efforts must be
undertaken by all interested and
involved parties, including
manufacturers, insurers, and the
medical community, to ensure that
device problems are recognized and
addressed as early as possible so that
people’s health is protected and high
quality medical care is provided. We are
taking several steps to assist in the early
recognition and analysis of patterns of
device problems to minimize the
potential for harmful device-related
effects on the health of Medicare
patients and the public in general.
In recent years, CMS has recognized
the importance of data collection as a
condition of Medicare coverage for
selected services. In 2005, CMS issued
a National Coverage Determination
(NCD) that expanded coverage of ICDs
and also required registry participation
when the devices were implanted for
certain clinical indications. The NCD
included this requirement in order to
ensure that the care received by
Medicare beneficiaries was reasonable
and necessary and, therefore,
appropriately reimbursed. Presently, the
American College of Cardiology—
National Cardiovascular Data Registry
(ACC–NCDR) collects these data and
maintains the registry.
In addition to ensuring appropriate
payment of claims, collection, and
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
ongoing analysis of ICD implantation,
data can facilitate public health
response in the event of future device
recalls. The systematic recording of
device manufacturer and model number
can enhance patient and provider
notification. Analysis of registry data
may uncover patterns in complication
rates (for example, device malfunction,
device related infection, or early battery
depletion) associated with particular
devices that signify the need for a more
specific investigation. Patterns found in
registry data may identify problems
earlier than the currently available
mechanisms, which do not
systematically collect such detailed
information surrounding procedures.
We encourage the medical community
to work to develop additional registries
for implantable devices, so that timely
and comprehensive information is
available regarding devices, recipients
of those devices, and their health status
and outcomes. While participation in an
ICD registry is required as a condition
of coverage for ICD implantation for
certain clinical conditions, we believe
that the potential benefits of registries
extend well beyond their application in
Medicare’s specific NCDs. As medical
technology continues to advance
swiftly, data collection regarding the
short and long term outcomes of new
technologies, and especially concerning
implanted devices that may remain in
the bodies of patients for their lifetimes,
will be essential to the timely
recognition of any specific problems
and patterns of complications. This
information will facilitate early
interventions to mitigate harm and
improve the quality and efficiency of
health care services.
Moreover, data from registries may
help further the development of high
quality, evidence-based clinical practice
guidelines for the care of patients who
may receive device-intensive
procedures. In turn, widespread use of
evidence-based guidelines may reduce
variation in medical practice, leading to
improved personal and public health.
Registry information may also
contribute to the development of more
comprehensive and refined quality
metrics that may be used to
systematically assess and then improve
the safety and quality of health care.
Such improvements in the quality of
care that result in better personal health
will require the sustained commitment
of industry, payers, health care
providers, and others towards that goal,
along with excellent and open
communication and rapid systemwide
responses in a comprehensive effort to
protect and enhance the health of the
public. We look forward to further
PO 00000
Frm 00094
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
discussions with the public about new
strategies to recognize device problems
early and how to definitively address
them, in order to minimize both the
harmful health effects and increased
health care costs that may result.
In addition, we believe that the
routine identification of Medicare
claims for certain device implantation
procedures in situations where a
payment adjustment is appropriate may
enhance the medical community’s
recognition of device problems,
potentially leading to more timely
improvements in device technologies.
This systematic approach, where
hospitals identify and then
appropriately report selected services
when devices are replaced without cost
to the hospital or with full credit to the
hospital for the cost of the replaced
device, should provide comprehensive
information regarding the hospital
experiences of Medicare patients with
certain devices that are being replaced.
Because Medicare patients are common
recipients of implanted devices, this
claims information may be particularly
helpful in identifying patterns of device
problems early in their natural history
so that appropriate strategies to reduce
future problems may be developed.
In addition to our concern for the
public health, we also have a fiduciary
responsibility to the Medicare Trust
Fund to ensure that Medicare pays only
for covered services. Therefore, we
believe that we need to consider
whether it is appropriate to reduce the
Medicare payment in cases in which an
implanted device is replaced without
cost to the hospital or with full credit
for the removed device. Such a proposal
could cover certain devices for which
credit for the replaced device is given or
which are replaced as a result of or
pursuant to a warranty, field action,
voluntary recall, involuntary recall, and
certain devices which are provided free
of charge. It could provide for a
reduction in the IPPS payment when we
determine that the device is replaced
without cost to the provider or
beneficiary or when the provider
receives full credit for the cost of a
replaced device. We will need to
develop a methodology to determine the
amount of the reduction to the
otherwise payable IPPS payment. We
believe that this is appropriate because
in these cases the full cost of the
replaced device is not incurred and,
therefore, we believe that an adjustment
to the payment is necessary to remove
the cost of the device.
E. Recalibration of DRG Weights
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule,
we proposed to change the DRG
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
recalibration process methodology for
FY 2007 to move to an HSRV weighting
method as discussed in section II.C.2. of
the preamble to the proposed rule (71
FR 24044). For FY 2006 and years prior,
we have recalibrated the DRG weights
based on charge data for Medicare
discharges using the most current
charge information available (for
example, the FY 2005 MedPAR file
would have been used for FY 2007). Our
thorough analysis of the March 2005
MedPAC recommendations regarding
refinement of the DRG system used for
the IPPS (see discussion of the MedPAC
recommendations in section II.C.2. of
this preamble) has shown that using
gross charges as a basis for setting the
DRG weights has introduced bias into
the weighting process. Specifically,
hospitals that are systematically more
expensive than others (that is, teaching
hospitals and specialty hospitals) tend
to treat certain cases more commonly
than others, causing the weights for
these cases to be artificially high. In
addition, hospitals may mark up their
charges for routine days, intensive care
days, and various ancillary services by
different percentages. This practice of
differential markups among hospital
cost centers may also introduce bias into
the weights. For instance, we have
observed that ancillary service cost
centers generally have higher charge
markups than routine services. Thus,
the charge-based relative weight
methodology may result in higher
weights for DRGs that use more
ancillary services relative to DRGs that
use more routine services than would
occur under a system where the weights
are based on costs.
As discussed in section II.C.2. of the
preamble of the proposed rule, based on
our study of the MedPAC
recommendations, we developed an
alternative methodology for
recalibrating the DRG weights. This
proposed method is discussed in detail
beginning on 71 FR 24044. The
proposed method involved applying the
HSRV methodology at the cost center
level (HSRVcc) to remove the bias
introduced by hospital characteristics
(that is, teaching, disproportionate
share, location, and size, among others)
and then scaling the weights to costs
using national cost center CCRs derived
from cost report data. However, in
response to comments discussed in
section II.C.2 of this final rule, we have
postponed the implementation of the
HSRV methodology in order to further
study its effects and have subsequently
revised the methodology for setting
relative weights based on cost. Further,
we are adopting the cost relative
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
weights under a 3-year transition period
such that in FY 2007, year one of the
transition, the relative weights will be a
blend of 33 percent of the relative cost
weight and 67 percent of the relative
charge weight. In year two, the relative
weights will be based on 67 percent of
the relative cost weight and 33 percent
of the relative charge weight and in year
three, the relative weights will be 100
percent cost based.
In developing the final system of
weights, we used two data sources:
Claims data and cost report data. As in
previous years, the claims data source is
the MedPAR file. This file is based on
fully coded diagnostic and procedure
data for all Medicare inpatient hospital
bills. The FY 2005 MedPAR data used
in this proposed rule include discharges
occurring on October 1, 2004, through
September 30, 2005, based on bills
received by CMS through March 31,
2006, from all hospitals subject to the
IPPS and short-term acute care hospitals
in Maryland (which are under a waiver
from the IPPS under section 1814(b)(3)
of the Act). The FY 2005 MedPAR file
used in calculating the relative weights
includes data for approximately
12,238,146 Medicare discharges.
Discharges for Medicare beneficiaries
enrolled in a Medicare+Choice managed
care plan are excluded from this
analysis. The data exclude CAHs,
including hospitals that subsequently
became CAHs after the period from
which the data were taken. The second
data source used in the cost relative
weight methodology are the FY 2004
Medicare cost report data files from
HCRIS, which represents the most
recent full set of cost report data
available. We used the March 31, 2006
update of the HCRIS cost report files for
FY 2004 in setting the final relative cost
based weights.
Because we are implementing the
relative weights on a transitional basis
it is necessary to calculate both charge
based and cost based relative weights.
The charge-based methodology used to
calculate the DRG relative weights from
the MedPAR data is the same
methodology that was in place for FY
2006 and was applied as follows:
• To the extent possible, all the
claims were regrouped using the FY
2007 DRG classification revisions
discussed in section II.D. of this
preamble.
• The transplant cases that were used
to establish the relative weight for heart
and heart-lung, liver and/or intestinal,
and lung transplants (DRGs 103, 480,
and 495) were limited to those
Medicare-approved transplant centers
that have cases in the FY 2005 MedPAR
file. (Medicare coverage for heart, heart-
PO 00000
Frm 00095
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47963
lung, liver and/or intestinal, and lung
transplants is limited to those facilities
that have received approval from CMS
as transplant centers.)
• Organ acquisition costs for kidney,
heart, heart-lung, liver, lung, pancreas,
and intestinal (or multivisceral organs)
transplants continue to be paid on a
reasonable cost basis. Because these
acquisition costs are paid separately
from the prospective payment rate, it
was necessary to subtract the
acquisition charges from the total
charges on each transplant bill that
showed acquisition charges before
computing the average charge for the
DRG and before eliminating statistical
outliers.
• Total charges were standardized to
remove the effects of differences in area
wage levels, indirect medical education
and disproportionate share payments,
and, for hospitals in Alaska and Hawaii,
the applicable cost-of-living adjustment.
• The average standardized charge
per DRG was calculated by summing the
standardized total charges for all cases
in the DRG and dividing that amount by
the number of cases classified in the
DRG. A transfer case was counted as a
fraction of a case based on the ratio of
its transfer payment under the per diem
payment methodology to the full DRG
payment for non-transfer cases. That is,
a transfer case receiving payment under
the transfer methodology equal to half of
what the case would receive as a nontransfer would be counted as 0.5 of a
total case.
• Statistical outliers were eliminated
by removing all cases that were beyond
3.0 standard deviations from the mean
of the log distribution of both the
charges per case and the charges per day
for each DRG.
• The average charge for each DRG
was then recomputed (excluding the
statistical outliers) and divided by the
national average standardized charge
per case to determine the relative
weight.
The new charge-based weights were
then normalized by an adjustment factor
of 1.49338 so that the average case
weight after recalibration was equal to
the average case weight before
recalibration. This normalization
adjustment is intended to ensure that
recalibration by itself neither increases
nor decreases total payments under the
IPPS as required by section
1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act. We note
that due to the decision in Bellevue
Hosp. Center v. Leavitt, in which the
Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
(the Court) ordered CMS to apply the
occupational mix adjustment to 100
percent of the wage index effective for
FY 2007 (see section III.C. of this final
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47964
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
rule for more details of this Court
decision), we are unable to finalize the
FY 2007 wage index data at this time.
Since we are relying on the wage index
data as one of the standardizing factors
that we use in calculating both the
charge-based and the cost-based relative
weights that are blended to set the FY
2007 transitional relative weights, we
will recalculate the FY 2007 relative
weights when the wage data becomes
available and will publish these
recalculated relative weights in a
subsequent Federal Register notice
prior to October 1, 2006.
The methodology we used to calculate
the DRG cost-based weights from the FY
2005 MedPAR claims data and FY 2004
Medicare cost report data is as follows:
• To the extent possible, all the
claims were regrouped using the FY
2007 DRG classification revisions
discussed in section II.D. of this
preamble.
• The transplant cases that were used
to establish the relative weight for heart
and heart-lung, liver and/or intestinal,
and lung transplants (DRGs 103, 480,
and 495) were limited to those
Medicare-approved transplant centers
that have cases in the FY 2005 MedPAR
file. (Medicare coverage for heart, heartlung, liver and/or intestinal, and lung
transplants is limited to those facilities
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
that have received approval from CMS
as transplant centers.)
• Organ acquisition costs for kidney,
heart, heart-lung, liver, lung, pancreas,
and intestinal (or multivisceral organs)
transplants continue to be paid on a
reasonable cost basis. Because these
acquisition costs are paid separately
from the prospective payment rate, it is
necessary to subtract the acquisition
charges from the total charges on each
transplant bill that showed acquisition
charges before computing the average
cost for each DRG and before
eliminating statistical outliers.
• Claims with total charges or total
length of stay less than or equal to zero
were dropped. Claims that had an
amount in the total charge field that
differed by more than $10.00 from the
sum of the routine day charges,
intensive care charges, pharmacy
charges, special equipment charges,
therapy services charges, operating
room charges, cardiology charges,
laboratory charges, radiology charges,
other service charges, labor and delivery
charges, inhalation therapy charges and
anesthesia charges were also dropped.
At least 94 percent of the providers in
the MedPAR file had charges for 10 of
the 13 cost centers. Claims for providers
that did not have charges greater than
PO 00000
Frm 00096
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
zero for at least 10 of the 13 cost centers
were dropped.
• Statistical outliers were eliminated
by removing all cases that were beyond
3.0 standard deviations from the mean
of the log distribution of both the total
charges per case and the total charges
per day for each DRG.
Once the MedPAR data were trimmed
and the statistical outliers were
removed, the charges for each of the 13
cost groups for each claim were
standardized to remove the effects of
differences in area wage levels, indirect
medical education and disproportionate
share payments, and for hospitals in
Alaska and Hawaii, the applicable costof-living adjustment. Charges were then
summed by DRG for each of the 13 cost
groups such that each DRG had 13
standardized charge totals. These
charges were then adjusted to cost by
applying the national average CCRs
developed from the FY 2004 cost report
data.
The 13 cost centers that we used in
the DRG cost calculation are shown in
the following table. In addition, the
table shows the lines on the cost report
that we used to create the national cost
center CCRs that we used to adjust the
DRG charges to cost:
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00097
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47965
ER18AU06.008
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00098
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.009
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47966
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00099
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47967
ER18AU06.010
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00100
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.011
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47968
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00101
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47969
ER18AU06.012
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
We developed the national average
CCRs as follows:
Taking the FY 2004 cost report data,
we removed CAHs, Indian Health
Service hospitals, all-inclusive rate
hospitals, and cost reports that
represented time periods of less than 1
year (365 days). We included hospitals
located in Maryland as we are including
their charges in our claims database. We
then created CCRs for each provider for
each cost center (see prior table for line
items used in the calculations) and
removed any CCRs that were greater
than 10 or less than .01. In response to
a comment from MedPAC discussed in
section II.C.1. of this preamble, we
normalized the departmental CCRs by
dividing the CCR for each department
by the total CCR for the hospital for the
purpose of trimming the data. We then
took the logs of all of the normalized
cost center CCRs and removed any cost
center CCRs where the log of the cost
center CCR was greater or less than the
mean log plus/minus 3 times the
standard deviation for the log of that
cost center CCR. In the proposed rule
we had used a trim of 1.96 times the
standard deviation. However, in
response to comments as discussed in
section II C. of this preamble, we have
subsequently revised our trim to 3
standard deviations as commenters
stated that this less stringent trim
appropriately retains more providers in
the database. Once the cost report data
were trimmed, we calculated a Medicare
specific CCR, again in response to a
comment from MedPAC as discussed in
section II.C. of this preamble. The
Medicare specific CCR was determined
by taking the Medicare charges for each
line item from worksheet D Part 4 and
deriving the Medicare specific costs by
applying the hospital-specific
departmental CCRs to the Medicare
specific charges for each line item from
worksheet D Part 4. Once each
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
hospital’s Medicare specific costs were
established, we summed the total
Medicare specific costs and divided by
the sum of the total Medicare specific
charges to produce national average,
charge weighted CCRs. In the proposed
rule, we used hospital-specific CCRs,
but in response to comments as
discussed in section II C. of this
preamble, we have revised our
methodology to use charge-weighted
CCRs in establishing the national
average CCRs.
After we multiplied the total charges
for each DRG in each of the 13 cost
centers by the corresponding national
average CCR, we summed the 13 ‘‘costs’’
across each DRG to produce a total
standardized cost for the DRG. The
average standardized cost for each DRG
was then computed as the total
standardized cost for the DRG divided
by the transfer adjusted case count for
the DRG. The average cost for each DRG
was then divided by the national
average standardized cost per case to
determine the relative weight.
The new cost-based weights were
then normalized by an adjustment factor
of 1.49338 so that the average case
weight after recalibration was equal to
the average case weight before
recalibration. This normalization
adjustment is intended to ensure that
recalibration by itself neither increases
nor decreases total payments under the
IPPS as required by section
1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act.
When we recalibrated the DRG
weights for previous years, we set a
threshold of 10 cases as the minimum
number of cases required to compute a
reasonable weight. We used that same
case threshold in recalibrating the DRG
weights for FY 2007. Using the FY 2005
MedPAR data set, there are 40 DRGs
that contain fewer than 10 cases. In FY
2006, we computed weights for low
volume DRGs by adjusting the FY 2005
PO 00000
Frm 00102
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
weights of these low volume DRGs by
the percentage change in the average
weight of the cases in other DRGs.
Because we believe that we do not have
sufficient MedPAR data to set accurate
and stable HSRVcc weights for these
low-volume DRGs, we proposed to
assign them the weights of similar DRGs
for which we have more complete data
and solicited comment on this proposal.
The crosswalk table we proposed is
shown in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule (71 FR 24048).
Comment: One commenter stated that
we should not assign weights based on
other DRGs but should instead
supplement our current data the data
from other sources so that we can set
weights for these DRGs based on actual
cases.
Response: Because we are
implementing cost based weights in a
transition phase and because we intend
to study the DRGs and relative weight
methodologies during the coming year
we have reconsidered our proposal to
assign low volume DRGs the weights of
other DRGS for FY 2007 and are
reverting to our previous method of
updating the prior year’s weight for
these DRGs by the percentage change in
the average weight of the cases in the
other DRGs. We may consider
supplementing our MedPAR data with
additional claims data in the future.
Section 1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act
requires that, beginning with FY 1991,
reclassification and recalibration
changes be made in a manner that
assures that the aggregate payments are
neither greater than nor less than the
aggregate payments that would have
been made without the changes.
Although normalization is intended to
achieve this effect, equating the average
case weight after recalibration to the
average case weight before recalibration
does not necessarily achieve budget
neutrality with respect to aggregate
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.013
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47970
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
payments to hospitals because payments
to hospitals are affected by factors other
than average case weight. Therefore, as
we have done in past years, and as
discussed in section II.A.4.a. of the
Addendum to this final rule, we are
making a budget neutrality adjustment
to ensure that the requirement of section
1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act is met.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
F. LTC–DRG Reclassifications and
Relative Weights for LTCHs for FY 2007
1. Background
In the June 6, 2003 LTCH PPS final
rule (68 FR 34122), we changed the
LTCH PPS annual payment rate update
cycle to be effective July 1 through June
30 instead of October 1 through
September 30. In addition, because the
patient classification system utilized
under the LTCH PPS uses the same
DRGs as those currently used under the
IPPS for acute care hospitals, in that
same final rule, we explained that the
annual update of the long-term care
diagnosis-related group (LTC–DRG)
classifications and relative weights will
continue to remain linked to the annual
reclassification and recalibration of the
DRGs used under the IPPS. In that same
final rule, we specified that we will
continue to update the LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights to be
effective for discharges occurring on or
after October 1 through September 30
each year. Furthermore, we stated that
we will publish the annual update of
the LTC–DRGs in the proposed and final
rules for the IPPS.
In the past, the annual update to the
IPPS DRGs has been based on the
annual revisions to the ICD–9–CM codes
and was effective each October 1. As
discussed in the FY 2006 IPPS final rule
(70 FR 47323 through 47341) and in the
Rate Year (RY) 2007 LTCH PPS final
rule (71 FR 27803 through 27809), with
the implementation of section 503(a) of
Pub. L. 108–173, there is the possibility
that one feature of the GROUPER
software program may be updated twice
during a Federal fiscal year (October 1
and April 1) as required by the statute
for the IPPS. Section 503(a) of Pub. L.
108–173 amended section 1886(d)(5)(K)
of the Act by adding a new clause (vii)
which states that ‘‘the Secretary shall
provide for the addition of new
diagnosis and procedure codes in [sic]
April 1 of each year, but the addition of
such codes shall not require the
Secretary to adjust the payment (or
diagnosis-related group classification)
* * * until the fiscal year that begins
after such date.’’ This requirement
improves the recognition of new
technologies under the IPPS by
accounting for those ICD–9–CM codes
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
in the MedPAR claims data at an earlier
date. In implementing the statutory
change, the agency has provided that
ICD–9–CM diagnosis and procedure
codes for new medical technology may
be created and added to existing DRGs
in the middle of the Federal fiscal year
on April 1. However, this policy change
will have no effect on the LTC–DRG
relative weights, which will continue to
be updated only once a year (October 1),
nor will there be any impact on
Medicare payments under the LTCH
PPS. The use of the ICD–9–CM code set
is also compliant with the current
requirements of the Transactions and
Code Sets Standards regulations at 45
CFR Parts 160 and 162, promulgated in
accordance with the Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act of
1996 (HIPAA), Pub. L. 104–191.
As we explained in the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27805
through 27809), in the health care
industry, historically annual changes to
the ICD–9–CM codes were effective for
discharges occurring on or after October
1 each year. Thus, the manual and
electronic versions of the GROUPER
software, which are based on the ICD–
9–CM codes, were also revised annually
and effective for discharges occurring on
or after October 1 each year. As noted
above, the patient classification system
used under the LTCH PPS (LTC–DRGs)
is based on the patient classification
system used under the IPPS (CMS
DRGs), which historically had been
updated annually and is effective for
discharges occurring on or after October
1 through September 30 each year. As
also mentioned above, the ICD–9–CM
coding update process was revised as a
result of implementing section 503(a) of
Pub. L. 108–173, which includes a
requirement for updating diagnosis and
procedure codes as often as twice a year
instead of the current process of annual
updates on October 1 of each year (as
discussed in greater detail in section
II.D.10. of the preamble of this final
rule). The agency uses the ICD–9–CM
codes as its code set for diagnoses and
procedures. Therefore, the ICD–9–CM
codes currently used under both the
IPPS and LTCH PPS may be updated as
often as twice a year. This requirement
is included as part of the amendments
to the Act relating to recognition of new
medical technology under the IPPS.
Despite the fact that aspects of the
GROUPER software may be updated to
recognize any new technology ICD–9–
CM codes, as discussed most recently in
the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR
27805 through 27808), there will be no
impact on either LTC–DRG assignments
or payments under the LTCH PPS at that
time. That is, changes to the LTC–DRGs
PO 00000
Frm 00103
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47971
(such as the creation or deletion of LTC–
DRGs) and the relative weights will
continue to be updated in the manner
and timing (October 1) as they are now.
As noted above and as described in the
RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR
27805 through 27809), updates to the
GROUPER for both the IPPS and the
LTCH PPS (with respect to relative
weights and the creation or deletion of
DRGs) are made in the annual IPPS
proposed and final rules and are
effective each October 1. We also
explained that because we do not
publish a midyear IPPS rule, any April
1 code updates will not be published in
a midyear IPPS rule. Rather, we will
assign any new diagnosis or procedure
codes to the same DRG in which its
predecessor code was assigned, so that
there will be no impact on the DRG
assignments (as also discussed in
section II.D.10. of this preamble). Any
coding updates will be available
through the Web sites provided in
section II.D.10. of this preamble and
through the Coding Clinic for ICD–9–
CM. Publishers and software vendors
currently obtain code changes through
these sources in order to update their
code books and software system. If new
codes are implemented on April 1,
revised code books and software
systems, including the GROUPER
software program, will be necessary
because we must use current ICD–9–CM
codes. Therefore, for purposes of the
LTCH PPS, because each ICD–9–CM
code must be included in the GROUPER
algorithm to classify each case into a
LTC–DRG, the GROUPER software
program used under the LTCH PPS
would need to be revised to
accommodate any new codes.
In implementing section 503(a) of
Pub. L. 108–173, there will only be an
April 1 update if new technology codes
are requested and approved. We note
that any new codes created for April 1
implementation will be limited to those
diagnosis and procedure code revisions
primarily needed to describe new
technologies and medical services.
However, we reiterate that the process
of discussing updates to the ICD–9–CM
has been an open process through the
ICD–9–CM Coordination and
Maintenance Committee since 1995.
Requestors will be given the
opportunity to present the merits for a
new code and make a clear and
convincing case for the need to update
ICD–9–CM codes for purposes of the
IPPS new technology add-on payment
process through an April 1 update (as
also discussed in section II.D.10. of this
preamble).
However, as we discussed in the RY
2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27805
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47972
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
through 27809), at the September 29–30,
2005 ICD–9–CM Coordination and
Maintenance Committee meeting, there
were no requests for an April 1, 2006
implementation of ICD–9–CM codes,
and, therefore, the next update to the
ICD–9–CM coding system would not
occur until October 1, 2006 (FY 2007).
Presently, as there were no coding
changes suggested for an April 1, 2006
update, the ICD–9–CM coding set
implemented on October 1, 2005, will
continue through September 30, 2006
(FY 2006). The update to the ICD–9–CM
coding system for FY 2007 is discussed
above in section II.D.10. of this
preamble. Accordingly, in this final
rule, as discussed in greater detail
below, we are revising the LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights, to
be effective October 1,2006 through
September 30, 2007 (FY 2007).
Furthermore, we will notify LTCHs of
any revisions to the GROUPER software
used under the IPPS and the LTCH PPS
that will be implemented April 1, 2007.
The LTC–DRGs and relative weights for
FY 2007 in this final rule are based on
the IPPS DRGs (GROUPER Version 24.0)
discussed in section II.B. of the
preamble to this final rule.
Comment: Two commenters urged us
to consolidate rulemaking for the LTCH
PPS into one annual cycle rather than
setting the payment rates and policy
changes on a July 1 through June 30 rate
year but making changes to the LTC–
DRGs and relative weights based on the
Federal fiscal year, October 1 through
September 30. Both commenters noted
that this situation has caused
management and planning difficulty for
some LTCHs. One of the commenters,
whose LTCH has a June 1 through May
31 fiscal year, emphasizes the
difficulties in ‘‘estimating the impact of
changes in case weights as part of the
final rule’’ associated with the hospital
IPPS.
One commenter noted that other
Medicare provider types only
experience one routine annual
adjustment to their respective PPSs and
that it is not reasonable to expect the
LTCH provider community to comment
on the reasonableness of a proposed
payment level in February when ‘‘that
payment level is subject to change in a
second rulemaking proposed in April or
May of the same year.’’ This commenter
suggested that, commencing with FY
2008, all LTCH PPS rulemaking should
occur on the same schedule as it does
under the IPPS, which would maintain
the established cycle for the update of
the LTC–DRGs and relative weights. The
same commenter further suggested that,
should CMS make this change in the
rulemaking schedule, for the first year
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
only, CMS should establish a 3-month
(July through September) and 12-month
(October through September) update
factor to the Federal rate.
Response: In the LTCH RY 2004 final
rule (68 FR 34122), we revised our
regulations at § 412.535, which
established a LTCH PPS rate year with
a July 1 effective date for the annual
update of the Federal payment rate and
associated payment policies while also
maintaining an October 1
implementation date for the update of
the LTC–DRG patient classification
system and associated weighting factors.
In changing the effective date of the
annual LTCH PPS rate year update and
the resulting publication dates of the
proposed and final regulations for the
LTCH PPS, we stated that this shift in
the schedule would promote
‘‘administrative feasibility and
efficiency’’ by avoiding concurrent
rulemaking and publication with the
IPPS final rule. We also noted that
although section 1886(e)(5)(A) of the
Act required that, for the IPPS, the
proposed rule be published in the
Federal Register ‘‘not later than the
April 1 before each fiscal year; and the
final rule, not later than the August 1
before such fiscal year,’’ no similar
requirement is imposed on the LTCH
PPS and that we believed that this
schedule change was well within the
considerable discretion that Congress
afforded the Secretary in the
implementation of the LTCH PPS (68 FR
34125 through 34128). We maintained
at that time, and we continue to believe,
that this change to the LTCH rate year
annual rulemaking schedule was not
unduly burdensome for the LTCH
industry because we had not added any
requirements that LTCHs maintain
payment systems or coding software in
order to be paid under the LTCH PPS,
although we understood that it was
common for many hospitals,
consultants, and industry associations
to do so.
With regard to the commenter who
described a LTCH with a fiscal year
beginning on June 1, we would also
reiterate what we stated in the FY 2004
final rule that ‘‘since the start of cost
reporting periods for many LTCHs, as
well as acute care hospitals, have not
generally coincided with the October
starting date of the Federal fiscal year,
those hospitals that choose to have their
own payment software are very familiar
with the virtually seamless routine of
inputting new numbers to their existing
systems when a final rule is published’’
(68 FR 34127).
Therefore, we continue to believe that
there is no significant administrative
burden imposed on the LTCH industry
PO 00000
Frm 00104
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
by the establishment of the July 1
through June 30 rate year for the annual
payment rate update under the LTCH
PPS while still maintaining the October
1 through September 30 update of the
LTC–DRGs and relative weights which
are linked to the annual update of the
diagnosis and procedure code set (ICD–
9–CM) currently adopted by the DHHS
and the IPPS DRGs and relative weights.
However, two commenters also stated
that the separate rule-making cycles
cause difficulty in ‘‘estimating the
impact of changes in case weights,’’
which will be published in April or
May, when commenting on the payment
rates published in the LTCH PPS
proposed rule in the preceding January
or February. From the volume of
correspondence that we receive from
LTCH associations and their
consultants, some of which include
detailed analyses of CMS data, we do
not believe that our annual publication
in the IPPS proposed rule of the
proposed updates of the LTC–DRGs and
corresponding relative weights (which
are derived solely from the best
available LTCH MedPAR claims data)
prohibits the public from assessing the
impact such proposed changes would
have if finalized. In fact, in their specific
comments on the proposed FY 2007
LTC–DRG relative weights (discussed in
greater detail below), several
commenters presented analyses of the
combined effect of the policy changes
established in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
final rule, effective July 1, 2007 (for
example, revisions to the short-stay
outlier policy), and the proposed
changes to the LTC–DRGs and relative
weights for FY 2007. Furthermore, the
comments received on the policies
presented in the LTCH PPS RY 2007
proposed rule, a number of which
contained detailed data evaluations,
demonstrated the availability as well as
the ability of the public to analyze the
proposed policy changes using the most
recent LTCH MedPAR claims data.
Therefore, we do not believe that our
present publication schedule deprives
industry stakeholders of the opportunity
to submit meaningful comments on
proposed changes to payment levels
when we are establishing the payment
rates and associated policy under the
LTCH PPS, even though changes to the
LTC–DRG weights are proposed in a
separate notice of proposed rulemaking.
Given the considerable discretion
granted to the Secretary under the BBRA
of 1999 and the BIPA of 2000 to develop
the LTCH PPS, we may revisit the
rulemaking schedule for the LTCH PPS
in the future. If a revision to the
schedule is proposed, the public will
have the opportunity to submit
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
comments on any proposed change to
the schedule during the rulemaking
process.
2. Changes in the LTC–DRG
Classifications
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
a. Background
Section 123 of Pub. L. 106–113
specifically requires that the agency
implement a PPS for LTCHs that is a per
discharge system with a DRG-based
patient classification system reflecting
the differences in patient resources and
costs in LTCHs. Section 307(b)(1) of
Pub. L. 106–554 modified the
requirements of section 123 of Pub. L.
106–113 by specifically requiring that
the Secretary examine ‘‘the feasibility
and the impact of basing payment under
such a system [the LTCH PPS] on the
use of existing (or refined) hospital
diagnosis-related groups (DRGs) that
have been modified to account for
different resource use of long-term care
hospital patients as well as the use of
the most recently available hospital
discharge data.’’
In accordance with section 307(b)(1)
of Pub. L. 106–554 and § 412.515 of our
existing regulations, the LTCH PPS uses
information from LTCH patient records
to classify patient cases into distinct
LTC–DRGs based on clinical
characteristics and expected resource
needs. The LTC–DRGs used as the
patient classification component of the
LTCH PPS correspond to the DRGs
under the IPPS for acute care hospitals.
Thus, in this final rule, we are using the
IPPS GROUPER Version 24.0 for FY
2007 to process LTCH PPS claims for
LTCH discharges occurring from
October 1, 2006, through September 30,
2007. The changes to the CMS–DRG
classification system used under the
IPPS for FY 2007 (GROUPER Version
24.0) are discussed in section II.D. of the
preamble to this final rule.
We note that, as we discuss in section
II.C.6. of the preamble to this final rule,
MedPAC, in its 2005 Report to Congress
on Physician-Owned Specialty
Hospitals, recommended that CMS,
among other things, refine the current
DRGs under the IPPS to more fully
capture differences in severity of illness
among patients. As we also discuss in
that same section, in evaluating the
MedPAC recommendation for the IPPS,
we are evaluating the APR DRG
GROUPER used by MedPAC in its
analysis. Based on this analysis, we
concur with MedPAC that the modified
version of the APR DRGs would account
more completely for differences in
severity of illness and associated costs
among hospitals. However, as we made
clear in the proposed rule and reiterate
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
in section II.C.6. of the preamble of this
final rule, there are still further changes
that are important to make to the CS
DRG system before it is ready for
adoption. At this time, we are not
adopting a new severity-adjusted DRG
system, such as the APR DRGs or a
modified version of the APR DRGs,
under the IPPS, as discussed in greater
detail in section II.C.6. of the preamble
of this final rule. However, we are
refining the current CMS–DRG system
by creating 20 new CMS DRGs and
modifying 32 others across 13 different
clinical areas involving 1,666,476 cases
that would improve the CMS DRG
system’s recognition of severity of
illness for FY 2007. We note that the
LTCH PPS uses the same patient
classification system (DRGs) as the IPPS.
That is, the patient classification system
used under the LTCH PPS (LTC DRGs)
is based on the patient classification
system used under the IPPS (CMS
DRGs), which historically had been
updated annually and is effective for
discharges occurring on or after October
1 through September 30 each year. As
such, the updates to the CMS DRG
classification system used under the
IPPS for FY 2007 (GROUPER Version
24.0), discussed in section II.D. of the
preamble to this final rule, will also be
updates that apply under the LTCH PPS.
Under the LTCH PPS, we determine
relative weights for each of the DRGs to
account for the difference in resource
use by patients exhibiting the case
complexity and multiple medical
problems characteristic of LTCH
patients. In a departure from the IPPS,
as we discussed in the August 30, 2002
LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR 55985),
which implemented the LTCH PPS, and
the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47324), we use low-volume quintiles in
determining the LTC–DRG relative
weights for LTC–DRGs with less than 25
LTCH cases, because LTCHs do not
typically treat the full range of
diagnoses as do acute care hospitals.
Specifically, we group those lowvolume LTC–DRGs (that is, LTC–DRGs
with fewer than 25 cases) into 5
quintiles based on average charge per
discharge. (A listing of the composition
of low-volume quintiles for the FY 2006
LTC–DRGs (based on FY 2004 MedPAR
data) appears in section II.G.3. of the FY
2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR 47325
through 47332).) We also adjust for
cases in which the stay at the LTCH is
less than or equal to five-sixths of the
geometric average length of stay; that is,
short-stay outlier cases (§ 412.529), as
discussed below in section II.F.4. of this
preamble.
PO 00000
Frm 00105
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47973
b. Patient Classifications Into DRGs
Generally, under the LTCH PPS,
Medicare payment is made at a
predetermined specific rate for each
discharge; that is, payment varies by the
LTC–DRG to which a beneficiary’s stay
is assigned. Just as cases are classified
into DRGs for acute care hospitals under
the IPPS (see section II.B. of this
preamble), cases are classified into
LTC–DRGs for payment under the LTCH
PPS based on the principal diagnosis,
up to eight additional diagnoses, and up
to six procedures performed during the
stay, as well as age, sex, and discharge
status of the patient. The diagnosis and
procedure information is reported by
the hospital using the ICD–9–CM codes.
As discussed in section II.B. of this
preamble, the CMS–DRGs are organized
into 25 major diagnostic categories
(MDCs), most of which are based on a
particular organ system of the body; the
remainder involve multiple organ
systems (such as MDC 22, Burns).
Accordingly, the principal diagnosis
determines MDC assignment. Within
most MDCs, cases are then divided into
surgical DRGs and medical DRGs. Some
surgical and medical DRGs are further
differentiated based on the presence or
absence of CCs. (See section II.B. of this
preamble for further discussion of
surgical DRGs and medical DRGs.)
Because the assignment of a case to a
particular LTC–DRG will determine the
amount that is paid for the case, it is
important that the coding is accurate. As
used under the IPPS, classifications and
terminology used under the LTCH PPS
are consistent with the ICD–9–CM and
the Uniform Hospital Discharge Data Set
(UHDDS), as recommended to the
Secretary by the National Committee on
Vital and Health Statistics (‘‘Uniform
Hospital Discharge Data: Minimum Data
Set, National Center for Health
Statistics, April 1980’’) and as revised in
1984 by the Health Information Policy
Council (HIPC) of the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services. We
point out again that the ICD–9–CM
coding terminology and the definitions
of principal and other diagnoses of the
UHDDS are consistent with the
requirements of the Transactions and
Code Sets Standards under HIPAA (45
CFR Parts 160 and 162).
The emphasis on the need for proper
coding cannot be overstated.
Inappropriate coding of cases can
adversely affect the uniformity of cases
in each LTC–DRG and produce
inappropriate weighting factors at
recalibration and result in inappropriate
payments under the LTCH PPS. LTCHs
are to follow the same coding guidelines
used by acute care hospitals to ensure
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47974
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
accuracy and consistency in coding
practices. There will be only one LTC–
DRG assigned per long-term care
hospitalization; it will be assigned at the
time of discharge of the patient.
Therefore, it is mandatory that the
coders continue to report the same
principal diagnosis on all claims and
include all diagnosis codes for
conditions that coexist at the time of
admission, for conditions that are
subsequently developed, or for
conditions that affect the treatment
received. Similarly, all procedures
performed in a LTCH, or paid for under
arrangements by a LTCH, during that
stay are to be reported on each claim.
Upon the discharge of the patient
from a LTCH, the LTCH must assign
appropriate diagnosis and procedure
codes from the ICD–9–CM. Completed
claim forms are to be submitted
electronically to the LTCH’s Medicare
fiscal intermediary. Medicare fiscal
intermediaries enter the clinical and
demographic information into their
claims processing systems and subject
this information to a series of automated
screening processes called the Medicare
Code Editor (MCE). These screens are
designed to identify cases that require
further review before assignment into a
LTC–DRG can be made.
After screening through the MCE,
each LTCH claim will be classified into
the appropriate LTC–DRG by the
Medicare LTCH GROUPER. The LTCH
GROUPER is specialized computer
software and is the same GROUPER
used under the IPPS. After the LTC–
DRG is assigned, the Medicare fiscal
intermediary determines the prospective
payment by using the Medicare LTCH
PPS PRICER program, which accounts
for LTCH hospital-specific adjustments
and payment rates. As provided for
under the IPPS, we provide an
opportunity for the LTCH to review the
LTC–DRG assignments made by the
fiscal intermediary and to submit
additional information, if necessary,
within a specified timeframe
(§ 412.513(c)).
The LTCH GROUPER is used both to
classify past cases in order to measure
relative hospital resource consumption
to establish the LTC–DRG weights and
to classify current cases for purposes of
determining payment. The records for
all Medicare hospital inpatient
discharges are maintained in the
MedPAR file. The data in this file are
used to evaluate possible DRG
classification changes and to recalibrate
the DRG weights during our annual
update (as discussed in section II.E. of
this preamble). The LTC–DRG relative
weights are based on data for the
population of LTCH discharges,
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
reflecting the fact that LTCH patients
represent a different patient-mix than
patients in short-term acute care
hospitals.
3. Development of the FY 2007 LTC–
DRG Relative Weights
a. General Overview of Development of
the LTC–DRG Relative Weights
As we stated in the August 30, 2002
LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR 55981), one
of the primary goals for the
implementation of the LTCH PPS is to
pay each LTCH an appropriate amount
for the efficient delivery of care to
Medicare patients. The system must be
able to account adequately for each
LTCH’s case-mix in order to ensure both
fair distribution of Medicare payments
and access to adequate care for those
Medicare patients whose care is more
costly. To accomplish these goals, we
adjust the LTCH PPS standard Federal
prospective payment system rate by the
applicable LTC–DRG relative weight in
determining payment to LTCHs for each
case. Under the LTCH PPS, relative
weights for each LTC–DRG are a
primary element used to account for the
variations in cost per discharge and
resource utilization among the payment
groups (§ 412.515). To ensure that
Medicare patients classified to each
LTC–DRG have access to an appropriate
level of services and to encourage
efficiency, we calculate a relative weight
for each LTC–DRG that represents the
resources needed by an average
inpatient LTCH case in that LTC–DRG.
For example, cases in a LTC–DRG with
a relative weight of 2 will, on average,
cost twice as much as cases in a LTC–
DRG with a weight of 1.
b. Data
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24052), to calculate the proposed
LTC–DRG relative weights for FY 2007,
we obtained total Medicare allowable
charges from FY 2005 Medicare LTCH
bill data from the December 2005
update of the MedPAR file, which were
the best available data at that time, and
we used the proposed Version 24.0 of
the CMS GROUPER used under the IPPS
(as discussed in that same proposed
rule) to classify cases. In that same
proposed rule, we also proposed that if
more recent data were available, we
would use that data and the finalized
Version 24.0 of the CMS GROUPER
(used under the IPPS) to determine the
final LTC–DRG relative weights for FY
2007. Accordingly, to calculate the final
LTC–DRG relative weights for FY 2007
in this final rule, we obtained total
Medicare allowable charges from FY
2005 Medicare hospital bill data from
PO 00000
Frm 00106
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
the March 2006 update of the MedPAR
file (which are the most recent available
data), and used the final Version 24.0 of
the CMS GROUPER used under the IPPS
(as discussed in section II.B. of this
preamble) to classify cases.
We also stated in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24052), as we
discussed in the FY 2006 IPPS final rule
(70 FR 47325), we have excluded the
data from LTCHs that are all-inclusive
rate providers and LTCHs that are
reimbursed in accordance with
demonstration projects authorized
under section 402(a) of Pub. L. 90–248
as amended. Therefore, consistent with
the proposed rule, in the development
of the FY 2007 LTC–DRG relative
weights in this final rule, we have
excluded the data of the 19 all-inclusive
rate providers and the 3 LTCHs that are
paid in accordance with demonstration
projects that had claims in the FY 2005
MedPAR file.
c. Hospital-Specific Relative Value
Methodology
By nature, LTCHs often specialize in
certain areas, such as ventilatordependent patients and rehabilitation
and wound care. Some case types
(DRGs) may be treated, to a large extent,
in hospitals that have, from a
perspective of charges, relatively high
(or low) charges. This nonarbitrary
distribution of cases with relatively high
(or low) charges in specific LTC–DRGs
has the potential to inappropriately
distort the measure of average charges.
To account for the fact that cases may
not be randomly distributed across
LTCHs, we use a hospital-specific
relative value (HSRV) method to
calculate the LTC–DRG relative weights
instead of the methodology used to
determine the DRG relative weights
under the IPPS described in section II.E.
of this preamble. We believe this
method will remove this hospitalspecific source of bias in measuring
LTCH average charges. Specifically, we
reduce the impact of the variation in
charges across providers on any
particular LTC–DRG relative weight by
converting each LTCH’s charge for a
case to a relative value based on that
LTCH’s average charge.
Under the HSRV method, we
standardize charges for each LTCH by
converting its charges for each case to
hospital-specific relative charge values
and then adjusting those values for the
LTCH’s case-mix. The adjustment for
case-mix is needed to rescale the
hospital-specific relative charge values
(which, by definition, average 1.0 for
each LTCH). The average relative weight
for a LTCH is its case-mix, so it is
reasonable to scale each LTCH’s average
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
relative charge value by its case-mix. In
this way, each LTCH’s relative charge
value is adjusted by its case-mix to an
average that reflects the complexity of
the cases it treats relative to the
complexity of the cases treated by all
other LTCHs (the average case-mix of all
LTCHs).
In accordance with the methodology
established under § 412.523, as
implemented in the August 30, 2002
LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR 55989
through 55991), we standardize charges
for each case by first dividing the
adjusted charge for the case (adjusted
for short-stay outliers under § 412.529 as
described in section II.F.4. (step 3) of
this preamble) by the average adjusted
charge for all cases at the LTCH in
which the case was treated. Short-stay
outliers under § 412.529 are cases with
a length of stay that is less than or equal
to five-sixths the average length of stay
of the LTC–DRG. The average adjusted
charge reflects the average intensity of
the health care services delivered by a
particular LTCH and the average cost
level of that LTCH. The resulting ratio
is multiplied by that LTCH’s case-mix
index to determine the standardized
charge for the case.
Multiplying by the LTCH’s case-mix
index accounts for the fact that the same
relative charges are given greater weight
at a LTCH with higher average costs
than they would at a LTCH with low
average costs, which is needed to adjust
each LTCH’s relative charge value to
reflect its case-mix relative to the
average case-mix for all LTCHs. Because
we standardize charges in this manner,
we count charges for a Medicare patient
at a LTCH with high average charges as
less resource intensive than they would
be at a LTCH with low average charges.
For example, a $10,000 charge for a case
at a LTCH with an average adjusted
charge of $17,500 reflects a higher level
of relative resource use than a $10,000
charge for a case at a LTCH with the
same case-mix, but an average adjusted
charge of $35,000. We believe that the
adjusted charge of an individual case
more accurately reflects actual resource
use for an individual LTCH because the
variation in charges due to systematic
differences in the markup of charges
among LTCHs is taken into account.
d. Low-Volume LTC–DRGs
In order to account for LTC–DRGs
with low-volume (that is, with fewer
than 25 LTCH cases), in accordance
with the methodology established in the
August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS final rule
(67 FR 55984), we group those ‘‘lowvolume LTC–DRGs’’ (that is, DRGs that
contained between 1 and 24 cases
annually) into one of five categories
(quintiles) based on average charges, for
the purposes of determining relative
weights. Consistent with the FY 2007
IPPS proposed rule (71 FR 24052 and
24053), we will continue to employ this
treatment of low-volume LTC–DRGs in
determining the FY 2007 LTC–DRG
relative weights using the best available
LTCH data in this final rule. In that
same proposed rule, using LTCH cases
from the December 2005 update of the
FY 2005 MedPAR file, we identified 173
LTC–DRGs that contained between 1
and 24 cases. As noted above, we also
proposed that if more recent data were
available, we would use that data and
the finalized Version 24.0 of the CMS
GROUPER (used under the IPPS) to
determine the final LTC–DRG relative
weights for FY 2007. Accordingly, for
this final rule, using LTCH cases from
the March 2006 update of the FY 2005
MedPAR file, we identified 180 LTC–
DRGs that contained between 1 and 24
cases. This list of LTC–DRGs was then
divided into one of the 5 low-volume
quintiles, each containing 36 LTC–DRGs
(180/5 = 36). In accordance with our
established methodology, as we
proposed, we then make an assignment
to a specific low-volume quintile by
sorting the low-volume LTC–DRGs in
ascending order by average charge. For
this final rule, this results in an
assignment to a specific low-volume
quintile of the sorted 180 low-volume
LTC–DRGs by ascending order by
average charge. For this final rule, based
on LTCH claims data from the March
2006 update of the FY 2005 MedPAR
file and the finalized Version 24.0 of the
CMS GROUPER, the number of lowvolume LTC–DRGs is evenly divisible
by five (that is, the number of lowvolume quintile used to determine the
LTC–DRG relative weights).
Consequently, for this final rule, it was
not necessary to employ our established
methodology to determine which lowvolume quintile would receive the
additional LTC–DRG(s) if the number of
low-volume LTC–DRGs had not been
evenly divisible by five. However, if the
number of LTC–DRGs with less than 25
LTCH cases for this final rule had not
evenly divisible by five, we would have
employed our established methodology
that compares the average charge of the
low-volume LTC–DRGs, to determine
which low-volume quintile would
receive the additional LTC–DRG, as
presented in greater detail in the FY
2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR 24053).
Because, for this final rule, the number
of LTC–DRGs with less than 25 LTCH
cases was evenly divisible by five, to
determine the composition of the lowvolume quintiles, in accordance with
our established methodology, as was
proposed, we sorted the 180 lowvolume LTC–DRGs in ascending order,
and grouped the first fifth (1st through
36th) of low-volume LTC–DRGs (with
the lowest average charge) into Quintile
1; the next fifth (37th through 72nd) of
low-volume LTC–DRGs were into
Quintile 2; and so on until the last fifth
(145th through 180th) of low-volume
LTC–DRGs (with the highest average
charge) were grouped into Quintile 5.
In order to determine the relative
weights for the LTC–DRGs with low
volume for FY 2007, as was proposed,
in accordance with the methodology
established in the August 30, 2002
LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR 55984), in
this final rule, we used the five lowvolume quintiles described above. The
composition of each of the five lowvolume quintiles shown in the chart
below was used in determining the
LTC–DRG relative weights for FY 2007.
As was proposed, for this final rule, we
determined a relative weight and
(geometric) average length of stay for
each of the five low-volume quintiles
using the formula that we apply to the
regular LTC–DRGs (25 or more cases), as
described below in section II.F.4. of this
preamble. We assigned the same relative
weight and average length of stay to
each of the LTC–DRGs that make up that
low-volume quintile. We note that, as
this system is dynamic, it is possible
that the number and specific type of
LTC–DRGs with a low volume of LTCH
cases will vary in the future. We use the
best available claims data in the
MedPAR file to identify low-volume
LTC–DRGs and to calculate the relative
weights based on our methodology.
COMPOSITION OF LOW-VOLUME QUINTILES FOR FY 2007
LTC–DRG
Description
Quintile 1
29 ..................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TRAUMATIC STUPOR & COMA, COMA <1 HR AGE >17 W/O CC.
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00107
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47975
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47976
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
COMPOSITION OF LOW-VOLUME QUINTILES FOR FY 2007—Continued
LTC–DRG
31 ..................
45 ..................
65 ..................
69 ..................
83 ..................
93 ..................
102 ................
125 ................
129 ................
136 ................
140 ................
143 ................
160 ................
181 ................
183 ................
208 ................
224 ................
237 ................
241 ................
250 ................
254 ................
273 ................
323 ................
324 ................
332 ................
335 ................
347 ................
367 ................
383 ................
399 ................
425 ................
432 ................
509 ................
511 ................
523 ................
Description
CONCUSSION AGE >17 W CC.
NEUROLOGICAL EYE DISORDERS.
DYSEQUILIBRIUM.
OTITIS MEDIA & URI AGE >17 W/O CC.
MAJOR CHEST TRAUMA W CC.
INTERSTITIAL LUNG DISEASE W/O CC.
OTHER RESPIRATORY SYSTEM DIAGNOSES W/O CC.
CIRCULATORY DISORDERS EXCEPT AMI, W CARD CATH W/O COMPLEX DIAG.
CARDIAC ARREST, UNEXPLAINED.
CARDIAC CONGENITAL & VALVULAR DISORDERS AGE >17 W/O CC.
ANGINA PECTORIS.
CHEST PAIN.
HERNIA PROCEDURES EXCEPT INGUINAL & FEMORAL AGE >17 W/O CC.
G.I. OBSTRUCTION W/O CC.
ESOPHAGITIS, GASTROENT & MISC DIGEST DISORDERS AGE >17 W/O CC.
DISORDERS OF THE BILIARY TRACT W/O CC.
SHOULDER, ELBOW OR FOREARM PROC, EXC MAJOR JOINT PROC, W/O CC.
SPRAINS, STRAINS, & DISLOCATIONS OF HIP, PELVIS & THIGH.
CONNECTIVE TISSUE DISORDERS W/O CC.
FX, SPRN, STRN & DISL OF FOREARM, HAND, FOOT AGE >17 W CC.
FX, SPRN, STRN & DISL OF UPARM, LOWLEG EX FOOT AGE >17 W/O CC.
MAJOR SKIN DISORDERS W/O CC.
URINARY STONES W CC, &/OR ESW LITHOTRIPSY.
URINARY STONES W/O CC.
OTHER KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT DIAGNOSES AGE >17 W/O CC.
MAJOR MALE PELVIC PROCEDURES W/O CC.
MALIGNANCY, MALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM, W/O CC.
MALIGNANCY, FEMALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM W/O CC.
OTHER ANTEPARTUM DIAGNOSES W MEDICAL COMPLICATIONS.
RETICULOENDOTHELIAL & IMMUNITY DISORDERS W/O CC.
ACUTE ADJUSTMENT REACTION & PSYCHOSOCIAL DYSFUNCTION.
OTHER MENTAL DISORDER DIAGNOSES.
FULL THICKNESS BURN W/O SKIN GRFT OR INH INJ W/O CC OR SIG TRAUMA.
NON-EXTENSIVE BURNS W/O CC OR SIGNIFICANT TRAUMA.
ALCOHOL/DRUG ABUSE OR DEPENDENCE W/O REHABILITATION THERAPY W/O CC.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Quintile 2
8 ....................
11 ..................
17 ..................
46 ..................
77 ..................
117 ................
122 ................
128 ................
133 ................
139 ................
173 ................
175 ................
177 ................
189 ................
246 ................
261 ................
276 ................
281 ................
284 ................
295 ................
301 ................
325 ................
348 ................
419 ................
420 ................
427 ................
431 ................
441 ................
445 ................
447 ................
450 ................
479 ................
492 ................
521 ................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
PERIPH & CRANIAL NERVE & OTHER NERV SYST PROC W/O CC.
NERVOUS SYSTEM NEOPLASMS W/O CC.
NONSPECIFIC CEREBROVASCULAR DISORDERS W/O CC.
OTHER DISORDERS OF THE EYE AGE >17 W CC.
OTHER RESP SYSTEM O.R. PROCEDURES W/O CC.
CARDIAC PACEMAKER REVISION EXCEPT DEVICE REPLACEMENT.
CIRCULATORY DISORDERS W AMI W/O MAJOR COMP, DISCHARGED ALIVE.
DEEP VEIN THROMBOPHLEBITIS.
ATHEROSCLEROSIS W/O CC.
CARDIAC ARRHYTHMIA & CONDUCTION DISORDERS W/O CC.
DIGESTIVE MALIGNANCY W/O CC.
G.I. HEMORRHAGE W/O CC.
UNCOMPLICATED PEPTIC ULCER W CC.
OTHER DIGESTIVE SYSTEM DIAGNOSES AGE >17 W/O CC.
NON-SPECIFIC ARTHROPATHIES.
BREAST PROC FOR NON-MALIGNANCY EXCEPT BIOPSY & LOCAL EXCISION.
NON-MALIGNANT BREAST DISORDERS.
TRAUMA TO THE SKIN, SUBCUT TISS & BREAST AGE >17 W/O CC.
MINOR SKIN DISORDERS W/O CC.
DIABETES AGE 0–35.
ENDOCRINE DISORDERS W/O CC.
KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT SIGNS & SYMPTOMS AGE >17 W CC.
BENIGN PROSTATIC HYPERTROPHY W CC.
FEVER OF UNKNOWN ORIGIN AGE >17 W CC.
FEVER OF UNKNOWN ORIGIN AGE >17 W/O CC.
NEUROSES EXCEPT DEPRESSIVE.
CHILDHOOD MENTAL DISORDERS.
HAND PROCEDURES FOR INJURIES.
TRAUMATIC INJURY AGE >17 W/O CC.
ALLERGIC REACTIONS AGE >17.
POISONING & TOXIC EFFECTS OF DRUGS AGE >17 W/O CC.
OTHER VASCULAR PROCEDURES W/O CC.
CHEMO W ACUTE LEUKEMIA AS SDX OR W USE OF HIGH DOSE CHEMO AGENT.
ALCOHOL/DRUG ABUSE OR DEPENDENCE W CC.
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00108
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
COMPOSITION OF LOW-VOLUME QUINTILES FOR FY 2007—Continued
LTC–DRG
524 ................
563 ................
Description
TRANSIENT ISCHEMIA.
SEIZURE AGE >17 W/O CC.
Quintile 3
21 ..................
22 ..................
44 ..................
67 ..................
72 ..................
97* .................
100 ................
118 ................
119 ................
142* ...............
157 ................
171 ................
199 ................
206* ...............
227 ................
228 ................
235 ................
259 ................
266 ................
270 ................
299 ................
312 ................
338 ................
339 ................
344 ................
346 ................
369 ................
404 ................
414 ................
449 ................
454 ................
467 ................
486 ................
502 ................
532 ................
555 ................
VIRAL MENINGITIS.
HYPERTENSIVE ENCEPHALOPATHY.
ACUTE MAJOR EYE INFECTIONS.
EPIGLOTTITIS.
NASAL TRAUMA & DEFORMITY.
BRONCHITIS & ASTHMA AGE >17 W/O CC.
RESPIRATORY SIGNS & SYMPTOMS W/O CC.
CARDIAC PACEMAKER DEVICE REPLACEMENT.
VEIN LIGATION & STRIPPING.
SYNCOPE & COLLAPSE W/O CC.
ANAL & STOMAL PROCEDURES W CC.
OTHER DIGESTIVE SYSTEM O.R. PROCEDURES W/O CC.
HEPATOBILIARY DIAGNOSTIC PROCEDURE FOR MALIGNANCY.
DISORDERS OF LIVER EXCEPT MALIG, CIRR, ALC HEPA W/O CC.
SOFT TISSUE PROCEDURES W/O CC.
MAJOR THUMB OR JOINT PROC, OR OTH HAND OR WRIST PROC W CC.
FRACTURES OF FEMUR.
SUBTOTAL MASTECTOMY FOR MALIGNANCY W CC.
SKIN GRAFT &/OR DEBRID EXCEPT FOR SKIN ULCER OR CELLULITIS W/O CC.
OTHER SKIN, SUBCUT TISS & BREAST PROC W/O CC.
INBORN ERRORS OF METABOLISM.
URETHRAL PROCEDURES, AGE >17 W CC.
TESTES PROCEDURES, FOR MALIGNANCY.
TESTES PROCEDURES, NON-MALIGNANCY AGE >17.
OTHER MALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM O.R. PROCEDURES FOR MALIGNANCY.
MALIGNANCY, MALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM, W CC.
MENSTRUAL & OTHER FEMALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM DISORDERS.
LYMPHOMA & NON-ACUTE LEUKEMIA W/O CC.
OTHER MYELOPROLIF DIS OR POORLY DIFF NEOPL DIAG W/O CC.
POISONING & TOXIC EFFECTS OF DRUGS AGE >17 W CC.
OTHER INJURY, POISONING & TOXIC EFFECT DIAG W CC.
OTHER FACTORS INFLUENCING HEALTH STATUS.
OTHER O.R. PROCEDURES FOR MULTIPLE SIGNIFICANT TRAUMA.
KNEE PROCEDURES W PDX OF INFECTION W/O CC.
SPINAL PROCEDURES W/O CC.
PERCUTANEOUS CARDIOVASCULAR PROC W MAJOR CV DX.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Quintile 4
55 ..................
63 ..................
95* .................
110 ................
124 ................
193 ................
197 ................
223 ................
262 ................
268 ................
288 ................
304 ................
306 ................
308 ................
310 ................
336 ................
345 ................
365 ................
376 ................
394 ................
401 ................
408 ................
487 ................
488 ................
493 ................
496 ................
500 ................
503 ................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
MISCELLANEOUS EAR, NOSE, MOUTH & THROAT PROCEDURES.
OTHER EAR, NOSE, MOUTH & THROAT O.R. PROCEDURES.
PNEUMOTHORAX W/O CC.
MAJOR CARDIOVASCULAR PROCEDURES W CC.
CIRCULATORY DISORDERS EXCEPT AMI, W CARD CATH & COMPLEX DIAG.
BILIARY TRACT PROC EXCEPT ONLY CHOLECYST W OR W/O C.D.E. W CC.
CHOLECYSTECTOMY EXCEPT BY LAPAROSCOPE W/O C.D.E. W CC.
MAJOR SHOULDER/ELBOW PROC, OR OTHER UPPER EXTREMITY PROC W CC.
BREAST BIOPSY & LOCAL EXCISION FOR NON-MALIGNANCY.
SKIN, SUBCUTANEOUS TISSUE & BREAST PLASTIC PROCEDURES.
O.R. PROCEDURES FOR OBESITY.
KIDNEY AND URETER PROCEDURES FOR NON-NEOPLASM W CC.
PROSTATECTOMY W CC.
MINOR BLADDER PROCEDURES W CC.
TRANSURETHRAL PROCEDURES W CC.
TRANSURETHRAL PROSTATECTOMY W CC.
OTHER MALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM O.R. PROC EXCEPT FOR MALIGNANCY.
OTHER FEMALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM O.R. PROCEDURES.
POSTPARTUM & POST ABORTION DIAGNOSES W/O O.R. PROCEDURE.
OTHER O.R. PROCEDURES OF THE BLOOD AND BLOOD FORMING ORGANS.
LYMPHOMA & NON-ACUTE LEUKEMIA W OTHER O.R. PROC W CC.
MYELOPROLIF DISORD OR POORLY DIFF NEOPL W OTHER O.R.PROC.
OTHER MULTIPLE SIGNIFICANT TRAUMA.
HIV W EXTENSIVE O.R. PROCEDURE.
LAPAROSCOPIC CHOLECYSTECTOMY W/O C.D.E. W CC.
COMBINED ANTERIOR/POSTERIOR SPINAL FUSION.
BACK & NECK PROCEDURES EXCEPT SPINAL FUSION W/O CC.
KNEE PROCEDURES W/O PDX OF INFECTION.
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00109
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47977
47978
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
COMPOSITION OF LOW-VOLUME QUINTILES FOR FY 2007—Continued
LTC–DRG
506
515
519
533
538
539
552
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
557 ................
1 ....................
146 ................
150 ................
152 ................
159 ................
168 ................
191 ................
195 ................
200 ................
218 ................
230 ................
232 ................
257 ................
293* ...............
341 ................
406 ................
424 ................
471 ................
476 ................
482 ................
491 ................
497 ................
499 ................
504 ................
505 ................
529 ................
531 ................
535 ................
543 ................
544 ................
545 ................
567 ................
568 ................
569 ................
570 ................
573 ................
Description
FULL THICKNESS BURN W SKIN GRAFT OR INHAL INJ W CC OR SIG TRAUMA.
CARDIAC DEFIBRILLATOR IMPLANT W/O CARDIAC CATH.
CERVICAL SPINAL FUSION W CC.
EXTRACRANIAL PROCEDURES W CC.
LOCAL EXCISION & REMOVAL INT FIX DEVICES EXCEPT HIP & FEMUR W/O CC.
LYMPHOMA & LEUKEMIA W MAJOR O.R. PROCEDURE W CC.
OTHER PERMANENT CARDIAC PACEMAKER IMPLANT W/O MAJOR CV DX PERCUTANEOUS CARDIOVASCULAR PROC
W DRUG-ELUTING STENT W MAJOR CV.
DX.
Quintile 5
CRANIOTOMY AGE >17 W CC.
RECTAL RESECTION W CC.
PERITONEAL ADHESIOLYSIS W CC.
MINOR SMALL & LARGE BOWEL PROCEDURES W CC.
HERNIA PROCEDURES EXCEPT INGUINAL & FEMORAL AGE >17 W CC.
MOUTH PROCEDURES W CC.
PANCREAS, LIVER & SHUNT PROCEDURES W CC.
CHOLECYSTECTOMY W C.D.E. W CC.
HEPATOBILIARY DIAGNOSTIC PROCEDURE FOR NON-MALIGNANCY.
LOWER EXTREM & HUMER PROC EXCEPT HIP, FOOT, FEMUR AGE >17 W CC.
LOCAL EXCISION & REMOVAL OF INT FIX DEVICES OF HIP & FEMUR.
ARTHROSCOPY.
TOTAL MASTECTOMY FOR MALIGNANCY W CC.
OTHER ENDOCRINE, NUTRIT & METAB O.R. PROC W/O CC.
PENIS PROCEDURES.
MYELOPROLIF DISORD OR POORLY DIFF NEOPL W MAJ O.R. PROC W CC.
O.R. PROCEDURE W PRINCIPAL DIAGNOSES OF MENTAL ILLNESS.
BILATERAL OR MULTIPLE MAJOR JOINT PROCS OF LOWER EXTREMITY.
PROSTATIC O.R. PROCEDURE UNRELATED TO PRINCIPAL DIAGNOSIS.
TRACHEOSTOMY FOR FACE, MOUTH & NECK DIAGNOSES.
MAJOR JOINT & LIMB REATTACHMENT PROCEDURES OF UPPER EXTREMITY.
SPINAL FUSION EXCEPT CERVICAL W CC.
BACK & NECK PROCEDURES EXCEPT SPINAL FUSION W CC.
EXTENSIVE BURNS OR FULL THICKNESS BURNS W MV 96+ HRS W SKIN GRAFT.
EXTENSIVE BURNS OR FULL THICKNESS BURNS W MV 96+ HRS W/O SKIN GRAFT.
VENTRICULAR SHUNT PROCEDURES W CC.
SPINAL PROCEDURES W CC.
CARDIAC DEFIB IMPLANT W CARDIAC CATH W AMI/HF/SHOCK.
CRANIOTOMY W MAJOR DEVICE IMPLANT OR ACUTE COMPLEX CNS PDX.
MAJOR JOINT REPLACEMENT OR REATTACHMENT OF LOWER EXTREMITY.
REVISION OF HIP OR KNEE REPLACEMENT.
STOMACH, ESOPHAGEAL & DUODENAL PROC AGE >17 W CC W MAJOR GI DX.
STOMACH, ESOPHAGEAL & DUODENAL PROC AGE >17 W CC W/O MAJOR GI DX.
MAJOR SMALL & LARGE BOWEL PROCEDURES W CC W MAJOR GI DX.
MAJOR SMALL & LARGE BOWEL PROCEDURES W CC W/O MAJOR GI DX.
MAJOR BLADDER PROCEDURES.
* One of the original 180 low-volume LTC–DRGs initially assigned to this low-volume quintile; removed from this low-volume quintile in addressing nonmonotonicity (see step 5 below)..
We note that we will continue to
monitor the volume (that is, the number
of LTCH cases) in these low-volume
quintiles to ensure that our quintile
assignment results in appropriate
payment for such cases and does not
result in an unintended financial
incentive for LTCHs to inappropriately
admit these types of cases.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
4. Steps for Determining the FY 2007
LTC–DRG Relative Weights
As we noted previously, as was
proposed, the FY 2007 LTC–DRG
relative weights in this final rule are
determined in accordance with the
methodology established in the August
30, 2002 LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
55989 through 55991). In summary,
LTCH cases must be grouped in the
appropriate LTC–DRG, while taking into
account the low-volume LTC–DRGs as
described above, before the FY 2007
LTC–DRG relative weights can be
determined. After grouping the cases in
the appropriate LTC–DRG, we
calculated the relative weights for FY
2007 in this final rule by first removing
statistical outliers and cases with a
length of stay of 7 days or less, as
discussed in greater detail below. Next,
we adjusted the number of cases in each
LTC–DRG for the effect of short-stay
outlier cases under § 412.529, as also
discussed in greater detail below. The
short-stay adjusted discharges and
PO 00000
Frm 00110
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
corresponding charges are used to
calculate ‘‘relative adjusted weights’’ in
each LTC–DRG using the HSRV method
described above.
Below we discuss in detail the steps
for calculating the FY 2007 LTC–DRG
relative weights in this final rule. These
steps are the same as the ones we
presented in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule for calculating the proposed FY
2007 LTC–DRG relative weights. We
note that, as we stated above in section
II.F.3.b. of this preamble, we have
excluded the data of all-inclusive rate
LTCHs and LTCHs that are paid in
accordance with demonstration projects
that had claims in the FY 2005 MedPAR
file.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Step 1—Remove statistical outliers.
The first step in the calculation of the
FY 2007 LTC–DRG relative weights, as
was proposed, is to remove statistical
outlier cases. We define statistical
outliers as cases that are outside of 3.0
standard deviations from the mean of
the log distribution of both charges per
case and the charges per day for each
LTC–DRG. These statistical outliers are
removed prior to calculating the relative
weights. As noted above, we believe that
they may represent aberrations in the
data that distort the measure of average
resource use. Including those LTCH
cases in the calculation of the relative
weights could result in an inaccurate
relative weight that does not truly
reflect relative resource use among the
LTC–DRGs.
Step 2—Remove cases with a length
of stay of 7 days or less.
The FY 2007 LTC–DRG relative
weights reflect the average of resources
used on representative cases of a
specific type. Generally, cases with a
length of stay of 7 days or less do not
belong in a LTCH because these stays do
not fully receive or benefit from
treatment that is typical in a LTCH stay,
and full resources are often not used in
the earlier stages of admission to a
LTCH. As explained above, if we were
to include stays of 7 days or less in the
computation of the FY 2007 LTC–DRG
relative weights, the value of many
relative weights would decrease and,
therefore, payments would decrease to a
level that may no longer be appropriate.
We do not believe that it would be
appropriate to compromise the integrity
of the payment determination for those
LTCH cases that actually benefit from
and receive a full course of treatment at
a LTCH, in order to include data from
these very short-stays. Thus, as
explained above, in determining the FY
2007 LTC–DRG relative weights in this
final rule, as was proposed, we remove
LTCH cases with a length of stay of 7
days or less.
Step 3—Adjust charges for the effects
of short-stay outliers.
After removing cases with a length of
stay of 7 days or less, we are left with
cases that have a length of stay of greater
than or equal to 8 days. The next step
in the calculation of the FY 2007 LTC–
DRG relative weights is to adjust each
LTCH’s charges per discharge for those
remaining cases for the effects of shortstay outliers as defined in § 412.529(a).
(However, we note that even if a case
was removed in Step 2 (that is, cases
with a length of stay of 7 days or less),
it was paid as a short-stay outlier if its
length of stay was less than or equal to
five-sixths of the average length of stay
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
of the LTC–DRG, in accordance with
§ 412.529.)
We make this adjustment by counting
a short-stay outlier as a fraction of a
discharge based on the ratio of the
length of stay of the case to the average
length of stay for the LTC–DRG for
nonshort-stay outlier cases. This has the
effect of proportionately reducing the
impact of the lower charges for the
short-stay outlier cases in calculating
the average charge for the LTC–DRG.
This process produces the same result
as if the actual charges per discharge of
a short-stay outlier case were adjusted to
what they would have been had the
patient’s length of stay been equal to the
average length of stay of the LTC–DRG.
As we explained in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24059), counting
short-stay outlier cases as full
discharges with no adjustment in
determining the LTC–DRG relative
weights would lower the LTC–DRG
relative weight for affected LTC–DRGs
because the relatively lower charges of
the short-stay outlier cases would bring
down the average charge for all cases
within a proposed LTC–DRG. This
would result in an ‘‘underpayment’’ for
nonshort-stay outlier cases and an
‘‘overpayment’’ for short-stay outlier
cases. Therefore, in this final rule, as
was proposed, we adjust for short-stay
outlier cases under § 412.529 in this
manner because it results in more
appropriate payments for all LTCH
cases.
Step 4—Calculate the FY 2007 LTC–
DRG relative weights on an iterative
basis.
The process of calculating the LTC–
DRG relative weights using the HSRV
methodology is iterative. First, for each
LTCH case, we calculate a hospitalspecific relative charge value by
dividing the short-stay outlier adjusted
charge per discharge (see step 3) of the
LTCH case (after removing the statistical
outliers (see step 1)) and LTCH cases
with a length of stay of 7 days or less
(see step 2) by the average charge per
discharge for the LTCH in which the
case occurred. The resulting ratio is
then multiplied by the LTCH’s case-mix
index to produce an adjusted hospitalspecific relative charge value for the
case. An initial case-mix index value of
1.0 is used for each LTCH.
For each LTC–DRG, the FY 2007
LTC–DRG relative weight is calculated
by dividing the average of the adjusted
hospital-specific relative charge values
(from above) for the LTC–DRG by the
overall average hospital-specific relative
charge value across all cases for all
LTCHs. Using these recalculated LTC–
DRG relative weights, each LTCH’s
average relative weight for all of its
PO 00000
Frm 00111
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47979
cases (case-mix) is calculated by
dividing the sum of all the LTCH’s LTC–
DRG relative weights by its total number
of cases. The LTCHs’ hospital-specific
relative charge values above are
multiplied by these hospital-specific
case-mix indexes. These hospitalspecific case-mix adjusted relative
charge values are then used to calculate
a new set of LTC–DRG relative weights
across all LTCHs. In this final rule, as
was proposed, this iterative process is
continued until there is convergence
between the weights produced at
adjacent steps, for example, when the
maximum difference is less than 0.0001.
Step 5—Adjust the FY 2007 LTC–DRG
relative weights to account for
nonmonotonically increasing relative
weights.
As explained in section II.B. of this
preamble, the FY 2007 CMS DRGs, on
which the FY 2007 LTC–DRGs are
based, contain ‘‘pairs’’ that are
differentiated based on the presence or
absence of CCs. The LTC–DRGs with
CCs are defined by certain secondary
diagnoses not related to or inherently a
part of the disease process identified by
the principal diagnosis, but the presence
of additional diagnoses does not
automatically generate a CC. As we
discussed in the FY 2006 IPPS final rule
(70 FR 47336), the value of
monotonically increasing relative
weights rises as the resource use
increases (for example, from
uncomplicated to more complicated).
The presence of CCs in a LTC–DRG
means that cases classified into a
‘‘without CC’’ LTC–DRG are expected to
have lower resource use (and lower
costs). In other words, resource use (and
costs) are expected to decrease across
‘‘with CC/without CC’’ pairs of LTC–
DRGs.
For a case to be assigned to a LTC–
DRG with CCs, more coded information
is called for (that is, at least one relevant
secondary diagnosis), than for a case to
be assigned to a LTC–DRG ‘‘without
CCs’’ (which is based on only one
principal diagnosis and no relevant
secondary diagnoses). Currently, the
LTCH claims data include both
accurately coded cases without
complications and cases that have
complications (and cost more), but were
not coded completely. Both types of
cases are grouped to a LTC–DRG
‘‘without CCs’’ when only the principal
diagnosis was coded. Since the LTCH
PPS was only implemented for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2002 (FY 2003), and LTCHs
were previously paid under cost-based
reimbursement, which is not based on
patient diagnoses, coding by LTCHs for
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47980
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
these cases may not have been as
detailed as possible.
Thus, in developing the FY 2003
LTC–DRG relative weights for the LTCH
PPS based on FY 2001 claims data, as
we discussed in the August 30, 2002
LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR 55990), we
found on occasion that the data
suggested that cases classified to the
LTC–DRG ‘‘with CCs’’ of a ‘‘with CC/
without CC’’ pair had a lower average
charge than the corresponding LTC–
DRG ‘‘without CCs.’’ Similarly, as
discussed in the FY 2006 IPPS final rule
(70 FR 47336 through 47337), based on
FY 2004 claims data, we also found on
occasion that the data suggested that
cases classified to the LTC–DRG ‘‘with
CCs’’ of a ‘‘with CC/without CC’’ pair
have a lower average charge than the
corresponding LTC–DRG ‘‘without CCs’’
for the FY 2006 LTC–DRG relative
weights.
We believe this anomaly may be due
to coding that may not have fully
reflected all comorbidities that were
present. Specifically, LTCHs may have
failed to code relevant secondary
diagnoses, which resulted in cases that
actually had CCs being classified into a
‘‘without CC’’ LTC–DRG. It would not
be appropriate to pay a lower amount
for the ‘‘with CC’’ LTC–DRG because, in
general, cases classified into a ‘‘with
CC’’ LTC–DRG are expected to have
higher resource use (and higher cost) as
discussed above. Therefore, previously
when we determined the LTC–DRG
relative weights in accordance with the
methodology established in the August
30, 2002 LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR
55990) when we implanted the LTCH
PPS, we grouped both the cases ‘‘with
CCs’’ and ‘‘without CCs’’ together for the
purpose of calculating the LTC–DRG
relative weights. As we stated in that
same final rule, we will continue to
employ this methodology to account for
nonmonotonically increasing relative
weights until we have adequate data to
calculate appropriate separate weights
for these anomalous LTC–DRG pairs.
We expect that, as was the case when
we first implemented the IPPS, in most
instances, this problem will be selfcorrecting, as LTCHs submit more
completely coded data in the future.
There are three types of ‘‘with CC’’
and ‘‘without CC’’ pairs that could be
nonmonotonic; that is, where the
‘‘without CC’’ LTC–DRG would have a
higher average charge than the ‘‘with
CC’’ LTC–DRG. For this final rule, using
the LTCH cases in the March 2006
update of the FY 2005 MedPAR file (the
most recent and complete data available
at this time), we identified one of the
three types of nonmonotonic LTC–DRG
pairs. As we stated in the August 30,
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
2002 LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR
55990), we believe this anomaly may be
due to coding inaccuracies and expect
that, as was the case when we first
implemented the acute care hospital
IPPS, this problem will be selfcorrecting, as LTCHs submit more
completely coded data in the future.
The first category of
nonmonotonically increasing relative
weights for LTC–DRG pairs ‘‘with and
without CCs’’ contains one pair of LTC–
DRGs in which both the LTC–DRG
‘‘with CCs’’ and the LTC–DRG ‘‘without
CCs’’ had 25 or more LTCH cases and,
therefore, did not fall into one of the 5
low-volume quintiles. For those
nonmonotonic LTC–DRG pairs, based
on our established methodology (67 FR
55983 through 55990), we combined the
LTCH cases and computed a new
relative weight based on the caseweighted average of the combined LTCH
cases of the LTC–DRGs. The caseweighted average charge is determined
by dividing the total charges for all
LTCH cases by the total number of
LTCH cases for the combined LTC–DRG.
This new relative weight is then
assigned to both of the LTC–DRGs in the
pair. In this final rule, for FY 2007, there
were no LTC–DRGs that fell into this
category.
The second category of
nonmonotonically increasing relative
weights for LTC–DRG pairs ‘‘with and
without CCs’’ consists of one pair of
LTC–DRGs that has fewer than 25 cases,
and each LTC–DRG is grouped to
different low-volume quintiles in which
the ‘‘without CC’’ LTC–DRG is in a
higher-weighted low-volume quintile
than the ‘‘with CC’’ LTC–DRG. For those
pairs, based on our established
methodology, we combine the LTCH
cases and determine the case-weighted
average charge for all LTCH cases. The
case-weighted average charge is
determined by dividing the total charges
for all LTCH cases by the total number
of LTCH cases for the combined LTC–
DRG. Based on the case-weighted
average LTCH charge, we determine
within which low-volume quintile the
‘‘combined LTC–DRG’’ is grouped. Both
LTC–DRGs in the pair are then grouped
into the same low-volume quintile, thus
having the same relative weight. In this
final rule, for FY 2007, there were no
LTC–DRGs that fell into this category.
The third category of
nonmonotonically increasing relative
weights for LTC–DRG pairs ‘‘with and
without CCs’’ consists of one pair of
LTC–DRGs where one of the LTC–DRGs
has fewer than 25 LTCH cases and is
grouped to a low-volume quintile and
the other LTC–DRG has 25 or more
LTCH cases and has its own LTC–DRG
PO 00000
Frm 00112
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
relative weight, and the LTC–DRG
‘‘without CCs’’ has the higher relative
weight. Based on our established
methodology, as proposed, we removed
the low-volume LTC–DRG from the lowvolume quintile and combined it with
the other LTC–DRG for the computation
of a new relative weight for each of
these LTC–DRGs. This new relative
weight is assigned to both LTC–DRGs,
so they each have the same relative
weight. In this final rule, for FY 2007,
5 ‘‘pairs’’ of LTC–DRGs fall into this
category: LTC–DRGs 94 and 95; LTC–
DRGs 96 and 97; LTC–DRGs 141 and
142; LTC–DRGs 205 and 206; and LTC–
DRGs 292 and 293.
Step 6—Determine a FY 2007 LTC–
DRG relative weight for LTC–DRGs with
no LTCH cases.
As we stated above, in this final rule,
as we proposed we determine the
relative weight for each LTC–DRG using
total Medicare allowable charges
reported in the March 2006 update of
the FY 2005 MedPAR file. Of the 538
LTC–DRGs for FY 2007, we identified
183 LTC–DRGs for which there were no
LTCH cases in the database. That is,
based on data from the FY 2005
MedPAR file used in this final rule, no
patients who would have been classified
to those LTC–DRGs were treated in
LTCHs during FY 2005 and, therefore,
no charge data were reported for those
LTC–DRGs. Thus, in the process of
determining the LTC–DRG relative
weights, we are unable to determine
weights for these 183 LTC–DRGs using
the methodology described in Steps 1
through 5 above. However, because
patients with a number of the diagnoses
under these LTC–DRGs may be treated
at LTCHs beginning in FY 2007, as was
proposed, for this final rule, we
assigned relative weights to each of the
183 ‘‘no volume’’ LTC–DRGs based on
clinical similarity and relative costliness
to one of the remaining 355 (538 - 183
= 355) LTC–DRGs for which we are able
to determine relative weights, based on
FY 2005 LTCH claims data. As there are
currently no LTCH cases in these ‘‘no
volume’’ LTC–DRGs, as proposed, we
determined relative weights for the 183
LTC–DRGs with no LTCH cases in the
FY 2005 MedPAR file used in this final
rule by grouping them to the
appropriate low-volume quintile. This
methodology is consistent with our
methodology used in determining
relative weights to account for the lowvolume LTC–DRGs described above.
As was proposed, for this final rule,
our methodology for determining the
relative weights for the ‘‘no volume’’
LTC–DRGs is as follows: We crosswalk
the no volume LTC–DRGs by matching
them to other similar LTC–DRGs for
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47981
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
which there were LTCH cases in the FY
2005 MedPAR file based on clinical
similarity and intensity of use of
resources as determined by care
provided during the period of time
surrounding surgery, surgical approach
(if applicable), length of time of surgical
procedure, postoperative care, and
length of stay. We assigned the relative
weight for the applicable low-volume
quintile to the no volume LTC–DRG if
the LTC–DRG to which it is crosswalked
is grouped to one of the low-volume
quintiles. If the LTC–DRG to which the
no volume LTC–DRG is crosswalked is
not one of the LTC–DRGs to be grouped
to one of the low-volume quintiles, we
compared the relative weight of the
LTC–DRG to which the no volume LTC–
DRG is crosswalked to the relative
weights of each of the five quintiles and
we assigned the no volume LTC–DRG
the relative weight of the low-volume
quintile with the closest weight. For this
final rule, a list of the no volume FY
2007 LTC–DRGs and the FY 2007 LTC–
DRG to which it is crosswalked in order
to determine the appropriate lowvolume quintile for the assignment of a
relative weight for FY 2007 is shown in
the chart below.
NO VOLUME LTC-DRG CROSSWALK AND QUINTILE ASSIGNMENT FOR FY 2007
Crosswalked
LTC–DRG
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
LTC–DRG
Description
2 ......................
3 ......................
6 ......................
26 ....................
30 ....................
32 ....................
33 ....................
36 ....................
37 ....................
38 ....................
39 ....................
40 ....................
41 ....................
42 ....................
43 ....................
47 ....................
48 ....................
49 ....................
50 ....................
51 ....................
52 ....................
53 ....................
54 ....................
56 ....................
57 ....................
58 ....................
59 ....................
60 ....................
61 ....................
62 ....................
66 ....................
70 ....................
71 ....................
74 ....................
81 ....................
84 ....................
86 ....................
91 ....................
98 ....................
104 ..................
105 ..................
106 ..................
108 ..................
111 ..................
137 ..................
147 ..................
149 ..................
151 ..................
153 ..................
155 ..................
156 ..................
158 ..................
161 ..................
162 ..................
163 ..................
164 ..................
165 ..................
CRANIOTOMY AGE >17 W/O CC .............................................................................................
CRANIOTOMY AGE 0–17 ..........................................................................................................
CARPAL TUNNEL RELEASE ....................................................................................................
SEIZURE & HEADACHE AGE 0–17 ..........................................................................................
TRAUMATIC STUPOR & COMA, COMA <1 HR AGE 0–17 .....................................................
CONCUSSION AGE >17 W/O CC .............................................................................................
CONCUSSION AGE 0–17 ..........................................................................................................
RETINAL PROCEDURES ..........................................................................................................
ORBITAL PROCEDURES ..........................................................................................................
PRIMARY IRIS PROCEDURES .................................................................................................
LENS PROCEDURES WITH OR WITHOUT VITRECTOMY .....................................................
EXTRAOCULAR PROCEDURES EXCEPT ORBIT AGE >17 ...................................................
EXTRAOCULAR PROCEDURES EXCEPT ORBIT AGE 0–17 .................................................
INTRAOCULAR PROCEDURES EXCEPT RETINA, IRIS & LENS ...........................................
HYPHEMA ..................................................................................................................................
OTHER DISORDERS OF THE EYE AGE >17 W/O CC ...........................................................
OTHER DISORDERS OF THE EYE AGE 0–17 ........................................................................
MAJOR HEAD & NECK PROCEDURES ...................................................................................
SIALOADENECTOMY ................................................................................................................
SALIVARY GLAND PROCEDURES EXCEPT SIALOADENECTOMY ......................................
CLEFT LIP & PALATE REPAIR .................................................................................................
SINUS & MASTOID PROCEDURES AGE >17 .........................................................................
SINUS & MASTOID PROCEDURES AGE 0–17 .......................................................................
RHINOPLASTY ...........................................................................................................................
T&A PROC, EXCEPT TONSILLECTOMY &/OR ADENOIDECTOMY ONLY, AGE >17 ..........
T&A PROC, EXCEPT TONSILLECTOMY &/OR ADENOIDECTOMY ONLY, AGE 0–17 .........
TONSILLECTOMY &/OR ADENOIDECTOMY ONLY, AGE >17 ...............................................
TONSILLECTOMY &/OR ADENOIDECTOMY ONLY, AGE 0–17 .............................................
MYRINGOTOMY W TUBE INSERTION AGE >17 ....................................................................
MYRINGOTOMY W TUBE INSERTION AGE 0–17 ..................................................................
EPISTAXIS ..................................................................................................................................
OTITIS MEDIA & URI AGE 0–17 ...............................................................................................
LARYNGOTRACHEITIS .............................................................................................................
OTHER EAR, NOSE, MOUTH & THROAT DIAGNOSES AGE 0–17 .......................................
RESPIRATORY INFECTIONS & INFLAMMATIONS AGE 0–17 ...............................................
MAJOR CHEST TRAUMA W/O CC ...........................................................................................
PLEURAL EFFUSION W/O CC ..................................................................................................
SIMPLE PNEUMONIA & PLEURISY AGE 0–17 .......................................................................
BRONCHITIS & ASTHMA AGE 0–17 ........................................................................................
CARDIAC VALVE & OTHER MAJOR CARDIOTHORACIC PROC W CARDIAC CATH ..........
CARDIAC VALVE & OTHER MAJOR CARDIOTHORACIC PROC W/O CARDIAC CATH ......
CORONARY BYPASS W PTCA ................................................................................................
OTHER CARDIOTHORACIC PROCEDURES ...........................................................................
MAJOR CARDIOVASCULAR PROCEDURES W/O CC ............................................................
CARDIAC CONGENITAL & VALVULAR DISORDERS AGE 0–17 ...........................................
RECTAL RESECTION W/O CC .................................................................................................
MAJOR SMALL & LARGE BOWEL PROCEDURES W/O CC ..................................................
PERITONEAL ADHESIOLYSIS W/O CC ...................................................................................
MINOR SMALL & LARGE BOWEL PROCEDURES W/O CC ...................................................
STOMACH, ESOPHAGEAL & DUODENAL PROCEDURES AGE >17 W/O CC .....................
STOMACH, ESOPHAGEAL & DUODENAL PROCEDURES AGE 0–17 ..................................
ANAL & STOMAL PROCEDURES W/O CC ..............................................................................
INGUINAL & FEMORAL HERNIA PROCEDURES AGE >17 W CC .........................................
INGUINAL & FEMORAL HERNIA PROCEDURES AGE >17 W/O CC .....................................
HERNIA PROCEDURES AGE 0–17 ..........................................................................................
APPENDECTOMY W COMPLICATED PRINCIPAL DIAG W CC .............................................
APPENDECTOMY W COMPLICATED PRINCIPAL DIAG W/O CC .........................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00113
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
1
1
237
563
29
31
31
46
46
46
46
46
46
46
45
45
45
64
63
63
63
63
63
63
69
69
69
69
69
69
69
69
97
69
69
93
102
90
97
110
110
110
110
110
136
171
176
160
152
567
567
157
160
160
160
171
171
Low-volume
quintile
assignment
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
5.
5.
1.
2.
1.
1.
1.
2.
2.
2.
2.
2.
2.
2.
1.
1.
1.
4.
4.
4.
4.
4.
4.
4.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
2.
1.
1.
1.
1.
2.
2.
4.
4.
4.
4.
4.
1.
3.
3.
1.
5.
5.
5.
3.
1.
1.
1.
3.
3.
47982
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
NO VOLUME LTC-DRG CROSSWALK AND QUINTILE ASSIGNMENT FOR FY 2007—Continued
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
LTC–DRG
166
167
169
178
184
186
187
190
192
194
196
198
211
212
219
220
229
234
251
252
255
258
260
267
275
279
282
286
289
290
291
298
303
305
307
309
311
313
314
319
322
326
327
328
329
330
333
334
337
340
342
343
349
351
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
370
371
372
373
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Crosswalked
LTC–DRG
Description
APPENDECTOMY W/O COMPLICATED PRINCIPAL DIAG W CC .........................................
APPENDECTOMY W/O COMPLICATED PRINCIPAL DIAG W/O CC ......................................
MOUTH PROCEDURES W/O CC ..............................................................................................
UNCOMPLICATED PEPTIC ULCER W/O CC ...........................................................................
ESOPHAGITIS, GASTROENT & MISC DIGEST DISORDERS AGE 0–17 ..............................
DENTAL & ORAL DIS EXCEPT EXTRACTIONS & RESTORATIONS, AGE 0–17 ..................
DENTAL EXTRACTIONS & RESTORATIONS ..........................................................................
OTHER DIGESTIVE SYSTEM DIAGNOSES AGE 0–17 ...........................................................
PANCREAS, LIVER & SHUNT PROCEDURES W/O CC .........................................................
BILIARY TRACT PROC EXCEPT ONLY CHOLECYST W OR W/O C.D.E. W/O CC ..............
CHOLECYSTECTOMY W C.D.E. W/O CC ................................................................................
CHOLECYSTECTOMY EXCEPT BY LAPAROSCOPE W/O C.D.E. W/O CC ..........................
HIP & FEMUR PROCEDURES EXCEPT MAJOR JOINT AGE >17 W/O CC ..........................
HIP & FEMUR PROCEDURES EXCEPT MAJOR JOINT AGE 0–17 .......................................
LOWER EXTREM & HUMER PROC EXCEPT HIP, FOOT, FEMUR AGE >17 W/O CC ........
LOWER EXTREM & HUMER PROC EXCEPT HIP, FOOT, FEMUR AGE 0–17 .....................
HAND OR WRIST PROC, EXCEPT MAJOR JOINT PROC, W/O CC ......................................
OTHER MUSCULOSKELET SYS & CONN TISS O.R. PROC W/O CC ...................................
FX, SPRN, STRN & DISL OF FOREARM, HAND, FOOT AGE >17.W/O CC ..........................
FX, SPRN, STRN & DISL OF FOREARM, HAND, FOOT AGE 0–17 .......................................
FX, SPRN, STRN & DISL OF UPARM,LOWLEG EX FOOT AGE 0–17 ...................................
TOTAL MASTECTOMY FOR MALIGNANCY W/O CC ..............................................................
SUBTOTAL MASTECTOMY FOR MALIGNANCY W/O CC ......................................................
PERIANAL & PILONIDAL PROCEDURES ................................................................................
MALIGNANT BREAST DISORDERS W/O CC ..........................................................................
CELLULITIS AGE 0–17 ..............................................................................................................
TRAUMA TO THE SKIN, SUBCUT TISS & BREAST AGE 0–17 ..............................................
ADRENAL & PITUITARY PROCEDURES .................................................................................
PARATHYROID PROCEDURES ................................................................................................
THYROID PROCEDURES .........................................................................................................
THYROGLOSSAL PROCEDURES ............................................................................................
NUTRITIONAL & MISC METABOLIC DISORDERS AGE 0–17 ................................................
KIDNEY AND URETER PROCEDURES FOR NEOPLASM ......................................................
KIDNEY AND URETER PROCEDURES FOR NON-NEOPLASM W/O CC ..............................
PROSTATECTOMY W/O CC .....................................................................................................
MINOR BLADDER PROCEDURES W/O CC .............................................................................
TRANSURETHRAL PROCEDURES W/O CC ...........................................................................
URETHRAL PROCEDURES, AGE >17 W/O CC ......................................................................
URETHRAL PROCEDURES, AGE 0–17 ...................................................................................
KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT NEOPLASMS W/O CC ..............................................................
KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT INFECTIONS AGE 0–17 ............................................................
KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT SIGNS & SYMPTOMS AGE >17 W/O CC ................................
KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT SIGNS & SYMPTOMS AGE 0–17 .............................................
URETHRAL STRICTURE AGE >17 W CC ................................................................................
URETHRAL STRICTURE AGE >17 W/O CC ............................................................................
URETHRAL STRICTURE AGE 0–17 .........................................................................................
OTHER KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT DIAGNOSES AGE 0–17 ..............................................
MAJOR MALE PELVIC PROCEDURES W CC .........................................................................
TRANSURETHRAL PROSTATECTOMY W/O CC ....................................................................
TESTES PROCEDURES, NON-MALIGNANCY AGE 0–17 .......................................................
CIRCUMCISION AGE >17 .........................................................................................................
CIRCUMCISION AGE 0–17 .......................................................................................................
BENIGN PROSTATIC HYPERTROPHY W/O CC .....................................................................
STERILIZATION, MALE .............................................................................................................
PELVIC EVISCERATION, RADICAL HYSTERECTOMY & RADICAL VULVECTOMY ............
UTERINE,ADNEXA PROC FOR NON-OVARIAN/ADNEXAL MALIG W CC .............................
UTERINE,ADNEXA PROC FOR NON-OVARIAN/ADNEXAL MALIG W/O CC .........................
FEMALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM RECONSTRUCTIVE PROCEDURES ...........................
UTERINE & ADNEXA PROC FOR OVARIAN OR ADNEXAL MALIGNANCY ..........................
UTERINE & ADNEXA PROC FOR NON-MALIGNANCY W CC ...............................................
UTERINE & ADNEXA PROC FOR NON-MALIGNANCY W/O CC ............................................
VAGINA, CERVIX & VULVA PROCEDURES ............................................................................
LAPAROSCOPY & INCISIONAL TUBAL INTERRUPTION .......................................................
ENDOSCOPIC TUBAL INTERRUPTION ...................................................................................
D&C, CONIZATION & RADIO-IMPLANT, FOR MALIGNANCY .................................................
D&C, CONIZATION EXCEPT FOR MALIGNANCY ...................................................................
CESAREAN SECTION W CC ....................................................................................................
CESAREAN SECTION W/O CC ................................................................................................
VAGINAL DELIVERY W COMPLICATING DIAGNOSES ..........................................................
VAGINAL DELIVERY W/O COMPLICATING DIAGNOSES ......................................................
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00114
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
171
171
185
160
183
185
185
189
191
193
197
197
210
210
210
218
237
237
237
253
253
274
274
270
274
273
281
292
63
63
63
297
318
318
306
308
310
312
312
318
321
321
321
325
325
325
332
335
306
339
339
339
339
339
365
365
365
365
365
365
365
365
383
383
383
383
383
383
383
383
Low-volume
quintile
assignment
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
3.
3.
2.
1.
1.
2.
2.
2.
5.
4.
4.
4.
5.
5.
5.
5.
1.
1.
1.
2.
2.
3.
3.
3.
3.
1.
2.
4.
4.
4.
4.
1.
3.
3.
4.
4.
4.
3.
3.
3.
1.
1.
1.
2.
2.
2.
1.
1.
4.
3.
3.
3.
3.
3.
4.
4.
4.
4.
4.
4.
4.
4.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
47983
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
NO VOLUME LTC-DRG CROSSWALK AND QUINTILE ASSIGNMENT FOR FY 2007—Continued
LTC–DRG
374
375
377
378
379
380
381
382
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
396
402
405
407
411
412
417
422
433
443
446
448
451
455
481
484
485
494
498
507
518
520
522
525
528
530
534
536
540
546
547
548
549
550
556
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
..................
558 ..................
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
559 ..................
577 ..................
VAGINAL DELIVERY W STERILIZATION &/OR D&C ..............................................................
VAGINAL DELIVERY W O.R. PROC EXCEPT STERIL &/OR D&C .........................................
POSTPARTUM & POST ABORTION DIAGNOSES W O.R. PROCEDURE .............................
ECTOPIC PREGNANCY ............................................................................................................
THREATENED ABORTION ........................................................................................................
ABORTION W/O D&C ................................................................................................................
ABORTION W D&C, ASPIRATION CURETTAGE OR HYSTEROTOMY .................................
FALSE LABOR ...........................................................................................................................
OTHER ANTEPARTUM DIAGNOSES W/O MEDICAL COMPLICATIONS ...............................
NEONATES, DIED OR TRANSFERRED TO ANOTHER ACUTE CARE FACILITY ................
EXTREME IMMATURITY OR RESPIRATORY DISTRESS SYNDROME, NEONATE .............
PREMATURITY W MAJOR PROBLEMS ...................................................................................
PREMATURITY W/O MAJOR PROBLEMS ...............................................................................
FULL TERM NEONATE W MAJOR PROBLEMS ......................................................................
NEONATE W OTHER SIGNIFICANT PROBLEMS ...................................................................
NORMAL NEWBORN .................................................................................................................
SPLENECTOMY AGE >17 .........................................................................................................
SPLENECTOMY AGE 0–17 .......................................................................................................
RED BLOOD CELL DISORDERS AGE 0–17 ............................................................................
LYMPHOMA & NON-ACUTE LEUKEMIA W OTHER O.R. PROC W/O CC .............................
ACUTE LEUKEMIA W/O MAJOR O.R. PROCEDURE AGE 0–17 ............................................
MYELOPROLIF DISORD OR POORLY DIFF NEOPL W MAJ O.R.PROC W/O CC ...............
HISTORY OF MALIGNANCY W/O ENDOSCOPY .....................................................................
HISTORY OF MALIGNANCY W ENDOSCOPY ........................................................................
SEPTICEMIA AGE 0–17 ............................................................................................................
VIRAL ILLNESS & FEVER OF UNKNOWN ORIGIN AGE 0–17 ...............................................
ALCOHOL/DRUG ABUSE OR DEPENDENCE, LEFT AMA .....................................................
OTHER O.R. PROCEDURES FOR INJURIES W/O CC ...........................................................
TRAUMATIC INJURY AGE 0–17 ...............................................................................................
ALLERGIC REACTIONS AGE 0–17 ..........................................................................................
POISONING & TOXIC EFFECTS OF DRUGS AGE 0–17 ........................................................
OTHER INJURY, POISONING & TOXIC EFFECT DIAG W/O CC ...........................................
BONE MARROW TRANSPLANT ...............................................................................................
CRANIOTOMY FOR MULTIPLE SIGNIFICANT TRAUMA ........................................................
LIMB REATTACHMENT, HIP & FEMUR PROC FOR MULTIPLE SIGNIFICANT TRAUMA ....
LAPAROSCOPIC CHOLECYSTECTOMY W/O C.D.E. W/O CC ..............................................
SPINAL FUSION EXCEPT CERVICAL W/O CC .......................................................................
FULL THICKNESS BURN W SKIN GRFT OR INHAL INJ W/O CC OR SIG TRAUMA ...........
PERCUTANEOUS CARDIOVASC PROC W/O CORONARY ARTERY STENT OR AMI ........
CERVICAL SPINAL FUSION W/O CC .......................................................................................
ALCOHOL/DRUG ABUSE OR DEPENDENCE W REHABILITATION THERAPY W/O CC .....
OTHER HEART ASSIST SYSTEM IMPLANT ............................................................................
INTRACRANIAL VASCULAR PROCEDURES W PDX HEMORRHAGE ..................................
VENTRICULAR SHUNT PROCEDURES W/O CC ....................................................................
EXTRACRANIAL PROCEDURES W/O CC ...............................................................................
CARDIAC DEFIB IMPLANT W CARDIAC CATH W/O AMI/HF/SHOCK ...................................
LYMPHOMA & LEUKEMIA W MAJOR O.R. PROCEDURE W/O CC .......................................
SPINAL FUSION EXC CERV WITH CURVATURE OF THE SPINE OR MALIG .....................
CORONARY BYPASS W CARDIAC CATH W MAJOR CV DX ................................................
CORONARY BYPASS W CARDIAC CATH W/O MAJOR CV DX ............................................
CORONARY BYPASS W/O CARDIAC CATH W MAJOR CV DX ............................................
CORONARY BYPASS W/O CARDIAC CATH W/O MAJOR CV DX .........................................
PERCUTANEOUS CARDIOVASC PROC W NON-DRUG-ELUTING STENT W/O MAJ CV
DX.
PERCUTANEOUS CARDIOVASCULAR PROC W DRUG-ELUTING STENT W/O MAJ CV
DX.
ACUTE ISCHEMIC STROKE WITH USE OF THROMBOLYTIC AGENT .................................
CAROTID ARTERY STENT PROCEDURE ...............................................................................
To illustrate this methodology for
determining the relative weights for the
183 LTC–DRGs with no LTCH cases, we
are providing the following examples,
which refer to the no volume LTC–DRGs
crosswalk information for FY 2007
provided in the chart above.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Crosswalked
LTC–DRG
Description
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Example 1: There were no cases in the
FY 2005 MedPAR file used for this final
rule for LTC–DRG 3 (Craniotomy Age 0–
17). Since the procedure is similar in
resource use and the length and
complexity of the procedures and the
length of stay are similar, we
determined that LTC–DRG 1
PO 00000
Frm 00115
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Low-volume
quintile
assignment
383
383
383
383
383
383
383
383
383
383
383
383
383
383
383
383
197
197
399
395
404
408
173
173
576
426
523
445
445
447
449
449
394
1
487
493
497
511
125
497
521
468
1
529
500
517
399
499
517
517
517
517
125
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
Quintile
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
1.
4.
4.
1.
2.
3.
4.
2.
2.
3.
1.
1.
2.
2.
2.
3.
3.
4.
5.
4.
4.
5.
1.
1.
5.
2.
5.
5.
5.
4.
4.
1.
5.
4.
4.
4.
4.
1.
125
Quintile 1.
16
533
Quintile 3.
Quintile 4
(Craniotomy Age >17 with CC), which is
assigned to low-volume Quintile 5 for
the purpose of determining the FY 2007
relative weights, would display similar
clinical and resource use. Therefore, we
assigned the same relative weight of
LTC–DRG 1 of 1.6835 (Quintile 5) for
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47984
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
FY 2007 (Table 11 in the Addendum to
this final rule) to LTC–DRG 3.
Example 2: There were no LTCH
cases in the FY 2005 MedPAR file used
in this final rule for LTC–DRG 91
(Simple Pneumonia and Pleurisy Age 0–
17). Since the severity of illness in
patients with pneumonia and pleurisy is
similar in patients regardless of age, we
determined that LTC–DRG 90 (Simple
Pneumonia and Pleurisy Age >17
Without CC) would display similar
clinical and resource use characteristics
and have a similar length of stay to
LTC–DRG 91. There were over 25 cases
in LTC–DRG 90 in the FY 2005 MedPAR
file data used determining the FY 2007
LTC–DRG relative weights in this final
rule. Therefore, it would not be assigned
to a low-volume quintile for the purpose
of determining the LTC–DRG relative
weights. However, under our
established methodology, LTC–DRG 91,
with no LTCH cases, would need to be
grouped to a low-volume quintile. We
determined that the low-volume
quintile with the closest weight to LTC–
DRG 90 (0.4958) (refer to Table 11 in the
Addendum to this final rule) would be
low-volume Quintile 2 (0.5594) (refer to
Table 11 in the Addendum to this final
rule). Therefore, we assigned LTC–DRG
91 a relative weight of 0.5694 for FY
2007. We note that we will continue to
monitor the volume (that is, the number
of LTCH cases) that have few or no
LTCH cases to ensure that our no
volume LTC–DRG crosswalking and
relative weight assignment results in
appropriate payments for such cases
and does not result in an unintended
financial incentive for LTCHs to
inappropriately admit these types of
cases.
Furthermore, as was proposed, we are
establishing LTC–DRG relative weights
of 0.0000 for heart, kidney, liver, lung,
pancreas, and simultaneous pancreas/
kidney transplants (LTC–DRGs 103, 302,
480, 495, 512, and 513, respectively) for
FY 2007 in this final rule because
Medicare will only cover these
procedures if they are performed at a
hospital that has been certified for the
specific procedures by Medicare and
presently no LTCH has been so certified.
Based on our research, we found that
most LTCHs only perform minor
surgeries, such as minor small and large
bowel procedures, to the extent any
surgeries are performed at all. Given the
extensive criteria that must be met to
become certified as a transplant center
for Medicare, we believe it is unlikely
that any LTCHs would become certified
as a transplant center. In fact, in the
nearly 20 years since the
implementation of the IPPS, there has
never been a LTCH that even expressed
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
an interest in becoming a transplant
center.
However, if in the future a LTCH
applies for certification as a Medicareapproved transplant center, we believe
that the application and approval
procedure would allow sufficient time
for us to determine appropriate weights
for the LTC–DRGs affected. At the
present time, we would only include
these six transplant LTC–DRGs in the
GROUPER program for administrative
purposes. Because we use the same
GROUPER program for LTCHs as is used
under the IPPS, removing these LTC–
DRGs would be administratively
burdensome.
Again, we note that, as this system is
dynamic, it is entirely possible that the
number of LTC–DRGs with a zero
volume of LTCH cases based on the
system will vary in the future. We used
the best most recent available claims
data in the MedPAR file to identify zero
volume LTC–DRGs and to determine the
relative weights in this final rule.
Table 11 in the Addendum to this
final rule lists the LTC–DRGs and their
respective relative weights, geometric
mean length of stay, and five-sixths of
the geometric mean length of stay (to
assist in the determination of short-stay
outlier payments under § 412.529) for
FY 2007.
We also wish to point out that in
section VI.A.5. of the preamble of this
rule, we discuss our revision to the
regulations for grandfathered HwHs,
grandfathered hospital satellite
facilities, and grandfathered satellite
units at §§ 412.22(f), 412.22(h), and
412.25(e), respectively. In addition, in
section VI.A.6. of the preamble of this
final rule, we discuss our revision and
clarification to the existing policies
governing the determination of LTCHs’
CCRs and the reconciliation of high-cost
and short-stay outlier payments under
the LTCH PPS based on the proposal
presented in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule (71 FR 24126 through 24135).
5. Summary of Public Comments and
Departmental Responses
Comment: Numerous commenters
opposed the proposed changes in the
LTC–DRG weights, which they noted
would result in an approximately 1.4
percent decrease in estimate aggregate
payments to LTCHs. Several of the
commenters noted that LTCHs had been
subject to a number of ‘‘significant
Medicare payment reductions in recent
years,’’ including an estimated 4.2
percent reduction as a result of the
reweighting of the LTC–DRGs for FY
2006; a zero update (as opposed to a 3.4
percent market-basket increase) in the
Federal rate for RY 2007; an estimated
PO 00000
Frm 00116
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
3.7 percent decrease caused by the
revised short-stay outlier payment
policy for RY 2007; and, most recently,
the estimated 1.4 percent reduction as a
result of the proposed reclassification
and reweighting of the LTC–DRGs for
FY 2007. The commenters maintained
that the cumulative effect of these
established and proposed Medicare
payment reductions is not sustainable
for the LTCH industry and will cause
much ‘‘volatility’’ for LTCH providers,
and also restrict access to LTCHs for
patients.
One commenter provided a chart that
indicated that if CMS finalizes the
proposed LTC–DRG relative weights,
LTCH industry-wide margins would
approximate 0 percent. Another
commenter, an association that
represents large LTCH chains, urged
CMS to postpone implementation of the
proposed FY 2007 reweighting of the
LTC–DRGs until an analysis of the
impact of this change on payment
adequacy, as well as other payment
changes established for RY 2007, is
conducted.
Response: While we understand the
commenters’ concerns with the
estimated decrease of 1.4 percent in
LTCH PPS payments as a result of the
proposed changes in the LTC–DRGs,
and relative weights for FY 2007, we did
not propose any changes in the
methodology used to determine the
proposed recalibration of the LTC–DRG
relative weights for FY 2007. (We note
that based on the final LTCH–DRG
relative weights for FY 2007 the
estimate is a 1.3 percent decrease.) The
proposed update to the LTC–DRG
relative weights for FY 2007 is based on
the proposed Version 24.0 of the CMS
GROUPER (including the proposed
changes in the DRG classifications
relative weights and geometric mean
length of stay) and FY 2005 LTCH
claims data. For this final rule, we used
updated data as described previously. In
the FY 2003 final rule for the LTCH
PPS, which first implemented the
payment system, we described in great
detail, the methodology for the
development of the LTC–DRG relative
weights, and we have reiterated these
steps in every subsequent rulemaking
cycle. (When we revised our regulations
at § 412.535, establishing the LTCH PPS
rate year, while still publishing the
LTC–DRG updates on the Federal fiscal
year (October through September) cycle,
we continued to include a brief writeup of our LTC–DRG update
methodology in the annual LTCH PPS
proposed and final rules and a
comprehensive description of the policy
in the annual IPPS proposed and final
rules (67 FR 55984–55995; 68 FR
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
34131–34132; 69 FR 25681; 69 FR
48989–48999; 70 FR 24177–24178; 70
FR 37323–37341; and 71 FR 27808).)
There has been no methodological
change in the way in which the LTC–
DRG relative weights are computed
since the implementation of the LTCH
PPS. The annual determination of the
LTC–DRG relative weights is datadriven; that is, based on claims data in
the most current MedPAR files which
are derived from patient bills submitted
by LTCHs.
We agree with the commenters who
noted that the LTCH industry has
indeed been impacted by significant
changes since the start of the LTCH PPS
for FY 2003. Since we first established
the LTCH PPS, the unadjusted Federal
payment rate, which began at
$34,956.15, increased to $38,086.64 for
RY 2006. (The zero percent update
finalized in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final
rule (71 FR 27798) resulted in the
stabilization of this amount for RY
2007.) From RY 2005 to RY 2006, there
was a 5.7 percent increase in estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments (70 FR
24217). The average Medicare payment
per case for FY 2003 was reported at
$26,751, while, for RY 2006, it was
estimated to be $33,208, which is an
increase of over 24 percent.
Significantly, there was a 13.8 percent
increase in estimated Medicare
payments to LTCHs in RY 2005 alone.
The results of the first 2 years of this
‘‘volatility’’ were aggregate industry
margins estimated at 7.8 percent for FY
2003, and for FY 2004, preliminary cost
report data revealed an estimated
average Medicare margin of 12.7
percent, as stated in the RY 2007 LTCH
PPS final rule (71 FR 27819).
The commenters noted the Medicare
payment reductions in recent years,
including the estimated 4.2 percent
reduction for FY 2006 due to the
recalibration of the LTC–DRG weights
and the estimated 1.4 percent decrease
in aggregate LTCH PPS payments due to
the proposed update to the LTC–DRG
relative weights for FY 2007. As noted
above, the decrease in average case-mix
based on the proposed LTC–DRG
relative weights for FY 2007 as
compared to FY 2006, as well as the
decrease in average case-mix from FY
2006 as compared to FY 2005, which
were estimated to result in an aggregate
estimated decrease in LTCH PPS
payments, were data driven. For this
final rule they remain data driven as
well. In the FY 2006 IPPS proposed rule
(70 FR 23667), we noted that we
continued to observe a significant
increase of relatively lower charge cases
being assigned to LTC–DRGs with
higher relative weights in the prior year.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
The addition of these lower charge cases
resulted in a decrease in many of the
LTC–DRG relative weights from FY
2005 to FY 2006. This decrease in many
of the LTC–DRG relative weights, in
turn, resulted in an estimated decrease
in LTCH PPS payments from FY 2005 to
FY 2006. As we explained in that same
rule, contributing to this increased
number of relatively lower charge cases
being assigned to LTC–DRGs with
higher relative weights in the prior year
were improvements in coding practices,
which are typically found when moving
from a reasonable cost-based payment
system to a PPS.
Our analyses of data from the March
2005 update of the FY 2004 MedPAR
files, which were used to calculate the
FY 2006 LTC–DRG relative weights, and
the most recent update of the FY 2005
MedPAR files which were used to
determine the proposed and final FY
2007 LTC–DRG relative weights
continue to show an increase of
relatively lower charge cases being
assigned to LTC–DRGs with higher
relative weights in the prior year. As we
explained in the FY 2006 IPPS final rule
(70 FR 47335) and the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24413), the impact
of including cases with relatively lower
charges into LTC–DRGs that had a
relatively higher relative weight in the
previous fiscal year’s GROUPER is a
decrease in the average relative weight
for those LTC–DRGs, which, in turn,
may result in an estimated aggregate
decrease in LTCH PPS payments.
The commenters also mentioned the
zero update to the RY 2007 standard
Federal rate as one of the ‘‘significant
Medicare payment reductions in recent
years.’’ In the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final
rule (71 FR 27819 through 27827), we
explained our rationale for establishing
a zero percent update to the standard
Federal rate for the 2007 LTCH PPS rate
year, which was based on the most
recent estimate in the Rehabilitation,
Psychiatric and Long-Term Care (RPL)
market basket offset by an adjustment
for changes in coding practices that are
unrelated to case mix, rather than solely
using the most recent estimate of the
RPL market basket to update the RY
2006 Federal rate. This market basket
offset resulted from a number of factors
that included our ongoing monitoring
activities, which prompted us to
examine the changes in LTCHs’ patient
case-mix index and margins since the
inception of the LTCH PPS for FY 2003
(67 FR 56014).
First, we noted that there has been
tremendous growth in the number of
LTCHs reimbursed by Medicare.
Specifically, the number of LTCHs
almost doubled from approximately 200
PO 00000
Frm 00117
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47985
LTCHs in FY 2003 to 378 LTCHs at the
start of FY 2005. In addition, Medicare
spending for LTCHs has also grown
rapidly, as noted in MedPAC’s June
2004 Report to Congress (page 122).
Rapid increases in LTCH growth and
Medicare spending under the LTCH
PPS, in conjunction with the fact that
over 98 percent of LTCHs are currently
paid based fully on the Federal rate
(rather than choosing to be paid under
a blend of the reasonable cost-based
(TEFRA) payment amount and the
LTCH PPS Federal rate payment
amount), prompted us to examine
changes in LTCHs’ patient case-mix
index and margins under the LTCH PPS.
We believed the zero percent update
factor for RY 2007, which was based on
the most recent estimate of the RPL
market basket at that time, adjusted to
account for coding changes, was
supported by our findings regarding the
case-mix index, Medicare margins, and
patient census based on the most recent
complete LTCH data.
As we explained in considerable
detail in the RY 2007 final rule for the
LTCH PPS (71 FR 27818 through
27824), a LTCH’s case-mix index is
defined as the case-weighted average
LTC–DRG relative weight for all its
discharges in a given period. Changes in
the case-mix index consist of two
components: ‘‘real’’ case-mix index
changes and ‘‘apparent’’ case-mix index
changes. Real case-mix index increase is
defined as the increase in the average
LTC–DRG relative weights resulting
from the hospital’s treatment of more
resource intensive patients. Apparent
case-mix index increase is defined as
the increase in computed case-mix
index that is due to changes in coding
practices (including better
documentation of the medical record by
physicians and more complete coding of
the medical record by coders). Observed
case-mix index increase is defined as
real case-mix index increase plus the
apparent case-mix index increase.
If LTCH patients have more costly
impairments, lower functional status, or
increased comorbidities, and thus
require more resources in the LTCH, we
consider this a real change in case-mix.
Conversely, if LTCH patients have the
same impairments, functional status,
and comorbidities but are coded
differently resulting in higher payment,
we consider this an apparent change in
case-mix. We believe that changes in
payment rates should accurately reflect
changes in LTCHs’ true cost of treating
patients (real case-mix index increase),
and should not be influenced by
changes in coding practices (apparent
case-mix index increase). Apparent
case-mix index increase results in a case
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47986
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
being grouped to a LTC–DRG with a
higher weight than it would be without
such changes in coding practices, which
results in a higher payment to the LTCH
that does not necessarily reflect the true
cost of treating the patient. Therefore, in
the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR
27798) under the broad discretionary
authority conferred upon the Secretary
by section 123 of the BBRA as amended
by section 307(b) of the BIPA to include
appropriate adjustments, including
updates, in the establishment of the
LTCH PPS, we revised the annual
update to the LTCH PPS standard
Federal rate set forth at § 412.523(a)(2)
for the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year to
adjust the payment amount for LTCH
inpatient hospital services to eliminate
the effect of coding or classification
changes that do not reflect real changes
in LTCHs’ case-mix.
Our determination to specifically
provide a zero update resulted from data
analysis by 3M Health Information
Systems (3M) regarding changes in casemix and coding since the
implementation of the LTCH PPS, based
on the most recently available data,
which compared FY 2003 LTCH claims
data from the first year of
implementation of the PPS with FY
2004 LTCH claims data, and also looked
at FY 2001 claims data (generated prior
to the implementation of the LTCH
PPS). (The FY 2001 data was the same
LTCH claims data used to develop the
LTCH PPS.) The analysis indicated,
among other things, that the average
annual case-mix index increase from FY
2001 to FY 2003 was 2.75 percent. Since
coding of diagnoses was not a factor in
determining payments under the former
reasonable cost-based (TEFRA) payment
system, and since payments were not
directly tied to diagnosis codes, there
was no incentive for LTCHs to attempt
to influence payments through changes
in coding practices. Therefore, it was
reasonable to assume that the observed
2.75 percent change in case-mix in the
years prior to the implementation of the
LTCH PPS represent the value for the
real case-mix index increase (that is, we
assumed that the 2.75 percent increase
in case-mix is due to treatment of more
resource intensive patients, rather than
to improvements in documentation or
more complete coding of the medical
record during this period). Using the
average annual 2.75 percent observed
case-mix index increase as a baseline,
we separated the computed case-mix
index increase between FY 2003 and FY
2004 into the real case-mix index
increase, which is based on the
treatment of more resource intensive
patients, and the apparent case-mix
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
index increase, due to improvements in
documentation and coding practices.
As we stated in the RY 2007 LTCH
PPS final rule (71 FR 27820), the
calculated observed case-mix index
increase between FY 2003 and FY 2004
was 6.75 percent. Assuming that the real
case-mix index increase observed (on
average) from FY 2001 to FY 2003
remained relatively constant into FY
2004, then the difference of 4.0 percent
(6.75 percent minus 2.75 percent)
represented the apparent case-mix index
increase that was due to improvements
in documentation and coding. This was
considerably higher than the 0.34
percent behavioral offset originally
estimated by the CMS Office of the
Actuary, which was used in the
development of the FY 2003 LTCH PPS
standard Federal rate (67 FR 56033).
Therefore, we believed that it was
appropriate that the market basket be
offset by an adjustment to account for
changes in coding practices that do not
reflect changes in real case mix. This
adjustment was implemented to ensure
that the LTCH PPS payment rates
continue to reflect, as closely as
possible, the true costs of treating LTCH
patients. It was our intent that such an
adjustment to the most recent estimate
of the LTCH PPS market basket would
eliminate the effect of coding or
classification changes that did not
reflect real changes in LTCHs’ case-mix
in prior years.
Regarding the impact of the revised
short-stay outlier policy on Medicare
payments to LTCHs, we continue to
believe that the revisions we established
to the short-stay outlier payment
adjustments in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
final rule were highly appropriate and
that they provide fair and reasonable
payment for short-stay patients in
LTCHs, which are required to meet the
same certification criteria as short-term
acute care hospitals set forth in section
1861(e) of the Act and generally have an
average length of stay of greater than 25
days. Therefore, our present policy
under the short-stay outlier policy at
§ 412.529, effective for discharges
beginning on or after July 1, 2006, is to
base Medicare payment on the least of
100 percent of the estimated costs of the
discharge, 120 percent of the LTC–DRG
per diem payment amount multiplied
by the length of stay, the full LTC–DRG
payment, or a LTCH PPS payment based
on a blend of the IPPS-comparable per
diem payment amount (capped at the
full IPPS comparable payment amount)
and a payment based on 120 percent of
the LTC–DRG per diem amount.
We believe that this finalized policy
clearly demonstrates our rationale,
which is that as the length of a short-
PO 00000
Frm 00118
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
stay outlier case increases, the case
begins to resemble a more ‘‘typical’’
LTCH stay as defined under section
1886(d)(1)(B)(IV)(I) of the Act and
envisioned by the statutes authorizing
the establishment of the LTCH PPS.
Furthermore, the estimated 3.7 percent
decrease in payments cited by the
commenters will only have an impact
on payments to those LTCHs that
continue to admit a large number of
very short-stay patients. We believe that
the previous short-stay outlier policy,
under which Medicare paid the least of
120 percent of the estimated cost of the
case, 120 percent of the per diem LTC–
DRG multiplied by the length of stay, or
the full LTC–DRG, inadvertently
provided an incentive for a LTCH to
inappropriately admit patients who
could otherwise have been treated in
acute care hospitals and paid for under
the IPPS. Therefore, we believe the
provisions of the short-stay outlier
policy that were finalized in the RY
2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27845
through 27872) will result in fair and
equitable payment for short-stay
patients at LTCHs.
In response to the commenter who
provided a chart that indicated
industry-wide margins of approximately
zero percent because of the proposed
changes in the LTC–DRG relative
weights that are anticipated to result
from the 1.4 percent payment reduction,
we continue to believe that our case-mix
analysis (case-mix index) and Medicare
margins analysis are sound. In the RY
2007 final rule for the LTCH PPS, we
calculated ‘‘revenue-weighted’’
Medicare margins, which are the sum of
hospital inpatient Medicare revenue
(payments) minus the sum of hospital
inpatient Medicare expenses (costs)
divided by the sum of hospital inpatient
Medicare revenue (payments). This
margin analysis, which is also utilized
by MedPAC in its analyses, is used to
evaluate the overall financial status of
LTCHs in general. In our analysis of the
latest available LTCH data, we found
that LTCH Medicare margins for FY
2003 (the first year of the LTCH PPS)
were 7.8 percent, and preliminary data
for FY 2004 based on the most recent
HCRIS data revealed an even higher
Medicare margin of 12.7 percent.
Moreover, our analysis of LTCHs’
payments and costs per discharge based
on the latest available cost report data
supports our adjustment to account for
changes in coding practices that do not
reflect changes in real case mix because
it shows that, while payments (revenue)
increased approximately 15 percent
from FY 2002 to FY 2003, costs
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
(expenses) per discharge increased by
only 8 percent for the same period.
Thus, payments to LTCHs from FY
2002 to FY 2003 increased almost twice
as much as the increase of costs for the
same period. We also noted that even
though we established a zero update to
the Federal payment rate for RY 2007,
we continue to believe that, based on
the sizeable Medicare margins among
LTCHs, the standard rate for the RY
2007 LTCH PPS will not affect
beneficiary access to LTCH services
because LTCHs will continue to be paid
adequately to reflect the cost of
resources needed to treat Medicare
beneficiaries. We also note that
MedPAC’s March 2006 Report to
Congress on Medicare Payment Policy
included similar data on margins and,
based on its indepth evaluation of
payment adequacy for LTCHs for 2006,
MedPAC recommended that there be no
update to the LTCH PPS Federal rate for
RY 2007.
In addition, we do not believe that it
would be appropriate to ‘‘postpone
implementation’’ of the proposed
reweighting of the LTC–DRGs pending
an analysis of the impact on LTCH
payment adequacy of this change, as
well as other payment changes
established for LTCHs for RY 2007. The
annual recalibration of the LTC–DRG
relative weights, which is based on
patient data, is one of the cornerstones
of all prospective payment systems. To
reiterate, we believe that the policies
finalized for RY 2007, including the
zero percent update to the standard
Federal rate and the payment
adjustment for short-stay outlier cases,
do not provide any impediment to the
ability of LTCHs to continue to maintain
the quality or the availability of
appropriately delivered LTCH services
to Medicare beneficiaries.
Comment: Several comments
questioned the methodology that we
used that distinguishes between
payment ‘‘reductions’’ resulting from
the zero update to the standard Federal
rate finalized in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
final rule and payment reductions
resulting from the proposed reweighting
of the LTC–DRGs for FY 2007. One
commenter asserted that CMS has
utilized the same rationale as a basis to
propose to reduce the FY 2007 LTC–
DRG relative weights that were used to
apply a zero percent update in the RY
2007 LTCH PPS final rule. The
commenters believed CMS has doublecounted the same phenomenon.
Another commenter stated that,
because the LTC–DRG relative weights
are not updated in a budget-neutral
manner, through the annual
recalibration of the weights, the LTC–
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
DRG system will ‘‘self-correct over
time’’ without the need for any lowering
of the Federal payment rate. The
commenter believed that this nonbudget neutral weight recalibration will
continue to correct for the case-mix
creep until coding improvement reaches
a plateau, at which point annual casemix variation will reflect actual
variations in case-mix intensity. Citing
our justification of ‘‘apparent’’ as
opposed to real case-mix increase based
on FY 2004 LTCH data for the zero
percent update to the Federal rate for
RY 2007, the commenter believed that
CMS has overpenalized LTCHs by a net
4.2 percent. The commenter
recommended that CMS work with the
industry to establish an update system
that eliminates the possibility of ‘‘over
reduction’’ due to case-mix creep by one
of the following options: implementing
a budget neutral recalibration system
and address case-mix creep through the
update; or alternatively, maintaining the
current non-budget neutral weight
recalibration system but foregoing any
future Federal rate update reduction for
case-mix creep.
Response: The commenters have
expressed concern that, if we finalize
the proposed change in the FY 2007
LTC–DRG relative weights, the change
would result in an estimated 1.4 percent
decrease in payments. Because we have
already finalized the zero update to the
RY 2007 standard Federal rate, the
commenters believe we will have
reduced payments to LTCHs twice for
the same phenomenon. We would like
to remind the commenters that the ‘‘zero
percent’’ update to the Federal rate for
RY 2007 did not reduce LTCH PPS
payments from their previous level.
Instead, the Federal rate remained at
$38,086.04 from RY 2006 to RY 2007.
Furthermore, we disagree and do not
believe that LTCHs are being penalized
twice, once through adjustment of the
standard Federal rate and again due to
the proposed and finalized recalibration
of the LTC–DRG relative weights for FY
2007.
In the LTCH PPS RY 2007 final rule,
we addressed a similar allegation by
commenters that we were ‘‘unfairly
penalizing’’ LTCHs twice in proposing
the zero percent update to the standard
Federal rate as a remedy for
inappropriate Medicare payments to
LTCHs resulting from ‘‘case-mix creep’’
(that is, the ‘‘apparent’’ case-mix index
increase) between FYs 2003 and 2004.
At that time, several commenters stated
that CMS had already corrected any
coding issues from FY 2004 by the
annual recalibration of the LTC–DRGs
for FY 2006 based on case-mix changes
from FYs 2003 and 2004, which resulted
PO 00000
Frm 00119
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47987
in an estimated decrease of 4.2 percent
in payments to LTCHs.
In the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule
(71 FR 27882), we presented the
explanation of the distinction between
the annual reweighting of the LTC–
DRGs, which we expect to result in
appropriate payments for the
forthcoming fiscal year’s LTCH
discharges, and determinations
regarding the appropriate application of
adjustments to the market basket
increase applied to the standard Federal
rate which was established to account
for payments made in a prior year that
were based on improved coding rather
than increased patient severity (71 FR
27821). At that time, we reviewed the
discussion in the FY 2006 IPPS final
rule (70 FR 47701–47702) in which we
estimated that a payment reduction of
¥4.2 percent would result from the FY
2006 recalibration of the LTC–DRG
relative weights, which were based on
LTCH claims data from the FY 2004
MedPAR file. We stated ‘‘* * * [t]hus
FY 2004 LTCH claims data, which
reflected improved coding, were used to
determine the LTC–DRG relative
weights used to pay LTCH PPS
discharges occurring during FY 2006.
While it is true that the reweighting of
the LTC–DRGs using FY 2004 LTCH
claims served to update the relative
weights based on actual claims data in
each LTC–DRG, which also reflects
coding improvements that occurred in
FY 2004, the recalibration of LTC–DRG
weights only corrects for any coding
improvement for the purpose of making
accurate LTCH PPS payments in FY
2006.’’ (71 FR 27822)
However, annual recalibration does
not serve to account for payments that
were made based on improved coding
(rather than patient severity) in prior
years. The case-mix adjustment to the
market basket in determining the RY
2007 Federal rate is meant to reduce
current payments to account for the
increase payments that occurred in FY
2004 that resulted from the CMI
increase that is attributable to ‘‘casemix’’ creep in that year 71 FR 27822).
We also explained the rationale and
computations underlying our update for
RY 2007 in that same final rule: ‘‘In the
RY 2007 LTCH PPS proposed rule, we
proposed to offset the market basket by
an amount equal to the increase in case
mix that was due solely to improved
documentation and coding rather than
changes in real case mix. At the time of
the proposed rule, that increase was
within rounding error of the market
basket, and therefore resulted in a
proposed Federal rate for RY 2007 that
was equal to the RY 2006 Federal rate,
and not a reduction to the RY 2006
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47988
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Federal rate.’’ (71 FR 27821). Therefore,
this policy determination regarding the
market basket increase of zero percent
for RY 2007 was based on changes in
the LTCHs’ case-mix indices in
conjunction with a broader analysis of
trends in the LTCH industry (noted
most recently by MedPAC in the
Commission’s March 2006 Report to the
Congress (page 211)) and in particular,
driven by a detailed analysis of LTCH
margins since the implementation of the
LTCH PPS. As we stated in that same
final rule, we believe that, in
determining the Federal rate update for
RY 2007, it is appropriate to apply an
adjustment to the most recent estimate
of the LTCH PPS market basket to
eliminate the effects of coding and
classification changes that do not reflect
changes in real case-mix. This
adjustment is necessary to account for
prior year payments that were made
based on improved coding practices
(rather than increased patient severity)
(71 FR 27821). Furthermore, we note
that FY 2004 LTCH claims data were
used to determine the adjustment to the
market basket to account for changes in
coding practices in establishing the zero
percent update to the Federal rate for
RY 2007, while FY 2005 LTCH claims
data were used to determine the
proposed and final FY 2007 LTC–DRG
relative weights. Because LTCH claims
data from different years were used to
determine the two adjustments noted by
the commenters, we further disagree
that we ‘‘double counted the same
phenomenon.’’
Regarding our margins analysis, based
on data from the LTCHs’ cost reports
received as of December 31, 2005,
updated LTCH margins analysis for the
LTCH PPS RY 2007 final rule continued
to show high Medicare margins among
LTCHs since the implementation of the
LTCH PPS in FY 2003. As noted in the
RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule, ‘‘[w]e
calculated ‘revenue-weighted’ Medicare
margins, which are the sum of hospital
inpatient Medicare revenue (payments)
minus the sum of hospital inpatient
Medicare expenses (costs) divided by
the sum of hospital inpatient Medicare
revenue (payments). This margin
calculation, also utilized by MedPAC in
its analyses, is used to evaluate the
overall financial status of LTCHs in
general. In an analysis of the latest
available LTCH cost reports, we found
that LTCH Medicare margins for FY
2003 (the first year of the LTCH PPS)
were 7.8 percent and preliminary cost
report data for FY 2004 based on the
most recent update to the cost report
data in HCRIS reveal an even higher
Medicare margin of 12.7 percent. For
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
periods prior to the implementation of
the LTCH PPS (that is, FY 1999 through
FY 2002), we found that aggregate
Medicare margins ranged between a
minimum of ¥2.3 percent in FY 2000,
and a maximum of 1.5 percent in FY
2002.’’ (71 FR 27823).
We wish to emphasize that, as we
specified in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
proposed rule, the large observed
increase in LTCH case-mix was not
accompanied by a corresponding
increase in Medicare costs. This was
consistent with our belief expressed
earlier that a significant part of this
observed increase in case-mix was
‘‘apparent’’ and not ‘‘real.’’ In
conjunction with an increase in real
case-mix (that is, patient severity), we
would have expected to see a significant
increase in costs per discharge, even
taking into account LTCH operating
efficiencies, to pay for the resources
needed to treat sicker patients.
Consistent with MedPAC’s most recent
research discussed in its March 2006
Report to Congress (section 4C), our
margins analysis indicated that, in spite
of the estimated real increase in casemix (severity of patients), payments to
LTCHs under the LTCH PPS are
generally more than adequate to cover
the Medicare costs of the inpatient
hospital services provided to LTCH
patients.
Therefore, for the reasons discussed
above, we disagree with the commenters
who believe that we ‘‘double counted
the same phenomenon.’’ To summarize,
the purpose of the adjustment to the
market basket which was to account for
changes in coding practices that
resulted in a zero percent update to the
Federal rate for RY 2007 and the
changes in payments that will result
from the proposed and final reweighting
of the LTC–DRGs are different.
Specifically, the objective of our
adjustment to the standard Federal rate
update for RY 2007 was to adjust
payments to account for prior year
payments made by the Medicare
program that were due to changes in
coding practices, that did not reflect
actual costs of beneficiary care.
However, the annual recalibration of the
relative weights for LTC–DRGs reflects
the variation in coding practices and
charges from the previous year and it
helps ensure that the LTC–DRG relative
weights in the upcoming fiscal year will
result in appropriate payments to
LTCHs for the resources they expend to
treat patients. This was the case for FY
2006, when LTC–DRG relative weight
recalibrations were estimated to result
in a payment decrease of 4.2 percent
and it was also the case for the
estimated 1.4 percent decrease based on
PO 00000
Frm 00120
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
the proposed LTC–DRG relative weights
for FY 2007. It is also the case for the
estimated 1.3 percent decrease in this
final rule due to the recalibration of the
LTC–DRG relative weights.
Therefore, in response to the
commenter who presented an ‘‘either/
or’’ scenario suggesting that we should
adjust payments based on case-mix
variation through the present (that is,
not budget neutral) recalibration of the
LTC–DRG relative weights but forego
any future Federal rate update for casemix creep, or we should address ‘‘casemix creep’’ through the annual update
in the Federal rate but implement a
budget neutral recalibration system, we
do not believe that this approach is
appropriate, given that, as discussed in
greater detail above, the purposes of the
case-mix adjustments in each context
are distinct. It is possible that if coding
practices stabilize and reach ‘‘a
plateau,’’ as one of the commenters
suggested, and case-mix variation only
reflects real variations in case-mix
intensity, the ‘‘self-correcting’’
mechanism of the annual recalibrations
of LTC–DRG relative weights may be a
reliable indication of actual costs at
LTCHs by DRG. However, we emphasize
that there is a distinct difference
between the payment adjustments that
could result from data-driven
determinations that we consider, as
described earlier, when we promulgate
our policy regarding the annual
application of the market basket update
to the standard Federal rate and the
data-driven effects of the recalibration of
the LTC–DRG relative weights.
Moreover, we do not believe that the
zero update to the standard Federal rate
implemented for RY 2007, which was
intended to adjust for payments that
were reflective of payments that were
made based on improved coding rather
than patient severity in 2004, and the
reweighting of the relative weights for
the LTC–DRGs, which would only
address making appropriate payments
for FY 2007, have resulted in an ‘‘over
reduction’’ of payments to LTCHs, or
overpenalized the LTCH industry.
As we have stated most recently in
the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule, we
discussed a potential framework to
update payments to LTCHs that would
account for appropriate factors that
affect efficient delivery of services and
care to Medicare beneficiaries (71 FR
27818), and we have solicited comments
on the presentation of a model for such
a framework presented in Appendix A
of that final rule. Presently, however, in
the absence of a more comprehensive
update framework, we believe that it is
necessary and appropriate for us to
evaluate the need of applying an
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
adjustment to the full market-basket
increase, based upon the best available
data and policy considerations.
Similarly, we believe it is appropriate to
update the LTC–DRG relative weights
based on the latest available data
because the more recent data ensure that
the LTC DRG relative weights for FY
2007 best reflect the resources actually
used in the treatment of LTCH patients.
Comment: Several commenters
discussed the impact of policies that we
proposed under the IPPS for short-term,
acute care hospitals (that is, the
adoption of severity-adjusted DRGs; and
the implementation of HSRVcc (costbased weights) methodology for
calibration of DRG weights) in their
evaluation of the proposed 1.4 decrease
in the LTC–DRG payments based on the
proposed LTC–DRG changes for FY
2007. Both commenters urged us not to
implement the proposed LTC–DRG
relative weights because they believe
that the discussion of the severityadjusted DRGs in the proposed rule
emphasized the fact that the LTC–DRG
classifications, as they currently exist,
do not accurately capture the full
measure of severity for LTCH patients.
One commenter commissioned a
study by the Lewin Group that utilized
claims data from the FY 2005 MedPAR
file and cost report data from FY 2003
to simulate the HSRVcc methodology
set forth in the proposed rule. The
commenter stated that the result was
that, rather than a estimated 1.4 percent
payment reduction, the HSRVcc method
of determining LTC–DRG relative
weights resulted in an estimated 1.5
percent increase in LTCH PPS
payments. The commenter added that
this indicates that there can be
reasonable differences as to what is the
most accurate method of establishing
relative weights under PPSs and that the
Secretary should adjust the LTC–DRG
weights this year on a budget-neutral
basis, thus eliminating the estimated 1.4
percent decrease based on the proposed
LTC–DRG relative weights. The
commenter recommended that, although
the authorizing legislation contemplates
that CMS use the most recently
available LTC–DRG weights for an
annual update, the Secretary could use
his broad authority to modify the LTC–
DRG payments, as appropriate, and in
order to accurately reflect current LTCH
patient care. The commenter believed
that the FY 2006 LTC–DRG relative
weights should be maintained for FY
2007 because they more accurately
account for the expected resources to be
used by LTCH patients in FY 2007.
Another commenter noted that, based
on the discussion in the FY 2007
proposed rule, CMS believes that
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
severity-adjusted DRGs would improve
the accuracy of the DRG system under
the IPPS, and consequently, the
commenter believed that, for FY 2008,
severity-adjusted LTC–DRGs could be
considered because they may better
account for differences in severity of
illnesses and associated costs across
hospitals. This commenter further stated
that higher weighted LTC–DRGs (and
the LTCHs that treat them) are more
vulnerable to the payment reductions
proposed for FY 2007 based on
proposed LTC–DRG relative weights
because payment rates for higher acuity
LTCH patients will be diluted by the FY
2005 upcoding of many lower severity
cases to the higher weighted DRGs. In
addition, the commenter pointed to the
revised short-stay outlier policy
established in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
final rule which, they believe, is
intended to reduce the number of loweracuity patients being treated in LTCHs,
and stated that those LTCH patients that
are not short-stay outlier cases will be
more typical of LTCH patients and,
therefore, have higher acuity. The same
commenter also mentioned that the FY
2005 data that are being proposed to be
used to reweight the LTC–DRGs for FY
2007 represent a system ‘‘still in flux’’
because the system is still transitioning
to full payment under the LTCH PPS
and only a portion of each case is being
paid based on LTC–DRGs. For these
reasons, the commenter urged CMS to
postpone further LTC–DRG rate
reductions and instead recommended
that CMS address coding improvements
comprehensively in FY 2008 under the
LTCH PPS in the context of the
improved severity measures proposed
under the IPPS for FY 2008 (or earlier).
Response: We understand that the
commenters are concerned with the 1.4
percent decrease in estimated
aggregated LTCH PPS payments for FY
2007 due to the proposed reweighting of
the LTC–DRGs. We also understand that
the commenters believe that the
adoption of a severity-adjusted patient
classification system under the LTCH
PPS applied to the LTC–DRGs and the
use of cost-based weights (HSRVcc)
methodology could result in a different
estimated aggregate payment change for
FY 2007. However, as we discussed in
greater detail below, we do not agree
that the FY 2006 relative weights would
more accurately represent resource use
by LTCH patients for FY 2007 and that
it would be necessary or appropriate to
postpone the finalization of the annual
reweighting of the LTC–DRGs. The
current (FY 2006) LTC–DRG relative
weights were determined based on FY
2004 LTCH claims data from the
PO 00000
Frm 00121
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47989
MedPAR files. For FY 2007, we
proposed to use our existing relative
weight methodology (established when
the LTCH PPS was implemented for FY
2003) and FY 2005 LTCH claims data
from the MEDPAR files to recalibrate
the LTC–DRG relative weights, as these
were currently the most recent complete
LTCH claims data. As was proposed, for
this final rule, we are using the March
2006 update of the FY 2005 MedPAR
files because this is currently the most
recent and complete LTCH claims data.
We believe that the FY 2005 data are the
best LTCH data available that reflect
LTCHs’ current treatment practice and
coding patterns. Therefore, because the
FY 2005 LTCH claims data better
reflects current LTCH behavior than the
FY 2004 LTCH claims data that was
used to determine the FY 2006 LTC–
DRG relative weights, we believe that
using this updated (FY 2005) LTCH
claims data with our existing relative
weight methodology will result in LTC–
DRG relative weights for FY 2007 that
will best reflect the resources actually
utilized by LTCHs in treating their
Medicare patients.
With respect to the accuracy of the
current LTCH–DRG system, we note the
following. For FY 2003, we decided to
adopt the current LTC–DRG system
stating, ‘‘the LTC–CMS–DRG system is a
system that is familiar to hospitals
because it is based on the current DRG
system under the acute care hospital
inpatient prospective payment system.
We believe that the familiarity of the
LTC–CMS–DRG model may best
facilitate the transition from the
reasonable cost-based system to the
prospective payment system as well as
providing continuity in payment
methodology across related sites of care
(for example, an acute care
hospitalization for a patient with a
chronic condition)’’ (67 FR 55966).
However, we have noted that we
believed that there may be significant
advantages in the use of severityadjusted LTC–DRGs. In fact, when we
were developing the LTCH PPS for FY
2003, we seriously considered using a
specially modified version of the APR–
DRGs (67 FR 55966–55967). At that
time, we stated:
‘‘The LTC–APR–DRGs, a condensed
version of 3M’s all-patient refined DRGs
(APR–DRGs) for acute care hospitals,
was developed by 3M Health
Information Systems, for exclusive use
in LTCHs. The LTC–APR–DRG system
was designed to reflect the clinical
characteristics of LTCH patients. This
case-mix classification model contains
26 base LTC–APR–DRGs, subdivided by
4 severity of illness levels to yield 104
classification levels. In this system, the
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47990
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
patient’s secondary diagnoses, their
interaction, and their clinical impact on
the primary diagnosis determine the
severity level assigned to each of the 26
LTC–APR–DRGs’’ (67 FR 55966).
When we decided to use the same
patient classification system as the IPPS,
following a comprehensive analysis of
both the LTC–APR–DRGs and the
existing DRG system (modified by the
use of quintiles for low volume DRGs)
for the particular purposes of patient
classification at LTCHs, we indicated
that we believed that either
classification system would result in
appropriate payments for LTCHs under
the PPS. However, we noted several
issues to consider concerning the LTC–
APR–DRG system, including—
‘‘* * * its complexity, its clinical
subjectivity, and its utility as it relates
to other Medicare prospective payment
systems. The LTC–APR–DRG model
provides a clinical description of the
population of LTCHs, patients
exhibiting a range of severity of illness
with multiple comorbidities as
indicated by secondary diagnoses. The
clinical interaction of the primary
diagnosis with these comorbidities
determines the severity level of the
primary diagnoses, resulting in the final
assignment to a LTC–APR–DRG by the
GROUPER software designed for this
system’’ (67 FR 55966).
We further noted that ‘‘* * *
determining whether particular
comorbidities increase the cost of a case
for a LTCH patient is complicated by the
nature of the clinical characteristics of
these patients. More specifically, many
LTCH patients have numerous
conditions that may not all be relevant
to the cost of care for a particular
discharge. Although the patient actually
has a specific condition, including this
condition among secondary diagnoses
coded under the LTC–APR–DRG system
may assign an inaccurate severity level
to the primary diagnosis and result in
inappropriate LTC–APR–DRG payment.
We also believe that reliance on existing
comorbidity information submitted on
LTCH bills could result in significant
variation in the assignment of the
specific LTC–APR–DRGs’’ (67 FR
55967).
We concluded our explanation in the
FY 2003 final rule for the LTCH PPS by
stating that ‘‘[e]ven though we are using
LTC–DRGs in the LTCH prospective
payment system in this final rule, we
may have the opportunity to propose a
severity-adjusted patient classification
for LTCHs in the future, particularly if
the acute care hospital inpatient
prospective payment system moves in
this direction’’ (67 FR 55967). As we
noted in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
rule, if and when a severity-adjusted
patient classification system is adopted
under the IPPS, we would need to
consider whether to propose revisions
to the patient classification system used
under the LTCH PPS. Any proposed
changes to the patient classification
system would be done through notice
and comment rulemaking (71 FR
24051). Subsequently, in 2005, MedPAC
recommended we refine the entire
inpatient acute care CMS DRG system to
take into account severity of illness and
apply HSRV weights to DRGs. However,
we believe that it is advantageous to the
LTCH community to wait for CMS to
first finalize its policies regarding any
refinements to the DRG system for the
IPPS so that we can fully analyze what
the effects of such changes would be on
LTCH PPS payments. To the extent any
changes for severity-adjusted DRGs for
the IPPS system have been finalized, an
analysis could then be performed to
determine whether it is appropriate to
propose the same severity-adjusted
patient classification for LTCHs. As we
stated in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule:
‘‘At that time, we would need to
consider whether to propose revisions
to the patient classification system
under the LTCH PPS. Any proposed
changes to the patient classification
system would be done through notice
and comment rulemaking’’ (71 FR
24051).
The commenters cited the virtues of
the severity-adjusted DRGs and one
commenter commissioned the above
described study to assess the validity of
our proposed update to the LTC–DRG
relative weights for FY 2007. In
response to these comments, we
reiterate that, while we understand that
applying the severity-adjusted DRGs
under the LTCH PPS could have an
impact on setting relative weights used
in determining LTCH PPS payments, we
would consider their use in the LTCH
PPS after we evaluate any DRG
refinements for the IPPS, as noted
above.
We note that while severity-adjusted
DRGs had been proposed under the
IPPS system for FY 2008 (or earlier), we
did not propose to revise the current
patient classification system used under
the LTC PPS. Because, as we explained
above, we believe any refinement due to
severity-adjusted DRGs for the IPPS
system would need to be evaluated to
determine whether it is appropriate to
use the same severity-adjusted DRGs for
LTCHs, we will, at that time, take into
consideration such issues as the impact
of treating higher acuity patients.
We have noted that some commenters
believe it is not appropriate that LTCHs
PO 00000
Frm 00122
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
be impacted by decreasing payments
because of the upcoding of lower acuity
patients to higher weighted LTC–DRGs,
as discussed in the previous responses.
However, as we discussed in the FY
2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR 24413),
many of the LTC–DRG relative weights
proposed for FY 2007 are lower than the
current (FY 2006) LTC–DRG relative
weight because based on the latest
available LTCH claims data, we
continue to observe an increase in the
number of relatively lower charge cases
being assigned to LTC–DRGs with
higher relative weights in prior years.
As explained previously, we believe
that using updated (FY 2005) LTCH
claims data will result in LTC–DRG
relative weights for FY 2007 that best
reflect the resources actually utilized by
LTCHs in treating their Medicare
patients and thereby act to ensure
appropriate LTCH PPS payments in FY
2007. The commenter is correct in
noting that it was our intention, when
we revised the short-stay outlier policy
described above, to reduce the number
or type of short-stay patients being
treated in LTCHs that do not utilize the
resources of ‘‘typical’’ LTCHs. Many of
these very short stay cases require more
appropriate treatment at another
hospital setting, such as an acute care
hospital. Therefore, we are not
convinced that reducing the number of
short stay patients treated at LTCHs will
necessarily result in higher LTC–DRG
weights in all LTC–DRGs or even in
higher weighted LTC–DRGs.
Moreover, since the implementation
of the LTCH PPS in FY 2003, we have
accounted for very short-stay and shortstay outliers cases in our LTC–DRG
relative weight methodology.
Specifically, we have removed cases
with a length of stay of 7 days or less
because we believed that they could
‘‘significantly bias payments against
inlier cases’’ (67 FR 55989). In addition,
the methodology includes a step to
adjust charges for the effects of shortstay outliers by ‘‘counting a short-stay
outlier as a fraction of a discharge based
on the ratio of the length of stay of the
case to the average length of stay for the
LTC–DRG.’’ Without this adjustment,
we maintained at that time that we
believed that ‘‘the relatively lower
charges of the short-stay outlier cases
bring down the average charge for all
cases within a LTC–DRG * * * [and]
result in an ‘underpayment’ to nonshortstay outlier cases * * *’’ (67 FR 55990).
Therefore, we do not believe that the
changes that we have made in the shortstay outlier policy in the RY 2007 LTCH
PPS final rule will affect the DRG
weights because our methodology has
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
always accounted for this potential
effect so that a reduction in short-stay
outlier cases will not necessarily result
in a significant change to the DRG
weights.
During the previous 4 years, while we
phased in to full payments under the
LTCH PPS, we have reweighted the
LTC–DRGs, with the result that for the
first year, there was an estimated
negligible increase in average payments
based upon the reweighting of the LTC–
DRGs (FY 2004 + 0.4 percent) and a
negligible decrease in estimated
payments based on the LTC–DRG
update in FY 2005 (FY 2005, ¥0.5
percent). For the subsequent 2 years,
there were decreases (FY 2006, ¥4.2
percent; proposed FY 2007, ¥1.4
percent). Although the LTCH PPS has
been evolving, we believe that using the
updated (FY 2005) LTCH claims data
with our existing relative weight
methodology will result in LTC–DRG
relative weights for FY 2007 that will
best reflect the resources actually
utilized by LTCHs in treating its
Medicare patients since the FY 2005
data is the best LTCH data available that
reflects LTCHs’ current treatment
practice and coding patterns. Therefore,
we do not find it either necessary or
appropriate to postpone the FY 2007
update of the LTC–DRG relative weights
until we consider the adoption of a
classification system with ‘‘improved
severity measures.’’
Comment: Numerous commenters
suggested that CMS forgo the proposed
approximately 1.4 percent decrease in
estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments and, instead, establish a
policy of budget neutrality for the
annual updates of the LTC–DRG relative
weights. The commenters believed a
policy of budget neutrality would
mitigate the estimated LTCH PPS
payment reductions that CMS estimates
would result from the proposed changes
to the LTC–DRGs and relative weights
for FY 2007. MedPAC also endorsed
adopting a policy of budget neutrality
for the annual recalibration of the LTC–
DRG weights and noted that the
adoption of the budget neutrality
process that CMS uses in recalibrating
the annual weights for the IPPS for the
LTCH would avoid the estimated
decrease in payments of 1.4 percent for
FY 2007.
One commenter asserted that the
absence of a budget neutrality
adjustment for the annual recalibration
of the LTC–DRGs provides a negative
incentive for efficiency, because
assigning cases that appropriately use
fewer hospital resources to a particular
LTC–DRG will result in a lower weight
for that LTC–DRG. Therefore, the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
commenter urged CMS not to
implement the proposed reweighting for
FY 2007 prior to a full analysis of the
impact of the proposed reweighting
along with other payment policy
changes provided in the RY 2007 LTCH
PPS on the overall adequacy of
payments to LTCHs. In addition, the
commenters expressed eagerness to
review the recommendations currently
under development by RTI International
for patient and facility criteria for
LTCHs. Several commenters further
suggested that no additional
reimbursement reductions under the
LTCH PPS should be imposed until the
RTI report is complete and the industry
works with CMS to implement its
findings.
Response: We understand that the
commenters are concerned with the
estimated decrease in payments under
LTCH PPS based upon the changes in
the LTC DRGs and relative weights
proposed for FY 2007. However, as
discussed above, we are not postponing
the proposed FY 2007 reclassification
and recalibration of the LTC–DRGs. In
addition, the payment policies that were
finalized in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final
rule, such as the zero update to the
standard Federal rate and the revised
short-stay outlier policy, will be
effective for LTCH discharges beginning
on July 1, 2007, as established in that
rule.
We further acknowledge that the
commenters and also MedPAC are
urging us to establish a budget
neutrality requirement for the annual
reclassification and recalibration of the
LTC–DRGs so that, in future years, the
LTCH PPS would avoid an estimated
decrease in aggregate payments such as
the estimated 1.3 percent based on the
LTC–DRG weights that we are finalizing
for FY 2007.
In the responses to comments
addressed above, we have noted several
reasons for the annual fluctuations in
LTC–DRG relative weights that resulted
in an estimated increase in aggregate
payments for FY 2004, a negligible
estimated decrease in aggregate
payments for FY 2005, and decreases in
aggregate payments for FYs 2006 and
2007. We reiterate that the LTCH PPS
has existed since FY 2003, and we
believe that several factors are occurring
that affect the changes to the relative
weights, including actual improvements
in coding so that cases are appropriately
assigned to LTC–DRGs. Each year, we
recalibrate the LTC–DRG relative
weights based on the most recent
available LTCH claims data, which
reflect current LTCH patient mix and
coding practices. The annual
recalibration of the LTC–DRG relative
PO 00000
Frm 00123
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47991
weights to which LTCH cases are
assigned will appropriately reflect more
or less resource use than the previous
year’s LTC–DRG relative weights.
We understand the concerns
expressed by the commenters regarding
this fiscal year’s estimated decrease in
payments based upon the proposed (and
finalized) FY 2007 reweighting of the
LTC–DRGs. However, we remind the
commenters that establishing a budgetneutrality policy for the LTC–DRG
weights would have precluded the
increase in payments that occurred
during FY 2004 as well as any increase
that an analysis of future data may
warrant.
Under the IPPS, there is a statutory
requirement in section 1886(d)(4)(C)(iii)
of the Act that requires that, beginning
with FY 1991, reclassification and
recalibration changes be made in a
manner that assures that the aggregate
payments are neither greater than nor
less than the aggregate payments that
would have been made without the
changes. However, there is no statutory
or regulatory requirement that the
annual update to the LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights be
done in a budget neutral manner. In
addition, after FY 2003, the year that the
LTCH PPS was implemented, there was
no statutory requirement for budget
neutrality for any component of the
LTCH PPS.
However, as we have already noted,
the LTCH PPS, having been first
implemented for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after the start of FY
2003, will soon end its transition period
and payment will be based solely on the
Federal rate with cost reporting periods
beginning in FY 2007. In the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule, we provided that
we would reevaluate all payment
adjustments that were originally
considered for the LTCH PPS prior to its
implementation and also determine the
appropriateness of a one-time
prospective adjustment to the standard
Federal rate (§ 412.523(d)(3)) so that the
effect of any significant differences
between actual payments and estimated
payments for the first year of the LTCH
PPS would not be perpetuated in the
PPS for future years. Given the
considerable discretion granted to the
Secretary under the BBRA of 1999 and
the BIPA of 2000 to develop the LTCH
PPS, it is possible, however, that at the
same time, the Secretary would consider
using his broad authority to establish a
policy of budget neutrality for the
annual update of the LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights. As
noted above, currently the best available
LTCH data (FY 2005) are from the
second full year of the PPS, and LTCHs
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47992
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
may still be modifying their behavior to
the change in payment methodology. If,
upon reevaluation of our payment
policies based on future LTCH data as
the data become available, we find that
it would be appropriate to propose
making the updates to the LTC–DRGs
and relative weights in a budget neutral
manner, the public will have the
opportunity to submit comments on any
proposed change during the rulemaking
process.
The commenters mentioned their
eagerness to review the
recommendations currently being
developed by RTI regarding the
feasibility of patient and facility level
admissions criteria for LTCHs. We
anticipate that RTI will submit its final
report and recommendations during RY
2007. We place considerable importance
on RTI’s work, and we will encourage
a dialogue with the public based on the
report. We note that, while we believe
the report will have a substantial impact
on future Medicare policy for LTCHs,
we still believe that the retention of
many of the specific payment
adjustment features of the LTCH PPS
presently in place and the development
of additional or revised adjustments
may still be both necessary and
appropriate for purposes of protecting
the integrity of the Medicare trust fund.
Comment: Several commenters
believed that the changes to the LTC–
DRG relative weights will have a more
significant impact on high case-mix
providers than on low-case mix
providers. One commenter referred to a
LTCH which, as a high acuity provider,
will experience an approximate 5
percent drop in total case mix index.
This commenter requested that CMS
make a weighted average calculation
available when it publishes the impacts
of changes in the relative weights. The
commenter further suggested that CMS
produce an impact statement focusing
on changes across all DRGs that will
enable providers to understand the
impacts on their individual LTCHs.
Response: We believe we published a
comprehensive description of the
impact of the reweighting of the LTC–
DRGs for FY 2007 in the proposed rule
(71 FR 24413). Specifically, in section
VII, Effects of Other Proposed Policy
Changes, in subsection A, under the
heading, Effects of LTC–DRG
Reclassifications and Relative Weights
for LTCHs, we included a detailed
analysis of the impact that would result
from our proposals.
In that section, we stated: ‘‘When we
compared the GROUPER Version 23.0
(FY 2006) LTC–DRG relative weights to
the proposed GROUPER Version 24.0
(FY 2007) proposed LTC–DRG relative
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
weights, we found that approximately
62 percent of the LTC–DRGs would
have a higher relative weight under
Version 23.0, while the remaining
approximately 38 percent of the LTC–
DRGs would have a higher relative
weight under Version 24.0. We also
found that, based on FY 2005 LTCH
cases, the GROUPER Version 23.0 LTC–
DRG relative weights were, on average,
approximately 3.1 percent higher than
the proposed GROUPER Version 24.0
LTC–DRG relative weights. In addition,
based on an analysis of the most recent
available LTCH claims data from the FY
2005 MedPAR file, we continue to
observe that the average proposed LTC–
DRG relative weight decreases due to an
increase of relatively lower charge cases
being assigned to LTC–DRGs with
higher relative weights in the prior year.
Contributing to this increase in these
relatively lower charge cases being
assigned to proposed LTC–DRGs with
higher relative weights in the prior year
are improvements in coding practices,
which are typical when moving from a
reasonable cost-based payment system
to a PPS. The impact of including
additional cases with relatively lower
charges in LTC–DRGs that had a
relatively higher relative weight in the
GROUPER Version 23.0 (FY 2006) is a
decrease in the average relative weight
for those LTC–DRGs in the proposed
GROUPER Version 24.0. As noted above
in section II.F. of the preamble to this
proposed rule, LTCHs are a specialized
provider type that typically do not treat
a broad spectrum of patients in their
facilities with many different diagnoses.
While there are 526 valid proposed
GROUPER Version 24.0 LTC–DRGs, 191
LTC–DRGs have no LTCH cases. In
addition, another 173 LTC–DRGs are
categorized as ‘low volume’ (that is,
have less than 25 cases annually).
Consequently, only about 162 LTC–
DRGs are used by most LTCHs on a
‘regular basis’ (that is, nationally LTCHs
discharge, in total, an average of 25 or
more of these cases annually).
Of these 162 LTC–DRGs that are used
on a regular basis, we found that
approximately 60 percent of the LTC–
DRGs would have higher relative
weights under GROUPER Version 23.0
in comparison to proposed GROUPER
Version 24.0, and the remaining 40
percent of the 162 LTC–DRGs that are
used on a ‘regular basis’ would have
higher relative weights under proposed
GROUPER Version 24 in comparison to
GROUPER Version 23.0. In addition,
about 25 percent of the 162 LTC–DRGs
that are used on a ‘regular basis’ would
experience a decrease in the average
charge per case as compared to the
average charge per case in that DRG
PO 00000
Frm 00124
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
based on FY 2004 data, which generally
results in a lower relative weight.
Moreover, of the 162 LTC–DRGs that are
used on a ‘regular basis,’ approximately
63 percent of those LTC–DRGs would
experience a change in the average
charge per case from FY 2004 LTCH
data as compared to FY 2005 LTCH data
that is less than the increase in overall
average LTCH charges across all LTC–
DRGs from FY 2004 to FY 2005 of about
8.3 percent. Accordingly, those LTC–
DRGs would also have a proposed
reduction in their relative weight as
compared to the relative weight in FY
2006. For those LTC–DRGs in which the
average charge within the LTC–DRG
increase is less than 8.3 percent, the
proposed relative weights for those
LTC–DRGs would decrease because the
average charge for each of those LTC–
DRGs is being divided by a larger
number (that is, the average charge
across all LTC–DRGs). For the reasons
discussed above, we believe that the
proposed changes in the LTC–DRG
relative weights, which include a
significant number of LTC–DRGs with
lower proposed relative weights, would
result in approximately a 1.4 percent
decrease in estimated aggregate LTCH
PPS payments’’ (71 FR 24413).
The above paragraphs, published in
the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule, clearly
indicated the impact of the reweighting
of the LTC–DRGs. All of the impact
percentages listed are ‘‘weighted
averages,’’ as was the proposed
estimated 1.4 percent decrease in
aggregate LTCH PPS payments. That is,
all LTCH cases in the December 2005
update of the FY 2005 MedPAR file
were used to determine the LTC–DRG
impact figures presented in the FY 2007
IPPS proposed rule. Therefore, the latest
data on the types of patients treated
across all LTCHs were used to
determine the impact and not just the
proposed changes to the LTC–DRG
weights. The proposed and final FY
2007 reweighting of the LTC–DRGs may
indeed have a more significant impact
on a high acuity provider because many
of the proposed and final LTC–DRG
weights in relatively high weighted
LTC–DRGs would decrease compared to
their current values. However, we also
note that Medicare payments for several
of the highest acuity LTC–DRGs have
yielded substantial margins. For
example, an analysis of MedPAR data
from FY 2004 indicated that, for LTC–
DRG 475 (Ventilator Support) with a
relative weight of 2.1358 for FY 2004,
average aggregate (dollar weighted)
margins for all providers was 21.09
percent, and for LTC–DRG 87
(Pulmonary Edema/Respiratory
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Support) with a relative weight of
1.6513 for FY 2004, average aggregate
margins were 26.93 percent. Even for
cases requiring somewhat less resource
intensity, such as LTC–DRG 416
(Septicemia) with a relative weight of
0.9191 for FY 2004, which is also one
of the diagnoses most frequently found
in LTCHs, the aggregate margin is 11.54
percent and for LTC–DRG 249 (After
Care Musculoskeletal) with a relative
weight of 0.7829 for FY 2004, the
margin is 9.69 percent. Therefore, we
believe that the reweighting of the LTC–
DRGs for FY 2007, even for those highacuity providers who experience a more
significant impact, should not impede
the efficient and effective delivery of
care to Medicare beneficiaries, because,
as described above, several of the
highest-acuity LTC–DRGs have yielded
substantial margins. Furthermore, even
though the recalibration of the LTC–
DRG relative weights will result in a
decrease in the relative weight for some
high-acuity LTC–DRGs, because the
recalibration is based on the most recent
available LTCH claims data (FY 2005),
it ensures the most accurate payments
for FY 2007 based on current LTCH
treatment and coding practices.
In response to the commenter who
requested impacts that reflected a
weighted average calculation, as noted
above, the impact of the proposed
changes to the LTC–DRGs for FY 2007
presented in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule (71 FR 24413) are based on a
weighted average calculation. That is,
all FY 2005 LTCH cases in the
December 2005 update of the MedPAR
data were used to determine the impact
figures presented in the proposed rule.
This means that only the proposed
changes to the relative weights for LTC–
DRGs that had LTCH cases in those
DRGs based on the FY 2005 LTCH data
contributed to the impact. This
continues to be true for the impact of
the final LTC_DRG weights which are
based on the most recent update of the
FY 2005 MedPAR data. It also means
that, for example, LTCH cases in LTC–
DRG 475 represent approximately 12
percent of all LTCH cases in FY 2005
and therefore, 12 percent of the impact
presented in the proposed rule was due
to the proposed change in the LTC–DRG
weight for LTC–DRG 475. We believe
that the commenter may have
mistakenly believed that we measured
the impact of the proposed LTC–DRG
changes based on the changes proposed
for each LTC–DRG without accounting
for the volume of LTCH cases treated in
each LTC–DRG. In addition, we note
that if a provider is eager to determine
the specific impact of the annual
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
proposed LTC–DRG reweighting on an
individual LTCH or a particular weight,
the provider needs only to compare an
application of the LTC–DRG weights
published in the previous year’s final
rule (Table 11) of its cases to the
proposed LTC–DRG relative weights
that are published in the current year’s
proposed rule (Table 11; 71 FR 24395–
24403) as applied to the same set of
cases.
Comment: Several commenters
maintained that the proposed 1.4
percent decrease in aggregate payments
to LTCHs due to the proposed LTC–DRG
reclassification and recalibration for FY
2007, in addition to payment cuts
established for RY 2007 represent a
‘‘misinterpretation’’ of MedPAC’s
recommendation in its March 2006
Report to the Congress for a zero update
for LTCHs. MedPAC cited Medicare
margins for 2004 of 9.0 for the LTCH
industry and projected 7.8 percent
margins for 2006, but the commenters
believed that these projections did not
factor in the impact of the ‘‘25 percent
policy’’ for co-located LTCHs or the
estimated payment reductions
associated with the revised short-stay
outlier policy.
Response: As we have noted
elsewhere in earlier responses to
comments, the estimated 1.4 percent
decrease aggregate in LTCH PPS
payments due to the proposed LTC–
DRG reclassification and recalibration
for FY 2007 is a data-driven result of the
annual recalibration of the relative
weights for LTC–DRGs based on the
latest available LTCH claims data from
the MedPAR files (FY 2005). Therefore,
for FY 2007, based on the updated LTC–
DRGs classifications and relative
weights, estimated payments to LTCHs
will be 1.3 percent less than they would
have been based on the prior fiscal
year’s (that is, FY 2006) classifications
and relative weights for the same LTCH
cases. Similarly, LTCH claims data from
the FY 2006 MedPAR files will be used
to determine the proposed LTC–DRG
relative weights for FY 2008, and the
resulting aggregate LTCH PPS payments,
absent a regulatory or statutory change
implementing recalibration of relative
weights in a budget neutral manner,
may either decrease or increase, based
upon the FY 2006 data and DRG
classification changes. In setting the
annual relative weights for the LTC–
DRG system for FY 2007, we have
followed the requirements established
with the implementation of the LTCH
PPS in FY 2003 (67 FR 55984–55995).
Although the proposed recalibrated
LTC–DRG relative weights were
estimated to result in 1.4 percent
decrease in LTCH PPS payments for FY
PO 00000
Frm 00125
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47993
2007 (and based on final policies
established in this final rule, the
updated LTC–DRGs for FY 2007 are
estimated to result in a 1.3 percent
decrease in aggregate LTCH PPS
payments for FY 2007, as noted above),
we do not believe that this adjustment
is relevant to MedPAC’s
recommendation for the zero percent
update to the LTCH PPS Federal rate for
RY 2007.
The annual LTC-DRG update is
separate from the Federal rate update;
specifically, their purposes are different
and independent. The standard Federal
base rate is an estimate of the national
average cost per case which is adjusted
by the LTC-DRG relative weights to
reflect the resource consumption of the
particular case; that is, a case with a
relative weight of 2.0 is twice as costly/
uses twice the resources as a case with
a relative weight of 1.0. The LTC-DRG
relative weights are recalibrated
annually based on the most recent
available LTCH data to reflect resources
used by LTCHs in treating each type of
case. The update to the Federal rate is
to adjust the Federal rate to account for
various adjustments to that rate,
including inflation.
MedPAC’s data analysis, in its March
2006 Report to the Congress, indicated
that the average Medicare margin for
LTCHs was 9.0 percent for FY 2005 and
was projected at 7.8 percent for 2006.
(As we stated in our RY 2007 LTCH PPS
final rule, MedPAC also noted that
‘‘LTCH HwHs were found to have
higher margins than freestanding LTCHs
in RY 2005’’ (71 FR 27823).) Based on
its analysis, MedPAC stated that ‘‘* * *
evidence from the indicators we have
examined suggests that LTCHs can
accommodate the cost of caring for
Medicare beneficiaries in 2007 without
an increase in the base rate’’ (p. 218).
Consistent with MedPAC’s
recommendation, after incorporating an
adjustment to account for changes in
coding practices that did not reflect
‘‘real’’ case-mix, we finalized a zero
percent update for FY 2007 (71 FR
27819). As stated earlier, this
adjustment is not a function of, or
related to, the update to the relative
weights for LTC–DRGs.
The commenters’ also reference the
25-percent threshold payment
adjustment for co-located LTCHs
(§ 412.534) established beginning in FY
2005 and the newly revised short stay
outlier payment policy (§ 412.529)
beginning in RY 2007. We believe that
the commenters are seeking to connect
these adjustments, which are also
estimated to result in a decrease in
aggregate LTCH PPS payments in the
absence of a change in admission
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47994
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
practices by LTCHs to the estimated
impact of the updated LTC–DRG
relative weights. However, the policies
cited by the commenters are not related
to the impact of the updating of the
LTCH–DRG relative weights, but each
independently, furthers the goal of
establishing fair and reasonable
Medicare payments under the LTCH
PPS.
The HwH ‘‘25 percent rule,’’ that is,
the special payment provisions for
LTCH HwHs and satellites, was
established at § 412.534 in the FY 2005
IPPS final rule. Under that policy, we
provide a payment adjustment for those
patients discharged from co-located
LTCHs (that is, HwHs and satellites)
admitted from host hospitals that
exceeded a specified threshold
percentage (in most cases, 25 percent).
Medicare patients who reach high-cost
outlier status in the host hospital are
excluded from the count of the
percentage of patients admitted directly
from the host. As we discussed in the
FY 2005 IPPS final rule, when we
implemented the ‘‘25 percent rule,’’ we
were unable to estimate the impact of
this policy because we anticipated
behavioral changes by both the host and
the co-located LTCHs resulting from the
provision that exempted high-cost
outliers from the percentage threshold
calculation (69 FR 49771).
MedPAC further addressed this issue
in the March 2006 Report, where it
noted that it ‘‘* * * cannot foresee how
HwHs/ behavior will change in response
to this rule. CMS has discussed
scenarios (CMS 2005). For example,
patients admitted to an HwHs from the
host hospital after becoming an outlier
are not counted in the limit, thus HwHs
may admit more outlier cases under this
rule. Alternatively, host hospitals may
discharge fewer patients to their HwHs
because of constraints from the 25
percent rule, in which case HwHs’
volume might fall. In cities where there
is another LTCH, an acute care hospital
might discharge patients to a different
long-term care hospital than the one on
its grounds. The Office of Inspector
General or the QIOs may want to
monitor acute care hospitals’ and HwHs’
behavior in response to the 25 percent
rule. Because we have no evidence of
how HwHs will react, we have not
modeled margins incorporating this
policy change.’’ (p. 218)
Because the policy at § 412.534
exempts patients admitted from the host
hospital if they had already achieved
high-cost outlier status under the IPPS,
from the LTCHs’ percentage threshold
calculation (as noted above), we believe
that even with some adjustments
resulting in a decrease in payments to
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
some co-located LTCHs, Medicare
payments to co-located LTCHs on
average will continue to exceed the
Medicare costs of the inpatient hospital
services provided to its patients, even
with a zero percent update to the
Federal rate for RY 2007 (71 FR 27823).
Furthermore, we believe that the 25percent threshold policy and the short
stay outlier payment revision that that
we have established, first for co-located
LTCHs at § 412.534 for FY 2004 and the
revisions to the short-stay outlier
policies at § 412.529 that we finalized
for RY 2007, each have a firm and
consistent basis in our general policy
considerations under the LTCH PPS.
As we noted in the RY 2007 final rule
for the LTCH PPS, we do not believe
that the change to the short-stay outlier
policy will result in an adverse impact
on LTCHs. As a result of the change to
the short-stay outlier payment formula,
we believe that LTCHs will have an
incentive to significantly reduce the
number of very short-stay cases that
they admit. We believe that, by paying
appropriately for short-stay outlier cases
and by removing the financial incentive
for LTCHs to admit those very short stay
cases that could otherwise receive
appropriate treatment at an acute care
hospital (and paid under the IPPS),
LTCHs will change their admission
patterns for these patients. We further
believe that payment decreases to
LTCHs resulting from this policy would
only occur if LTCHs were to continue to
admit the same number of short-stay
outlier patients with very short lengths
of stay. We believe this policy is needed
to assure that payments for short-stay
outlier cases are appropriate.
Therefore, we disagree with the
commenter that we have
‘‘misinterpreted’’ MedPAC’s
recommendation of a zero percent
update for 2007 in our proposed update
to the LTC-DRGs for FY 2007. We
maintain that the rationale for each of
the policy features mentioned by the
commenter, when evaluated
independently, is clear and reasonable.
In addition, they are independent of the
DRG recalibration that occurs every year
based on an established formula. We
strongly disagree with the allegations
that their implementation represents a
‘‘misinterpretation’’ of MedPAC’s
margin analysis and recommendation
(discussed above) in the March 2006
Report to the Congress. As discussed
above, this update is not based on
MedPAC’s analysis and we believe that
updating the LTC–DRG relative weights
for FY 2007 based on FY 2005 LTCH
claims data will result in more
appropriate LTCH PPS payments since
the relative resource intensity of each
PO 00000
Frm 00126
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
LTC–DRG (that is, the relative weight)
will be determined from the most recent
available LTCH data (FY 2005)
reflecting LTCHs’ current practice and
treatment patterns.
Comment: Several commenters,
including MedPAC, recommended that
we adopt severity-adjusted DRGs as the
patient classification system for the
LTCH PPS. In particular, MedPAC
analyzed FY 2004 CMS LTCH data
using both standardized charges and
standardized hospital-specific costs
(removing the effect of local wages)
using Version 23 (FY 2006) of the
GROUPER and stated that, on a
preliminary basis, CS DRGs are
relatively homogeneous in resource use
for the kinds of cases treated in LTCHs.
They believed that this indicates that
the CS DRGs proposed for IPPS
hospitals may also ‘‘be promising for
LTCHs.’’
Response: We are aware of the
heightened interest in severity-adjusted
DRGs by the provider community, and
in section II.C.6.of this final rule, we
discuss the revisions that we are making
to the DRG classifications structure for
the IPPS and our expectations for
adopting severity adjustments for DRGs
under the IPPS in FY 2008. We
appreciate the data analysis that
MedPAC produced to demonstrate the
potential utility of CS DRGs for
classifying patients being treated in
LTCHs. It is possible that the modified
version of the APR DRGs or another
severity-adjusted patient classification
system may account for differences in
severity of illness and associated costs
among hospitals. In section II.C. of this
preamble, we discuss the issues that we
are dealing with respect to the adoption
of a severity adjusted DRG system. Once
we have addressed those issues under
the IPPS, we would need to consider
whether it is appropriate to propose
similar revisions to the patient
classification system under the LTCH
PPS. As stated in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule, we would emphasize
that any proposed changes to the patient
classification system for LTCHs would
be done through notice and comment
rulemaking.
G. Add-On Payments for New Services
and Technologies
1. Background
Sections 1886(d)(5)(K) and (L) of the
Act establish a process of identifying
and ensuring adequate payment for new
medical services and technologies
(sometimes collectively referred to in
this section as ‘‘new technologies’’)
under the IPPS. Section
1886(d)(5)(K)(vi) of the Act specifies
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
that a medical service or technology will
be considered new if it meets criteria
established by the Secretary after notice
and opportunity for public comment.
Section 1886(d)(5)(K)(ii)(I) of the Act
specifies that the process must apply to
a new medical service or technology if,
‘‘based on the estimated costs incurred
with respect to discharges involving
such service or technology, the DRG
prospective payment rate otherwise
applicable to such discharges under this
subsection is inadequate.’’
The regulations implementing this
provision establish three criteria for new
medical services and technologies to
receive an additional payment. First,
§ 412.87(b)(2) defines when a specific
medical service or technology will be
considered new for purposes of new
medical service or technology add-on
payments. The statutory provision
contemplated the special payment
treatment for new medical services or
technologies until such time as data are
available to reflect the cost of the
technology in the DRG weights through
recalibration. There is a lag of 2 to 3
years from the point a new medical
service or technology is first introduced
on the market and when data reflecting
the use of the medical service or
technology are used to calculate the
DRG weights. For example, data from
discharges occurring during FY 2005 are
used to calculate the FY 2007 DRG
weights in this final rule. Section
412.87(b)(2) provides that a ‘‘medical
service or technology may be considered
new within 2 or 3 years after the point
at which data begin to become available
reflecting the ICD–9–CM code assigned
to the new medical service or
technology (depending on when a new
code is assigned and data on the new
medical service or technology become
available for DRG recalibration). After
CMS has recalibrated the DRGs, based
on available data, to reflect the costs of
an otherwise new medical service or
technology, the medical service or
technology will no longer be considered
‘new’ under the criterion for this
section.’’
The 2-year to 3-year period during
which a medical service or technology
can be considered new would ordinarily
begin with FDA approval, unless there
was some documented delay in bringing
the product onto the market after that
approval (for instance, component
production or drug production had been
postponed until FDA approval due to
shelf life concerns or manufacturing
issues). After the DRGs have been
recalibrated to reflect the costs of an
otherwise new medical service or
technology, the special add-on payment
for new medical services or technology
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
ceases (§ 412.87(b)(2)). For example, an
approved new technology that received
FDA approval in October 2005 and
entered the market at that time may be
eligible to receive add-on payments as a
new technology until FY 2008
(discharges occurring before October 1,
2007), when data reflecting the costs of
the technology would be used to
recalibrate the DRG weights. Because
the FY 2008 DRG weights will be
calculated using FY 2006 MedPAR data,
the costs of such a new technology
would likely be reflected in the FY 2008
DRG weights.
Section 412.87(b)(3) further provides
that, to receive special payment
treatment, new medical services or
technologies must be inadequately paid
otherwise under the DRG system. To
assess whether technologies would be
inadequately paid under the DRGs, we
establish thresholds to evaluate
applicants for new technology add-on
payments. In the FY 2004 IPPS final
rule (68 FR 45385, August 1, 2003), we
established the threshold at the
geometric mean standardized charge for
all cases in the DRG plus 75 percent of
1 standard deviation above the
geometric mean standardized charge
(based on the logarithmic values of the
charges and transformed back to
charges) for all cases in the DRG to
which the new medical service or
technology is assigned (or the caseweighted average of all relevant DRGs,
if the new medical service or technology
occurs in many different DRGs). Table
10 in the Addendum to the FY 2004
IPPS final rule (68 FR 45648) listed the
qualifying threshold by DRG, based on
the discharge data that we used to
calculate the FY 2004 DRG weights.
However, section 503(b)(1) of Pub. L.
108–173 amended section
1886(d)(5)(K)(ii)(I) of the Act to provide
for ‘‘applying a threshold * * * that is
the lesser of 75 percent of the
standardized amount (increased to
reflect the difference between cost and
charges) or 75 percent of 1 standard
deviation for the diagnosis-related group
involved.’’ The provisions of section
503(b)(1) apply to classification for
fiscal years beginning with FY 2005. We
updated Table 10 from the Federal
Register document that corrected the FY
2004 final rule (68 FR 57753, October 6,
2003), which contained the thresholds
that we used to evaluate applications for
new service or technology add-on
payments for FY 2005, using the section
503(b)(1) measures stated above, and
posted these new thresholds on our Web
site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/08_newtech.asp. In
the FY 2005 IPPS final rule (in Table 10
of the Addendum), we included the
PO 00000
Frm 00127
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47995
final thresholds that were being used to
evaluate applicants for new technology
add-on payments for FY 2006. (Refer to
section IV.D. of the preamble to the FY
2005 IPPS final rule (69 FR 49084,
August 11, 2004) for a discussion of a
revision of the regulations to
incorporate the change made by section
503(b)(1) of Pub. L. 108–173.) Table 10
of the Addendum to the FY 2006 final
rule (70 FR 47680) contained the final
thresholds that are being used to
evaluate applications for new
technology add-on payments for FY
2007.
Section 412.87(b)(1) of our existing
regulations provides that a new
technology is an appropriate candidate
for an additional payment when it
represents ‘‘an advance that
substantially improves, relative to
technologies previously available, the
diagnosis or treatment of Medicare
beneficiaries.’’ For example, a new
technology represents a substantial
clinical improvement when it reduces
mortality, decreases the number of
hospitalizations or physician visits, or
reduces recovery time compared to the
technologies previously available. (Refer
to the September 7, 2001 final rule (66
FR 46902) for a complete discussion of
this criterion.)
The new medical service or
technology add-on payment policy
provides additional payments for cases
with high costs involving eligible new
medical services or technologies while
preserving some of the incentives under
the average-based payment system. The
payment mechanism is based on the
cost to hospitals for the new medical
service or technology. Under § 412.88,
Medicare pays a marginal cost factor of
50 percent for the costs of a new
medical service or technology in excess
of the full DRG payment. If the actual
costs of a new medical service or
technology case exceed the DRG
payment by more than the 50-percent
marginal cost factor of the new medical
service or technology, Medicare
payment is limited to the DRG payment
plus 50 percent of the estimated costs of
the new technology.
The report language accompanying
section 533 of Pub. L. 106–554 indicated
Congressional intent that the Secretary
implement the new mechanism on a
budget neutral basis (H.R. Conf. Rep.
No. 106–1033, 106th Cong., 2nd Sess. at
897 (2000)). Section 1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of
the Act requires that the adjustments to
annual DRG classifications and relative
weights must be made in a manner that
ensures that aggregate payments to
hospitals are not affected. Therefore, in
the past, we accounted for projected
payments under the new medical
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
47996
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
service and technology provision during
the upcoming fiscal year at the same
time we estimated the payment effect of
changes to the DRG classifications and
recalibration. The impact of additional
payments under this provision was then
included in the budget neutrality factor,
which was applied to the standardized
amounts and the hospital-specific
amounts.
Section 1886(d)(5)(K)(ii)(III) of the
Act, as amended by section 503(d)(2) of
Pub. L. 108–173, provides that there
shall be no reduction or adjustment in
aggregate payments under the IPPS due
to add-on payments for new medical
services and technologies. Therefore,
add-on payments for new medical
services or technologies for FY 2005 and
later years have not been budget neutral.
Applicants for add-on payments for
new medical services or technologies for
FY 2008 must submit a formal request,
including a full description of the
clinical applications of the medical
service or technology and the results of
any clinical evaluations demonstrating
that the new medical service or
technology represents a substantial
clinical improvement, along with a
significant sample of data to
demonstrate the medical service or
technology meets the high-cost
threshold, no later than October 15,
2006. Applicants must submit a
complete database no later than
December 30, 2006. Complete
application information, along with
final deadlines for submitting a full
application, will be available at our Web
site: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/08_newtech.asp. To
allow interested parties to identify the
new medical services or technologies
under review before the publication of
the proposed rule for FY 2008, the Web
site will also list the tracking forms
completed by each applicant.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
2. Public Input Before Publication of a
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on AddOn Payments
Section 1886(d)(5)(K)(viii) of the Act,
as amended by section 503(b)(2) of Pub.
L. 108–173, provides for a mechanism
for public input before publication of a
notice of proposed rulemaking regarding
whether a medical service or technology
represents a substantial clinical
improvement or advancement. The
process for evaluating new medical
service and technology applications
requires the Secretary to—
• Provide, before publication of a
proposed rule, for public input
regarding whether a new service or
technology represents an advance in
medical technology that substantially
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
improves the diagnosis or treatment of
Medicare beneficiaries.
• Make public and periodically update
a list of the services and technologies for
which applications for add-on payments
are pending.
• Accept comments,
recommendations, and data from the
public regarding whether a service or
technology represents a substantial
clinical improvement.
• Provide, before publication of a
proposed rule, for a meeting at which
organizations representing hospitals,
physicians, manufacturers, and any
other interested party may present
comments, recommendations, and data
regarding whether a new service or
technology represents a substantial
clinical improvement to the clinical
staff of CMS.
In order to provide an opportunity for
public input regarding add-on payments
for new medical services and
technologies for FY 2007 before
publication of the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule, we published a notice in
the Federal Register on December 23,
2005 (70 FR 76315) and held a town hall
meeting at the CMS Headquarters Office
in Baltimore, MD, on February 16, 2006.
In the announcement notice for the
meeting, we stated that the opinions and
alternatives provided during the
meeting would assist us in our
evaluations of applications by allowing
public discussions of the substantial
clinical improvement criterion for each
of the FY 2007 new medical service and
technology add-on payment
applications before the publication of
the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule.
Approximately 35 participants
registered and attended the town hall
meeting in person, while additional
participants listened over an open
telephone line. The participants focused
on presenting data on the substantial
clinical improvement aspect of their
products, as well as the need for
additional payments to ensure access to
Medicare beneficiaries. In addition, we
received written comments regarding
the substantial clinical improvement
criterion for the applicants. We
considered these comments in our
evaluation of each new application for
FY 2007 in the proposed rule and in this
final rule. We have summarized these
comments or, if applicable, indicated
that no comments were received, at the
end of the discussion of the individual
applications.
We received two general comments
about application of the newness and
substantial clinical improvement
criteria.
Comment: One commenter
encouraged CMS to amend the
PO 00000
Frm 00128
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
definition of substantial clinical
improvement for the IPPS new
technology provision to conform to the
OPPS definition of substantial clinical
improvement used in 2001. Specifically,
AdvaMed requested that after
‘‘decreased pain, bleeding, or other
quantifiable symptom,’’ CMS should
insert the following language: ‘‘such as
convenience, durability, ease of
operation or make other improvements
in quality of life.’’
Response: We believe we addressed
this concern in the FY 2006 IPPS final
rule (70 FR 47360). We use similar
standards to evaluate substantial
clinical improvement in the IPPS and
OPPS and, in both systems, we employ
identical language to explain and
elaborate on the kinds of considerations
that are taken into account in
determining whether a new technology
represents a substantial clinical
improvement. We do not believe a
change to the regulations text is
necessary.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that CMS should not use ‘‘substantial
similarity’’ to evaluate newness without
also determining whether the product is
a substantial clinical improvement. The
commenter argued that CMS is applying
a concept that is not defined in
regulations. If CMS applies the concept
as part of determining whether a
product is new without evaluating
substantial clinical improvement, the
commenter recommended that CMS
should define substantial similarity
through notice and comment
rulemaking.
Response: We addressed this
comment in the FY 2006 IPPS final rule
(70 FR 47350 through 47351). We refer
readers to that final rule for a detailed
response to this comment.
Section 1886(d)(5)(K)(ix) of the Act, as
added by section 503(c) of Pub. L. 108–
173, requires that, before establishing
any add-on payment for a new medical
service or technology, the Secretary
shall seek to identify one or more DRGs
associated with the new technology,
based on similar clinical or anatomical
characteristics and the costs of the
technology and assign the new
technology into a DRG where the
average costs of care most closely
approximate the costs of care using the
new technology. No add-on payment
will be made if the new technology is
assigned to a DRG that most closely
approximates its costs.
At the time an application for new
technology add-on payments is
submitted, the DRGs associated with the
new technology are identified. We only
determine that a new DRG assignment is
necessary or a new technology add-on
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
payment is appropriate when the
payment under these currently assigned
DRGs is not adequate and the
technology otherwise meets the
newness, cost, and substantial clinical
improvement criteria.
In this final rule, we evaluate whether
new technology add-on payments will
continue in FY 2007 for the three
technologies that currently receive such
payments. In addition, we present our
evaluations of three applications for
add-on payments in FY 2007.
Comment: One commenter stated that
section 503 of Pub. L. 108–173 provided
new funding for new technology add-on
payments by no longer requiring that
these payments be budget neutral. The
commenter stated that this provision
was enacted to ensure that the IPPS
would better account for new drugs,
devices, and services. However, the
commenter believed that CMS continues
to resist approval of new technologies
and considers only a few technologies a
year for add-on payments.
Another commenter called upon CMS
to be more willing to indicate its
preliminary views regarding whether a
new technology application meets the
criteria for add-on payments in the
proposed rule. The commenter
expressed particular concern that CMS
had not given a strong indication of
whether any of the initial new
technology applications would meet the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion and noted that doing so would
enhance stakeholder dialogue with CMS
on the evaluation of the new technology
criteria during the comment period.
Another commenter believed that
CMS’ definition of new technology is
contrary to the statute. The commenter
explained that CMS uses the FDA
approval date to determine newness
while the statute clearly requires that
new technology add-on payments begin
on the date an ICD–9–CM code is
issued. The commenter urged CMS to
use the date an ICD–9–CM code is
issued to determine whether a
technology is new instead of the FDA
approval date.
Response: With respect to the
comment that CMS resists approval of
new technologies and considers only a
few technologies a year for add-on
payments, we note that we encourage
companies with new-technologies that
believe that they may meet the new
technology criteria to apply for add-on
payments. In our view, we have not
resisted approving new technologies or
been overly stringent in our application
of the criteria. Our review of new
technology focuses on the merits of the
application and the requirements under
the statute. The experience of our
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
review process indicates that a
significant number of new technologies
have met the criteria. In fact, we have
approved over 50 percent (6 of 11) of
applications where we had to apply
judgment about whether the technology
met the criteria for an add-on payment.
From FY 2003 to FY 2006, we received
a total of 25 applications, but only 21
were unique (four applicants applied
twice in subsequent years for the same
technology). Of the applications that we
received, 8 were already beyond the
timeline to be considered new, 1 had
not received FDA approval, and 1 did
not meet the cost criterion. In our view,
we denied these applications using
objective criteria and without having to
apply any subjective judgment. Of the
remaining 11 applications, 6 were
approved for new technology add-on
payment, while the other 5 were not
approved because we determined that
these applications were not
substantially different from older
technologies or did not meet the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion. Therefore, to date, we have
approved over 50 percent of
applications where we needed to apply
judgment about whether a new
technology met the criteria for an addon payment. These statistics obviously
reflect the recent experience of new
technology applications, and,
depending on the ability of applications
to meet the criteria in the future, will
likely change. We note that the merits
of each application determine whether
it should be approved. The aggregate
statistics reflect the ability of applicants
to satisfy the criteria, and should not be
construed as a measure of the
appropriateness of the review process.
We also note that over the years, the
cost criterion has been lowered, giving
applicants a lower threshold to meet the
cost criterion. We encourage and
welcome additional applications in
future years so that we can continue to
make payments for those technologies
that meet the criteria and warrant new
technology add-on payments.
With respect to the comment that
CMS should be more willing to indicate
our preliminary views regarding
whether a new technology meets the
criteria for an add-on payment, we
provided our initial concerns regarding
the two pending applications in the
proposed rule. For the C-Port System,
we described our concerns about both
the newness (‘‘various forms of surgical
staples and clips have been used for
more than a decade in a wide range of
surgical procedures’’) and substantial
clinical improvement (‘‘the applicant
submitted evidence suggesting that
PO 00000
Frm 00129
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47997
device does not always produce reliable
anastomoses’’) criteria and also
indicated that the device appears to
meet the cost threshold (71 FR 24071).
Similarly, for the X STOP Interspinous
Process Decompression System, we
indicated our belief that ‘‘the device
satisfies the newness and cost threshold
criteria’’ and described our concerns
about substantial clinical improvement
(71 FR 24072). As a result of
information provided in the proposed
rule, the applicants were afforded the
opportunity to address the specific
concerns we raised. For example, the
applicant for the C-Port system was
able to address our concerns about
similarity to predicate devices to allow
us to determine that the device meets
the newness criterion. Similarly, the
applicant for X STOP was able to
address the concerns we raised in the
proposed rule about whether the device
meets the substantial clinical
improvement criterion during the
comment period.
Finally, with respect to the comment
that CMS should use the issuance of an
ICD–9–CM code as the date on which
‘‘newness’’ would begin, we have
addressed this issue several times
before, including in the FY 2005 IPPS
final rule (69 FR 49002) and the FY
2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR 47343).
Comment: One commenter proposed
that CMS allow manufacturers to apply
for a new technology add-on payment
on an ongoing basis and recommended
that the agency issue quarterly updates
announcing the approval of new
technology add-on payments, similar to
the outpatient setting.
Response: Section 1886(d)(5)(K)(i) of
the Act requires that new technology
add-on payments be established after
notice and opportunity for public
comments (in the publication required
by subsection (e)(5) for a fiscal year or
otherwise). In addition, pursuant to
section 1886(d)(5)(K)(viii) of the Act, we
are also required to hold an annual town
hall meeting prior to the IPPS proposed
rule to obtain public input about
whether a new technology meets the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion. Given the requirements in the
statute, it is not feasible to process
applications on a quarterly basis.
Comment: Some commenters
expressed disappointment that CMS has
not increased the payment rate for new
technology add-on payments from a
maximum of 50 percent to a maximum
of 80 percent of the marginal cost factor
of the new medical service or
technology, consistent with the outlier
payment methodology. The commenters
stated that increasing the marginal cost
factor from 50 percent to 80 percent
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
47998
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
would offer some stability and
consistency for hospitals thus enabling
hospitals to more easily provide their
patients access to new technologies.
Other commenters noted that CMS
has approved so few technologies for
new technology add-on payments that it
would make more sense to compensate
hospitals with a full add-on payment by
paying on a cost basis using the average
sales price plus six percent for FDA
approved drugs and biologicals and list
price plus a percentage for devices. The
commenters believed that such a
payment methodology would ensure
that, ‘‘providers recoup their costs,
Medicare pays a fair rate, and that
payment is harmonized across treatment
settings.’’ Finally, one commenter
requested that CMS provide clear
guidance and greater transparency as to
how determinations of newness will be
made for a technology that already has
an ICD–9–CM code but is later approved
by the FDA for a new indication.
Response: We did not propose any
changes to the marginal cost factor in
the proposed rule. Furthermore, we
continue to believe that a 50-percent
marginal cost factor is appropriate for
the reasons described in detail in the
new technology final rule (66 FR 46919,
September 7, 2001).
Also, we have already discussed the
situation in which a technology is
described under an existing ICD–9–CM
code, but subsequently receives
approval for a new indication from the
FDA. That discussion can be found in
the September 7, 2001 new technology
final rule (66 FR 46915) and in the FY
2005 IPPS final rule (69 FR 49011)
concerning InFUSE Bone Graft for tibia
fractures.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that CMS did not address how the
proposed changes to the DRGs would
affect new technology add-on payments.
Another commenter stated that it is
essential that CMS maintain new
technology add-on payments for FY
2007 and beyond. Another commenter
recommended that CMS broaden the
new technology criteria to ensure that
new technologies are accounted for
within a cost-based DRG system.
Response: Although we are adopting
a system of cost relative weights in this
final rule (section III.C. of this
preamble), we will continue to apply
the cost criterion using standardized
charges consistent with the statute. The
statute requires that we apply ‘‘a
threshold specified by the Secretary that
is the lesser of 75 percent of the
standardized payment amount
(increased to reflect the difference
between costs and charges) or 75
percent of one standard deviation for
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
the diagnosis-related group involved.’’
Changes to the DRG system to better
recognize severity in the DRG will also
have no effect on our application of the
new technology criteria. Any changes to
the DRG system will merely result in us
calculating different thresholds for the
revised DRGs. In addition, once a
technology is approved for new
technology add-on payments, we will
continue to use the ICD–9–CM code to
identify the technology for determining
when new technology add-on payments
are appropriate.
Finally, section 1886(d)(5)(K) and (L)
of the Act establishes a process of
identifying and ensuring adequate
payment for new medical services and
technologies. Because no changes have
been made to this section of the statute,
we will continue to make new
technology add-on payments for FY
2007 and beyond for those technologies
that meet the criteria.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that, because CMS
proposed to implement a cost-based
weight DRG system, CMS should
reconsider whether applicants for FY
2007 new technology add-on payments
meet the cost criterion based on a
revised data set.
Response: As stated above, Table 10
of the Addendum to the FY 2006 IPPS
final rule (70 FR 47680) contained the
final thresholds that are being used to
evaluate applications for new
technology add-on payments for FY
2007. We use the thresholds contained
in Table 10 that were published in the
previous year’s final rule (that is, FY
2006) to determine whether a
technology is inadequately paid for the
next fiscal year (that is, FY 2007). We
publish Table 10 in the proposed rule in
order to give the public notice and the
opportunity to submit comments before
we finalize the thresholds in the final
rule. Also, it is necessary for applicants
to have the thresholds from Table 10
during the application process so that
both the applicants and CMS can
establish if the applicant’s technology
meets the cost criterion. Further, as we
note above, we believe that the statute
requires us to establish the cost
thresholds using charges.
Comment: One commenter noted that
section 503 of Pub. L. 108–173 included
a provision to expand the inpatient new
technology add-on payment to include a
broader range of technologies. The
commenter added that this legislation
was made to ensure that adequate
payments were made to hospitals until
hospital charges include the costs for
these technologies. The commenter
explained that CMS’ narrow
interpretation has created a situation
PO 00000
Frm 00130
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
where few, if any, products can qualify
for new technology add-on payments
and a process that is opaque and thus,
costly, especially for small companies,
to apply for add-on payments. The
commenter requested that CMS provide
greater opportunity for technologies to
qualify for add-on payments to ensure
patient access to new technologies as
Congress intended.
Response: Section 503 of Pub. L. 108–
173 amended the law to: (1) require that
we establish diagnosis and procedure
codes annually on April 1 as well as
October 1; (2) change the application of
the cost threshold; (3) require a process
for obtaining public input on new
technology applications prior to the
proposed rule; and (4) eliminate the
budget neutrality requirement for new
technology add-on payments. We
believe that we have implemented
section 503 as Congress intended.
As we discussed in the FY 2006 IPPS
final rule (70 FR 47344), we do not
believe that our criteria present an
inordinately cumbersome burden for
small companies that want to apply for
new technology add-on payments. We
have received applications for FY 2007
from relatively small companies
compared to some of the companies that
have applied in the past. Further, we
have already been approached by other
small companies seeking new
technology add-on payments for FY
2008. We encourage potential applicants
to contact us before their technology is
available on the market if they have
questions about the new technology
application process.
Comment: One commenter requested
that it be given the opportunity to work
closely with CMS to help refine the
regulatory framework under which CMS
evaluates new innovative treatments for
Medicare beneficiaries. The commenter
suggested ideas such as creating a
pathway for small companies under
FDA review to elect to meet with CMS
to discuss coverage, payment, and
coding issues. In addition, the
commenter recommended that CMS
establish a committee and annual public
workshop to assist emerging
technologies and small companies with
the new technology add-on payment
process.
Response: We have been committed to
providing ample opportunity for
applicants and other interested parties
to make their views known to us
throughout the application process, at
the annual public meeting, and during
the comment period on the proposed
rule. We encourage interested parties to
contact CMS staff for more information
about the new technology add-on
application process. Interested parties
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
may contact Tiffany Swygert at (410)
786–4642 or Michael Treitel at (410)
786–4552.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS broaden the definition of
substantial clinical improvement. The
commenter explained that, in the
outpatient setting, CMS views as a
separate factor ‘‘improvements in the
medical technology itself that are so
significant that we may wish to
recognize them for separate payment
even though they do not directly result
in substantial clinical improvements.’’
For example, technological
advancements may result in
improvement of a product’s
‘‘convenience, durability [or] ease of
operation such as the strength of
materials, increased battery life, [and]
miniaturization.’’ The commenter
suggested that CMS could recognize
these additional improvements along
with others when evaluating substantial
clinical improvement in the inpatient
setting.
Response: The commenter’s specific
reference to language that was included
in the November 2, 2001 OPPS final rule
was taken out of context. The language
quoted above by the commenter from
that OPPS final rule stated that CMS
‘‘may,’’ under the OPPS, recognize
technologies for separate payment even
though they do not directly result in
substantial clinical improvements. To
date, under the OPPS, we have only
applied the explicit substantial clinical
improvement criteria to pass-through
device category applications. In the
OPPS context, CMS has not found any
applications for technologies ‘‘that are
so significant that we may wish to
recognize them for separate payment (as
opposed to packaged payments) even
though they do not result in substantial
clinical improvements’’ (67 FR 66783).
In fact, the historical OPPS experience
has indicated that, in general, highly
significant advances in medical
technology from characteristics such as
longer battery life commonly result in
substantial clinical improvements that
may be appropriately evaluated
according to the substantial clinical
improvement criteria alone. We have
not made a determination to apply these
standards within the IPPS. However, as
noted in the FY 2005 IPPS final rule (69
FR 49021), we will continue to consider
whether to employ specific factors such
as those identified for the OPPS in the
IPPS.
Comment: One commenter urged
CMS not to use the FDA section 510(k)
approval process as a bar to a
determination of meeting the newness
criterion because the ‘‘predicate’’
devices identified through the section
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
510(k) approval process are not
necessarily substantially similar to the
new technology; rather the approval
indicates that the new device is at least
as safe and effective as its predicate(s).
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s concern and agree that the
mere existence of a predicate device(s)
identified in the FDA section 510(k)
approval process should not
automatically preclude a product from
meeting the newness criterion.
Although we may consider the predicate
devices that are listed in the FDA
section 510(k) approval, we will
evaluate whether a new technology is
substantially similar to existing
products on a case-by-case basis. We
refer readers to the discussion in the FY
2006 final rule (70 FR 47350–47352) for
more detailed information on
substantial similarity.
3. FY 2007 Status of Technologies
Approved for FY 2006 Add-On
Payments
a. Kinetra Implantable Neurostimulator
(Kinetra) for Deep Brain Stimulation
Medtronic, Inc. submitted an
application for approval of the Kinetra
implantable neurostimulator device for
new technology add-on payments for FY
2005. In the IPPS final rule for FY 2005
(69 FR 49019, August 11, 2004), we
approved Kinetra for new technology
add-on payments.
As noted above, the period for which
technologies are eligible to receive new
technology add-on payments is 2 to 3
years after the product becomes
available on the market and data
reflecting the cost of the technology are
reflected in the DRG weights. This
technology received FDA approval on
December 16, 2003. Therefore, the
technology will be beyond the 2- to 3year period during which it can be
considered new during FY 2007.
Therefore, we proposed in the FY 2007
IPPS proposed rule (71 FR 24070), to
discontinue add-on payments for the
Kinetra rechargeable, implantable
neurostimulator device for FY 2007.
The manufacturer submitted a request
that we consider a higher-paying DRG
assignment for dual array
neurostimulator pulse generator cases.
We have taken this request into
consideration and have reviewed the FY
2005 Medicare charge data for cases that
use implantable neurostimulator for
deep brain stimulation. Our findings
and a full discussion of this issue can
be found in section II.D.2.a. of the
preamble of this final rule.
Comment: A number of commenters
were concerned that the expiration of
the new technology add-on payment for
PO 00000
Frm 00131
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
47999
Kinetra will lead to inadequate
payments for full system Kinetra
implants. One commenter requested
that CMS reconsider its decision to end
payments for the Kinetra implantable
neurostimulator. Other commenters
thanked CMS for its efforts in granting
add-on payments for the Kinetra
during the last 2 years.
Response: As noted above, the
Kinetra technology will be beyond the
2-year to 3-year period during which it
can be considered new during FY 2007.
Therefore, we are finalizing our
proposal from the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24070) to
discontinue add-on payments for the
Kinetra rechargeable implantable
neurostimulator for FY 2007.
b. Endovascular Graft Repair of the
Thoracic Aorta
W. L. Gore & Associates, Inc.
submitted an application for
consideration of its Endovascular Graft
Repair of the Thoracic Aorta (GORE
TAG) for new technology add-on
payments for FY 2006. The
manufacturer argued that endovascular
stent-grafting of the descending thoracic
aorta provides a less invasive alternative
to the traditional open surgical
approach required for the management
of descending thoracic aortic
aneurysms. The GORE TAG device is a
tubular stent-graft mounted on a
catheter-based delivery system, and it
replaces the synthetic graft normally
sutured in place during open surgery.
The device was initially identified using
ICD–9–CM procedure code 39.79 (Other
endovascular repair (of aneurysm) of
other vessels). The applicant also
requested a unique ICD–9–CM
procedure code. As noted in Table 6B of
the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47637), new procedure code 39.73
(Endovascular implantation of graft in
thoracic aorta) was assigned to this
technology.
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47356), we approved the GORE TAG
device for new technology add-on
payment for FY 2006. We noted that any
substantially similar device that is FDAapproved before or during FY 2006 that
uses the same ICD–9–CM procedure
code as GORE TAG and is assigned to
the same DRGs as those approved for
new technology add-on payments may
also receive the new technology add-on
payment associated with this
technology in FY 2006.
FDA approved GORE TAG on March
23, 2005. The technology remains
within the 2- to 3-year period during
which it can be considered new.
Therefore, as we proposed (71 FR
24070), we are continuing add-on
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48000
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
payments for the endovascular graft
repair of the thoracic aorta for FY 2007.
Comment: Some commenters
supported our proposal to continue new
technology add-on payments for GORE
TAG for FY 2007.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support and, as noted above,
we are continuing new technology addon payments for GORE TAG for FY
2007.
c. Restore Rechargeable Implantable
Neurostimulator
Medtronic Neurological submitted an
application for new technology add-on
payments for its Restore Rechargeable
Implantable Neurostimulator for FY
2006. The Restore Rechargeable
Implantable Neurostimulator is
designed to deliver electrical
stimulation to the spinal cord to block
the sensation of pain. The technology
standard for neurostimulators uses
internal sealed batteries as the power
source to generate the electrical current.
These internal batteries have finite lives,
and require replacement when their
power has been completely discharged.
According to the manufacturer, the
Restore Rechargeable Implantable
Neurostimulator ‘‘represents the next
generation of neurostimulator
technology, allowing the physician to
set the voltage parameters in such a way
that fully meets the patient’s
requirements to achieve adequate pain
relief without fear of premature
depletion of the battery.’’ The applicant
stated that the expected life of the
Restore rechargeable battery is 9 years,
compared to an average life of 3 years
for conventional neurostimulator
batteries. We approved new technology
add-on payments for all rechargeable,
implantable neurostimulators for FY
2006. Cases involving these devices,
made by any manufacturer, are
identified by the presence of newly
created ICD–9–CM code 86.98 (Insertion
or replacement of dual array
rechargeable neurostimulator pulse
generator).
As noted above, the period for which
technologies are eligible to receive new
technology add-on payments is 2 to 3
years after the product becomes
available on the market and data
reflecting the cost of the technology are
reflected in the DRG weights. The FDA
approved the Restore Rechargeable
Implantable Neurostimulator in 2005.
However, as noted above and in the FY
2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR 47358), at
least one similar product was approved
by the FDA as early as April 2004.
Nevertheless, consistent with current
policy (70 FR 47362) and decisions for
prior products (that is, bone
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
morphogenetic products and CRT–D
devices), as we proposed (71 FR 24070
through 24071), we are continuing new
technology add-on payments for
rechargeable, implantable
neurostimulators in FY 2007 because
the product will be beyond the 3-year
period only in the latter 6 months of the
fiscal year.
Comment: Some commenters
supported our decision to continue addon payments for the Restore
Rechargeable Implantable
Neurostimulator.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support and as noted
above, we are continuing new
technology add-on payments for
Restore Rechargeable Implantable
Neurostimulator for FY 2007.
4. FY 2007 Applications for New
Technology Add-On Payments
a. C-Port Distal Anastomosis System
Cardica, Inc. submitted an application
for new technology add-on payments for
FY 2007 for its Cardica C-Port Distal
Anastomosis System. The manufacturer
stated that the C-Port System is
indicated for all patients requiring a
vein as a conduit during a coronary
bypass operation for bypassing a
coronary artery stenosis or occlusion.
The manufacturer contended that the CPort System is specifically designed to
create a reliable and consistent end-toside anastomosis between a conduit,
such as a venous graft, and a small
arterial vessel during the bypass
surgery. The device consists of eight
stainless steel clips and a delivery
system. Once the vein graft has been
loaded into the device and the device
positioned against the target vessel, the
anastomosis is created by pushing a
single button. Cardica, Inc. stated the
main purpose of the device is to replace
a conventional hand-sewn, distal
anastomosis with an automated,
compliant, mechanical anastomosis.
We received the following public
comments at the new technology town
hall meeting regarding whether this
technology meets the substantial
clinical improvement criteria:
Comment: The manufacturer argued
that this technology meets the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion because:
• It achieves higher patency rates at 6
months compared to conventional handsewn anastomoses.
• Use of the device will result in less
surgeon-to-surgeon variability in the
quality of the anastomosis compared to
hand sewing.
• The device leads to reduced
operative time.
PO 00000
Frm 00132
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
• The product allows for the creation
of an anastomosis during minimally
invasive surgery.
In addition, we received written
comments expressing support for
approval of new technology add-on
payments for the C-Port System. These
commenters noted that—
• The device allows the anastomosis
to be completed quickly, reducing
patient complications during surgery
from ischemia.
• The device will allow for smaller
incisions during heart surgery and
physicians will not have to position
their hands in the chest cavity in order
to hand-sew the anastomosis.
• The rapidly deployed anastomosis
clamp provides patients with a surgical
alternative where one would otherwise
not be available due to the
comorbidities associated with the more
invasive CABG procedures.
Response: We appreciate the time and
effort the applicant took to present at
the town hall meeting. We indicated in
the proposed rule that we would
consider the information presented in
the written comments and at the town
hall meeting, and invoted interested
parties to submit objective data that
would support the assertions presented
above by the commenters.
The C-Port System was granted
section 510(k) approval from the FDA
on November 10, 2005. While the device
appeared to meet the criteria for being
considered new based on its FDA
approval date, we were concerned that
various forms of surgical staples and
clips have been used for more than a
decade in a wide range of surgical
procedures. In fact, the FDA found that
the C-Port System ‘‘is substantially
equivalent to the predicate devices with
regard to indications, device
characteristics, method of use, labeling
and materials.’’ Thus, given its
similarity to other devices currently on
the market, we were concerned that the
C-Port System may not qualify as new.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule, we
solicited specific comments on whether
this device is new and how it could be
distinguished from predicate devices
that perform the same or a similar
function.
We received the following public
comments in response to the proposed
rule.
Comment: The manufacturer
commented that the C-Port System
meets the newness criterion for the
following reasons:
• The FDA section 510(k) approval
process identifies predicate devices as
having ‘‘a similar, not necessarily
identical use and function.’’
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
• There is no other ‘‘fully-integrated
anastomotic system cleared by the FDA
for the creation of an anastomosis
between a blood vessel graft and a target
coronary artery.’’ There are no ‘‘clip or
staple-based automated distal coronary
anastomotic devices such as [C-Port]
approved by the FDA.’’ The
manufacturer argued that while the
devices they identified in the FDA
section 510(k) approval process are
similar to C-Port system, none of them
are identical.
• C-Port was FDA approved in
November 2005, thus enabling the
device to still qualify as new based on
its FDA approval date.
• There is no clinical precedence for
the use of a stapling device in creating
distal coronary anastomoses, and there
are no ICD–9 CM codes for stapling
devices—the lack of the procedure code
means that CMS does not have charge
data for C-Port and that the device’s
costs are not reflected in the current
DRG weights.
• CMS approved Kinetra in 2004
and stated that the Kinetra device was
not ‘‘significantly different in terms of
how it achieves its desired clinical
results from its predecessor Soletra.’’
The manufacturer believed that the
approval of Kinetra sets precedence for
C-Port approval.
Response: We appreciate the
manufacturer’s clarification of the
questions we posed in the proposed rule
about whether the C-Port would meet
the newness criterion. The additional
information submitted has allowed us to
determine that the C-Port meets the
newness criterion.
In response to the commenter’s
statement about Kinetra, we indicated
that Soletra and Kinetra achieve the
desired clinical result through the same
stimulation mechanism. However, we
did not find Soletra and Kinetra to be
substantially similar products. We noted
that Soletra controls symptoms only on
one side of a patient’s body, while
Kinetra provides bilateral control of
neurological symptoms through a single
device. We determined in the FY 2005
IPPS final rule (69 FR 49019) that
Kinetra represented a substantial
clinical improvement over the previous
Soletra device.
In the proposed rule, we also noted
that there is currently no ICD–9–CM
code used to identify how the
anastomosis is performed. The surgical
technique used to graft the bypass to the
arterial vessel is part of the surgical
procedure itself and is not separately
identified in our current coding
structure. Although there is not an
explicit code to identify C-Port, the
hospital’s charge for the device will be
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
included on its bill. The hospital is
permitted to charge for all items and
services it furnishes irrespective of
whether a particular item is identified
by an explicit ICD–9–CM code. The
charges included on hospital bills for
the device will be part of the relative
weight calculation 2 years later (that is,
FY 2005 hospital charge data are used
to set the FY 2007 relative weights).
Comment: The manufacturer of CPort urged CMS to differentiate
between ‘‘distinct procedures involving
the creation of anastomosis’’ by creating
the following codes: (a) Anastomosis,
manual; and (b) anastomosis,
automated, using single or multiple clip
array deployment technology. The
manufacturer commented that a new
code should be created for C-Port
because the C-Port Distal Anastomosis
procedure is not a typical part of the
bypass procedure code and the use of
the C-Port system requires training and
proctoring for physicians and OR staff to
use the equipment because the C-Port
system comprises new steps and
preparation in the bypass procedure.
Finally, the manufacturer stated that
CMS set a precedent for the creation of
a new code by creating a code for a
drug-eluting stent even though ICD–9–
CM procedure codes already existed for
stent procedures and by creating a new
code to distinguish single versus dual
channel-pulse generator devices
(Kinetra by Medtronic).
Response: While the use of the CPort device may represent a difference
in technique of creating a distal
anastomosis, we do not agree that it is
a distinct procedure. Historically, we
have subdivided procedures involving
the insertion of specific devices that are
designed to achieve a specific
therapeutic purpose, but we have not
assigned a code for specific tools used
to perform surgery. Kinetra, a stent and
a pacemaker, is an example of a device
that is implanted in a patient to treat an
illness that is appropriately assigned a
code. To date, we have not used a code
to identify a specific type of surgical
tool such as a scalpel, saw, or clamp.
Similarly, we view C-Port as a surgical
tool (albeit far more sophisticated or
innovative than those just mentioned)
that should also not be recognized by its
own ICD–9–CM code.
The applicant made several
arguments in support of the device
meeting the cost criterion. Cardica, Inc.
estimated that the cost of each device
will be approximately $1,200. The
applicant assumed a hospital markup of
100 percent, with an average use of 2.5
C-Port devices per case. Therefore, it
estimated that the total average charge
per patient will be $6,000. The C-Port
PO 00000
Frm 00133
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48001
System would be used when a coronary
artery bypass graft is performed. Thus,
we assessed whether it meets the cost
criterion in relation to the threshold for
DRGs 106 (Coronary Bypass with
Percutaneous Transluminal Coronary
Angioplasty), 547 (Coronary Bypass
with Cardiac Catheter with Major CV
Diagnosis), 548 (Coronary Bypass with
Cardiac Catheter without Major CV
Diagnosis), 549 (Coronary Bypass
without Cardiac Catheter with Major CV
Diagnosis), and 550 (Coronary Bypass
without Cardiac Catheter without Major
CV Diagnosis). We note that the data
analysis for this technology is slightly
unusual, as the DRGs to which the
technology would have been assigned in
FY 2005 (the MedPAR data we are
currently using) are DRGs 107 and 109.
These DRGs were terminated in FY
2006, and 4 new coronary bypass DRGs
were created for these cases (DRGs 547,
548, 549, and 550). The manufacturer
provided estimates showing a caseweighted threshold for DRGs 106, 547,
548, 549 and 550 of $75,373. The
applicant projected a 20-percent market
penetration for the device in FY 2007 or
its use in approximately 23,000 cases
across the 5 DRGs. The applicant
submitted data showing average
standardized charges for cases using the
C-Port System of $80,887. Therefore,
the applicant argued that the device
meets the cost threshold for a new
technology add-on payment. Our
internal data analysis of the technology,
using the FY 2005 MedPAR data and
Table 10 thresholds for FY 2005, shows
a case-weighted threshold of $68,416.
We identified cases using coronary
bypass procedure codes 36.10, 36.11,
36.12, 36.13 and 36.14, and concluded
that the case-weighted average
standardized charge for these bypass
cases was $79,394. Thus, our internal
data also suggested that the device
meets the cost threshold.
As we discussed in the proposed rule,
the applicant made several arguments in
support of the device meeting the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion. The manufacturer argued that
the C-Port creates a reliable and fully
compliant end-to-side anastomosis
between a vein graft and a coronary
artery, in less time than is required to
create a hand-sewn distal anastomosis.
The applicant also stated that the CPort System integrates deployment of
the anastomotic clips and creation of the
arteriotomy, thus enabling deployment
to occur without occlusion of blood
flow through the target vessel. However,
we note that the applicant submitted
evidence suggesting that the device does
not always produce reliable
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48002
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
anastomoses; specifically, a study of 130
patients receiving 132 devices reported
13 incomplete anastomoses in 12
patients, and the study also noted that
additional manual stitches were
required in the majority of the patients
studied. Therefore, we were concerned
that these studies suggested that the CPort System may not represent a
substantial clinical improvement over
the traditional hand-sewn technique. At
the town hall meeting, the applicant
noted that these results were associated
with inexperience preparing the target
vessel, vein thickness assessment,
proper device alignment and
anastomosis site selection rather than
problems with the device itself. The
applicant believed that these problems
will become infrequent as surgeons have
more experience with the device. In the
FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule, we
solicited further information from
commenters that would suggest how the
product meets the substantial clinical
improvement criterion.
We received the following comment
in response to the proposed rule.
Comment: The manufacturer
submitted the following comments to be
considered in our evaluation of whether
C-Port met the substantial clinical
improvement criterion:
• Intraoperative anastomotic failures
with the hand-sewn technique occur in
approximately 10 percent of patients.
Falk, et al., evaluated vein graft patency
using a meta-analysis of 28 published
studies with over 28,000 grafts and
found that occlusion within 30 days
occurs in about 12 percent of vein grafts
while occlusion within 6 months occurs
in 20 percent.
• The C-Port device may mitigate
some of the negative factors found in
hand-sewn anastomoses that impact
vein graft patency. Post-operative vein
graft patency rates using the hand-sewn
technique were 88 percent at 30 days
and 80 percent at 6 months (data
obtained from historical controls);
whereas patency rates using the C-Port
device were 99 percent at discharge and
96 percent at 6 months.
• In the greater than 1-year followup
group, none of the patients in the
pivotal C-Port study required a
reintervention.
• The ‘‘10 percent failure rate’’ cited
in a C-Port publication referred to a
failure in surgeons using the device (due
to lack of experience using it), not a
failure of the device itself.
Response: We are concerned that
information presented by the applicant
does not demonstrate that this
technology is a sufficient improvement
over hand-sewing the distal
anastomosis. Although patency rates
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
using the C-Port device were
reportedly higher than those found
using the hand-sewn technique (99
percent at discharge and 96 percent at
6 months compared to 88 percent at 30
days and 80 percent at 6 months), we
also found that the data on the handsewn patency rates was derived from a
meta-analysis of over 28,000 bypass
grafts to different coronary vessels,
many of which may have been
comparatively poor candidates for
bypass grafting, suggesting a possible
selection bias in the arteries in the CPort study. We believe that a clinical
study demonstrating substantial clinical
improvement in outcomes is necessary
for this technology because the
comparison is of the CABG procedure
using the C-Port device to the handsewn technique. In some cases, our
approval of a technology was based on
a clinical assessment that at least one of
the criteria for evaluating substantial
clinical improvement listed in the new
technology final rule (66 FR 46914) was
met. For example, our approval of the
Restore rechargeable neurostimulator
was based on evidence that showed it
decreased the ‘‘rate of subsequent * * *
therapeutic interventions’’ by avoiding a
surgery to replace a battery. Similarly,
we approved GORE TAG because it
‘‘offers a treatment option for patient
population unresponsive to, or
ineligible for, currently available
treatments.’’ In these cases, we were less
reliant on a clinical study to
demonstrate improvement over an
existing technology than our clinical
judgment that the product achieved its
intended purposes which itself is a
substantial clinical improvement. With
C-Port or with a hand-sewn
anastomosis, the treatment is the same
(a CABG for coronary artery vessel
disease). Thus, clinical studies
demonstrating an improvement in
CABG outcomes using the C-Port
device relative to the hand-sewn
technique are critical to approving the
device for new technology add-on
payments.
Given the relatively high rates of
success of both the hand sewn and the
automated technique, we were not able
to determine that the C-Port device is
a substantial clinical improvement over
the traditional hand-sewn technique.
Accordingly, after consideration of the
comments received, we are not
approving the C-Port Distal
Anastomosis System for FY 2007 new
technology add-on payment.
There are several potential criteria
listed in the new technology final rule
that C-Port could potentially meet. For
instance, it is possible that C-Port will
reduce recovery time or lead to more
PO 00000
Frm 00134
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
rapid beneficial resolution of the disease
process treatment. Given the potential
benefits of C-Port, it is likely that we
would approve the technology for addon payments with a study that more
definitively demonstrates substantial
clinical improvement. For instance, our
main concern with the study presented
was that the control group and the study
population used to demonstrate
substantial clinical improvement may
not have been directly comparable. If
there was a study that showed similar
improvements in patency rates between
the control group and a study
population where the patients were
directly comparable in their coronary
artery vessel disease, we believe it
would be more likely to demonstrate
that the substantial clinical
improvement criterion was met.
b. NovoSeven for Intracerebral
Hemorrhage
The Pinnacle Health Group in
conjunction with Novo Nordisk Inc. (the
manufacturer) submitted an application
for new technology add-on payments for
FY 2007 for NovoSeven for
Intracerebral Hemorrhage. However, the
applicant withdrew its application for
new technology add-on payment on
June 07, 2006.
We received the following public
comments regarding this application for
new technology add-on payments in
response to the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule.
Comment: One commenter supported
approving new technology add-on
payments for NovoSeven. The
commenter believed that the availability
of an add-on payment would help
facilitate patient access to this important
and costly therapy.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s response to the proposed
rule. We note that, during the comment
period, the applicant withdrew its
application from consideration for new
technology add-on payments for FY
2007.
We appreciate the applicant for its
submittal of an application for new
technology add-on payments and
encourage a resubmission of an
application upon FDA approval of its
technology.
c. X STOP Interspinous Process
Decompression System
St. Francis Medical Technologies
submitted an application for new
technology add-on payments for the X
STOP Interspinous Process
Decompression System for FY 2007.
Lumbar spinal stenosis describes a
condition that occurs when the spaces
between bones in the spine become
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
narrowed due to arthritis and other agerelated conditions. This narrowing, or
stenosis, causes nerves coming from the
spinal cord to be compressed, thereby
causing symptoms including pain,
numbness, and weakness. It particularly
causes symptoms when the spine is in
extension, as occurs when a patient
stands fully upright or leans back. The
X STOP device is inserted between the
spinous processes of adjacent vertebrae
in order to provide a minimally invasive
alternative to conservative treatment
(exercise and physical therapy) and
invasive surgery (spinal fusion). It
works by limiting the spine extension
that compresses the nerve roots while
still preserving as much motion as
possible. The device is inserted in a
relatively simple, primarily outpatient
procedure using local anesthesia.
However, in some circumstances, the
physician may prefer to admit the
patient for an inpatient stay. The
manufacturer described the device as
providing ‘‘a new minimally invasive,
stand-alone alternative treatment for
lumbar spinal stenosis.’’
The X STOP Interspinous Process
Decompression system received premarket approval from the FDA on
November 21, 2005. The device is
currently described by ICD–9–CM code
84.58 (Implantation of Interspinous
process decompression device)
(excluding: fusion of spine (codes 81.00
through 81.08, and 81.30 through
81.39)). This ICD–9–CM code went into
effect on October 1, 2005.
The manufacturer provided data in
support of the device meeting the cost
threshold criterion. The applicant stated
that there would be an average of 1.6
units used per case. Each unit costs
$5,500; therefore, the technology is
expected to cost $8,800 per case. The
device is currently assigned to DRGs
499 (Back and Neck Procedures Except
Spinal Fusion with CC) and 500 (Back
and Neck Procedures Except Spinal
Fusion without CC). The manufacturer
projected that there would be
approximately 424 patients eligible to
receive the device in DRG 499 in FY
2007, while there may be approximately
1,700 patients who receive the device in
DRG 500. The manufacturer also
provided data for cases involved in the
clinical trials. The average standardized
charge for the cases in FY 2004 was
$24,065. The weighted threshold for
DRGs 499 and 500 is $20,096. However,
the manufacturer argued that because
significantly less than 20 percent of
patients receiving the X STOP
experienced complications or had
comorbidities, the threshold should be
calculated by estimating that 20 percent
of patients would be assigned to DRG
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
499 and 80 percent would to DRG 500.
The manufacturer stated in its
application that, using this
methodology, the applicable threshold
should be $19,796. Using either
calculation, it appears that the
technology meets the cost threshold for
new technology add-on payments.
The applicant also submitted
information in support of its claim of
meeting the substantial clinical
improvement criterion. The
manufacturer stated that the X STOP
device is placed between the spinous
processes to limit extension of the
symptomatic level(s), yet allowing
flexion, axial rotation, and lateral
bending (that is, the device limits
pressure on the spinal nerves and the
resulting pain symptoms when the
patient is in an upright position or leans
backward while also preserving the
patient’s ability to turn side-to-side,
bend forward, and to turn to either
side). The applicant contended that this
technology provides an alternative with
improved clinical outcomes to
conservative and surgical treatments.
The manufacturer further stated that the
device may offer a new alternative to
lumbar spinal decompression
procedures such as laminectomy and
laminotomy. Additional information
included in the application suggested
that the device preserves spinal motion
and is superior to a spinal
decompression procedure that requires
concomitant fusion (with or without
instrumentation). The applicant argued
that the advantages over spinal
decompression include reduced risk,
shorter hospital stay, and earlier
improvement in pain and function. The
manufacturer further contended that
disease progression at adjacent levels is
minimal following X STOP
implantation compared to the known
risk associated with surgical
decompression and concomitant fusion.
The applicant stated that the X STOP is
comparable to traditional surgical
decompression of lumbar spinal
stenosis with respect to improved
quality of life postoperatively.
According to the applicant, the device
provides advantages over nonoperative
care, including better symptom relief,
improved function, and increased
patient satisfaction.
We received the following public
comments through the new technology
town hall meeting process regarding this
application for add-on payments.
Comment: The applicant asserted that
the X STOP Interspinous Process
Decompression system has the
following advantages:
• It retains spinal anatomy and all
spinal structures.
PO 00000
Frm 00135
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48003
• The device allows for increased
function and less pain after
implantation as evidenced by
radiographic measures that showed
increases in the spinal canal area by 18
percent, diameter by 9 percent, and
subarticular diameter (the route that the
nerves exit the spine) by 50 percent. In
lateral view: area increased by 25
percent and width by 41 percent.
• The X STOP is a reversible
procedure that causes no damage to
facets or disks.
• The device allows for a treatment
option for patients that cannot undergo
surgeries with general anesthesia.
• The rate of complications
associated with implantation of the
device is below 1 percent.
Response: In the proposed rule, we
indicated that we would evaluate these
assertions as we further considered this
application for new technology add-on
payments for the final rule. We also
noted that the study that the applicant
summarized at the town hall meeting for
the X STOP used a randomized study
that targeted lumbar spinal stenosis
patients with mild to moderate
symptoms. The control group did not
require operative care. In the proposed
rule, we solicited information from the
comments that demonstrates how the
study populations showed substantial
clinical improvement compared to the
control group.
We believe that the device satisfies
the newness and cost threshold criteria
for new technology add-on payments.
However, in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule, we expressed our concern that the
information included with the
application may raise issues about
substantial clinical improvement.
During the FDA approval process, the
Center for Devices and Radiological
Health (CDRH) Advisory Panel voted
against premarket approval (PMA) in
August 2004 because of concerns about
proper patient selection as well as the
lack of objective endpoints, especially
radiographic endpoints. The Panel also
mentioned the overall low clinical
efficacy rate in the study population.
The device subsequently received PMA
approval, but only on the condition that
it be used in the context of a long term
(5 year) follow-up study. In the
proposed rule, we solicited information
from commenters that addressed the
concerns raised by the CDRH Advisory
Panel or other information bearing on
the issue of whether this product meets
the substantial clinical improvement
criterion.
We note that the town hall meeting
produced contradictory information
regarding whether this procedure is
generally performed in inpatient or
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48004
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
outpatient settings. The presenter
indicated that over 90 percent of his
patients were treated as outpatients. The
manufacturer noted that 90 percent of
non-U.S. patients and approximately
two-thirds of U.S. patients since FDA
approval have been treated in inpatient
settings. While the setting where the
procedure is typically performed has no
bearing on whether the product
represents a substantial clinical
improvement, we noted that we believe
the physician should select the most
appropriate site to perform the
procedure based on the clinical needs of
the patient.
We received the following comments
in response to the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule.
Comment: The manufacturer
commented that the contradictory
information we noted in the proposed
rule about whether the procedure in
general performed in the outpatient or
inpatient setting was likely the result of
the presenter at the town hall meeting
misspeaking when he said that the
device was used in the outpatient
setting about 90 percent of the time.
Although the device may be used with
local anesthesia, the manufacturer
predicted that many clinicians attending
to Medicare patients will choose general
anesthesia and will use the procedure in
an inpatient setting. The manufacturer
stated that the X STOP device is
currently used in the inpatient setting
about 90 percent of the time.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s clarification of this point.
As we indicated in the proposed rule,
the site of service has no bearing on
whether we will determine the
technology to be a substantial clinical
improvement. However, given the
similarity in the criteria we apply in the
two settings for determining substantial
clinical improvement, we note that a
decision to approve a device for
inpatient new technology add-on
payment may have implications for
outpatient new technology pass-through
payment.
Comment: In response to our request
for additional information supporting
that the X STOP device meets the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion, the manufacturer reiterated
many of the comments that it submitted
through the new technology town hall
meeting process. Mainly, the commenter
stated that X STOP offers an alternative
to surgery that is associated with fewer
and less severe complications, is a
reversible procedure, and offers a faster
recovery time than more invasive
surgery. The commenter also stated that
X STOP meets the criterion when
compared to other disease management
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
modalities for lumbar spinal stenosis
patients, as evidenced by symptom
relief, physical functioning, treatment
satisfaction, and health-related quality
of life, and that use of X STOP results
in—
• Comparable treatment efficacy
when compared to laminectomy
• Lower rates of intraoperative
complications compared to surgical
decompression with or without
concomitant fusion
• Lower reoperation rates for
unresolved stenosis systems compared
to other surgical treatments.
In addition, the manufacturer stated
that it addressed the issues that the
Advisory Panel to the FDA cited as
reasons for voting against approving X
STOP. Those issues were in regards to
proper patient selection, a lack of
objective endpoints, especially
radiographic endpoints and an overall
low clinical efficacy rate in the study
population. The manufacturer claimed
that it addressed the concerns of the
Advisory Panel by submitting additional
data and analyses to the FDA that—
• Identified patients with LSS and
moderately impaired physical function
at baseline as the appropriate
indication.
• Supplemented ‘‘the showing of the
mechanism of effect on the spine in
cadavers with in vivo clinical
radiographic data.’’
• Addressed the issue of low clinical
efficacy rates, by showing that the
success rates using X STOP were
comparable to those of more invasive
procedures that are covered by
Medicare.
The manufacturer further noted that
the Advisory Panel wrote in its
Summary of Safety and Effectiveness
document that ‘‘the X STOP device met
the primary clinical study endpoint for
success, exceeding the success rate of
the control in every statistical analysis.’’
Finally, the manufacturer noted that the
FDA requirement that X STOP’s
approval was conditioned on a 5-year
followup study was not uncommon for
spinal implant devices and that, over
the past 10 years, all nine spinal
implant FDA approvals have had
similar conditional requirements. The
manufacturer also commented that CMS
approved the INFUSE Bone Graft device
and noted that the FDA required a 6year followup study as a condition of its
approval of that device.
Several commenters who were
individual physicians who have had
experience using the X STOP device
indicated that X STOP provides an
alternative to more invasive surgery
such as a laminectomy after
conservative treatment has failed. All of
PO 00000
Frm 00136
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
the commenters supported approving
the device for new technology add-on
payment. In addition to commenters’
support that the device is minimally
invasive and has short operative and
recovery time, some of the commenters
mentioned other positive outcomes that
the X STOP procedure—
• Increases foraminal height and
produces minimal reversal of the
lordosis, as measured by post operative
x-rays;
• Reduced the pain reported by
patients by half in some cases;
• Provided alleviation of neurogenic
claudication symptoms; and
• Benefited patients with significant
comorbidities, including cardiothoracic
problems, specifically chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease or
coronary artery disease
In addition, some commenters noted
that the X STOP device can very easily
be implanted in the outpatient setting
(assuming appropriate patientselection), thus allowing high inpatient
costs to be avoided.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ submittal of comments in
support of X STOP. With respect to
substantial clinical improvement, we
continue to be concerned that the FDA
Advisory Panel noted the overall low
clinical efficacy rate in the study
population and only approved the
technology conditional on a 5 year
followup study. Nevertheless, we note
that the FDA did approve the
technology, meaning that it is safe and
effective (that is, it achieves its intended
purpose). Further, we note that the
applicant was able to address the FDA
concern about lack of objective
endpoints by the showing of the
mechanism of effect on the spine in
cadavers with in vivo clinical
radiographic data. That is, the applicant
was able to show that the X STOP
device limits spine extension that
compresses the nerve. Thus, we believe
that the technology has promise for
providing a less invasive alternative to
procedures such as laminectomy or
fusion for patients that have failed
conservative treatment (exercise,
physical therapy and medication). The
X STOP system represents a new level
of treatment on the continuum of care
for patients with lumbar spinal stenosis
that previously did not exist.
Accordingly, after consideration of
the comments received, we are
approving the X STOP Interspinous
Process Decompression System for new
technology add-on payment for FY
2007. However, we remain interested in
seeing whether the clinical evidence
from the 5-year followup study required
by the FDA demonstrates that X STOP
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
continues to be effective. Cases
involving X STOP will be identified by
ICD–9–CM code 84.58 (Implantation of
interspinous process decompression
device). These cases are generally
included in DRG 499 (Back and Neck
Procedures Except Spinal Fusion with
CC) and DRG 500 (Back and Neck
Procedures Except Spinal Fusion
without CC). As noted in the proposed
rule, the manufacturer submitted data to
support its estimated cost per case
involving the X STOP procedure of
$8,800. Accordingly, we are finalizing a
maximum add-on payment of $4,400 for
cases that involve this technology.
5. Interim and Final Cost Threshold
Tables Due to Changes to Wage Index
and Budget Neutrality Factors
Table 10 of the IPPS proposed and
final rules contains the cost thresholds
that are used to determine whether a
technology meets the criteria for new
technology add-on payments. We are
publishing an interim Table 10 in this
final rule. We use the national adjusted
operating standardized amounts in
calculating the cost threshold. As noted
in section III. and in the Addendum to
this final rule, the final national
adjusted operating standardized
amounts will be published subsequent
to this final rule when the wage index
and budget neutrality factors are
finalized for FY 2007. Therefore, we
will also publish a revised version of
Table 10, containing the final thresholds
for FY 2008 between August 1 and
October 1.
III. Changes to the Hospital Wage Index
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
A. Background
Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act
requires that, as part of the methodology
for determining prospective payments to
hospitals, the Secretary must adjust the
standardized amounts ‘‘for area
differences in hospital wage levels by a
factor (established by the Secretary)
reflecting the relative hospital wage
level in the geographic area of the
hospital compared to the national
average hospital wage level.’’ In
accordance with the broad discretion
conferred under the Act, we currently
define hospital labor market areas based
on the definitions of statistical areas
established by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB). A discussion of the
FY 2007 hospital wage index based on
the statistical areas, including OMB’s
revised definitions of Metropolitan
Areas, appears under section III.B. of
this preamble.
Beginning October 1, 1993, section
1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act requires that we
update the wage index annually.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Furthermore, this section provides that
the Secretary base the update on a
survey of wages and wage-related costs
of short-term, acute care hospitals. The
survey must exclude the wages and
wage-related costs incurred in
furnishing skilled nursing services. This
provision also requires us to make any
updates or adjustments to the wage
index in a manner that ensures that
aggregate payments to hospitals are not
affected by the change in the wage
index. The adjustment for FY 2007 is
discussed in section II.B. of the
Addendum to this final rule.
As discussed below in section III.G. of
this preamble, we also take into account
the geographic reclassification of
hospitals in accordance with sections
1886(d)(8)(B) and 1886(d)(10) of the Act
when calculating the wage index. Under
section 1886(d)(8)(D) of the Act, the
Secretary is required to adjust the
standardized amounts so as to ensure
that aggregate payments under the IPPS
after implementation of the provisions
of sections 1886(d)(8)(B) and (C) and
1886(d)(10) of the Act are equal to the
aggregate prospective payments that
would have been made absent these
provisions. The budget neutrality
adjustment for FY 2007 is discussed in
section II.A.4.b. of the Addendum to
this final rule.
Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act also
provides for the collection of data every
3 years on the occupational mix of
employees for short-term, acute care
hospitals participating in the Medicare
program, in order to construct an
occupational mix adjustment to the
wage index. A discussion of the
occupational mix adjustment that we
are applying beginning October 1, 2006
(the FY 2007 wage index) appears under
section III.C. of this preamble.
B. Core-Based Statistical Areas for the
Hospital Wage Index
The wage index is calculated and
assigned to hospitals on the basis of the
labor market area in which the hospital
is located. In accordance with the broad
discretion under section 1886(d)(3)(E) of
the Act, beginning with FY 2005, we
define hospital labor market areas based
on the Core-Based Statistical Areas
(CBSAs) established by OMB and
announced in December 2003 (69 FR
49027). OMB defines a CBSA, beginning
in 2003, as ‘‘a geographic entity
associated with at least one core of
10,000 or more population, plus
adjacent territory that has a high degree
of social and economic integration with
the core as measured by commuting
ties.’’ The standards designate and
define two categories of CBSAs:
Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs)
PO 00000
Frm 00137
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48005
and Micropolitan Statistical Areas (65
FR 82235).
According to OMB, MSAs are based
on urbanized areas of 50,000 or more
population, and Micropolitan Statistical
Areas (referred to in this discussion as
Micropolitan Areas) are based on urban
clusters with a population of at least
10,000 but less than 50,000. Counties
that do not fall within CBSAs are
deemed ‘‘Outside CBSAs.’’ In the past,
OMB defined MSAs around areas with
a minimum core population of 50,000,
and smaller areas were ‘‘Outside
MSAs.’’
The general concept of the CBSAs is
that of an area containing a recognized
population nucleus and adjacent
communities that have a high degree of
integration with that nucleus. The
purpose of the standards is to provide
nationally consistent definitions for
collecting, tabulating, and publishing
Federal statistics for a set of geographic
areas. CBSAs include adjacent counties
that have a minimum of 25 percent
commuting to the central counties of the
area. (This is an increase over the
minimum commuting threshold of 15
percent for outlying counties applied in
the previous MSA definition.) We
consider CBSAs that are MSAs to be
urban, and CBSAs that are Micropolitan
Statistical Areas as well as areas outside
of CBSAs to be rural. In addition, where
an MSA has been divided into
Metropolitan Division to comprise the
labor market areas for purposes of
calculating the wage index (69 FR
49029).
The revised CBSAs established by
OMB comprised MSAs and
Micropolitan Areas based on Census
2000 data. (A copy of the announcement
may be obtained at the following
Internet address: https://
www.whitehouse.gov/omb/bulletins/
fy04/b04–03.html.) The revised
definitions recognize 49 MSAs and 565
Micropolitan Areas, and extensively
changed the composition of many of the
MSAs that existed prior to the revisions.
The revised area designations resulted
in a higher wage index for some areas
and a lower wage index for others.
Further, some hospitals that were
previously classified as urban are now
in rural areas. Given the significant
payment impacts upon some hospitals
because of these changes, we provided
a transition period to the new labor
market areas in the FY 2005 IPPS final
rule (69 FR 49027 through 49034). As
part of that transition, we allowed urban
hospitals that became rural under the
new definitions to maintain their
assignment to the MSA where they were
previously located for the 3-year period
of FY 2005, FY 2006, and FY 2007.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48006
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Specifically, these hospitals were
assigned the wage index of the urban
area to which they previously belonged.
(For purposes of the wage index
computation, the wage data of these
hospitals remained assigned to the
statewide rural area in which they are
located.) The hospitals receiving this
transition will not be considered urban
hospitals; rather, they will maintain
their status as rural hospitals. Thus, the
hospital would not be eligible, for
example, for a large urban add-on
payment under the capital PPS. In other
words, it is the wage index, but not the
urban or rural status, of these hospitals
that is being affected by this transition.
The higher wage indices that these
hospitals are receiving are also being
taken into consideration in determining
whether they qualify for the outmigration adjustment discussed in
section III.I. of this preamble and the
amount of any adjustment.
FY 2007 will be the third year of this
transition period. We will continue to
assign the wage index for the urban area
in which the hospital was previously
located through FY 2007. In order to
ensure this provision remains budget
neutral, we will continue to adjust the
standardized amount by a transition
budget neutrality factor to account for
these hospitals. Doing so is consistent
with the requirement of section
1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act that any
‘‘adjustments or updates [to the
adjustment for different area wage
levels] * * * shall be made in a manner
that assures that aggregate payments
* * * are not greater or less than those
that would have been made in the year
without such adjustment.’’
Beginning in FY 2008, these hospitals
will receive their statewide rural wage
index, although they will be eligible to
apply for reclassification by the MGCRB
both during this transition period and in
subsequent years. These hospitals will
be considered rural for reclassification
purposes.
Consistent with the FY 2005 and FY
2006 IPPS final rules, as we did
beginning in FY 2006, for FY 2007 we
are providing that hospitals receive 100
percent of their wage index based upon
the CBSA configurations. Specifically,
we will determine for each hospital a
wage index for FY 2007 employing wage
index data from FY 2003 hospital cost
reports and using the CBSA labor
market definitions.
C. Occupational Mix Adjustment to the
FY 2007 Wage Index
As stated earlier, section 1886(d)(3)(E)
of the Act provides for the collection of
data every 3 years on the occupational
mix of employees for each short-term,
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
acute care hospital participating in the
Medicare program, in order to construct
an occupational mix adjustment to the
wage index, for application beginning
October 1, 2004 (the FY 2005 wage
index). The purpose of the occupational
mix adjustment is to control for the
effect of hospitals’’ employment choices
on the wage index. For example,
hospitals may choose to employ
different combinations of registered
nurses, licensed practical nurses,
nursing aides, and medical assistants for
the purpose of providing nursing care to
their patients. The varying labor costs
associated with these choices reflect
hospital management decisions rather
than geographic differences in the costs
of labor.
Comment: Some commenters
expressed concern about the
occupational mix adjustment relative to
the proposed implementation of
changes to the DRG system. A few stated
that the purpose of the occupational mix
adjustment is to ensure that hospitals
are not paid through both the wage
index and the resource-based DRG
system for the additional resources
needed for certain procedures. The
commenters suggested that the
occupational mix adjustment is not
necessary if a robust severity-adjusted
DRG system is implemented. Other
commenters indicated that CMS should
consider deferring the implementation
of the proposed hospital-specific cost
weighting methodology and severity
DRGs until at least FY 2008 to alleviate
the burden on hospitals that will be
negatively affected by a redistribution of
Medicare payments under the new
occupational mix adjustment.
Response: We remind the commenters
that an occupational mix adjustment to
the wage index is required under
section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act.
Although we understand the
commenters’ concerns that some
hospitals may be negatively affected by
the new occupational mix adjustment,
we also believe that it is important for
us to move forward with implementing
changes in the DRG system that would
recognize that some more complex cases
may require a higher DRG payment
because the services are provided by
more highly skilled workers.
Comment: A few commenters
opposed the occupational mix
adjustment. One commenter believed
that the initial application of the
occupational mix adjustment had
unintended results, benefiting fewer
rural hospitals and more large urban
hospitals than anticipated. The
commenter stated that this problem has
been compounded by the additional
pressure from the decision in Bellevue
PO 00000
Frm 00138
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Hosp. Center v. Leavitt, 443 F.3d 163
(2nd Cir. 2006), and, therefore,
recommended that CMS approach
Congress about repealing the mandate
for the occupational mix adjustment.
Another commenter indicated that the
occupational mix survey is confusing
and burdensome to hospitals.
Response: As held in Bellevue Hosp.
Center v. Leavitt, 443 F.3d 163 (2nd Cir.
2006), adjusting the wage index for
occupational mix is required by
Congress. Therefore, commenters who
believe that the occupational mix
should be eliminated would need to
approach the Congress with such
concerns. As for the initial application
of the occupational mix, we believe the
unexpected outcomes may have been
due to a combination of factors,
including the newness of the survey and
changing trends in hospital
employment. We have modified the
survey for 2006, and these modifications
should reduce the risk of reporting and
measurement errors. These
modifications are based largely on
suggestions we received from MedPAC
and the hospital community. We
understand the commenter’s concern
that completing the survey causes a
burden to hospitals; however, the
statute requires us to collect data on
occupational mix every 3 years. In
response to similar concerns expressed
for the 2003 survey, we streamlined the
2006 survey and clarified the
instructions in an effort to reduce the
burden. We will continue to work with
hospitals and associations to explore
ways to improve the survey to ensure
the accuracy of the occupational mix
adjustment while reducing the reporting
burden for hospitals.
1. Development of Data for the FY 2007
Occupational Mix Adjustment
In our initial FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule (71 FR 23996), we discussed our
proposals for calculating the proposed
FY 2007 occupational mix adjustment.
We proposed to use the same CMS Wage
Index Occupational Mix Survey and
Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) data
that we used for the FY 2005 and FY
2006 wage indices, with a few
exceptions. We also proposed to adjust
10 percent of the FY 2007 wage index
by a factor reflecting occupational mix.
However on April 3, 2006, in Bellevue
Hosp. Center v. Leavitt, 443 F.3d 163
(2nd Cir. 2006) the Court of Appeals for
the Second Circuit (the Court) ordered
CMS to apply the occupational mix
adjustment to 100 percent of the wage
index effective for FY 2007. The Court
ordered CMS to ‘‘immediately * * *
collect data that are sufficiently robust
to permit full application of the
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
occupational mix adjustment.’’ The
Court also ordered that all ‘‘data
collection and measurement and any
other preparations necessary for full
application be completed by September
30, 2006, at which time the agency is to
immediately apply the adjustment in
full.’’ For more information, we refer the
readers to Bellevue Hosp. Center v.
Leavitt, 443 F.3d 163, 179 (2nd Cir.
2006).
To comply with the Court’s order, on
April 21, 2006, we issued a JointSignature Memorandum (JSM–06412) to
all Medicare fiscal intermediaries
announcing our plans to collect new
occupational mix data from hospitals.
The Joint-Signature Memorandum is
available on the CMS Web site at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS.
Click on ‘‘Wage Index Files’’ and the
link is titled: 2006 Occupational Mix
Survey—Interim Data Collection—CMS
Memo to Fiscal Intermediaries.
On May 17, 2006, we also published
in the Federal Register (71 FR 28644) a
second proposed rule that proposed to
revise the methodology for calculating
the occupational mix adjustment by
applying the occupational mix
adjustment to 100 percent of the wage
index using the new occupational mix
data collected from hospitals. The
second proposed rule also proposed to
modify hospitals’ procedures for
withdrawing requests to reclassify for
the FY 2007 wage index and for
supplementing the FY 2008
reclassification application with official
data used to develop the FY 2007 wage
index. In addition, we proposed to
replace in full the descriptions of the
data and methodology that would be
used in calculating the occupational
mix adjustment discussed in the initial
FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule.
As stated earlier, section 1886(d)(3)(E)
of the Act requires us to conduct a new
survey at least once every 3 years. On
October 14, 2005, we published a notice
in the Federal Register (70 FR 60092)
proposing to use a new survey, the 2006
Medicare Wage Index Occupational Mix
Survey (the 2006 survey) to apply an
occupational mix adjustment to the FY
2008 wage index. In the proposed 2006
survey, we included several
modifications based on the comments
and recommendations we received on
the 2003 survey, including (1) allowing
hospitals to report their own average
hourly wage rather than using BLS data;
(2) extending the prospective survey
period; and (3) reducing the number of
occupational categories but refining the
subcategories for registered nurses.
We made the changes to the
occupational categories in response to
MedPAC comments to the FY 2005 IPPS
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
final rule (69 FR 49036). Specifically,
MedPAC recommended that CMS assess
whether including subcategories of
registered nurses would result in a more
accurate occupational mix adjustment.
MedPAC believed that including all
registered nurses in a single category
may obscure significant wage
differences among the subcategories of
registered nurses, for example, the
wages of surgical registered nurses and
floor registered nurses may differ. Also,
to offset additional reporting burden for
hospitals, MedPAC recommended that
CMS should combine the general
service categories that account for only
a small percentage of a hospital’s total
hours with the ‘‘all other occupations’’
category because most of the
occupational mix adjustment is
correlated with the nursing general
service category.
In addition, in response to the public
comments on the October 14, 2005
notice, we modified the 2006 survey. On
February 10, 2006, we published a
Federal Register notice (71 FR 7047)
that solicited comments and announced
our intent to seek OMB approval on the
revised occupational mix survey (Form
CMS–10079 (2006)).
The revised 2006 survey provides for
the collection of hospital-specific wages
and hours data, a 6-month prospective
reporting period (that is, January 1,
2006, through June 30, 2006), the
transfer of each general service category
that comprised less than 4 percent of
total hospital employees in the 2003
survey to the ‘‘all other occupations’’
category (the revised survey focuses
only on the mix of nursing occupations),
additional clarification of the
definitions for the occupational
categories, an expansion of the
registered nurse category to include
functional subcategories, and the
exclusion of average hourly rate data
associated with advance practice nurses.
The 2006 survey includes only two
general occupational categories: Nursing
and ‘‘all other occupations.’’ The
nursing category has four subcategories:
registered nurses, licensed practical
nurses, aides, orderlies, attendants, and
medical assistants. The registered nurse
subcategory includes two functional
subcategories: management personnel
and staff nurses or clinicians. As
indicated above, the 2006 survey
provides for a 6-month data collection
period, from January 1, 2006 through
June 30, 2006. However, we allowed
flexibility for the reporting period begin
and end dates to accommodate some
hospitals’ bi-weekly payroll and
reporting systems. That is, the 6-month
reporting period must begin on or after
PO 00000
Frm 00139
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48007
December 25, 2005, and must end before
July 9, 2006.
To comply with the order of the court
in Bellevue Hosp. Center v. Leavitt, as
discussed above, we proposed to collect
new survey data, instead of using the
2003 survey data proposed in the FY
2007 IPPS proposed rule, to calculate
the occupational mix adjustment for the
FY 2007 wage index. Because hospitals
were already collecting data for the
revised 2006 survey, we proposed to use
the first 3 months of that data (that is,
from January 1, 2006, through March 31,
2006) to calculate the FY 2007
occupational mix adjustment. In order
to allow sufficient time for hospitals,
fiscal intermediaries, and CMS to
collect, review, and correct the new
data, and for CMS to perform required
analyses and apply the new data in
calculating the FY 2007 occupational
mix adjustment, we determined that it
would be impossible for us to apply the
full 6 months of data by October 1,
2006.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that hospitals were sometimes unsure of
the placement of certain employees on
the survey. For example, hospitals were
uncertain as to the category that would
include surgical technicians and
paramedics who are employed by the
hospital and who usually work in the
emergency department. The
commenters urged CMS to evaluate
where these employees should be
placed on the survey for future
collections.
The commenters also stated that they
agreed with CMS’ efforts to ensure
consistent reporting by specifying the
cost centers for collecting nursing
personnel data. They agreed that the
cost centers included on the survey are
where the majority of nurses are
employed within hospitals. The
commenters added that the use of the
cost centers significantly reduces the
burden for hospitals by allowing them
to focus on only the listed cost centers.
However, the commenters urged CMS to
consider refining the list of cost centers
for future collections. The commenters
advised that every hospital has a
different method for attributing costs to
cost centers; therefore, some hospitals
may have a few cost centers that contain
a significant number of nursing
personnel that were not included in the
current survey.
The commenters recommended that
CMS work with the hospital community
to explore potential changes to the
survey occupational categories and cost
centers. Even if they are warranted, the
commenters suggested that CMS should
not make any changes to the ongoing
survey collection, as it would
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48008
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
necessitate the resubmission of the 1st
quarter 2006 data to ensure that both 1st
and 2nd quarters could be used for the
FY 2008 and the FY 2009 occupational
mix adjustment.
Response: We appreciate the
assistance we have already received
from the hospital community in
developing the 2006 occupational mix
survey. On May 25, 2006, in response to
questions from hospitals and
associations, we distributed
supplemental instructions to the
intermediaries, hospitals (via the
intermediaries), and national hospital
associations (and posted the
instructions on our Web site) to clarify
the placement of nursing and
nonnursing personnel on the
occupational mix survey. We will
continue to work with MedPAC and the
hospital community to determine if
changes to the occupational categories
and cost centers included on the survey
are reasonable and necessary for future
collections. We agree with not changing
the instructions for the 2006 survey. As
the commenters indicated, to change the
survey with the 1st quarter data
collection already completed would
require substantial rework on the part of
hospitals, fiscal intermediaries, and
CMS.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed concern that hospitals in
States with mandatory nurse-staffing
ratios for inpatient facilities and
hospitals that use higher levels of
registered nurses to improve the quality
of care will be adversely affected by the
occupational mix adjustment. One
commenter stated that the current
survey is designed to benefit parts of the
country that make greater use of lesser
skilled nurses and allied health
professionals, and to reduce payment in
areas that make greater use of registered
nurses in nursing positions. The
commenter speculated that the
occupational mix adjustment will likely
reduce the payments for its hospitals,
thus reducing the quality of care they
can provide to Medicare beneficiaries.
Another commenter indicated that the
wage index and occupational mix
adjustments penalize hospitals that
invest in quality and efficiency at the
same time that Congress is trying to
improve quality and efficiency under
the Medicare program. The commenter
stated that the effect of these
adjustments on hospitals that use higher
levels of registered nurses reduces or
eliminates the annual Medicare
inflation increase provided to address
the increasing costs these hospitals
incur. The commenter further indicated
that this reduction would not be a
savings to the program, but rather it
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
would be a redistribution of Medicare
payments to hospitals that have not
been as efficient or as focused on
improving the quality of care.
Response: As stated earlier, the statute
requires implementation of an
occupational mix adjustment to the
wage index. In addition, the purpose of
the occupational mix adjustment is to
control the effect of a hospital’s
employment mix on its average hourly
wage for the wage index. The
adjustment standardizes the
employment mix for hospitals so that
the wage index more accurately
compares wage rates among labor
market areas for a constant mix of labor.
As the commenters noted, the
occupational mix adjustment would
lower the wage index for an area
employing a mix of more highly paid
and skilled labor than the national
average. Although we understand the
commenters’ concerns regarding the
effect of the occupational mix on their
areas’ Medicare payments, we disagree
that the wage index and occupational
mix adjustments penalize hospitals that
invest in quality and efficiency. We note
that CMS is moving toward adoption of
a severity-based DRG system that will
better recognize severity of illness and
provide improved payments to those
hospitals that need more highly skilled
labor to care for more severely ill
patients. Even under the current system,
the labor costs incurred by hospitals
that provide more highly skilled
services are currently reflected in the
hospital’s DRG payments and illustrated
through a higher case mix index.
Reflecting the costs associated with
more highly skilled labor in both the
case mix and the wage index is
essentially counting them twice.
To comply with the order of the court
in Bellevue Hosp. Center v. Leavitt, as a
final policy, we are adopting our
proposal to use the new 1st quarter 2006
survey data to calculate the
occupational mix adjustment for the FY
2007 wage index.
2. Timeline for the Collection, Review,
and Correction of the Occupational Mix
Data
The Joint-Signature Memorandum
(JSM–06412) that we issued on April 21,
2006, instructed all fiscal intermediaries
to immediately alert the hospitals they
service to the changes in the schedule
for submitting the occupational mix
data files.
The Joint-Signature Memorandum
provided hospitals and fiscal
intermediaries with the revised
schedule for the occupational mix
survey data that would be used in the
PO 00000
Frm 00140
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
FY 2007 wage index. The schedule
included deadlines for—
• Hospitals to submit occupational
mix data. The deadline was June 1,
2006.
• Fiscal intermediary review of the
submitted data. The deadline was June
22, 2006.
• Availability of the submitted data
on the CMS Web site. The deadline was
June 29, 2006.
• Hospitals to submit requests to their
fiscal intermediaries for corrections to
their interim occupational mix data. The
deadline was July 13, 2006.
• Fiscal intermediaries to submit
corrected interim occupational mix
survey data for the January 1, 2006,
through March 31, 2006 period. The
deadline was July 27, 2006.
We noted that it was critical that
hospitals provide information according
to the dates provided in the schedule in
order to be able to appeal any disputed
calculations at a later point to the
Provider Review Reimbursement Board
(PRRB). The final deadline for the fiscal
intermediaries to make occupational
mix data available to CMS was July 27,
2006. These data would reflect fiscal
intermediary review and the resolution
of any errors or adjustments between the
hospitals and fiscal intermediary. Once
these data are available on the CMS Web
site, changes to a hospital’s
occupational mix data would be
allowed only in those very limited
situations involving an error by the
fiscal intermediary or CMS that the
hospital could not have known about
before its review of the final
occupational mix data file. Specifically,
neither the fiscal intermediary nor CMS
would approve the following types of
requests:
• Requests for occupational mix data
corrections that were submitted too late
to be included in the data transmitted to
CMS by fiscal intermediaries on or
before July 27, 2006.
• Requests for correction of errors
that were not, but could have been,
identified during the hospital’s review
of the June 29, 2006 occupational mix
file.
Verified corrections to the
occupational mix received by the fiscal
intermediaries and CMS (that is, by July
13, 2006) would be incorporated into
the final wage index for FY 2007, to be
effective October 1, 2006.
We created the process described
above to resolve all substantive
occupational mix correction disputes
before we finalize the wage and
occupational mix data for the FY 2007
payment rates. Accordingly, hospitals
that did not meet the procedural
deadlines set forth above will not be
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
afforded a later opportunity to submit
occupational mix data corrections or to
dispute the fiscal intermediary’s
decision with respect to requested
changes. Specifically, our policy is that
hospitals that do not meet the
procedural deadlines set forth above
will not be permitted to challenge later,
before the PRRB, the failure of CMS to
make a requested data revision. (See
W.A. Foote Memorial Hospital v.
Shalala, No. 99–CV–75202–DT (E.D.
Mich.2001) and Palisades General
Hospital v. Thompson, No. 99–1230
(D.D.C. 2003)). We also refer the reader
to the FY 2000 IPPS final rule (64 FR
41513) for a discussion of the
parameters for appealing to the PRRB
for wage index data corrections.
We believe the occupational mix data
correction process described above
provided hospitals with the opportunity
to bring errors in their occupational mix
data to the fiscal intermediary’s
attention.
Because hospitals had access to the
final occupational mix data by June 29,
2006, we believe they had the
opportunity to detect any data entry or
tabulation errors made by the fiscal
intermediary or CMS before the
development and publication of the
final FY 2007 wage index and the
implementation of the FY 2007 wage
index on October 1, 2006. We believe
that if hospitals availed themselves of
the opportunities afforded to provide
and make corrections to the
occupational mix data, the wage index
implemented on October 1, 2006, will
be accurate. In the event that errors are
identified by hospitals and brought to
our attention after July 13, 2006, we will
only make mid-year changes to the wage
index in accordance with § 412.64(k).
For a detailed discussion, see section
III.J. of this preamble.
Comment: One commenter stated that
the 6-month reporting period for the
2006 survey, originally planned for the
FY 2008 wage index, is an improvement
over the 2003 survey process. However,
the commenter urged CMS to initiate a
survey with a full-year reporting period
for the FY 2009 wage index.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s recognition of our efforts
to improve the occupational mix survey
process. We also appreciate the
commenter’s suggestion for expanding
the survey reporting period to a full year
for the FY 2009 wage index. While we
appreciate the willingness expressed in
the comment to collect a complete year
of data in order to achieve more
accurate survey results, we note that
hospitals are currently obligated to
collect data for the period April 1, 2006,
to June 30, 2006, by August 31 in order
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
for us to use 6 months of data to apply
the occupational mix adjustment for FY
2008. If we were to use a full year of
2006 survey data to apply an
occupational mix adjustment for FY
2009, hospitals would have to submit
data for the last 6 months of calendar
year 2006. Hospitals have already been
required to submit occupational mix
survey data for two different 3-month
periods in 2006. At this time, we believe
it would be burdensome to require a
third occupational mix data collection
from hospitals for 2006 in order to apply
the adjustment based on a full year of
data for FY 2009. We also note that
collecting a full year of calendar year
2007 data, from January 1, 2007,
through December 31, 2007, would not
provide enough time for a thorough
review and correction period before the
FY 2009 proposed rule would be
published in April 2008. Our normal
wage index review and correction
process before the proposed rule
publication begins in early October and
ends in late February. This would mean
that hospitals and intermediaries would
have only approximately 2 months,
from January to late February, to review
and correct a year’s worth of
occupational mix data. We believe that
such an abbreviated review and
correction period would not be in the
hospitals’ best interest. However, we
will consider expanding the survey
reporting period to a full year for a
future collection.
Comment: Some commenters
expressed concern that the 3-month
survey period for FY 2007 will lead to
inaccurate results for several reasons:
Having no advance notice of the
expedited data collection; some
hospitals had not yet begun, or had just
begun, to plan for the 2006 survey data
collection and had little or no resources
available to complete the survey for all
or part of the 3-month time period; the
new survey, though improved over the
previous survey, is more complicated
and requires more effort to complete;
due to the short timeframe for
developing and submitting the data (4
months), some normal review processes
had to be eliminated by hospitals; not
enough time was allowed for the types
of corrections that can be made during
the annual wage index survey process;
due to the infrequent collection of the
occupational mix data, many hospitals
may underestimate its importance; there
was not enough time for hospital groups
to review the data for individual
hospitals in the area, a process that
often raises questions that leads to more
accurate data.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concerns about the
PO 00000
Frm 00141
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48009
potential for inaccurate occupational
mix survey data to be used due to the
abbreviated data collection and
reporting periods. However, CMS has
established a process that we believe
will maximize the opportunity for
accurate occupational mix data to be
used to adjust area wage indices.
Hospitals were required to submit
occupational mix survey data to their
fiscal intermediaries by June 1, 2006.
CMS provided fiscal intermediaries
with a desk review program to assist in
identifying erroneous or aberrant data.
Fiscal intermediaries then had 3 weeks
(or until June 22) to review the data and
submit it to CMS. CMS made the
occupational mix survey data available
on the CMS Web site on June 29 to
facilitate review by hospitals, fiscal
intermediaries, and others. The June 29
posting of occupational survey data
resulted in hospitals, State hospital
associations, wage index consultants,
and others identifying errors and other
aberrant data. These parties then
initiated action to correct the
occupational mix survey data by the
July 13 deadline. While there is no
additional time available to correct the
survey data for the FY 2007 wage index,
we will, however, allow hospitals to
submit any additional revisions and
corrections to both 3-month periods of
data for the FY 2008 wage index. We
strongly encourage hospitals to take full
advantage of the FY 2008 wage index
correction process. Hospitals will be
notified early in the Fall of 2006
regarding the revision/correction
process for the FY 2008 wage index for
both the cost report wage data and the
2006 occupational mix survey data.
3. Calculation of the Occupational Mix
Adjustment
In the May 17, 2006 proposed rule, we
proposed a series of steps to be used in
calculating the FY 2007 occupational
mix adjustment factor. In this final rule,
we are adopting the proposed steps with
one minor exception. In response to
comments (discussed below), we have
made an adjustment to step 7 so that the
percentage of worker salaries
attributable to the nursing category is
based on salaries and not on hours. For
2007, we will calculate the occupational
mix adjustment factor using the
following steps:
Step 1—For each hospital, determine
the percentage of the total nursing
category attributable to a nursing
subcategory by dividing the nursing
subcategory hours by the total nursing
category’s hours (registered nurse
management personnel and registered
nurse staff nurses or clinicians are
treated as separate nursing
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48010
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
subcategories). Repeat this computation
for each of the five nursing
subcategories: Registered nurse
management personnel, registered nurse
staff nurses or clinicians, licensed
practical nurses; nursing aides,
orderlies, and attendants; and medical
assistants.
Step 2—Determine a national average
hourly rate for each nursing subcategory
by dividing a subcategory’s total salaries
for all hospitals in the occupational mix
survey database by the subcategory’s
total hours for all hospitals in the
occupational mix survey database.
Step 3—For each hospital, determine
an adjusted average hourly rate for each
nursing subcategory by multiplying the
percentage of the total nursing category
(from Step 1) by the national average
hourly rate for that nursing subcategory
(from Step 2). Repeat this calculation for
each of the five nursing subcategories.
Step 4—For each hospital, determine
the adjusted average hourly rate for the
total nursing category by summing the
adjusted average hourly rate (from Step
3) for each of the nursing subcategories.
Step 5—Determine the national
average hourly rate for the total nursing
category by dividing total nursing
category salaries for all hospitals in the
occupational mix survey database by
total nursing category hours for all
hospitals in the occupational mix
survey database.
Step 6—For each hospital, compute
the occupational mix adjustment factor
for the total nursing category by
dividing the national average hourly
rate for the total nursing category (from
Step 5) by the hospital’s adjusted
average hourly rate for the total nursing
category (from Step 4).
If the hospital’s adjusted average
hourly rate is less than the national
average hourly rate (indicating the
hospital employs a less costly mix of
nursing employees), the occupational
mix adjustment factor would be greater
than 1.0000. If the hospital’s adjusted
average hourly rate is greater than the
national average hourly rate, the
occupational mix adjustment factor
would be less than 1.0000.
Step 7—For each hospital, calculate
the occupational mix adjusted salaries
and wage-related costs for the total
nursing category by multiplying the
hospital’s total salaries and wage-related
costs (from Step 5 of the unadjusted
wage index calculation in section III.F.
of this preamble) by the percentage of
the hospital’s total workers attributable
to the total nursing category (using the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
occupational mix survey data, this
percentage is determined by dividing
the hospital’s total nursing category
salaries by the hospital’s total salaries
for ‘‘nursing and all other’’) and by the
total nursing category’s occupational
mix adjustment factor (from Step 6
above).
The remaining portion of the
hospital’s total salaries and wage-related
costs that is attributable to all other
employees of the hospital is not
adjusted by the occupational mix. A
hospital’s all other portion is
determined by subtracting the hospital’s
nursing category percentage from 100
percent.
Step 8—For each hospital, calculate
the total occupational mix adjusted
salaries and wage-related costs for a
hospital by summing the occupational
mix adjusted salaries and wage-related
costs for the total nursing category (from
Step 7) and the portion of the hospital’s
salaries and wage-related costs for all
other employees (from Step 7).
To compute a hospital’s occupational
mix adjusted average hourly wage,
divide the hospital’s total occupational
mix adjusted salaries and wage-related
costs by the hospital’s total hours (from
Step 4 of the unadjusted wage index
calculation in section III.F. of this
preamble).
Step 9—To compute the occupational
mix adjusted average hourly wage for an
urban or rural area, sum the total
occupational mix adjusted salaries and
wage-related costs for all hospitals in
the area, then sum the total hours for all
hospitals in the area. Next, divide the
area’s occupational mix adjusted
salaries and wage-related costs by the
area’s hours.
Step 10—To compute the national
occupational mix adjusted average
hourly wage, sum the total occupational
mix adjusted salaries and wage-related
costs for all hospitals in the Nation, then
sum the total hours for all hospitals in
the Nation. Next, divide the national
occupational mix adjusted salaries and
wage-related costs by the national
hours.
Step 11—To compute the
occupational mix adjusted wage index,
divide each area’s occupational mix
adjusted average hourly wage (Step 9)
by the national occupational mix
adjusted average hourly wage (Step 10).
Step 12—To compute the Puerto Rico
specific occupational mix adjusted wage
index, follow Steps 1 through 11 above.
Comment: MedPAC and a few other
commenters noted that Step 7 of CMS’
PO 00000
Frm 00142
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
proposed calculation for the
occupational mix adjustment uses the
occupational mix survey’s paid hours to
determine the portion of the salaries and
wage-related costs to adjust for
occupational mix (that is, the total
nursing portion) and the portion to
remain unadjusted (that is, the all other
occupations portion). One of the
commenters stated that this approach
was reasonable using the 2003 survey
data because hospital-specific paid
salaries data were not collected.
However, the commenter also noted that
the actual share of wages for either the
nursing category or the all other
occupations category could differ using
an allocation that is based on paid hours
compared to paid salaries. The
commenters suggested that, since the
2006 survey provides for the collection
of paid salaries data, CMS should use
paid salaries instead of paid hours to
more accurately determine the wage
costs that should be adjusted for
occupational mix and those that should
not.
Response: As discussed above, we
evaluated the commenters’
recommendation and agree that it is
reasonable to use the occupational mix
survey salaries instead of hours in
computing the portion of a hospital’s
salaries and wage-related costs to adjust
for occupational mix and the portion to
remain unadjusted. Accordingly, we
revised Step 7 of the final calculation
for the occupational mix adjustment to
reflect this change.
We received no other comments on
the steps used in calculating the
occupational mix adjustment. As a final
policy, we are adopting the proposed
calculation, with the change to Step 7,
for the occupational mix adjustment to
the FY 2007 wage index. Also, to
comply with the order of the court in
Bellevue Hosp. Center v. Leavitt, we will
apply this adjustment to 100 percent of
the wage index.
The table below is an illustrative
example of the final occupational mix
adjustment. (Note: We have revised this
example from that included in the
proposed rule to reflect the change in
step 7 discussed above. We have added
an additional column for provider
occupational mix salaries and the
Provider Percent by Total is determined
by dividing the hospital’s total nurse
salaries (and separately, Total All Other
Salaries) by Total Employee Salaries.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00143
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48011
ER18AU06.014
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00144
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.015
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48012
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Because the occupational mix
adjustment is required by statute, all
hospitals that are subject to payments
under the IPPS, or any hospital that
would be subject to the IPPS if not
granted a waiver, must complete the
occupational mix survey, unless the
hospital has no associated cost report
wage data that are included in the FY
2007 wage index.
For the FY 2005 and FY 2006 final
wage indices, we used the unadjusted
wage data for hospitals that did not
submit occupational mix survey data.
For calculation purposes, this equates to
applying the national nursing mix to the
wage data for these hospitals, because
hospitals having the same mix as the
Nation would have an occupational mix
adjustment factor equaling 1.0000.
However, an adjustment may not be
equitable in situations where the
hospital has a higher or lower than
average occupational mix than the
Nation as a whole. If the hospital’s
occupational mix is higher than the
average for the nation as a whole,
hospitals in other areas are
disadvantaged by the hospital not
providing occupational mix
information. If the hospital’s
occupational mix is lower than the
average for the Nation as a whole, other
hospitals in the same geographic area
would be disadvantaged by the hospital
not providing the information.
In the FY 2005 and FY 2006 IPPS
final rules (69 FR 49035 and 70 FR
47368), we noted that we would revisit
this matter with subsequent collections
of the occupational mix data. In the May
17, 2006 proposed rule, for the FY 2007
wage index, we proposed to use one of
four options for treating the
occupational mix data for
nonresponsive hospitals: (1) Assign the
hospital an occupational mix
adjustment factor of 1.0000 as we did
for FY 2005 and FY 2006; (2) assign the
hospital the average occupational mix
adjustment factor for its labor market
area; (3) assign the hospital the lowest
occupational mix adjustment factor for
its labor market area; or (4) assign the
hospital the average occupational mix
factor for similar hospitals, based on
factors such as, geographic location, bed
size, teaching versus non-teaching status
and case mix. We requested comments
on these or other alternatives for
equitably addressing the situation of
hospitals that are not responsive to the
occupational mix survey.
Comment: A majority of the
commenters believed that, in order for
the wage index to be computed
accurately, it is critical for all IPPS
hospitals to complete the occupational
mix survey. Many of the commenters
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
suggested that CMS should penalize
hospitals that did not submit a survey.
However, the commenters indicated that
no hospitals should be penalized for not
completing the survey for the 1st quarter
of FY 2006 (to be used in calculating the
FY 2007 wage index) because of the
short notification and timeframe for the
collection of that data. Some suggested
future penalties such as a 1 to 2 percent
reduction in the hospital’s wage index
value or a set percentage of the
standardized amount, whichever is
administratively feasible. However, the
commenters also suggested that any
penalty should be hospital-specific and
should not affect the wage index
amounts for other hospitals in the area.
Commenters suggested that CMS should
first calculate the area wage index using
proxy data for a nonresponsive
hospital’s occupational mix adjustment,
and then CMS should assess a penalty
on its wage index value or national
standardized amount.
The commenters supported all of the
ideas we raised in the proposed rule
except option 3. Commenters
unanimously opposed assigning the
hospital the lowest occupational mix
adjustment factor for its labor market
area, because they believed this option
would have the most negative impact on
other hospitals in the labor market area.
MedPAC recommended option 4, to
assign the hospital the average
occupational mix factor for similar
hospitals, based on factors such as,
geographic location, bed size, teaching
versus nonteaching status and case-mix.
MedPAC suggested other factors that
CMS should consider, such as share of
ICU days and types of services offered.
Some commenters recommended an
option that we did not describe. These
commenters recommended that CMS
substitute data from the previous 2003
survey for hospitals that did not submit
2006 survey data for the FY 2007 wage
index. Alternatively, several
commenters recommended that CMS
could substitute the national average
hourly wage (that is, option 1, an
occupational mix adjustment of 1.0000)
for nonresponsive hospitals in
calculating an area’s wage index, while
others favored option 2 because it
would have the least affect on the labor
market area. One commenter
recommended assigning the lower of the
hospital’s occupational mix adjustment
in FY 2006 or the average for the
hospital’s labor market in FY 2007. The
commenter believed that the best proxy
for a hospital’s missing FY 2007 data is
its FY 2006 occupational mix
adjustment, even though there was a
change in the formula to calculate the
PO 00000
Frm 00145
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48013
FY 2007 adjustment. The commenter
stated that CMS should provide an
exception for an exogenous event
affecting all hospitals in the labor
market area. In this scenario, the
commenter recommended using the
average FY 2007 adjustment.
Response: We agree with the
commenters that hospitals that did not
respond to the occupational mix survey
should not benefit from the
participation of others. We also agree
that, due to the unusual circumstances
of the Court’s order and the short
timeframe that hospitals were provided
for completing and submitting their
data, it would not be fair to apply a
penalty to nonresponsive hospitals for
the 2007 wage index. However, we
believe that section 1886(d)(5)(I)(i) of
the Act provides us with the authority
to penalize hospitals that do not submit
occupational mix survey data. That
section authorizes us to provide for
exceptions and adjustments to the
payment amounts under IPPS as the
Secretary deems appropriate. We will
give serious consideration to applying a
hospital-specific penalty such as those
suggested by the commenters if a
hospital does not comply with
regulations requiring submission of
occupational mix survey data in future
years. We will address this issue in the
FY 2008 IPPS proposed rule.
Regarding the treatment of data for
nonresponsive hospitals, we have
chosen not to adopt option 3, because it
would be punitive to other hospitals in
the area that submitted occupational
mix data. We also have not chosen
option 1 because it does not provide an
incentive for hospitals to respond if they
have a higher mix of employees than the
national average. We will not use data
from the 2003 survey, as some
commenters suggested, because the
2007 wage index, we believe, should be
exclusively based on the newly
collected data. In addition, there was
concern about the sufficient robustness
of such data to support 100 percent
adjustments. We also do not believe it
would be entirely feasible, for 2007, to
implement MedPAC’s recommendation,
option 4, due to the wide range of
parameters that could be used for
developing proxies for the missing
hospitals and the fact that the exact set
of such parameters was not subject to
comment. So many variables might be of
relevance that our selection of any
particular variables might be subject to
controversy, and hospitals may wish to
have an opportunity to comment on the
exact variables that would be used.
MedPAC’s recommendation to add more
variables to further refine the analysis
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48014
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
could be so limiting as to result in few
or no hospitals to use for comparison.
For the FY 2007 wage index, we have
adopted option 2—using the average
occupational mix adjustment for the
labor market area. We believe this
option would have the least impact on
the wage index for other hospitals in the
area and does not have the
disadvantages of the options discussed
above. Although we believe this option
is the best of the ones we considered for
nonresponsive hospitals for FY 2007,
we reserve the right to apply a different
approach in future years, including
potentially penalizing nonresponsive
hospitals. If there is only one hospital in
the labor market area, and that hospital
failed to submit occupational mix data,
or, if there are no hospitals in the labor
market area, we would apply the
national occupational mix factor of
1.0000 in calculating the area’s FY 2007
occupational mix adjusted wage index.
Comment: Some commenters
recommended that CMS allow hospitals
that failed to submit their 1st quarter
data by June 1, 2006, to submit that data
when the 2nd quarter data is due (that
is, by August 31, 2006). The
commenters also suggested that CMS
allow hospitals that submitted their 1st
quarter data by June 1, an opportunity
to correct that data when the 2nd
quarter data are due. The commenters
indicated that allowing hospitals to
submit the data at this time would
improve the survey response rate and
eliminate the need for penalties for
hospitals that would otherwise be
nonresponsive and improve the
accuracy of the data for the FY 2008 and
the FY 2009 occupational mix
adjustment.
Response: We agree with the
commenters. Hospitals that did not
submit occupational mix data for the 1st
quarter of 2006 will be permitted to
submit 1st and 2nd quarter data by
August 31. We included the 1st quarter
data for some hospitals that submitted
survey data after June 1. However,
submissions that were received too late
to include in the FY 2007 occupational
mix adjustment will be included in the
desk review process for the
occupational mix adjustment for the FY
2008 wage index. As we previously
mentioned, we will also allow hospitals
an opportunity to revise both their 1st
quarter and 2nd quarter 2006
occupational mix data for the FY 2008
wage index. Further, we stated that we
will notify hospitals early in the Fall of
2006 regarding the revision/correction
process for the FY 2008 wage index for
both the cost report wage data and the
2006 occupational mix survey data.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
D. Worksheet S–3 Wage Data for the FY
2007 Wage Index
The FY 2007 wage index values
(effective for hospital discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2006,
and before October 1, 2007) that will be
published separately from this final rule
will be based on the data collected from
the Medicare cost reports submitted by
hospitals for cost reporting periods
beginning in FY 2003 (the FY 2006 wage
index was based on FY 2002 wage data).
The FY 2007 wage index will include
the following categories of data
associated with costs paid under the
IPPS (as well as outpatient costs):
• Salaries and hours from short-term,
acute care hospitals (including paid
lunch hours and hours associated with
military leave and jury duty).
• Home office costs and hours.
• Certain contract labor costs and
hours (which includes direct patient
care, certain top management,
pharmacy, laboratory, and nonteaching
physician Part A services).
• Wage-related costs, including
pensions and other deferred
compensation costs.
Consistent with the wage index
methodology for FY 2006, the final wage
index for FY 2007 also will exclude the
direct and overhead salaries and hours
for services not subject to IPPS payment,
such as SNF services, home health
services, costs related to GME (teaching
physicians and residents) and certified
registered nurse anesthetists (CRNAs),
and other subprovider components that
are not paid under the IPPS. The final
FY 2007 wage index also will exclude
the salaries, hours, and wage-related
costs of hospital-based rural health
clinics (RHCs), and Federally qualified
health centers (FQHCs) because
Medicare pays for these costs outside of
the IPPS (68 FR 45395). In addition,
salaries, hours, and wage-related costs
of CAHs will be excluded from the wage
index, for the reasons explained in the
FY 2004 IPPS final rule (68 FR 45397).
Data collected for the IPPS wage
index are also currently used to
calculate wage indices applicable to
other providers, such as SNFs, home
health agencies, and hospices. In
addition, they are used for prospective
payments to IRFs, IPFs, and LTCHs, and
for hospital outpatient services. We note
that, in the IPPS rules, we do not
address comments pertaining to the
wage indices for non-IPPS providers.
Such comments should be made in
response to separate proposed rules for
those providers.
Comment: Several commenters
addressed CMS’ policy of excluding
data from CAHs when computing the
PO 00000
Frm 00146
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
wage index. They stated that, as of FY
2007, 1,191 CAHs (representing
approximately 24 percent of all IPPS
hospitals in FY 2000, and
approximately 55 percent of all rural
hospitals in FY 2000) have been
removed from the wage index. The
commenters indicated that CAHs have
lower average hourly wages than the
typical IPPS hospital and eliminating
their data from the wage index
overstates the national average hourly
wage by an estimated 0.707 percent.
They added that increases in the
national average hourly wage, in turn,
are offset with the application of a
negative budget neutrality adjustment,
which understates IPPS operating
payments according to the commenters.
The commenters believed that the
artificial increase in the national average
hourly wage has lowered the budget
neutrality adjustment by an estimated
$1.52 billion over 5 years (2003–2007).
The commenters stated that CMS should
apply a one-time positive budget
neutrality adjustment in FY 2007 to
compensate for the prior
underpayments. They did not believe
similar future adjustments would be
necessary because very few hospitals are
expected ‘‘to convert to CAH status now
that the necessary provider designation
is no longer an option.’’
Other commenters asked that CMS
use estimated CAH wage data to
compute the FY 2007 wage index, and
that an occupational mix factor of
1.0000 be assigned to these hospitals.
The commenters noted that MedPAC
has recommended that CAH data be
included in the wage index, at least in
computing the national average hourly
wage. The commenters asserted that
because CAHs in rural areas still
compete with rural IPPS hospitals for
scarce resources, their data should be
included in the wage index.
Commenters also requested that CMS
obtain wage data from CAHs and subject
that data to the same rigorous review by
the fiscal intermediaries as is done for
IPPS hospitals. Another commenter
suggested that an alternative to
including the CAHs in wage index
would be to not factor in any increases
in the national average hourly wage that
are attributable to the removal of CAHs’
wage data.
Response: In the August 1, 2003 final
rule (68 FR 45397–8), we explained the
reasons for our decision to remove CAH
data from the wage index immediately
upon conversion to CAH status, even if
the hospital was paid under the IPPS
during the cost reporting period used in
calculating the current fiscal year’s wage
index. The primary reason for excluding
CAHs from the wage index was that
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
they are a separate provider type and are
unique compared to other short term,
acute care hospitals with respect to
factors such as their location and bed
size. We discussed the payment impact,
mentioning the substantial negative
impact CAHs typically have on the wage
indexes in the areas where they are
located, and the minimal impact they
have on other areas. We also stated that
we would not be holding other
hospitals’ payments harmless for this
change, consistent with our general
wage index policy.
As the commenters indicated, in the
FY 2006 IPPS final rule, we addressed
a comment from MedPAC
recommending that data from CAHs be
included in the wage index (70 FR
47370). MedPAC had recommended that
CMS begin collecting wage data from
CAHs in 2005. Although we agree with
MedPAC that CAHs have recently
become more similar to other rural
hospitals, in structure, location, and
services provided, largely due to
changes in the CAH statute resulting
from section 405 of Pub. L. 108–173
(MMA), the wage index must be based
on data from ‘‘subsection (d),’’ shortterm, acute care hospitals, consistent
with section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act.
Therefore, we cannot use any wage data
collected from CAHs in the IPPS wage
index. Because Pub. L. 108–173 was
enacted at the end of calendar year
2003, it would not affect the wage index
at least until FY 2008, which would be
computed from cost reporting periods
beginning in FY 2004. Accordingly, we
continue to believe that it has been
prudent policy to remove the wage data
for hospitals that later became CAHs
from the wage index.
We do not believe that the elimination
of these data has resulted in an
overstated national average hourly
wage, nor has the budget neutrality
adjustment been inappropriately
reduced. The national average hourly
wage appropriately reflects only those
wages paid by IPPS hospitals. To
determine the budget neutrality
adjustment for FY 2007, we equate IPPS
payments using the FY 2006 and FY
2007 wage indices using FY 2005
MedPAR data that excludes any
hospitals that became CAHs as of
February 17, 2006. The calculation
excludes CAHs from the determination
of IPPS payments using both the FY
2006 and FY 2007 wage indices so the
budget neutrality adjustment reflects
only information from IPPS hospitals
and is not overstated. Consequently, we
will not apply a one-time positive
budget neutrality adjustment in FY
2007.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
E. Verification of Worksheet S–3 Wage
Data
The wage data for the final FY 2007
wage index will be obtained from
Worksheet S–3, Parts II and III of the FY
2003 Medicare cost reports. Instructions
for completing the Worksheet S–3, Parts
II and III are in the Provider
Reimbursement Manual, Part I, sections
3605.2 and 3605.3. The data file used to
construct the wage index will include
FY 2003 data submitted to us as of June
28, 2006. As in past years, we will
perform an intensive review of the wage
data, mostly through the use of edits
designed to identify aberrant data.
We asked our fiscal intermediaries to
revise or verify data elements that
resulted in specific edit failures. While
some of the edits failures were resolved,
we did remove the wage data of some
hospitals from the final FY 2007 wage
index. For the final FY 2007 wage index
in this final rule, we removed the data
for 229 hospitals from our database: 189
hospitals designated as CAHs by 7 or
more days prior to the posting of the
preliminary February public use file,
and 30 hospitals were low Medicare
utilization hospitals or failed edits that
could not be corrected because the
hospitals terminated the program or
changed ownership. In addition, we
removed the wage data for 10 hospitals
with incomplete or inaccurate data
resulting in zero or negative, or
otherwise aberrant, average hourly
wages. As a result, the final FY 2007
wage index is calculated based on FY
2003 wage data from 3,570 hospitals.
In constructing the final FY 2007
wage index, we will include the wage
data for facilities that were IPPS
hospitals in FY 2003, even for those
facilities that have since terminated
their participation in the program as
hospitals, as long as those data do not
fail any of our edits for reasonableness.
We believe that including the wage data
for these hospitals is, in general,
appropriate to reflect the economic
conditions in the various labor market
areas during the relevant past period.
However, we exclude the wage data for
CAHs as discussed in 68 FR 45397.
Section 4410 of Pub. L. 105–33
provides that, for the purposes of
section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 1997, the area wage index applicable
to any hospital that is located in an
urban area of a State may not be less
than the area wage index applicable to
hospitals located in rural areas in the
State. This provision is commonly
referred to as the ‘‘rural floor.’’ In the
August 11, 2004 IPPS final rule (69 FR
49109), we discussed situations where a
PO 00000
Frm 00147
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48015
State has only urban areas and no
geographically rural areas, or a State has
geographically rural areas but no IPPS
hospitals are located in those rural
areas. As a result, these States did not
have rural IPPS hospitals from which to
compute and apply a ‘‘rural floor.’’ In
that final rule, we developed a policy
for imputing a ‘‘rural floor’’ for these
States, effective for the FYs 2005, 2006,
and 2007 wage indices, so that a ‘‘rural
floor’’ could be applicable to IPPS urban
hospitals in those States in the same
manner that a ‘‘rural floor’’ is applicable
to IPPS urban hospitals in States that
have IPPS rural hospitals. We revised
the regulations at § 412.64(h) to describe
the methodology for computing the
imputed ‘‘rural floors’’ for these States
and to define an all-urban State.
Specifically, § 412.64(h)(5) defines an
all-urban State as ‘‘a State with no rural
areas * * * or a State in which there are
no hospitals classified as rural. A State
with rural areas and with hospitals
reclassified as rural under § 412.103 is
not an all-urban State.’’
We have received questions as to
what area wage index CMS would apply
in the instance where a new rural IPPS
hospital opens in a State that has an
imputed ‘‘rural floor’’ because it has
rural areas but had no hospitals
classified as rural. In addition, we have
been asked whether a new IPPS hospital
could submit its wages and hours data
to be used in computing the wage index,
even though the hospital did not file a
cost report as an IPPS provider for the
cost report base year that is used in
calculating that wage index.
A new hospital can be an entirely new
facility that did not exist before, or it
can be a hospital that participated in
Medicare under a previous provider
number, but has acquired a new
Medicare provider number (such as
when a CAH converts to IPPS status, or
vice versa). As a new IPPS hospital (in
this case, rural), the hospital would not
yet have filed any wages and hours data
on a Medicare cost report. Even in the
situation where a new IPPS hospital
previously participated in Medicare as a
non-IPPS provider, wages and hours
data collected as a non-IPPS provider
would not be suitable for calculating an
IPPS wage index because section
1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act specifies that
the wage index must be based on data
from ‘‘subsection (d)’’ hospitals. Thus,
CMS could not include wages and hours
from a period during which a hospital
was not an IPPS provider. Furthermore,
even once the hospital files its first
Medicare cost report under the new
IPPS provider number, that first cost
report is not used in computing the
wage index for the hospital’s geographic
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48016
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
area until 4 years later (for example, we
use the 2003 data to compute the wage
index for FY 2007). Therefore, if a new
rural IPPS hospital opens in a State that
has an imputed ‘‘rural floor’’ and has
rural areas, for FY 2007, the hospital
would receive the imputed ‘‘rural floor’’
as its wage index. The imputed rural
floor is set to expire on September 30,
2007. However, we expect that we
would address the 2008 implications for
a new rural hospital that is the only
rural hospital in the State in the FY
2008 proposed rule.
Comment: Two commenters stated
that CMS’ above policy conflicts with
the policy of excluding the wage data of
IPPS hospitals that convert to CAH
status. The commenters also asserted
that in the years before the hospital’s
own wage data is used, the rural
hospital will be paid at the imputed
rural floor, which they contend is
unrelated to the hospital’s own labor
market costs. The commenters also
asserted that if the new rural hospital’s
average hourly wage is greater than the
imputed rural floor, the hospital would
suffer underpayments until its index
could be based upon its own wage data.
One commenter suggested that, at least
for CAHs converting to IPPS status,
CMS should use wage data filed by the
hospital when it was a CAH.
The commenters urged CMS to
include the wage data of a new rural
IPPS hospital in the wage index ‘‘as
soon as a full year’s cost report with the
hospital operating as a PPS hospital is
available.’’
Response: We disagree with the
commenters. Our consistent policy is
that new hospitals must first develop
their wage data and have it reviewed by
our fiscal intermediaries prior to the
wage data being included in the wage
index. The submission and review
process requires a 4-year period, in
order to allow time for all hospitals to
complete and submit their wage data for
the fiscal year, for the fiscal
intermediaries to review the data, for
the fiscal intermediaries to present the
results of their review to hospitals, for
hospitals to review any potential errors
in the wage index files, for us to resolve
any disputes between the fiscal
intermediary and the hospital, and
finally, for the final wage indices to be
calculated and published in advance of
the fiscal year. For a discussion of the
wage data review and correction
process, refer to section III.J. of this
preamble. This policy applies to all new
hospitals, not just rural hospitals.
Although a new rural IPPS hospital that
previously was a CAH may be willing to
provide CMS with wage data from the
period during which it was a CAH, the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
wage index must be based on data from
IPPS hospitals, consistent with section
1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act. A CAH is not
an IPPS hospital; thus, we cannot
include the hospital’s wages and hours
from the period during which it was a
CAH. Indeed, even if a CAH previously
existed as an IPPS hospital (that is, it
previously was an IPPS hospital,
converted to CAH status, and then
converted back to IPPS status), its
historical wage data would have been
submitted from years prior to the cost
reports used to calculate the FY 2007
wage index (that is, the FY 2003 cost
reports). If a CAH converts back to IPPS
status in FY 2007, there would be no
wage data for the FY 2007 wage index
because such a provider did not file
Medicare cost reports as an IPPS
provider in FY 2003.
We recognize, as one commenter
pointed out that in the past we have
noted the importance of including ‘‘all’’
available wage data in the wage index
calculation. However, our past
statements to this effect were discussing
the inclusion of all IPPS hospital wage
data, not data from non-IPPS hospitals.
In the FY 2003 IPPS final rule (67 FR
50023), we discussed our policy of
including data from IPPS hospitals that
have since closed. We stated that such
data should be included because, ‘‘any
hospital that is in operation during the
data collection period used to calculated
the wage index should be included in
the database, since the hospital’s data
reflect conditions occurring in that labor
market area during the period
surveyed.’’ Our statement, however, was
directed at the inclusion of IPPS
hospital data—not the inclusion of data
from hospitals that were not IPPS
hospitals during the data collection
period. As stated earlier, section
1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act requires the
wage index to be based upon a survey
of ‘‘subsection (d) hospitals.’’
Lastly, we think it is false logic to
state that our policy excluding data from
hospitals that become CAHs necessarily
requires inclusion of data from hospitals
that switch from CAH status to IPPS
status. As stated in the FY 2003 IPPS
final rule, we exclude hospitals that
convert to CAH status because our
analysis showed that the wage data for
these hospitals, in general, are
significantly different from other shortterm hospitals (68 FR 45397). CAHs that
convert to IPPS status, in contrast, could
not, under the statute, be included in
the wage index survey because they are
not IPPS hospitals at the time of the
survey.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS propose now to
extend the imputed rural floor to
PO 00000
Frm 00148
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
coincide with the rural floor established
under section 4410 of Pub. L. 105–33, in
order to place all 50 states on a level
playing field.
Response: As stated above, our policy
for imputing a ‘‘rural floor’’ is effective
for the FYs 2005, 2006, and 2007 wage
indices. We will determine the
appropriateness of extending that policy
beyond FY 2007 and state our proposal
in the FY 2008 proposed rule.
Commenters will be have sufficient time
during the FY 2008 IPPS comment
period to assess and comment on such
a proposal.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that CMS should select one national
contractor as part of the Medicare
Administrative Contractor (MAC)
bidding process (provided for under
section 1847A of the Act as added by
section 911 of Pub. L. 108-173) to do
wage index reviews. The commenter
believed that the use of the MAC
process to solicit a single ‘‘national’’
contractor would ensure that the wage
data and occupational mix data reviews
are handled consistently and accurately,
so that all hospitals are subject to the
same policy interpretations. The
commenter noted the importance of the
wage index in determining Medicare
payments to hospitals and indicated
that any variation among contractors in
the handling of hospitals’ wage index
data could be detrimental to hospitals in
certain geographic regions. The
commenter also stated that the inclusion
of a 100 percent occupational mix
adjustment intensifies the need for a
contractor approach going forward.
Response: We appreciate the
suggestion and will consider it as we
develop our program acquisition
strategies.
F. Computation of the FY 2007
Unadjusted Wage Index
The method used to compute the FY
2007 wage index without an
occupational mix adjustment follows:
Step 1—As noted above, we based the
FY 2007 wage index on wage data
reported on the FY 2003 Medicare cost
reports. We gathered data from each of
the non-Federal, short-term, acute care
hospitals for which data were reported
on the Worksheet S–3, Parts II and III of
the Medicare cost report for the
hospital’s cost reporting period
beginning on or after October 1, 2002,
and before October 1, 2003. In addition,
we include data from some hospitals
that had cost reporting periods
beginning before October 2002 and
reported a cost reporting period
covering all of FY 2003. These data are
included because no other data from
these hospitals would be available for
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
the cost reporting period described
above, and because particular labor
market areas might be affected due to
the omission of these hospitals.
However, we generally describe these
wage data as FY 2003 data. We note
that, if a hospital had more than one
cost reporting period beginning during
FY 2003 (for example, a hospital had
two short cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2002,
and before October 1, 2003), we include
wage data from only one of the cost
reporting periods, the longer, in the
wage index calculation. If there was
more than one cost reporting period and
the periods were equal in length, we
include the wage data from the later
period in the wage index calculation.
Step 2—Salaries—The method used to
compute a hospital’s average hourly
wage excludes certain costs that are not
paid under the IPPS. In calculating a
hospital’s average salaries plus wagerelated costs, we subtract from Line 1
(total salaries) the GME and CRNA costs
reported on Lines 2, 4.01, 6, and 6.01,
the Part B salaries reported on Lines 3,
5 and 5.01, home office salaries reported
on Line 7, and exclude salaries reported
on Lines 8 and 8.01 (that is, direct
salaries attributable to SNF services,
home health services, and other
subprovider components not subject to
the IPPS). We also subtract from Line 1
the salaries for which no hours were
reported. To determine total salaries
plus wage-related costs, we add to the
net hospital salaries the costs of contract
labor for direct patient care, certain top
management, pharmacy, laboratory, and
nonteaching physician Part A services
(Lines 9 and 10), home office salaries
and wage-related costs reported by the
hospital on Lines 11 and 12, and
nonexuded area wage-related costs
(Lines 13, 14, and 18).
We note that contract labor and home
office salaries for which no
corresponding hours are reported are
not included. In addition, wage-related
costs for nonteaching physician Part A
employees (Line 18) are excluded if no
corresponding salaries are reported for
those employees on Line 4.
Step 3—Hours—With the exception of
wage-related costs, for which there are
no associated hours, we compute total
hours using the same methods as
described for salaries in Step 2.
Step 4—For each hospital reporting
both total overhead salaries and total
overhead hours greater than zero, we
then allocate overhead costs to areas of
the hospital excluded from the wage
index calculation. First, we determine
the ratio of excluded area hours (sum of
Lines 8 and 8.01 of Worksheet S–3, Part
II) to revised total hours (Line 1 minus
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
the sum of Part II, Lines 2, 3, 4.01, 5,
5.01, 6, 6.01, 7, and Part III, Line 13 of
Worksheet S–3). We then compute the
amounts of overhead salaries and hours
to be allocated to excluded areas by
multiplying the above ratio by the total
overhead salaries and hours reported on
Line 13 of Worksheet S–3, Part III. Next,
we compute the amounts of overhead
wage-related costs to be allocated to
excluded areas using three steps: (1) We
determine the ratio of overhead hours
(Part III, Line 13) to revised hours (Line
1 minus the sum of Lines 2, 3, 4.01, 5,
5.01, 6, 6.01, 7, 8, and 8.01); (2) we
compute overhead wage-related costs by
multiplying the overhead hours ratio by
wage-related costs reported on Part II,
Lines 13, 14, and 18; and (3) we
multiply the computed overhead wagerelated costs by the above excluded area
hours ratio. Finally, we subtract the
computed overhead salaries, wagerelated costs, and hours associated with
excluded areas from the total salaries
(plus wage-related costs) and hours
derived in Steps 2 and 3.
Step 5—For each hospital, we adjust
the total salaries plus wage-related costs
to a common period to determine total
adjusted salaries plus wage-related
costs. To make the wage adjustment, we
estimate the percentage change in the
employment cost index (ECI) for
compensation for each 30-day
increment from October 14, 2002,
through April 15, 2004, for private
industry hospital workers from the BLS’
Compensation and Working Conditions.
We use the ECI because it reflects the
price increase associated with total
compensation (salaries plus fringes)
rather than just the increase in salaries.
In addition, the ECI includes managers
as well as other hospital workers. This
methodology to compute the monthly
update factors uses actual quarterly ECI
data and assures that the update factors
match the actual quarterly and annual
percent changes. The factors used to
adjust the hospital’s data were based on
the midpoint of the cost reporting
period, as indicated below.
MIDPOINT OF COST REPORTING
PERIOD
After
10/14/2002
11/14/2002
12/14/2002
01/14/2003
02/14/2003
03/14/2003
04/14/2003
05/14/2003
06/14/2003
07/14/2003
PO 00000
Frm 00149
Adjustment
factor
Before
11/15/2002
12/15/2002
01/15/2003
02/15/2003
03/15/2003
04/15/2003
05/15/2003
06/15/2003
07/15/2003
08/15/2003
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
1.06058
1.05679
1.05304
1.04915
1.04513
1.04108
1.03713
1.03325
1.02948
1.02584
48017
MIDPOINT OF COST REPORTING
PERIOD—Continued
After
08/14/2003
09/14/2003
10/14/2003
11/14/2003
12/14/2003
01/14/2004
02/14/2004
03/14/2004
Before
09/15/2003
10/15/2003
11/15/2003
12/15/2003
01/15/2004
02/15/2004
03/15/2004
04/15/2004
Adjustment
factor
1.02231
1.01878
1.01510
1.01127
1.00743
1.00367
1.00000
0.99644
For example, the midpoint of a cost
reporting period beginning January 1,
2003, and ending December 31, 2003, is
June 30, 2003. An adjustment factor of
1.02948 would be applied to the wages
of a hospital with such a cost reporting
period. In addition, for the data for any
cost reporting period that began in FY
2003 and covered a period of less than
360 days or more than 370 days, we
annualize the data to reflect a 1-year
cost report. Dividing the data by the
number of days in the cost report and
then multiplying the results by 365
accomplishes annualization.
Step 6—Each hospital is assigned to
its appropriate urban or rural labor
market area before any reclassifications
under section 1886(d)(8)(B), section
1886(d)(8)(E), or section 1886(d)(10) of
the Act. Within each urban or rural
labor market area, we add the total
adjusted salaries plus wage-related costs
obtained in Step 5 for all hospitals in
that area to determine the total adjusted
salaries plus wage-related costs for the
labor market area.
Step 7—We divide the total adjusted
salaries plus wage-related costs obtained
under both methods in Step 6 by the
sum of the corresponding total hours
(from Step 4) for all hospitals in each
labor market area to determine an
average hourly wage for the area.
Step 8—We add the total adjusted
salaries plus wage-related costs obtained
in Step 5 for all hospitals in the Nation
and then divide the sum by the national
sum of total hours from Step 4 to arrive
at a national average hourly wage. Using
the data as described above, the national
average hourly wage is $29.6521.
Step 9—For each urban or rural labor
market area, we calculate the hospital
wage index value, unadjusted for
occupational mix, by dividing the area
average hourly wage obtained in Step 7
by the national average hourly wage
computed in Step 8.
Step 10—Following the process set
forth above, we develop a separate
Puerto Rico-specific wage index for
purposes of adjusting the Puerto Rico
standardized amounts. (The national
Puerto Rico standardized amount is
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48018
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
adjusted by a wage index calculated for
all Puerto Rico labor market areas based
on the national average hourly wage as
described above.) We add the total
adjusted salaries plus wage-related costs
(as calculated in Step 5) for all hospitals
in Puerto Rico and divided the sum by
the total hours for Puerto Rico (as
calculated in Step 4) to arrive at an
overall average hourly wage of $13.0915
for Puerto Rico. For each labor market
area in Puerto Rico, we calculate the
Puerto Rico-specific wage index value
by dividing the area average hourly
wage (as calculated in Step 7) by the
overall Puerto Rico average hourly
wage.
Step 11—Section 4410 of Pub. L. 105–
33 provides that, for discharges on or
after October 1, 1997, the area wage
index applicable to any hospital that is
located in an urban area of a State may
not be less than the area wage index
applicable to hospitals located in rural
areas in that State. (For all-urban States,
we establish an imputed floor (69 FR
49109). Furthermore, this wage index
floor is to be implemented in such a
manner as to ensure that aggregate IPPS
payments are not greater or less than
those that would have been made in the
year if this section did not apply. For FY
2007, the areas affected by this
provision, after the occupational mix
adjustment is applied, will be by a
footnote in Tables 4A–1 and 4A–2 that
are to be published separate from this
final rule.
G. Implementation of the FY 2007
Occupational Mix Adjustment to the
Wage Index
For the final FY 2005 and FY 2006
wage indices, we used a blend of the
occupational mix adjusted wage index
and the unadjusted wage index.
Specifically, we adjusted 10 percent of
the FY 2005 and FY 2006 wage index
adjustment factor by a factor reflecting
occupational mix. We refer readers to
the FY 2005 IPPS final rule at 69 FR
49052 and the FY 2006 IPPS final rule
at 70 FR 47376 for a detailed discussion
of the blended wage index.
As discussed in section III.C. of this
preamble, for FY 2007, we are applying
the occupational mix adjustment to 100
percent of the FY 2007 wage index. We
will calculate the occupational mix
adjustment using the first 3 months of
the 2006 survey data, using the
methodology described in section III.C.
of this preamble.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that, for the FY 2007 wage index, CMS
should apply the Bellevue Hosp. Center
v. Leavitt decision only to hospitals in
the Second Circuit, and not on a
nationwide basis. For States outside the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Second Circuit, the commenter
recommended that CMS apply the
occupational mix adjustment at 10
percent, as it did in FYs 2005 and 2006.
The commenter noted that there is a
CMS (then HCFA) precedent for
applying a court’s order to only
hospitals in the States in the Circuit
where the decision was rendered, citing
HCFA Ruling 97–2, pertaining to the
inclusion of ‘‘eligible but unpaid’’
Medicaid days in the DSH calculation.
Response: The commenter did not
address whether the 10-percent
adjustment would use the new 2006
occupational mix survey data or the
prior 2003 data. Therefore, it is not clear
how the commenter is suggesting we
apply the policy. Nevertheless, we
believe the most appropriate policy is to
apply the occupational mix adjustment
uniformly nationwide, using the same
survey data and a 100 percent
adjustment for all hospitals. It is
important to keep in mind that the
occupational mix adjustment is an
adjustment to the wage index factor that
represents the ratio of a labor market
area’s average hourly wage to the
national average hourly wage. DSH
adjustments, in contrast, are not based
upon individual hospital information
compared to a national average. If we
were to use separate sets of data
depending upon geographic location,
hospitals located in the Second Circuit
would be compared to one national
benchmark, whereas hospitals located
elsewhere would be compared to a
different one. We believe such a policy
would undermine the calculation of the
wage index that is a relative measure of
differences in area wage levels that uses
a uniform national baseline for purposes
of comparison. In addition, we note that
the New York labor market area
includes counties located both inside
and outside of the Second Circuit. The
New York-White Plains-Wayne, NY–NJ
CBSA includes three New Jersey
Counties: Bergen, Hudson, and Passaic
Counties. These counties are located in
the Third Circuit, not the Second
Circuit. Therefore, applying the Bellevue
Hosp. Center v. Leavitt decision only in
the Second Circuit would result in two
area wage index values for the New
York labor market area, adding further
complexity to the wage index
calculation.
Comment: One commenter believed
that section 1886(d)(6) of the Act
requires CMS to publish its actual wage
tables and other factors by August 1.
The commenter also cited the Balanced
Budget Act of 1997 (BBA), Pub. L. 105–
33, under which Congress moved the
deadline in section 1886(d)(6) of the Act
from September 1 to August 1. The
PO 00000
Frm 00150
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
commenter contended that Congress
would not have needed to move the
deadline if the final data were not to be
published as of August 1.
Response: The relevant language of
section 1886(d)(6)of the Act states: ‘‘The
Secretary shall provide for publication
in the Federal Register, on or before
August 1 before each fiscal year * * *
of a description of the methodology and
data used in computing the adjusted
DRG prospective payment rates under
this subsection.’’ We believe the plain
language of section 1886(d)(6) of the Act
requires merely a description of the data
and methodology that are used to
compute the IPPS rates and does not
require actual publication of the rates.
With respect to the comments about
the statutory change that moved the
deadline for the IPPS rule from
September 1 to August 1, section 4644
of the BBA was an amendment to
conform section 1886(h)(6) of the Act to
the requirements of the Congressional
Review Act. The Congressional Review
Act does not allow a major rule to go
into effect for 60-days unless there is an
act of Congress allowing the rule to go
into effect earlier. The publication date
in section 1886(d)(6) of the Act was
changed accordingly so that the IPPS
final rule could take effect no sooner
than 60 days after publication, or by the
beginning of the Federal fiscal year on
October 1 without Congress having to
act. However, Congress did not alter
section 1886(d)(6) of the Act with
respect to the information that is to be
included in the final rule. We agree with
the commenter that it is our usual
practice to publish the wage tables and
other factors along with the final rule
consistent with 42 CFR 412.8. However,
due to our implementation of the
Bellevue Hosp. Center v. Leavitt
decision, it is not possible to follow this
procedure for FY 2007. In the proposed
rule, we explained our intent to post the
FY 2007 occupational mix adjusted
wage index tables and related impacts
on the CMS Web site after we publish
the FY 2007 IPPS final rule, and in
advance of October 1, 2006 (71 FR
28652). We have modified 42 CFR 412.8
accordingly. The change we are making
to § 412.8 is a procedural rule that we
are making effective upon publication.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed concern that the new
occupational mix adjustment may have
a negative impact on some hospitals,
and they would not know how they are
affected until the final FY 2007 wage
index tables are published. Some
commenters recommended that CMS
allow hospitals more time to review
their data, comment on the survey
results, and make adjustments and/or
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
revisions to their occupational mix
survey data. One commenter requested
that CMS publish the occupational mix
regulations and data as an interim final
rule with a full 60-day comment period
so that providers will have an
opportunity to comment further.
Another commenter urged CMS to
consider either delaying the
implementation of the occupational mix
adjustment, or consider allowing
retroactive correction to any errors
discovered after October 1. A few
commenters recommended that CMS
use its discretionary authority to
‘‘smooth out’’ the impact of this change
on adversely affected hospitals and
apply a multiyear transition of the
occupational mix survey data.
Response: As we indicated above,
while we understand the commenters’
concerns about the potential for
inaccurate occupational mix survey data
to be used due to the abbreviated data
collection and reporting periods, we
believe we have established a review
and correction process that is intended
to minimize errors. We cannot delay the
implementation of, or transition in, the
occupational mix adjustment for the FY
2007 wage index because the Second
Circuit Court required that all ‘‘data
collection and measurement and any
other preparations necessary for full
application should be complete by
September 30, 2006, at which time we
instruct the agency to immediately
apply the adjustment in full.’’ Also, we
believe that the 30-day comment period
after the May 17, 2006 publication of the
amended FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule
provided ample opportunity for the
public to comment on the new
occupational mix survey data and
adjustment for the FY 2007 wage index.
Hospitals are usually afforded 60 days
to comment on the entire IPPS rule. In
addition, we cannot allow retroactive
changes to the FY 2007 wage index for
errors discovered after October 1, 2006,
unless a hospital’s correction request
meets the strict criteria of § 412.64(k)(1)
of our existing regulations (also see
section III.J. of this preamble). However,
as previously mentioned, we will allow
hospitals an additional opportunity to
revise both their 1st quarter and 2nd
quarter 2006 occupational mix data for
the FY 2008 wage index.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS publish the
corrected 1st quarter 2006 survey data
as a public use file prior to the
publication of the final FY 2007 wage
index tables.
Response: Intermediaries are required
to transmit the corrected 1st quarter
2006 survey data to CMS by July 27,
2007. Unfortunately, due to our short
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
timeframe after July 27 for reviewing the
survey data and computing, analyzing,
and publishing the final FY 2007
occupational mix adjusted wage index,
we cannot publish the corrected 1st
quarter survey data before we publish
final FY 2007 wage index tables.
The final wage index values for FY
2007 (except those for hospitals
receiving wage index adjustments under
section 505 of Pub. L. 108–173) will be
included in Tables 4A–1, 4A–2, 4B, 4C–
1, 4C–2, and 4F that are to be posted on
our Web site and published in a Federal
Register notice subsequent to this final
rule.
Tables 3A and 3B in the separate
issuance will list the 3-year average
hourly wage for each labor market area
before the redesignation of hospitals,
using the wages included in the
calculation for the FYs 2005, 2006, 2007
wage indices. Table 3A in the separate
issuance will list these data for urban
areas and Table 3B in the separate
issuance will list these data for rural
areas. In addition, Table 2 in the
separate issuance will include the
adjusted average hourly wage for each
hospital from the FY 2001 and FY 2002
cost reporting periods, as well as the FY
2003 period used to calculate the FY
2007 wage index. The 3-year averages
will be calculated by dividing the sum
of the dollars (adjusted to a common
reporting period using the method
described previously) across all 3 years,
by the sum of the hours. If a hospital is
missing data for any of the previous
years, its average hourly wage for the 3year period will be calculated based on
the data available during that period.
The final wage index values in Tables
4A–1, 4A–2, 4B, 4C–1, 4C–2, and 4F
and the average hourly wages in Tables
2, 3A, and 3B to be posted on our Web
site and published in a subsequent
Federal Register notice will include the
occupational mix adjustment.
H. Revisions to the Wage Index Based
on Hospital Redesignations
1. General
Under section 1886(d)(10) of the Act,
the Medicare Geographic Classification
Review Board (MGCRB) considers
applications by hospitals for geographic
reclassification for purposes of payment
under the IPPS. Hospitals must apply to
the MGCRB to reclassify by September
1 of the year preceding the year during
which reclassification is sought.
Generally, hospitals must be proximate
to the labor market area to which they
are seeking reclassification and must
demonstrate characteristics similar to
hospitals located in that area. The
MGCRB issues its decisions by the end
PO 00000
Frm 00151
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48019
of February for reclassifications that
become effective for the following fiscal
year (beginning October 1). The
regulations applicable to
reclassifications by the MGCRB are
located in §§ 412.230 through 412.280.
Section 1886(d)(10)(D)(v) of the Act
provides that, beginning with FY 2001,
a MGCRB decision on a hospital
reclassification for purposes of the wage
index is effective for 3 fiscal years,
unless the hospital elects to terminate
the reclassification. Section
1886(d)(10)(D)(vi) of the Act provides
that the MGCRB must use the 3 most
recent years’ average hourly wage data
in evaluating a hospital’s
reclassification application for FY 2003
and any succeeding fiscal year.
Section 304(b) of Pub. L. 106–554
provides that the Secretary must
establish a mechanism under which a
statewide entity may apply to have all
of the geographic areas in the State
treated as a single geographic area for
purposes of computing and applying a
single wage index, for reclassifications
beginning in FY 2003. The
implementing regulations for this
provision are located at § 412.235.
Section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
requires the Secretary to treat a hospital
located in a rural county adjacent to one
or more urban areas as being located in
the MSA to which the greatest number
of workers in the county commute, if
the rural county would otherwise be
considered part of an urban area under
the standards for designating MSAs and
if the commuting rates used in
determining outlying counties were
determined on the basis of the aggregate
number of resident workers who
commute to (and, if applicable under
the standards, from) the central county
or counties of all contiguous MSAs. In
light of the new CBSA definitions and
the Census 2000 data that we
implemented for FY 2005 (69 FR
49027), we undertook to identify those
counties meeting these criteria. The
eligible counties are identified under
section III.H.4. of this preamble.
2. Effects of Reclassification/
Redesignation
Section 1886(d)(8)(C) of the Act
provides that the application of the
wage index to redesignated hospitals is
dependent on the hypothetical impact
that the wage data from these hospitals
would have on the wage index value for
the area to which they have been
redesignated. These requirements for
determining the wage index values for
redesignated hospitals is applicable
both to the hospitals located in rural
counties deemed urban under section
1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act and hospitals
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48020
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
that were reclassified as a result of the
MGCRB decisions under section
1886(d)(10) of the Act. In compliance
with section 1886(d)(8)(C) of the Act, as
well as with the rules CMS has
established by regulation, the wage
index values were determined by
considering the following:
• If including the wage data for the
redesignated hospitals would reduce the
wage index value for the area to which
the hospitals are redesignated by 1
percentage point or less, the area wage
index value determined exclusive of the
wage data for the redesignated hospitals
applies to the redesignated hospitals.
• If including the wage data for the
redesignated hospitals reduces the wage
index value for the area to which the
hospitals are redesignated by more than
1 percentage point, the area wage index
determined inclusive of the wage data
for the redesignated hospitals (the
combined wage index value) applies to
the redesignated hospitals.
• If including the wage data for the
redesignated hospitals increases the
wage index value for the urban area to
which the hospitals are redesignated,
both the area and the redesignated
hospitals receive the combined wage
index value. Otherwise, the hospitals
located in the urban area receive a wage
index excluding the wage data of
hospitals redesignated into the area.
• The wage data for a reclassified
urban hospital is included in both the
wage index calculation of the area to
which the hospital is reclassified
(subject to the rules described above)
and the wage index calculation of the
urban area where the hospital is
physically located.
• Rural areas whose wage index
values would be reduced by excluding
the wage data for hospitals that have
been redesignated to another area
continue to have their wage index
values calculated as if no redesignation
had occurred (otherwise, redesignated
rural hospitals are excluded from the
calculation of the rural wage index).
• The wage index value for a
redesignated rural hospital cannot be
reduced below the wage index value for
the rural areas of the State in which the
hospital is located.
• In cases where urban hospitals have
reclassified to rural areas under 42 CFR
412.103, the urban hospital wage data
are: (a) Included in the rural wage index
calculation, unless doing so would
reduce the rural wage index; and (b)
included in the urban area where the
hospital is physically located.
3. FY 2007 MGCRB Reclassifications
Under section 1886(d)(10) of the Act,
the MGCRB considers applications by
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
hospitals for geographic reclassification
for purposes of payment under the IPPS.
The specific procedures and rules that
apply to the geographic reclassification
process are outlined in § 412.230
through § 412.280.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24377), we identified hospitals that
have reclassifications effective in FY
2007. As specified in § 412.273,
hospitals that have been reclassified by
the MGCRB are permitted to withdraw
an application for reclassification or
terminate an existing 3-year
reclassification for FY 2007. The request
must be received by the MGCRB within
45 days of publication of the IPPS
proposed rule.
However, as a result of our
compliance with the Bellevue Hosp.
Center v. Leavitt court decision, as
discussed earlier, we will be
recalculating wage indices using new
occupational mix data and applying the
occupational mix to 100 percent of the
wage index. Wage tables in the IPPS
proposed rule did not include the new
survey data, nor did they adjust 100
percent for occupational mix. Thus, the
data that hospitals might have used to
make withdrawal or termination
decisions are obsolete. The necessary
data (including wage indices and outmigration adjustments) hospitals
generally utilize in evaluating whether
to withdraw or terminate a
reclassification will not be available
until after this IPPS final rule has been
published. Therefore, in the May 17,
2006 proposed rule (71 FR 28650), in
this limited circumstance, we
suspended the 45-day deadline and
have established the new procedure
described below to withdraw from or
terminate reclassifications for FY 2007.
Some hospitals may have adhered to the
established process and notified the
MGCRB of their decision to withdraw or
terminate a reclassification, in
accordance with § 412.273, before
publication of that proposed rule.
Because hospitals made these
decisions based on information in the
FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule that is now
obsolete, in the May 17, 2006 proposed
rule, we proposed that the MGCRB not
act on these withdrawal or termination
requests. Instead, we have applied the
following procedures for withdrawal
and termination determinations for all
hospital reclassifications for FY 2007.
We will make reclassification
withdrawal and termination
determinations based on what we
perceive would be most advantageous to
the hospital. We will use our best efforts
to determine what would provide the
hospital with the highest possible wage
index. Specifically, we will choose
PO 00000
Frm 00152
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
among: section 508 reclassifications,
section 1886(d)(10) reclassifications,
section 505 out-migration adjustments,
and certain other changes to the wage
index (for example, the special
exceptions policy explained in the FY
2005 IPPS rule (69 FR 49105) or Lugar
status if we determine that it is in the
hospital’s best interest to waive the
Lugar/section 1886(d)(8)(B)
redesignation in order to receive the
section 505 out-migration adjustment).
We also will make the final
occupational mix adjusted wage indices
and out-migration adjustments and our
interim decisions on hospital
reclassifications available to the public
in the Federal Register and on the CMS
Web site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/WIFN/list.asp after
August 1, 2006, and before October 1,
2006. We will allow hospitals a 30-day
period from the date the final data and
our interim decisions are made available
on the Web site to notify CMS in
writing, with a copy to the MGCRB, of
whether they wish to reverse the
reclassification decision made by CMS
or to choose another reclassification for
which they are eligible. We will make
every effort to provide the final data
before September 1, 2006, so that the 30day period to make these
determinations will end before October
1, 2006, and no retroactive adjustments
will be necessary. Requests to reverse a
decision made by CMS must be
received, in writing, no later 30 days
after the data are made available on the
CMS Web site at the following:
Division of Acute Care, C4–08–06,
7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21244, Attn: Marianne Myers;
AND a copy to
Medicare Geographic Classification
Review Board, 2520 Lord Baltimore
Drive, Suite L, Baltimore, MD 21244–
2670.
Prior to FY 2004, hospitals had been
able to apply to be reclassified for
purposes of either the wage index or the
standardized amount. Section 401 of
Pub. L. 108–173 established that all
hospitals will be paid on the basis of the
large urban standardized amount,
beginning with FY 2004. Consequently,
all hospitals are paid on the basis of the
same standardized amount, which made
such reclassifications moot. Although
there could still be some benefit in
terms of payments for some hospitals
under the DSH payment adjustment for
operating IPPS, section 402 of Pub. L.
108–173 equalized DSH payment
adjustments for rural and urban
hospitals, with the exception that the
rural DSH adjustment is capped at 12
percent (except that rural referral
centers and, effective for discharges
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
occurring on or after October 1, 2006,
MDHs have no cap). (A detailed
discussion of this application appears in
section IV.I. of the preamble of the FY
2005 IPPS final rule (69 FR 49085). The
exclusion of MDHs from the 12 percent
DSH cap under Pub. L. 109–171 is
discussed under section IV.F.4. of this
preamble.)
Comment: Several commenters asked
CMS to clarify its position on
withdrawing reclassifications as well as
the timeframe of submitting
applications for geographic
reclassification.
Response: The normal timetable of 45
days after the publication of the
proposed rule for hospitals to withdraw
or terminate a reclassification under
section 508 of Pub. L. 108–173, section
1886(d)(10) of the Act, or section
1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act (in order to
receive a section 505 out-migration
adjustment) does not apply for FY 2007.
For this reason, any withdrawal or
termination requests submitted to the
MGCRB and/or CMS following
publication of the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule are not reflected in the
reclassification tables shown in this
final rule.
We will make best efforts to give each
hospital the highest FY 2007 wage index
after reviewing applicable data using the
100 percent occupational adjusted wage
index. Hospitals will have 15 days from
the display date of this final rule to
notify us of whether, in the absence of
viewing the final 100 percent
occupational mix-adjusted wage index
data, they wish to choose a particular
wage index for which they are eligible
(such as to definitively maintain a
reclassification that they received or to
definitively terminate or withdraw from
a reclassification). Written requests to
maintain, terminate, or withdraw a
reclassification, in the absence of
viewing the final wage tables, must be
received at the following address no
later than 5 p.m. EDT 15 days from the
date this final rule appears on public
display at the Office of the Federal
Register:
Division of Acute Care, C4–08–06,
7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21244, Attn: Marianne Myers.
If we do not receive notice from the
hospital within such 15-day timeframe,
we will make determinations for the
hospital using our best efforts to
determine what we believe results in the
highest wage index for the hospital. If
applicable, we will give the hospital its
home wage index with the outmigration adjustment, if that option
results in the highest wage index. In
some cases, we may determine that it is
most advantageous for a hospital to
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
terminate its Lugar/section 1886(d)(8)(B)
reclassification in order to receive the
out-migration adjustment. Because this
termination would result in the hospital
losing urban status, we will separately
publish a table identifying these
hospitals that move from Lugar/urban
status to rural status with the outmigration adjustment. For section 508
hospital individual reclassifications, we
may make half-year terminations/
withdrawals on behalf of hospitals,
using the procedures identified in our
proposed rule. That is, for a section 508
hospital that applied for an individual
reclassification under section
1886(d)(10), we would give the section
508 hospital the higher of its home wage
index, section 508 or 1886(d)(10) wage
index for the first half of the year. For
the second half of the year, we would
give the section 508 hospital the higher
of its home wage index or its section
1886(d)(10) reclassification. (However,
in no case could such a hospital receive
its home wage indes for the first half of
the year and its MGCRB reclassification
for the second half, or vice versa. For
group reclassifications, we will apply
the higher of the home wage index or
the section 1886(d)(10) reclassification
for the entire year. For group
reclassifications that include a section
508 hospital, we will apply the decision
that was on the MGCRB application for
groups that followed the procedural
rules (that is, the group either: (1)
Withdrew from its section 1886(d)(10)
reclassification for the first half of FY
2007 and will only receive a second half
FY 2007 section 1886(d)(10)
reclassification; or (2) the group is
reclassified under section 1886(d)(10) of
the Act for the entire year and the
section 508 hospital withdraws from its
section 508 reclassification for the first
half of the FY 2007) unless the group
informs us differently after publication
of the final occupational mix adjusted
wage indices. Groups that include a
section 508 hospital will be able to
make decisions as a group, separately
for the first and second half of the year.
Thus, the group may decide to
withdraw a section 1886(d)(10)
reclassification that would be applicable
only for the second half of FY 2007.
Again, however, in no case could a
group whose 508 hospital chose to
waive its 508 reclassification (and
therefore accept the MGCRB
reclassification for the first half of FY
2007) withdraw its MGCRB
reclassification for the first half of the
year, but not the second (or vice versa).
We acknowledge that hospitals may
base withdrawal/termination decisions
on factors other than simply what
PO 00000
Frm 00153
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48021
results in the highest wage index for the
upcoming fiscal year. For this reason,
we will allow a hospital to change a
decision that is made by CMS on its
behalf. Hospitals should note that we
will not recalculate the wage indices or
budget neutrality factors after the final
notice announcing the FY 2007
occupational mix adjusted wage indices.
That is, we will not further recalculate
the wage indices or standardized
amounts based on hospital decisions
that further revise decisions made by
CMS on the hospitals’ behalf.
We will post the final occupational
mix adjusted wage indices, outmigration adjustments, and our interim
decisions on hospital reclassification on
the CMS Web site, as discussed above,
sometime after August 1, 2006, and
before October 1, 2006. We will post the
same tables on the CMS Web site that
appear in the Federal Register final
notice of the occupational mix adjusted
wage indices to be published after
August 1, 2006 and before October 1,
2006. Hospitals will be able to
determine the reclassification decision
applied on their behalf by reviewing
Tables 9A through 9C for hospitals that
are reclassified under section
1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act, section 508 of
Pub. L. 108–173, or section 1886(d)(10)
of the Act. The applicable wage index
for these hospitals will be found on
Table 2. If a hospital is not listed in
Tables 9A through 9C, CMS will have
made a decision not to reclassify the
hospital and its home wage index will
apply, including the effect of the outmigration adjustment, will be found in
Table 2. The applicable out-migration
adjustment for the hospital will be
found in Table 4J. As indicated above,
we will separately publish a table
identifying hospitals that we move from
Lugar/urban status to rural status with
the out-migration adjustment in Table
9D. Hospitals will have 30 days after the
data are placed on the CMS Web site to
submit, in writing, whether they wish to
revise the decision made on their behalf
by CMS. Written requests to revise a
decision made on behalf of a hospital by
CMS must be received by CMS no later
than 5 p.m. EDT, with a copy sent to the
MGCRB, within 30 days from the date
the information appears on the CMS
Web site at https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/WIFN/list.asp at the
following addresses:
Division of Acute Care, C4–08–06,
7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21244, Attn: Marianne Myers;
AND a copy to
Medicare Geographic Classification
Review Board, 2520 Lord Baltimore
Drive, Suite L, Baltimore, MD 21244–
2670.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48022
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
If a hospital fails to notify CMS that
it is revising a determination made on
its behalf within 30 days from the date
the information appears on the CMS
Web site, the interim decision made by
CMS on the hospital’s behalf will be
final for FY 2007. Therefore, if CMS
makes a decision on a hospital’s behalf
to terminate or withdraw a
reclassification and the hospital does
not reverse or modify CMS’s decision,
we will deem the hospital’s
reclassification is withdrawn or
terminated. Once CMS’s decision on the
hospital’s behalf is in effect, it will be
treated in the same manner as if the
hospital(s) had made the reclassification
decision on its own. Thus, for example,
because a hospital cannot have
overlapping reclassifications, if we
decide a hospital should accept a FY
2007 through 2009 reclassification, any
reclassification the hospital previously
had for FY 2006 through 2008 would be
permanently terminated.
Section 1886(d)(10)(C)(ii) of the Act
indicates that a hospital requesting a
change in geographic classification for a
FY must submit its application to the
MGCRB no later than the first day of the
13-month period ending on September
30 of the preceding fiscal year. Thus, the
statute requires that FY 2008
reclassification applications be
submitted to the MGCRB no later than
September 1, 2006. Hospitals must
submit applications for geographic
reclassification for FY 2008 by
September 1, 2006. However, because
the 3-year average hourly wage of
hospitals for the FY 2007 final rule will
not be available by the September 1,
2006 deadline for submitting FY 2008
geographic reclassification applications,
we will allow hospitals to supplement
incomplete reclassification applications
with the official data used to develop
the FY 2007 wage index after filing their
initial application. As indicated above,
the 3-year average hourly wage
information that will be necessary for
FY 2008 reclassification applications
will be available subsequent to this final
rule after August 1, and before October
1, 2006. The information will be
available on the CMS Web site at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/
WIFN/list.asp and then accessing the
page titled ‘‘MGCRB Reclassification
Data for FY 2008 Applications.’’
Applications and other information
about MGCRB reclassifications may be
obtained via the CMS Internet Web site
at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/mgcrb/, or
by calling the MGCRB at (410) 786–
1174. The mailing address of the
MGCRB is: 2520 Lord Baltimore Drive,
Suite L, Baltimore, MD 21244–2670.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Comment: Several commenters
requested a revision in the geographic
reclassification rules so that in the
future the occupational mix adjusted
average hourly wage data is used as a
point of comparison for eligibility. The
commenters believed this change would
make reclassification decisions
consistent with the new basis for the
wage index. The commenters also
suggested that hospitals should not be
allowed to apply for reclassification if
they do not provide complete
occupational mix data.
Response: Section 1886(d)(10)(D)(vi)
of the Act requires the MGCRB to use
the 3-year average of the average hourly
wage data from the most recently
published hospital wage survey data, as
well as the preceding 2 fiscal years’
published surveys. Because our
published surveys of wage data include
adjustments for occupational mix (10
percent in FYs 2005 and 2006 and 100
percent in FY 2007), the MGCRB uses
mix-adjusted wage indices in making
reclassification decisions. Therefore, for
FY 2008 reclassification applications,
the MGCRB will use the average of the
average hourly wages for FYs 2005
through 2007. These data will be based
on an occupational mix adjustment of
10 percent for FY 2005 and FY 2006 and
100 percent for FY 2007.
With respect to the comment about
precluding hospitals that did not submit
occupational mix survey data from
reclassifying, we believe that due to the
unusual circumstances of the Court’s
order and the short timeframe that
hospitals were provided for completing
and submitting their data, it would not
be fair to apply a penalty to nonresponsive hospitals for the 2008
reclassification applications. However,
as indicated earlier, we will give serious
consideration to applying some sort of
penalty in the future if a hospital does
not comply with regulations requiring
submission of occupational mix survey
data.
4. Procedures for Hospitals Applying for
Reclassification Effective in FY 2008
and Reinstating Reclassifications in FY
2008
Applications for FY 2008
reclassifications are due to the MGCRB
by September 1, 2006. We note that this
deadline also applies for canceling a
previous wage index reclassification
withdrawal or termination under
§ 412.273(d). As we noted in the FY
2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR 24083),
applications and other information
about MGCRB reclassifications may be
obtained, beginning in mid-July 2006,
on the CMS Web site at: https://
PO 00000
Frm 00154
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
www.cms.hhs.gov/mgcrb/, or by calling
the MGCRB at (410) 786–1174.
The MGCRB, in evaluating a
hospital’s request for reclassification for
FY 2008 for the wage index, must utilize
the official data used to develop the FY
2007 wage index. The wage data used to
support the hospital’s wage
comparisons must be from the CMS
hospital wage survey. Generally, the
source for these data is the IPPS final
rule to be published on or before August
1, 2006. However, as we stated earlier,
the wage tables identifying the 3-year
average hourly wage of hospitals will
not be available in time to include them
in this FY 2007 IPPS final rule.
Therefore, we will make the data
available subsequent to August 1, 2006,
but before October 1, 2006.
Section 1886(d)(10)(C)(ii) of the Act
indicates that a hospital requesting a
change in geographic classification for a
FY must submit its application to the
MGCRB not later than the first day of
the 13-month period ending on
September 30 of the preceding FY.
Thus, the statute requires that FY 2008
reclassification applications be
submitted to the MGCRB by no later
than September 1, 2006. For this reason,
hospitals must file an FY 2008
reclassification application by the
September 1, 2006 deadline even
though the average hourly wage data
used to develop the final FY 2007 wage
indices will not yet be available. We
note that, under § 412.256(c), the
MGCRB must review applications and
notify the hospital if it determines that
the application is incomplete. We are
also allowing hospitals 30 days from the
date the final wage data is posted on the
CMS Web site to request to cancel a
withdrawal or termination in order to
reinstate its reclassification for FY 2008
or FY 2009, or both fiscal years.
Requests to cancel a withdrawal or
termination in order to reinstate a
hospital’s reclassification for FY 2008 or
FY 2009, or both fiscal years, should be
forwarded to the following addresses:
Medicare Geographic Classification
Review Board, 2520 Lord Baltimore
Drive, Suite L, Baltimore, MD 21244–
2670;
AND a copy to
Division of Acute Care, C4–08–06,
7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21244, Attn: Marianne Myers.
As outlined in § 412.256(c)(2),
hospitals with incomplete applications
have the opportunity to request that the
MGCRB grant a hospital that has
submitted an application by September
1, 2006, an extension beyond September
1, 2006, to complete its application.
Thus, while hospitals must file an
application for reclassification to the
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
MGCRB by September 1, 2006, they will
be able to supplement the
reclassification application with official
data used to develop the FY 2007 wage
index after filing their initial
application. We are providing that
hospitals file a supplement to the
reclassification application with official
data used to develop the FY 2007 wage
index no later than 30 days after the
data are made available on the CMS
Web site. These same rules will apply
to canceling a withdrawal or
termination of a geographic
reclassification.
5. FY 2007 Redesignations Under
Section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
Beginning October 1, 1988, section
1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act required us to
treat a hospital located in a rural county
adjacent to one or more urban areas as
being located in the MSA if certain
criteria were met. Prior to FY 2005, the
rule was that a rural county adjacent to
one or more urban areas would be
treated as being located in the MSA to
which the greatest number of workers in
the county commute, if the rural county
would otherwise be considered part of
an urban area under the standards
published in the Federal Register on
January 3, 1980 (45 FR 956) for
designating MSAs (and New England
County Metropolitan Areas (NECMAs)),
and if the commuting rates used in
determining outlying counties (or, for
New England, similar recognized areas)
were determined on the basis of the
aggregate number of resident workers
who commute to (and, if applicable
under the standards, from) the central
county or counties of all contiguous
MSAs (or NECMAs). Hospitals that met
the criteria using the January 3, 1980
version of these OMB standards were
deemed urban for purposes of the
standardized amounts and for purposes
of assigning the wage data index.
Effective beginning FY 2005, we use
OMB’s 2000 CBSA standards and the
Census 2000 data to identify counties
qualifying for redesignation under
section 1886(d)(8)(B) for the purpose of
assigning the wage index to the urban
area. We provided the chart below with
the listing of the rural counties
designated as urban under section
1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act in the FY 2007
IPPS proposed rule. For discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2006,
hospitals located in the first column of
this chart will be redesignated for
purposes of using the wage index of the
urban area listed in the second column.
The following table is subject to
revision if CMS decides it is most
advantageous for a county to waive its
county Lugar status in order for a
hospital within that county to receive a
section 505 out-migration adjustment.
RURAL COUNTIES REDESIGNATED AS URBAN UNDER SECTION 1886(D)(8)(B) OF THE ACT
[Based on CBSAs and Census 2000 data]
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Rural County
CBSA
Cherokee, AL ............................................................................................
Macon, AL ................................................................................................
Talladega, AL ...........................................................................................
Hot Springs, AR ........................................................................................
Windham, CT ............................................................................................
Bradford, FL ..............................................................................................
Flagler, FL ................................................................................................
Hendry, FL ................................................................................................
Levy, FL ....................................................................................................
Walton, FL ................................................................................................
Banks, GA ................................................................................................
Chattooga, GA ..........................................................................................
Jackson, GA .............................................................................................
Lumpkin, GA .............................................................................................
Morgan, GA ..............................................................................................
Peach, GA ................................................................................................
Polk, GA ...................................................................................................
Talbot, GA ................................................................................................
Bingham, ID ..............................................................................................
Christian, IL ..............................................................................................
DeWitt, IL ..................................................................................................
Iroquois, IL ................................................................................................
Logan, IL ...................................................................................................
Mason, IL ..................................................................................................
Ogle, IL .....................................................................................................
Clinton, IN .................................................................................................
Henry, IN ..................................................................................................
Spencer, IN ...............................................................................................
Starke, IN ..................................................................................................
Warren, IN ................................................................................................
Boone, IA ..................................................................................................
Buchanan, IA ............................................................................................
Cedar, IA ..................................................................................................
Allen, KY ...................................................................................................
Assumption Parish, LA .............................................................................
St. James Parish, LA ................................................................................
Allegan, MI ................................................................................................
Montcalm, MI ............................................................................................
Oceana, MI ...............................................................................................
Shiawassee, MI ........................................................................................
Tuscola, MI ...............................................................................................
Fillmore, MN .............................................................................................
Dade, MO .................................................................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00155
Fmt 4701
Rome, GA.
Auburn-Opelika, AL.
Anniston-Oxford, AL.
Hot Springs, AR.
Hartford-West Hartford-East Hartford, CT.
Gainesville, FL.
Deltona-Daytona Beach-Ormond Beach, FL.
West Palm Beach-Boca Raton-Boynton, FL.
Gainesville, FL.
Fort Walton Beach-Crestview-Destin, FL.
Gainesville, GA.
Chattanooga, TN-GA.
Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, GA.
Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, GA.
Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, GA.
Macon, GA.
Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, GA.
Columbus, GA-AL.
Idaho Falls, ID.
Springfield, IL.
Bloomington-Normal, IL.
Kankakee-Bradley, IL.
Springfield, IL.
Peoria, IL.
Rockford, IL.
Lafayette, IN.
Indianapolis-Carmel, IN.
Evansville, IN-KY.
Gary, IN.
Lafayette, IN.
Ames, IA.
Waterloo-Cedar Falls, IA.
Iowa City, IA.
Bowling Green, KY.
Baton Rouge, LA.
Baton Rouge, LA.
Holland-Grand Haven, MI.
Grand Rapids-Wyoming, MI.
Muskegon-Norton Shores, MI.
Lansing-East Lansing, MI.
Saginaw-Saginaw Township North, MI.
Rochester, MN.
Springfield, MO.
Sfmt 4700
48023
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48024
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
RURAL COUNTIES REDESIGNATED AS URBAN UNDER SECTION 1886(D)(8)(B) OF THE ACT—Continued
[Based on CBSAs and Census 2000 data]
Rural County
CBSA
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Pearl River, MS ........................................................................................
Caswell, NC ..............................................................................................
Granville, NC ............................................................................................
Harnett, NC ...............................................................................................
Lincoln, NC ...............................................................................................
Polk, NC ...................................................................................................
Los Alamos, NM .......................................................................................
Lyon, NV ...................................................................................................
Cayuga, NY ..............................................................................................
Columbia, NY ...........................................................................................
Genesee, NY ............................................................................................
Greene, NY ...............................................................................................
Schuyler, NY .............................................................................................
Sullivan, NY ..............................................................................................
Wyoming, NY ............................................................................................
Ashtabula, OH ..........................................................................................
Champaign, OH ........................................................................................
Columbiana, OH .......................................................................................
Cotton, OK ................................................................................................
Linn, OR ...................................................................................................
Adams, PA ................................................................................................
Clinton, PA ................................................................................................
Greene, PA ...............................................................................................
Monroe, PA ...............................................................................................
Schuylkill, PA ............................................................................................
Susquehanna, PA .....................................................................................
Clarendon, SC ..........................................................................................
Lee, SC .....................................................................................................
Oconee, SC ..............................................................................................
Union, SC .................................................................................................
Meigs, TN .................................................................................................
Bosque, TX ...............................................................................................
Falls, TX ...................................................................................................
Fannin, TX ................................................................................................
Grimes, TX ...............................................................................................
Harrison, TX .............................................................................................
Henderson, TX .........................................................................................
Milam, TX .................................................................................................
Van Zandt, TX ..........................................................................................
Willacy, TX ................................................................................................
Buckingham, VA .......................................................................................
Floyd, VA ..................................................................................................
Middlesex, VA ...........................................................................................
Page, VA ..................................................................................................
Shenandoah, VA ......................................................................................
Island, WA ................................................................................................
Mason, WA ...............................................................................................
Wahkiakum, WA .......................................................................................
Jackson, WV .............................................................................................
Roane, WV ...............................................................................................
Green, WI .................................................................................................
Green Lake, WI ........................................................................................
Jefferson, WI ............................................................................................
Walworth, WI ............................................................................................
As in the past, hospitals redesignated
under section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
are also eligible to be reclassified to a
different area by the MGCRB. Affected
hospitals are permitted to compare the
reclassified wage index for the labor
market area in Tables 4C–1 and 4C–2
into which they have been reclassified
by the MGCRB to the wage index for the
area to which they are redesignated
under section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Gulfport-Biloxi, MS.
Burlington, NC.
Durham, NC.
Raleigh-Cary, NC.
Charlotte-Gastonia-Concord, NC-SC.
Spartanburg, NC.
Santa Fe, NM.
Carson City, NV.
Syracuse, NY.
Albany-Schenectady-Troy, NY.
Rochester, NY.
Albany-Schenectady-Troy, NY.
Ithaca, NY.
Poughkeepsie-Newburgh-Middletown, NY.
Buffalo-Niagara Falls, NY.
Cleveland-Elyria-Mentor, OH.
Springfield, OH.
Youngstown-Warren-Boardman, OH-PA.
Lawton, OK.
Corvallis, OR.
York-Hanover, PA.
Williamsport, PA.
Pittsburgh, PA.
Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, PA-NJ.
Reading, PA.
Binghamton, NY.
Sumter, SC.
Sumter, SC.
Greenville, SC.
Spartanburg, SC.
Cleveland, TN.
Waco, TX.
Waco, TX.
Dallas-Plano-Irving, TX.
College Station-Bryan, TX.
Longview, TX.
Dallas-Plano-Irving, TX.
Austin-Round Rock, TX.
Dallas-Plano-Irving, TX.
Brownsville-Harlingen, TX.
Charlottesville, VA.
Blacksburg-Christiansburg-Radford, VA.
Virginia Beach-Norfolk-Newport News, VA.
Harrisonburg, VA.
Winchester, VA–WV.
Seattle-Bellevue-Everett, WA.
Olympia, WA.
Longview, WA.
Charleston, WV.
Charleston, WV.
Madison, WI.
Fond du Lac, WI.
Milwaukee-Waukesha-West Allis, WI.
Milwaukee-Waukesha-West Allis, WI.
once the final wage index data are
posted on the CMS Web site.
6. Reclassifications Under Section 508
of Pub. L. 108–173
Under section 508 of Pub. L. 108–173,
a qualifying hospital could appeal the
wage index classification otherwise
applicable to the hospital and apply for
reclassification to another area of the
State in which the hospital is located
(or, at the discretion of the Secretary, to
PO 00000
Frm 00156
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
an area within a contiguous State). We
implemented this process through
notices published in the Federal
Register on January 6, 2004 (69 FR 661),
and February 13, 2004 (69 FR 7340).
Such reclassifications are applicable to
discharges occurring during the 3-year
period beginning April 1, 2004, and
ending March 31, 2007. Under section
508(b), reclassifications under this
process do not affect the wage index
computation for any area or for any
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
other hospital and cannot be effected in
a budget neutral manner.
Some hospitals currently receiving a
section 508 reclassification are eligible
to reclassify to that same area under the
standard reclassification process as a
result of the new labor market
definitions that we adopted for FY 2005.
The governing regulations indicate that
‘‘if a hospital is already reclassified to
a given geographic area for wage index
purposes for a 3-year period, and
submits an application to the same area
for either the second or third year of the
3-year period, that application will not
be approved.’’ However in the FY 2006
IPPS final rule (70 FR 47382), we stated
that hospitals that indicated in their FY
2007 MGCRB applications that they
agreed to waive their section 508
reclassification for the first 6 months of
FY 2007 if they were granted a 3-year
reclassification under the traditional
MGCRB process will not be subject to
the rule cited above. Thus, in applying
for a 3-year MGCRB reclassification
beginning in FY 2007, hospitals that are
already reclassified to the same area
under section 508 should have
indicated in their MGCRB
reclassification requests that if they
receive the MGCRB reclassification,
they would forfeit the section 508
reclassification for the first 6 months of
FY 2007.
Under 1886(d)(10)(D)(v) of the Act,
CMS has the authority to ‘‘establish
procedures’’ under which a hospital
may elect to terminate a reclassification
before the end of a 3-year period. In the
FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR 47382),
we discussed our decision to exercise
this authority to establish a procedural
rule for section 508 hospitals to retain
their section 508 reclassification
through its expiration on March 31,
2007, and reclassify under the
regulations at 42 CFR Part 412, Subpart
L, for the second half of FY 2007. We
provided further detail above on how
we will apply decisions regarding
section 508 reclassifications in the
context of the Bellevue Hosp. Center v.
Leavitt court decision. Again, we will
select the reclassification option that
provides the highest wage index for the
hospital and will give the hospital 30
days to revise the decision made on its
behalf by CMS. We refer readers to the
discussion above for further details
about how section 508 hospitals that
have applied for an individual
reclassification and hospitals groups
that include a section 508 hospital can
revise a CMS decision.
We will apply a similar rule for
purposes of the out-migration
adjustment for FY 2007 discussed in
section III.I. of this preamble. The
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
statute states that a hospital cannot
receive an out-migration adjustment if it
is reclassified under section 1886(d)(10)
of the Act. Therefore, eligible hospitals
that are not reclassified during any part
of FY 2007 will, by default, receive an
out-migration adjustment during that
time period. If the hospital is
reclassified for all of FY 2007, the
hospital will be ineligible for the outmigration adjustment. If a hospital has
a half fiscal year reclassification, the
hospital will be eligible for the outmigration adjustment for the portion of
the fiscal year that it is not reclassified.
The procedural rules described in the
FY 2006 IPPS final rule were intended
to address specific circumstances where
individual and group reclassifications
involve a section 508 hospital. The rules
were designed to recognize the special
circumstances of section 508 hospital
reclassifications ending mid-year during
FY 2007 and were intended to provide
flexibility in our regulations that would
allow previously approved
reclassifications to continue through
March 31, 2007, and new
reclassifications to begin April 1, 2007,
upon the conclusion of the section 508
reclassifications. As we indicated in the
proposed rule, we have received
questions about the application of these
special procedural rules to non-section
508 hospitals that are part of group
applications that previously were
awarded an individual reclassification
that continues into FY 2007. These
hospitals are concerned that the
procedural rules imply that such prior
reclassification would be terminated
beginning October 1, 2006, because the
rules specify that ‘‘the remainder of the
group receives the home wage index’’
for the period October 1, 2006, through
March 31, 2007, if the group
reclassification application specified
that the section 1886(d)(10) group
reclassification would not begin until
April 1, 2007. We did not specifically
contemplate preexisting individual
reclassifications when we drafted the
special procedural rules for group
reclassifications that involve section 508
hospitals. However, we did not intend
to adopt a less favorable policy for nonsection 508 hospitals in a group with a
pending individual geographic
reclassification than we did for section
508 hospitals. Thus, we clarified our
procedural rule with respect to nonsection 508 hospitals with preexisting
individual reclassifications that are part
of group reclassifications that include a
section 508 hospital. For the first half of
FY 2007, we intend to either apply (a)
the area wage index where the hospital
is physically located if there is no
PO 00000
Frm 00157
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48025
reclassification pending, or (b) the
hospital’s individual reclassification
wage index if the hospital was part of
a group awarded a group reclassification
and the group followed the procedural
rules for postponing reclassification
until April 1, 2007. However, once the
hospital begins its new section
1886(d)(10) reclassification for the
period April 1, 2007, through September
30, 2009, any prior reclassifications are
permanently terminated, consistent
with 42 CFR 412.274(b)(2)(ii). We are
also reiterating that the special
procedural rules that we have adopted
for half fiscal year reclassifications and
terminations are intended only to
address the special circumstances
created by section 508 of Pub. L. 108–
173 with respect to reclassifications
beginning and ending mid-way through
a fiscal year. These special procedural
rules do not change any of the
permanent provisions currently in effect
with respect to reclassifications under
subpart L of 42 CFR Part 412.
We show the reclassifications
effective under the one-time appeal
process in tentative Table 9B in the
Addendum to this final rule. All section
1886(d)(10) reclassifications are listed in
tentative Table 9A in the Addendum to
this final rule.
Comment: Many commenters stated
their appreciation and support of CMS’
flexibility relating to the expiration of
section 508 and in facilitating the
transition between the end of section
508 and reclassifications occurring
under section 1886(d)(10) of the Act.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support.
7. Wage Indices for Reclassified
Hospitals and Reclassification Budget
Neutrality Factor
Under the procedural rules described
under section III.H.6. of this preamble,
different wage indices may be in effect
for the first 6 months and the second 6
months of FY 2007. Specifically, there
may be different wage indices in effect
for the first and second half of FY 2007
due to the special circumstances of
section 508 reclassifications ending in
the middle of a fiscal year and half of
FY 2007 geographic reclassifications
under section 1886(d)(10) beginning on
April 1, 2007. This unique circumstance
will not change as a result of the
Bellevue Hosp. Center v. Leavitt court
decision.
The half fiscal year section
1886(d)(10) reclassifications present
issues related to the calculation of the
reclassified wage indices and
reclassification budget neutrality factor.
Section 1886(d)(8)(C) of the Act
provides requirements for determining
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48026
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
the wage index values for both hospitals
located in rural counties deemed urban
under section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
and hospitals that were reclassified as a
result of the MGCRB decisions under
section 1886(d)(10) of the Act. As
provided in the statute, we are required
to calculate a separate wage index for
hospitals reclassified to an area if
including the wage data for the
reclassified hospitals would reduce the
area wage index by more than 1 percent.
We proposed to issue two separate
reclassified wage indices for affected
areas (one effective from October 1,
2006, through March 31, 2007, and a
second reclassified wage index effective
April 1, 2007, through September 30,
2007). The reclassified wage indices
will be calculated based on the wage
data for hospitals reclassified to the area
in the respective half of the fiscal year.
We only received public comments
supporting this proposal.
The half fiscal year reclassifications
also have implications for budget
neutrality. The overall effect of
geographic reclassification is required
by section 1886(d)(8)(D) of the Act to be
budget neutral. We apply an adjustment
to the IPPS standardized amounts to
ensure that the effects of geographic
reclassification are budget neutral. We
proposed calculating one budget
neutrality adjustment that reflects the
average of the adjustments required for
first and second half fiscal year
reclassifications, respectively, as
discussed in section II.A.4.b. of the
Addendum to this final rule. We only
received public comments supporting
this proposal.
I. FY 2007 Wage Index Adjustment
Based on Commuting Patterns of
Hospital Employees
In accordance with the broad
discretion under section 1886(d)(13) of
the Act, as added by section 505 of Pub.
L. 108–173, beginning with FY 2005, we
established a process to make
adjustments to the hospital wage index
based on commuting patterns of
hospital employees. The process,
outlined in the FY 2005 IPPS final rule
(69 FR 49061), provides for an increase
in the wage index for hospitals located
in certain counties that have a relatively
high percentage of hospital employees
who reside in the county but work in a
different county (or counties) with a
higher wage index. Such adjustments to
the wage index are effective for 3 years,
unless a hospital requests to waive the
application of the adjustment. A county
will not lose its status as a qualifying
county due to wage index changes
during the 3-year period, and counties
will receive the same wage index
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
increase for those 3 years. However, a
county that qualifies in any given year
may no longer qualify after the 3-year
period, or it may qualify but receive a
different adjustment to the wage index
level. Hospitals that receive this
adjustment to their wage index are not
eligible for reclassification under
section 1886(d)(8) or section 1886(d)(10)
of the Act. Adjustments under this
provision are not subject to the budget
neutrality requirements under section
1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act.
Hospitals located in counties that
qualify for the wage index adjustment
are to receive an increase in the wage
index that is equal to the average of the
differences between the wage indices of
the labor market area(s) with higher
wage indices and the wage index of the
resident county, weighted by the overall
percentage of hospital workers residing
in the qualifying county who are
employed in any labor market area with
a higher wage index. We employ the
pre-reclassified wage indices in making
these calculations.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24264 through 24272), in the OutMigration Adjustment table, Table 4J,
we identified hospitals located in
qualifying counties. Table 4J also listed
the proposed adjustments calculated for
qualifying hospitals. Hospitals that
newly qualified for the adjustment in
FY 2005 or FY 2006 are eligible to
receive the same adjustment in FY 2007.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule, we
determined county eligibility based on a
10 percent occupational mix adjustment
to the wage index. However, under the
May 17, 2006 proposed rule discussed
in section III.C. of this preamble, for FY
2007 we are applying the occupational
mix adjustment to 100 percent of the FY
2007 wage index. Therefore, we must
reevaluate which counties are newly
eligible for the out-migration adjustment
in FY 2007 using the 100 percent
occupational mix adjusted wage index
data. We will publish an updated
version of Table 4J showing eligible
hospitals and their corresponding wage
index adjustments on the CMS Web site
after we publish this IPPS final rule, and
in advance of October 1, 2006, using the
procedures discussed in section III.H.of
this preamble. We will use the same
formula described in the FY 2005 final
rule (69 FR 49064) to calculate the outmigration adjustment.
The adjustments calculated for
qualifying hospitals will be listed in the
revised Table 4J that will be issued
separately from this final rule. These
adjustments will be effective for each
county for a period of 3 fiscal years.
Hospitals that received the adjustment
in FY 2006 will be eligible to retain that
PO 00000
Frm 00158
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
same adjustment for FY 2007. For
hospitals in newly qualified counties,
adjustments to the wage index are
effective for 3 years, beginning with
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2006.
As previously noted, hospitals
receiving the wage index adjustment
under section 1886(d)(13)(F) of the Act
are not eligible for reclassification under
sections 1886(d)(8) or (d)(10) of the Act,
or under section 508 of Pub. L. 108–173,
unless they waive such out-migration
adjustment. As announced in the FYs
2005 and 2006 final rules, hospitals
redesignated under section 1886(d)(8) of
the Act or reclassified under section
1886(d)(10) of the Act or under section
508 of Pub. L. 108-173 will be deemed
to have chosen to retain their
redesignation or reclassification, unless
they explicitly notified CMS that they
elected to receive the out-migration
adjustment instead within 45 days from
the publication of the FY 2007 proposed
rule.
As previously noted, hospitals
receiving the wage index adjustment
under section 1886(d)(13)(F) of the Act
are not eligible for reclassification under
sections 1886(d)(8) or (d)(10) of the Act,
or under section 508 of Pub. L. 108–173,
unless they waive such out-migration
adjustment. Ordinarily, our rule is to
presume that a hospital wishes to retain
its reclassification, unless it notifies us
within 45 days of the proposed rule that
it wishes to receive the out-migration
adjustment in lieu of the
reclassification. However, for FY 2007,
as stated earlier, we will be making
reclassification withdrawal and
termination decisions on behalf of
hospitals. Thus, the ordinary 45-day
rule would not apply in FY 2007.
Rather, hospitals will have 15 days from
the display date of this final rule to
notify us of whether, in the absence of
viewing the final 100 percent
occupational mix-adjusted wage index
data, they wish to choose a particular
wage index for which they are eligible
(such as to definitively maintain a
reclassification which they received or
to definitively terminate or withdraw
from a reclassification). Otherwise, we
will make withdrawal and termination
decisions on behalf of the hospital
(including a decision as to whether to
accept an out-migration adjustment
instead of a reclassification), and the
hospital will then have 30 days to
reverse or modify our decision, as
applicable.
J. Process for Requests for Wage Index
Data Corrections
In the FY 2005 IPPS final rule (68 FR
27194), we revised the process and
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
timetable for application for
development of the wage index,
beginning with the FY 2005 wage index.
The preliminary and unaudited wage
index data for FY 2007 were made
available on October 7, 2005, through
the Internet on the CMS Web site at:
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS. In a memorandum
dated October 7, 2005, we instructed all
Medicare fiscal intermediaries to inform
the IPPS hospitals they service of the
availability of the wage index data files
and the process and timeframe for
requesting revisions (including the
specific deadlines listed below). We
instructed the fiscal intermediaries to
advise hospitals that these data are also
made available directly through their
representative hospital organizations.
If a hospital wished to request a
change to its data as shown in the
October 7, 2005 wage index data files,
the hospital was to submit corrections
along with complete, detailed
supporting documentation to its fiscal
intermediary by December 5, 2005.
Hospitals were notified of this deadline
and of all other possible deadlines and
requirements, including the requirement
to review and verify their data as posted
on the preliminary wage index data file
on the Internet, through the October 7,
2005 memorandum referenced above.
The fiscal intermediaries notified the
hospitals by mid-February 2006 of any
changes to the wage index data as a
result of the desk reviews and the
resolution of the hospitals’ early
December 2005 change requests. The
fiscal intermediaries also submitted the
revised data to CMS by mid-February
2006. CMS published the proposed
wage index PUFs that included
hospitals’ revised wage data on
February 24, 2006. Also, in a
memorandum dated February 14, 2006,
we instructed fiscal intermediaries to
notify all hospitals regarding the
availability of the proposed wage index
PUFs and the criteria and process for
requesting corrections and revisions to
the wage index data. Hospitals had until
March 13, 2006, to submit requests to
the fiscal intermediaries for
reconsideration of adjustments made by
the fiscal intermediaries as a result of
the desk review, and to correct errors
due to CMS’s or the fiscal
intermediary’s mishandling of the wage
index data. Hospitals were also required
to submit sufficient documentation to
support their requests.
After reviewing requested changes
submitted by hospitals, fiscal
intermediaries transmitted any
additional revisions resulting from the
hospitals’ reconsideration requests by
April 14, 2006. The deadline for a
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
hospital to request CMS intervention in
cases where the hospital disagreed with
the fiscal intermediary’s policy
interpretations was April 21, 2006.
Hospitals were also instructed to
examine Table 2 in the Addendum to
the proposed rule. Table 2 contained
each hospital’s adjusted average hourly
wage used to construct the wage index
values for the past 3 years, including the
FY 2003 data used to construct the
proposed FY 2007 wage index. We
noted that the hospital average hourly
wages shown in Table 2 only reflected
changes made to a hospital’s data and
transmitted to CMS by March 1, 2006.
As discussed in section III.C. of this
preamble, on May 17, 2006, we
published in the Federal Register (71
FR 28644) a proposed rule that
proposed to revise the methodology for
calculating the occupational mix
adjustment by applying the
occupational mix adjustment to 100
percent of the wage index using the new
2006 occupational mix data. In section
III.C.2 of this preamble, we discussed in
detail the timeline and process for
collecting, reviewing, and correcting the
FY 2006 occupational mix survey data.
The 1st quarter 2006 occupational mix
data PUF was released on June 29, 2006,
to hospital associations and the public
on the Internet at https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS.
The release of this file superseded any
and all of the 2003 occupational mix
survey data that we had previously
published and proposed to use for the
FY 2007 wage index. Hospitals had
until July 13 to submit to the
intermediaries their requests for
corrections to the new 2006 survey data.
Intermediaries were to submit all
corrected occupational mix data to CMS
by July 27, 2007. Also, as discussed in
section III.C., the occupational mix data
could not be finalized in time to include
in this final rule, so we are releasing the
final occupational mix adjusted wage
index data and tables after the
publication of this final rule, but before
October 1, 2006.
Because hospitals had access to the
final occupational mix data by June 29,
2006, we believe they had the
opportunity to detect any data entry or
tabulation errors made by the fiscal
intermediary or CMS before the
development and publication of the
final FY 2007 wage index and the
implementation of the FY 2007 wage
index on October 1, 2006. We believe
that if hospitals availed themselves of
the opportunities afforded to provide
and make corrections to the
occupational mix data, the wage index
implemented on October 1, 2006, will
be accurate. In the extent that errors are
PO 00000
Frm 00159
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48027
identified by hospitals and brought to
our attention after July 13, 2006, we will
only make mid-year changes to the wage
index in accordance with § 412.64(k)
(see below for a detailed discussion).
The final Worksheet S–3 wage data
PUF was released in May 2006 to
hospital associations and the public on
the Internet at https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS (hereon, referred to
as the May 2006 PUF). The May 2006
PUF was made available solely for the
limited purpose of identifying any
potential errors made by CMS or the
fiscal intermediary in the entry of the
final Worksheet S–3 wage data that
result from the correction process
described above (revisions submitted to
CMS by the fiscal intermediaries by
April 14, 2006). If, after reviewing the
May 2006 PUF, a hospital believed that
its Worksheet S–3 wage data were
incorrect due to a fiscal intermediary or
CMS error in the entry or tabulation of
the final data, the hospital was to send
a letter to both its fiscal intermediary
and CMS outlining why the hospital
believed an error existed and to provide
all supporting information, including
relevant dates (for example, when it first
became aware of the error). CMS and the
fiscal intermediaries were to receive
these requests no later than June 12,
2006. (We note that the June 12, 2006
date was revised from the June 9, 2006
date originally specified in the October
7, 2005 letter to hospitals.) Requests
mailed to CMS were to be sent to:
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, Center for Medicare
Management, Attention: Wage Index
Team, Division of Acute Care, C4–08–
06, 7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore,
MD 21244–1850.
Each request also was to be sent to the
fiscal intermediary. The fiscal
intermediary was to review requests
upon receipt and contact CMS
immediately to discuss its findings.
After the release of the May 2006
PUF, changes to the hospital Worksheet
S–3 wage data were only to be made in
those very limited situations involving
an error by the fiscal intermediary or
CMS that the hospital could not have
known about before its review of the
final wage data file. Specifically, neither
the intermediary nor CMS would
approve the following types of requests:
• Requests for Worksheet S–3 wage
data corrections that were submitted too
late to be included in the data
transmitted to CMS by fiscal
intermediaries on or before April 14,
2006.
• Requests for correction of errors
that were not, but could have been,
identified during the hospital’s review
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48028
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
of the February 24, 2006 wage index
data file.
• Requests to revisit factual
determinations or policy interpretations
made by the fiscal intermediary or CMS
during the wage index data correction
process.
Verified corrections to the Worksheet
S–3 wage data received timely by CMS
and the fiscal intermediaries (that is, by
June 12, 2006) are incorporated into the
final wage index and will be reflected in
the FY 2007 final wage index tables that
will be published in a separate issuance
after the publication of this final rule.
We created the processes described
above to resolve all substantive wage
index data correction disputes before we
finalize the wage and occupational mix
data for the FY 2007 payment rates.
Accordingly, hospitals that did not meet
the procedural deadlines set forth above
will not be afforded a later opportunity
to submit wage index data corrections or
to dispute the fiscal intermediary’s
decision with respect to requested
changes. Specifically, our policy is that
hospitals that did not meet the
procedural deadlines set forth above
will not be permitted to challenge later,
before the Provider Reimbursement
Review Board, the failure of CMS to
make a requested data revision. (See W.
A. Foote Memorial Hospital v. Shalala,
No. 99–CV–75202–DT (E.D. Mich. 2001)
and Palisades General Hospital v.
Thompson, No. 99–1230 (D.D.C. 2003.)
We refer the reader also to the FY 2000
final rule (64 FR 41513) for a discussion
of the parameters for appealing to the
Provider Reimbursement Review Board
for wage index data corrections.
We believe the wage index data
correction process described above
provides hospitals with sufficient
opportunity to bring errors in their wage
index data to the fiscal intermediaries’
attention. Nevertheless, in the event that
errors are identified by hospitals and
brought to our attention after June 12,
2006, for Worksheet S–3 wage data, or
after July 13, 2006, for the 1st quarter
2006 occupational mix data, we retain
the right to make midyear changes to the
wage index under very limited
circumstances.
Specifically, in accordance with
§ 412.64(k)(1) of our existing
regulations, we make midyear
corrections to the wage index for an area
only if a hospital can show that: (1) The
fiscal intermediary or CMS made an
error in tabulating its data; and (2) the
requesting hospital could not have
known about the error or did not have
an opportunity to correct the error,
before the beginning of the fiscal year.
For purposes of this provision, ‘‘before
the beginning of the fiscal year’’ means
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
by the June deadline for making
corrections to the wage data for the
following fiscal year’s wage index. With
regard to the FY 2007 wage index, this
means by June 12 for Worksheet S–3
wage data and by July 13 for 1st quarter
2006 occupational mix data. This
provision is not available to a hospital
seeking to revise another hospital’s data
that may be affecting the requesting
hospital’s wage index for the labor
market area. As indicated earlier, since
CMS makes the wage data available to
a hospital on the CMS Web site prior to
publishing both the proposed and final
IPPS rules, and the fiscal intermediaries
notify hospitals directly of any wage
data changes after completing their desk
reviews, we do not expect that midyear
corrections would be necessary.
However, under our current policy, if
the correction of a data error changes
the wage index value for an area, the
revised wage index value will be
effective prospectively from the date the
correction is made.
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47385), we revised § 412.64(k)(2) to
specify that, effective on October 1,
2005, that is beginning with the FY 2006
wage index, a change to the wage index
can be made retroactive to the beginning
of the Federal fiscal year only when: (1)
The fiscal intermediary or CMS made an
error in tabulating data used for the
wage index calculation; (2) the hospital
knew about the error and requested that
the fiscal intermediary and CMS correct
the error using the established process
and within the established schedule for
requesting corrections to the wage index
data, before the beginning of the fiscal
year for the applicable IPPS update (that
is, for the FY 2007 wage index, by the
June 12, 2006 deadline for Worksheet S–
3 data and the July 13, 2006 deadline for
1st quarter 2006 occupational mix data);
and (3) CMS agreed that the fiscal
intermediary or CMS made an error in
tabulating the hospital’s wage index
data and the wage index should be
corrected.
In those circumstances where a
hospital requests a correction to its wage
index data before CMS calculates the
final wage index (that is, for the FY
2007 wage index, by the June 12, 2006
deadline for Worksheet S–3 wage data
and the July 13, 2006 deadline for 1st
quarter 2006 occupational mix data),
and CMS acknowledges that the error in
the hospital’s wage data was caused by
CMS’s or the fiscal intermediary’s
mishandling of the data, we believe that
the hospital should not be penalized by
our delay in publishing or
implementing the correction. As with
our current policy, we indicated that the
provision is not available to a hospital
PO 00000
Frm 00160
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
seeking to revise another hospital’s data.
In addition, the provision cannot be
used to correct prior years’ wage index
data; it can only be used for the current
Federal fiscal year. In other situations,
we continue to believe that it is
appropriate to make corrections
prospectively only. We note that, as
with prospective changes to the wage
index, the final retroactive correction
will be made irrespective of whether the
change increases or decreases a
hospital’s payment rate. In addition, we
note that the policy of retroactive
adjustment will still apply in those
instances where a judicial decision
reverses a CMS denial of a hospital’s
wage index data revision request.
K. Labor-Related Share for the Wage
Index for FY 2007
Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act
directs the Secretary to adjust the
proportion of the national prospective
payment system base payment rates that
are attributable to wages and wagerelated costs by a factor that reflects the
relative differences in labor costs among
geographic areas. It also directs the
Secretary to estimate from time to time
the proportion of hospital costs that are
labor-related: ‘‘The Secretary shall
adjust the proportion (as estimated by
the Secretary from time to time) of
hospitals’ costs which are attributable to
wages and wage-related costs of the
DRG prospective payment rates * * *’’
We refer to the portion of hospital costs
attributable to wages and wage-related
costs as the labor-related share. The
labor-related share of the prospective
payment rate is adjusted by an index of
relative labor costs, which is referred to
as the wage index.
Section 403 of Pub. L. 108–173
amended section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the
Act to provide that the Secretary must
employ 62 percent as the labor-related
share unless this ‘‘would result in lower
payments to a hospital than would
otherwise be made.’’ However, this
provision of Pub. L. 108–173 did not
change the legal requirement that the
Secretary estimate ‘‘from time to time’’
the proportion of hospitals’’ costs that
are ‘‘attributable to wages and wagerelated costs.’’ We believe that this
reflected Congressional intent that
hospitals receive payment based on
either a 62-percent labor-related share,
or the labor-related share estimated from
time to time by the Secretary, depending
on which labor-related share resulted in
a higher payment.
We have continued our research into
the assumptions employed in
calculating the labor-related share. Our
research involves analyzing the
compensation share separately for urban
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
and rural hospitals, using regression
analysis to determine the proportion of
costs influenced by the area wage index,
and exploring alternative methodologies
to determine whether all or only a
portion of professional fees and
nonlabor intensive services should be
considered labor-related.
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47392), we presented our analysis and
conclusions regarding the frequency and
methodology for updating the laborrelated share for FY 2006. We also
recalculated a labor-related share of
69.731 percent, using the FY 2002-based
PPS market basket for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2005. In
addition, we implemented this revised
and rebased labor-related share in a
budget neutral manner, but consistent
with section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, we
did not take into account the additional
payments that would be made as a
result of hospitals with a wage index
less than or equal to 1.0 being paid
using a labor-related share lower than
the labor-related share of hospitals with
a wage index greater than 1.0.
The labor-related share is used to
determine the proportion of the national
PPS base payment rate to which the area
wage index is applied. In this final rule,
we are not making any changes to the
national average proportion of operating
costs that are attributable to wages and
salaries, fringe benefits, professional
fees, contract labor, and labor intensive
services. Therefore, we are continuing to
use a labor-related share of 69.731
percent for discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2006. Tables 1A and 1B
which will be issued as part of a
document separate from this final rule,
as discussed in section III.C. of this final
rule, will reflect this labor-related share.
We note that section 403 of Pub. L. 108–
173 amended sections 1886(d)(3)(E) and
1886(d)(9)(C)(iv) of the Act to provide
that the Secretary must employ 62
percent as the labor-related share unless
this employment ‘‘would result in lower
payments to a hospital than would
otherwise be made.’’
We also are continuing to use a laborrelated share for the Puerto Rico-specific
standardized amounts of 58.7 percent
for discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 2006. Consistent with our
methodology for determining the
national labor-related share, we added
the Puerto Rico-specific relative weights
for wages and salaries, fringe benefits,
contract labor, nonmedical professional
fees, and other labor-intensive services
to determine the labor-related share.
Puerto Rico hospitals are paid based on
75 percent of the national standardized
amounts and 25 percent of the Puerto
Rico-specific standardized amounts. For
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Puerto Rico hospitals, the national
labor-related share will always be 62
percent because the wage index for all
Puerto Rico hospitals is less than 1.0. A
Puerto Rico-specific wage index is
applied to the Puerto Rico-specific
portion of payments to the hospitals.
The labor-related share of a hospital’s
Puerto Rico-specific rate will be either
62 percent or the Puerto Rico-specific
labor-related share depending on which
results in higher payments to the
hospital. If the hospital has a Puerto
Rico-specific wage index of greater than
1.0, we will set the hospital’s rates using
a labor-related share of 62 percent for
the 25 percent portion of the hospital’s
payment determined by the Puerto Rico
standardized amounts because this
amount will result in higher payments.
Conversely, a hospital with a Puerto
Rico-specific wage index of less than 1.0
will be paid using the Puerto Ricospecific labor-related share of 58.7
percent of the Puerto Rico-specific rates
because the lower labor-related share
will result in higher payments. The
Puerto Rico labor-related share of 58.7
percent for FY 2007 will be reflected in
the Table 1C of the separately issued
document referenced under sections
III.C. and III.H. of this preamble.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that, for hospitals with a wage index
greater than one, CMS should use the
FY 1992-based labor share of 71.1
percent rather than continue to use the
FY 2002-based IPPS labor share of 69.7
percent.
Response: The labor-related share is
used to determine the proportion of the
national PPS based payment rate to
which the area wage index is applied.
For IPPS, the labor share remains
constant until the market basket is
rebased. As discussed in the August 12,
2005 IPPS final rule (70 FR 47393), the
labor-related share for the FY 2002based market basket was calculated by
adding the relative weights of the laborrelated operating cost categories of that
market basket. These cost categories are:
wages and salaries, fringe benefits,
professional fees, contract labor, and
labor-intensive services. Their relative
weights were derived from the FY 2002
Medicare cost reports, which
represented the most recent and
complete data available when the FY
2002-based market basket was
developed.
A return to the considerably older FY
1992-based labor share, where the
relative weights were determined using
FY 1992 Medicare cost reports, would
mean relying on outdated information
and thus is not optimal.
Finally, although the wage index and
the labor-related share are interrelated
PO 00000
Frm 00161
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48029
regarding final payments, it is important
to note that the labor-related share is
calculated completely independently of
the wage index. For these reasons, we
will continue to use a labor-related
share of 69.731 percent for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2006.
L. Proxy for the Hospital Market Basket
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47387), we changed the base year cost
structure for the IPPS hospital index for
the hospital market basket for operating
costs from FY 1997 to FY 2002. As
discussed in that final rule, the IPPS
hospital index primarily uses the BLS
data as price proxies, which are grouped
in one of the three BLS categories. The
categories are Producer Price Indexes
(PPIs), Consumer Price Indexes (CPIs),
and Employment Cost Indexes (ECIs),
discussed in detail in the FY 2006 IPPS
final rule (70 FR 47388 through 47391).
We evaluate the price proxies using the
criteria of reliability, timeliness,
availability, and relevance. The PPIs,
CPIs, and ECIs selected by us and used
for this final rule meet these criteria as
described in the FY 2006 IPPS final
rule. We believe they continue to be the
best measures of price changes for the
cost categories.
Beginning April 2006 with the
publication of March 2006 data, the
BLS’ ECI will use a different
classification system, the North
American Industrial Classification
System (NAICS), instead of the Standard
Industrial Codes (SIC), which will no
longer exist. We have consistently used
the ECI as the data source for our wages
and salaries and other price proxies in
the IPPS market basket and are not
making any changes to the usage at this
time. However, we did solicit comments
in the IPPS proposed rule on our
continued use of the BLS ECI data in
light of the BLS change in system usage
to the NAICS-based ECI. CMS received
no comments on use of the BLS ECI
data. As the SIC-based ECIs no longer
exist, we will therefore adopt the
proposed policy of using the BLS
NAICS-based ECIs to replace the SICbased ECIs as price proxies in the
market basket.
IV. Other Decisions and Changes to the
IPPS for Operating Costs and GME
Costs
A. Reporting of Hospital Quality Data
for Annual Hospital Payment Update
(§ 412.64(d)(2))
1. Background
Section 5001(a) of the Deficit
Reduction Act of 2005, Pub. L. 109–171
(DRA) sets out new requirements for the
Reporting Hospital Quality Data for
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48030
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Annual Payment Update (RHQDAPU)
program. The RHQDAPU program was
established to implement section 501(b)
of Pub. L. 108–173 (MMA). It builds on
our ongoing voluntary Hospital Quality
Initiative which is intended to empower
consumers with quality of care
information to make more informed
decisions about their health care while
also encouraging hospitals and
clinicians to improve the quality of care.
Section 5001(a) of Pub. L. 109–171
revises the mechanism used to update
the standardized amount for payment
for hospital inpatient operating costs.
New sections 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(I) and
(II) of the Act provide that the payment
update for FY 2007 and each subsequent
fiscal year will be reduced by 2.0
percentage points for any ‘‘subsection
(d) hospital’’ that does not submit
certain quality data in a form and
manner, and at a time, specified by the
Secretary.
New sections 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(III)
and (IV) of the Act require that we
expand the ‘‘starter set’’ of 10 quality
measures that we have used since 2003.
Specifically, the Secretary is required to
expand, consistent with the provisions
of section 5001(a) of Pub. L. 109–171,
the set of measures that the Secretary
determines to be appropriate for the
measurement of the quality of care
furnished by hospitals in inpatient
settings. In expanding these measures,
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(IV) of the Act
provides that we must begin to adopt
the baseline set of performance
measures as set forth in a 2005 report
issued by the Institute of Medicine
(IOM) of the National Academy of
Sciences under section 238(b) of Pub. L.
108–173,19 effective for payments
beginning with FY 2007. The IOM
measures include the Hospital Quality
Alliance (HQA) measures (the HQA is a
public-private collaboration to improve
the quality of care provided by the
nation’s hospitals by measuring and
publicly reporting on that care), the
HCAHPS patient perspective survey,
and three structural measures. The
structural measures included in the IOM
report are: ‘‘(1) Implementation of
computerized provider order entry for
prescriptions, (2) staffing of intensive
care units with intensivists, and (3)
evidence-based hospital referrals. These
measures originate from the Leapfrog
Group’s original ‘‘three leaps,’’ and are
part of the [National Quality Forum’s]
30 safe practices.’’
19 Institute of Medicine, ‘‘Performance
Measurement: Accelerating Improvement,’’
December 1, 2005, available at https://www.iom.edu/
CMS/3809/19805/31310.aspx.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
New sections 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(V)
and (VI) of the Act require that, effective
for payments beginning with FY 2008,
we add other quality measures that
reflect consensus among affected
parties, and provide the Secretary with
the discretion to replace any quality
measures or indicators in appropriate
cases, such as where all hospitals are
effectively in compliance with a
measure, or the measures or indicators
have been subsequently shown to not
represent the best clinical practice.
Thus, the Secretary has broad discretion
to replace measures on the basis that
they are not appropriate.
New section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(VII) of
the Act requires that we establish
procedures for making quality data
available to the public after ensuring
that a hospital has the opportunity to
review, in advance, its data that are to
be made public. In addition, this section
requires that we report quality measures
of process, structure, outcome, patients’
perspective on care, efficiency, and
costs of care that relate to services
furnished in inpatient settings on the
CMS Web site.
Like the provisions of section 501(b)
of Pub. L. 108–173, the provisions of
section 5001(a) of Pub. L. 109–171 do
not apply to hospitals and hospital units
excluded from the IPPS, or to payments
to hospitals under other prospective
payment systems such as the hospital
outpatient PPS. New section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(I) of the Act also
provides that any reduction will apply
only with respect to the fiscal year
involved, and will not be taken into
account for computing the applicable
percentage increase for a subsequent
fiscal year.
Initially, section 1886(b)(3)(B)(vii) of
the Act provided for a reduction of 0.4
percentage points to the update
percentage increase for each of FYs 2005
through 2007 for any ‘‘subsection (d)
hospital’’ that did not submit data on
the starter set of 10 quality measures
established by the Secretary of Health
and Human Services as of November 1,
2003. Section 5001(a) of Pub. L. 109–
171 limits the 0.4 percentage point
reduction to FY 2005 and FY 2006, and
establishes a 2.0 percentage point
reduction for FY 2007 and subsequent
fiscal years.
The starter set of 10 quality measures
we established as of November 1, 2003
are:
Heart Attack (Acute Myocardial
Infarction)
• Was aspirin given to the patient
upon arrival to the hospital?
• Was aspirin prescribed when the
patient was discharged?
PO 00000
Frm 00162
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
• Was a beta-blocker given to the
patient upon arrival to the hospital?
• Was a beta-blocker prescribed when
the patient was discharged?
• Was an ACE inhibitor given for the
patient with heart failure?
Heart Failure (HF)
• Did the patient get an assessment of
his or her heart function?
• Was an ACE inhibitor given to the
patient?
Pneumonia (PNE)
• Was an antibiotic given to the
patient in a timely way?
• Had the patient received a
pneumococcal vaccination?
• Was the patient’s oxygen level
assessed?
We adopted these measures after the
Secretary of HHS initiated a partnership
with several collaborators intended to
promote hospital quality improvement
and public reporting of hospital quality
information. These collaborators
included the American Hospital
Association, the Federation of American
Hospitals, the Association of American
Medical Colleges, the Joint Commission
on Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations (JCAHO), the National
Quality Forum (NQF), the American
Medical Association, the ConsumerPurchaser Disclosure Project, the
American Association of Retired
Persons, the American Federation of
Labor-Congress of Industrial
Organizations, the Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality
(AHRQ), as well as CMS, Quality
Improvement Organizations (QIOs), and
others.
This collaboration, originally known
as the National Voluntary Hospital
Reporting Initiative, is now known as
the HQA. Hospital data are submitted
through the QualityNet Exchange secure
Web site (www.qnetexchange.org). This
Web site meets or exceeds all current
Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act requirements. Data
from this initiative were initially used to
populate the Hospital Compare Web
site, www.hospitalcompare.hhs.gov.
This Web site assists beneficiaries and
the general public by providing
information on hospital quality of care
for consumers who need to select a
hospital. It further serves to encourage
consumers to work with their doctors
and hospitals to discuss the quality of
care they provide to patients, thereby
providing an additional incentive to
improve the quality of that care.
This starter set of 10 quality measures,
all of which have been endorsed by the
NQF, is a subset of measures currently
collected for the JCAHO as part of its
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
certification program. NQF is a
voluntary consensus standard-setting
organization established to standardize
health care quality measurement and
reporting through its consensus
development process We chose these 10
quality measures in order to collect data
that will: (1) provide useful and valid
information about hospital quality to the
public; (2) provide hospitals with a
sense of predictability about public
reporting expectations; (3) begin to
standardize data and data collection
mechanisms; and (4) foster hospital
quality improvement. Most hospitals
have participated in the HQA, and are
continuing to submit data to the QIO
Clinical Warehouse. Since the HQA
released the starter set of 10 quality
measures, it has continued to release
additional quality measures, and has
released 11 additional NQF-endorsed
quality measures to date. Many HQAparticipating hospitals have been
voluntarily reporting on these
additional quality measures, although
only the starter set of 10 quality
measures were subject to potential
reductions in hospitals’ annual payment
update percentages under section 501(b)
of Pub. L. 108–173.
To implement section 501(b) of Pub.
L. 108–173, we created the RHQDAPU
program. Originally, the program set out
the form, manner, and timeframes for
hospitals to submit data regarding the
starter set of 10 quality measures. For
the FY 2005 payment update, we
permitted hospitals to withdraw from
the RHQDAPU program at any time up
to August 1, 2004. Hospitals that
withdrew from the program did not
receive the full payment update and,
instead, received a reduction of 0.4
percentage points in their payment
update. We did not establish a deadline
for withdrawal for the FY 2006 payment
update.
For FY 2006, in order to receive a full
payment update, hospitals were
required to continuously submit to the
QIO Clinical Warehouse abstracted data
regarding the starter set of 10 quality
measures each calendar quarter
according to the schedule found on the
QualityNet Exchange Web site. New
participants were required to submit
these data using the same schedule,
starting with the quarter they began
discharging patients. The data for each
quarter had to be submitted on time and
pass all of the edits and consistency
checks required in the QIO Clinical
Warehouse. Hospitals that did not treat
a condition or that had very few
discharges were not penalized, and they
received the full payment update if they
submitted appropriate data on each of
the 10 quality measures that they treated
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
for patients who were discharged during
the reporting periods.
2. New Procedures for Hospital
Reporting of Quality Data
a. Two Percentage Point Reduction
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24091), we proposed to amend our
regulations at § 412.64(d)(2) to reflect
the 2.0 percentage point reduction in
the payment update for FY 2007 and
subsequent fiscal years for hospitals that
do not comply with requirements for
reporting quality data as provided for
under section 5001(a) of Pub. L. 109–
171.
Comment: One commenter stated that
the increase from a 0.4 percentage point
reduction in the annual payment update
to a 2.0 percentage point reduction was
too great and that this increase could
cause some small hospitals to close.
Response: The increase from a 0.4
percentage point reduction to a 2.0
percentage point reduction is mandated
by section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(I) of the
Act.
Comment: One commenter asked if
the 2.0 percentage point reduction in
the market basket update would ever
apply retroactively.
Response: The amount of the
reduction and the payment update to
which a reduction applies are governed
by statute. Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(I)
of the Act requires a 2.0 percentage
point reduction for FY 2007 ‘‘and each
subsequent fiscal year.’’ Section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(I) also provides that
the 2.0 percentage point reduction
‘‘shall apply only to the fiscal year
involved.’’ Therefore, the 2.0 percentage
point reduction will not affect the
annual payment update for a hospital
for any fiscal year prior to FY 2007.
b. New Procedures
We also revised the RHQDAPU
program’s procedures to reflect our
experience with this program and to
implement section 5001(a) of Pub. L.
109–171, including the new
requirement for the reporting of an
expanded set of quality measures. In
addition to publication in this final rule,
all revised procedures will be added to
the ‘‘Reporting Hospital Quality Data for
Annual Payment Update Reference
Checklist’’ section of the QualityNet
Exchange Web site. This checklist also
contains all of the forms to be
completed by hospitals participating in
the program. In order to participate in
the hospital reporting initiative,
hospitals must follow these steps:
• Identify a QualityNet Exchange
Administrator who follows the
registration process and submits the
PO 00000
Frm 00163
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48031
information through the QIO. This must
be done regardless of whether the
hospital uses a vendor for transmission
of data.
• Complete the revised ‘‘Reporting
Hospital Quality Data for Annual
Payment Update Notice of
Participation’’ form. All hospitals must
send this form to their QIO, no later
than August 15, 2006. In addition,
before participating hospitals initially
begin reporting data, they must register
with the QualityNet Exchange,
regardless of the method used for
submitting data. Although, we proposed
that this form be submitted by August
1, 2006, we have chosen to extend the
due date to August 15, 2006 to provide
hospitals with additional time to notify
their QIOs regarding their intent to
participate. We received no comments
on this proposal.
• Continue to collect data for all 10
‘‘starter set’’ quality measures (or begin
collecting such data, if newly
participating in the program), and
submit the data to the QIO Clinical
Warehouse either using the CMS
Abstraction & Reporting Tool (CART),
the JCAHO ORYX Core Measures
Performance Measurement System, or
another third-party vendor tool that has
met the measurement specification
requirements for data transmission to
QualityNet Exchange. The QIO Clinical
Warehouse will submit the data to CMS
on behalf of the hospitals. The
submission will be done through
QualityNet Exchange. Because the
information in the QIO Clinical
Warehouse is considered QIO
information, it is subject to the stringent
QIO confidentiality regulations in 42
CFR Part 480. We proposed that
hospitals continue to submit data
regarding the starter set of 10 quality
measures because the existing data
submission schedule that we will use
for the FY 2007 update relies on
discharges that occurred in calendar
year (CY) 2005. Because the first three
quarters of CY 2005 data already have
been submitted, we did not propose to
require hospitals to submit any
additional CY 2005 data to address the
new quality measures. However, we
again note that many hospitals have
been providing data on these additional
measures since they were first included
in the HQA set, although these measures
did not affect hospitals’ annual payment
adjustment under the RHQDAPU
program implementing section 501(b) of
Pub. L. 108–173.
• For the FY 2007 update, we
proposed that hospitals also would be
required to complete and return a
written form on which they pledge to
submit data on the set of expanded
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48032
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
quality measures starting with
discharges that occur in CY 2006. The
proposed 21 quality measures which we
included in the proposed rule are part
of the HQA-released measures that the
2005 IOM report recommended we use
as expanded ‘‘starter’’ measures, and
they include the 10 measures that we
originally adopted for the RHQDAPU
program. As discussed above, new
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(IV) of the Act
requires us to begin to adopt the
baseline set of performance measures set
forth in the 2005 IOM report effective
for payments beginning with FY 2007.
We proposed that hospitals would be
required to submit data on the expanded
measures to the QIO Clinical Warehouse
beginning with discharges that occur in
the first calendar quarter of 2006
(January through March discharges). We
also stated that the deadline for
hospitals to submit their data for first
calendar quarter of 2006 would be
August 15, 2007.
Comment: Over 100 commenters
opposed our proposal that hospitals
submit data using the expanded quality
measures for discharges occurring in
calendar year 2006. Even though data
for the first calendar quarter of 2006 are
not required to be submitted until
August 15, 2006, commenters stated that
using the first calendar quarter as a
starting date for submissions would
create a hardship for hospitals, and
require that their staff re-review records.
Commenters recommended that the
expanded measure set be used for future
reviews only, and that all changes made
to reporting should be done with a
future effective date. Most of the
commenters recommended that we
require hospitals to begin reporting
using the expanded quality measures
starting with discharges occurring in the
third calendar quarter of 2006.
Response: After careful review and
consideration of the operational issues
raised by commenters, CMS has decided
to modify the starting quarter for
hospital reporting of the expanded 21
quality measures. In reviewing this
matter, we recognized that hospitals
who concurrently abstract data may
have been required to reabstract data
from records that had already been
completed. Others would have the
burden of reconsidering the additional
data elements after the timeframe for
which they are preparing to submit data.
Given the goal of improving quality
through public reporting in an efficient
manner that does not create undue
burden, CMS believes it is appropriate
in this instance to modify the starting
quarter for the expanded measures.
Therefore, hospitals will now be
required to submit data on the specified
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
expanded set of 21 quality measures to
the QIO Clinical Data Warehouse
beginning with discharges that occur in
the third calendar quarter of 2006 (July
through September discharges). The
deadline for hospitals to submit this
data for third calendar quarter of 2006
is February 15, 2007. The measures that
are part of this expanded measure set
are described below.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that not all hospitals are currently
submitting data on the expanded
measure set. These commenters noted
that hospitals that do not currently
submit data using the expanded
measure set may need to hire and train
new staff to handle the new increased
data abstraction requirements that we
proposed to implement in the proposed
rule. Some of these commenters
suggested that reporting data on the
expanded measure set should start with
January 2007 discharges in order to
allow hospitals additional time to make
the necessary changes for the extra
work.
Response: Although hospitals are not
currently required to submit data on the
full set of 21 quality measures identified
in the proposed rule, many of them are
already submitting these data on a
voluntary basis under the HQA
initiative. As noted in our response to
the previous set of comments, we have
modified our proposal in response to
concerns expressed by commenters.
Hospitals will now be required to
submit data on a specified expanded set
of measures to the QIO Clinical Data
Warehouse beginning with discharges
that occur in the third calendar quarter
of 2006 (July through September
discharges). The deadline for hospitals
to submit this data for third quarter
2006 is February 15, 2007. We believe
that this will provide adequate
additional time for hospitals to hire or
train staff regarding the expanded
quality measures.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern that the proposed rule requires
hospitals to start collecting data on the
expanded quality measures
immediately.
Response: As indicated above, we
have modified our original proposal to
ease the hospitals’ transition to
reporting using the expanded quality
measures. For the expanded measures
reporting requirement, hospitals will
now be required to pledge to submit
data on the expanded measures
beginning with discharges that occur in
the third calendar quarter of 2006 (July
through September discharges).
Hospitals are given 41⁄2 months
following the last day of a discharge
quarter to submit accurate data into the
PO 00000
Frm 00164
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
QIO Clinical Data Warehouse.
Therefore, under our revised policy, we
believe that hospitals will have
sufficient time to plan when they will
begin to collect data on the expanded
quality measures.
We would also like to note that we
have taken steps to ensure that the
burden on hospitals to submit data on
the expanded measures is as minimal as
possible. For example, in addition to
being described in this rule, all of the
measures that must be reported,
including the 11 newly required
measures, are also described in the
‘‘Specifications Manual for National
Hospital Quality Measures,’’ which is a
manual that is jointly issued and
maintained by CMS and JCAHO. The
manual contains all of the
specifications, data definitions, data
collection rules and algorithms related
to all 21 measures (the 10 RHQDAPU
PROGRAM measures and the 11
measures that are being voluntarily
reported under the HQA initiative). All
specifications for each of these measures
as used by CMS for the RHQDAPU
program are identical to, or ‘‘aligned’’
with, those used by JCAHO. The CMS
and JCAHO alignment results in a single
standardized process for the reporting of
measures that is accepted by both CMS
and JCAHO. In an effort to reduce the
reporting burden on hospitals, CMS and
the JCAHO work together to refine the
data collection process for hospitals for
the purposes of validation, public
reporting, and the RHQDAPU program.
Additionally, CMS and JCAHO have
agreed to release all documents
associated with data collection at a
minimum of 120 days prior to
implementation.
Comment: One commenter stated that
the time frames for data collection in the
proposed rule do not provide hospitals
the opportunity to change or correct
mistakes.
Response: The current data
submission timeframe is designed to
provide sufficient time for hospitals to
meet all reporting requirements.
Hospitals are given 41⁄2 months
following the last day of a discharge
quarter to submit accurate data into the
QIO Clinical Data Warehouse. We
believe that this is a sufficient
timeframe for the vendor, hospital, QIO
or other interested party to identify data
errors and submit corrections in
advance of the data submission
deadline. Additionally, abstractions can
begin as early during the quarter as the
day the patient is actually admitted. As
such, hospitals actually have up to 3
months in addition to the 41⁄2 months
following the last day of the discharge
quarter to collect and submit data. In
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
addition, under § 482.24 of our
regulations, all elements of the medical
record (for example, documentation) are
required to be complete within 30 days
following discharge, so we believe that
hospitals have adequate time for the
record abstraction and submission.
To ensure that data submission
problems are recognized and corrected
early, we encourage hospitals to submit
their data continuously or to conduct
test transmissions prior to the quarterly
posted data transmission deadlines.
Testing transmissions ensures that
hospitals’ computer systems are
equipped with the proper software and
configuration required to successfully
transmit data through QualityNet
Exchange Web site. We note that it is a
hospital’s responsibility to ensure that
its data are submitted successfully to the
QIO Clinical Data Warehouse. To make
it easier for hospitals to verify whether
their data were successfully submitted,
the QualityNet Exchange Web site has a
function that enables hospitals to run
reports during test transmissions and
after final transmission of data that
indicate which records were
successfully submitted, with and
without errors, and/or which data were
rejected by the warehouse. We
recommend that hospitals run these
reports following each submission of
data. Submitting test files early also
allows hospitals to check the reports to
identify and change or correct mistakes.
Comment: Two commenters stated
that the retrospective way that data are
reviewed does not offer sufficient
opportunity to quickly correct a
problem in the hospital setting. One
commenter recommended that
abstracting occur concurrently with
discharge, thereby preventing discharge
if additional clinical requirements need
to be met. The commenter suggested
that a real-time data system be
developed to capture this information.
The system would alert health care
providers when clinical requirements
have not been met so that hospitals can
remedy these requirements prior to
discharging the patient. The commenter
also suggested that CMS sponsor a
demonstration project for this activity. It
would give CMS the opportunity to lead
the way for improved technology
dissemination in hospitals.
Response: As we discussed in our
discussion of value-based purchasing in
the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR
24098), one of the challenges we face is
minimizing the length of time between
our receipt of, and our ability to provide
feedback to hospitals on, the data they
submit. We agree that hospitals also face
this same issue with data they collect.
CMS encourages hospitals to take steps
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
toward the adoption of electronic
medical records (EMRs) that will allow
for the reporting of clinical quality data.
In general, whether to abstract on a
concurrent or on a retrospective basis is
a hospital’s decision, although we
recognize there may be a necessary
period of retrospective abstraction due
to the implementation of new measures.
We do not believe that a demonstration
project is needed.
Comment: Several commenters noted
that expanding the measure set
retroactively will require hospitals to renegotiate contracts with their vendors.
Response: We disagree that our
proposal to require hospitals to submit
data beginning with first quarter 2006
discharges would have expanded the
measure set retroactively. However, as
noted above, in response to the
comments we received, we will require
that hospitals begin using the expanded
measure set for submissions due
February 15, 2007 relating to discharges
occurring in the third calendar quarter
of 2006. We believe that this change will
afford hospitals adequate notice to
prepare for reporting using the
expanded quality measures. CMS
provides information in a manner that is
timely for purposes of meeting the
requirements outlined. CMS does not
comment on the contractual
arrangements between private parties
such as hospitals and their vendors.
CMS will continue to work with all to
assist with their timely performance, but
this issue remains a private contractual
arrangement between those parties. As
an alternative, CMS also provides the
CART tool to ensure that hospitals may
timely meet its requirements for the
annual payment update.
Comment: Sixteen commenters
requested that CMS consider publishing
the proposal to expand the set of
measures at least one full year prior to
the start of the fiscal year to which the
proposal would apply. Seven other
commenters requested a 6-month to 1year lead-time to prepare for reporting
additional quality measures adopted by
the Secretary as part of the RHQDAPU
program.
Response: We have used the
rulemaking process to adopt new
quality measures under the RHQDAPU
program, and we believe that this
process provides sufficient notice for
hospitals to comply for the annual
payment update. We also note that all
of the measures we have adopted to date
for reporting under the RHQDAPU
program were previously reported by
many hospitals under other voluntary
reporting initiatives.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that CMS publicly release a list of the
PO 00000
Frm 00165
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48033
hospitals that do not meet quality
reporting requirements each year. This
would allow the affected hospitals to
know immediately that they are not in
compliance with quality reporting.
Response: Hospitals that met the
current CMS requirements for quality
data reporting and received their full
annual payment update (APU) for FY
2006 are listed on www.qualitynet.org.
In the future, QualityNet will display a
list of those hospitals receiving their full
APU for FY 2007. CMS currently does
not have a system in place for
individually notifying hospitals that fail
to meet the RHQDAPU program
requirements. CMS is currently
considering how to inform those
hospitals that do not receive their full
annual payment update for FY 2007.
c. Expanded Quality Measures
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24093), we listed 21 proposed
quality measures, including the 10
‘‘starter set’’ measures and 11 new
measures. The expanded set of measures
includes:
Heart Attack (Acute Myocardial
Infarction)
• Aspirin at arrival
• Aspirin prescribed at discharge
• ACE inhibitor (ACE–I) or
Angiotensin Receptor Blocker (ARBs)
for left ventricular systolic dysfunction
• Beta blocker at arrival
• Beta blocker prescribed at discharge
• Thrombolytic agent received within
30 minutes of hospital arrival
• Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
(PCI) received within 120 minutes of
hospital arrival
• Adult smoking cessation advice/
counseling
Heart Failure (HF)
• Left ventricular function assessment
• ACE inhibitor (ACE–I) or
Angiotensin Receptor Blocker (ARBs)
for left ventricular systolic dysfunction
• Discharge instructions
• Adult smoking cessation advice/
counseling
Pneumonia (PNE)
• Initial antibiotic received within 4
hours of hospital arrival
• Oxygenation assessment
• Pneumococcal vaccination status
• Blood culture performed before first
antibiotic received in hospital
• Adult smoking cessation advice/
counseling
• Appropriate initial antibiotic
selection
• Influenza vaccination status
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48034
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Surgical Care Improvement Project
(SCIP)—Named SIP for Discharges
Prior to July 2006 (3Q06)
• Prophylactic antibiotic received
within 1 hour prior to surgical incision
• Prophylactic antibiotics
discontinued within 24 hours after
surgery end time
Comment: Six commenters fully
supported the progress CMS has made
on the identification and reporting of
quality measures.
Response: CMS appreciates the
comments and looks forward to
continued support for this effort.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that, with regard to hospital acquired
infections, CMS make it clear that
process measures are an interim step
prior to the reporting in the near future
of the actual rates of common hospital
acquired infections.
Response: CMS believes that the
information obtained from both process
and outcome measures (an example of
which would be the rates of common
hospital acquired infections) are
important and complementary in
stimulating the system changes
necessary for quality improvement.
With regard to nosocomial or hospitalacquired infections, we appreciate the
comment and would note that the NQF
is currently evaluating measures of
hospital acquired infections with the
goal of endorsing a set of measures by
2007. The NQF is a voluntary consensus
standard-setting organization
established to standardize healthcare
quality measurement and reporting, for
its review and endorsement through its
consensus development process. In
addition, we are working with the
Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and
the AHRQ, two government agencies
that collaborate with CMS on the SCIP
on ways to further reduce surgical
complications and infections and
improve the kinds of information
collected related to this goal.
Comment: One commenter urged
CMS to recognize new technology
promptly and appropriately to ensure
that measures do not provide incentives
for hospitals to keep older technologies
in place after they are outdated.
Response: CMS is constantly
reviewing the medical literature and
maintains technical expert panels and
consultants for its performance measure
sets so that its measures remain up to
date with current technologies.
Additionally, we have regular
conference calls with the relevant
specialty societies, such as the
American College of Surgeons, the
American Society of Anesthesiologists,
and the Association of periOperative
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Registered Nurses), to obtain their input
on new evidence and changing best
practices that might warrant a change to
our performance measures.
Comment: One commenter stated that
in small hospitals, one person may be
responsible for many jobs. In this
situation, the commenter felt that
submitting data regarding more
measures was very redundant.
Response: For each of the conditions
(such as pneumonia) for which we
adopt measures, the measures focus on
individual aspects of care that are
considered standard for every patient.
The addition of measures represents a
more comprehensive view of the quality
of services provided to each patient. We
believe that additional information from
the added measures will contribute to
quality improvement in patient care.
Comment: Twenty-four commenters
stated that their hospitals do not
currently collect data for the surgical
infection prevention (SIP) measures.
They contend that the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule’s requirement that they
establish a procedure for abstracting and
collecting these measures for first
quarter 2006 would be very burdensome
for hospitals. Many of the commenters
requested a delay in the implementation
of the collection of SIP measures until
third calendar quarter of 2006. Another
commenter noted that the hospital’s
data collecting vendor would require
additional funds to collect and process
data to support the SIP measure data
collection for January and February of
2006.
Response: As noted above, in this
final rule we have revised the
implementation date for hospital
reporting using the expanded quality
measures (including the SIP/SCIP
measures) so that reporting will begin
starting with discharges occurring in the
third calendar quarter of 2006. We also
note that submitting data via vendors is
not the only route available to hospitals.
Currently hospitals have available to
them three mechanisms by which to
submit data into the QIO Clinical
Warehouse. It is the hospital’s choice
which mechanism it will utilize to
report its data. The following data
reporting mechanisms are available to
hospitals:
• Quality Improvement Organization
Program (QIO)—CMS makes available to
hospitals data reporting assistance via
QIOs. QIOs provide technical assistance
to hospitals as they report data, and if
need be will report the data on behalf
of the hospital.
• Self reporting—Hospitals can report
their own data. All data collection,
including SIP/SCIP can be
accomplished by using the CMS
PO 00000
Frm 00166
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Abstraction & Reporting Tool (CART).
This application tool is available at no
charge to hospitals or other
organizations.
• JCAHO vendor—A hospital may
authorize a JCAHO Performance
Measurement System (PMS) vendor that
has met the CMS measurement
specifications to transmit data into the
QIO Clinical Warehouse on its behalf.
These reporting mechanisms are also
described on the QualityNet Exchange
Web site (www.qualitynet.org).
Comment: Nine commenters noted
that the data requirement for SCIP
would result in unplanned costs to
hospitals including the hiring of
additional abstractors, additional
training, and additional medical
assistance to pull the pertinent charts.
Response: Under section 5001(a) of
Pub. L. 109–171, we are required to
begin to adopt the baseline set of
performance measures as set forth in the
2005 IOM report, which include the
SIP/SCIP measures. In considering
which of these measures we would
adopt for the RHQDAPU program, we
weighed the burden for the hospital to
report additional quality data for the
measure against the benefits of
addressing recognized gaps in quality
and providing beneficiaries with useful
information on the quality of hospital
care. We believe that the SIP/SCIP
measures strike the appropriate relative
balance of interests.
That balance is appropriate and
valuable on three levels given the
potential improvements in surgical site
infections that can occur through proper
antibiotic use. It is estimated that over
half of the 127,000 surgical site
infections that are contracted by
Medicare beneficiaries were preventable
(Best, WR, Khuri SF, et al.; Identifying
Patient Preoperative Risk Factors and
Postoperative Adverse Events in
Administrative Databases: Results from
the Department of Veterans Affairs
National Surgical Quality Improvement
Program. J Am Coll Surg 2002;194:257–
266. 2002 by the American College of
Surgeons).
SCIP measures are designed as a
framework to help hospitals organize
and coordinate care. Evidence has
shown that when hospitals change their
internal systems to reliably deliver the
care mandated in the SCIP measures,
they are more efficient and safer for
patients. For example, a nationwide
collaborative dedicated to improve the
processes of care outlined in the
proposed SCIP Infection measures
demonstrated a significant reduction in
surgical site infection (Dellinger EP,
Hausmann SM, et al., Hospitals
collaborate to decrease surgical site
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
infections. Am J Surg. 2005 Jul;190(1):9–
15.). And reliable processes of care
aimed at assuring the correct deep
venous thrombosis prevention as
outlined in the proposed SCIP VTE
measures ‘‘markedly reduced’’ the rates
of these complications in patients at risk
(Kucher, N, Koo S, et al.; Electronic
Alerts to Prevent Venous
Thromboembolism among Hospitalized
Patients N Engl J Med 2005;352:969–77).
Comment: One commenter stated that
the sample size for SCIP for large
hospitals will be onerous for these
facilities. The commenter requested that
the sample size be calculated using the
entire organization’s activity rather than
each specialty. Under this approach,
hospitals could decide on an individual
basis if they want to drill down for more
information.
Response: Specialty-specific sample
sizes are required to provide more
precise measures by specialty. Much of
the existing research about antibiotic
administration is specialty-specific, and
the exclusion criteria and process
measure rates differ by specialty. The
increased sample size is necessary to
incorporate these specialty-specific
differences into hospital-level estimates
of antibiotic administration.
The SCIP sample is designed to
provide precise hospital level measures
for all SCIP measures, including the
SCIP Infection 1 and 3 measures
included in this rule. CMS believes that
the SCIP specialty-specific sample is
designed to produce precise measures
for the entire SCIP expanded measure
set.
Comment: One commenter agreed
with the inclusion of the SIP measures.
This commenter believed that there was
not sufficient information provided by
the two measures alone. The commenter
urged CMS to include SIP–2 in the
measures.
Response: We agree with the
commenter. CMS will evaluate how we
can include SIP 2 (SCIP 2), appropriate
selection of prophylactic antibiotics, in
the future.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS review the way
some of the indicators are measured.
Two commenters recommended that
quality measures should conform to
clinically appropriate care established
by peer-reviewed literature or
professional consensus. One commenter
suggested that there needs to be a more
scientific method when setting up
indicators.
Response: We believe that the quality
measures in this rule and on Hospital
Compare have a strong evidence base
and represent technical guidelines from
relevant stakeholder societies such as
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
the American College of Cardiology and
the American Heart Association. They
are maintained by CMS working with
the JCAHO through ongoing
assessments of changes in the clinical
literature, evaluation of trends in
performance, and review by technical
experts. In addition, all measures
currently being reported, as well as
those that we are adopting in this rule,
have been endorsed by the NQF, a
national consensus body whose mission
is to identify a common set of
standardized evidence-based measures
for quality reporting. Detailed
specifications for each of the measures,
including information concerning the
underlying literature and clinical
evidence that led to their endorsement
and adoption, are included in the
Specifications Manual for National
Hospital Quality Measures, at
www.qualitynet.org.
Comment: Two commenters stated
that financial incentives must allow
sufficient flexibility to meet the unique
needs of individual patients, and not
encourage hospitals to avoid the most
difficult cases.
Response: As noted in our response to
the previous commenter, we have
adopted evidence-based quality
measures which have been endorsed by
the NQF. There is no question that any
payment system potentially contains
incentives for unintended consequences
that may be counter to the intent of
those who design the system. We share
the commenters’ concern regarding this
issue and will consider it as we monitor
the impact of hospitals reporting data to
receive the full market basket update
under section 5001(a) of Pub. L. 109–
171, and as we develop our plan for
implementing a value-based purchasing,
under section 5001(b) of Pub. L. 109–
171.
Comment: Eight commenters stated
payment for 2007 will be reduced by 2.0
percentage points for performance
indicators that have a track record of
poor reliability, such as the working
diagnosis of pneumonia. The
commenters noted that some hospitals
resort to answering working diagnosis
for pneumonia as a ‘‘yes’’ for all
pneumonia charts regardless of actual
documentation, since the penalty is
disproportionately more severe if the no
answer is found to be incorrect. The
commenters noted that a couple of
mismatches on the ‘‘no’’ response to
working diagnosis can drive the
hospitals to the brink of losing 2.0
percentage points of their annual
payment update.
Response: The working diagnosis
element is only one of over 15 elements
in a single episode of care that is used
PO 00000
Frm 00167
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48035
to calculate the pneumonia measures.
Many of the hospitals that failed
quarterly validation due to submitting
inaccurate pneumonia elements did not
submit additional elements used in the
calculation of pneumonia measures and
validation score. All hospitals are able
to submit all elements potentially used
to calculate validation scores, and we
encourage hospitals to submit all of
these elements to improve their
likelihood to pass quarterly validation.
Comment: Two commenters
recommended that for future measure
development, CMS select measures only
from those used by the HQA for public
reporting.
Response: CMS strongly values its
participation in the HQA, which was
established as a public-private
collaboration to promote voluntary
hospital public reporting on quality of
care. Led by representatives of the
hospital industry, with membership that
includes consumer groups, unions,
purchasers, providers, health plans and
government, accrediting and standardsetting organizations, the HQA has been
instrumental in helping to identify and
find common ground among the diverse
interests of these stakeholders. Congress
recognized the HQA’s role when it
included the ‘‘starter set’’ of 10
measures, first identified by the HQA
for reporting on Hospital Compare, in
the Pub. L. 108–173 RHQDAPU program
provisions (section 501(b)). As we now
implement section 5001(a) of Pub. L.
109–171 and expand the measure set for
FY 2007 and beyond, we are asking
hospitals to report on the 21 HQAapproved measures. In addition, HQA
has strongly supported the development
and use of the HCAHPS tool for
assessment of patient experience with
care. We expect to continue to work
closely with the HQA in our future
efforts, as well.
In addition, we expect to add
HCAHPS measures to the RHQDAPU
program’s reporting set as soon as
feasible. The HCAHPS survey is
designed to make ‘‘apples to apples’’
comparisons of patients’’ perspectives
on hospital care including
communications with doctors,
communications with nurses,
responsiveness of hospital staff,
cleanliness and quietness of the
hospital, pain control, communication
about medicines, and discharge
information.
Comment: One commenter requested
a clear definition for antibiotic
administration time. In the commenter’s
opinion, the current standard requiring
that no longer than one-hour pass
between the administration of the
antibiotic and the making of a surgical
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48036
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
incision does not have adequate clinical
support.
Response: The performance measures
that we have adopted for the RHQDAPU
program, including the timing of
prophylactic antibiotic administration
prior to surgery, are evidence-based,
consensus-derived measures. The
measurement specifications each of
these measures includes the supporting
evidence basis for the measure, and can
be found in the Specifications Manual
for National Hospital Quality Measures,
at www.qualitynet.org. In addition, as
part of our routine maintenance review
of the measures, we monitor any
changes in the medical literature that
would require modification of the
measures.
Comment: One commenter suggested
‘‘retiring’’ the oxygenation assessment
measure. New section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(VI) of the Act
specifies that CMS has the ability to
replace measures ‘‘where all hospitals
are effectively in compliance.’’ The
commenter noted that the average
performance on this measure is 99
percent and that retiring this measure
would be a signal to hospitals that CMS
is willing to reduce the burden of data
collection as the set evolves.
Response: The commenter’s points are
well taken. The oxygenation measure
was previously endorsed by the NQF.
The NQF has recently initiated a
‘‘maintenance’’ review of all of its
previously-endorsed pulmonary care
measures, including the oxygenation
measure, under which process these
measures will be reevaluated by panels
of experts and health care stakeholders
(including CMS) to determine their
continuing technical merit. CMS will
defer its decision on the oxygenation
measure until after this group has
completed its deliberations.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that the measures recommended by the
Leapfrog Group (computerized provider
order entry, intensive care intensivists,
and evidence-based hospital referrals)
and included in the 2005 IOM report do
not meet the quality measure standards
necessary for inclusion in CMS’ national
quality measurement initiatives. In
addition, commenters noted that rural
hospitals have not previously been
asked to comply with these measures.
These commenters believe that it would
be unwise for CMS to adopt these
measures. Another commenter wrote in
support of the use of such structural
measures. This commenter noted,
however, that in terms of burden on
hospitals, such programs span multiple
years, must be approved on an annual
basis, and require board approval. They
also require significant financial
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
resources, human resources, and time to
develop and implement. The
commenter stated that requiring such
programs, which present a challenge to
either fund or risk reduction in
payment, would not appear to be
reasonable. For example, the commenter
stated that the phased-approach
implementation of computerized
provider order entry for prescriptions
(CPOE) for its facility is projected to be
completed by 2009 with an estimated
cost of up to $2 million.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their input. For FY 2007, we are not
proposing that hospitals submit data on
the three structural measures
recommended by the three Leapfrog
Group and included in the 2005 IOM
report. However, as we continue to
expand the set of measures on which
hospitals report, we will consider
whether to include these measures, as
well as other structural measures and
will bear the commenters’ observations
in mind.
Comment: Several commenters agreed
that measures selected should be those
that are endorsed by NQF and aligned
with JCAHO’s reporting requirements.
The commenters also proposed that
methods for maintaining measures be
developed and implemented. Since
medical knowledge continues to evolve,
the science behind clinical practice
guidelines must be monitored for
changing evidence that previously
accepted clinical practices no longer
define the best care. Without this
important step, measures cannot
continue to evaluate best quality of care
delivered to patients. The commenters
proposed that CMS create a plan,
including method and frequency for
monitoring new evidence that impacts
established measures, in addition to
monitoring for adjustments needed to
improve their implementation.
Response: We agree with the
commenters. CMS continuously
monitors new evidence and works with
panels of experts, as well as with the
relevant specialty societies and other
groups that develop practice guidelines,
to assure that the measures are up to
date, and to verify that measures reflect
best clinical practice. In addition, we
work with JCAHO experts to assure that
the detailed specifications and
instructions for collection of data used
to calculate the rates reflects the most
up to date information about
medications, coding, and other issues.
Comment: A commenter suggested
that as new measures are added and
mandated for public reporting, payment
should not be based on simply the
indicator percentage, but should also
include the percentage change of
PO 00000
Frm 00168
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
improvement or the quarters of
sustained improvement. The commenter
stated that data collected based on such
process improvement would be test data
until the processes being measured were
stable. Just as indicators are tested and
validated, process improvement
provides data that is test data.
Transparency of data reporting
connected to payment needs to allow a
test period for data to not ‘‘count’’
toward payment.
Response: The commenter has made
several important suggestions that are
relevant to our ongoing deliberations
about measures for both reporting
quality data and for value-based
payment systems (discussed more fully
in section IV.B. of this preamble). In
proposing that CMS consider measures
that highlight improvement over time,
rather than just performance during a
single time period, the commenter has
offered an important suggestion that
addresses our goal of identifying a set of
measures that will support sustained
quality improvement. We also raised
this issue in the 2007 IPPS proposed
rule in our discussion of value-based
purchasing (71 FR 24098). As we
consider further expansion of the
measure set, we will consider this
suggestion, as well as the commenter’s
suggestion that hospitals be given the
opportunity to ‘‘test’’ the reporting of
new measures before they are included
in any payment incentive arrangement.
Comment: Three commenters strongly
urged CMS to adopt measures identified
in the 2005 IOM report as well as
consider and adopt as many additional
NQF-endorsed measures as can be
feasibly collected, for example:
Outcomes
• 30-day heart failure mortality
• 30-day heart attack mortality
• Failure to rescue
Complications
• Urinary catheter-associated
infection rate
• Central line-associated blood stream
infection rate
• Ventilator associated pneumonia
rate
Clinical
• Surgery patients with
recommended venous
thromboembolism prophylaxis ordered
• Surgery patients who received
appropriate venous thromboembolism
prophylaxis within 24 hours prior to
surgery to 24 hours after surgery
Response: We appreciate the specific
recommendations of the commenters
and will consider them as we look to
expand the set of measures.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS continue to
work to ensure the accuracy of the
information posted on the Hospital
Compare Web site. The methodology
adopted should be fully transparent to
all stakeholders to clearly assess
hospital-level reliability. The
commenter recommended that we also
engage representatives from the
research, provider, and consumer
communities to obtain input on the
different potential methodologies and
their impact on data validity, accuracy,
and completeness.
Response: We agree with the
commenter. The integrity of the
information posted on the Web site
depends on the accuracy of the
underlying data. In the 2007 IPPS
proposed rule, we solicited input on
proposed revisions to our methodology,
and CMS remains open to advice and
suggestions concerning how to continue
to improve its processes to assess and
assure hospital-level reliability.
Comment: Two commenters urged
CMS to include outcome measures
based on the best available science and
consensus, rather than permanently
focus on the process measures that it
has adopted. Ultimately, consumers
want to see the results of hospital
practices, that is, whether the processes
measured actually yield higher quality
care as indicated by results, such as
better mortality rates and fewer
infections.
Response: We appreciate the specific
recommendations of the commenter and
will consider them as we look to further
expand the set of measures. We are
particularly interested in considering
measures that have been endorsed by
consensus building entities such as the
NQF that take into account the issues of
validity, reliability, impact and
feasibility of the measures and involve
a wide array of stakeholders. We also
anticipate issuing a rulemaking in the
near future that would propose to adopt
a number of outcome measures, which
may include 30-day post-admission
mortality rates for patients with acute
myocardial infarction and heart failure
Comment: Two commenters requested
that, as we consider new measures, we
involve all stakeholders in the process.
Response: CMS agrees with the
commenter that stakeholder input is an
essential part of the measure selection
process. CMS receives input from
stakeholders through multiple vehicles
such as the NQF, the HQA and the
notice and comment rulemaking
process. CMS remains committed to the
goal of including stakeholders in the
process.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Comment: One commenter suggested
that because CMS makes its hospital
quality data public, the data should be
risk adjusted, and technical standards
should be applied to the data to assure
fair treatment of hospitals.
Response: The set of measures
currently reported on Hospital Compare
are process measures for which no risk
adjustment is needed, since they are
constructed to reflect the proportion of
cases in which a patient received the
care that is appropriate for his or her
clinical needs. The measures are
constructed to exclude cases for which
an intervention would not be
appropriate. We expect that, as we
consider whether to expand the set of
measures to include outcome measures,
we will need to address concerns about
risk-adjustment and patient-mix.
Comment: Two commenters suggested
that CMS develop measures that
examine quality and costs of care within
and across settings over time. A
commenter also recommended allowing
variation in the implementation of new
measures due to variability across the
country.
Response: We appreciate the
recommendations of the commenters.
As we work to expand the set of
measures that hospitals report under the
RHQDAPU program, we will consider
such issues as how to assess care
coordination both within and across
hospitals and health care providers, as
well as how to account for expected and
unexpected variations in performance
across providers.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern about the negative effects of
requiring hospitals to report measures
when it is actually the physician who
orders the care. This particularly
happens in the case of small rural
hospitals. This commenter indicated
that the hospital should not be
responsible for physician mistakes.
Response: Hospitals cannot abrogate
their responsibility for the care that is
practiced at their own facilities. Given
that virtually all significant treatment
decisions are initiated with a
physician’s order, this argument would
absolve hospitals of virtually all
responsibility for quality and safety.
Comment: One commenter
recommended addressing the alignment
of physician and hospital indicators. If
alignment is not possible, the
commenter recommended that we have
physician-driven indicators that apply
to physicians only.
Response: CMS is working
collectively with the hospital and
physician communities to improve the
overall quality of health care for
Americans. As part of this effort, CMS
PO 00000
Frm 00169
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48037
to use a common focus on quality by
clinicians and providers to achieve
improvement in the quality of
healthcare. One example of this is the
Surgical Care Improvement Project
(SCIP). The use of metrics that focus on
surgical quality from both the physician
and provider perspective offer the best
opportunity to improve the surgical
quality of care. In addition, CMS
launched a Physician Voluntary
Reporting Program (PVRP) that
incorporated indicators that will align
physician interests with hospitals. More
information on PVRP can be found at
www.cms.hhs.gov/pvrp.
d. HCAHPS Survey
As recommended in the IOM report,
we will be implementing the HCAHPS
survey in October 2006 as a part of the
HQA. HCAHPS is designed to make
‘‘apples to apples’’ comparisons of
patients’’ perspectives on hospital care
including communications with
doctors, communications with nurses,
responsiveness of hospital staff,
cleanliness and quietness of the
hospital, pain control, communication
about medicines, and discharge
information. More information on this
survey can be found on our Web site:
www.cms.hhs.gov/HospitalQualityInits/
downloads/
HospitalHCAHPSFactSheet200512.pdf.
We intend to report the first three
quarters of these survey data in late
2007 on the Web site:
www.hospitalcompare.hhs.gov.
HCAHPS was endorsed by the NQF in
May 2005. However, we did not propose
to include HCAHPS as a part of the
revised FY 2007 ‘‘Reporting Hospital
Quality Data for Annual Payment
Update Notice of Participation’’ form.
We believe that the procedures and
expanded measure set that we proposed
to adopt in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule meets the requirement of section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(IV) of the Act that,
‘‘for payments beginning with fiscal
year 2007, in expanding the number of
measures, under subclause (III), the
Secretary shall begin to adopt’’ the 2005
IOM report’s set of baseline measures.
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(III) of the Act
states that we must expand, for FY 2007
and each subsequent fiscal year, the set
of measures that the Secretary
determines to be ‘‘appropriate’’ for the
measurement of the quality of care
furnished by hospitals in inpatient
settings beyond the original quality
measures that applied in FY 2005 and
FY 2006.
We believe that the statute gives the
Secretary the discretion to choose what
‘‘begin to adopt’’ should involve in FY
2007 and the number of additional
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48038
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
measures, if any that would be
‘‘appropriate’’ during this time. In
proposing our revised procedures,
designing the methods that hospitals
will use to report during FY 2007,
establishing a set of expanded measures
based on the 2005 IOM report, and
revising RHQDAPU program materials,
we believe that we have met the
statutory requirements. We will
continue to explore the feasibility of
adopting additional measures for
purposes of the FY 2008 update,
including the HCAHPS survey
described in the IOM report and other
measures that reflect consensus among
affected parties, as required by new
sections 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(III) through
(V) of the Act.
Comment: One commenter expressed
support for the HCAHPS initiative, but
requested that CMS make the survey
available in languages other than
English and Spanish. The commenter
noted that in areas with diverse patient
populations such as New York City,
hospitals will not be able to conduct the
survey adequately in only two
languages.
Response: The HCAHPS survey is
currently available only in English and
Spanish. We intend to solicit comments
from participating hospitals and survey
vendors regarding additional languages
for HCAHPS. This information can be
submitted to our HCAHPS mailbox,
CMSHOSPITALCAHPS@cms.hhs.gov.
Based on the information we receive, we
will establish priorities for HCAHPS
translation into additional languages.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that we offer hospitals
sufficient time to incorporate the
HCAHPS measures into their care
protocols. The commenter suggested
that we establish an implementation
schedule that provides for sufficient
time for hospitals to become familiar
with data submission, and instructions
explaining how to use the tool for
feedback. The commenter noted that
such an approach would allow for
development of more accurate data.
Response: We agree that hospitals and
survey vendors must become familiar
with the HCAHPS instrument, data
collection, and data submission
procedures prior to participation in the
national implementation of the survey.
To this end, CMS offered free training
to hospitals and survey vendors in
February and April of this year.
Additionally, to gain experience in all
aspects of the survey, hospitals that will
participate in the national
implementation of HCAHPS in
October 2006 were required to take part
in a ‘‘dry run’’ of the survey in April,
May, or June of this year. Data
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
submitted to CMS from this dry run will
not be publicly reported. CMS is
planning to offer additional training and
dry run opportunities for hospitals that
will join the HCAHPS initiative after
October 2006.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that the following
question be added to the HCAHPS
patient survey proposed for October
2006, ‘‘Did you get an infection while
you were in the hospital or after any
surgery or other procedure?’’ The
commenter stated that most patients
would know about the existence of an
infection, and this would be a more
precise way to identify significant
problems than more general and
subjective HCAHPS questions, such as
questions that address the ‘‘cleanliness
and quietness of the hospital.’’
Response: We appreciate this
suggestion, but at this time we are not
planning to add new items to the
current version of the HCAHPS survey
(which can be found on
www.hcahpsonline.org)) based on our
evaluation of the survey and on
comments we received on the survey in
response to multiple Federal Register
notices that we published (for example,
68 FR 5889, 68 FR 38346, 68 FR 68087,
and 70 FR 67476). However, we will
keep this suggestion in mind for future
versions of the survey.
Comment: Two commenters stated
that for FY 2008, CMS needs to more
than merely explore the feasibility of
adopting additional measures for FY
2008 update. There should be a
substantial expansion of measures for
hospitals to obtain the FY 2008 annual
update. The commenters agreed with
the Consumer-Purchaser Disclosure
Project recommendations that CMS
adopt the additional measures identified
in the 2005 IOM report (HCAHPS and
three structural measures), as well as
consider and adopt a number of other
NQF-endorsed measures.
Response: We note that in addition to
the expanded measure set that we are
adopting in this rule, we will begin
national implementation of the
HCAHPS survey in October 2006. We
also anticipate further expanding the
measure set for FY 2008 and will
consider adopting other NQF-endorsed
measures at that time.
Comment: A commenter suggested
that CMS identify and develop, in
collaboration with the long-term care
hospital (LTCH) industry, appropriate
quality measurement indicators and
begin collecting and public reporting
results across providers.
Response: At this time, we are not
working on developing measures for the
long term care hospital setting. However
PO 00000
Frm 00170
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
we will consider, in the future, the
commenter’s suggestions regarding the
collection of quality measures from long
term care hospitals. HCAHPS has been
developed for use by short-term, acutecare hospitals, which encompasses all
hospitals that are eligible to submit
clinical measures for public reporting.
At this time, other types of hospitals,
including LTCHs, are not eligible to
participate in HCAHPS. CMS will, in
the future, consider whether and how
an HCAHPS survey could be redesigned for appropriate use by other
types of hospitals, including LTCHs.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that there is no ‘‘no-cost’’ alternative to
using a vendor to participate in
HCAHPS, unlike the situation of the
collection of clinical chart abstraction
data. They noted that this presented a
significant burden to hospitals that will
have no alternative to using commercial
vendors to satisfy a Federal mandate. In
addition, the commenters stated that a
substantial number of hospitals do not
currently conduct a patient experience
survey and that the Federal government
has committed only to providing the
interface to upload data to QualityNet
Exchange. Some commenters suggested
that it would be helpful if we provided
clear and concise guidance on
HCAHPS sampling.
Response: From the inception of the
survey, CMS has been attentive to the
costs to hospitals that participate in
HCAHPS. HCAHPS has been
designed to allow a hospital to either
conduct the survey on its own, or to
conduct the survey through the use of
a survey vendor. A hospital that elects
to self-administer HCAHPS must meet
a series of minimum survey
requirements related to prior survey
experience, capacity to conduct
HCAHPS, and its ability to satisfy
quality control procedures. In addition,
HCAHPS was designed to be
compatible with a range of popular
survey practices. It is made available in
four modes of administration (mail,
telephone, mail with telephone followup, or active IVR), and can be
implemented as a stand-alone survey, or
integrated within an ongoing patient
survey. Because of the nature of the
HCAHPS, the tool developed for
HCAHPS is different from the CART
tool. However, CMS has designed an
HCAHPS on-line tool that allows
hospitals that self-administer the survey
to enter and upload the survey data into
the QualityNet Exchange data base.
There is no charge for use of the
HCAHPS on-line tool.
Further, in February and April 2006
CMS offered free training on
participation in the HCAHPS survey.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Among its topics, this training included
detailed instruction on sampling.
Additional iterations of this training
program are currently being planned.
CMS also provides readily available
guidance on sampling and other
HCAHPS issues through its
HCAHPSonline.org help desk. In
addition, QualityNet Exchange
maintains a help desk that provides
assistance on matters related to
submission to the HCAHPS data
warehouse. All of these services are
available free of charge.
An independent study of the benefits
and costs of HCAHPS estimated that
the average cost of HCAHPS collected
as a separate survey to be between
$3,300 and $4,575 per hospital. The cost
of combining HCAHPS with an
existing hospital survey would be about
$978 per hospital (Abt Associates Inc.:
Costs and Benefits of HCAHPS, October
5, 2005). Additionally, hospitals have
the option to use a survey vendor or
conduct HCAHPS on their own if they
have prior survey experience.
e. Data Submission
For the FY 2007 update, we specify
that hospitals must submit complete
data regarding the quality measures in
accordance with the joint CMS/JCAHO
sampling requirements located on the
QualityNet Exchange Web site. These
requirements specify that hospitals must
submit a random sample or complete
population of cases for each of three
topics (acute myocardial infarction,
heart failure, and pneumonia) covered
by the starter set of 10 quality measures.
Hospitals are expected to continuously
meet these sampling requirements for
the starter set of 10 quality measures for
discharges in each quarter.
We do not anticipate significant
additional burden on hospitals
regarding the starter set of 10 quality
measures or the anticipated 21 clinical
quality measures because all JCAHOaccredited hospitals are currently
required to adhere to these sampling
requirements in acute myocardial
infarction, heart failure, pneumonia,
and surgical infection prevention for
accreditation and core measure
reporting purposes.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that CMS consider a methodology that
would allow resubmission of data in
cases where incorrect data has been
identified by the submitting provider,
while still maintaining the integrity of
the data validation process for payment
purposes. The commenter suggested
that this could be accomplished through
the use of two databases. One database
would be frozen once the final
submission deadline for a quarter has
passed to be used for Clinical Data
Abstraction Center (CDAC) validation.
However, if the providers discovered
errors in its data submission after the
quarterly deadline, it would be able to
48039
use a second database to submit
updated data. The commenter believed
that this would improve the data
available on Hospital Compare.
Response: We believe that the
commenter’s suggestion that we create
two separate databases has the potential
to maintain the integrity of the
validation process as well as to improve
the quality of the publicly reported data.
We will review the methodology and
take this suggestion into consideration.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS create meaningful and useful
reports that would be available to
vendors after data submission is
complete each quarter. The reports
should identify actionable steps that
hospitals are required to take to make
sure they successfully submit data for
the RHQDAPU program. CMS should
also modify the current Failure and
Success Reports so that any data
elements needed to populate or
calculate measures reported for the
annual payment update can be
identified as a critical error and result
in the rejection of the record. The
hospital should be able to download the
entire report, without having to
download it into several reports.
Response: CMS thanks the commenter
for the suggestions on how to improve
the reports. The following reports are
currently available to hospitals and
vendors:
Vendor access
Provider
access
QIO Clinical Warehouse Import Detail by Provider—Provides case import status into warehouse; options for queries include topic, upload status, discharge dates, types of messages
(critical, informational and measures) and various sort options.
QIO Clinical Warehouse Import Detail by Error Code—Provides case import status into warehouse; options for queries include topic, upload status, discharge dates and various sort options.
QIO Clinical Warehouse Submission Summary—Case submission summary ...............................
Case Status Summary Report—Includes measure inclusion status and reason for exclusion ......
Measure Status Summary Report—Summary of number of cases indicated per quality measure
for cases accepted into the QIO Clinical Warehouse.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Title of report
X ...............................................
X
X ...............................................
X
X ...............................................
Based on hospital authorization
Based on hospital authorization
X
X
X
CMS is currently reviewing the data
submission reports and considering
modifications to improve and enhance
the existing feedback reports. In the
interim, we released two additional
reports in June 2006 to provide more
detailed information to hospitals.
• QIO Clinical Warehouse Measure
Status by Category; this report will
provide information by measure to
include total cases as well as the
number of cases by measure category
(A–E).
• QIO Clinical Warehouse Measure
Status by Case; this report will provide
by measure for each case whether the
case was eligible for the denominator,
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
passed the measure (numerator), was
excluded from measure calculation and
the reason for exclusion.
CMS and its contractors routinely
conduct training to provide additional
assistance concerning how to access and
utilize QualityNet Exchange Reports.
Information on these trainings can be
found on QualityNet Exchange Web site.
Comment: Two commenters requested
that corporate owners and vendors have
access to QualityNet reports about their
specific hospitals, and believe that these
reports should not be provided only to
hospitals. The commenters stated that
having access to these reports will allow
hospitals to discern whether errors in
PO 00000
Frm 00171
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
data transmission have occurred and
whether data should be resubmitted
before the deadline.
Response: Hospitals have had the
ability to grant third parties such as
health care systems and vendors
permission to access select QualityNet
Exchange Reports since December 2004
through QualityNet Exchange SelfServe. Health care system users and
vendors obtain permission to access
hospital reports by completing a
QualityNet registration form and
submitting the form to the QualityNet
help desk. The QualityNet help desk
will process the registration form. When
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48040
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
a QualityNet user account is assigned,
the health care system or vendor user
can then request access to reports
through the QualityNet Self Serve. The
healthcare system’s or vendor’s report
request is then sent to the hospital for
report access approval. Detailed
instructions for using QualityNet
Exchange Self-Serve are available in
Chapter 2, Section 2 of the User Guide
located on www.QualityNet.org.
Comment: One commenter opposed
CMS’ intent to develop measures
specifications and a system or
mechanism to accept data without
converting it into XML.
Response: CMS does not intend to
develop measures specifications and a
system or mechanism to accept data
without converting it into XML. Our
intent is to continue to utilize the XML
format for file submissions.
Comment: Four commenters
disagreed with CMS’ opinion that no
additional burden would be placed on
hospitals. The commenters noted that
JCAHO participating hospitals are not
required to submit the data regarding all
21 measures found in the proposed rule.
Therefore, it would be an additional
burden on the hospitals to have to
submit more measures than are required
by the current JCAHO requirements.
Response: We acknowledge this
concern, but we are required by new
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(IV) of the Act
to begin to adopt the measures as
specified in the 2005 IOM report. We
believe that the measures we have
selected are appropriate because we
believe these quality measures will: (1)
Provide useful and valid information
about hospital quality to the public; (2)
provide hospitals with a sense of
predictability about public reporting
expectations; (3) begin to standardize
data and data collection mechanisms;
and (4) foster hospital quality
improvement.
We have also taken steps to ensure
that the burden on hospitals is as
minimal as possible. First, while some
hospitals report through JCAHO
vendors, we make available the CART
tool for reporting on all of the measures
in the expanded measures set, at no
additional cost to the hospital. Second,
our data analysis indicates that although
hospitals are not currently required to
submit data regarding the 21 measures
identified in the proposed rule, many of
them are already submitting these data
as part of our HQA voluntary reporting
initiative. Many hospitals have
participated in the HQA, and are
continuing to submit data to the QIO
Clinical Warehouse. Many HQAparticipating hospitals have been
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
voluntarily reporting on the additional
quality measures
Comment: One commenter stated that
the additional requirements for
reporting are too burdensome for rural
hospitals. The commenter noted that
additional resources required for this
work takes away from time the staff can
provide for actual care and that the costs
associated with submitting the
additional measures are too prohibitive
for rural hospitals.
Response: Although we acknowledge
that the additional reporting
requirements will potentially require
hospitals to begin collecting data that
they have not, to date, been collecting,
this potential burden must be weighed
against the goals of improving quality of
care and meeting the needs of patients.
As we stated in response to a previous
comment above, we have taken a series
of steps to minimize the burden for all
hospitals.
Comment: One commenter stated that
the QUEST system does not provide
consistent answers to questions about
abstraction. This commenter stated that
there are flaws in the current system.
Therefore, the commenter stated that
payment should not be based on this
system.
Response: The QUEST system is the
question and answer system that is
available on the internet at
QualityNet.org. Questions can be
submitted by anyone and they are
answered by CMS or its contractors.
CMS is working to improve the QUEST
system. New processes have been
implemented in order to avoid
inconsistent answers to questions about
abstraction. However, payment is not
based on the QUEST system, but is
based on compliance with the full set of
RHAQDAPU requirements. The primary
source for abstraction clarification is the
Specifications Manual for National
Hospital Quality Measures, available on
the QualityNet Exchange Web site.
f. RHQDAPU Program Withdrawal and
Chart Validation Requirements
For the FY 2007 update, hospitals
may withdraw from the revised
RHQDAPU program at any time up to
August 1, 2006. If a hospital withdraws
from the program, it will receive a 2.0
percentage point reduction in its
payment update.
For the FY 2007 update, and until
further notice, we will continue to
require that hospitals meet the chart
validation requirements that we
implemented in the FY 2006 IPPS final
rule. There were no chart-audit
validation criteria in place for FY 2005.
Based upon our experience with the FY
2005 submissions and our requirement
PO 00000
Frm 00172
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
for reliable and validated data, in the FY
2006 IPPS final rule, we discussed
additional requirements that we had
established for the data that hospitals
were required to submit in order to
receive the full FY 2006 payment
update (70 FR 47421 and 47422). These
requirements, as well as additional
information on validation requirements,
will continue and are being placed on
the QualityNet Exchange Web site.
For the FY 2007 payment update, and
until further notice, hospitals must pass
our validation requirement of a
minimum of 80 percent reliability,
based upon our chart-audit validation
process, for the first three quarters of
data from CY 2005. These data were due
to the QIO Clinical Warehouse by July
15, 2005 (first quarter CY 2005
discharges), November 15, 2005 (second
quarter CY 2005 discharges), and
February 15, 2006 (third quarter CY
2005 discharges).
We use confidence intervals to
determine if a hospital has achieved an
80-percent reliability aggregated over
the three quarters. The use of
confidence intervals allows us to
establish an appropriate range below the
80-percent reliability threshold that
demonstrates a sufficient level of
reliability to allow the data to still be
considered validated. We estimate the
percent reliability based upon a review
of five charts, and then calculate the
upper 95-percent confidence limit for
that estimate. If this upper limit is above
the required 80-percent reliability, the
hospital data are considered validated.
We are using the design-specific
estimate of the variance for the
confidence interval calculation, which,
in this case, is a stratified single stage
cluster sample, with unequal cluster
sizes. (For reference, see Cochran,
William G.: Sampling Techniques, John
Wiley & Sons, New York, chapter 3,
section 3.12 (1977); and Kish, Leslie.:
Survey Sampling, John Wiley & Sons,
New York, chapter 3, section 3.3
(1964).) Each quarter is treated as a
stratum for variance estimation
purposes.
We use a two-step process to
determine if a hospital is submitting
valid data. In the first step, we calculate
the percent agreement for all of the
variables submitted in all of the charts.
If a hospital falls below the 80-percent
cutoff, we restrict the comparison to
those variables associated with the
starter set of 10 quality measures. We
recalculate the percent agreement and
the estimated 95-percent confidence
interval and again compare to the 80percent cutoff point. If a hospital passes
under this restricted set of variables, the
hospital is considered to be submitting
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
valid data for purposes of the
RHQDAPU program.
Comment: Four commenters
recommended that CMS consider a
validation process that would focus
more resources on those hospitals that
are having difficulty in passing the
validation thresholds on a consistent
basis.
Response: QIOs, on behalf of CMS,
work to assist hospitals with all aspects
of hospital reporting activity. QIOs are
available to provide training and
assistance to those hospitals
experiencing difficulty passing the
validation thresholds. This training and
assistance is designed to improve the
validation scores of hospitals with
failing validation scores through better
performance measurement techniques
and medical record documentation.
Comment: One commenter
recommended using an alternative
method of data validation and suggested
that we use the monthly data points of
each clinical measure instead of relying
on chart abstraction. Under this
methodology, a monthly data point that
exceeds three (3) standard deviations
would be considered an outlier.
Response: The current validation
methodology measures abstraction
accuracy of hospital submitted data
elements, and thereby measures the
accuracy of reported data. The suggested
alternative methodology is designed to
identify outlier measures at the
aggregate hospital level, and does not
identify the specific source of errors.
CMS believes that its current validation
methodology more accurately measures
abstraction accuracy at the element level
for the RHQDAPU program.
Comment: One commenter stated that
it is incongruent to require results from
the first three quarters of 2005 for
validation with an effective date of the
final rule that is after the data
submissions.
Response: Section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(I) of the Act requires
an annual determination of payment
eligibility, and we believe that we can
make accurate payment determinations
based on three quarters of validated
data. In order to make timely payments
to hospitals under the IPPS during FY
2007, we need to complete our payment
determinations prior to the start of FY
2007 that is, prior to October 1, 2006.
Data submitted in connection with
discharges that occurred during the first
three quarters of 2005 constitute the
most current data that we can use to
make our payment determination for FY
2007.
Comment: Two commenters suggested
that if we are going to increase the
penalties for failure, there needs to be
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
more timely feedback allowing
organizations to correct their
submission errors. These commenters
recommended that the validation
process take into account at least 6
quarters of data to allow for learning
and to accommodate the constant
changes in the specifications.
Response: We use quarterly validation
results in order to make a single annual
determination. The first three quarters
of 2005 constitute the complete set of
most currently available data to
determine FY 2007 payment eligibility
by September 1, 2006. We believe that
using three quarters of data is sufficient
to allow us to make accurate payment
assessments. We will continue to review
whether using additional quarters of
data can improve the reliability of
hospital results under the RHQDAPU
program. In addition, as we noted in
response to an earlier comment,
hospitals and their vendors can use test
transmissions in order to identify
problems before the submission
deadlines. Also, in an effort to reduce
hospital burdens, CMS and JCAHO have
agreed to release aligned measure
changes 120-days prior to their
implementation. This allows both
hospitals and vendors adequate time to
prepare for those changes prior to
implementation. However, hospitals are
responsible for ensuring that their
vendors submit accurate and timely
data. It is the responsibility of each
vendor, and ultimately of the hospital,
to adhere to the requirements listed in
the specifications manual for the set
discharge time period.
Comment: One commenter
recommended a provision to allow CMS
and the hospital to have the flexibility
to meet 2 of 3, or 3 of 4 quarters. This
would provide some assurance that if
and when the processes break down,
hospitals are not unilaterally punished
while providing quality care.
Response: The 3 quarter validation
determination is designed to provide a
single overall estimate of hospital
abstraction accuracy over the entire
period. This single overall estimate
pools the quarterly samples to increase
the overall reliability of the abstraction
accuracy estimate for that period. The
expectation is that hospitals will
abstract and submit cases every quarter
with consistency. The entire period
would not be reflected if hospitals are
allowed the flexibility to meet 2 of 3, or
3 of 4 quarters. To utilize fewer quarters
decreases the overall reliability of the
abstraction accuracy estimate.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that the annual payment update not be
tied to validation until the JCAHO and
CMS have aligned the measures,
PO 00000
Frm 00173
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48041
resulting in making the guidelines clear
and consistent.
Response: As of July 1, 2004
discharges, all data elements within the
10-starter set were CMS and JCAHO
aligned. As of January 1, 2005
discharges, all data elements for the
expanded 21 measure set were aligned.
The changes are designed to keep the
measures current with the accepted
evidence base of medical research, and
to improve the clarity and reliability of
the abstraction instructions. CMS and
its contractors have and will continue to
work diligently to ensure that alignment
issues do not affect a hospital’s
eligibility for receiving the full annual
payment update.
Comment: One commenter requested
that hospitals not be held responsible
when data processing and
communication errors, under the
control of CMS or that occur as a result
of actions of its contractors, cause a
failure in validation.
Response: When a hospital reports
data processing and communication
errors, the errors are thoroughly
researched. CMS has not held a hospital
responsible for data processing and
communication errors that were clearly
under the control of CMS or its
contractors. However, CMS does hold
the hospital responsible for its own
errors in data processing and
communication. If the error is by the
hospital’s contracted vendor, the
hospital is held responsible.
Under the standard appeal process, all
hospitals are given the detailed results
of CDAC reabstraction along with their
estimated percent reliability and the
upper bound of the 95-percent
confidence interval. If a hospital does
not meet the required 80-percent
threshold, the hospital has 10 working
days to appeal these results to its QIO.
The QIO will review the appeal with the
hospital and make a final determination
on the appeal. The QIO receives from
the hospital the element or elements
that are to be evaluated during the
appeal process, along with the hospital’s
rationale for the difference between the
hospital’s abstraction and the CDAC
reabstraction. In this validation appeal
process, the QIO reviews the appeal
using the medical record to evaluate the
data elements that are being appealed.
This process allows for an independent
review and is designed to find coding
errors on the part of abstractors. QIO
appeal decisions are based on the data
that the hospital submitted to the QIO
Clinical Warehouse. The QIO has 20
calendar days to make a final decision.
The QIO can either uphold or reverse
the CDAC validation decision. If the
QIO does not agree with the hospital’s
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48042
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
appeal, the original results stand.
However, if the QIO agrees with the
hospital, new validation results are
calculated and provided to the hospital
through the usual processes. This
validation appeal process is described
in detail at the QualityNet Exchange
Web site.
Comment: Twelve commenters
recommended expanding the appeal
process to include any indicator,
regardless of whether the overall
validation score for the hospitals is at or
above 80 percent. The commenters
believed that this would allow hospitals
the opportunity for improvement. The
commenters also felt that this was
significant due to the aggregations of
validation results for multiple quarters,
and for the resolution of discrepancies
between the hospital and the CDAC.
Response: Currently the appeals
process is only available to those
hospitals that had an overall reliability
rate of less than 80 percent for the
quarter. However, CMS encourages all
hospitals to use their validation results
as a tool for improving abstraction
accuracy.
Comment: Seventeen commenters
urged CMS to review, on a case-by-case
basis, any instance in which a hospital’s
payment would be put in jeopardy as a
result of the validation process. These
commenters did not feel that the
validation process is reliable enough to
warrant a hospital losing its update due
to faulty validation. If a hospital has
made a good faith effort to submit valid
data, one commenter felt that the
hospital should receive its update
regardless of whether the data are
deemed accurate enough for display.
Response: CMS believes that the
current validation process provides a
reliable estimate of abstraction accuracy
on an annual basis. CMS and its
contractors work closely with the CDAC
regarding issues that are raised by
hospitals about the validation processes.
If a hospital identifies an issue where it
believes that its validation score is
incorrect, CMS conducts a
comprehensive review. We work
diligently to ensure that validation
issues do not impact eligibility for
receiving the full market basket update.
Comment: Two commenters requested
that hospitals receive more time to file
validation appeals. One commenter
suggested increasing the time for filing
validation appeals from 10 days to 30
days.
Response: The current time frame for
a hospital to file an appeal is 10
business days after the results are
posted to QualityNet Exchange. The
hospital is notified by electronic mail
when its validation results are posted so
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
it receives the information quickly, and
it has the full 10 business days to review
and appeal the results. The QIO then
has an additional 20 calendar days to
review and respond to this appeal by
forwarding the information to the CDAC
or upholding the CDAC decision while
providing education to the hospital.
CMS believes this is adequate time to
file an appeal. The current validation
and appeal process can extend as much
as 6–9 months beyond the last day of a
discharge quarter. To extend the time
allowed to file appeals would further
lengthen this time for hospitals to
receive final results.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that we use an impartial
party to decide appeals. The commenter
felt that the CDAC should not be
responsible for both the abstraction as
well as reabstraction if there is an
appeal.
Response: All data successfully
submitted into the QIO Clinical Data
Warehouse are subject to the hospital
data validation process. The CDAC
reabstraction process that occurs during
the appeal is a very objective process.
Both the hospitals and the CDAC
abstract the records using the same
guidelines, the Specifications Manual
for National Hospital Quality Measures.
The hospital’s abstraction is compared
to the CDAC’s reabstraction in order to
determine mismatches and the
validation score. A hospital that scores
at least 80 percent overall for the quarter
is considered to be supplying valid data
for that quarter. A hospital that scores
less than 80 percent overall for the
quarter has the opportunity to file an
appeal with its QIO. The hospital must
supply to the QIO the rationale for the
appeal and the QIO will review a copy
of the same record the CDAC completed
during its reabstraction. The QIO will
then determine the final outcome of the
appeal. The QIO has the final say in
appeal decisions.
Comment: One commenter expressed
several concerns with the validation
process.
• The method that is used to
construct the numerator and
denominator on the summary report is
unclear.
Response: We are unsure specifically
which numerator & denominator the
commenter is referring to. If we
interpret the comment correctly, the
commenter is referring to the
Submission Feedback report. The
denominator in the summary report
refers to the number of elements in the
sampled records used to calculate the
measures, and the numerator refers to
the number of correctly abstracted
elements in the sampled records used to
PO 00000
Frm 00174
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
calculate the measures. Two measure
lists are used to determine the
denominator list of elements, one list for
the ten starter set measures versus the
second list for the expanded measure
set. We believe that the documentation
regarding these reports, available on the
QualtyNet.org Web site, provides clear
explanation of how the numerator and
denominator are determined.
• CMS does not accept
documentation from hospitals after the
validation results have been published.
Response: Although we do not accept
documentation from hospitals after the
validation results have been published,
we do have several safeguards in place
to prevent this from happening. The
CDAC works diligently with the QIOs
and CMS to ensure that the
requirements for hospital reporting of
quality data are efficiently and
effectively being addressed. We have
devoted a great deal of resources to
ensuring that the CDAC process,
including the receipt of documentation,
is consistent, reliable and accurate. Due
in part to our adherence to the fixed
time schedule in the hospital data
validation process, and for security
purposes, the CDAC utilizes an in-house
system to track and monitor the end-toend processing of each medical record
request from hospitals. The CDAC also
relies on external contractors like
Federal Express or the U.S. Postal
Service (within HIPAA guidelines) with
their tracking systems to ship and track
medical records. The CDAC goes so far
as to contact each provider when all
requested medical records are not
received.
• Hospitals have failed validation due
to the CDAC not receiving all materials,
although the hospital verified that all of
the materials were sent in a timely
manner.
Response: CMS has several safeguards
in place to prevent this from happening.
The CDAC works diligently with QIOs
and CMS to ensure that the
requirements of the QIO program are
efficiently and effectively being met. We
have devoted a great deal of resources
to ensuring that the CDAC process is
consistent, reliable and accurate. Due in
part to our adherence to the fixed time
schedule in the hospital data validation
process, and for security purposes, the
CDAC utilizes an in-house system to
track and monitor the end-to-end
processing of each medical record
request from hospitals. The CDAC also
relies on external contractors like
Federal Express or the U.S. Postal
Service (within HIPAA guidelines) with
their tracking systems to ship and track
medical records. The CDAC goes so far
as to contact each provider when all
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
requested medical records are not
received.
• There is no information to verify
the reliability of abstraction.
Response: Hospitals that score below
80 percent are able to appeal abstraction
results, and these results are
documented. If the hospital believes
that it scored below 80 percent due to
an abstraction error on the part of the
CDAC, there is an appropriate process
by which the hospital can appeal the
validation results.
• For most hospitals, the sample size
is too small to determine conditionspecific indicator accuracy.
Response: The validation sample is
designed to provide overall quarterly
feedback on abstraction accuracy and to
provide an annual estimate for payment
eligibility determination. However,
hospitals can use several quarters’
validation results to estimate conditionspecific accuracy.
In reviewing the hospital data, we
will combine the samples for first
quarter, second quarter, and third
quarter (15 cases) into a single stratified
sample to determine whether the 80percent reliability level is met. This
gives us the greatest accuracy when
estimating the reliability level. The
confidence interval approach accounts
for the variation in coding among the
five charts pulled each quarter and for
the entire year around the overall
hospital mean score (on all individual
data elements compared). The closer
each case’s reliability score is to the
hospital mean score, the tighter the
confidence interval established for that
hospital. A hospital may code each
chart equally inaccurately, achieve a
tight confidence interval, and not pass,
even though its overall score is just
below the passing threshold (75 percent,
for example). A hospital with more
variation among charts will achieve a
broader confidence interval, which may
allow it to pass, even though some
charts score very low and others score
very high.
We believe we have adopted the most
suitable statistical tests for the hospital
data we are trying to validate. In the FY
2007 IPPS proposed rule, we solicited
comments from hospitals on this
passing threshold, the confidence
interval, and the sampling approach (71
FR 24094). Based on analytical results
from FY 2006, we found confidence
intervals using only five charts widely
varied in size. As a result of these
findings, we decided to combine
multiple quarters of validation samples
into a single stratified sample to shrink
and/or decrease the variation and
produce a more reliable estimate of
abstraction reliability to determine if
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
any changes in our methodology are
required. We will make any necessary
revisions to the sampling methodology
and the statistical approach through
manual issuances and other guidance to
hospitals.
Comment: Several commenters
objected to our validation process. They
indicated that this process places a large
burden on hospitals working with
vendors that require the submission of
100 percent of the hospitals’ cases.
Additionally, this process will not
provide timely feedback, and will only
add to the burden of receiving untimely
feedback while attempting to continue
abstraction. Two commenters expressed
concern about the accuracy of the
validation process due to large
fluctuations in the data dictionary
guidelines. One of the commenters
suggested that any modifications to the
technical process should be published
120 days before the effective/
implementation date and that the
parameters of the validation process
should be stated explicitly and
documented. Several commenters
suggested that hospitals should be
notified about any validation rule
changes at least 120 days before
abstraction and that any validation
process should not penalize hospitals
for technical data issues.
Response: The current validation
process of 5 charts per quarter is
designed to provide hospitals,
regardless of size, with an estimate of
their abstraction accuracy. The quarterly
interval is designed to minimize
abstraction burden by coinciding with
required submission requirements for
JCAHO-accredited hospitals. NonJCAHO accredited hospitals also need
periodic feedback about their
abstraction accuracy for quality
improvement, and the current process is
designed to provide this feedback. As
noted above, CMS and JCAHO have
agreed to release documents at a
minimum of 120 days before
implementation. All manuals contain
data file submission requirements and
programming formats for each quarter.
Hospitals are encouraged to be aware of
the release schedule and to ensure the
proper Specifications Manual (data
dictionary) is being used for the
discharge time period specified. We will
explore modifying the release date of
updated Specifications Manuals to
provide additional time to hospitals and
vendors to incorporate these
modifications.
Comment: Three commenters did not
believe the validation process of using
5 charts over 4 patient populations is
statistically reliable. The commenters
recommended that we use 4 quarters of
PO 00000
Frm 00175
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48043
data to increase the number of charts. A
commenter also recommended that we
use as many as 25 charts.
Response: As we noted above,
although we will consider using
additional quarters of data, we believe
that the current 3 quarters stratified
sample provides sufficiently reliable
results. The abstraction accuracy
estimate is an element level estimate,
and the chart is considered a cluster of
elements. Each quarterly validation
sample generally contains 50 to 100
elements clustered in 5 charts. Analysis
of previous quarters of submitted data
indicates that the clustering effect
increases sampling variability by a
relatively small proportion. However,
the increase in sampling variability is so
small that the sample still produces
reliable validation rate estimates. The
median hospital standard error using
the three quarter stratified sample was
about 3 percent.
Time limitations prevent us from
using 2005 fourth quarter calendar year
discharges for purposes of making the
FY 2007 annual payment determination,
since the scheduled completion date of
appeals would not occur until after the
September 1, 2006 scheduled release
date of the list of hospitals receiving full
payment update. However, we will
consider using 4 quarters of validation
results (that is, fourth quarter 2005
through third quarter 2006) for the FY
2008 determination. Additionally, CMS
factored cost, burden, and precision of
the validation results in determining the
current validation sampling
methodology. The goal of the chart audit
validation process is to ensure that the
hospital is abstracting and submitting
accurate data. In order to calculate
quality measures, which are used to
determine the standard of care,
complete and accurate data are
necessary.
Comment: Eight commenters stated
that hospitals may be negatively affected
by the way CMS will determine the 80
percent reliability. The stratified
sampling method could result in a
passing score for the first two quarters,
but may result in an overall failure
rating based on the results of the third
quarter.
Response: The stratified sampling
method is designed to produce a single
estimate of abstraction accuracy using
three combined quarters of validation
results. CMS uses three quarters’ results
to provide a reliable estimate of
sustained abstraction accuracy.
Combining results from multiple
quarters improves the reliability of the
estimate, since it is possible that
abstraction accuracy varies widely from
quarter to quarter. Thus, it is possible
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48044
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
that one or two quarterly validation
samples achieve a passing score above
80percent, but a single quarterly
validation score below 80 percent
would drop the three combined quarter
score below 80 percent. It is the weight
of cases for a particular quarter that
determines how much impact a single
quarter will have on the overall
reliability calculation. However, the
aggregate approach improves the ability
to accurately calculate the reliability of
data submissions.
g. Data Validation and Attestation
For the FY 2007 update, we will
revise and post up-to-date confidence
interval information on the QualityNet
Exchange Web site explaining the
application of the confidence interval to
the overall validation results. The data
are being validated at several levels.
There are consistency and internal edit
checks to ensure the integrity of the
submitted data; there are external edit
checks to verify expectations about the
volume of the data received.
In the FY 2007 proposed IPPS rule,
we proposed that hospitals attest to the
completeness and accuracy of the data
submitted to the QIO Clinical
Warehouse in order to improve aspects
of the validation checks (71 FR 24094).
In order to meet this requirement, for
each quarter, hospitals will have to
verify the completeness and accuracy,
including the volume, of the data
submitted. We plan to provide
additional information to explain the
data completeness requirement as well
as provide the relevant form to be
completed on the QualityNet Exchange
Web site.
Comment: One commenter supported
the requirement for hospitals to attest to
the validity of their data. One
commenter also suggested requiring
hospitals to not only attest to the data,
but to also subject a small number of
hospitals to a random audit. Another
commenter felt there are still significant
issues with the completeness and
adherence to sampling requirements.
Response: CMS appreciates the
commenter’s support for the attestation
requirement and strives to continually
improve the accuracy and reliability of
the hospital quality data. In addition to
the attestation requirement, CMS is
currently studying the need, cost, and
feasibility of alternative methods for
assessing submission completeness and
adherence to sampling requirements,
including on-site random audits.
Comment: One commenter did not
want the hospital attestations to become
too burdensome. The commenter
recommended that if the attestation can
be a part of the review period, the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
QualityNet Exchange Administrator
should be allowed to review the data in
the preview period, and electronically
sign for its accuracy. At a minimum, the
attestations should be able to be
delivered electronically.
Response: We welcome this
suggestion, and agree that the electronic
attestation would increase efficiency
and lessen the burden for hospitals. We
will investigate aspects, such as
operational and legal requirements for
attestation pertaining to electronic
submission.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS establish and communicate to
the field which quarters will be used in
the calculation of the validation
threshold. The commenter believes that
CMS should provide notice to
RHQDAPU program eligible hospitals
which quarters will be included in the
annual payment update prior to the
beginning of the rulemaking process
each year.
Response: CMS is aware of and
understands the commenters concerns
in regards to the calculation of the
validation threshold. However, we
believe that the appropriate way to
announce the quarters for which data
must be submitted under the program is
to announce them as part of the
rulemaking process.
h. Public Display and Reconsideration
Procedures
We will continue to display quality
information for public viewing as
required by new section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(VII) of the Act. Before
we display this information, hospitals
will be permitted to review their
information as we have it recorded.
For hospitals that CMS has
determined do not meet the RHQDAPU
program requirements for the applicable
fiscal year who wish to appeal this
determination, the appeals process set
forth in 42 CFR Part 405, Subpart R (a
Provider Reimbursement Review Board
(PRRB) appeal) applies. However, in the
FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR
24095) we noted that we believe it may
be appropriate to establish a structured
reconsideration process to precede the
PRRB appeal for FY 2008 and
subsequent fiscal years.
Currently, a hospital may submit a
letter setting out its reasons for
requesting that we reconsider our
decision that the hospital did not meet
the RHQDAPU program requirements.
We proposed to continue this process
for FY 2007 RHQDAPU program
decisions (71 FR 24095). However, we
proposed to establish a deadline of
November 1, 2006, for hospitals to make
such requests related to the FY 2007
PO 00000
Frm 00176
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
RHQDAPU program decisions, which
will give hospitals a minimum of 30
days to submit reconsideration requests
from the dates that the decisions are
made public. Further, we proposed that
the November 1, 2006 deadline also
would apply to FY 2005 and FY 2006
RHQDAPU program decisions and that
a November 1 deadline would apply in
all future fiscal years. CMS will
officially respond to the letters
submitted by hospitals.
Further, we sought public comment
specifically on the need for a more
structured reconsideration process to
precede any PRRB appeal for FY 2008
and subsequent fiscal years (71 FR
24095). We also sought comment on
what such a process would entail. For
example, we noted that such a process,
if established, could include—
• A limited time, such as 30 days
from the public release of the decision,
for requesting a reconsideration;
• Who in a hospital organization can
request such a reconsideration and be
notified of its outcome;
• The specific factors that CMS will
consider in such a reconsideration, such
as an inability to submit data timely due
to CMS systems failures;
• Specific requirements for
submitting a reconsideration request,
such as a written request for
reconsideration specifically stating all
reasons and factors, including specific
data elements, why the hospital believes
it did meet the RHQDAPU program
requirements;
• Specific CMS components that
would participate in the reconsideration
process; and
• The timeframe, such as 60 days, for
CMS to provide its reconsideration
decision to the hospital.
We also solicited comments on the
reasons for not establishing such a
reconsideration process.
Comment: One commenter
recommended a structured
reconsideration process for FY 2007
RHQDAPU program decisions. This
commenter supported reconsideration
predicated on a written request
specifically stating all reasons and
factors why a hospital believes it did not
meet the RHQDAPU program
requirements. The commenter agreed
with the deadline of November 1 for
RHQDAPU program decisions, and a
maximum of 60 days for a CMS
response to the reconsideration.
Response: We are pleased that the
commenter supports reconsideration
predicated on a written request stating
all reasons and factors for a hospital not
meeting the RHQDAPU program
requirements and concurs with the
timeframes we proposed. We expect to
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
move forward with establishing a
structured reconsideration process for
future RHQDAPU program decisions.
Comment: Three commenters stated
that the PRRB may not be the best
review mechanism for appeals. A
commenter suggested that CEOs should
be able to submit their appeals in
writing, stating all reasons and facts and
that CMS should then establish a prePRRB review panel that does not
involve any of the individuals who
make the original determination. If the
pre-PRRB review panel renders a
decision against the hospital, the
hospital can then go before the PRRB for
a review.
Response: We are pleased that the
commenter supports reconsideration
predicated on a written request stating
all reasons and factors for a hospital not
meeting the RHQDAPU program
requirements. We expect to move
forward with establishing a structured
reconsideration process for future
RHQDAPU program decisions. We will
examine the feasibility of using a panel
structure that does not include
individuals involved in the original
determination. However, because of the
highly technical nature of this process,
it may be necessary to consult with
those individuals due to their
specialized expertise.
Comment: Three commenters
supported establishing a process that
could consider the reasons why a
hospital did not meet the RHQDAPU
program requirements. A commenter
suggested that QIOs could be very
helpful in developing and administering
a reconsideration process.
Response: We appreciate these
comments and will consider the
suggestion that QIOs have a role in a
reconsideration process as we begin to
implement the reconsideration process
for FY 2007 and subsequent fiscal years.
i. Conclusion
After consideration of the public
comments received, because the change
in the percentage point reduction from
0.4 percentage points to 2.0 percentage
points is required by section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(I) of the Act, we are
adopting as final, without modification,
the proposed changes to § 412.64(d) of
our regulations.
After careful consideration of the
public comments received, we are
adopting as final the expanded quality
measures we proposed.
In response to public comments, we
will require that reporting of the
expanded quality measures begin with
discharges occurring on or after the
third calendar quarter of 2006 (July
through September discharges). The
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
deadline for hospitals to submit data for
this quarter will be February 15, 2007.
We are also setting the deadline for
hospitals to complete and send the
revised ‘‘Reporting Hospital Quality
Data for Annual Payment Update Notice
of Participation’’ form to their respective
QIO, no later than August 15, 2006.
With these modifications, after careful
consideration of the public comments
received, we are adopting these
procedures as final.
3. Electronic Medical Records
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule, we
encouraged hospitals to take steps
toward the adoption of electronic
medical records (EMRs) that will allow
for reporting of clinical quality data
from the EMRs directly to a CMS data
repository (70 FR 47420). We intend to
begin working toward creating measures
specifications and a system or
mechanism, or both, that will accept the
data directly without requiring the
transfer of the raw data into an XML file
as is currently done. The Department
continues to work cooperatively with
other Federal agencies in the
development of Federal health
architecture data standards. We
encouraged hospitals that are
developing systems to conform them to
both industry standards and, when
developed, the Federal Health
Architecture Data standards, and to
ensure that the data necessary for
quality measures are captured. Ideally,
such systems will also provide point-ofcare decision support that enables high
levels of performance on the measures.
Hospitals using EMRs to produce data
on quality measures will be held to the
same performance expectations as
hospitals not using EMRs.
Due to the low volume of comments
we received on this issue in response to
the FY 2006 proposed IPPS rule, in the
proposed IPPS rule for FY 2007 (71 FR
24095), we again invited comments on
these requirements and options. In
section IV.B.6. of the preamble to the FY
2007 IPPS proposed rule, we also
invited comments on the potential role
of effective, interoperable health
information on technology in valuebased purchasing.
Comment: Most of the comments that
were submitted on the adoption of
electronic health records in the hospital
settings focused on:
• HIT associated cost implication for
hospitals.
• The time frame for implementation
should be at least a 10-year window, to
allow hospitals to obtain the financial
and technical support needed for this
initiative.
PO 00000
Frm 00177
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48045
• CMS statutory authority to
encourage the use and adoption of HIT
without new legislation.
• Support for the initiative but
recommended that CMS develop
partnerships with affected parties to
ensure its successful development.
Response: After consideration of the
public comments received, we will
continue to pursue the adoption of
electronic health records for the
reporting of hospital quality data. In
addition, for the future we will take all
comments submitted under
consideration as we move forward.
B. Value-Based Purchasing
1. Introduction
CMS has undertaken a number of
activities to improve the quality and
efficiency of care delivered to Medicare
beneficiaries. Currently, there are
several different fee-for-service payment
systems under Medicare that are used to
pay health professionals and other
providers based on the number and
complexity of services provided to
patients. In general, all providers to
which a specific Medicare payment
system applies receive the same amount
for a service, regardless of its quality or
efficiency. As a result, Medicare’s
payment systems can direct more
resources to hospitals that deliver care
that is not of the highest quality or
include unnecessary services (for
example, duplicative tests and services
or services to treat avoidable
complications). Therefore, we are
examining the concept of ‘‘value-based
purchasing,’’ which may use a range of
incentives to achieve identified quality
and efficiency goals, as a means of
promoting better quality of care and
more effective resource use in the
Medicare payment systems. In
considering the concept of value-based
purchasing, we are working closely with
stakeholder partners, including health
professionals and providers. In the FY
2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR 24095),
we sought public comment on valuebased purchasing as related specifically
to hospitals.
We discussed CMS’ and Congress’
initial steps toward hospital value-based
purchasing, which include the Premier
Hospital Quality Incentive
Demonstration, the RHQDAPU program
authorized by section 501(b) of Pub. L.
108–173 (MMA), and the extended and
expanded RHQDAPU program
authorized by section 5001(a) of Pub. L.
109–171 (DRA). (The RHQDAPU
program was also discussed in section
IV.A. of the preamble to the proposed
rule.) In addition, we discussed the
issues that must be considered in
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48046
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
developing a plan to implement a valuebased purchasing plan beginning with
FY 2009 for Medicare payments for
subsection (d) hospitals. This plan is
required by section 5001(b) of Pub. L.
109–171. For each of the required
planning issues (measures, data
infrastructure, incentives), we discussed
CMS’ activities to date and solicited
comments on outstanding policy
questions. Next, we discussed options
for implementation of section 5001(c) of
Pub. L. 109–171, which authorizes
quality adjustment to DRG payments for
certain conditions that were not present
on hospital admission. We solicited
input about detailed design
considerations related to each of these
issues and the advantages and
disadvantages of possible approaches to
planning and implementing hospital
value-based purchasing.
Finally, we discussed and invited
comments on how to encourage
hospitals to effectively use health
information technology to improve
efficiency, processes, and health care
outcomes, through, for example,
adopting interoperable health
information technology.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
2. Premier Hospital Quality Incentive
Demonstration
One of the ways in which CMS is
testing innovative potential approaches
to improving quality is through
demonstrations and pilot projects. The
demonstration most relevant to
hospitals is the Premier Hospital
Quality Incentive Demonstration.
Premier, Inc., a nationwide alliance of
not-for-profit hospitals, submitted an
unsolicited proposal for consideration
by CMS.20 We have partnered with
Premier to conduct a demonstration that
is designed to test whether the quality
of inpatient care for Medicare
beneficiaries improves when financial
incentives are provided. Under the
demonstration, about 270 hospitals are
voluntarily providing data on 34 quality
measures related to 5 clinical
conditions: heart attack, heart failure,
pneumonia, coronary artery bypass
graft, and hip and knee replacements.
Using the quality measures, CMS
identifies hospitals with the highest
quality performance in each of the five
clinical areas. Hospitals scoring in the
top 10 percent in each clinical area
receive a 2-percent bonus payment in
addition to the regular Medicare DRG
20 The
Premier Hospital Quality Incentive
Demonstration was authorized under section 402 of
Pub. L. 90–248, Social Security Amendments of
1967 (42 U.S.C. 1395b–1). This section authorizes
certain types of demonstration projects that waive
compliance with the regular payment methods used
in the Medicare program.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
payment for the measured condition.
Hospitals in the second highest 10
percent receive a 1-percent bonus
payment. In the third year of the
demonstration, some hospitals that do
not achieve absolute improvements
above the demonstration’s first year
composite score baseline (the lowest 20
percent) for that condition will have
their DRG payments reduced by 1 or 2
percent, depending on how far their
performance is below the baseline.
Following the first year of the
demonstration (FY 2004), CMS awarded
a total of $8.85 million to participating
hospitals in the top two deciles for each
clinical area. In the aggregate, quality of
care improved in all five clinical areas
that were measured. Preliminary
information from the second year of the
demonstration indicates that quality is
continuing to improve, particularly for
the poorest performing hospitals.
Additional information on the Premier
Hospital Quality Incentive
Demonstration is available on the CMS
Web site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
HospitalQualityInits/
35_HospitalPremier.asp.
3. RHQDAPU Program
We believe that the acts of collecting
and submitting performance data and of
publicly reporting comparative
information about hospital performance
seem to be a strong incentive to
encourage hospital accountability.
Measurement and reporting can help
focus the attention of hospitals and
consumers on specific goals and on
hospitals’ performance relative to those
goals.
a. Section 501(b) of Pub. L. 108–173
(MMA)
Since 2003, we have operated the
Hospital Quality Initiative,21 which is
designed to stimulate improvements in
hospital care by standardizing hospital
performance measures and data
transmission to ensure that all payers,
hospitals, and oversight and accrediting
entities use the same measures when
publicly reporting on hospital
performance. Section 501(b) of Pub. L.
108–173 authorized us to link the
collection of data for an initial starter set
of 10 quality measures to the Medicare
annual update of the standardized
payment amount for hospital inpatient
operating costs (also known as the
RHQDAPU program). For FYs 2005 and
2006, hospitals that met the RHQDAPU
program’s requirements received the full
annual payment update to their
21 For more information about CMS’ Hospital
Quality Initiative, see https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
HospitalQualityInits/.
PO 00000
Frm 00178
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
inpatient operating costs, while
hospitals that did not comply received
an update that was reduced by 0.4
percentage points. For FY 2005,
virtually every hospital in the country
that was eligible to participate
submitted data (98.3 percent), and
approximately 96 percent of all
participating hospitals met the
requirements to receive the full update.
The data regarding the starter set of 10
quality measures as well as additional,
voluntarily-reported data on other
quality measures, are available to the
public through the Hospital Compare
Web site at: https://
www.hospitalcompare.hhs.gov.
b. Section 5001(a) of Pub. L. 109–171
(DRA)
As discussed in section IV.A. of the
FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR
24091), for FY 2007 and each
subsequent year, section 5001(a) of Pub.
L. 109–171 amended section
1886(b)(3)(B) of the Act and made
changes to the program established
under section 501(b) of Pub. L. 108–173.
These changes require us to expand the
number of measures for which data
must be submitted, and to change the
percentage point reduction in the
annual payment update from 0.4
percentage points to 2.0 percentage
points for subsection (d) hospitals that
do not report the required quality
measures in a form and manner, and at
a time, specified by the Secretary.
Effective for payments beginning with
FY 2007, new section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(IV) of the Act
requires the Secretary to begin to adopt
the expanded set of performance
measures set forth in the IOM’s 2005
report entitled, ‘‘Performance
Measurement: Accelerating
Improvement.’’ 22 Those measures
include the HQA measures, the
HCAHPS patient perspective survey,
and three structural measures.23
Effective for payments beginning with
FY 2008, the Secretary must add other
measures that reflect consensus among
affected parties and may replace
existing measures as appropriate. New
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(VII) of the Act
requires the Secretary to establish
procedures for making hospital quality
data on these measures available to the
public. We discuss our responses to
22 Institute of Medicine, ‘‘Performance
Measurement: Accelerating Improvement,’’
December 1, 2005, available at https://www.iom.edu/
CMS/3809/19805/31310.aspx.
23 The three structural measures are: (1)
Computerized provider order entry; (2) intensive
care intensivists; and (3) evidence-based hospital
referrals.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
public comments on these requirements
in section IV.A. of this preamble.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
4. Plan for Implementing Hospital
Value-Based Purchasing Beginning With
FY 2009
Section 5001(b) of Pub. L. 109–171
requires us to develop a plan to
implement hospital value-based
purchasing beginning with FY 2009.
The plan must consider the following
issues: (a) The ongoing development,
selection, and modification process for
measures of quality and efficiency in
hospital inpatient settings; (b) the
reporting, collection, and validation of
quality data; (c) the structure of
payment adjustments, including the
determination of thresholds of
improvements in quality that would
substantiate a payment adjustment, the
size of such payments, and the sources
of funding for the payments; and (d) the
disclosure of information on hospital
performance. Section 5001(b) of Pub. L.
109–171 also calls for us to consult with
affected parties and to consider relevant
demonstrations in developing the plan.
Each of these issues (measure
development and refinement, data
infrastructure, incentives, and public
reporting) is discussed below, along
with our activities to date and
outstanding policy questions.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24097), we sought comments on
these issue areas and outstanding policy
questions. We received 50 items of
correspondence, which included 37
comments from hospitals and health
care systems, including the American
Hospital Association and many State
hospital associations, the Federation of
American Hospitals, the National
Association of Public Hospitals, the
Association of American Medical
Colleges, and the Catholic Health
Association. From the purchaser and
consumer perspectives, we received
comments from The Leapfrog Group, the
National Business Coalition on Health,
the Consumer-Purchaser Disclosure
Project, the National Breast Cancer
Coalition Fund, and Consumers Union.
The medical device and information
technology industries also provided
comments.
As a preliminary matter, almost half
of all commenters also made
recommendations on the process for
developing the Medicare value-based
purchasing plan. The AHA, the State
hospital associations, the Voluntary
Hospital Association, and the
Federation of American Hospitals all
stressed that the HQA be the foundation
for planning. Several other commenters
noted the value of an iterative process,
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
with multiple opportunities for public
comment to build consensus.
We present a summary of the
comments by major issue area below
and our response.
a. Measure Development and
Refinement
As we explore the potential
connections between performance
measurement and incentives, we would
like to better understand how to develop
valid, meaningful, current performance
measures that are aligned with other
hospital measurement activities, and an
enterprise for development, validation,
consensus building, and maintenance of
these measures. In addition, before
measures could be used to compare the
relative quality or cost of care provided
by hospitals, we believe that the
information would need to be
appropriately adjusted to account for
relevant differences among hospitals
and among their patients. The
availability of appropriate measures on
which consensus might be achieved
depends on the state of the art of
research on measure development.
We believe that it is desirable for
performance measures to be based on
appropriate evidence, effectively related
to desired outcomes, derived in a
transparent fashion involving
consultation with experts and affected
hospitals, and routinely updated.
MedPAC’s 2005 Report to Congress 24
stated that measures should be
evidence-based; that collecting and
analyzing data should not be unduly
burdensome for the provider or for
CMS; that risk adjustment should be
sufficient to deter providers from
avoiding patients who might lower
performance scores; that most providers
should be able to improve on the
measures; that measures should apply to
a broad range of care and providers; that
measures should capture aspects of care
that are under the control of the
providers being measured; and that
areas of care being measured should be
those needing improvement.
The IOM’s December 2005 report,
‘‘Performance Measurement:
Accelerating Improvement’’ 25
recommended that measure sets should
build on the work of key public- and
private-sector organizations; that
national performance measures that
24 Medicare Payment Advisory Commission:
Report to Congress: Medicare Payment Policy,
March 2005, pp. 186–187, available at: https://
www.medpac.gov/publications/generic_
report_display.cfm?report_type_id=1&
sid=2&subid=0.
25 Institute of Medicine, ‘‘Performance
Measurement: Accelerating Improvement,’’
December 1, 2005, available at https://www.iom.edu/
CMS/3809/19805/31310.aspx.
PO 00000
Frm 00179
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48047
have been approved through ongoing
consensus processes led by major
stakeholder groups are an appropriate
starting point; that the limited scope of
current measures should be broadened
to address efficiency, equity, and
patient-centeredness; that quality, costs,
and outcomes of care should be
measured over longer time intervals;
and that measures be applicable to more
than one setting so that providers can
share accountability for a patient’s care
(pp. 8–11).
The plan for hospital value-based
purchasing mandated by Pub. L. 109–
171 must address the ongoing
development, selection, and
modification process for measures of
quality and efficiency in hospital
inpatient settings. We have worked
collaboratively in defining consistent,
meaningful performance measures for
hospitals and other providers for a
number of years. The efforts of CMS and
its stakeholder partners to develop
standardized performance measures
increase the likelihood that the
measures will be valid, reliable, and
widely accepted as viable indicators of
performance. Standardized measures
also reduce the burden for hospitals that
would otherwise have to report different
measures to multiple entities, such as
accrediting bodies and State agencies.
CMS and the HQA (which includes
representatives from consumers,
hospitals, health professionals,
purchasers, and accreditation
organizations) collectively selected a
starter set of 10 consensus-derived
quality measures for public reporting,
which was incorporated into the
RHQDAPU program authorized by
section 501(b) of Pub. L. 108–173. (See
section IV.A. of the preamble to the FY
2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR 24091)
for a detailed discussion of the
RHQDAPU program.) The measures
were endorsed by the NQF, a nonprofit
voluntary organization that represents a
broad range of health care stakeholders
and endorses consensus-based national
performance standards. CMS has also
worked with the JCAHO to align
hospital performance measures that we
share in common, thereby reducing
hospitals’ reporting burden.
In April and September 2005, CMS
and the HQA identified additional NQFendorsed measures of hospital
performance. In section IV.A. of the
preamble to the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule (71 FR 24093), we listed these
measures and proposed to require
hospital reporting on these measures
under an expanded version of the
RHQDAPU program authorized by
section 5001(a) of Pub. L. 109–171.
These measures are discussed in more
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48048
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
detail on the CMS Web site at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/HospitalQualityInits/
downloads/HospitalHQA2004
_2007200512.pdf. In this final rule, we
have included the 20 NQF-endorsed
measures currently reported on our
Hospital Compare Web site, as well as
two additional NQF-endorsed measures,
as requirements for hospital reporting
under the FY 2007 RHQDAPU program.
Two additional outcome measures
(30-day mortality for heart attack and
heart failure) have been endorsed by the
NQF for public reporting. Further, in
October 2006, we will be implementing
the HCAHPS survey of inpatient
perceptions of their hospital care
experiences, with the intention that an
aggregate HCAHPS measure will
become a publicly reported performance
measure. HCAHPS was endorsed by
the NQF in May 2005. Beyond these, we
could also consider including additional
measures from the Surgical Care
Improvement Project, measures relating
to a hospital’s use of information
technology that result in improved
patient outcomes, implementation of
data standards, and preventable
readmissions as quality reporting
measures under the RHQDAPU program
or the hospital value-based purchasing
program.
Comment: Virtually all of the
commenters discussed the measures
issues. The commenters focused on
three major topics: (1) The use of quality
versus efficiency measures, (2) the use
of process versus outcome measures,
and (3) the importance of including
measures that capture aspects of care
from the patient experience, including
access, respect, and disparities/
differences experienced by patients of
different races and ethnic backgrounds.
From the perspective of virtually all
provider associations, the hospital
value-based purchasing program should
focus on evidence-based process
measures. The majority of commenters
also believed that, for now, measures
should focus solely on quality and that
measures of efficiency are premature.
Several commenters also stressed that
the goal of the program should be to
improve overall quality of care, rather
than to decrease costs.
Commenters from the medical device
industry raised the concern that a
reliance on process measures when
assessing efficiency could inhibit access
to new technologies and urged that riskadjusted outcome measures be used
instead. Two provider associations
urged that payment systems must
ensure that evolving and improved
technologies continue to be available to
all patients and that efficiency measures
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
not inhibit the adoption of new qualityenhancing technologies.
Commenters representing the
purchaser and consumer perspectives
stressed the importance of including
measures that reflect quality, efficiency,
equity, patient experience, and structure
and urged that all measures be
nationally endorsed, scientifically valid,
risk-adjusted, and regularly updated.
Several consumer groups and safety net
providers also noted the importance of
including measures that could capture
disparities in care experienced by
patients of different races and ethnic
backgrounds. On a related note, the
Association of American Medical
Colleges and safety net providers
emphasized the importance of assuring
a level playing field to account for
differences among types of hospitals
and patient demographics.
Several commenters noted that
developing measures is a public good
and that substantial funding should be
provided to support the development of
consumer-relevant measures to fill
existing gaps, especially for measures of
efficiency and equity.
Several commenters supported
including measures from the Surgical
Care Improvement Program (SCIP)
because surgical wounds and infections
are among the most common and
harmful hospital-acquired infections.
Regarding information technology, the
response was mixed. Some commenters
supported the inclusion of measures
that would encourage IT adoption,
while others noted the obstacle of
ongoing issues with current health IT
standards.
b. Data Infrastructure
Implementing measures on which to
base a value-based purchasing system
would require an infrastructure that
could collect appropriate information
from hospitals, store and aggregate it as
necessary, and prepare it for use in
determining appropriate incentives.
Hospitals would likely need to be able
to generate appropriate data as input for
calculation of the measures. For some
measures, data that hospitals already
submit with claims for payment or for
some other administrative purpose may
be sufficient. For other measures,
hospitals might need to provide
information regarding their structure
and resources or about the specifics of
medical care provided to patients or the
outcomes of that care. For that
information, hospitals may need special
software to assist with data collection
and secure channels by which they can
transmit data. In the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule, we solicited comments
on how to develop an infrastructure that
PO 00000
Frm 00180
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
would facilitate the efficient
transmission and storage of data, and
especially, as discussed in sections
IV.A.3. and IV.B.6. of the preamble to
that proposed rule (71 FR 24095,
24100). We especially solicited
comments on how electronic medical
and health record systems could help
improve care and be integrated into or
facilitate the data collection process.
We did not receive any comments
specific to this issue.
Implementation would require
communication channels and data
warehouses with sufficient capacity and
flexibility to acquire and store data from
hospitals. We are considering how we
might validate the submitted data,
determine incentives based on that data,
and transmit these values to Medicare’s
fiscal intermediaries. The potential
infrastructure would need to be
extremely secure and afford the most
privacy protection permitted by law. It
would also need to minimize the burden
of data collection and transmission on
providers. It would need to be accurate,
efficient, and cost-effective for CMS to
administer.
The plan for hospital value-based
purchasing mandated by Pub. L. 109–
171 must address the reporting,
collection, and validation of quality
data. Over the past few years, we have
developed a data collection and
reporting infrastructure for the
RHQDAPU program that can transmit
performance measurement data via
secure channels for its submission,
storage, analysis, validation, and
reporting. Specifically, to facilitate data
collection, we have developed the
CART software to assist hospitals in the
collection of clinical and administrative
data used to measure performance
improvement. CART, which is provided
to hospitals free of charge, is a powerful
application that hospitals and their
designees can use to abstract clinical
data needed for performance
measurement from medical records.
This tool was designed and developed
by CMS with input from the JCAHO and
the Medicare QIOs. We have also
developed the QualityNet Exchange
system for secure transmission of data to
the QIO Clinical Warehouse.
QNetExchange.org is the CMS-approved
Web site for secure communications and
data exchange between two or more of
the following: Hospitals, performance
measurement system vendors, end stage
renal disease networks and facilities,
QIOs, and CMS.
For data warehousing, we have a
claims warehouse for Medicare Part A
data, which maintains the claims for the
most recent 42 months. We also have a
QIO Clinical Warehouse that currently
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
contains information on the starter set of
10 quality measures collected under the
RHQDAPU program, as well as
additional voluntarily reported
measures. We must assess the validity of
the RHQDAPU information because of
its use for quality improvement, public
reporting, and determining hospitals’
annual payment updates under the
RHQDAPU program. Validation
activities assess the reliability of the
data that a hospital has submitted, as
evidenced by the consistency between a
hospital’s abstraction and reabstraction
by an independent party.
We are currently using a contractor,
the CDAC, to carry out the validation
process under the RHQDAPU program.
Hospitals are required to submit certain
quality data to the QIO Clinical
Warehouse within 4.5 months of the
end of each quarterly reporting period.
The steps in the validation process are:
(1) Check for duplicates; (2) draw a
sample; (3) obtain copies of medical
records; (4) request and complete CDAC
abstraction; (5) post results on
QualityNet Exchange for hospitals’
review; and (6) resolve validation
appeals. In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule (71 FR 24098), we sought
comments on how the data submission
and validation processes that we
currently use for the RHQDAPU
program might be adaptable to a
hospital value-based purchasing
program.
We did not receive any comments
specific to this issue.
One of the key challenges we face in
considering implementation of hospital
value-based purchasing is minimizing
the length of time between our receipt
of data and our ability to provide
feedback to hospitals on the data. Some
of the hospitals that are participating in
the RHQDAPU program and the Premier
Hospital Quality Incentive
Demonstration have asked for more
timely feedback on their performance.
We recognize that a long delay between
the provision of services and feedback
about the quality of those services may
impede both improvement efforts and a
hospital’s motivation to improve. The
current lag time between the end of the
quarterly reporting period and the
availability of performance feedback
under the RHQDAPU program is
approximately 9 months. Hospitals have
4.5 months to complete their paper
medical records and to submit
information to the QIO Clinical
Warehouse, which roughly coincides
with JCAHO’s timeline for submission
of data to their ORYX Core Measure
Performance Measurement System.
Another 4.5 months are required to
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
accomplish the steps in the validation
process.
We are considering options to
decrease the overall length of time
between our receipt of data and our
ability to provide feedback to hospitals,
and we are interested in comments on
these options. First, we are considering
whether more frequent data
submissions, such as monthly
submissions, would decrease the time
between the provision of services and
feedback about the quality of those
services. We are aware that some
hospitals and their vendors already
submit quality data on a monthly basis
to JCAHO. However, unless we reduced
the sample size per reporting period, the
process of validating each month the
same number of records that are
currently validated each quarter would
increase costs significantly. On the other
hand, if we reduced the sample size per
reporting period, the monthly numbers
might be too small to provide for
adequate validation. Second, we could
shorten the data submission period,
which is a significant source of lag time.
This option would require hospitals to
submit information to the data
warehouse more quickly, which could
increase the possibility that hospitals
would submit less complete data. In
addition, this option would require
coordination with JCAHO to keep
submission timelines congruent, which
reduces hospitals’ reporting burden.
Third, we could eliminate the validation
appeals process, which would reduce
the lag time by up to 2 months. Fourth,
we could create an expanded role for
the third party vendors that assist
hospitals with submitting quality data to
CMS and JCAHO. For example, CMS
could certify third party vendors to also
provide standardized validation services
and quick performance feedback to their
hospital customers.
Comment: Approximately half of the
commenters’ responses included
comments specific to data issues. The
commenters addressed two issues in
particular: (1) The data challenges
confronted by small hospitals and (2)
the timeliness of feedback versus the
burden of submission.
A quarter of commenters raised the
special challenges confronted by small,
in particular rural, hospitals because of
the small sample sizes they often
encounter for many measures and the
volatility and instability in measure
results under these circumstances.
Regarding timeliness and the lag time
between reporting and feedback,
commenters from different stakeholder
groups had opposing perspectives.
Provider commenters were concerned
that monthly reporting would be
PO 00000
Frm 00181
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48049
extremely burdensome, while purchaser
and consumer advocate commenters
suggested that monthly submission
could improve the timeliness of data.
All commenters stressed the importance
of data validation. Consumers Union
stressed that validation is critical and
need not increase the time lag. It
recommended the use of rolling
publication of data with quarterly
updates. Two commenters endorsed the
concept that the data submission and
validation processes could be
streamlined through use of electronic
health records (EHRs), which could also
provide an incentive for adoption of
EHRs. The Federation of American
Hospitals found none of the options
presented in the proposed IPPS rule for
reducing the lag time between
submission and feedback to be
acceptable.
Several commenters mentioned the
benefits of augmenting billing forms
with clinical data elements and cited
the approach of the Pennsylvania
Healthcare Cost Containment Council.
c. Incentive Methodology
While measurement of the quality of
care and of resources use may be
advantageous in itself, we are
considering whether and what kind of
incentives can further improve
outcomes. The potential design of
incentives in a value-based purchasing
system presents many choices. The
implementation plan for hospital valuebased purchasing mandated by Pub. L.
109–171 must address the structure of
payment adjustments, including the
determination of thresholds of
improvements in quality that would
substantiate a payment adjustment, the
size of such payments, and the sources
of funding for the value-based
payments. In the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24098), we sought
comments on the merits of and
alternatives to all of the approaches to
the design of a value-based purchasing
methodology that are discussed below.
(1) How should incentives be
structured?
A number of options exist for the
structure of potential incentives. The
incentive methodology could include
differential incentives depending on
whether hospitals exceed a particular
standard of performance. To reflect
expectations of continued improvement
among hospitals, the standard could be
raised in predictable steps over time.
Alternatively, incentives could be
structured to reward hospitals that
improve from a baseline level of
performance. These approaches could
be combined to develop an incentive
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48050
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
methodology that includes both
attaining benchmarks and improving
care.
Comment: Approximately half of the
commenters responded to at least one of
the questions on incentives, and
comments varied widely on these
issues. Most commenters saw the
combination of incentives to reward
continuous improvement over time and
incentives for attainment of specific
benchmarks as most desirable. However,
there was disagreement about the value
of absolute benchmarks. Several
commenters favored developing a fixed
standard, rewarding hospitals that meet
or exceed the standard, and when the
majority achieves this standard, either
raising the standard or selecting another
measure with a fixed standard. They
commented that the bar should be high
enough to serve as an effective target,
but not so high as to become attainable
by only a small number of providers. By
contrast, one commenter believed that a
fixed benchmark discourages hospitals,
particularly small and rural hospitals,
because it might not reflect their unique
circumstances.
Almost half of all commenters
emphasized the importance of aligning
hospital and physician incentives so
that everyone will be working toward
the same goals of improving quality and
providing appropriate care.
(2) What level of incentive is needed?
Value-based purchasing incentives
should be targeted to that level needed
to achieve a desired level of
performance. Our experience with
implementing section 501(b) of Pub. L.
108–173 indicates that a targeted
incentive, coupled with active
management by CMS, can encourage
reporting on quality measures. Nearly
every eligible hospital has been willing
and able to submit the required data in
order to receive the full payment update
under the RHQDAPU program.
Similarly, our experience with the
Premier Hospital Quality Incentive
Demonstration indicates that a 1 or 2
percent bonus, coupled with potential
reductions for poor performance, may
stimulate improvement. Further
experience in ascertaining how
hospitals respond to incentives will be
important for examining incentives over
time.
Comment: A number of commenters
across the stakeholder spectrum
responded that the annual IPPS update
is proving to be a sufficient incentive to
encourage virtually all hospitals to
participate in the RHQDAPU program
and that the current level of a 1–2
percent incentive is appropriate.
Commenters noted that an additional
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
portion of the update could be made
conditional upon achieving specified
performance goals.
Many provider commenters stated
that a system of rewards should increase
payments or reduce regulatory burden
for successful providers and urged that
incentives involving penalties should
not be used because the basic level of
DRG payment does not now cover costs
for more than one-third of hospitals.
Several provider commenters suggested
that rewards should be large enough to
cover the costs of implementing process
changes and to allow for reinvestment
in quality improvement efforts. One
provider commenter also urged that
incentive structures should be gradual
to avoid ‘‘cliff’’ effects in either rewards
or penalties.
(3) What should be the source of
incentives?
The President’s FY 2007 Budget
indicates support for identifying and
testing ‘‘budget-neutral incentives that
will stimulate Medicare providers to
improve performance on quality and
efficiency measures.’’ 26 We do not
believe that providing additional
aggregate funding to finance
performance-based incentives is either
supportable or necessary. One approach
might be to examine how we could
identify and apply measurable savings
achieved by reducing care that is
unnecessary or otherwise inappropriate.
For example, we may examine
possibilities of improving care
coordination, whether this could
produce measurable savings, and
whether some of the savings generated
in one payment system could be used
for incentives in another, as long as
these reforms do not provide
inappropriate incentives to stop
providing necessary care. For instance,
appropriate quality of care and effective
resource use in hospitals and other
institutional providers might generate
savings that could be used for incentives
for both physicians and facilities.
Comment: Several hospital
association and individual provider
commenters suggested that savings from
improved care coordination could be a
source of funding for incentives and
recommended studying whether savings
generated in one payment system could
be used for payments in another setting.
One commenter noted the importance
of assuring that funds designated for
rewards be fully allocated to hospitals
and urged that a program designed to
reward improving quality should not
26 Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal
Year 2007, available at: https://www.whitehouse.gov/
omb/budget/fy2007/.
PO 00000
Frm 00182
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
become an arbitrary cost-cutting
mechanism.
The budget-neutral shared savings
approach currently used in the Leapfrog
Hospital Rewards Program was cited by
several commenters as a model worth
considering, though the commenters
noted that savings are harder to identify
in the Medicare DRG-based system than
in the commercial per diem systems
where the Leapfrog Program is currently
operating.
(4) What should the form of incentives
be?
Potential approaches for incentives
include making an add-on payment to
the base payment for individual
inpatient hospital services or providing
periodic, lump-sum payments on a
monthly, quarterly, or annual basis.
Under the RHQDAPU program,
hospitals that do not submit the
required data receive a decrease in the
standardized payment amount made for
all inpatient operating costs for the
applicable fiscal year. In a hospital
value-based purchasing system, perservice payments might be made only in
connection with the services directly
associated with the particular measure
for which the hospital achieved a good
result. Alternatively, lump-sum
payments might be made on a periodic
basis to hospitals that achieve particular
performance targets. The preferable
approach may depend on operational
concerns, the strength of incentive
effects, and other aspects of the design.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24099), we sought comments on this
issue.
Comment: We received three
comments on this issue, and all
commenters favored periodic lump-sum
payments over other options.
(5) What should the timing of incentives
be in relation to performance?
Any value-based purchasing system
should seek a balance between
rewarding desired performance close to
when it occurs and ensuring the
accuracy of both performance
measurement and incentives. Given the
lag times for collecting and reviewing
different types of data, some measures
may be calculated quickly after the
period of performance, while data lag
times for other measures may be longer.
For instance, structural measures could
affect incentives soon after they are
collected. Other measures that are based
on experience over a time interval may
require some time for measured events
to manifest. An example of this type of
measure would be the rate of mortality
within 30 days of hospitalization.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
We did not receive any comments
specific to this issue.
(6) How should we develop composite
scores?
Encouraging improved performance
could be facilitated by valid and reliable
methods to aggregate performance data
into single composite scores. Composite
scoring may also improve consumer
understanding of complex performance
indicators by combining measures of
many dimensions of care into a single
score. One example of a composite
scoring methodology that we used for
the Premier Hospital Quality Incentive
Demonstration (discussed in detail
above) is a modification of the
‘‘opportunity model,’’ which can be
used to address individual weighting,
missing data, and sensitivity to case
volumes. For example, a hospital that
has few or no cases for a particular
dimension of care could receive a low
score, yet that measure is equally
weighted with others in the composite.
Under the opportunity model, a
composite may be developed for a
disease category by dividing the total
number of successful interventions by
the total number of opportunities for the
same targeted interventions. Some of the
advantages of the opportunity model are
that individual measures are weighted
by the volume of opportunities for the
associated intervention for a particular
hospital; missing values for a particular
aspect of care provided by an individual
hospital would not prevent that hospital
from being represented in a public
report; and composite measures may
easily accommodate the addition of
individual measures.
The ‘‘appropriate care measure’’
(ACM) is another composite scoring
methodology, which we used in
connection with the QIOs. The ACM
scoring methodology is patient-centric.
For a hospital to receive credit for
treating a patient well, the hospital must
have met the standard for every measure
applicable to that patient’s condition.
There are also a number of proprietary
composite measures, such as those used
by Solucient, Healthgrades,
CareScience, and U.S. News & World
Report. In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule (71 FR 24099), we solicited
comments on the use of composite
scoring for hospital value-based
purchasing and on the various
composite scoring methodologies.
Comment: Five commenters
supported the use of the ‘‘opportunity
model.’’ No comments were received
regarding the ‘‘appropriate care model.’’
Several commenters urged that further
research and consumer testing be done
around the development and display of
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
measure composites. Several other
commenters urged that while
composites are useful, they should not
be the only information available;
instead, information should be
presented in various ways, including
composite scores, individual scores
making up the composite, statistics
supporting the score, and graphics.
Value-based purchasing methods are
still under development, and
anticipating their potential effects on
the health care system is difficult. We
understand that unintended
consequences may result from the
implementation of these methods. We
believe that we will need to assess
incentives and evaluate their effects so
that we can revise them quickly as we
learn more about their impact on
hospitals and on inpatient hospital
services provided to Medicare
beneficiaries.
We did not receive any comments
specific to this issue.
d. Public Reporting
The plan for hospital value-based
purchasing mandated by Pub. L. 109–
171 must address the public disclosure
of information on hospital performance.
CMS currently provides public
reporting of quality information through
the ‘‘Compare’’ Web sites for hospitals,
nursing homes, home health agencies,
and dialysis facilities.27 The Compare
Web sites provide comparative quality
information to consumers and others to
help guide choices and drive
improvements in the quality of care
delivered in these settings. Besides
providing Medicare beneficiaries and
their health professionals with
information to assist them in making
informed health care decisions, public
reporting of comparative performance
data also provides information that is
useful to health care consumers who are
not Medicare beneficiaries. For
example, a consumer who has a Health
Savings Account can access CMS’
Hospital Compare Web site to gather
comparative quality information to
assist in choosing a high quality
hospital. CMS is contributing to the
Administration’s Consumer-Directed
Health Care Initiative by working with
our private- and public-sector partners
to make health care information more
transparent and available to consumers
than ever before. (Refer to section IV.M.
27 See CMS’ Hospital Compare Web site, available
at: https://www.hospitalcompare.hhs.gov/; Nursing
Home Compare Web site, avaialble at: https://
www.medicare.gov/NHCompare; Home Health
Compare Web site, avaialble at: https://
www.medicare.gov/HHCompare/Home.asp; Dialysis
Facility Compare Web site, available at: https://
www.medicare.gov/Dialysis.
PO 00000
Frm 00183
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48051
of the preamble to the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24120) for more
information.) In the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24100), we sought
comments on how we can further
stimulate public reporting to increase
the transparency and meaningfulness of
healthcare performance information.
Comment: Five commenters made
recommendations regarding public
reporting. One commenter stressed that
informed decision-making about
performance cannot occur if reported
costs are divorced from information
about quality. A second commenter
noted the importance of providing a
formal appeals process for providers
that disagree with their performance
ratings. Consumers Union urged CMS to
use multiple approaches to get
consumers more engaged in using
quality information, suggesting that
Hospital Compare be promoted
continuously, that tools be developed to
support comparisons in different ways,
and that information on Hospital
Compare to be updated more frequently
than once a year to be relevant to the
patient and fair to the hospital.
Response: We thank all commenters
for their thoughtful and valuable input.
We will use these comments to inform
our design of the plan for Medicare
hospital value-based purchasing, as
mandated by Pub. L. 109–171. This
rulemaking process is the first
opportunity for the public to be
involved in our planning process. We
will also be hosting public listening
sessions in 2007 to receive public input
on drafts of the plan. We encourage your
participation in those listening sessions.
5. Considerations Related to Certain
Conditions, Including HospitalAcquired Infections
Medicare’s IPPS encourages hospitals
to treat patients efficiently. Hospitals
receive the same DRG payment for stays
that vary in length. In many cases,
complications acquired in the hospital
do not generate higher payments than
the hospital would otherwise receive for
other cases in the same DRG. To this
extent, the IPPS does encourage
hospitals to manage their patients well
and to avoid complications, when
possible. However, complications, such
as infections, acquired in the hospital
can trigger higher payments in two
ways. First, the treatment of
complications can increase the cost of
hospital stays enough to generate outlier
payments. However, the outlier
payment methodology requires that
hospitals experience large losses on
outlier cases (in FY 2006, hospitals must
lose $23,600 before a case qualifies for
outlier payments, and the hospital
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48052
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
would then only receive 80 percent of
its costs above the outlier threshold).
Second, there are about 121 sets of
DRGs that split based on the presence or
absence of a complication or
comorbidity (CC). The CC DRG in each
pair would generate a higher Medicare
payment. If an infection acquired during
the beneficiary’s hospital stay is one of
the conditions on the CC list, the result
may be a higher payment to the hospital
under a CC DRG. (See section II.C. of the
FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR
24006) for a detailed discussion of
proposed DRG reforms.)
Section 5001(c) of Pub. L. 109–171
requires the Secretary to identify, by
October 1, 2007, at least two conditions
that are (a) high cost or high volume or
both, (b) result in the assignment of a
case to a DRG that has a higher payment
when present as a secondary diagnosis,
and (c) could reasonably have been
prevented through the application of
evidence-based guidelines. For
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2008, hospitals would not receive
additional payment for cases in which
one of the selected conditions was not
present on admission. That is, the case
would be paid as though the secondary
diagnosis was not present. Section
5001(c) provides that we can revise the
list of conditions from time to time, as
long as it contains at least two
conditions. Section 5001(c) also requires
hospitals to submit the secondary
diagnoses that are present at admission
when reporting payment information for
discharges on or after October 1, 2007.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24100), we sought input about which
conditions and which evidence-based
guidelines should be selected.
We received 44 comments on this
section from hospitals and health care
systems, provider associations,
consumer groups, purchasers, medical
device manufacturers, information
technology companies, and health care
research organizations.
Comment: The majority of
commenters addressed conceptual
issues concerning the selection,
measurement, and prevention of
hospital-acquired infections. While
most of the commenters focused on
broad factors CMS should consider,
some of the commenters included
specific recommendations of conditions
for possible inclusion in the payment
changes. We found these comments very
helpful and constructive, and we look
forward to further input as we work
towards implementation of this section.
In the following discussion, we present
a summary of the major themes of the
commenters and list the specific
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
hospital-acquired complications
presented in the comments.
Many commenters encouraged CMS
to engage in a collaborative discussion
with relevant experts in designing,
evaluating, and implementing this
section. The commenters urged CMS to
include individuals with expertise in
infection control and prevention, as
well as representatives from the
provider community, in this discussion.
Nearly half of the commenters
expressed concern about the difficulty
in distinguishing between hospitalacquired and community-acquired
infections. Multiple commenters
indicated that community-acquired
infections often cannot be diagnosed on
admission and thus would not be
included as secondary diagnoses at the
time of admission. These commenters
indicated that it would be costly and
inefficient to attempt to diagnose all
community-acquired infections at the
time of admission. The commenters
requested that CMS provide technical
guidance to assist providers in
distinguishing between hospital and
community-acquired infections.
Many commenters discussed the
statutory requirement for hospitals to
submit information regarding secondary
diagnoses present on admission
beginning FY 2008. Some commenters
supported this requirement and
suggested that it would better enable
CMS and health care providers to more
accurately differentiate between
comorbidities and hospital-acquired
complications. MedPAC, in particular,
noted that this requirement was
recommended in its March 2005 Report
to Congress and indicated that this
information is important to Medicare’s
value-based purchasing efforts. Other
commenters suggested that CMS delay
implementation of this provision, given
the significant payment changes
contained in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule.
Many commenters, including States,
health care associations, and health care
providers with experience in hospitalacquired infection prevention,
cautioned us about potential problems
with relying on secondary diagnosis
codes to identify hospital-acquired
complications. These commenters
indicated that secondary diagnosis
codes may be an inaccurate method for
identifying true hospital-acquired
complications. Some of the commenters
referred to research showing a wide
discrepancy between hospital-acquired
infections identified through claims
data and hospital-acquired infections
identified through active surveillance
and/or chart review. According to the
commenters, this research found that
PO 00000
Frm 00184
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
active surveillance conducted by trained
infection control practitioners was the
most accurate method for identifying
hospital-acquired infections. The
commenters also noted that there is
currently no standardized and validated
method for using claims data to identify
hospital-acquired infections.
A number of commenters expressed
concerns about the data coding
requirements for this payment change.
They asked for detailed guidance from
CMS to help them identify and
document hospital-acquired
complications. The commenters also
noted that there are currently no
standard definitions or guidance to code
the present on admission indicator. In
addition, there was concern that the
current system of bill coding does not
support a present on admission
indicator and that future versions of the
bill coding systems may not be
implemented in time to meet the data
reporting requirements for this payment
change. The commenters also urged
CMS to allow adequate time for
hospitals to implement the necessary
changes to their billing and coding
systems and to conduct appropriate staff
training.
Almost half of the commenters
expressed concern that not all hospitalacquired infections are preventable. In
particular, the commenters noted that
sicker and more complex patients are at
greater risk for hospital-acquired
infections and complications. The
commenters urged CMS to use
discretion in implementing this section
to ensure that the program does not
punish hospitals taking care of sicker
and more complex patients.
To address this issue, many of the
commenters suggested that CMS include
standardized infection-prevention
process measures, in addition to
outcome measures of hospital-acquired
infections. The commenters proposed
that hospitals should not be penalized if
they follow evidence-based infection
prevention measures. Specifically, a
number of commenters referenced the
Surgical Care Improvement Program
(SCIP) and suggested that CMS build on
this initiative. These commenters
recommended that CMS include
exceptions to the payment changes for
cases in which the hospital performed
evidence-based infection-prevention
measures.
Some commenters proposed that CMS
expand the scope of the payment
changes beyond the statutory minimum
of two conditions. They noted that the
death, injury, and cost of hospitalacquired infections are too high to limit
this provision to only two conditions.
Commenters also recommended that
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
CMS annually select additional
hospital-acquired complications for the
payment change.
Conversely, a number of commenters
proposed that CMS initially begin with
limited demonstrations to test CMS’’
methodology before nationwide
implementation. The commenters
specifically mentioned the Michigan
Hospital Association Keystone Center,
the Pittsburgh Regional Health
Initiative, and the Maryland Patient
Safety Center as possible models. In
addition, several commenters suggested
that CMS work with states that currently
collect information on diagnoses present
on admission.
A commenter recommended that CMS
include appropriate consumer
protections to prevent providers from
billing patients for the non-reimbursed
costs of the hospital-acquired
complications and to prevent hospitals
from selectively avoiding patients
perceived at risk for complications.
In addition to the broad conceptual
suggestions, some commenters
recommended specific conditions for
possible inclusion in the payment
changes. The specific conditions
mentioned in the comments are listed
below:
• Surgical site infections. Some
commenters recommended including
surgical site infections because of their
high frequency and cost. Commenters
also noted that evidence-based measures
to prevent the occurrence of these
infections are currently measured and
reported as part of SCIP. Many
commenters suggested that CMS work
with SCIP partners to identify
appropriate post-surgical hospitalacquired infections for possible
inclusion in the payment changes. Other
commenters expressed concern that
administrative data may not be a
reliable source for identifying surgical
site infections. Commenters also
cautioned that surgical site infections
often do not manifest and thus cannot
be diagnosed until after the patient has
been discharged from the hospital.
• Ventilator-associated pneumonia.
Commenters also mentioned ventilatorassociated pneumonia as a possible
condition for inclusion in the payment
changes because this condition is
currently measured and reported
through SCIP. Other commenters
recommended against this condition
due to the subjective and labor-intensive
nature of defining the diagnosis.
• Catheter-associated bloodstream
infections. Commenters recommended
catheter-associated bloodstream
infections, including central line
infections, as possible conditions.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Commenters noted that these infections
are currently reported through SCIP.
• Urinary tract infections. One
commenter recommended nosocomial
urinary tract infection for possible
inclusion in the payment change.
Another commenter argued against this
condition because it has limited impact
on patient mortality and morbidity.
• Pressure ulcers. Multiple
commenters suggested that CMS
consider pressure ulcers as an
alternative to hospital-acquired
infections.
• Hospital falls. Several commenters
suggested that CMS consider hospital
falls as an alternative to hospitalacquired infections.
• Deep vein thromboses. Commenters
also suggested that CMS consider deep
vein thromboses as an alternative to
hospital-acquired infections.
Response: We would like to express
our gratitude to all of the commenters
for their thoughtful and helpful
recommendations. We will carefully
consider their views as we move toward
implementing this section. CMS will be
working closely with our colleagues at
the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention over the coming months to
select appropriate conditions to propose
for implementation. We anticipate that
the next opportunity for formal public
comment will be the FY 2008 IPPS
proposed rule-making, which will be
published in spring of 2007. We
encourage the public to comment on our
proposal at that time.
6. Promoting Effective Use of Health
Information Technology
We recognize the potential for health
information technology (HIT) to
facilitate improvements in the quality
and efficiency of health care services.
One recent RAND study found that
broad adoption of electronic health
records could save more than $81
billion annually and, at the same time,
improve quality of care.28 The largest
potential savings that the study
identified was in the hospital setting
because of shorter hospital stays
promoted by better coordinated care;
less nursing time spent on
administrative tasks; better use of
medications in hospitals; and better
utilization of drugs, laboratory services,
and radiology services in hospital
outpatient settings. The study also
identified potential quality gains
through enhanced patient safety,
decision support tools for evidence28 RAND News Release: Rand Study Says
Computerizing Medical Records Could Save $81
Billion Annually and Improve the Quality of
Medical Care, September 14, 2005, available at:
https://rand.org/news.press.05/09.14.html.
PO 00000
Frm 00185
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48053
based medicine, and reminder
mechanisms for screening and
preventive care. Despite such large
potential benefits, the study found that
only about 20 to 25 percent of hospitals
have adopted HIT systems.
It is important to note the caveats to
the RAND study. The projected savings
are across the health care sector, and
any Federal savings would be a reduced
percentage. In addition, there are
significant assumptions made in the
RAND study. National savings are
projected in some cases based on one or
two small studies. Also, the study
assumes patient compliance, in the form
of participation in disease management
programs and following medical advice.
For these reasons, extreme caution
should be used in interpreting these
results.
There are some mixed signals about
the potential of HIT to reduce costs.
Some studies have indicated that HIT
adoption does not necessarily lead to
lower costs and improved quality. In
addition, some industry experts have
stated that factors such as an aging
population, medical advances, and
increasing provider expenses would
offset any projected savings.
In his 2004 State of the Union
Address, President Bush announced a
plan to ensure that most Americans
have electronic health records within 10
years.29 One part of this plan involves
developing voluntary standards and
promoting the adoption of interoperable
HIT systems that use these standards.
The 2007 Budget states that ‘‘The
Administration supports the adoption of
health information technology (IT) as a
normal cost of doing business to ensure
patients receive high quality care.’’
Over the past several years, CMS has
undertaken several activities to promote
the adoption and effective use of HIT in
coordination with other Federal
agencies and with the Office of the
National Coordinator for Health
Information Technology. One of those
activities is promotion of data standards
for clinical information, as well as for
claims and administrative data. In
addition, through our 8th Scope of Work
contract with the QIOs, we are offering
assistance to hospitals on how to adopt
and redesign care processes to
effectively use HIT to improve the
quality of care for Medicare
beneficiaries, including computerized
physician order entry (CPOE) and bar
coding systems. In section IV.A.3. of the
FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR
29 Transforming Health Care: The President’s
Health Information Technology Plan, available at:
https://www.whitehouse.gov/infocus/technology/
economic_policy200404/chap3.html.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48054
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
24095), we again invited comments on
streamlining the submission of clinical
quality data by using standards-based
electronic medical records. (We used
the term ‘‘electronic medical records’’ in
section IV.A.3. instead of the term
‘‘electronic health records’’ that is used
in this section in order to maintain
consistency with our request for
comments in the FY 2006 IPPS final
rule.) Finally, our Premier Hospital
Quality Incentive Demonstration
provides additional financial payments
for hospitals that achieve improvements
in quality, which effective HIT systems
can facilitate.
We are considering the role of
interoperable HIT systems in increasing
the quality of hospital services while
avoiding unnecessary costs. As noted
above, the Administration supports the
adoption of HIT as a normal cost of
doing business. Whereas payments
under the IPPS do not vary depending
on the adoption and use of HIT,
hospitals that leverage HIT to provide
better quality services may more
efficiently reap the reward of any
resulting cost savings. In addition, the
adoption and use of HIT may contribute
to improved processes and outcomes of
care, including shortened hospital stays
and the avoidance of adverse drug
reactions.
In the preamble to the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24101), we sought
comments on our statutory authority to
encourage the adoption and use of HIT.
We also sought comments on the
appropriate role of HIT in any valuebased purchasing program, beyond the
intrinsic incentives of the IPPS, to
provide efficient care, encourage the
avoidance of unnecessary costs, and
increase quality of care. In addition, we
sought comments on promotion of the
use of effective HIT through hospital
conditions of participation (CoPs),
perhaps by adding a requirement that
hospitals use HIT that is compliant with
and certified in its use of the HIT
standards adopted by the Secretary. We
anticipate that the American Health
Information Community will provide
advice to the Secretary on these issues.
We received 30 comments on this
section. Below is a summary of the
comments addressing: (1) CMS’’
statutory authority to encourage
adoption of effective health information
technology (HIT); (2) the role that HIT
should play in value-based purchasing;
and (3) whether CMS should promote
the adoption of effective HIT through
our CoPs. In addition to these areas in
which we sought comments, we also
received several comments on the
challenges of implementing HIT, which
were particularly focused on
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
overcoming the high cost of
implementation. We conclude the
summary with additional commenter
input on the adoption and use of HIT.
Comment: Seven comments addressed
our statutory authority to encourage
adoption and use of HIT. Two of the
seven commenters stated that the HHS
has the authority to encourage adoption
of HIT. Those commenters referred to
the Hill Burton Act, the Medicare
Modernization Act, the Deficit
Reduction Act, and the FY 2006 Health
and Human Services Appropriations
Act as bases for our statutory authority.
Other commenters stated that we do not
have the authority to encourage
adoption and use of HIT. Those
commenters pointed out the need for
legislation to specifically authorize
support for HIT implementation.
Nineteen commenters addressed the
role of HIT in a value-based purchasing
program. Only 2 of the 19 commenters
stated that HIT should be directly tied
to value-based purchasing. An
overwhelming majority of the
commenters believed that HIT funding
should not be tied to value-based
purchasing; rather those commenters
stated that HIT implementation should
be tied to increases in hospital payment.
However, nearly all of the commenters
agreed that use of effective HIT could
increase health care quality, efficiency,
patient safety, and care coordination. A
few commenters recognized that HIT
will likely reduce the burden of
reporting to a value-based purchasing
system.
We received 14 comments on the
promotion of HIT through our CoPs. Of
those comments, only three were in
favor of including HIT in the CoPs. Of
these comments, only three were in
favor of including adoption of certified,
interoperable HIT in the CoPs. The
majority of commenters opposed this
proposal and termed such a requirement
a potential ‘‘unfunded mandate.’’
There were a total of 19 comments
addressing the high costs associated
with HIT implementation. Commenters
identified cost as the greatest barrier to
HIT implementation and stated that the
short term benefits do not justify the
costs. Several commenters noted that
HIT is a public good and felt strongly
that funding for HIT implementation
should be provided through government
loan guarantees and grants. Two
commenters felt that safety-net hospitals
should be the primary beneficiaries of
any federal funding for HIT. One
commenter observed that the
governments of other countries funds
HIT. Nine commenters observed that the
proposed rule failed to recognize that a
major finding of the RAND study was
PO 00000
Frm 00186
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
that HIT investments accrue more to the
payers and purchasers than to hospitals
and health systems, which the
commenters believed indicates that
purchasers and plans should make a
greater share of investment in HIT.
We received 11 comments addressing
the challenges of HIT implementation
beyond costs. Many of the commenters
noted that HIT adoption takes careful
planning and requires many internal
workflow process changes. Several
comments addressed the variation in
health care delivery systems and the
vastly different needs for HIT across
systems, as well as vastly differing
abilities to accomplish HIT
implementation. Many felt strongly that
inoperability standards must precede
implementation.
Several thoughtful ideas were
addressed by a small proportion of
commenters. Two commenters felt that
until HIT is fully implemented,
hospitals should be required to report a
unique identifier for each coded
procedure, capture referring and
ordering providers for each procedure,
record vital signs at presentation,
include any do not resuscitate (DNR)
orders, and record time of admission.
Along the same lines, another
commenter felt that until HIT is in
place, hospitals should be required to
notify dialysis facilities via phone, fax,
or e-mail, when a kidney failure patient
is admitted.
Response: We thank all commenters
for their thoughtful and valuable
discussion of the issues. In the HIT
section of the preamble to the proposed
rule, we recognized the potential for
effective HIT to facilitate improvements
in the quality and efficiency of health
care services. We also pointed out CMS’
promotion of the adoption and effective
use of HIT in coordination with other
Federal agencies and the Office of the
National Coordinator of Health
Information Technology. Here, we will
discuss three areas that we are
emphasizing to promote the effective
use of HIT, in light of the comments we
received: (1) Value-based purchasing,
(2) the e-prescribing rule, and (3)
infrastructure and interoperability
standards. We believe that these
activities will address the barriers to
HIT implementation that were
presented by the commenters and will
increase the benefits of HIT adoption
relative to the costs.
We continue our work toward the
implementation of value-based
purchasing payment system reforms
because we believe that, among other
advantages, value-based purchasing can
encourage hospitals to invest in
activities , such as effective HIT, that
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
have the potential to improve quality
and decrease unnecessary costs.
However, linking a portion of Medicare
payments to valid measures of quality
and effective use of resources could give
hospitals more direct incentives to
implement innovative ideas and
approaches that may result in improved
value of care. We agree with the
commenters that noted that the use of
effective HIT could increase quality,
efficiency, patient safety, and care
coordination. We also agree with the
commenters that noted that effective use
of HIT can be used to decrease the
burden of reporting to value-based
purchasing programs. However, we
disagree with the commenters that
recommended direct government
funding of HIT. As stated in the
President’s 2007 Budget, ‘‘the
Administration supports the adoption of
[HIT] as a normal cost of doing business
to ensure patients receive high quality
care.’’
Commenters noted that multiple
stakeholders in the health care system,
including purchasers and payers,
benefit from provider adoption and use
of effective HIT and should share in the
cost. CMS and OIG are in the process of
issuing final rules to allow hospitals and
other health care providers under some
circumstances to donate electronic
prescribing and electronic health
records technology to physicians and
others without running afoul of the
Stark (physician self-referral) and antikickback statutes. We believe that these
rules will facilitate the adoption of HIT
by physicians and other health care
providers who might otherwise have
been unable or unwilling to invest in
the technology. We also believe that
these regulatory changes will help to
stimulate the adoption of effective HIT,
and that, as HIT use spreads, the
benefits relative to the costs of
implementation may increase for all
stakeholders.
The majority of commenters pointed
out that the current lack of HIT
infrastructure, including lack of
interoperability standards, is a major
obstacle to adoption and effective use of
HIT. To address the lack of
infrastructure, the Secretary has
undertaken a national strategy that calls
for Federal agencies to collaborate with
private stakeholders in the development
of architecture, standards, certification
processes, and methods of governance
to facilitate the adoption of effective
HIT. In September 2005, the Secretary
selected 16 commissioners to serve on
the American Health Information
Community (AHIC), which is a federally
chartered collaborative forum of private
and public interests charged with
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
advising the Secretary on how to make
health information digital and
interoperable. The goals of the
Community include immediate access
to vital medical information at the point
of care, privacy protection, better data
for research, and overall cost savings.
The work of the Community has been
divided among four workgroups: (1) the
Electronic Health Records Workgroup,
(2) the Chronic Care Workgroup, (3) the
Consumer Empowerment Workgroup,
and (4) the Biosurveillance Workgroup.
The AHIC Workgroups have made
recommendations, as their initial
‘‘breakthroughs,’’ pertaining to: an
electronic medication summary and
registration history; secure messaging
capabilities for individuals with chronic
disease; biosurveillance monitoring;
and, through secure means, broadening
the availability and access to current
and historical laboratory results and
interpretations. More information about
the Community is available at: https://
www.hhs.gov/healthit/ahic.html.
In conclusion, we are not adopting at
this time our proposal to require
adoption of certified, interoperable HIT
as a Medicare CoP. Rather, we are
reserving judgment on the imposition of
such a requirement and will continue to
research the feasibility of doing so. We
may revisit this issue in the FY 2008
IPPS proposed rule or in another
rulemaking proceeding.
C. Sole Community Hospitals (SCHs)
(§ 412.92) and Medicare-Dependent,
Small Rural Hospitals (MDHs)
(§ 412.108)
1. Background
Under the IPPS, special payment
protections are provided to a sole
community hospital (SCH). Section
1886(d)(5)(D)(iii) of the Act defines an
SCH as a hospital that, by reason of
factors such as isolated location,
weather conditions, travel conditions,
absence of other like hospitals (as
determined by the Secretary), or
historical designation by the Secretary
as an essential access community
hospital, is the sole source of inpatient
hospital services reasonably available to
Medicare beneficiaries. The regulations
that set forth the criteria that a hospital
must meet to be classified as an SCH are
located in § 412.92.
Under the IPPS, separate special
payment protections also are provided
to a Medicare-dependent, small rural
hospital (MDH). Section
1886(d)(5)(G)(iv) of the Act defines an
MDH as a hospital that is located in a
rural area, has not more than 100 beds,
is not an SCH, and that has a high
percentage of Medicare discharges (not
PO 00000
Frm 00187
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48055
less than 60 percent in its 1987 cost
reporting year or in 2 of its most recent
3 audited and settled Medicare cost
reporting years). The regulations that set
forth the criteria that a hospital must
meet to be classified as an MDH are
located in § 412.108.
Although SCHs and MDHs are paid
under special payment methodologies,
they are section 1886(d) hospitals. Like
all section 1886(d) IPPS hospitals, SCHs
and MDHs are paid for their discharges
based on the DRG weights calculated
under section 1886(d)(4) of the Act.
Effective with hospital cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2000, section 1886(d)(5)(D)(i) of the Act
(as amended by section 6003(e) of Pub.
L. 101–239) and section 1886(b)(3)(I) of
the Act (as added by section 405 of Pub.
L. 106–113 and further amended by
section 213 of Pub. L. 106–554), provide
that SCHs are paid based on whichever
of the following rates yields the greatest
aggregate payment to the hospital for the
cost reporting period:
• The Federal rate applicable to the
hospital;
• The updated hospital-specific rate
based on FY 1982 costs per discharge;
• The updated hospital-specific rate
based on FY 1987 costs per discharge;
or
• The updated hospital-specific rate
based on FY 1996 costs per discharge.
For purposes of payment to SCHs for
which the FY 1996 hospital-specific rate
yields the greatest aggregate payment,
payments for discharges during FYs
2001, 2002, and 2003 were based on a
blend of the FY 1996 hospital-specific
rate and the greater of the Federal rate
or the updated FY 1982 or FY 1987
hospital-specific rate. For discharges
during FY 2004 and subsequent fiscal
years, payments based on the FY 1996
hospital-specific rate are 100 percent of
the updated FY 1996 hospital-specific
rate.
For each cost reporting period, the
fiscal intermediary determines which of
the payment options will yield the
highest rate of payment to the SCH.
Payments are automatically made at the
highest rate using the best data available
at the time the fiscal intermediary
makes the determination. However, it
may not be possible for the fiscal
intermediary to determine in advance
precisely which of the rates will yield
the highest payment by year’s end. In
many instances, it is not possible to
forecast the outlier payments, the
amount of the DSH adjustment, or the
IME adjustment, all of which are
applicable only to payments based on
the Federal rate. The fiscal intermediary
makes a final adjustment at the close of
the cost reporting period after it
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48056
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
determines precisely which of the
payment rates would yield the highest
payment to the hospital.
If an SCH disagrees with the fiscal
intermediary’s determination regarding
the final amount of program payment to
which it is entitled, it has the right to
appeal the fiscal intermediary’s decision
in accordance with the procedures set
forth in Subpart R of Part 405, which
concern provider payment
determinations and appeals.
Through and including FY 2006,
under section 1886(d)(5)(G) of the Act,
MDHs are paid based on the Federal
national rate or, if higher, the Federal
national rate plus 50 percent of the
difference between the Federal national
rate and the updated hospital-specific
rate based on FY 1982 or FY 1987 costs
per discharge, whichever is higher.
However, section 5003 of Pub. L. 109–
171 (DRA) modified these rules for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2006. Section 5003(c) changed the 50percent adjustment to 75 percent.
Section 5003(b) requires that an MDH
use the 2002 cost reporting year as its
base year (that is, the FY 2002 hospitalspecific rate), if that use results in a
higher payment. An MDH does not have
the option to use its FY 1996 hospitalspecific rate. We discussed our
proposed changes to implement section
5003 of the DRA in section IV.C.4 of the
preamble to the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule (71 FR 24104).
2. Volume Decrease Adjustment for
SCHs and MDHs
Section 1886(d)(5)(D)(ii) of the Act
requires that the Secretary make a
payment adjustment to an SCH that
experiences a decrease of more than 5
percent in its total number of inpatient
discharges from one cost reporting
period to the next, if the circumstances
leading to the decline in discharges
were beyond the SCH’s control. Section
1886(d)(5)(G)(iii) of the Act requires that
the Secretary make a payment
adjustment to an MDH that experiences
a decrease of more than 5 percent in its
total number of inpatient discharges
from one cost reporting period to the
next, if the circumstances leading to the
decline in discharges were beyond the
MDH’s control. These adjustments were
designed to compensate an SCH or MDH
for the fixed costs it incurs in the year
following the reduction in discharges
(this is, the second year), which it may
be unable to reduce. Such costs include
the maintenance of necessary core staff
and services. Our records indicate that
three to four SCHs/MDHs request this
adjustment each year.
However, we believe that not all staff
costs can be considered fixed costs.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Using a standardized formula specified
by us, the SCH or MDH must
demonstrate that it appropriately
adjusted the number of staff in inpatient
areas of the hospital based on the
decrease in the number of inpatient
days. This formula examines nursing
staff in particular. If an SCH or MDH has
an excess number of nursing staff, the
cost of maintaining those staff members
is deducted from the total adjustment.
One exception to this policy is that no
SCH or MDH may reduce its number of
staff to a level below what is required
by State or local law. In other words, an
SCH or MDH will not be penalized for
maintaining a level of staff that is
consistent with State or local
requirements.
The process for determining the
amount of the volume decrease
adjustment can be found in section
2810.1 of the Provider Reimbursement
Manual. Fiscal intermediaries are
responsible for establishing whether an
SCH or MDH is eligible for a volume
decrease adjustment and, if so, the
amount of the adjustment. To qualify for
this adjustment, the SCH or MDH must
demonstrate that: (a) A 5 percent or
more decrease of total discharges has
occurred; and (b) the circumstance that
caused the decrease in discharges was
beyond the control of the hospital. Once
the fiscal intermediary has established
that the SCH or MDH satisfies these two
requirements, it will calculate the
adjustment. The adjustment amount is
determined by subtracting the second
year’s DRG payment from the lesser of:
(a) The second year’s costs minus any
adjustment for excess staff; or (b) the
previous year’s costs multiplied by the
appropriate IPPS update factor minus
any adjustment for excess staff. The
SCH or MDH receives the difference in
a lump-sum payment.
The adjustment for excess staff is
currently broken into two parts: the
routine acute care area (excluding
intensive care unit areas) excess staff
adjustment and the intensive care unit
excess staff adjustment. (For purposes of
this section of the preamble, any
subsequent references to the routine
acute care area of an SCH or MDH refer
to the routine acute care area excluding
any intensive care unit areas.) In order
to determine whether or not the hospital
is appropriately staffing its routine acute
care and its intensive care unit area, the
fiscal intermediary compares the
hospital’s actual number of nursing staff
in each area with the staffing of like-size
hospitals in the same census region.
Currently, fiscal intermediaries obtain
average nurse staffing data from the
American Hospital Association’s HAS/
Monitrend Data Book. (More
PO 00000
Frm 00188
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
information on the HAS/Monitrend Data
Book follows.) If a hospital employs
more than the reported average number
of nurses in the routine acute care or
intensive care unit area for hospitals of
its size and census region, the fiscal
intermediary reduces the amount of the
adjustment by the cost of maintaining
the additional staff. The amount of the
reduction is calculated by multiplying
the actual number of nursing staff above
the reported average by the average
nurse salary for that hospital as reported
on the Medicare cost report. The
complete process for determining the
amount of the adjustment can be found
at section 2810.1 of the Provider
Reimbursement Manual.
Representatives from several SCH and
MDH hospitals have contacted CMS
with concerns regarding the current use
of the HAS/Monitrend data for
determining the volume decrease
adjustment for SCHs and MDHs.
Because the most recent HAS/
Monitrend Data Book was published in
1989 and is no longer updated, the
hospitals expressed concern that the
information in the publication is too
outdated for current use. Therefore, in
the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR
24102), we presented for public
comment a new methodology for
calculating the adjustment for excess
staff.
a. HAS/Monitrend Data
From the mid-1960’s to 1989, the
Healthcare Administrative Services
Division of the American Hospital
Association (AHA) published
biannually the HAS/Monitrend Data
Book, a collection of aggregate hospital
statistics. Hospitals completed surveys
based on 6 months of data; these data
were categorized into one of five bedsize groups and into one of nine census
regions. The bed size groups were 0–49,
50–99, 100–199, 200–399, and 400 or
more beds. The census regions include:
(1) New England (Connecticut, Maine,
Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode
Island, and Vermont); (2) Middle
Atlantic (New Jersey, New York, and
Pennsylvania); (3) South Atlantic
(Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida,
Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina,
South Carolina, Virginia, and West
Virginia); (4) East North Central
(Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and
Wisconsin); (5) East South Central
(Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi, and
Tennessee); (6) West North Central
(Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri,
Nebraska, North Dakota, and South
Dakota); (7) West South Central
(Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and
Texas); (8) Mountain (Arizona,
Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming); and (9)
Pacific (Alaska, California, Hawaii,
Oregon, and Washington).
The survey collected data on nearly
400 items pertaining to utilization,
resource allocation, departmental
productivity, departmental direct
expenses, and staffing. In order for
aggregate data to be published for a
category, at least three hospitals in the
same census region and bed-size group
had to have responded to the survey.
For the final 1989 publication, 996 acute
care hospitals completed the survey.
CMS has used the HAS/Monitrend Data
Book since 1984 to determine the
volume decrease adjustment for SCHs;
the data also have been used for the
volume decrease adjustment for MDHs
since 1990. In particular, CMS has used
the HAS/Monitrend data on the number
of paid nursing hours per patient day
(‘‘paid hours/patient day’’) in both the
general acute care area (‘‘Medical and
Surgical Units’’) and the intensive care
unit (‘‘Med & Surg Intensive Care
Unit’’). More information on the HAS/
Monitrend Data Book is available from
the American Hospital Association, 840
North Lake Shore Drive, Chicago,
Illinois 60611.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
b. HAS/Monitrend Data Book
Replacement Alternative
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24102), we proposed an alternative
method for determining an SCH’s or
MDH’s target number of core staff using
data from the Medicare cost report and
the occupational mix survey. However,
this methodology would only establish
one combined average number of
nursing hours per patient day for both
the inpatient routine care and the
intensive care unit areas. We proposed
to use the Medicare cost report and
occupational mix survey data beginning
with requests for adjustments for FY
2008 cost reports. We invited comments
from the public on this proposal.
(1) Occupational Mix Survey
As discussed in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24075), the CMS
occupational mix survey collects from
each hospital data on the mix of
employees in the areas of the hospital
payable under the IPPS for a limited
number of hospital occupational
categories. For the 2006 survey, these
categories include registered nurses,
licensed practical nurses, aides,
orderlies, attendants, and medical
assistants. The registered nurse
subcategory includes two functional
subcategories: management personnel
and staff nurses or clinicians. For
example, hospitals may choose to
employ different combinations of
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
registered nurses, licensed practical
nurses, and nurses’ aides for the
purpose of providing nursing care to
their patients. The varying labor costs
associated with these choices reflect
hospital management decisions rather
than geographic differences in the costs
of labor. The data collected on the
survey are used to adjust hospitals’
wage data to account for each hospital’s
mix within the general occupational
categories. Hospitals completed the first
occupational mix survey using FY 2003
data. A second survey will be completed
this year (FY 2006).
Under the proposed method, we
would calculate the nursing hours per
inpatient day for each SCH or MDH by
dividing the number of paid nursing
hours (for registered nurses, licensed
practical nurses, and nursing aides)
reported on the occupational mix survey
by the number of inpatient days
reported on the Medicare cost report.
The results would be grouped into the
same bed-size groups and census
regions as the HAS/Monitrend Data
Book. CMS would publish the mean
number of nursing hours per patient day
for each census region and bed-size
group in the Federal Register. (We
proposed to include licensed practical
nurse and nursing aide hours as well as
registered nurse hours to reflect the
various levels of nursing staff employed
by hospitals to provide direct patient
care.)
The results that would be published
in the Federal Register would be the
target number of core nursing hours per
patient day. For purposes of the volume
decrease adjustment, the published data
would be utilized in the same way as
the HAS/Monitrend data: The fiscal
intermediary would multiply the SCH’s
or MDH’s number of inpatient days by
the applicable published hours per
patient day. This figure would be
divided by the average number of
worked hours per year per nurse (for
example, 2,080 for a standard 40-hour
week). The result would be the target
number of core nursing staff for the
particular SCH or MDH. If necessary,
the cost of any excess staff (number of
FTEs that exceed the published number)
would be removed from the second
year’s costs or, if applicable, the
previous year’s costs multiplied by the
IPPS update factor when determining
the volume decrease adjustment.
Because we would consider registered
nurses, licensed practical nurses, and
nursing aides, the fiscal intermediary
would calculate the excess staff
adjustment by multiplying the number
of excess staff by the average salary
among the three groups, taking into
account how many registered nurses,
PO 00000
Frm 00189
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48057
licensed practical nurses, and nursing
aides work at the facility. (For instance,
if the hospital’s average salary for a
registered nurse is $50,000 and the
hospital’s average salary for a licensed
practical nurse is $30,000 and the
hospital employs 5 registered nurses, 3
licensed practical nurses, and no
nursing aides, the calculated average
salary would be $42,500 for one FTE (((5
× $50,000) + (3 × $30,000))/8 = $42,500).
We proposed to use the results of the
FY 2006 occupational mix survey and
begin applying the proposed
methodology for adjustments resulting
from a decrease in discharges between
FYs 2007 to 2008. Because the
occupational mix survey is conducted
once every 3 years, we would update
the data set every 3 years. We proposed
to use the FY 2006 survey results and
not to utilize the FY 2003 survey results
to take into account comments we
received in response to the first set of
results from the occupational mix
survey, and to ensure that hospitals
have had some experience with the
occupational mix survey before it is
used in determining these adjustments.
Because we have used the HAS/
Monitrend data for so many years, we
stated our belief that it was appropriate
to continue to use these data for one
more year and wait for the results of the
FY 2006 survey. We stated that this
would give hospitals an opportunity to
have some experience with the
occupational mix survey before it is
used in these adjustments, and would
allow us to compare the data from the
FY 2006 occupational mix survey with
the data reported in the 2003 survey, if
necessary. However, for purposes of
describing how we would implement
this methodology, we applied the
proposed calculation to the FY 2003
occupational mix survey data. While we
did not propose to use the FY 2003 data,
we stated our belief that it was the best
data available at the time to help
explain our proposed methodology.
To calculate the results below, we
merged the FY 2003 occupational mix
survey results into the FY 2003 cost
report file. We eliminated all
observations for non-IPPS providers,
providers who failed to complete the
occupational mix survey, and providers
for which provider numbers, bed counts
and/or day counts were missing. We
also only included providers with 12
months’ worth of data. This resulted in
a pool of approximately 3,541 providers.
For each provider in this pool, we
calculated the number of nursing hours
by adding the number of registered
nurse, license practical nurse, and
nursing aide hours reported on the
occupational mix survey. We divided
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48058
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
the result of this calculation by the total
number of inpatient days reported on
the cost report to determine the number
of nursing hours per patient day.
For purposes of calculating the census
regional averages for the various bedsize groups, we proposed to only
include observations that fall within 3
standard deviations of the mean of all
observations, thus removing potential
outliers in the data. Below are the
results of this calculation.
We realize that, in the chart, some
results may appear to be anomalous (for
example, 0–49 beds for census regions
4, 6, and 8). We believe a small number
of outlier data may have skewed the
mean, which was the basis for
identifying data within 3 standard
deviations to include in the
calculations. Therefore, we solicited
comments on whether we should
consider another method for
determining the appropriateness of
using available data in calculating the
average number of nursing hours per
patient day. For instance, in this case,
the results are based on the inclusion of
data within 3 standard deviations of the
mean. Alternatively, we stated that we
could use another measure of central
tendency.
PAID NURSING HOURS PER PATIENT DAY
Census region
Number of beds
1
0–49 .................................................................................
50–99 ...............................................................................
100–199 ...........................................................................
200–399 ...........................................................................
400 or more ......................................................................
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
(2) American Hospital Association
Annual Hospital Survey
In the process of evaluating different
sources of data to replace the HAS/
Monitrend Data Book, we considered
using the results of the AHA’s Annual
Hospital Survey. This survey includes
over 700 data fields that cover facilities
and services, utilization, finances, and
staffing. On average, 6,000 hospitals
complete the survey each year. Section
E of the Annual Survey Database
includes total facility staffing data. FTE
counts are available for registered
nurses, practical and vocational nurses,
nursing assistive personnel, and other
personnel. However, FTEs in outpatient
areas, excluded units, and nursing home
units within the hospital are also
included in the aggregated FTE counts.
It is not possible to separately identify
how many of the total reported nursing
FTEs are attributable to the general
acute care facility and how many to a
distinct part unit or outpatient facility.
Due to varying staffing needs in distinct
part units and outpatient areas, in the
proposed rule we stated our belief that
it would be best for any calculation of
average staffing for the inpatient acute
care area to consist of data solely from
the inpatient acute care area of the
hospital. In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule (71 FR 24104), we requested
comments on this issue.
We received 16 public comments on
our proposal.
Comment: Many commenters believed
that it is not appropriate to use the FY
2006 occupational mix survey for
making determinations under the
volume decrease adjustment. The
commenters believed the FY 2006
occupational mix survey consists of
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
2
16.38
13.71
11.98
12.40
13.32
3
8.33
11.07
10.99
12.19
9.42
4
19.26
15.66
14.38
14.19
12.77
30.76
17.37
13.44
13.00
15.39
unreliable data due to the rushed nature
of the collection. The commenters
suggested that CMS use the AHA
Annual Survey data to determine
nursing levels per patient day. One
commenter expressed concern that the
data from the occupational mix survey
and the hospital cost report data were
not for the same time period and that
annualizing the data from the
occupational mix survey may distort the
data. Another commenter noted that the
occupational mix survey collects data
from ancillary areas similar to the AHA
Annual Survey data and, therefore, use
of either data source would result in a
similar calculation. One commenter
recommended that CMS work with the
AHA to develop a new survey tool to
collect this information. In the interim,
the commenter recommended
continuing to use the latest HAS
Monitrend data.
One commenter suggested that CMS
no longer require fiscal intermediaries
to compare a hospital’s nursing staff per
patient day with other hospitals of like
size in the same area. Rather, the
commenter suggested that fiscal
intermediaries should be able to
evaluate a hospital’s individual needs
and circumstances. The commenter also
suggested that CMS only consider
registered nurse and licensed practical
nurse hours and eliminate nursing aide
hours from the calculation. The
commenter further suggested that CMS
compare SCHs and MDHs to a smaller
sample than the current census regions;
for instance, CMS could compare
hospitals in the same State.
Response: We do not agree with the
commenters who stated that the
occupational mix survey results are
PO 00000
Frm 00190
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
5
11.72
13.69
11.93
10.57
9.51
6
26.70
15.53
17.03
16.20
19.70
7
20.50
12.51
13.91
11.35
12.36
8
31.00
16.63
14.33
14.06
17.64
9
17.39
16.11
13.32
15.33
13.32
unreliable. The data is supplied solely
by hospitals, and because this is the
second time hospitals have completed
the survey, we believe they are familiar
with the requirements and are providing
accurate information. In addition,
although the collection may have been
more hurried in 2006 due to the
Bellevue decision, as explained in
section III.C. of this preamble, hospitals
had opportunities to review, validate
and correct their occupational mix data.
For 2006, the occupational mix
collection will include three months of
data. Therefore, it will be necessary to
annualize the data to reflect staffing
levels for a one year period. We do not
believe this distorts an individual
hospital’s average staffing levels
throughout the year unless the hospital
experiences a unique event that either
greatly increases or reduces hospital
utilization and/or the hospital’s ability
to recruit and maintain staff. However,
it is for this reason that we require a
minimum number of hospitals in each
bed-size/census group to have reported
staffing data before calculating an
average for that category. We believe
that by combining the results of at least
three hospitals of like size in an area, we
reduce the chance of unique events
affecting individual hospitals distorting
the averages.
As previously mentioned, we stated
in the proposed rule that it would be
best to collect nursing data from only
the inpatient, acute care portion of the
hospital and that this would be a
justification for using occupational mix
survey data. However, in this final rule,
we are correcting this statement, since
the occupational mix survey—like the
wage survey—collects data on both the
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
inpatient and outpatient areas of the
hospital. Also, it is our understanding
that hospital nursing staff may, and
often do, rotate between the inpatient
and outpatient areas of the hospital as
necessary. In addition, inpatients often
utilize services in the outpatient (or
ancillary) areas of the hospital. Given
that the occupational mix survey
collects data on both outpatient and
inpatient areas of the hospital, and
given that most commenters stated that
they preferred to use the AHA Annual
Survey data and not the occupational
mix data, our final policy will be to
allow an SCH or MDH that has
experienced a 5 percent or greater
reduction in the number of discharges
from one cost reporting period to the
next the option of using either the AHA
Annual Survey results or the
occupational mix data to compare the
number of hospital’s core staff with
other like-sized hospitals in its
geographic area.
We recognize that the AHA data
includes staffing data from distinct part
units and skilled nursing facilities.
While it is possible to identify which
hospitals have skilled nursing facilities,
it is not possible to distinguish between
those hospitals with distinct part units
and those without. Our data indicate
that there are currently 1230 hospitalbased skilled nursing facilities. If we
eliminated all hospitals with skilled
nursing facilities from the pool of
comparison hospitals that responded to
the FY 2004 AHA Annual Survey,
roughly 3,000 hospitals would remain.
We believe this is a sufficient number of
hospitals with which to calculate
staffing averages and our final policy
will be that when using the AHA
Annual Survey, we will eliminate
hospitals with hospital-based skilled
nursing facilities. Also, consistent with
the HAS/Monitrend Databook, we will
only calculate the average number of
nursing staff for a bed-size/census group
if there are data available for three or
more hospitals.
In order to account for staff in the
distinct part units, we would include in
the patient day count the number of
inpatient days from these units. While
this may still lower the average number
of staff per patient day, as discussed in
more detail later in this section, a
hospital may decide whether this data
most closely resembles its staffing or
whether the HAS/Monitrend data or
occupational mix data better represents
hospitals in its bed-size/census group.
In light of this, we do not believe it is
necessary for the AHA to develop a new
survey tool to collect staffing
information for purposes of this
adjustment.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
In response to the commenter who
suggested that the fiscal intermediaries
take into account the individual
circumstances of each SCH/MDH that
experiences a decrease in discharges, we
note that the commenter failed to
suggest how this may be achieved. In
light of our goal of maintaining a
uniform standard for calculating the
amount of the volume decrease
adjustments, we believe that it is more
appropriate for the fiscal intermediaries
to utilize either the same or comparable
data sources for all hospitals. The AHA
Annual Survey, occupational mix
survey, and HAS/Monitrend Databook
offer this standard. We note, however,
that the AHA Annual Survey, the
occupational mix survey and the HAS/
Monitrend Databook are not identical
data sources, as described above.
Therefore, fiscal intermediaries and
hospitals should work together to
determine which data source best
represents the staffing needs of the
hospital. In addition, the fiscal
intermediaries must consider any
minimum staffing requirement set by
the State. If the average number of
nursing hours per patient day for a bedsize/census group is below the State’s
minimum staffing requirement, the
fiscal intermediaries may not reduce the
amount of a hospital’s volume decrease
adjustment to reflect a core number of
nursing staff below what is required by
law. In addition, we are continuing to
employ the census areas defined by the
AHA in the HAS/Monitrend Databook.
The larger size of the census areas
ensures that a sufficient number of
hospitals respond in every bed-size
category for each census region.
We have considered the commenter’s
statement that we should only consider
registered nurse and licensed practical
nurse staff when computing the number
of nursing staff per patient day.
However, we believe that nursing aides
play an integral part in the delivery of
nursing care and, therefore, should be
considered part of the hospital’s nursing
staff for purposes of this determination.
Therefore, we will continue to calculate
the average number of reported
registered nurse, licensed practical
nurse, and nursing aide hours per
patient day. As previously noted, the
registered nurse, licensed practical
nurse, and nursing aide FTEs in the
AHA Annual Survey data include
employees from outpatient areas and
distinct part units of the hospital.
Therefore, the fiscal intermediaries will
include SCH or MDH registered nurse,
licensed practical nurse, and nursing
aide FTEs for all areas of the hospital,
PO 00000
Frm 00191
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48059
including any distinct part units, when
conducting the comparison.
We had proposed to use the results of
the 2006 occupational mix survey but
not until FY 2008. At that time, we were
not aware that we would have the
results of the FY 2006 survey available
to use for adjustments for decreases in
discharges occurring in 2006. However,
due to the shortened collection period
necessitated by the decision in Bellevue
Hospital Center v. Leavitt, these data
will now be available for use for volume
decrease adjustments for decreases in
discharges between the 2005 and 2006
cost reporting periods. These data will
be updated every 3 years. The results of
the FY 2006 survey may be used for
volume decrease adjustment
calculations for decreases in discharges
occurring during the 2006, 2007 and
2008 cost reporting periods.
After consideration of the public
comments received, we are finalizing a
policy to allow SCHs and MDHs the
option of using the results of (1) the
occupational mix survey, (2) the AHA
Annual Survey, or (3) the HAS/
Monitrend Databook for purposes of
determining the amount of the volume
decrease adjustment for any open
adjustment requests. Beginning with
adjustment requests for decreases in
discharges occurring beginning with
2007, the amount of the volume
decrease adjustment will be based on
either the AHA Annual Survey or the
occupational mix survey results.
Therefore a SCH or MDH that has
experienced a decrease in discharges in
2007 as compared to 2006 will no longer
be permitted to use the HAS/Monitrend
Databook results to calculate the amount
of the volume decrease adjustment.
If the SCH/MDH opts to use the
results of the occupational mix survey,
the fiscal intermediaries will determine
the SCH’s or MDH’s total hospital
nursing staff per inpatient day for the
year of the volume decrease and
compare that figure to the number
published for the hospital’s census area
and bed-size division. As described in
the FY 2007 proposed rule, we will
calculate the average number of nursing
hours per patient day for all IPPS
hospitals that responded to the
occupational mix survey. We will begin
by annualizing the results. We will then
divide this figure by the number of
inpatient days reported on the hospital
cost report. At this point, we will
eliminate results that fall outside three
standard deviations of the mean in order
to eliminate any potential outlier data.
Hospitals will then be grouped by bedsize and census area and the average
number of nursing hours per patient day
will be calculated. We will post the
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48060
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
results of the occupational mix survey
grouped by census division and bed-size
group on the CMS Web site. Core
staffing results and salaries will be
compared to the salaries reported for
both the inpatient and outpatient areas
of the hospital.
In place of the occupational mix
survey results (or the HAS/Monitrend
Databook, which may be used only for
open adjustment requests) hospitals
may also opt to use the AHA Annual
Survey results. Where available, these
AHA Annual Survey Results may be
used for all open adjustment requests, as
well as for requests involving decreases
experienced in 2007 or thereafter.
Currently, the AHA has published the
annual results including the FY 2004
survey. Fiscal intermediaries will use
the survey results from the year in
which the decrease occurred. For
instance, if a hospital experiences a
decrease between its 2002 and 2003 cost
reporting periods, the fiscal
intermediaries will compare the
hospital’s 2003 staffing with the results
of the FY 2003 AHA Annual Survey. We
will calculate the results of the Annual
Survey in a similar method to the
occupational mix survey (eliminating
from our data-set any hospitals with
hospital-based SNFs). We will begin by
multiplying the number of reported
nurse FTEs by 2080 to derive the
number of nursing hours per year (based
on a 40 hour work week). We will then
divide this number by the total number
of inpatient days, including inpatient
days from distinct part units, as
reported on the hospital cost report. We
will then eliminate all providers with
results outside of three standard
deviations from the mean. The hospitals
will then be grouped by bed-size and
census area and the average number of
nursing hours per patient day will be
calculated for each category. If the
hospital chooses to use the results of the
AHA Annual Survey, the fiscal
intermediary will include the hospital’s
number of nursing staff in the distinct
part units, as well as distinct part unit
inpatient days, in the determination.
Bed-size groups will also be determined
based on the total number of beds in the
inpatient areas and distinct part units as
reported on the hospital cost report. We
will post the results of the Annual
Survey grouped by census division and
bed-size group on the CMS Web site. If
a particular year is unavailable on the
Web site or there are no results for a
particular bed-size/census group, the
fiscal intermediaries may contact CMS
for the data.
If the fiscal intermediary determines
that the SCH or MDH has a
disproportionately high number of staff
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
on a per inpatient day basis as
compared to area hospitals, the fiscal
intermediary will modify the amount of
the adjustment to reflect the cost of the
excess staff. As stated above, because we
are including registered nurses, licensed
practical nurses, and nursing aides in
this determination, the fiscal
intermediary will calculate the excess
staff adjustment by multiplying the
number of excess staff by the average
weighted salary among the three groups,
taking into account the number of
registered nurses, licensed practical
nurses, and nursing aides at the facility.
3. Mandatory Reporting Requirements
for Any Changes in the Circumstances
Under Which a Hospital Was
Designated as an SCH or MDH
Under § 412.92(b)(3) and
§ 412.108(b)(4) respectively, once a
facility has been designated as an SCH
or MDH, the classification remains in
effect without need for reapproval
unless there is a change in the hospital’s
circumstances. Currently, the
regulations do not contain an explicit
requirement that an SCH report to CMS
or the fiscal intermediary a change in
circumstances that would affect its
status as an SCH. Likewise, the current
regulations for MDHs do not contain an
explicit requirement that an MDH report
to CMS or the fiscal intermediary a
change in the circumstances affecting its
MDH status. However, the fiscal
intermediary is required to evaluate on
an ongoing basis whether a hospital
continues to qualify for MDH status.
We have become aware of several
hospitals that have been paid based on
SCH or MDH status even after the
original circumstances that led to the
respective classification changed. In the
FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR
24104), we proposed to amend
§ 412.92(b)(3) for SCHs and
§ 412.108(b)(4) for MDHs to require an
SCH or MDH to report to its appropriate
CMS Regional Office when the
circumstances under which the hospital
was approved for SCH or MDH status
have changed. The CMS Regional Office
would then determine whether the SCH
or MDH continues to meet the criteria
for classification under § 412.92 or
§ 412.108. If an SCH or MDH no longer
meets these criteria, the CMS Regional
Office would issue a letter canceling the
classification within 30 days of its
determination. If the circumstances
affecting a hospital’s SCH or MDH
classification change and the hospital
does not disclose the information to the
CMS Regional Office, CMS would
cancel the hospital’s SCH or MDH
designation effective on the earliest
discernable date on which the fiscal
PO 00000
Frm 00192
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
intermediary can determine that the
hospital no longer met the criteria for
classification.
For MDHs, this reporting requirement
is in addition to the fiscal
intermediary’s ongoing evaluations of
whether a hospital continues to qualify
for MDH status as set out in our existing
regulations at § 412.108(b)(5).
We received 41 comments on this
proposal.
Comment: Most commenters agreed
that hospitals that no longer meet the
qualification criteria for either SCH or
MDH status should not continue to be
paid as SCHs or MDHs. However,
several commenters disagreed with the
proposed requirement that an SCH or
MDH notify the CMS Regional Office
when any change in the circumstances
that led to their classification occurs.
They contended that the fiscal
intermediary should be responsible for
monitoring such conditions. One
commenter argued that hospitals should
not be required to report changes they
cannot control, such as the building of
new roads or hospitals.
Another commenter noted that some
of the criteria are very difficult for
hospitals to monitor, such as patient
stays at other hospitals in the area. The
commenter stated that to monitor these
criteria would impose a tremendous
administrative burden on SCHs and
MDHs.
One commenter suggested that if CMS
is to require that an SCH or MDH report
on changes in the circumstances that led
to its classification, the circumstances
required to be reported be limited to
those for which the hospital has readily
available data, such as the opening of a
new hospital within an SCH’s mileage
criterion. One commenter suggested that
CMS not finalize any reporting
requirement for SCHs or MDHs.
Response: We understand that some
criteria may be difficult for hospitals to
monitor. However, because a hospital
cannot control the changes in
circumstances should not imply that the
hospital not be required to report
changes of which it becomes aware. We
agree with the commenters who
suggested that certain criteria may be
excessively burdensome for a hospital to
monitor because they do not have ready
access to the necessary data. For
instance, we recognize that a hospital
may not have the resources available to
determine what percentage of patients
in their service area has been admitted
to other facilities in that area. For this
reason, CMS often provides this data to
hospitals seeking initial SCH
classification. Therefore, we are
modifying the change to the regulations
to specify that SCHs will only be
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
expected to report changes that would
effect the distance between it and
another like-hospital, its geographic
classification status (urban/rural), the
number of beds (if the SCH was eligible
under § 412.92(a)(1)(ii)), and travel time
between itself and a like-provider. For
instance, an SCH would be expected to
report the opening of a new hospital or
road, whether its geographic
classification changed from rural to
urban, and/or an increase in the number
of beds at the hospital if the SCH was
eligible under § 412.92(a)(1)(ii). An
MDH would only be required to report
if there is a change to the number of
beds in the facility that increase the bed
count to more than 100 and/or if its
geographic classification changed from
rural to urban. We will not expect an
SCH or MDH to have knowledge of
other factors that could affect SCH or
MDH status. However, if it is
subsequently shown that the hospital
had knowledge of those factors, we
would terminate SCH or MDH status as
of the date the hospital became aware of
the event. For example, we would not
expect an SCH to be aware of the
conversion of a nearby CAH to a short
term acute care hospital. However, if
there is documentation clearly
indicating that the SCH had prior
knowledge of the CAH’s conversion and
the converted hospital is located within
the mileage criterion precluding SCH
status, we will rescind the SCH
designation to the time when the
documentation indicates the SCH
became aware of the conversion. The
SCH/MDH must report any changes of
which it becomes aware that affect SCH
or MDH status within 30 days of the
event occurring. We are updating the
regulations text at § 412.92 and
§ 412.108 to reflect these requirements.
We are also modifying the proposed
change to the regulations to require that
an SCH or MDH report any changes to
the fiscal intermediary and not the
regional office. Fiscal intermediaries are
responsible for accepting and reviewing
applications for SCH and MDH
designations. Therefore, we believe it is
appropriate for all documentation to
continue to be sent to the fiscal
intermediary. The fiscal intermediary
will forward the information submitted
by the SCH or the MDH and its
recommendation to the appropriate
regional office.
Comment: Several commenters
disagreed with the proposal to
‘‘retroactively’’ withdraw SCH or MDH
classification if it could be expected that
the hospital was aware of a change in
the circumstances that led to its
classification but did not report those
changes to the fiscal intermediary. The
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
commenters noted that such a change in
reimbursement could be financially
devastating to a hospital and
recommended that CMS develop a
prospective process for withdrawing the
hospital’s special payment status. One
commenter suggested that an SCH or
MDH in such a position lose their status
immediately, but not retroactively.
Several commenters requested
clarification of how far back CMS would
retroactively terminate SCH or MDH
status.
Response: As explained earlier, we
have modified the proposal to withdraw
SCH or MDH status when the provider
was expected to be aware of limited
changes in circumstances that caused
the provider to be no longer eligible for
such designation or when
documentation shows that an SCH or
MDH was aware of a change outside of
those listed in the revised regulations at
§ 412.92(b)(3)(ii) and § 412.108(b)(4)(ii)
that would affect its classification and
did not report these changes to the fiscal
intermediary. In those circumstances,
we believe it is appropriate to withdraw
the special payment rate effective with
the date the change occurred or, with
respect to changes that an SCH or MDH
is not required to report, when the
provider becomes aware of the event.
However, we understand the need to
establish a limit to how far back CMS
may rescind SCH or MDH status. We
believe that withdrawal of the
classification status falls within the
framework of the reopening rules at 42
CFR 405.1885. Accordingly, we will
withdraw such status for cost reporting
periods that are within the 3-year
reopening period. Therefore, if the
triggering event (as noted in the revised
regulations) changes the circumstances
under which the SCH or the MDH
received such designation occurs within
the three-year reopening period, under
the reopening rules, we will withdraw
the SCH or MDH designation for those
periods. If the event occurred prior to
the 3-year reopening period, we will
only withdraw SCH or MDH designation
for those cost reporting periods subject
to the reopening period.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern that an SCH or MDH
would be penalized for a change in
circumstances even if it were unaware
of such a change.
Response: If an SCH or an MDH is not
expected to be aware of a change in
circumstances, they will not be
penalized if one has occurred and it is
not reported. We acknowledge the
commenter’s concern and as noted
above revised the regulations to take his
concern into account. If due to the
change in circumstances the SCH or the
PO 00000
Frm 00193
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48061
MDH is out of compliance with the
criteria for classification and the change
was not one of those specifically listed
above and the SCH or MDH was not
previously aware of the change, the
provider’s status will be terminated 30
days after the Regional Office has
determined that the provider no longer
meets the criteria for classification.
Comment: Several commenters
disagreed with the termination of SCH
or MDH status within 30 days of the
determination that the hospital no
longer met the qualifications for such
status. One commenter suggested that
CMS continue to pay the provider as an
SCH or MDH for either 6 months or to
the end of the cost reporting period,
whichever comes later. Several
commenters suggested that CMS extend
the period to 12 months. One
commenter requested that CMS only
finalize these policies for future SCHs
and MDHs, in effect grandfathering all
current SCHs and MDHs.
Response: We do not agree that an
SCH or an MDH that no longer meets
the eligibility requirements for such
designation should continue to receive
enhanced payments. Currently, when
the Regional Office determines that an
SCH or MDH no longer meets the
classification criteria, it issues a letter
informing the provider that in 30 days
the SCH or MDH status will terminate.
As noted above, we will only terminate
the provider’s status 30 days after the
Regional Office has determined that the
provider no longer meets the criteria for
classification if due to a change in
circumstances the SCH or the MDH is
out of compliance with the criteria for
classification and the change was not
one of those specifically listed above
and the SCH or MDH was not
previously aware of the change.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS retain the current
grandfathering provision for SCHs that
permits any hospital that was an SCH as
of December 19, 1989 to maintain that
status despite any change of
circumstances.
Response: Section 6003(e)(1) of
Pub. L. 101–239 modified the criteria for
being eligible for SCH status by
reducing the number of miles between
providers from 50 to 35 and by requiring
the Secretary to establish a criterion that
takes into consideration the travel time
between two providers. Section
6003(e)(3) of Pub. L. 101–239 exempted
hospitals that already had SCH status
from meeting either of these
requirements. In other words, any
hospital that was an SCH in 1989 is
protected under this grandfathering
provision from the mileage criterion and
whether or not it meets the criterion for
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48062
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
classification concerning travel time at
§ 412.92(a)(3). However, we note that
this grandfathering provision is limited
to these two circumstances. Hospitals
with SCH designation in effect prior to
1989 can lose SCH status if they fail to
meet any of the other eligibility criteria.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that CMS use this rule to change the
regulation at § 412.92(a)(1)(i), which
requires that no more than 25 percent of
residents who become hospital
inpatients or 25 percent of Medicare
beneficiaries who become hospital
inpatients in the hospital’s service area
are admitted to other like hospitals
within a 35-mile radius, or, if larger, the
hospital’s service area. The commenter
suggested that CMS require that either
an SCH initially meet this requirement
but later meet a lower threshold or that
the SCH be required to demonstrate
compliance in two out of the three most
recent cost reporting periods.
Response: We believe that this
comment falls outside the scope of the
proposed change in policy. However,
we will keep this comment in mind
when evaluating SCH policy in the
future.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that CMS revise the definition
of ‘‘like hospital,’’ especially in
response to the growing number of
specialty hospitals. Several commenters
recommended that CMS not consider a
specialty hospital to be a ‘‘like hospital’’
for purposes of determining eligibility
and compliance with SCH criteria. One
commenter expressed concern that the
policy of considering any hospital
whose number of inpatient days from
units or wards generally payable under
the IPPS is 8 percent or more of the total
number of inpatient days from units or
wards generally payable under the IPPS
at the SCH a ‘‘like hospital’’ is arbitrary
and should be reviewed. The
commenter suggested that CMS increase
the 8-percent threshold to at least 10
percent. Another commenter requested
that CMS allow SCHs to retain its status
even if a like hospital opens in its
service area as long as the SCH’s case
mix index exceeds those of the like
hospitals.
Response: While we understand the
commenters’ concerns, we believe that
this comment is outside of the scope of
the proposed policy change. However,
we will keep this comment in mind
when evaluating SCH policy in the
future. In the meantime, we refer
commenters to the discussion of ‘‘like
hospital’’ in the preamble of the FY
2003 IPPS final rule (67 FR 50053–56).
As we noted in that preamble, our goal
for defining ‘‘like hospital’’ was to strike
a balance between the need to ensure
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
that SCHs do not lose their special
status due to specialty hospitals opening
nearby and the need to ensure that only
hospitals that are the sole source of
short-term acute hospitals services for
their community qualify as SCHs. We
originally proposed to consider any
hospital that overlapped on 3 percent of
more of services rendered to be
considered a like hospital. However, in
response to the public comments
received, we finalized a definition of
‘‘like hospital’’ as a hospital paid under
the IPPS with 8 percent or more of the
total number of inpatient days as the
SCH.
After consideration of the public
comments received, we are finalizing a
change to the regulations to specify that
SCHs and MDHs will be required to
report to the fiscal intermediary specific
changes it becomes aware of that would
affect the criteria under which it was
eligible for such designation. For an
SCH, the changes are as follows:
distance between it and another like
hospital, its geographic classification
status (urban/rural), the number of beds
if the SCH was eligible under
§ 412.92(a)(1)(ii), and the travel time
between itself and a like-provider. An
MDH will be required to report if there
is a change to the number of beds in the
facility that increase the bed count to
more than 100 and/or if its geographic
classification changed from rural to
urban.
4. Payment Changes for MDHs Under
the DRA of 2005 (§ 412.79, § 412.90(j)
and § 412.108)
a. Background
Under § 412.108(a) of our regulations,
in order to be classified as an MDH, a
hospital must: (1) Be located in a rural
area (as defined in 42 CFR Part 412,
Subpart D); (2) have 100 or fewer beds
(as defined at § 412.105(b)) during the
cost reporting period; (3) must not be
classified as an SCH (as defined in
§ 412.92); and (4) have no less than 60
percent of its inpatient days or
discharges attributable to inpatients
receiving Medicare Part A benefits
during either its cost reporting period
beginning in FY 1987, or in two of the
last three of its audited cost reports that
have been settled.
MDHs have been eligible for a series
of special payment rates under the IPPS.
Section 6003(f) of Pub. L. 101–239
created the first IPPS special payment
methodology for MDHs. Effective for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after April 1, 1990, and ending on or
before March 31, 1993, an MDH was
paid based on whichever of the
following rates yielded the greatest
PO 00000
Frm 00194
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
aggregate payment for the cost reporting
period:
• The Federal payment rate
applicable to the MDH;
• The MDH’s updated hospitalspecific rate based on its FY 1982 base
period costs per discharge; or
• The MDH’s updated hospitalspecific rate based on its FY 1987 base
period costs per discharge.
Section 13501(e)(1) Pub. L. 103–66
extended the MDH payment provisions
through 1994 and provided that, for
discharges occurring after March 31,
1993, if an MDH’s applicable hospitalspecific rate exceeded the Federal
payment rate, the additional payment
was limited to 50 percent of the amount
by which the applicable updated
hospital-specific rate exceeded the
Federal rate. These provisions expired
effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 1994.
Section 4204(a)(3) of Pub. L. 105–33
amended sections 1886(d)(5)(G)(i) and
(d)(5)(G)(ii)(II) of the Act to reinstate
these special MDH payment provisions,
including the 50-percent limitation, for
cost reporting periods ‘‘beginning on or
after October 1, 1997, and before
October 1, 2001.’’ Section 321(b)(1) of
Pub. L. 106-113 made a technical
amendment to these provisions of the
Act (which describes the time periods
for which some of the special payment
provisions apply and the time periods
during which a hospital may be
considered an MDH under section
1886(d)(1)(G)(iv) of the Act) by striking
the language ‘‘beginning on or after
October 1, 1997, and before October 1,
2001’’ and replacing it with ‘‘discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 1997,
and before October 1, 2001’’. This
change was made effective as if
included in Pub. L. 105-33. Pub. L. 106–
113 also provided for a 5-year extension
of the MDH special payment provisions.
Section 404(a) of that law further
amended sections 1886(d)(1)(G)(i) and
(d)(1)(G)(ii)(II) of the Act by striking the
phrase ‘‘and before October 1, 2001’’
and inserting the phrase ‘‘and before
October 1, 2006’’.
Section 5003(a) of Pub. L. 109–171
(DRA of 2005) amended the MDH
special payment provisions in the Act.
It amended section 1886(d)(5)(G) of the
Act and made a conforming amendment
under section 1886(b)(3)(D) of the Act to
provide for another 5-year extension of
the special MDH payment methodology.
Under this extension, a revised special
MDH payment methodology will apply
for discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 2006, and before October 1,
2011.
As stated earlier, MDHs currently are
paid using whichever rate yields the
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
greatest aggregate payment: the Federal
payment rate or, if higher, the Federal
payment rate plus 50 percent of the
difference between the Federal payment
rate and the updated hospital-specific
rate based on FY 1982 or FY 1987 base
period costs per discharge.
Section 5003(b) of Pub. L. 109–171
provides that, for discharges occurring
on or after October 1, 2006, and before
October 1, 2011, an MDH’s updated
hospital-specific rate will be the FY
2002 base period costs per discharges if
the FY 2002 based hospital-specific rate
results in a payment increase. In cases
where no payment increase results from
using FY 2002 hospital-specific rate, an
MDH will continue to be paid based on
the higher of its updated FY 1982 or FY
1987 hospital-specific rates, if using one
of those rates results in a payment
higher than that under the Federal
payment rate. (Unlike an SCH, an MDH
does not have the option of using its
updated FY 1996 hospital-specific rate.)
Under section 5003(c) of Pub. L. 109–
171, for discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 2006, and before October 1,
2011, if an MDH’s applicable hospitalspecific rate exceeded the Federal
payment rate, the additional payment is
limited to 75 percent (as opposed to the
previous 50 percent) of the amount by
which the applicable updated hospitalspecific rate exceeded the Federal rate.
Section 5003(d) of Pub. L. 109–171
enhances the DSH adjustment for MDHs
for discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 2006. Further discussion
concerning the implementation of this
provision can be found in section
IV.F.4. of the preamble to the FY 2007
IPPS final rule.
b. Regulation Changes
In this FY 2007 IPPS final rule, we are
amending our regulations to implement
section 5003(a) through (c) of Pub. L.
109–171. We are adding a new § 412.79
that describes how we will compute and
update the MDH hospital-specific rate
based on its FY 2002 base period. In
addition, we are revising § 412.90(j) to
reflect the extension of the MDH special
payment provisions to discharges
occurring before October 1, 2011. We
also are amending § 412.108 by revising
paragraph (a) and adding a new
paragraph (c)(2)(iii) to reflect the
changes to the special payment
methodology effective for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2006,
and before October 1, 2011.
Comment: One commenter pointed
out that the proposed language in the
new § 412.79(a) in the proposed rule
differs from the language provided in
section 5003 of the statute. That is, the
proposed regulatory language reads
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
‘‘ending on or before October 1, 2001’’;
however, the commenter believed it
should read ‘‘beginning on or after
October 1, 2001’’ as specified in the
statute.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that the regulatory language
should mirror the statutory language
and are making the appropriate changes
to the regulatory language in this final
rule.
Comment: One commenter supported
the proposed changes made as well as
CMS’ timely implementation of the
provisions from the DRA of 2005.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s support.
We received no other comments on
these proposed changes. Therefore, we
are adopting the proposed changes to
the regulations as final, with the
indicated change to the regulatory text
to reflect the FY 2002 base period
statutory language.
In addition, as we proposed, in this
FY 2007 IPPS final rule, as a part of the
amendments to § 412.90(j) and
§ 412.108(a), we are making two
technical corrections. Section 412.90(j)
describes when an MDH may receive a
special payment adjustments, while
§ 412.108(a) discusses the definition of
an MDH. Each of these sections now
refers to ‘‘cost reporting periods
beginning on or after April 1, 1990 and
before October 1, 1994, or beginning on
or after October 1, 1997 and before
October 1, 2006’’. However, as noted
above, sections 1886(d)(5)(G)(i) and
(d)(5)(G)(ii)(II) of the Act, the provisions
of the Act from which these time
periods were drawn, were amended by
Pub. L. 106–113. Sections 321(b)(1) and
404(a) of Pub. L. 106–113 amended
sections 1886(d)(5)(G)(i) and (d)(5)(ii)(II)
of the Act so that the phrase in each
section ‘‘beginning on or after October 1,
1997, and before October 1, 2001’’ was
replaced with the phrase ‘‘discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 1997,
and before October 1, 2006’’. (Section
5003(a)(1) of Pub. L. 109–171 changed
the ending date in these provisions from
‘‘before October 1, 2006’’ to ‘‘before
October 1, 2011’’.)
Therefore, we are removing the
incorrect phrase ‘‘beginning on or after
October 1, 1997’’ from each of these
regulations and inserting the phrase,
‘‘discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 1997’’, to conform the
regulations to the statute.
We did not receive any public
comments on these technical changes.
5. Technical Change
As we proposed, in this final rule, we
are correcting the spelling of the word
‘‘adjustment’’ in paragraph (b)(2)(iv) of
PO 00000
Frm 00195
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48063
§ 412.92, by changing it to
‘‘adjustment’’.
We did not receive any public
comments on this technical change.
D. Rural Referral Centers (§ 412.96)
Under the authority of section
1886(d)(5)(C)(i) of the Act, the
regulations at § 412.96 set forth the
criteria that a hospital must meet in
order to qualify under the IPPS as a
rural referral center. For discharges
occurring before October 1, 1994, rural
referral centers received the benefit of
payment based on the other urban
standardized amount rather than the
rural standardized amount. Although
the other urban and rural standardized
amounts are the same for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 1994,
rural referral centers continue to receive
special treatment under both the DSH
payment adjustment and the criteria for
geographic reclassification.
Section 402 of Pub. L. 108–173 raised
the DSH adjustment for other rural
hospitals with less than 500 beds and
rural referral centers. Other rural
hospitals with less than 500 beds are
subject to a 12-percent cap on DSH
payments. Rural referral centers are not
subject to the 12 percent cap on DSH
payments that is applicable to other
rural hospitals (with the exception of
rural hospitals with 500 or more beds).
Rural referral centers are not subject to
the proximity criteria when applying for
geographic reclassification, and they do
not have to meet the requirement that a
hospital’s average hourly wage must
exceed 106 percent of the average
hourly wage of the labor market area
where the hospital is located.
Section 4202(b) of Pub. L. 105–33
states, in part, ‘‘[a]ny hospital classified
as a rural referral center by the Secretary
* * * for fiscal year 1991 shall be
classified as such a rural referral center
for fiscal year 1998 and each subsequent
year.’’ In the August 29, 1997 final rule
with comment period (62 FR 45999), we
also reinstated rural referral center
status for all hospitals that lost the
status due to triennial review or MGCRB
reclassification, but not to hospitals that
lost rural referral center status because
they were now urban for all purposes
because of the OMB designation of their
geographic area as urban. However,
subsequently, in the August 1, 2000
final rule (65 FR 47089), we indicated
that we were revisiting that decision.
Specifically, we stated that we would
permit hospitals that previously
qualified as a rural referral center and
lost their status due to OMB
redesignation of the county in which
they are located from rural to urban to
be reinstated as a rural referral center.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48064
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Otherwise, a hospital seeking rural
referral center status must satisfy the
applicable criteria. We used the
definitions of ‘‘urban’’ and ‘‘rural’’
specified in Subpart D of 42 CFR Part
412.
One of the criteria under which a
hospital may qualify as a rural referral
center is to have 275 or more beds
available for use (§ 412.96(b)(1)(ii)). A
rural hospital that does not meet the bed
size requirement can qualify as a rural
referral center if the hospital meets two
mandatory prerequisites (a minimum
CMI and a minimum number of
discharges) and at least one of three
optional criteria (relating to specialty
composition of medical staff, source of
inpatients, or referral volume)
(§ 412.96(c)(1) through (c)(5)). (See also
the September 30, 1988 Federal Register
(53 FR 38513).) With respect to the two
mandatory prerequisites, a hospital may
be classified as a rural referral center
if—
• The hospital’s CMI is at least equal
to the lower of the median CMI for
urban hospitals in its census region,
excluding hospitals with approved
teaching programs, or the median CMI
for all urban hospitals nationally; and
• The hospital’s number of discharges
is at least 5,000 per year, or, if fewer, the
median number of discharges for urban
hospitals in the census region in which
the hospital is located. (The number of
discharges criterion for an osteopathic
hospital is at least 3,000 discharges per
year, as specified in section
1886(d)(5)(C)(i) of the Act.)
referral center status for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2006, rural hospitals with fewer than
275 beds must have a CMI value for FY
2005 that is at least—
• 1.3365; or
• The median CMI value (not
transfer-adjusted) for urban hospitals
(excluding hospitals with approved
teaching programs as identified in
§ 412.105(f)) calculated by CMS for the
census region in which the hospital is
located. (See the table set forth in the
proposed FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule at
71 FR 24106.)
Based on the latest data available (FY
2005 bills received through March
2006), in addition to meeting other
criteria, if they are to qualify for initial
rural referral center status for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2006, rural hospitals with
fewer than 275 beds must have a CMI
value for FY 2005 that is at least—
• 1.3132; or
• The median CMI value (not
transfer-adjusted) for urban hospitals
(excluding hospitals with approved
teaching programs as identified in
§ 412.105(f)) calculated by CMS for the
census region in which the hospital is
located.
The final median CMI values by
region are set forth in the following
table:
1. Case-Mix Index
Section 412.96(c)(1) provides that
CMS will establish updated national
and regional CMI values in each year’s
annual notice of prospective payment
rates for purposes of determining rural
referral center status. The methodology
we use to determine the national and
regional CMI values is set forth in
regulations at § 412.96(c)(1)(ii). The
national median CMI value for FY 2007
includes all urban hospitals nationwide,
and the regional values for FY 2007 are
the median values of urban hospitals
within each census region, excluding
those hospitals with approved teaching
programs (that is, those hospitals
receiving indirect medical education
payments as provided in § 412.105(f)).
These values are based on discharges
occurring during FY 2005 (October 1,
2004 through September 30, 2005) and
include bills posted to CMS’ records
through March 2006.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24106), we proposed that, in
addition to meeting other criteria, if
they are to qualify for initial rural
1. New England (CT, ME, MA,
NH, RI, VT) ...............................
2. Middle Atlantic (PA, NJ, NY) ....
3. South Atlantic (DE, DC, FL,
GA, MD, NC, SC, VA, WV) ......
4. East North Central (IL, IN, MI,
OH, WI) .....................................
5. East South Central (AL, KY,
MS, TN) .....................................
6. West North Central (IA, KS,
MN, MO, NE, ND, SD) ..............
7. West South Central (AR, LA,
OK, TX) .....................................
8. Mountain (AZ, CO, ID, MT, NV,
NM, UT, WY) ............................
9. Pacific (AK, CA, HI, OR, WA) ..
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Case-mix
index
value
Region
1.2313
1.2619
Frm 00196
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Region
1.3252
1.3118
1.2926
1.2344
1.3872
1.3877
1.3366
Hospitals seeking to qualify as rural
referral centers or those wishing to
know how their CMI value compares to
the criteria should obtain hospitalspecific CMI values (not transferadjusted) from their fiscal
intermediaries. Data are available on the
Provider Statistical and Reimbursement
(PS&R) System. In keeping with our
policy on discharges, these CMI values
are computed based on all Medicare
patient discharges subject to the IPPS
DRG-based payment.
PO 00000
2. Discharges
Section 412.96(c)(2)(i) provides that
CMS will set forth the national and
regional numbers of discharges in each
year’s annual notice of prospective
payment rates for purposes of
determining rural referral center status.
As specified in section 1886(d)(5)(C)(ii)
of the Act, the national standard is set
at 5,000 discharges. In the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24106), we
proposed to update the regional
standards based on discharges for urban
hospitals’ cost reporting periods that
began during FY 2003 (that is, October
1, 2002 through September 30, 2003),
which is the latest available cost report
data we had at that time.
Therefore, in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24106), we
proposed that, in addition to meeting
other criteria, a hospital, if it is to
qualify for initial rural referral center
status for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006,
must have as the number of discharges
for its cost reporting period that began
during FY 2003 a figure that is at least—
• 5,000 (3,000 for an osteopathic
hospital); or
• The median number of discharges
for urban hospitals in the census region
in which the hospital is located. (See
the table set forth in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule at 71 FR 24106.)
Based on the latest discharge data
available at this time, that is, for cost
reporting periods that began during FY
2003, the final median number of
discharges for urban hospitals by census
region area are as follows:
1. New England (CT, ME, MA,
NH, RI, VT) ...............................
2. Middle Atlantic (PA, NJ, NY) ....
3. South Atlantic (DE, DC, FL,
GA, MD, NC, SC, VA, WV) ......
4. East North Central (IL, IN, MI,
OH, WI) .....................................
5. East South Central (AL, KY,
MS, TN) .....................................
6. West North Central (IA, KS,
MN, MO, NE, ND, SD) ..............
7. West South Central (AR, LA,
OK, TX) .....................................
8. Mountain (AZ, CO, ID, MT, NV,
NM, UT, WY) ............................
9. Pacific (AK, CA, HI, OR, WA) ..
Number
of discharges
7,366
10,307
10,546
9,200
7,519
7,441
7,239
10,419
7,965
We note that the median number of
discharges for hospitals in each census
region is greater than the national
standard of 5,000 discharges. Therefore,
5,000 discharges is the minimum
criterion for all hospitals.
We reiterate that if an osteopathic
hospital is to qualify for rural referral
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
center status for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006,
the hospital would be required to have
at least 3,000 discharges for its cost
reporting period that began during FY
2003.
Comment: Commenters indicated the
case-mix index values that are used as
criteria for rural referral center status
have been fluctuating significantly in
the past few years (2005 through 2007),
where they had been relatively stable in
prior years. They questioned the
methodology used to calculate the
values.
Response: While we agree that there
have been changes in the case-mix
index values over the past few years, in
our view, they have not been significant.
The methodology for determining the
case-mix index values for rural referral
center status has not changed. The FY
2007 final case-mix index values are
based on a more complete file than the
proposed values and are more in line
with the prior year’s values. Although
the methodology for calculating the
indices has not changed, in response to
the commenters’ concerns, we will
continue to evaluate whether there are
other factors that would cause the
observed shift in the values.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify the last
sentence of the ‘‘Case-Mix Index’’
section which states that ‘‘In keeping
with our policy on discharges, these
case-mix index values are computed
based on all Medicare patient discharges
subject to DRG-based payment.’’ The
commenter believed it would be
inappropriate to include discharges paid
under the LTC DRG payment system.
The commenter recommended that,
assuming that discharges paid under the
LTC DRG-based payment system are
excluded, this sentence should be
changed to specify ‘‘under the inpatient
PPS DRG-based payment system.’’
Response: We agree with the
commenter and have revised the
preamble language in this final rule. The
sentence now states, ‘‘In keeping with
our policy on discharges, these case-mix
index values are computed based on all
Medicare patient discharges subject to
the IPPS DRG-based payment.’’
Comment: Two commenters
addressed the issue of which cost
reporting period is to be used to
determine the number of discharges of
a hospital applying for initial rural
referral center status. One commenter
referenced 42 CFR 412.96(c)(2)(ii),
which states that an osteopathic
hospital applying for rural referral
center status ‘‘must have at least 3,000
discharges during its most recently
completed cost reporting period to meet
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
the number of discharges criterion.’’
This commenter believed that the
preamble language in the proposed rule
should be corrected to reflect the use of
the hospital’s most recently completed
cost reporting period, rather than a cost
reporting period specified by a fiscal
year. The second commenter expressed
an opposite view and stated that the
cost reporting period specified by a
fiscal year in the rule should apply and
not the ‘‘most recently completed cost
reporting period’’ specified in the
regulations.
Response: We have considered this
issue and have decided to clarify the
regulations to be consistent with our
longstanding practice as well as the
policy we proposed in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule of using the same cost
reporting period used to develop the
regional medians. In this way, we derive
the regional medians (to which the
hospital’s discharges may be compared)
as well as the hospital’s own discharge
data using the same time period.
Because we use the FY 2003 data for
developing the regional medians, we
will also use this data for determining
the hospital’s own discharges. This is in
keeping with our longstanding and
consistent policy of publishing in our
preamble a specific cost reporting
period that we consider to have the
latest available cost report data at the
time of publication of the rule. We have
made technical revisions to § 412.96 to
reflect our proposed policy. The
language at § 412.96(c)(2)(i) will now
state, ‘‘the hospital’s cost reporting
period that began during the same fiscal
year as the cost reporting periods used
to compute the regional median
discharges under paragraph (i) of this
section.’’ We are also making similar
revisions to the references to ‘‘the
hospital’s most recently completed cost
reporting period’’ in § 412.96(c)(2)(ii)
and 412.96(i)(3). In addition, in
§ 412.96(c)(2)(ii), we are deleting the last
sentence that references ‘‘the triennial
review.’’
E. Indirect Medical Education (IME)
Adjustment (§ 412.105)
1. Background
Section 1886(d)(5)(B) of the Act
provides that prospective payment
hospitals that have residents in an
approved graduate medical education
(GME) program receive an additional
payment to reflect the higher indirect
patient care costs of teaching hospitals
relative to nonteaching hospitals. The
regulations regarding the calculation of
this additional payment, known as the
indirect medical education (IME)
adjustment, are located at § 412.105.
PO 00000
Frm 00197
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48065
The Balanced Budget Act of 1997
(Pub. L. 105–33) established a limit on
the number of allopathic and
osteopathic residents that a hospital
may include in its full-time equivalent
(FTE) resident count for direct GME and
IME payment purposes. Under section
1886(h)(4)(F) of the Act, a hospital’s
unweighted FTE count of residents may
not exceed the hospital’s unweighted
FTE count for its most recent cost
reporting period ending on or before
December 31, 1996. Under section
1886(d)(5)(B)(v) of the Act, the limit on
the FTE resident count for IME purposes
is effective for discharges occurring on
or after October 1, 1997. A similar limit
is effective for direct GME purposes for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 1997.
2. IME Adjustment Factor for FY 2007
The IME adjustment to the DRG
payment is based in part on the
applicable IME adjustment factor. The
IME adjustment factor is calculated
using a hospital’s ratio of residents to
beds, which is represented as r, and a
formula multiplier, which is
represented as c, in the following
equation: c × [{1 + r} .405 ¥ 1]. The
formula is traditionally described in
terms of a certain percentage increase in
payment for every 10-percent increase
in the resident-to-bed ratio.
Section 502(a) of Pub. L. 108–173
modified the formula multiplier (c) to be
used in the calculation of the IME
adjustment. Prior to the enactment of
Pub. L. 108–173, the formula multiplier
was fixed at 1.35 for discharges
occurring during FY 2003 and
thereafter. Section 502(a) modified the
formula multiplier beginning midway
through FY 2004 and provided for a
new schedule of formula multipliers for
FY 2005 and thereafter. In the FY 2005
IPPS rule, we announced the schedule
of formula multipliers to be used in the
calculation of the IME adjustment and
incorporated the schedule in our
regulations at § 412.105(d)(3)(viii)
through (d)(3)(xii). In the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24107), we
specified that for any discharges
occurring during FY 2007, the
statutorily mandated formula multiplier
is 1.32. Previously, for FY 2007, the
mandated formula multiplier was 1.42.
We estimate that application of the
mandated formula multiplier for FY
2007 will result in an increase of 5.35
percent in IME payment for every
approximately 10-percent increase in
the resident-to-bed ratio.
Comment: While acknowledging that
the formula multiplier for FY 2007 is
mandated in law, several commenters
expressed opposition to the reduced
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48066
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
IME payment resulting from the
application of the formula multiplier.
Response: As noted by the
commenters, the schedule of formula
multipliers to be used in the calculation
of the IME adjustment is mandated in
law. In this rule, we are simply
reiterating that, for any discharges
occurring during FY 2007, the formula
multiplier is 1.32.
3. Technical Change to Revise CrossReference
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24107), we proposed to revise the
cross-references included in paragraph
(f)(1)(ii)(C) of § 412.105 that specify the
criteria for counting FTE residents who
spend time in nonprovider settings for
IME payment adjustment purposes.
Currently, this paragraph only cites the
criteria set forth in §§ 413.78(c) or
413.78(d). We should have also cited the
provisions of § 413.78(e), which state
that the time residents spend in
nonprovider settings such as
freestanding clinics, nursing homes, and
physicians’ offices in connection with
approved programs may be included in
determining the number of FTE
residents in the calculation of a
hospital’s resident count if other
applicable conditions specified in
paragraph (e) are met.
We did not receive any specific public
comments on the proposed addition of
a cross-reference to § 413.78(e) to
§ 412.105(f)(1)(ii)(C) and are therefore
adopting it as final without
modification.
We note that in sections IV.H.2.,3.,4.,
and 5. of the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule (71 FR 24111), we discussed other
policy changes and clarifications to the
methodology for counting FTE residents
for the purposes of direct GME
payments, which also would be
applicable to IME payments. We
respond to public comments received
on those proposals below in the
specified sections.
F. Payment Adjustment for
Disproportionate Share Hospitals
(DSHs) (§ 412.106)
1. Background
Section 1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act
provides for additional payments to
subsection (d) hospitals that serve a
disproportionate share of low-income
patients. The Act specifies two methods
for a hospital to qualify for the Medicare
disproportionate share hospital (DSH)
adjustment. Under the first method,
hospitals that are located in an urban
area and have 100 or more beds may
receive a DSH payment adjustment if
the hospital can demonstrate that,
during its cost reporting period, more
than 30 percent of its net inpatient care
revenues are derived from State and
local government payments for care
furnished to indigent patients. These
hospitals are commonly known as
‘‘Pickle hospitals.’’ The second method,
which is also the most commonly used
method for a hospital to qualify, is
based on a complex statutory formula
under which payment adjustments are
based on the level of the hospital’s DSH
patient percentage, which is the sum of
two fractions: the ‘‘Medicare fraction’’
and the ‘‘Medicaid fraction.’’ The
Medicare fraction is computed by
dividing the number of patient days that
are furnished to patients who were
entitled to both Medicare Part A and
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
benefits by the total number of patient
days furnished to patients entitled to
benefits under Medicare Part A. The
Medicaid fraction is computed by
dividing the number of patient days
furnished to patients who, for those
days, were eligible for Medicaid but
were not entitled to benefits under
Medicare Part A by the number of total
hospital patient days in the same
period.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
2. Technical Corrections
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24108), we proposed to make a
technical correction to
§ 412.106(a)(1)(iii) to reflect the
statutory requirement at section
1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act that, as of
January 1, 2000, hospitals reclassified
under § 412.103 are considered rural for
purposes of this DSH regulation. We
also proposed to correct the regulation
to eliminate the reference to § 412.62(f).
These corrections reflect current policy
and already-existing statutory
requirements.
We did not receive any public
comments regarding the proposed
corrections to § 412.106(a)(1)(iii) to
reflect the statutory requirement that
section 1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act that
hospitals reclassified under § 412.103
are considered rural for purposes of this
DSH regulation and to eliminate the
reference to § 412.62(f). Therefore, we
are adopting the corrections as final
without modification.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
3. Reinstatement of Inadvertently
Deleted Provisions on DSH Payment
Adjustment Factors
In an interim final rule published in
the Federal Register on June 13, 2001
(66 FR 32174 and 32194) (which was
finalized in the Federal Register on
August 1, 2001 (66 FR 39827)), we
incorporated into our regulations at
§ 412.106(d)(2) the provisions of section
211(b) of Pub. L. 106–554. Section
211(b) amended section 1886(d)(5)(F) of
the Act to revise the calculation of the
disproportionate share percentage
adjustment for hospitals affected by the
revised DSH qualifying threshold
percentages specified in section 211(a)
of Pub. L. 106–554. When the section
211 changes were incorporated into the
Code of Federal Regulations at
§ 412.106(d)(2), the regulation text at
§ 412.106(d)(2)(v) was inadvertently
deleted during the transcribing of the
new text into the existing regulations.
Section 412.106(d)(2)(v) specifies the
payment adjustment factors for
PO 00000
Frm 00198
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
hospitals that meet the following criteria
under § 412.106(c)(2) for discharges
occurring on or after April 1, 1990, and
before October 1, 1991, and on or after
October 1, 1991: Hospitals located in an
urban area, that have 100 or more beds,
and that can demonstrate that, during
their cost reporting period, more than 30
percent of their net inpatient care
revenues are derived from State and
local government payments for care
furnished to indigent patients.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24108), we proposed to reinstate the
inadvertently deleted text of
§ 412.106(d)(2)(v). We noted that this is
a correction to the regulations; we did
not propose to change the payment
adjustment factors for hospitals that
meet the criteria under § 412.106(c)(2).
We did not receive any public
comments on this proposal and are,
therefore, adopting it as final without
modifications.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.094
DSH
Medicare, SSI Days
Medicaid, Non -Medicare Days
Patient =
+
Total Medicare Days
Total Patient Days
Percentage
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
4. Enhanced DSH Adjustment for MDHs
The DSH adjustment factor for most
categories of hospitals is capped at 12
percent. Urban hospitals with more than
100 beds, rural hospitals with more than
500 beds, and rural referral centers, are
exempt from this cap.
Section 5003(d) of Pub. L. 109–171
(DRA of 2005) amended section
1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act to revise the
DSH payment adjustment factor for
MDHs, effective for discharges occurring
on or after October 1, 2006. Specifically,
section 5003(d) amended section
1886(d)(5)(F)(xiv)(II) of the Act to
exclude MDHs from the 12-percent DSH
adjustment factor cap.
For all discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2006, the fiscal
intermediary will not apply the cap
when calculating the DSH payments.
These payments will be subject to
revision upon final settlement of the
cost reporting period. We note that this
change will not affect the calculation of
the disproportionate patient percentage.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24108), we proposed to amend the
regulations at § 412.106 to include this
provision under proposed new
paragraph (d)(2)(iv)(D).
We did not receive any public
comments of the proposed addition of
§ 412.106(d)(2)(iv)(D) to our regulations
to reflect the revision to section
1886(d)(5)(F)(xiv)(II) of the Act made by
section 5003 of Pub. L. 109–171.
Therefore, we are adopting the proposed
revision as final.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
G. Geographic Reclassifications
(§§ 412.103, 412.230, and 412.234)
1. Background
With the creation of the MGCRB,
beginning in FY 1991, under section
1886(d)(10) of the Act, hospitals could
request reclassification from one
geographic location to another for the
purpose of using the other area’s
standardized amount for inpatient
operating costs or the wage index value,
or both (September 6, 1990 interim final
rule with comment period (55 FR
36754), June 4, 1991 final rule with
comment period (56 FR 25458), and
June 4, 1992 proposed rule (57 FR
23631)). As a result of legislative
changes under section 402(b) of Pub. L.
108–7, section 402 of Pub. L. 108–89,
and section 401 of Pub. L. 108–173, the
standardized amount reclassification
criterion for large urban and other areas
is no longer necessary or appropriate
and has been removed from our
reclassification policy. We implemented
this policy in the FY 2005 IPPS final
rule (69 FR 49103). As a result, hospitals
can request reclassification for the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
purposes of the wage index only and not
the standardized amount. Implementing
regulations in Subpart L of 42 CFR Part
412 (§§ 412.230 et seq.) set forth criteria
and conditions for reclassifications for
purposes of the wage index from rural
to urban, rural to rural, or from an urban
area to another urban area, with special
rules for SCHs and rural referral centers.
Under section 1886(d)(8)(E) of the
Act, an urban hospital may file an
application to be treated as being
located in a rural area if certain
conditions are met. The regulations
implementing this provision are located
under § 412.103.
Effective with reclassifications for FY
2003, section 1886(d)(10)(D)(vi)(II) of
the Act provides that the MGCRB must
use the average of the 3 years of hourly
wage data from the most recently
published data for the hospital when
evaluating a hospital’s request for
reclassification. The regulations at
§ 412.230(d)(2)(ii) stipulate that the
wage data are taken from the CMS
hospital wage survey used to construct
the wage index in effect for prospective
payment purposes. To evaluate
applications for wage index
reclassifications for FY 2007, the
MGCRB used the 3-year average hourly
wages published in Table 2 of the
August 12, 2005 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47508). These average hourly wages are
taken from data used to calculate the
wage indexes for FY 2004, FY 2005, and
FY 2006, based on cost reporting
periods beginning during FY 2000, FY
2001, and FY 2002, respectively.
2. Reclassifications under Section 508 of
Pub. L. 108–173
Under section 508 of Pub. L. 108–173,
a qualifying hospital could appeal the
wage index classification otherwise
applicable to the hospital and apply for
reclassification to another area of the
State in which the hospital is located
(or, at the discretion of the Secretary, to
an area within a contiguous State). Such
reclassifications are applicable to
discharges occurring during the 3-year
period beginning April 1, 2004, and
ending March 31, 2007. Under section
508(b), reclassifications under this
process do not affect the wage index
computation for any area or for any
other hospital and cannot be achieved
in a budget neutral manner.
Some hospitals currently receiving a
section 508 reclassification are eligible
to reclassify to that same area under the
standard reclassification process as a
result of the new labor market
definitions that we adopted for FY 2005.
In applying for a 3-year MGCRB
reclassification beginning in FY 2007,
hospitals that are already reclassified to
PO 00000
Frm 00199
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48067
the same area under section 508 should
have indicated in their MGCRB
reclassification requests that if they
receive the MGCRB reclassification,
they would forfeit the section 508
reclassification for the first 6 months of
FY 2007.
We refer readers to section III.H. of
this preamble for a discussion of our
updated procedural rules established
under section 1886(d)(10)(D)(v) of the
Act in which a section 508 hospital may
retain its section 508 reclassification
through its expiration on March 31,
2007, and accept a reclassification
approved by the MGCRB for the second
half of FY 2007 (April 1, 2007, through
September 30, 2007). We also clarified
the procedural rules for an already
individually reclassified hospital that is
part of a group that includes a section
508 hospital. For nonsection 508
hospitals in a group with a pending
individual geographic reclassification,
we will apply one of the following for
the first half of FY 2007: (a) The area
wage index where the hospital is
physically located if there is no
reclassification pending, or (b) the
hospital’s individual reclassification
wage index if the hospital was part of
a group awarded a group reclassification
and the group followed the procedural
rules for postponing reclassification
until April 1, 2007. Final Table 9B will
include a final list of section 508
reclassifications for the 1st half of FY
2007 and will be included in a
subsequent Federal Register notice as
well as posted to the CMS Web site after
August 1, 2006, and before October 1,
2006.
3. Multicampus Hospitals
(§ 412.230(d)(2)(iii))
Subsequent to the publication of the
FY 2005 IPPS final rule, we became
aware of a situation in which, as a result
of the new labor market areas
implemented in FY 2005 for the IPPS,
a multicampus hospital previously
located in a single MSA is now located
in more than one CBSA. Under our
existing policy, a multi-campus hospital
with campuses located in the same labor
market area receives a single wage
index. However, if the campuses are
located in more than one labor market
area, payment for each discharge is
determined using the wage index value
for the MSA (or Metropolitan Divisions,
where applicable) in which the campus
of the hospital is located. Prior to FY
2006, the criteria for a hospital being
reclassified to another wage area by the
MGCRB did not address the
circumstances under which a single
campus of a multicampus hospital may
seek reclassification. The regulations
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48068
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
require that a hospital provide data from
the CMS hospital wage survey for the
average hourly wage comparison that is
used to support a request for
reclassification. Because a multicampus
hospital is required to report data for the
entire hospital on a single cost report,
there is no wage survey data for the
individual hospital campus that can be
used in a reclassification application.
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47444 through 47446 and 47487), we
modified the reclassification rules at
§ 412.230(d)(2)(iii) to allow campuses of
multicampus hospitals located in
separate wage index areas to support a
reclassification application to an area
where another campus is located using
the average hourly (composite) wage
data submitted on the cost report for the
entire multi-campus hospital as its
hospital-specific data. This special rule
applies for reclassification applications
for FY 2006, FY 2007, and FY 2008 and
will not be in effect for FY 2009
reclassification requests and beyond.
Because reclassification applications to
the MGCRB for FY 2009 must be filed
in September 2007, or 1 month before
the effective date of the FY 2008 IPPS
rule, we addressed whether to extend
the special rule for multicampus
hospitals beyond FY 2008 in this FY
2007 final rule. In the FY 2006 IPPS
final rule, we indicated that we would
continue to explore options that would
allow individual campuses of multicampus hospitals to submit wage data
necessary for geographic reclassification
and also monitor the number of multicampus hospitals affected by this
provision (70 FR 47445 and 47446).
After reviewing this situation further,
we are finalizing our proposed policy.
Beginning with FY 2009
reclassifications, we will no longer
allow a campus of a multicampus
hospital to use the average hourly wage
the entire hospital system to support its
reclassification application. Because a
cost report is filed for an entire hospital,
the campus would have to obtain a
separate provider number and be treated
for Medicare payment purposes as an
independent entity in order to be able
to provide wage data for the specific
campus. If a hospital were to make a
change in FY 2007 to its organizational
structure to provide campus specific
data to support a reclassification
application, the earliest fiscal year that
the campus would be eligible to
reclassify would be FY 2012 because the
cost report data that are used for
geographic reclassification precede the
payment year by 5 years (that is, FY
2003 cost report data will be used to
determine the FY 2008 geographic
reclassifications).
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
To our knowledge, only one hospital
has used the special rule for
multicampus hospitals. This hospital
has since joined a successful FY 2007
urban county group reclassification
application to the same area to which it
was approved under the multicampus
hospital rule. Thus, this hospital is no
longer required to meet the
multicampus hospital rule. Given that
there is only one hospital that has used
this rule and this hospital was able to
reclassify under the normal
reclassification rules, we believe the
special reclassification rule that applies
to multi-campus hospitals is no longer
needed. We proposed in the FY 2007
IPPS proposed rule, to not extend the
special rule beyond FY 2008. After
considering comments (discussed
below) we have decided to adopt the
proposal not to extend the multicampus
rule beyond 2008. For reclassification
requests for FY 2009 and thereafter, a
campus of a multicampus hospital
would be required to obtain a separate
provider number in order to provide the
required wage data from the CMS
hospital wage survey for the average
hourly wage comparison in its MGCRB
reclassification application.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that CMS continue to allow
multi-campus hospitals to use the
average hourly wage for the entire
hospital system as its wage data to
support a reclassification application to
an area where another one of the
campuses is located. One commenter
argued that, once the new census data
are available, there may be more
hospitals in need of the provision. Two
commenters asked CMS to retain the
provision because they believed
eliminating the multi-campus hospital
rule will preclude both reclassifications
of groups from areas where one of the
hospital campuses is located as well as
a campus of a multicampus provider
from reclassifying as an individual
hospital. These commenters argued that
the multicampus hospital rule is
necessary in order for an individual
campus of a multi-campus hospital to
provide wage data to join a group
reclassification. Given how few
hospitals are expected to use this
option, the commenters asked that CMS
extend the current rule for at least 5
more years.
Response: The next decennial census
is in 2010. Using past experience as a
guide, we would not be developing new
labor market areas based on the
decennial census until FY 2014 or FY
2015 and it is unknown whether such
a special rule will be needed at that
time. We do not believe a special time
limited rule that was intended to give us
PO 00000
Frm 00200
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
time to address the particular
circumstances of a situation should be
retained for nearly 10 more years merely
on the possibility that it will be needed.
We can reconsider whether to
reestablish this special rule if necessary
when OMB publishes new MSA
definitions following the 2010 Census.
Further, as stated in the proposed rule,
we believe that hospitals should have to
support an individual reclassification
application with their own data.
With respect to the comments about
group reclassifications, we believe the
commenters misunderstand our current
rules on reclassification. We are not
changing these already existing rules,
under which a satellite campus of a
multicampus hospital located in a CBSA
different from the main hospital would
not be required to provide campusspecific wage data in order to join the
group and for the MGCRB to approve a
group reclassification application.
(When a campus of a multicampus
hospital joins a group reclassification,
the group uses average hourly wage
information for the county that was
used to develop the wage index for the
labor market area. These data do not
include wage information for an
individual campus of a multicampus
hospital.) As we stated in the proposed
rule, a campus of a multicampus
hospital can join a group reclassification
under our normal rules (71 FR 24109).
That is, the special rule for multicampus
hospitals would not be needed when a
campus of a multicampus hospital joins
a group reclassification application. As
we allow for new hospitals that are part
of group reclassifications, an individual
campus of a multicampus hospital may
join a group reclassification under 42
CFR 412.234 without having to provide
campus-specific wage data. The
rationale for this policy was explained
in the proposed rule and is the same for
both new hospitals and individual
campuses of multicampus hospitals that
join group reclassifications (71 FR
24110).
After consideration of the public
comments received, we are not making
any further changes in this final rule to
our policy relating to multicampus
hospitals.
4. Urban Group Hospital
Reclassifications (§ 412.234(a)(3)(iii))
Section 412.234(a)(3)(iii) of the
regulations sets forth criteria for urban
hospitals to be reclassified as a group for
FY 2007 and thereafter. Under these
criteria, ‘‘hospitals located in counties
that are in the same Combined
Statistical Area (CSA) (under the MSA
definitions announced by the OMB on
June 6, 2003) as the urban area to which
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
they seek redesignation qualify as
meeting the proximity requirement for
reclassification to the urban area to
which they seek redesignation.’’
Last year, several commenters brought
to our attention that, while the CSA
standard allows for urban county group
reclassifications in large urban areas
throughout the United States (including
10 of the 11 CBSAs containing
Metropolitan Divisions), the CSA
standard precludes urban county group
reclassifications between three
Metropolitan Divisions within one
CBSA in Florida. They urged us to
modify our policy to also allow
hospitals located in counties that are in
the same CBSA (in the case of
Metropolitan Divisions) as the area to
which they seek redesignation to be
considered to have met the proximity
requirement. We agree with the
commenter’s proposed modification.
The proximity standard for group
reclassifications is intended to allow all
of a county’s hospitals to reclassify to an
adjacent area where there is sufficient
economic integration that there can be
an expectation that both areas are
competing in a similar labor market
area. We believe there is sufficient
economic integration between
Metropolitan Divisions within a CBSA
that urban county reclassifications
within a CBSA or a CSA should be
permitted. A CBSA, as defined by the
OMB, is a ‘‘geographic entity associated
with at least one core of 10,000 or more
population, plus adjacent territory that
has a high degree of social and
economic integration with the core as
measured by commuting ties.’’
Therefore, in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24110), we
proposed to revise § 412.234(a)(3) by
adding a new paragraph (iv) to expand
the proximity criteria to allow urban
county groups to apply for
reclassification to another area within
the same CBSA. We proposed to require
that, beginning with FY 2008, hospitals
must be located in counties that are in
the same CSA or CBSA (under the MSA
definitions announced by OMB on June
6, 2003) as the urban area to which they
seek redesignation to qualify as meeting
the proximity requirement for
reclassification to the urban area to
which they seek redesignation.
Comment: Several commenters
supported CMS’ proposal to allow
hospitals located in counties that are in
the same CBSA as the county in which
they seek redesignation to be considered
to have met the proximity requirement
for an urban county group
reclassification. These commenters
indicated that use of the CBSA criteria
appropriately recognizes economic
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
integration among different
metropolitan divisions for purposes of
applying the proximity standard within
the urban county group reclassification
regulations. Commenters further
indicated that the new proximity
criteria should be applied retroactively
and be effective for urban group
reclassifications beginning on October 1,
2006 (as opposed to October 1, 2007)
under specified circumstances.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support for our proposed
change to the regulations, but we do not
believe the changes should be made
retroactively. The IPPS system,
including any wage indices associated
with a hospital’s geographic
classification or reclassification is a
prospective system. In addition, under
section 1886(d)(10) of the Act, the
MGCRB makes decisions about
reclassifications, not CMS. Applications
for reclassifications for a fiscal year are
required to be submitted in September,
13 months before the reclassification
would go into effect (for example, a
reclassification application for FY 2007
would have had to be submitted by
September 2005). Reclassification
decisions issued through the statutory
process are final and binding and are
not subject to judicial review. Making a
reclassification criterion retroactive
would interfere with the prospective
nature of the MGCRB reclassification
decisions, and we believe would
conflict with the prospective nature of
the entire IPPS system. In addition, it
could require a recalculation of the
budget neutrality adjustment required
by section 1886(d)(8)(C) of the Act.
Modifying the FY 2006 reclassification
budget neutrality adjustment for all
hospitals nationwide, we believe would
not be feasible at this late date.
After consideration of the public
comments received, we are adopting as
final, without modification, the
proposed revision to § 412.234(a)(3) to
add a new paragraph (iv) to expand the
proximity criteria to allow urban county
groups to apply for reclassification to
another area within the same CBSA.
5. Effect of Change of Ownership on
Urban County Group Reclassifications
(§§ 412.230, 412.234, and 489.18)
We have received questions asking for
clarification of our policy regarding
whether newly constructed hospitals
and hospitals that do not accept
assignment of the previous owner’s
provider agreement can join an urban
county group reclassification.
The Medicare regulations at § 412.230
require that, for individual hospital
reclassifications, a hospital must
provide a weighted 3-year average of its
PO 00000
Frm 00201
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48069
average hourly wages using data from
the CMS hospital wage survey used to
construct the wage index in effect for
prospective payment purposes. Section
489.18(c) of the regulations provides
that, when there is a change of
ownership, the existing provider
agreement will automatically be
assigned to the new owner when there
is a change of ownership as defined in
the rules. Section 412.230(d)(2)(iv) of
the regulations specifies that, in
situations where a hospital becomes a
new provider and the existing hospital’s
provider agreement is not assigned
under § 489.18, the wage data associated
with the previous hospital’s provider
number will not be used in calculating
the new hospital’s 3-year average hourly
wage. This policy is consistent with
how we treat hospitals whose
ownership has changed for other
Medicare payment purposes. The
regulations also state that once a new
hospital has accumulated at least 1 year
of wage data using survey data from the
CMS hospital wage survey used to
determine the wage index, it is eligible
to apply for reclassification on the basis
of those data.
While the regulations preclude a new
provider from individually reclassifying
until the hospital accumulates at least 1
year of wage data from the CMS hospital
wage survey used to determine the wage
index, a new provider may join a group
reclassification under § 412.234. Under
§ 412.234, all hospitals in an urban
county must apply for redesignation as
a group. If we did not permit a new
hospital to join group reclassifications,
all hospitals in the county would not be
part of the reclassification application
and the urban county group would be
precluded from reclassifying for 3 years
until the new hospital accumulated at
least 1 year of wage data. We believe it
would be inequitable to preclude a
group reclassification merely because
there was one newly constructed
hospital or one hospital in the county
changed ownership and did not accept
the prior owner’s provider agreement.
Alternatively, we believe that allowing
group applications without a new
hospital would be inconsistent with our
regulations and unfair to new hospitals
because it would put them at a
competitive disadvantage with other
hospitals in the county. Because such
reclassifications are effective for 3 years,
a new hospital that was not allowed to
join a group reclassification would have
to accept a lower wage index than all
other hospitals in the county with
which it competes for labor for up to 3
years.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that where there is already an approved
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48070
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
group reclassification, the new provider
should be automatically granted the
wage index of all the other hospitals in
the county. Alternatively, the
commenter suggested that the Secretary
could use the broad authority provided
in the statute to grant an urban county
group reclassification already in
progress to a new hospital in the same
county.
Response: There is currently no
provision that allows a hospital to join
a county-wide group reclassification
already in effect. The existing
regulations at § 412.234 provide that all
hospitals in an urban county must apply
for redesignation as a group. The
MGCRB decision applies to only those
hospitals listed on the application.
However, it is possible that the urban
county group can apply for another
reclassification to a different area with
the new provider.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
6. Requested Reclassification for
Hospitals Located in a Single Hospital
MSA Surrounded by Rural Counties
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47448), we presented a commenter’s
concern about the special circumstances
of a hospital located in a single hospital
MSA surrounded by rural counties in
relation to the wage index and the rules
governing geographic reclassification.
The commenter stated that an isolated
hospital in a single hospital MSA is at
a competitive disadvantage because the
rural hospitals that surround the
hospital have been reclassified to higher
wage index areas or have been
designated as rural referral centers,
SCHs, MDHs, or CAHs. The urban
hospital is ineligible for reclassification
to a higher wage index area either as an
individual hospital or as part of a group
under the existing regulations. The
commenter emphasized that this
concern is especially significant given
the fact that an isolated hospital in a
single hospital MSA is the only hospital
in its urban area, and, therefore, has an
even greater obligation to the
communities it serves.
The commenter advocated a change to
the urban county group reclassification
regulations whereby a hospital in a
single hospital MSA surrounded by
rural counties would be able to
reclassify to the closest urban area that
is part of a CSA located in the same
State as the hospital. We did not adopt
this suggested policy for FY 2006
because we did not believe it would be
prudent to adopt the suggested policy in
a final rule without first soliciting
public comment. In the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule, we solicited comments
on this issue.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Comment: Commenters supported
allowing a hospital that is the only
hospital in its MSA to reclassify to the
closest urban area that is part of a CSA
located in the same State, when the
hospitals in surrounding areas have all
been reclassified to and/or are located in
areas that receive wage index
reimbursement significantly higher than
the surrounding hospitals’ actual wages.
Without this reclassification, the
commenters indicated that the hospital
must continually work to keep wages
competitive, purchase new technology,
and provide services needed by
Medicare beneficiaries in its
community. The commenters also stated
that a single hospital in an urban county
must offer a broad range of services to
meet the needs of the Medicare
beneficiaries in its large service area,
while potentially competing with
hospitals that offer fewer services yet
receive increased reimbursement due to
their ability to reclassify. Some
commenters also recommended that
proximity criteria should focus more on
competition as demonstrated through
economic connection, rather than
location. The commenters argued that
there is an anomaly in the
reclassification rules that allows a
reclassified hospital to receive a wage
index that is higher than its own average
hourly wage. Such a hospital has an
advantage relative to its competitors in
the single hospital MSA by being able
to take the excess revenue and invest in
technology and services. One
commenter stated that making an
exception for the hospital addressed
here would be an unnecessary
expansion of the geographic
reclassification provisions. The
commenter indicated that it was not
unsympathetic to the situation
described of a hospital that is
surrounded by rural hospitals that have
all received special payment status. The
commenter opposed allowing the
hospital to reclassify to a distant area
but indicated that it might support some
accommodation that was particularized
to this situation.
Response: We disagree with the
notion that receiving a higher wage
index than a hospital’s own average
hourly wage is an anomaly of
reclassification. The wage index
represents an average of all hospitals in
a labor market area. Using the
commenter’s logic, such an ‘‘anomaly’’
would not be limited to reclassification.
It would also be a feature of the wage
index in a labor market area with
multiple hospitals. Some hospitals
would have higher wages than the labor
market area average, and others, lower.
PO 00000
Frm 00202
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
The only policy option for addressing
such a concern would be to have a
hospital-specific wage index. We
believe such an option would not be
permitted under the section
1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, which requires
us to adjust IPPS rates for ‘‘area
differences in hospital wage levels’’ to
reflect the ‘‘relative hospital wage level
in the geographic area of the hospital
compared to the national average
hospital wage level.’’ The statute clearly
directs the Secretary to use area, and not
hospital-specific, differences in wage
levels in creating the wage index.
We believe that allowing hospitals in
single hospital MSAs surrounded by
rural counties to reclassify to the closest
urban area that is part of a CSA located
in the same State as the hospital would
be an unnecessary expansion of the
geographic reclassification provisions. If
we adopted the commenters’ change to
the reclassification provisions, we
would be allowing a hospital group to
reclassify to a labor market area that is
farther away from, rather than closer to,
urban market areas. Such a change
would be inconsistent with the
geographic reclassification regulations
that require a hospital to demonstrate
proximity to the area where it requests
reclassification. For individual hospital
reclassifications, the proximity
requirement is demonstrated by either
meeting a mileage requirement or
showing that at least 50 percent of the
hospital’s employees reside in the area
to which it wishes to reclassify. For
group reclassifications, the proximity
requirement is met if the county
demonstrates that it is adjacent to the
area where it is seeking reclassification
and has a sufficient degree of economic
integration to suggest that both areas
compete for the same labor. The
commenter’s approach would allow a
hospital to reclassify to a labor market
that is more than 75 miles away from
the requested area. In general, we
believe it is highly unlikely that two
areas more than 75 miles apart compete
for the same labor.
In accord with the comment from a
national hospital association, we agree
that the geographic reclassification rules
should not be revised to accommodate
this situation. However, as suggested in
the comment, we considered an
accommodation to address the
particular circumstances of this
situation. In this situation, a number of
the surrounding hospitals benefit from
being an MDH, SCH, or RRC. There are
also two hospitals within approximately
35 miles of the hospital in the single
hospital urban area that do not receive
special payment under these provisions
but receive a special wage index under
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
section 508 of Pub. L. 108–173.
Therefore, the hospital in the single
hospital urban area has neighboring
hospitals that either receive special
payment provisions such as RRC and
SCH status or benefit from the special
circumstances of section 508 that
provided them with temporary higher
wage indices. The section 508
reclassifications were special one-time
reclassification provisions that
permitted certain hospitals to reclassify
that ordinarily would not be able to.
Thus, the reclassification of the two
neighboring hospitals, in conjunction
with the special payment of the other
surrounding hospitals, represents a
situation that would not ordinarily
occur under our reclassification of labor
market area rules. Due to the
combination of these factors and the
unique circumstances surrounding the
section 508 reclassifications, we are
invoking our special exceptions and
adjustment authority under section
1886(d)(5)(I)(i) of the Act for this
situation. The special exceptions and
adjustment authority authorizes us to
provide ‘‘for such other exceptions and
adjustments to [IPPS] payment amounts
* * * as the Secretary deems
appropriate.’’ We believe it is
appropriate in these circumstances to
give the hospital in the single hospital
urban area the same wage index as the
nearby 508 hospitals until the
expiration of the provision on March 31,
2007. We note that in somewhat
analogous circumstances, we used the
special exceptions authority to address
hospitals co-located with other hospitals
that received a special temporary wage
index increase. In that case, a special
exception was granted where individual
hospitals were part of a failed group
application, where a significant
proportion of the group (one-third) was
able to otherwise reclassify, and where
the hospitals that did reclassify received
wage indices at least 10 percent higher
than the wage index of the MSA where
the hospital was located (69 FR 49105).
Comment: One commenter indicated
that when competing hospitals are
geographically located in two separate
MSAs they may experience large
differences in their wage indices, thus
leading to reimbursement differentials.
The commenter stated that a hospital in
a single hospital MSA could not rectify
its situation simply by increasing labor
compensation, thereby resulting in a
higher hospital-specific wage index,
because the wage index is based on
wage data from 3 years earlier and, in
addition, the wage index is only paid on
the labor-related share of the
standardized amount. Thus, the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
commenter concluded, a hospital could
not receive dollar-for-dollar returns on
its own labor costs for any particular
year, even though it receives a wage
index based on its own wage data.
Response: We disagree with the
commenter’s suggestion that the use of
MSAs do not provide a sound basis for
identifying hospital labor market areas.
As noted in the FY 2005 IPPS final rule
(69 FR 29027), exhaustive research has
been completed since the mid-1990’s on
use of alternatives to using MSA
definitions for inpatient hospital labor
market. While individual hospitals may
sometimes be disadvantaged by the use
of OMB statistical area definitions for
the Medicare IPPS labor market areas,
there has been no consensus among
interested parties that there are any
better alternatives. Dividing the country
into geographic areas used to determine
wage indices, as is required by section
1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, will necessarily
result in different wage indices across
different labor market areas. The
commenter is correct that hospitals can
neither change the proportion of their
payment that is adjusted by the wage
index nor shorten the period between
when hospitals pay wages to their
employees and when those wages are
used in determining the wage index.
However, these circumstances are not
unique to hospitals in single-hospital
MSAs. All hospitals experience a delay
between the date hospital wage costs are
incurred and the date those costs are
used to determine the wage index.
Similarly, all hospitals are paid based
upon a set labor-related share.
Commenters: provided the following
suggestions for revising the
reclassification rules for single hospital
MSAs:
• Exempt the hospital from the
requirement that its wages be at least
108 percent of the average hourly wage
of all other hospitals in its area, since a
single hospital alone in its MSA could
not, by definition, meet this test.
• Combine single hospital areas with
neighboring MSAs, for the same reasons
CMS treated micropolitan areas as rural
when it adopted new labor market areas
in FY 2005.
• Allow urban hospitals that qualify
to be SCHs or rural referral centers other
than being located in a rural area to
reclassify using the special rules that
apply to hospitals with such a status.
Response: We are not adopting any of
the above recommendations in this final
rule. We do not believe the
reclassification rules should be
modified to abolish the 108 percent test
in the case of a hospital in a singlehospital MSA. The 108-percent test
exists precisely to create a specific
PO 00000
Frm 00203
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48071
threshold for reclassifying and to ensure
that a reclassifying hospital’s own wages
are significantly higher than the wages
used in calculating the index of its
home area. Allowing a hospital
receiving 100 percent of its area wages
to be exempt from this test, we believe,
could potentially undermine the 108percent test for all hospitals, and we are
not certain how we would distinguish
between a hospital with wages at, for
example, 105 or 107 percent of its area
wages and the single hospital with a
wage index at 100 percent of its area
wages. We note that section
1886(d)(10)(D)(i)(I) of the Act
specifically directs us to include in our
reclassification guidelines ‘‘guidelines
for comparing wages * * * in the area
in which the hospital is classified.’’
We also disagree with the suggestion
that we should combine adjacent urban
areas into one labor market area where
one of the MSAs has a single hospital.
As we indicated above, the MSAs have
consistently been used by CMS to
designate geographic areas and there has
been no consensus among interested
parties in favor of any alternatives.
Combining MSAs could also potentially
disadvantage hospitals in the urban area
with multiple hospitals. For the same
reason, we also disagree with the
suggestion of the commenter that
indicated a hospital that meets all of the
requirements to be an SCH or a rural
referral centers except rural status
should be able to take advantage of the
special reclassification provisions that
apply to hospitals with these
designations. As rural hospitals, these
hospitals are afforded advantages that
do not apply to urban hospitals.
Congress has repeatedly recognized the
special circumstances of rural hospitals.
For example, Congress, in section
1886(d)(10)(D)(iii) of the Act, exempted
rural referral centers from certain wage
comparison rules used in
reclassification.
Finally, hospitals in single hospital
MSAs already have another
reclassification option available where
the 108-percent test does not need to be
met. A hospital in a single hospital MSA
can apply to an adjacent area using the
group reclassification rules. Under these
rules, the hospital must be located in a
county that is in the same CSA or CBSA
as the urban area where they are seeking
reclassification. The CSA and CBSA
requirement is intended to identify
economic integration among different
areas. To be part of an optional CSA, the
OMB standard requires that there be at
least a 15-percent employment
interchange between the areas (25
percent for CBSAs). We do not see a
need to exempt a hospital in a single
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48072
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
hospital MSA from wage data
comparison because it can apply to an
adjacent MSA within the same CSA
using the group reclassification rules
without having to meet the 108-percent
test. If a hospital in a single hospital
MSA cannot meet group reclassification
criteria because of the CSA standard, it
means there is not a sufficient degree of
employment interchange to suggest that
the areas compete for the same labor.
7. Special Adjustment for Hospital
Group Reclassification Denied on the
Basis of Incomplete CSA Listing
In this final rule, we are also invoking
our special exceptions and adjustment
authority under section 1886(d)(5)(I)(i)
of the Act to adjust the wage index of
a hospital group that failed to reclassify
on the basis of incomplete OMB
guidance for FY 2007 only. The hospital
group in question timely applied to the
MGCRB for geographic reclassification.
On December 5, 2005, the OMB issued
a bulletin, Bulletin 06–01, listing the
MSAs that comprise various CSAs
throughout the country. The bulletin
did not include the hospital group’s
county as being part of the CSA to
which the group sought reclassification.
CMS regulations at 42 CFR 412.234
require a group to be in the same CSA
as the urban area to which it seeks
reclassification. Thus, the MGCRB
properly denied the hospital group’s
request.
However, subsequent to the MGCRB
denial, the OMB corrected its December
5, 2005 bulletin. On April 25, 2006 and
then again on May 26, 2006, OMB
issued correction bulletins stating that it
had omitted from Bulletin 06–01 certain
MSAs that should have been part of the
CSA listing. The correction bulletin
resulted in the hospital group becoming
part of the same CSA as the urban area
to which it had sought reclassification.
However, by the time OMB issued its
correction, the deadline for appealing
the MGCRB denial to the Administrator
(15 days from the date of the MGCRB
decision) under 42 CFR 412.276(a) had
passed. In addition, the time for the
Administrator to issue a decision on his
or her own motion (105 days following
the issuance of an MGCRB decision) had
also expired. As provided under
§ 412.276(b), MGCRB decisions are final
and binding unless reviewed and
changed by the Administrator.
Four other hospital groups were
affected by OMB’s correction bulletin(s).
However, all of these groups were able
to receive a positive determination by
the Administrator. In one case, the
Administrator was able to toll the
timeframe for deciding the group’s
appeal under § 412.278(f)(2)(i). In the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
other three cases, the Administrator
affirmed the MGCRB’s decision but then
amended the decision on May 30 within
the 15 days allotted under
§ 412.278(g)(2).
The special exceptions and
adjustment authority authorizes us to
provide ‘‘for such other exceptions and
adjustments to [IPPS] payment amounts
* * * as the Secretary deems
appropriate.’’ We believe it is
appropriate in these circumstances to
adjust the hospital group’s wage index
to reflect the reclassification it would
have received had OMB’s initial CSA
listing been complete. First, of the five
hospital groups affected by the OMB
bulletin(s), four were granted
reclassifications under the procedures
for Administrator review. Only the
remaining hospital group was unable to
reclassify because the deadline for the
Administrator discretionary review
expired on May 17, 2006, and the OMB
did not issue its correction bulletin until
May 26, 2006. The circumstances of the
five cases are identical in that each was
denied reclassification by the MGCRB
by virtue of not meeting the CSA
standard that was later corrected by
OMB. We believe it would be
inequitable for the one remaining
hospital group to be the only group of
the five similarly situated not to benefit
from the correction of the errors to OMB
Bulletin 06–01. Second, the MGCRB’s
decision was based upon an incomplete
OMB listing. We do not believe the
hospital group should experience an
adverse determination solely on the
basis of OMB omissions. Third, OMB
issued its correction only 9 days after
expiration of the discretionary review
period for the Administrator to take
review. Taken in conjunction, we
believe that these three factors, the
reclassification of all other similarly
situated hospital groups; the
governmental omission; and the
closeness in time between OMB’s
correction and the expiration of the
Administrator discretionary review
period, support a special adjustment.
We note that we are not retroactively
granting a reclassification to the hospital
group in question. Rather, we will
adjust payment to reflect the wage index
it would have received (for example, we
will give the hospital group that wage
index for hospitals reclassified to the
requested area). The hospitals in the
group will not receive the section 505
out-migration adjustment in FY 2007.
Finally, we note that the hospital
group in question may reapply for
geographic reclassification to the same
area for the period FY 2008 through FY
2010. As specified in section III.H. of
the preamble of this final rule, the
PO 00000
Frm 00204
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
deadline for FY 2008 reclassification
applications is September 1, 2006. We
encourage hospitals to closely review
the special instructions provided in
section III.H. of this preamble elsewhere
in this final rule affecting the
procedures for applying for
reclassification for FY 2008, considering
the unique circumstances of
occupational mix wage adjusted average
hourly wages not being available until
after August 1 and prior to October 1.
H. Payment for Direct Graduate Medical
Education
1. Background
Section 1886(h) of the Act, as added
by section 9202 of the Consolidated
Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act
(COBRA) of 1985 (Pub. L. 99–272) and
implemented in regulations at existing
§§ 413.75 through 413.83, establishes a
methodology for determining payments
to hospitals for the costs of approved
graduate medical education (GME)
programs. Section 1886(h)(2) of the Act,
as added by COBRA, sets forth a
methodology for the determination of a
hospital-specific, base-period per
resident amount (PRA) that is calculated
by dividing a hospital’s allowable costs
of GME for a base period by its number
of residents in the base period. The base
period is, for most hospitals, the
hospital’s cost reporting period
beginning in FY 1984 (that is, the period
beginning between October 1, 1983,
through September 30, 1984). Medicare
direct GME payments are calculated by
multiplying the PRA times the weighted
number of full-time equivalent (FTE)
residents working in all areas of the
hospital (and nonhospital sites, when
applicable), and the hospital’s Medicare
share of total inpatient days. The base
year PRA is updated each year for
inflation. However, as specified in
section 1886(h)(2)(D)(ii) of the Act, for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 1993, through
September 30, 1995, each hospitalspecific PRA for the previous cost
reporting period is not updated for
inflation for any FTE residents who are
not either a primary care or an obstetrics
and gynecology resident. As a result,
hospitals that train primary care and
obstetrics and gynecology residents, as
well as nonprimary care residents in FY
1994 or FY 1995, have two separate
PRAs: one for primary care and
obstetrics and gynecology residents and
one for nonprimary care residents.
Pub. L. 106–113 amended section
1886(h)(2) of the Act, effective October
1, 2000, to establish a methodology for
the use of a national average PRA in
computing direct GME payments for
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 2000. Specifically, Pub.
L. 106–113 established a ‘‘floor’’ for FY
2001 such that a hospital-specific PRA
should not be less than 70 percent of the
locality-adjusted national average PRA.
In addition, it established a ‘‘ceiling’’
that froze or limited the annual inflation
adjustment to a hospital-specific PRA if
the PRA exceeded 140 percent of the
locality-adjusted national average PRA.
Section 511 of Pub. L. 106–554
increased the ‘‘floor’’ established by
Pub. L. 106–113 to equal 85 percent of
the locality-adjusted national average
PRA for PRAs in existence in FY 2002.
Existing regulations at § 413.77(d)(2)(iii)
specify that, for purposes of calculating
direct GME payments, each hospitalspecific PRA is compared to the floor
(for FY 2001 and FY 2002) and the
ceiling (for FY 2001 through 2013) to
determine whether a hospital-specific
PRA should be revised. We note that,
under existing regulations at § 413.77(c),
if a hospital-specific PRA for FY 2001 or
FY 2002 is revised due to application of
the floor PRA, the revised PRA is the
starting point for the PRA in future
years, subject to the annual inflation
adjustment and any other applicable
adjustments.
Section 1886(h)(4)(F) of the Act
established caps on the number of
allopathic and osteopathic residents that
hospitals may count for purposes of
calculating direct GME payments. For
most hospitals, the caps were the
number of allopathic and osteopathic
FTE residents training in the hospital’s
most recent cost reporting period ending
on or before December 31, 1996. Section
422 of Pub. L. 108–173 added section
1886(h)(7) of the Act which provided for
one-time reductions to the resident caps
of teaching hospitals that were training
a number of FTE residents below their
cap in a reference period, and
authorized a one-time ‘‘redistribution’’
of FTE resident slots to hospitals that
could demonstrate a likelihood of using
the additional resident slots within the
first three cost reporting periods
beginning on or after July 1, 2005.
2. Determination of Weighted Average
Per Resident Amounts (PRAs) for
Merged Teaching Hospitals (§ 413.77)
As stated in the background section
above, in accordance with section
1886(h) of the Act, Medicare pays
teaching hospitals for the direct costs of
GME based on the per resident direct
GME costs in a base year. For most
hospitals, the base year is FY 1984 (cost
reporting periods beginning between
October 1, 1983, and September 30,
1984). Although section 1886(h) of the
Act provides for the establishment of a
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PRA for a hospital that trained residents
in the 1984 base year, the statute does
not address how to treat the PRA(s) of
teaching hospitals that subsequently
merge.
Our policy has always been that when
two or more teaching hospitals merge,
we determine a weighted average PRA
for the surviving merged hospital using
direct GME costs and resident data from
the base year cost report for each
teaching hospital involved in the
merger. This policy was detailed in
Questions and Answers on Medicare
GME Payments issued on November 8,
1990: ‘‘[When] two hospitals merge
* * * the merged hospital’s per resident
amount * * * [is] based on the
weighted average of the per resident
amounts of both hospitals.’’ We believe
this is an equitable way to determine a
PRA for the surviving merged hospital
because it is based on the relative costs
and sizes of the GME training programs
in the respective facilities. Moreover, we
believe this policy minimizes the role
Medicare GME payments play in the
choice of the surviving hospital entity.
For example, there is no incentive to
choose the surviving hospital based in
part on the hospitals’ relative PRAs.
To calculate the weighted average
PRA for the merged entity, the fiscal
intermediary begins by determining the
base year PRAs and the base year FTE
resident counts of the hospitals that
merge. The weighted average PRA is
calculated by adding the product of
each hospital’s base year PRA and its
base year FTE resident count, and
dividing that number by the total
number of the base year FTE residents
for those hospitals.
When our current methodology was
first established for calculating the new
PRA for a merged hospital, we adopted
a policy to use base year PRAs and FTE
resident counts. It was appropriate and
workable to use data from the PRA base
year because the base year data (usually
for the 1984 fiscal year) associated with
the hospital-specific PRAs were easily
accessible. However, these data are now
often over 20 years old and it has
become administratively burdensome
for both CMS and the fiscal
intermediaries to access base year
information in calculating the weighted
average of the PRAs for merged
hospitals.
In addition to it being
administratively burdensome to use
base year cost report data, where a
hospital has two PRAs (one for primary
care and obstetrics and gynecology
residents and another for nonprimary
care residents), these two PRAs are not
being taken into account in developing
the weighted average PRA for the
PO 00000
Frm 00205
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48073
merged hospital. As discussed earlier,
hospitals that were training nonprimary
care residents in FYs 1994 and 1995
have a separate nonprimary care PRA
because there was no update for
inflation applied to the PRA for
nonprimary care residents in those years
(§ 413.77(c)(2)). Accordingly, many
teaching hospitals currently have two
PRAs: one for primary care and
obstetrics and gynecology residents and
one for all other residents. (Hospitals
that first train residents after FY 1995
would only have a single PRA, even if
they train both primary care residents
and nonprimary care residents.) Because
the current methodology for calculating
the weighted average PRA for a merged
teaching hospital is based solely on data
from the PRA base year (which is
usually prior to the years during which
the PRAs were not adjusted for inflation
to reflect nonprimary care residents),
this methodology does not take into
account that the merged hospitals may
currently have more than one PRA.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24111 through 24113), we proposed,
effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006,
rather than using the direct GME FTE
resident count and PRA from hospitals’
base year cost reports, to simplify and
revise the weighted average PRA
methodology for determining a merged
teaching hospital’s PRA by using FTE
resident data and PRA data from the
most recently settled cost reports of the
merging hospitals. We believe it is less
administratively burdensome to use
these data because these data are more
recent and, therefore, more accessible.
In addition, these data would reflect
both a primary care and obstetrics and
gynecology PRA and, if applicable, a
nonprimary care PRA.
We noted that, prior to FY 2003, our
policy for calculating the PRA for a new
teaching hospital was to calculate the
PRA based on the lower of the new
teaching hospital’s actual cost per
resident in its base period or a weighted
average of all the PRAs of existing
teaching hospitals in the same
geographic wage area, as that term is
used under the prospective payment
system (existing § 413.77(e)(1)). (For
ease of discussion, we refer to a hospital
that did not participate in Medicare or
that did not have any approved medical
residency training programs during the
period beginning between October 1,
1983, through September 30, 1984, and
has since commenced participating in
Medicare and begun training residents
in an approved program, as a ‘‘new
teaching hospital.’’) The weighted
average PRA of teaching hospitals
within a particular geographic wage area
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48074
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
was determined using the base year PRA
and the base year FTE resident count of
each respective teaching hospital within
the geographic wage area. However, as
discussed in the August 1, 2002 IPPS
final rule (67 FR 50067) effective
October 1, 2002, we revised our policy
to use PRAs and FTE resident data from
the most recently settled cost reports of
teaching hospitals in the same CBSA as
the new teaching hospitals, rather than
data from the 1984 base year (existing
§ 413.77(e)(1)(ii)(B)). We revised this
policy for establishing PRAs for new
teaching hospitals because it is less
administratively burdensome to use
data from the hospitals’ most recently
settled cost reports and because the
more recent data takes into account that
hospitals have a primary care PRA and
a nonprimary care PRA. In the FY 2007
IPPS proposed rule, we proposed a
similar policy revision for establishing a
merged teaching hospital’s PRA.
We proposed that the fiscal
intermediaries would use the following
steps to calculate the weighted average
PRA for the merged teaching hospital:
Step 1: Identify the primary care and
obstetrics and gynecology FTE resident
count, the nonprimary care FTE resident
count for hospitals with two PRAs, or
the single FTE resident count for
hospitals with a single PRA, for each
teaching hospital involved in the
merger. (Use the sum of the FTE
resident counts from Line 3.07, Line
3.08, and Line 3.11 of the hospital’s
most recently settled Medicare cost
report, CMS 2552–96, Worksheet E–3,
Part IV.)
Step 2: Identify the PRAs (either a
hospital’s primary care and obstetrics
and gynecology PRA and nonprimary
care PRA or, if applicable, a hospital’s
single PRA) from the most recently
settled cost report for each hospital
involved in the merger, and update the
PRAs using the CPI–U inflation factor to
coincide with the fiscal year end of the
surviving teaching hospital. For
example, if the surviving teaching
hospital’s fiscal year end is December
31, 2006, and the most recently settled
cost report of the teaching hospital(s)
involved in the merger is June 30, 2003,
the PRAs from this cost report would be
updated for inflation to December 31,
2006.
Step 3: Calculate the weighted average
PRA for the single merged hospital
using the PRAs and FTE resident counts
from Step 1 and Step 2. For each
teaching hospital in the merger:
(a) For hospitals with two PRAs,
multiply the primary care PRA by the
number of primary care and obstetrics
and gynecology FTE residents.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
(b) For hospitals with two PRAs,
multiply the nonprimary care PRA by
the number of nonprimary care FTE
residents.
(c) For hospitals with a single PRA,
multiple the single PRA by the
hospital’s total number of FTE residents.
(d) Add the products from applicable
Steps 3(a), (b), and (c) for all teaching
hospitals that merged.
(e) Add the number of FTE residents
from Step 1 for all hospitals.
(f) Divide the sum from Step 3(d) by
the sum from Step 3(e). The result is the
weighted average PRA for the merged
hospital.
As mentioned above, many hospitals
currently have two PRAs, one for
primary care residents and another for
nonprimary care residents. An
advantage to using data from the most
recently settled cost reports of the
hospitals involved in a merger is that
the two PRAs are taken into account in
determining the weighted average PRA
for the merged hospital. Because two
PRAs would be taken into account
under this proposal, we considered
whether a primary care PRA and a
nonprimary care PRA should, therefore,
be determined for the merged hospital.
Although it would be possible to
determine and retain two PRAs for a
merged hospital when one or more
hospitals involved in the merger had
two PRAs, we did not propose to do so.
We proposed that a single PRA also be
determined for the merged hospital in
this situation because it is more
administratively straightforward for the
fiscal intermediaries and the merged
hospitals and since the merged hospital
itself was not in existence in the years
that the two PRAs were established (FY
1994 and FY 1995), we do not believe
it is necessary to retain the two PRAs.
Furthermore, because the two existing
pre-merger PRAs are taken into account
when establishing the single PRA for the
merged hospital, and the statutory
provision that resulted in the creation of
two PRAs has no continuing effect
(because the updates were prohibited
only for FY 1994 and FY 1995), we see
no compelling reason to continue to
carry two PRAs for a merged hospital.
The following was presented as an
example of how to calculate a weighted
average PRA under the proposed revised
methodology:
Example: Assume that Hospital A,
Hospital B, and Hospital C merge and
Hospital B with a fiscal year end of
December 31, 2006, is the surviving
hospital. In their respective most
recently settled cost reports, Hospital A
has 200 primary care and obstetrics and
gynecology FTE residents and 150
nonprimary care FTE residents, and
PO 00000
Frm 00206
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Hospital B has 50 primary care and
obstetrics and gynecology FTE residents
and 60 nonprimary care FTE residents.
Hospital C became a teaching hospital
in 2000 and has 25 FTE residents. After
updating the primary care and
nonprimary care PRAs for inflation by
the CPI–U to December 31, 2006,
Hospital A has a primary care PRA of
$120,000 and a nonprimary care PRA of
$115,000, Hospital B has a primary care
PRA of $100,000 and a nonprimary care
PRA of $97,000, and Hospital C has a
single PRA of $90,000.
(a) Primary care:
Hospital A: $120,000 × 200 FTEs =
$24,000,000
Hospital B: $100,000 × 50 FTEs =
$5,000,000
(b) Nonprimary care:
Hospital A: $115,000 × 150 FTEs =
$17,250,000
Hospital B: $97,000 × 60 FTEs =
$5,820,000
(c) Single PRA: Hospital C: $90,000 ×
25 FTEs = $2,250,000
(d) $24,000,000 + $5,000,000 +
$17,250,000 + $5,820,000 + $2,250,000
= $54,320,000
(e) 200 + 50 + 150 + 60 + 25 = 485
total FTEs
(f) $54,320,000/485 FTEs = $112,000,
the weighted average of the hospitals
involved in the merger for fiscal year
end December 31, 2006.
Comment: One commenter
commended our proposal to revise the
weighted average PRA methodology for
determining a merged teaching
hospital’s PRA by using direct GME FTE
resident data and PRA data from the
most recently settled cost reports of the
merging hospitals. However, the
commenter suggested that because a
teaching hospital’s reimbursement is
calculated using the hospital’s rolling
average FTE count, and not the
hospital’s current year FTE count, the
rolling average FTE count of merging
hospitals (Lines 3.16 and 3.22 of
Worksheet E–3, Part IV) should be used
to determine a merged teaching
hospital’s PRA. The commenter also
pointed out that a new teaching
hospital’s FTE count only appears on
Lines 3.16 and 3.22 and in the case
where one of the hospitals involved in
a merger is a new teaching hospital, if
CMS were to use the current year FTE
counts, the new teaching hospital’s PRA
would not be taken into account in the
weighted average PRA determination for
the merged hospital.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s support for the proposed
policy revision; however, we disagree
with the commenter’s suggestion. The
intent of the policy revision is to ease
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
the administrative burden for hospitals
and fiscal intermediaries by using more
accessible cost reporting data for
determining a merged hospital’s
weighted average PRA. We do not
believe it is appropriate to change
which FTE counts are used to make a
PRA determination for a merged
hospital. While it is true that the statute
requires that direct GME payment be
determined based on a 3-year rolling
average of the hospital’s FTE counts,
that provision is intended by Congress
to moderate the impact of year-to-year
changes in hospitals’ FTE counts.
However, to calculate a weighted PRA
for merging teaching hospitals, we
believe it is appropriate to weight each
hospital’s PRA based on the FTE
resident count for each hospital’s
current year. We do agree with the
commenter that in the case of a merger
that involves a new teaching hospital or
an existing teaching hospital which, in
accordance with 42 CFR 413.79(d)(5),
included residents in ‘‘new teaching
programs’’ on Lines 3.16 and/or 3.22 of
Worksheet E–3, Part IV, the merged
hospital’s weighted average PRA will be
computed by including the ‘‘new
teaching program’’ FTE residents from
those lines.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that a separate primary care PRA and
nonprimary care PRA be determined for
a merged hospital. The commenter
believed that because most existing
teaching hospitals currently have two
PRAs, it would be appropriate to
determine two PRAs for a merged
teaching hospital as well. In addition,
the commenter believed that
determining one PRA for a merged
hospital might result in inaccurate
reimbursement should the surviving
hospital’s mix of primary and
nonprimary care residents or programs
change significantly.
Response: Although we initially
proposed to determine a single PRA for
the merged hospital, after considering
this comment, we are convinced that it
is appropriate to determine two PRAs
for a merged teaching hospital.
Although we do not believe the
determination of a single PRA for a
merged hospital would necessarily
result in ‘‘inaccurate reimbursement,’’
we do recognize the commenter’s point
that the application of a single PRA for
a merged hospital would be inconsistent
with the application of two PRAs for
most other teaching hospitals (typically,
a lower one for residents in nonprimary
care specialties), and could produce
some unintended incentives.
Specifically, we recognize that the two
PRAs have the continuing effect of
discouraging shifts from primary care
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
and obstetrics and gynecology programs
to nonprimary care programs. Therefore,
we are revising the steps for calculating
the weighted average PRAs for a merged
teaching hospital. The following steps
should be used by fiscal intermediaries
to calculate the primary care weighted
average PRA for a merged teaching
hospital for mergers that occur on or
after October 1, 2006:
Step 1: From the most recently settled
cost report of each hospital involved in
the merger, identify the primary care
and obstetrics and gynecology FTE
resident count (Line 3.07 and ‘‘new
program’’ residents from Line 3.22 of
Worksheet E–3, Part IV).
Step 2: From the most recently settled
cost report of each hospital involved in
the merger, identify the hospital’s
primary care and obstetrics and
gynecology PRA (or a hospital’s single
PRA when applicable). Update the
hospitals’ PRAs to the midpoint of the
surviving provider’s cost reports that
precede the cost report in which the
merger occurs using a special CPI–U
inflation factor obtained from the CMS
Central Office. All of the merging
hospitals’ PRAs should be updated to
coincide with the surviving hospital’s
fiscal year end for the cost reporting
period prior to the merger. (For
example, if the surviving teaching
hospital’s cost reporting period fiscal
year end prior to the merger is
December 31, 2006, and the most
recently settled cost report of the
teaching hospital(s) involved in the
merger is June 30, 2003, the PRAs from
this cost report would be updated for
inflation to December 31, 2006).
Step 3: Calculate the weighted average
primary care PRA for the merged
hospital using the PRAs and FTE
resident counts from Steps 1 and 2.
(a) For hospitals with two PRAs,
multiply the primary care PRA by the
number of primary care and obstetrics
and gynecology FTE residents.
(b) For hospitals with a single PRA,
multiply the single PRA by the number
of primary care FTE residents.
(c) Add the products from each
hospital from Steps 3(a) and (b).
(d) Add the number of FTE residents
from each hospital from Step 1.
(e) Divide the sum from Step 3(c) by
the sum from Step 3(d). The result is the
weighted average primary care PRA for
the merged hospital.
Fiscal intermediaries will follow these
same steps to calculate the weighted
average nonprimary care PRA for a
merged teaching hospital. For the
weighted average nonprimary care PRA,
the merging hospitals’ nonprimary care
FTE counts (Lines 3.08 and 3.11 and
‘‘new program’’ residents on Line 3.22
PO 00000
Frm 00207
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48075
from Worksheet E–3, Part IV) and
nonprimary care PRAs (or a single PRA
for a hospital with one PRA) should be
used.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS provide a detailed example
that includes the merger date and the
fiscal year ends for each merging
hospital’s cost report.
Response: The following is a detailed
example of how a weighted average
primary care PRA would be determined
for a merged hospital. The changes to
the proposed policy revision discussed
previously have been incorporated into
this example.
Example: Assume that Hospital A,
Hospital B, and Hospital C will merge
on February 1, 2007. On their most
recently settled cost reports, Hospital A
has 200 primary care and obstetrics and
gynecology FTE residents, Hospital B
has 50 primary care and obstetrics and
gynecology FTE residents, and Hospital
C has 10 primary care and obstetrics and
gynecology FTE residents. The
surviving hospital is Hospital C whose
fiscal year end prior to the merger is
December 31, 2006. Hospital A’s and
Hospital B’s most recently settled cost
report is September 30, 2002 and
Hospital C’s most recently settled cost
report is December 31, 2003. Since
Hospital C is the surviving provider and
Hospitals A and B have fiscal year ends
(that is, September 30, 2006) that differ
from the fiscal year end of Hospital C
(that is, December 31, 2006), Hospitals
A and B’s PRAs must be made
concurrent with the PRA of Hospital C
for fiscal year end December 31, 2006.
The fiscal intermediary should contact
the CMS Central Office for special
update factors and for instructions on
making the PRAs concurrent.
Additional special update factors will
be necessary to determine the direct
GME payment, pre-merger and postmerger, as indicated in response to the
next comment. After updating the PRAs
for inflation by the appropriate CPI–U
update factor to December 31, 2006,
Hospital A has a primary care PRA of
$120,000, Hospital B has a primary care
PRA of $100,000, and Hospital C has a
single PRA of $90,000.
(a) Hospital A: $120,000 × 200 FTEs
= $24,000,000
Hospital B: $100,000 × 50 FTEs =
$5,000,000
(b) Hospital C: $90,000 × 10 FTEs =
$900,000
(c) $24,000,000 + $5,000,000 +
900,000 = $29,900,000
(d) 200 + 50 + 10 = 260 total FTEs
(e) $29,900,000/260 FTEs = $115,000,
the weighted average primary care PRA
for Hospital C, the surviving hospital,
effective February 1, 2007, the date of
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48076
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
the merger. The weighted average
nonprimary care PRA would be
calculated using the merging hospitals’
nonprimary care FTE counts and
nonprimary care PRAs (or single PRA
for Hospital C).
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification on how CMS would treat a
merger that occurs in the middle of the
surviving hospital’s cost reporting
period. More specifically, the
commenter questioned whether, in such
a situation, the surviving hospital would
have two PRAs, a pre-merger PRA and
post-merger PRA.
Response: In the case described by the
commenter, the surviving hospital
would indeed be reimbursed with two
sets of PRAs, a set of pre-merger PRAs
and a set of post-merger PRAs. To
calculate the direct GME payment for
the surviving hospital for the cost
reporting period in which the merger
occurred, the fiscal intermediary
performs a series of off-the-cost-report
calculations, treating the pre-merger and
post-merger periods of the surviving
hospital’s cost reporting period as if
they are two short cost reporting
periods. The fiscal intermediary would
first calculate the direct GME
reimbursement for the surviving
hospital for the portion of the cost
reporting period prior to the merger
using only the surviving hospital’s FTEs
and PRA(s) and Medicare utilization
rate. Second, the fiscal intermediary
would calculate the surviving hospital’s
post-merger direct GME reimbursement
using the weighted average PRA(s)
updated with special CPI–U factors, a
combined rolling average FTE count
reflecting the merged hospitals’ FTEs,
and a combined Medicare utilization
rate reflecting the portion of the cost
reporting period after the merger. Then
the fiscal intermediary would add the
pre-merger and post-merger payments to
determine the surviving hospital’s total
reimbursement for that cost reporting
period. (Note that, although not the
topic of this discussion, similar premerger and post-merger calculations are
done for the resident-to-bed ratio for
IME purposes as well).
Comment: One commenter believed
that varying methodologies have been
used in the past to determine the PRA
for a merged teaching hospital and that
our statement in the proposed rule that
CMS’ policy ‘‘has always been that
when two or more teaching hospitals
merge, we determine a weighted average
PRA for the surviving merged hospital’’
is inaccurate. The commenter further
believed that the reference to the 1990
GME Questions and Answers is poor
evidence that CMS’ current policy is to
determine a weighted average PRA for
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
the surviving merged hospital. Finally,
the commenter believed that CMS
should promulgate a policy that gives
latitude to a merged hospital to have a
PRA determined that takes into
consideration the surviving hospital’s
post-merger operations. The commenter
suggested that CMS adopt a policy that
provides a merged hospital the option of
having its PRA determined as the
weighted average PRA or the surviving
provider’s PRA.
Response: We disagree with the
commenter’s assertion that varying
policies have been used in the past to
determine the PRA for a merged
hospital. In addition to the 1990
Questions and Answers on Medicare
GME Payments, we have consistently
expressed our policy to determine a
weighted average PRA for a merged
hospital. For example, our policy was
clearly cited in the May 12, 1998
Federal Register (63 FR 26239) in which
we state that ‘‘in implementing the
COBRA 1985 provision establishing a
hospital-specific per resident amount in
the situation of a merger, we have
calculated the revised per resident
amount for the merged hospital using an
FTE weighted average of each of the
respective hospital’s per resident
amount which is part of the merger.’’
We have worked with numerous fiscal
intermediaries in determining weighted
average PRAs for merged hospitals and
are unaware of any instance that a
weighted average PRA was not
determined for a merged hospital.
Our current policy, as revised by this
final rule, applies prospectively for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2006. Our main concern in
making these clarifications and changes
to our policy is to adopt a policy that
can be applied consistently and that
recognizes the nature of a merger of
hospital entities. We believe it is
appropriate to adopt a policy that takes
into account each of the various merging
hospitals’ preexisting, statutorily
established PRAs. We have adopted a
policy under which the PRA(s)
determined for a merged hospital is
based on the weighted average of the
different merging hospitals’ PRAs
precisely because it takes all of the
merging hospitals’ PRAs into account.
We do not believe it is appropriate to
provide a merged hospital the option of
adopting the surviving hospital’s PRA
instead of the average weighted PRA
because, aside from the fact that such a
policy would ignore the fact that the
merger is a result of multiple hospitals
with individual PRAs joining together,
such a policy could inappropriately
provide an incentive to choose the
surviving hospital based on which
PO 00000
Frm 00208
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
surviving hospital’s PRA would yield
the highest reimbursement.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that this policy revision be
included as a provision in the regulatory
text of § 413.77, the regulation that deals
with the determination of PRAs.
Response: We agree with the
commenters. In this final rule, we are
revising § 413.77 by adding a new
paragraph (h) to reflect the policy on
determining the PRA for the surviving
hospital when multiple hospitals merge,
effective October 1, 2006.
3. Determination of Per Resident
Amounts (PRAs) for New Teaching
Hospitals (§ 413.77(e))
As we discussed earlier in the
background portion of this section, the
hospital-specific, base-period PRA used
in the payment methodology for
determining Medicare direct GME
payments is calculated by dividing a
hospital’s allowable direct costs of GME
in a base period by its number of
residents in that base period. In the case
of a hospital that did not train residents
in its FY 1984 cost reporting period, a
PRA is determined by comparing and
taking the lower of a PRA based on
direct GME costs and FTE residents in
a base year or the updated weighted
mean value of PRAs of all hospitals
located in the same geographic wage
area. For ease of discussion, we refer to
a hospital that did not participate in
Medicare or have any approved medical
residency training programs during the
base period beginning between October
1, 1983, through September 30, 1984,
and has since commenced participating
in Medicare and begun training
residents in an approved program, as a
‘‘new teaching hospital.’’ A new
teaching hospital’s PRA is established
by using the lower of its hospitalspecific PRA based on the actual
allowable direct GME costs and FTE
residents during a base period as
defined in § 413.77(e) or the updated
weighted mean value of PRAs of other
teaching hospitals in the same
geographic area.
Existing regulations at § 413.77(e)
specify that the base year for
establishing a PRA for a new teaching
hospital is the first cost reporting period
in which the new teaching hospital
participates in Medicare and the
residents are on duty during the first
month of that period. If the new
teaching hospital begins training
residents but does not have residents on
duty during the first month of the first
cost reporting period in which training
occurs, the new teaching hospital is
paid on a reasonable cost basis under
§ 413.77(e) for any GME costs incurred
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
by that hospital during that period. The
intent of this policy for new teaching
hospitals is to make a more accurate
determination of a PRA based on the
hospital’s per resident direct GME costs
in a cost reporting period in which GME
costs have been incurred for that entire
period. As we noted in a response to
comments in a final rule published in
the Federal Register on September 29,
1989 (54 FR 40310), we believe that
where the new teaching hospital’s cost
reporting period begins on a date other
than July 1 (the beginning of the
academic year), for example, October 1
or January 1, the cost reporting period
that includes costs and resident counts
from the first year of the training
program may not be reflective of the
actual average costs per resident of the
program because the full complement of
residents might not be on duty, and
those that are on duty might be
receiving a salary for as few as 1 or 2
months of the cost reporting period. In
the usual case, training in the program
would continue into the following cost
reporting period and residents would
thus be on duty in the first month of this
next cost reporting period.
Consequently, our existing regulations
at § 413.77(e)(1) specify that the PRA is
to be determined by using the cost and
resident data from the first cost
reporting period during which residents
are training in the first month of the cost
reporting period.
It has come to our attention that, in
rare instances, it is possible for a new
teaching hospital, either through
happenstance or by purposeful gaming
of the policy, to continue to be
reimbursed for direct GME costs on a
reasonable cost basis even beyond the
first cost reporting period during which
residents begin training at the hospital
as long as no residents are on duty at the
new teaching hospital in the first month
of the subsequent cost reporting
period(s). We believe this scenario is
contrary to the statutory intent of
section 1886(h) of the Act, which
instructs that instead of payment on a
reasonable cost basis, the Secretary is to
determine and base direct GME
payments on a PRA for each hospital
with a residency program. For that
reason, in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule (71 FR 24113), we proposed to
revise § 413.77(e)(1) and (e)(1)(i) to
provide that we will make a PRA
determination even where residents are
not on duty in the first month of a cost
reporting period but where residents
began training at the hospital in the
prior cost reporting period. We
proposed that, effective for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
October 1, 2006, if a new teaching
hospital begins training residents in a
cost reporting period beginning on or
after October 1, 2006, and no residents
are on duty during the first month of
that period, the fiscal intermediary
establishes a PRA for the hospital using
the lesser of: (1) The cost and resident
data from the cost reporting period
immediately following the one for
which GME training at the hospital was
first reported (that is, the base period);
or (2) the updated weighted mean value
of PRAs of all hospitals located in the
same geographic wage area. We note
that, as with existing policy, the base
year need not be a full cost reporting
year.
Comment: One commenter noted that
CMS should clarify that the PRA will be
based on ‘‘the lesser of’’ the cost and
resident data from the cost report, or the
updated weighted mean value of PRAs
of all hospitals located in the same
geographic wage area.
Response: We agree with the
commenter and have revised the
language in the preamble of this final
rule accordingly.
After consideration of the public
comments received, we are adopting as
final, without modifications, the
proposed changes to § 413.77(e)(1) and
(e)(1)(i) to provide that ‘‘effective for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 2006, if a new teaching
hospital does not have residents on duty
during the first month of that period, the
PRA will be determined using
information from the cost reporting
period immediately following the cost
reporting period during which the
hospital participates in Medicare and
residents began training at the hospital
even if the residents are not on duty
during the first month of that period.’’
4. Requirements for Counting and
Appropriate Documentation of FTE
Residents: Clarification (§§ 412.105(f),
413.75(d), 413.78(b) and (e), 413.80, and
413.81)
Despite the fact that current policies
concerning the counting of FTE
residents for IME and direct GME
payment purposes have been in effect
since October 1985, we continue to
receive questions on the proper
counting and appropriate
documentation for FTE residents for
IME and direct GME payment purposes.
As a result of these continuing
questions, in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24113), we
included a clarification of policies that
apply in determining hospitals’ FTE
resident counts for Medicare GME
payment purposes.
PO 00000
Frm 00209
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48077
In the existing regulations at
§ 413.78(b) for direct GME payments, we
specify that no individual may be
counted as more than one FTE, and that
a hospital cannot claim the time spent
by residents training at another hospital.
Therefore, if a resident spends time
training in more than one hospital, the
residents counts as a partial FTE based
on the portion of time the resident trains
at the hospital (and a nonhospital
setting if the hospital meets the
requirements of § 413.78(e)) to the total
time worked. (The same provisions
apply to part-time residents as specified
in § 413.78(b)). A similar policy exists at
§ 412.105(f)(1)(ii) and (iii) for purposes
of counting FTE residents for IME
payment purposes. As we have
explained in previous Federal Register
documents (55 FR 36064 and 67 FR
50077), these policies apply even when
a hospital actually incurs the cost of
training the resident(s) at another
hospital(s). For example, during a cost
reporting year, a full-time resident trains
at Hospital A for 6 months and trains at
Hospital B for 6 months. Hospital A is
paying the salary and fringe benefits of
the resident for the entire year. In this
case, each hospital would only count
0.5 of an FTE at the most for that
resident. Hospital A would not be able
to count the entire FTE for that resident,
regardless of the fact that it incurred all
of the training costs for the resident
during that training year.
We also have become aware of issues
that have arisen due to a hospital’s
failure to document the number of FTE
residents claimed on its cost report.
Proper documentation is required so
that Medicare fiscal intermediaries can
determine where and when a resident(s)
is training and to allow the fiscal
intermediary to make payment to the
hospital based on the time the
resident(s) spends at the hospital, which
may be a percentage of the total time
trained. A rotation schedule is the
primary documentation that can be used
to support the direct GME and IME
resident counts but other similar
documentation may be acceptable. The
following is a situation about which we
learned that illustrates how inadequate
documentation resulted in
inappropriate counting of FTEs. Two
hospitals, Hospital C and D, were
‘‘associated’’ with each other, with
residents training at both hospitals.
However, instead of differentiating
between the number of FTEs and the
actual amount of time spent at each
hospital, Hospitals C and D split the
FTEs 50/50. Since, in reality, the
number of residents actually training at
each hospital differed, splitting the FTE
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48078
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
count 50/50 resulted in inappropriate
payment to both hospitals. Hospitals are
not permitted to decide among
themselves how their FTEs will be
counted. A hospital may not count a
greater number of FTE residents than is
actually training at the hospital (or its
nonhospital sites) during the year. Each
hospital must have documentation
which demonstrates, for the entire cost
reporting period, the amount of time
that the resident trained at the hospital
and, if applicable, a nonhospital site.
Furthermore, to the extent that residents
train in nonhospital sites, the hospital
claiming the FTEs in the nonhospital
site must meet the requirements at
§ 413.78(e).
Situations such as the one described
above involving Hospital C and Hospital
D are particularly harmful when one or
more of the hospitals involved
incorrectly reported FTEs in the cost
reporting period used to establish one or
more of the hospitals’ FTE resident
caps, and as a result, the caps were
established incorrectly. Unless the
incorrect caps can be revised pursuant
to our regulations regarding review and
revision of agency determinations, those
caps must be applied to the hospital(s)
in future years. For instance, we have
learned of situations where a hospital’s
FTE resident caps were established
incorrectly a number of years earlier
and, due to administrative finality of
settled cost reports, can no longer be
adjusted. However, going forward, that
cap will be applied to the hospital’s
count of FTEs, which must reflect the
number of FTE residents actually
training in the hospital (or in
nonhospital sites where applicable).
In order to ensure that FTEs are being
properly counted, hospitals are required
to furnish specific documentation to
support the number of FTE residents
included in the hospital’s FTE count.
Section 413.75(d) specifies the
requirements concerning documentation
of FTE residents. Proper documentation
must include the following information:
The name and social security number of
the resident; the type of residency
program in which the individual
participates and the number of years the
resident has completed in all types of
residency programs; the dates the
resident is assigned to the hospital and
any hospital-based providers (similar to
the rotation schedule); the dates the
resident is assigned to other hospitals,
or other freestanding providers, and any
nonprovider setting during the cost
reporting period, if any; and the name
of the employer paying the resident’s
salary. In addition, the documentation
should include the name of the medical,
osteopathic, dental, or podiatric school
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
from which the resident graduated and
the date of graduation, and whether the
resident is a foreign medical graduate,
including documentation concerning
whether the resident has satisfied the
regulatory requirements for foreign
medical graduates at § 413.80. The
information must be certified by an
official of the hospital and, if different,
an official responsible for administering
the residency program. Again, proper
documentation on where and when a
FTE resident is training during a cost
reporting period is essential in order for
the hospital to receive direct GME and
IME payments based on the correct
number of FTE resident(s). Inaccurate,
incomplete, or inappropriate
documentation will lead to Medicare
disallowing certain FTE residents from
being counted for purposes of direct
GME and IME payments. We note that
we are not expanding or making any
changes to current policy for proper
documentation of FTEs. Rather, we are
clarifying the existing regulations
concerning proper counting and
documentation of FTEs.
Comment: Several commenters noted
that the issue of proper documentation
has been a frequent topic of discussion
between teaching hospitals and fiscal
intermediaries and that concerns
involving the ‘‘lack of uniform
standards’’ for documentation, burdens
related to ‘‘duplicative documentation
requests,’’ and matters pertaining to the
‘‘Medicare audit process’’ have been
communicated to the CMS central
office. Several commenters asserted that
the Medicare Intern and Resident
Information System (IRIS) is used by
many teaching hospitals as a means of
documentation and verification of FTE
resident rotations and counts. One
commenter noted further that since
teaching hospitals and fiscal
intermediaries use the IRIS ‘‘* * *as
the key reporting tool for resident
information * * *’’ CMS should
contribute further resources and
consideration to maintaining the IRIS
and ensuring that the program itself and
its technical support systems are ‘‘stateof-the-art.’’ Specifically, the commenter
stated that because CMS is the agency
responsible for the management of the
Medicare program, it has the
responsibility to update the IRIS so that
it is a ‘‘user-friendly’’ tool for teaching
hospitals. In addition, the commenter
noted that because the IRIS has not
recently been updated, teaching
hospitals have had to rely on private
software in order to use the IRIS. The
commenter stated that it is
inappropriate that teaching hospitals
have had to rely on private software to
PO 00000
Frm 00210
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
make the IRIS work. The commenter
suggested that CMS form an IRIS task
force comprised of ‘‘* * * CMS policy
staff, CMS audit staff, and industry and
intermediary representation * * *’’ to
attend to concerns involving the IRIS.
Response: We believe that § 413.75(d)
clearly specifies the documentation that
is required to allow a hospital to count
FTE residents for Medicare payment
purposes. However, we encourage
hospitals and fiscal intermediaries to
contact CMS with questions they have
about proper documentation. With
regards to the use of the IRIS in
determining a hospital’s FTE resident
count and as a source for documentation
purposes, we note that currently the
IRIS does not contain all of the specific
documentation requirements cited
under § 413.75(d) and § 412.105(f)(1).
Furthermore, the IRIS does not serve as
the evidence/documentation that
supports the accuracy of the FTE
resident counts reported in the cost
report, which is the subject of section
IV.H.4. of this preamble. The hospitals
prepare the IRIS using actual records
(for example, rotation schedules or
similar documentation) that could be
proper evidence/documentation to
support the accuracy of the FTE resident
counts reported in the cost report. In
addition, we are aware that, for
whatever reasons, the FTE resident
counts computed using the IRIS
information do not always match the
FTE resident counts reported in the
related cost reports. Thus, the IRIS is
not, in itself, a sufficient mechanism for
hospitals to meet their obligation to
furnish information required under
§ 413.75(d) to support the FTE resident
counts reported in the cost report. We
emphasize that rotation schedules or
other similar documentation should
stand as the primary evidence to
support hospitals’ FTE resident counts.
Regarding the commenter’s assertion
that it is inappropriate that teaching
hospitals have had to rely on a private
software program for IRIS use, we note
that CMS does not mandate that fiscal
intermediaries purchase separate
software packages to supplement the
IRIS. Where the hospitals or the fiscal
intermediaries utilize a private software
program for the IRIS, those fiscal
intermediaries can use the IRIS in
conjunction with the rotation schedule
or similar documentation as an audit
tool to identify duplicates, that is, the
counting of the same resident by more
than one hospital.
Comment: One commenter noted that
in order for hospitals and intermediaries
to determine proper GME
reimbursement improved guidance and
reporting systems are necessary, and
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
that, without better guidance, mistakes
will continue to be made by hospitals
and intermediaries. Furthermore, the
commenter stated that in order to
maintain a cost effective policy, GME
payment policy should be evaluated
from time to time ‘‘* * * to determine
operational efficiency and
effectiveness.’’ The commenter stated
that maintaining a cost effective
approach includes limiting
disagreements between teaching
hospitals and fiscal intermediaries
which requires that Medicare direct
hospitals and fiscal intermediaries,
‘‘* * * on the spirit and intent of the
law.’’ The commenter stated that,
although the law imparts that payment
be rooted in rules of nongovernmental
organizations, ‘‘* * * such as the
American Council of Graduate Medical
Education (ACGME) and American
Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS),’’
the rules of these organizations ‘‘* * *
are not enforced rigidly and do not have
the force of the law.’’ The commenter
understands that policy cannot cover
every issue but stated that ‘‘* * *
financial auditors will not allow a
situation unless it is specifically
addressed in regulation and other
directives.’’
The commenter asserted that,
‘‘improper payment is usually due to
the intermediaries’ lack of knowledge
about a policy or misunderstanding
about the GME rules and, [t]o remedy
the fact that intermediaries are not well
versed in many of the basic principles
required for GME audit work, there is a
need for Medicare GME payment
specialists.’’ In addition, the commenter
stated that hospitals must deal with
inconsistencies from year to year due to
different auditors and the auditors’
requirements for documentation. The
commenter further stated that Medicare
policies established to adhere with the
law are instituted without an adequate
understanding of how teaching
programs and hospitals function. The
commenter asserted that it is time to
provide further guidance to fiscal
intermediaries and hospitals on
Medicare GME payment policy and one
way CMS could provide further
guidance is to revise the Provider
Reimbursement Review Manual (PRM)
instead of issuing instructions through
multiple Federal Registers.
In addition, the commenter stated that
a cost effective measure to take to
correctly count FTE residents would be
to modify the IRIS because the system
currently does not incorporate sufficient
information to meet the regulatory
requirement to report all training
locations for an individual resident, and
only identifies a range of dates where
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
some FTE time is counted for the same
resident by more than one hospital.
Furthermore, the commenter stated that
fiscal intermediaries interpret software
limitations as the need for hospitals to
provide supplementary documentation.
The commenter noted that ‘‘[i]n
practice, neither the intermediary nor
the hospitals have followed the
regulatory requirement to report all
training locations of a resident’’ and
therefore recommended that ‘‘* * *
CMS clarify that hospitals must obtain
a report from the entity sponsoring the
training program that lists each
resident’s training location.’’
Furthermore, the commenter asserted
that ‘‘[t]he intermediary’s level of
acceptable documents has been
increasingly stringent * * *’’ and that
there have been occasions where
disallowances have occurred because
the submitted documentation did not
meet individual intermediary
requirements. The commenter also
provided other examples of situations
where auditors have disallowed FTE
residents.
Response: We acknowledge that the
PRM should be revised and updated to
incorporate current GME policies.
However, we disagree with the
commenters’ assertion that not enough
guidance is provided to teaching
hospitals concerning Medicare’s GME
payment policies. In addition to
clarifying policy through public Q&As
and Federal Registers, we meet with
teaching hospitals and intermediaries
on hospital-specific issues and with
associations representing teaching
hospitals in order to clarify GME policy.
We urge hospitals and fiscal
intermediaries to contact us regarding
questions they have about appropriate
documentation. With regards to the use
of the IRIS in determining a hospital’s
FTE resident count, we note that the
IRIS is only intended to serve as an
audit tool to help identify duplicates
and does not contain all of the specific
documentation requirements listed
under § 413.75(d) and § 412.105(f)(1)
and, therefore, additional
documentation is required. As
previously mentioned, the fact that the
IRIS does not meet the regulatory
provision to report all training locations
for an individual resident is not the only
reason that the IRIS cannot serve as the
evidence/documentation to support the
accuracy of the FTE resident counts
reported in the cost report. Modification
of the IRIS would not eliminate the need
for auditable evidence to support the
cost report and the information
included in the IRIS. We specified in
the preamble background and the
PO 00000
Frm 00211
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48079
previous response in this section that
CMS considers the rotation schedules or
similar documentation as the primary
evidence to support the FTE resident
counts. In response to the commenter’s
recommendation that sponsoring
institutions submit documentation
listing residents’ training locations, the
rotation schedules are prepared by the
Director of the GME program of the
sponsoring institution. These types of
rotation schedules should be used by
the hospital to determine the cost report
FTE resident counts and be furnished by
the hospital to the fiscal intermediary
when requested for audit purposes.
Comment: One commenter noted that
the documentation submitted in
accordance with § 413.75(d) needs to be
certified by an official of the hospital or
by an official responsible for
administering the residency program.
The commenter was unclear as to what
exactly needs to be certified, and in
what format, and asked if submission
and certification of the IRIS report meets
the certification requirement.
Response: The IRIS report does not
contain all the information listed in
§ 413.75(d) or § 412.105(f)(1). Therefore,
in itself, it does not meet all the
requirements of these sections
regardless of whether it is certified or
not. Therefore, in addition to submitting
the IRIS report, the hospital must
submit the other documentation
elements specified in § 413.75(d), and
those must be certified by a hospital or
GME program official.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern over the policies regarding the
proper counting of FTE residents.
Specifically, the commenter expressed
dismay that a hospital can count
resident training time for GME payment
purposes when the resident rotates to a
nonhospital site but not when a resident
is training at another hospital even if the
teaching hospital is incurring all the
training costs of that resident at that
other hospital. The commenter noted
that this policy is particularly
detrimental to emergency medicine. The
commenter stated that the Accreditation
Council for Graduate Medical Education
(ACGME) sets forth a required case
volume for residency training in
emergency medicine and that this
volume requirement limits the number
of rural emergency medical residency
training programs. The commenter
noted that in an effort to provide
residents in emergency medicine with
experience in rural practice, attempts
have been made to expand training to
rural hospitals. The commenter noted
that since few small rural hospitals
‘‘* * * want to undertake the burden of
becoming teaching hospitals in their
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48080
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
own right * * *,’’ the major teaching
hospitals have continued to pay the
costs of those residents training at the
rural hospitals. The commenter stated
that the current policy opposes efforts of
governmental agencies to increase
training in rural areas and further stated
that more residency program directors
would make rural training available if
they were permitted to continue to
count residents that were rotating to
rural hospitals. The commenter urged
CMS to change its policy to allow
payment to the primary teaching
institution for resident time spent in
rural hospitals in situations where it is
not economically feasible for the rural
hospital to become a teaching hospital.
Response: We agree that efforts
should be made to ensure that residency
training is occurring at rural facilities so
that residents are prepared to work in
these environments upon completion of
their residency training programs.
However, we do not believe that it is
consistent with the requirements at
sections 1886(d)(5)(B)(IV) and
1886(h)(4)(E) of the Social Security Act
to expand the policy to allow hospitals
to count residents training at rural
hospitals even if the hospital seeking to
count the resident is paying the cost of
training for those residents rotating to
the rural hospital. In addition, section
1886(h)(4)(B) of the Social Security Act
requires that the regulations take into
account individuals who serve as
residents simultaneously in more than
one hospital. Therefore, we believe that
the statute contemplates allowing a
hospital to count only those residents
actually training in that hospital. We do
not believe it is appropriate for the
‘‘primary’’ teaching hospital to include
time spent by residents at other
hospitals in its FTE count, even when
the ‘‘primary’’ teaching hospital is
incurring the costs of training the
residents.
Comment: One commenter stated that
fiscal intermediaries may be using the
IRPs set forth in the August 30, 1996
Federal Register. The commenter noted
that in the August 30, 1996 Federal
Register, CMS set an IRP of 2 years for
podiatry residency programs. The
commenter noted, however, that since at
least 2003, the Council on Podiatric
Medical Education (CPME) has stated
that there exists both a 2-year podiatric
medicine and surgery-24 program and a
3-year podiatric medicine and surgery36 program. The commenter requested
that all intermediaries use the most
recent information regarding the length
of the relevant training programs as set
forth by the relevant accrediting
organizations, in this case the CPME.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Response: We did not propose any
changes in policy regarding IRPs in the
FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule. We
consider this comment out of the scope
of the proposed rule. Therefore, we are
not responding to this comment at this
time.
5. Resident Time Spent in Nonpatient
Care Activities as Part of Approved
Residency Programs (§§ 413.9 and
413.78(a))
In section IV.H.4. of this preamble, we
discussed the importance of properly
documenting where and when residents
are training in a particular hospital or
nonhospital site, in order for that
hospital to count those FTE residents for
purposes of direct GME and IME
payment. In addition, it is important for
hospitals to be able to document the
activities in which residents are engaged
because there are certain activities that
are not allowable for direct GME or IME
payment purposes, even though those
activities may be performed as part of an
approved residency program.
Specifically, it has come to our attention
that there may be some confusion in the
provider community as to whether the
time that residents spend in nonpatient
care activities that are part of the
approved residency program may be
counted for the purpose of direct GME
and IME payments. We have most
recently received questions as to
whether the time residents spend in
nonhospital sites in didactic activities
such as journal clubs or classroom
lectures may be included in determining
the allowable FTE resident counts. To
respond to these inquiries and to resolve
any confusion, in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24114 and 24115),
we included a clarification of our policy
concerning the counting of time spent in
nonpatient care activities for the
purpose of direct GME and IME
payments in both hospital and
nonhospital settings.
With respect to training in
nonhospital settings, the time that
residents spend in nonpatient care
activities as part of an approved
program, including didactic activities,
cannot be included in a hospital’s direct
GME or IME FTE resident count. This
longstanding policy is based on the
statutory requirements for counting FTE
residents training in nonhospital sites.
For the purpose of direct GME
payments, providers have been allowed
since July 1, 1987, to count the time
residents spend training in nonhospital
sites under certain conditions. Section
1886(h)(4)(E) of the Act specifies that
the implementing regulations
concerning computation of direct GME
for training in nonhospital sites ‘‘shall
PO 00000
Frm 00212
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
provide that only time spent in activities
relating to patient care shall be counted
and that all the time so spent by a
resident under an approved medical
residency training program shall be
counted towards the determination of
full-time equivalency, without regard to
the setting in which the activities are
performed, if the hospital incurs all, or
substantially all, of the costs for the
training program in that setting’’
(emphasis added).
For IME payment purposes, hospitals
were first allowed to count the time
residents spend training in nonhospital
sites for discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 1997. Section
1886(d)(5)(B)(iv) of the Act was
amended by Pub. L. 105–33 in 1997 to
provide that ‘‘all the time spent by an
intern or resident in patient care
activities under an approved medical
residency program at an entity in a
nonhospital setting shall be counted
towards the determination of full-time
equivalency if the hospital incurs all, or
substantially all, of the costs for the
training program in that setting’’
(emphasis added).
We understand that, as part of an
approved medical residency program,
residents are often required to
participate in didactic and ‘‘scholarly’’
activities such as educational
conferences, journal clubs, and
seminars. Some of these activities may
take place in nonhospital sites, such as
freestanding clinics or physicians’
offices, or in conference rooms at
nonhospital settings. In implementing
section 1886(h)(4)(E) of the Act for
direct GME payment purposes, we
specifically stated that ‘‘only time spent
in activities relating to patient care may
be counted [in nonhospital sites]’’ (54
FR 40292, September 29, 1989). In 1998,
when we implemented the statute
allowing FTE residents to be counted in
nonhospital sites for IME, we reiterated
that a hospital may only count resident
training time ‘‘in nonhospital sites for
indirect and direct GME, respectively, if
the resident is involved in patient care’’
(63 FR 40986, July 31, 1998). While we
have not explicitly defined in
regulations ‘‘patient care activities,’’ we
have applied the plain meaning of that
term. In addition, we note that the scope
of the term ‘‘patient care’’ had been
well-established in the Medicare
program even prior to issuance of the
first rules on counting FTE residents for
purposes of direct GME and IME
payments. For example, prior to the
IPPS, acute care hospitals were paid by
Medicare for inpatient services based on
their reasonable operating costs, or costs
relating to the provision of reasonable
and necessary ‘‘patient care.’’ The
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
longstanding regulation at 42 CFR 413.9,
entitled ‘‘Costs related to patient care,’’
states that ‘‘all payments to providers of
services must be based on the
reasonable cost of services covered
under Medicare and related to the care
of beneficiaries.’’ Thus, the scope of
costs recognized as reasonable under
Medicare had been limited to those
relating to ‘‘patient care,’’ or to those
relating to covered services for the care
of beneficiaries. Although the agency
appears to have made a conflicting
statement in a letter directed to a
particular individual implying that
didactic time spent in nonhospital
settings could be counted for direct
GME and IME, that statement was
inaccurate. We have applied and
continue to apply the plain meaning of
the statutory terms ‘‘patient care
activities’’ and ‘‘activities relating to
patient care’’ in the context of approved
GME programs. That is, the plain
meaning of patient care activities would
certainly not encompass didactic
activities. Rather, the plain meaning
refers to the care and treatment of
particular patients, or to services for
which a physician or other practitioner
may bill. Time spent by residents in
such patient care activities may be
counted for direct GME and IME
payment purposes in the nonhospital
site. Time spent by residents in other
activities in the nonhospital site that do
not involve the care and treatment of
particular patients, such as didactic or
‘‘scholarly’’ activities, is not allowable
for direct GME and IME payment
purposes.
We note that there is a difference in
the rules for counting FTE resident time
for IME and direct GME payments when
residents are training in a hospital. For
direct GME payment purposes, under
§ 413.78(a), ‘‘residents in an approved
program working in all areas of the
hospital complex may be counted.’’ As
explained in the September 29, 1989
Federal Register document (54 FR
40286), the hospital complex consists of
the hospital and the hospital-based
providers and subproviders. Therefore,
the distinction between patient care
activities and nonpatient care activities
is not relevant to direct GME FTE count
determinations when the residents are
training in the hospital complex.
However, for IME payment purposes,
consistent with the regulations at
§ 413.9, only time spent in patient care
activities in the hospital may be
counted. It has been our longstanding
policy that, regardless of the site of
training, ‘‘* * * we do not include
residents in the IME count to the extent
that the residents are not involved in
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
furnishing patient care * * *’’ (66 FR
39897, August 1, 2001).
Comment: Many commenters took
issue with CMS’s ‘‘clarification’’ that
FTE resident time spent in didactic
activities while training in the hospital
could not be counted for purposes of
IME payment, and while training in a
nonhospital site could not be counted
for either direct GME or IME payments.
The commenters urged CMS to ‘‘revert’’
to the position expressed in a letter in
1999, and questioned whether, in light
of that 1999 letter, CMS is actually
‘‘clarifying’’ its policy rather than
changing existing policy. One
commenter suggested that to ‘‘avoid
challenges’’ to CMS’s policy, a
definition of ‘‘patient care activities’’
should be promulgated under the
Administrative Procedures Act (APA).
Another commenter argued that it is
‘‘improper’’ for CMS to exclude
nonpatient care time from the IME
count for fiscal years prior to 2001 (as
the April 25, 2006 proposed rule would)
because CMS did not enact regulations
requiring the exclusion of nonpatient
care activities from the IME count until
2001. The commenter observed that in
the April 25, 2006 proposed rule, as in
the 2001 rule (66 FR 39898), CMS stated
that the rule excluding nonpatient care
time from the IME count was
‘‘longstanding’’ policy and applies to
periods prior to 2001. The commenter
asserted that it is inappropriate for the
agency to apply the policy expressed in
the April 25, 2006 proposed rule
retroactively (as was done in 2001)
because it ‘‘amends the agency’s policy
prior to 2001 without notice and
comment rulemaking as required by the
APA.’’ Another commenter noted that,
as justification for CMS’s ‘‘longstanding
policy’’ concerning patient care
activities, CMS quoted from the August
1, 2001 final rule (66 FR 39897) which
states that ‘‘we do not include residents
in the IME count to the extent that the
residents are not involved in furnishing
patient care * * *.’’ The commenter
stated that CMS ‘‘failed’’ to include the
remainder of the text, which states ‘‘but
are instead engaged exclusively in
research.’’ The commenter argued that
the excluded phrase indicates that CMS
only meant to exclude research
activities that are not patient-related
from the IME count, and that ‘‘nowhere
is the word ‘didactic’ ever mentioned.’’
Response: We disagree with the
commenters’ assertion that the
provision in the proposed rule
concerning the time residents spend in
nonpatient care activities is a change in
policy, rather than a clarification of
existing policy. With respect to
residency training occurring in
PO 00000
Frm 00213
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48081
nonhospital settings, in the April 25,
2006 proposed rule (71 FR 24115), we
enumerated several examples to
illustrate that the requirement for
residents to spend time in patient care
activities is fundamental to including
the FTE resident time in the count for
direct GME and IME purposes.
Specifically, in implementing section
1886(h)(4)(E) of the Act, which allows
hospitals to count time spent by
residents training in nonhospital sites
for direct GME payment purposes under
certain circumstances including that the
resident time be spent in activities
related to patient care, we reiterated that
‘‘only time spent in activities relating to
patient care may be counted’’ (54 FR
40292, September 29, 1989). In 1998,
when we implemented section
1886(d)(5)(B)(iv), which first allowed
hospitals to count time spent by
residents in nonhospital sites for
purposes of IME under certain
conditions including that the resident
time be spent in patient care activities,
we reiterated that a hospital may only
count resident training time ‘‘in
nonhospital sites for indirect and direct
GME, respectively, if the resident is
involved in patient care’’ (63 FR 40986,
July 31, 1998). In addition, we noted in
the April 25, 2006 proposed rule that
the scope of the term ‘‘patient care’’ had
been well-established in the Medicare
program even prior to issuance of the
first rules on counting FTE residents for
purposes of direct GME and IME
payments.
While we have not explicitly defined
‘‘patient care activities’’ in regulations,
we have consistently used the plain
meaning of that term. This is the case
despite the agency’s erroneous response
to a question on this issue in a
September 24, 1999 letter. The
commenters refer to this 1999 letter to
support their argument that the
‘‘clarification’’ in the proposed rule
demonstrates that CMS has changed its
position since 1999. In the September
24, 1999 letter, CMS (then HCFA) wrote:
‘‘HCFA interprets the phrase ‘patient
care activities’ broadly to include any
patient care oriented activities that are
part of the residency program. * * *
[T]his can include resident participation
in ‘‘(1) the direct delivery of patient
care, such as clinical rounds,
discussions, and conferences, and (2)
scholarly activities, such as educational
seminars, classroom lectures, research
conferences, patient care related
research as part of the residency
program, and presentations of papers
and research results to fellow residents,
medical students, and faculty.’’
As we stated in the April 25, 2006
proposed rule (71 FR 24115), in this
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48082
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
September 24, 1999 letter, we
inaccurately stated our interpretation of
the phrase ‘‘patient care activities,’’
implying that didactic time spent in
nonhospital settings could be counted
for direct GME and IME purposes.
While there is no explanation of the
phrase ‘‘patient care activities’’ in the
conference report language
accompanying the change in the laws
allowing the counting of FTE residents
in nonhospital sites in 1987 for direct
GME and in 1997 for IME, we believe
that Congress intended to limit in some
meaningful way the types of activities
for which FTE resident time could be
counted in the nonhospital setting. If
the term ‘‘patient care’’ in the statutory
phrase ‘‘only time spent in activities
relating to patient care’’ (section
1886(h)(4)(E) of the Act) was to be
interpreted as broadly as suggested in
the agency’s September 24, 1999 letter,
there would be virtually no limit to the
types of activities that could be counted,
rendering the entire phrase, and
particularly, the word ‘‘only,’’
meaningless. If Congress had desired
that all FTE time as part of an approved
program be counted in nonhospital
sites, then it need not have added the
limiting language concerning patient
care. It could have stated simply that
time spent in an approved program at a
nonhospital site should be counted. We
do not believe that Congress would have
included a superfluous phrase in the
statute. As the commenters point out,
CMS had not defined the term ‘‘patient
care’’ prior to the enactment of either of
the statutory provisions in 1987 and
1997. Therefore, we believe that when
Congress used the term ‘‘patient care’’,
it meant to give the term its plain
meaning. Such a plain meaning of the
statutory language is in direct conflict
with the exceedingly broad definition of
‘‘patient care activities’’ articulated in
the September 24, 1999 letter. We do
not believe it would be appropriate to
adopt a broad definition of patient care
activities as was expressed in the 1999
letter when that definition would
conflict with the plain meaning of a
limiting phrase in the statute—to the
extent that it would give little or no
meaning to the statutory phrase.
Moreover, we believe it would be
particularly inappropriate to adopt such
a broad construction when the
definition has not been promulgated
through notice and comment
rulemaking, but rather, expressed in a
single letter directed to a single
individual.
We also question whether the
provider community would actually
have relied as heavily as commenters
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
suggest on the September 24, 1999 letter
when it was clearly directed to a single
attorney in response to his specific
inquiry, and not to a broader audience,
nor was it (nor any similar guidance)
disseminated by the Agency to its fiscal
intermediaries. Furthermore, although
we believe that the letter responding to
this attorney contained an inartful and
incorrect expression of the policy
concerning nonpatient care activities,
we do not believe that expression
should be used to permit the
indiscriminate inclusion of FTE resident
time spent in nonpatient care activities
in nonhospital sites.
With respect to residency training in
the hospital, our policy limiting the IME
count to only time spent in patient care
activities is rooted in the creation and
the purpose of the IME adjustment. The
IME adjustment is a payment to a
teaching hospital for its higher costs of
patient care. Before Congress passed the
1983 law that included the IME
adjustment in the IPPS, the Secretary
submitted a report to Congress in 1982
that (in part) explained that, ‘‘the
indirect costs of graduate medical
education are higher patient care costs
incurred by hospitals with medical
education programs’’ (Report to
Congress required by the Tax Equity and
Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982,
December 1982, pp. 48–49, italics
emphasis added). Similarly, in passing
the IPPS legislation in 1983, the House
Committee on Ways and Means
acknowledged the link between higher
patient care costs and teaching
hospitals, and noted that the IME
adjustment was important due to
concerns about whether the PPS could
adequately account for factors such as
the severity of illness of patients
utilizing the more specialized treatment
programs at teaching hospitals. Thus,
the reasons for the IME adjustment
enumerated by Congress and by the
Secretary are directly linked to the
involvement of residents in patient care.
The August 1, 2001 final rule (66 FR
39897) also lists discussions in other
Federal Register notices in the 1980s
that clearly state that the indirect costs
of medical education are the additional
operating costs that teaching hospitals
incur in furnishing patient care. We
reiterated this longstanding policy in
the August 1, 2001 final rule and stated
that, ‘‘* * * consistent with the
purpose of IME payments and general
Medicare reimbursement principles, in
determining the FTE count with respect
to the IME adjustment, it has been our
longstanding policy that we do not
include residents to the extent that the
residents are not involved in patient
PO 00000
Frm 00214
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
care [but are instead engaged
exclusively in research]’’ (66 FR 39897).
One of the commenters stated that, in
the discussion in the April 25, 2006
proposed rule (71 FR 24115), ‘‘CMS
failed to include the remainder of the
text which states ‘but are instead
engaged exclusively in research.’ These
excluded words put in context what
CMS was trying to convey in that rule—
that in terms of research activities, only
those that are patient-related may be
counted. Nowhere is the word ‘didactic’
ever mentioned.’’ We did not include
the remainder of that text in the
proposed rule because the focus of the
discussion in the proposed rule was on
didactic activities, not research.
However, we reiterate that, just as
residents engaged in activities that are
exclusively research are not engaged in
patient care activities, and are not
included in the IME count in the
hospital, residents in the hospital
engaged in didactic, nonpatient care
activities are also not counted for the
purpose of IME.
Comment: Several commenters
pointed to what they believe is an
‘‘inconsistency of logic’’ concerning
CMS’ position regarding the time that
may be included in the resident count
at nonhospital settings, and the policy
concerning the time for which a hospital
must incur the costs relating to a
teaching physician in those settings. On
the one hand, CMS argues that in order
for hospitals to receive direct GME and
IME payments relating to residents
training in nonhospital settings, the
hospital must pay for the costs of the
time spent by teaching physicians in
educating residents, even when the
activities are not associated with patient
care. On the other hand, CMS precludes
hospitals from counting FTE resident
time not spent in patient care activities.
According to the commenters, these
‘‘conflicting positions’’ where the
hospitals must pay for costs of training
time that they cannot count for purposes
of direct GME and IME payments will
result in confusion in the provider
community.
Response: We are aware of what the
commenter views as a paradox in the
requirements concerning the time that
residents train in nonhospital settings.
Nevertheless, the statute clearly requires
that hospitals must incur ‘‘all, or
substantially all, of the costs for the
training program’’ in the nonhospital
setting in order to count any FTE
residents training at a nonhospital site
for IME and direct GME purposes
(§ 1886(d)(5)(B)(iv) and § 1886(h)(4)(E)
of the Act). The definition of ‘‘all or
substantially all of the costs for the
training program in the nonhospital
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
site’’ at § 413.75(b) is consistent with
what CMS (and previously HCFA) has
always considered to be ‘‘direct costs’’
of a GME program, inlcuding ‘‘the
residents’ salaries and fringe benefits
* * * and the portion of the cost of
teaching physicians’’ salaries and fringe
benefits attributable to direct GME.’’
The direct costs of GME associated with
teaching physicians were historically
paid for under Part A of the Medicare
Trust Fund, while payment for billable,
patient care services provided by
residents supervised by teaching
physicians are generally paid under
Medicare Part B. Therefore, the costs
associated with patient care activities in
which the teaching physicians are
involved are not included in the direct
costs of the GME program. Yet, in
allowing hospitals to count FTE
residents training in nonhospital sites,
the statutory provision regarding direct
GME also states that ‘‘only time spent in
activities relating to patient care shall be
counted * * *’’ (§ 1886(h)(4)(E) of the
Act). Similarly, the statutory provision
regarding IME states, ‘‘all the time spent
by an intern or resident in patient care
activities * * * shall be counted * * *’’
(§ 1886(d)(5)(B)(iv)). Consequently,
hospitals are not permitted to count a
portion of the FTE resident time (that is,
the nonpatient care time) even though
they must incur the training program
costs associated with that time.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that the IME and direct GME statute
pertaining to nonhospital sites supports
the counting of didactic activities, and
that Congress wanted to encourage, not
limit, residency training in nonhospital
sites. The commenters believe that the
reference to ‘‘patient care activities’’ in
the IME and direct GME nonhospital
statutes refers generally to patient care
settings, such as physicians’ offices and
other ambulatory care sites. One
commenter cited the statutory language
as the reason why hospitals exclude
extended periods of time spent
exclusively in ‘‘bench’’ research outside
of the hospital, or time spent by
preventive medicine residents in state
and local public health departments
from the IME and direct GME FTE
counts, since these activities do not
involve ‘‘patient care.’’ Another
commenter implied that didactic time in
nonhospital sites is allowed for IME
purposes since the conference
agreement accompanying the legislative
language in the BBA states, ‘‘The
conference agreement includes new
permission for hospitals to rotate
residents through nonhospital settings,
which include primarily ambulatory
care settings, without reduction indirect
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
medical education funds’’ (emphasis
added). Commenters also stated that
Congress was ‘‘well aware’’ that
residency training involves didactic
components, and Congressional actions
in both COBRA 1986 (enacting the
direct GME nonhospital site provision)
and BBA 1997 (enacting the IME
nonhospital site provision) make it clear
that Medicare would allow hospitals to
count time spent in nonhospital sites for
purposes of direct GME and IME.
Response: We believe the commenters
have erroneously concluded that
because Congress desired to encourage
increased residency training in
nonhospital sites, the nonhospital IME
and direct GME statutes must, therefore,
also support the counting of FTE
residents engaged in didactic activities
in nonhospital sites. In fact, despite the
lack of an explicit explanation of what
was intended by the term ‘‘patient care
activities,’’ when the Conference
committee report language is viewed in
conjunction with the statute, we believe
the obvious and correct conclusion is
that Congress wanted to encourage more
training in nonhospital settings, but
only for the purpose of increasing
patient care training in outpatient,
ambulatory settings. This Congressional
intent is evident in the legislative
history of both the direct GME and the
IME provisions on nonhospital settings.
First, legislative history associated with
passage of the direct GME provision (as
part of Pub. L. 99–509) indicates that
‘‘[s]ince it is difficult to find sufficient
other sources of funding [other than
hospitals and Medicare] for the costs of
such training, [that is, training in
freestanding primary care settings such
as family practice clinics or ambulatory
surgery centers] assignments to these
settings are discouraged [under the preenactment payment scheme]. It is the
Committee’s view that training in these
settings is desirable, because of the
growing trend to treat more patients out
of the inpatient hospital setting and
because of the encouragement it gives to
primary care.’’ (Emphasis added.) (H.R.
Rep. No. 99–727, 99th Cong., 1st Sess.,
70 (1986).) Thus, from the start of the
provision allowing hospitals to count
FTE resident training in nonprovider
sites, we believe Congress intended to
create a monetary incentive (or remove
the disincentive) for hospitals to rotate
residents from the hospital to the
nonhospital settings for the purpose of
treating patients in those ambulatory
settings, not for the purpose of spending
time in didactic activities in those
settings. We believe this is the reason
why Congress specifically added the
‘‘patient care activities’’ requirement to
PO 00000
Frm 00215
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48083
the direct GME (and later, the IME)
statute. Similarly, in the Conference
committee report accompanying the
provision of Pub. L. 105–33 on counting
resident training time in nonhospital
settings for IME, Congress stated that
‘‘[t]he conference agreement includes
new permission for hospitals to rotate
residents through nonhospital settings,
without reduction in indirect medical
education funds’’ (emphasis added, H.R.
Conf. Rep. No. 105–217, 105th Cong.,
1st Sess., 817 (1997).) We believe that by
the phrase ‘‘without reduction in
indirect medical education funds,’’
Congress intended that when hospitals
send residents to nonhospital sites for
training, the IME payments relating to
those FTE residents would not cease;
that is, the hospitals would continue to
receive IME, in addition to the direct
GME payments they were already
receiving when residents rotate from the
hospitals to nonhospital settings.
Furthermore, as we stated in the August
1, 2003 final rule in the context of
redistribution of cost and community
support principles (68 FR 45436),
legislative intent becomes even more
evident when the nature of the IME
adjustment is considered. Because the
IME adjustment is a payment for patient
care costs that is made for each
Medicare discharge from the areas
subject to the IPPS in a teaching
hospital, ‘‘the authorization by Congress
for IME payments relating to
nonhospital services while residents are
training at nonhospital sites would be
absurd if not viewed as an incentive to
transfer existing residency training from
the hospital to the nonhospital setting’’
(68 FR 45436). Given the nature of IME
as a patient care payment, surely
Congress would not have made IME
payments available for training in
nonhospital settings to encourage
movement of didactic training from the
hospital to nonhospital sites. To the
contrary, we believe Congress clearly
intended to encourage hospitals to shift
only residency training that involves
patient care activities from the hospital
to outpatient ambulatory settings.
Comment: One commenter alleged
that, ‘‘in a very misleading fashion in
the proposed rule, CMS does not quote
the entire section of the relevant portion
of the Medicare statute, which reads in
full:
‘‘Counting Time Spent in Outpatient
Settings. Such rules shall provide that
only time spent in activities relating to
patient care shall be counted and that
all the time so spent by a resident under
an approved medical residency training
program shall be counted toward the
determination of full-time equivalency,
without regard to the setting in which
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48084
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
the activities are performed, if the
hospital incurs all, or substantially all,
of the costs for the training in that
setting.’’ (Emphasis added). Section
1886(h)(4)(E) of the Social Security
Act.’’
The commenter argued that Congress
and CMS are well aware of the language
that can be used to describe care
directly provided to individual patients;
that is ‘‘direct patient care.’’ The
commenter included a list of mostly
regulatory (and 2 statutory) cites where
the term ‘‘direct patient care’’ is used
and noted that the statutory language
regarding GME does not use the term
‘‘direct patient care,’’ but rather, uses
the much broader language of ‘‘activities
relating to patient care.’’ Further, the
law states that ‘‘all the time so spent by
a resident under an approved medical
residency training program shall be
counted * * * without regard to the
setting in which the activities are
performed’’ (emphasis added.) The
commenter added that Medicare
regulations also define ‘‘direct medical
and surgical services’’ of physicians in
a teaching setting as ‘‘services to
individual beneficiaries that are either
personally furnished by a physician or
furnished by a resident under the
supervision of a physician in a teaching
hospital * * *’’ (42 CFR 415.152), and
that in all these situations, the idea of
‘‘direct patient care’’ can be more
narrowly defined than ‘‘activities
relating to patient care.’’
Response: It appears that the
commenter has overlooked the
paragraph on page 24115 of the April
25, 2006 proposed rule where we did,
in fact, quote the entire section of the
statutory language pertaining to direct
GME payments for nonhospital training.
We also believe the statutory language is
intended to be read differently from the
way the commenter has suggested,
resulting in a significantly different
policy. Specifically, the commenter
quotes and emphasizes the statute as
follows: ‘‘all the time so spent by a
resident under an approved medical
residency training program shall be
counted * * * without regard to the
setting in which the activities are
performed * * * ’’ The commenter uses
this language to suggest that CMS must
allow the time spent in didactic
activities in nonhospital sites. However,
we believe the correct reading of the
statute in its entirety is:
‘‘Such rules shall provide that only
time spent in activities relating to
patient care shall be counted and that
all the time so spent by a resident * * *
shall be counted toward the
determination of full-time equivalency,
without regard to the setting in which
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
the activities are performed * * * ’’
(§ 1886(h)(4)(E) of the Act).
In other words, only a subset of the
time that residents spend in nonhospital
settings can be counted. Specifically,
only all of the time so spent in activities
relating to patient care can be counted,
not necessarily all of the time spent
training in the nonhospital site.
Similarly, the IME statute states, ‘‘all the
time spent by an intern or resident in
patient care activities * * * shall be
counted * * * ’’ (§ 1886(d)(5)(B)(iv) of
the Act). Furthermore, as we stated in
response to previous comments, if
‘‘patient care’’ in the phrase ‘‘only time
spent in activities relating to patient
care’’ (section 1886(h)(4)(E) of the Act)
is interpreted as broadly as suggested by
the commenter, there would be virtually
no limit to the types of activities that
could be counted, rendering the entire
phrase, and particularly the word
‘‘only,’’ meaningless. In addition, we
note that the definition of ‘‘direct
medical and surgical services’’ at
§ 415.152 of regulations relating to
physicians in a teaching setting is
consistent with our definition of the
plain meaning of ‘‘patient care
activities.’’ Just as the definition of
‘‘direct medical and surgical services’’
refers to services to individual
beneficiaries that are either personally
furnished by a physician or furnished
by a resident under the supervision of
a physician, our definition of ‘‘patient
care activities’’ refers to the care and
treatment of particular patients, or to
services for which a physician or other
practitioner may bill. Therefore, the
terms ‘‘direct medical and surgical
services’’ and ‘‘direct patient care’’ are,
for all intents and purposes,
synonymous with the phrase ‘‘patient
care activities.’’
Comment: We received many
comments expressing strong opposition
to the clarification in the proposed rule,
some of which were quite passionate
and included ominous predictions of
the dire consequences of such a policy
on GME programs. Generally,
commenters urged that we rescind the
provision in the proposed rule, on the
grounds that there is a very close
connection between the didactic
activities that residents engage in and
the delivery of patient care. They argued
that with the exception of extended
periods of time spent doing ‘‘bench
research’’ which is excluded from the
IME count, every activity that the
residents are engaged in is integral to
patient care activities. The commenters
argued that there is no distinction
between patient care and other activities
in which residents participate during
their residency training. Rather, the
PO 00000
Frm 00216
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
distinction is more appropriate when
comparing undergraduate medical
training and post-graduate residency
training. The commenters noted that the
emphasis in medical school is didactic
education, while the focus in residency
training is patient care delivery, with
continued didactic education in the
context of furnishing patient care. The
commenters argued that the didactic
activities are an important part of the
ACGME’s required curriculum since it
is now widely recognized that
physicians should be competent in
‘‘medical knowledge about established
and evolving biomedical, clinical, and
cognate * * * sciences and the
application of this knowledge to patient
care’’ (ACGME Institutional
Requirements, III(E)(1)(b)). Several other
commenters pointed out that the
ACGME competencies are intended to
address ‘‘exactly what the IOM has
criticized our training professions for,’’
and therefore, didactic sessions are
necessary to improve the quality of
residency education. These commenters
stated that their program (family
medicine) currently evaluates their
residents ‘‘in all these competencies as
a continuing quality improvement
process during patient care’’ (emphasis
in the original). Commenters
representing osteopathic residency
programs stated that all osteopathic
training programs are required to teach
certain core competencies by 2006.
Another commenter stated that, in an
effort to improve the residents’ skills in
delivering patient care, the teaching
physician ‘‘looks for every opportunity,
in whatever physical setting for the
‘teachable moment’ to review a critical
point or two to hone the learner’s
skills.’’ Commenters also asserted that
most didactic activities are relatively
short, and residents often continue to
have direct patient care responsibilities
during the didactic time, and are often
paged to respond to emergencies or to
tend to their assigned patients during
scheduled didactic periods. They noted
generally that current patients are often
used as a springboard for discussions at
lectures, and it would be extremely
difficult to track when the ‘‘patient
care’’ ends and the didactic time begins.
In addition, residents are required to
attend simulation programs, which
prepare them for ‘‘real-time’’ patient
care experiences using advanced
technologies. A commenter urged CMS
to promote and encourage investment in
such technologies and activities that are
intended to improve the quality of
patient care, rather than ‘‘create
reimbursement disincentives for
institutions that may be struggling to
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
afford it.’’ Many commenters indicated
that if CMS finalized this rule, teaching
faculty ‘‘will be caught up in the
productivity race with no time for’’
valuable discussions with their
residents, at a time when family
physicians need to be ‘‘exceptionally
well trained’’ in order to meet the needs
of underserved, vulnerable patient
population who need chronic disease
management. The commenters warned
that CMS’s proposal ‘‘lowers the
standards of care for Medicare patients’’
and is ‘‘dangerous for our current and
our future patients.’’ One commenter
asked that we reconsider rule changes
that will ‘‘rob Peter to pay Paul,’’ while
another commenter urged that we
‘‘please [do] not allow anything to occur
that might reduce the attractiveness’’ of
medical school graduates pursuing
primary care specialties. One
commenter added that with the recent
loss of funding for primary care
education in Title VII of the Public
Health Act, this ruling could ‘‘literally
spell the end of primary care practice in
the United States.’’ Another commenter
asked if ‘‘perhaps [CMS] could refocus
[its] efforts toward educating doctors
instead of spending so much of [its]
time identifying new ways of
withholding funding.’’ We also received
a comment that stated that
reimbursement for direct GME and IME
is ‘‘sufficiently restricted’’ by limits on
increases to per resident amounts
(PRAs) and FTE resident caps, and there
is no need to impose additional
‘‘burdensome recordkeeping
requirements with the sole apparent
intent of further reducing such
payments.’’
Response: We are sympathetic to the
commenters’ arguments that the
didactic activities in which the
residents are required to participate
contribute to the development of more
highly skilled, proficient, well-rounded
clinicians, and we are not in any way
minimizing the importance of such
activities, nor are we advocating a
position that would deny all GME
payments for these activities. However,
we note that Medicare GME payments
were never intended to cover the total
costs of medical education, as is
evidenced most obviously by the fact
that direct GME payments are based on
Medicare’s share of the costs of training
an FTE resident. Rather, we are merely
distinguishing between activities that
concern the treatment and diagnosis of
particular patients (that is, patient care),
and activities that are didactic in nature
(that is, not patient care), as this
distinction is necessary to ensure that
Medicare funds for medical education
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
are paid appropriately. Direct GME has
historically been considered to be the
payment for the direct costs of
education. Accordingly, the direct
educational costs incurred by a hospital
in providing didactic activities are more
appropriately paid for via the direct
GME payment. We note that the
methodology used to determine
hospitals’ base year direct GME PRAs
included the allowable costs and FTE
time of didactic activities occurring
within the hospital complex. The IME
adjustment serves an entirely different
purpose. Specifically, the IME
adjustment is a payment under the IPPS
to recognize the higher operating costs
that teaching hospitals incur in
furnishing patient care; it is intended to
pay a teaching hospital for those
additional indirect patient care costs,
not the direct costs associated with
didactic learning.
Furthermore, while we do not dispute
that didactic activities are essential to
and integrated with the residents’
patient care experience, this does not
mean that the didactic activities are
patient care activities. In addition, the
didactic activities are not an
insignificant portion of a resident’s
training. These activities are required by
the accrediting organizations, and are
necessary for board certification, and
therefore, even though it may not be an
unusual occurrence for a resident to be
called out of a conference to tend to a
patient care emergency, the resident
surely must satisfy his/her minimum
requirements of didactic training over
the course of the entire academic year.
A random search on the internet of
individual hospitals’ program
requirements revealed that many
programs schedule didactic activities for
their residents of an hour or more in
length every single day. In fact, many
comments we received were from
commenters who included detailed
descriptions of the nonpatient care
activities in which their residents are
required to participate. We are also
aware of rotations that are
administrative or didactic in nature that
are more lengthy (for example, 2 weeks
or 6 weeks), but are scheduled less
frequently. Such rotations are surely not
patient care. Therefore, we are not
convinced by the commenters’
arguments that since didactic time is
frequently integrated with patient care
activities, it is patient care and,
therefore, the time should be allowed
for IME purposes in the hospital, and for
direct GME and IME purposes in the
nonhospital site.
Comment: One commenter noted that
direct GME and IME payments are based
on allowable ‘‘full-time equivalent’’
PO 00000
Frm 00217
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48085
(FTE) counts, and that the regulations
do not specify the number of hours that
comprise one FTE. Rather, the
regulations for IME state that ‘‘full-time
equivalent status is based on the total
time necessary to fill a residency slot’’
(§ 412.105(f)(1)(iii)(A)), and the direct
GME regulations have a similar
requirement (42 CFR § 413.78(a)).
Response: The commenter is correct
that a hospital’s allowable FTE count is
‘‘based on the total time necessary to fill
a residency slot’’ (§ 412.105(f)(1)(iii)(A).
As the regulations state, the concept of
the total time necessary to fill a
residency slot is used to determine the
part-time or full-time status of the
resident. If it is determined that the
resident is not working the number of
hours necessary to fill a residency slot
(between all the resident’s hospital and
nonhospital training sites), the resident
would be considered part-time, and the
proportion of total time the resident is
working in all training sites would be
adjusted accordingly. For purposes of
determining a hospital’s count of FTE
residents, the important word in the
regulatory phrase is ‘‘based.’’ That is,
the starting point (denominator) for
determining the allowable FTE count is
the total time necessary to fill a
residency slot. However, the hospital
must then subtract (from the numerator)
all nonallowable training time, such as
time spent at other providers, time spent
in IPPS-excluded distinct part units (for
IME), didactic activities (for IME), and
so on. Thus, while a hospital’s
allowable FTE count is certainly
‘‘based’’ on the total time necessary to
fill a resident slot, the total time is often
greater than the FTE time a particular
hospital is permitted to count for IME
and direct GME payment purposes.
Comment: One commenter noted that
the average resident’s workweek is 80
hours, and if CMS were to count an FTE
resident for GME purposes based on a
40 hour workweek as is done for the
Medicare IPPS wage index, the
exclusion of didactic activities would
not affect the overall FTE count.
Response: The total number of hours
recorded as worked by residents for the
purpose of the wage index adjustment to
the IPPS represents a compromise, and
is irrelevant in the context of
determining the FTE resident count for
GME payment. Historically, the actual
number of hours worked by residents
(often more than 80 hours per week)
was included in the average hourly
wages of hospitals used to compute the
wage index. However, teaching
hospitals argued that the excessive
number of resident hours relative to the
hours worked by other employees
skewed their average hourly wage
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48086
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
downward, and placed them at a
disadvantage relative to non-teaching
hospitals. Therefore, CMS (then HCFA)
determined that it would be appropriate
to count interns and residents for wage
index purposes based on a 40-hour
workweek. Thus, the 40-hour workweek
actually benefited teaching hospitals for
wage index purposes. In any case,
beginning with the FY 2000 wage index
(which was based on cost reporting
periods starting on or after October 1,
1995 and ending on or before September
30, 1996), the wages and hours of
interns and residents were phased out of
the wage index, since Medicare
payments for the salaries and fringe
benefits of interns and residents are
made by Medicare through the direct
GME payment (based on the PRA), and
not the IPPS. (Beginning with the FY
2003 wage index (cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 1999),
we removed 100 percent of the interns’
and residents’ wage data from the wage
index). For purposes of determining
what portion of an FTE resident a
hospital may count for a resident that is
training at the hospital (after first
determining whether the resident is a
part-time or full-time resident based on
the total necessary to fill the residency
slot), it is important and necessary to
first determine the actual total time
worked by the resident. Accordingly, if
80 hours per week is established as the
total time necessary to fill the residency
slot, and if a resident works an 80-hour
week and works 40 hours per week at
each of two hospitals, each hospital
would count no more than one half of
an FTE for the resident. The FTE
determination for that resident cannot
be based on 40 hours, since that would
result in both hospitals counting the
same resident as a full FTE. Thus, in
calculating the FTE count, it would be
inappropriate to compare the time spent
in patient care activities to a 40 hour
week and not to the total time worked
by the resident.
Comment: Some commenters asserted
that just as the direct GME statute for
residency training in the hospital does
not include a reference to patient care,
and therefore, all training in the hospital
is countable for direct GME, the IME
statute for hospital training also does
not refer to patient care, and therefore,
all the training in the hospital should be
counted for IME too. One commenter
asserted that the proposed rule is ‘‘ultra
vires’’ and is therefore,
‘‘unconstitutional’’ because the IME
statute for training in the hospital does
not exclude time spent in nonpatient
care activities, and that the IME
adjustment is only the ‘‘best proxy’’ for
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
teaching hospitals’ increased training
costs—it was not intended to measure
the ‘‘actual costs’’ of training residents.
The commenter argued that the
Congress did not ‘‘intend that CMS
parse apart or exclude certain time’’
from the FTE count, and doing so is
beyond the scope of the agency’s
authority. Another comment stated that
‘‘we are unaware of any Medicare
directive that distinguishes patient care
activity in a hospital and nonhospital
site.’’ One commenter stated that he is
‘‘not aware that the fiscal intermediaries
made disallowances for educational
activities when calculating hospitals’
PRAs in the 1984 base year.’’ The
commenter also refers to the 1990 Q&As
issued by CMS (then HCFA) to the CMS
Regional Offices and the fiscal
intermediaries for use in computing the
base year PRAs, and argues that ‘‘CMS
makes numerous references to
educational activities as allowable costs
and does not once specify that these
costs and the associated resident time
were to be carved out if the activity took
place in the nonhospital setting.’’ The
commenter quoted part of a response (to
one of the 1990 Q&As) which stated, ‘‘If
the hospital, rather than the related
school, directly incurs the costs
associated with these educational
activities, they should be recognized as
allowable graduate medical education
costs and included in the per resident
amount.’’
Another commenter noted that the
provisions at section 2120 of the
Provider Reimbursement Manual, Part I,
titled Reimbursement for Costs of
Interns and Residents, which described
the cost method of reimbursement for
GME programs, do not distinguish
between training types or training
location, and therefore, Medicare
allowed costs of residents when they
trained in didactic activities in
nonhospital locations.
Commenters also argued that CMS’s
‘‘overly rigid’’ interpretation of ‘‘patient
care activities’’ ignores CMS’s
longstanding definition of ‘‘costs related
to patient care,’’ which is the basis for
much of CMS’s analysis, because
educational activities like conferences
and seminars for hospital employees
have always been allowable costs under
Medicare, and therefore, should be
allowed for purposes of the IME as well.
[see PRM–I, chapter 21, sections 2108.1,
2128, 2136.1, 2138.1, 2138.2, 2144.4,
and 2144.6]. Another commenter
contended that to exclude didactic time
from the IME calculation would be
inconsistent with Congress’s purpose in
instituting the IME adjustment.
Congress’s reason for enacting this
provision was to address factors that
PO 00000
Frm 00218
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
contribute to the higher costs incurred
by teaching hospitals, such as more
acutely ill patients, more specialized
treatments, and the additional costs
associated with training residents such
as the ordering of additional tests and
extra staffing demands. The commenter
argued that during the time the
residents are involved in didactic
activities, ‘‘these costs are in no way
reduced,’’ since the ‘‘patients remain
just as ill as they were before, the
hospital continues with its residentrelated inefficiencies, the hospital
continues to provide specialized
services, and the services are just as
intense. Thus, all of the costs that the
IME adjustment is intended to
compensate continue unabated no
matter what the resident is doing.’’
Other commenters quoted the
Committee report language
accompanying the PPS legislation,
which stated that purpose of the IME
adjustment was to address ‘‘serious
doubts about the ability of the DRG case
classification system to account fully for
factors such as severity of illness of
patients requiring the specialized
services and treatment programs
provided by teaching institutions and
the additional costs associated with the
teaching of residents * * * the
adjustment for indirect medical
education costs is only a proxy to
account for a number of factors which
may legitimately increase costs in
teaching hospitals (emphasis added,
U.S. House of Representatives, 1983).’’
In light of this Committee report
language, the commenter believed that
the language in the proposed rule
defining the ‘‘plain meaning’’ of patient
care as related to the care and treatment
of a specific patient or to services for
which physicians can bill is ‘‘patently
incorrect.’’
Response: After reading the numerous
comments challenging CMS’ position
that only the time spent by residents in
patient care activities in the hospital
may be counted for IME purposes, it has
become apparent to us that there
actually has been a good deal of
confusion in the teaching hospital
community regarding our longstanding
policy with respect to IME and patient
care activities. Nevertheless, we do
believe that the commenters are
misconstruing and confusing CMS’
position on, and the purpose for, the
direct GME payments and IME
payments, respectively. By including a
provision in the April 25, 2006
proposed rule clarifying our position on
the time residents spend in nonpatient
care activities, we were (and still are)
distinguishing between activities that
concern the treatment and diagnosis of
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
particular patients (that is, patient care),
and activities that are didactic in nature
(that is not patient care), as this
distinction is necessary to ensure that
Medicare funds for medical education
are paid appropriately. As stated in
response to a previous comment,
historically, direct GME has been
considered to be a payment for the
direct costs of education. The
conference report accompanying the
original Medicare legislation (Pub. L.
89–97) stated:
‘‘Many hospitals engage in substantial
educational activities, including the
training of medical students, internship
and residency programs, the training of
nurses, and the training of various
paramedical personnel. Educational
activities enhance the quality of care in
an institution and it is intended, until
the community undertakes to bear such
education costs in some other way, that
a part of the net cost of such activities
(including stipends of trainees as well
as compensation of teachers and other
costs) should be considered as an
element in the cost of patient care, to be
borne to an appropriate extent by the
hospital insurance program’’ (S. Rep.
No. 404, 89th Cong., 1st Sess. 36 (1965);
H.R. No. 213, 89th Cong., 1st Sess. 32
(1965)).
Accordingly, educational activities of
hospital employees, particularly those
in ‘‘formally organized or planned
programs of study’’ as they were
described in the original regulations
first published on November 22, 1966
(31 FR 14814, and 20 CFR 405.421)
(later redesignated as 42 CFR 405.421 on
September 30, 1977 and as 42 CFR
413.85 on September 30, 1986)), were
recognized as Medicare-allowable costs
and implicitly included in the
definition of ‘‘costs related to patient
care’’ at 42 CFR 413.9. These specific
payments for medical education
activities were the basis for what later
evolved into the direct GME payments,
as established by Section 9202 of the
Consolidated Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1985 (Pub. L. 99–
272). That is, direct GME (and also,
payments for approved nursing and
allied health education programs under
42 CFR 413.85) is a payment for
education because it explicitly pays
hospitals for the direct costs of these
formally organized programs, such as
the stipends of trainees and teachers.
Additionally, as early as 1971, Chapter
4 of the Provider Reimbursement
Manual, Part I, stated that ‘‘any costs of
usual patient care’’ are excluded from
the definition of approved educational
activities (Section 404.2 of the PRM-I).
Clearly, the early medical education
payments, in which current direct GME
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
payments are rooted, were not intended
to be a payment for caring for patients,
but rather were (and are still today)
payments to hospitals for education
costs. Medicare made then, and still
makes, payments for usual patient care
as part of the hospital’s operating costs
and as direct payment to hospital-based
physicians under Medicare Part B.
Therefore, to the extent that residents
engage in nonpatient care didactic
activities as part of their approved
programs, the costs of those didactic
activities are allowed and paid by
Medicare through the direct GME
payment, based on the PRA. The
commenter is indeed correct that the
costs of didactic activities were
included as allowable costs by the fiscal
intermediaries when determining the
base year PRAs. However, the
commenter should not conclude that
didactic activities that occurred outside
of the hospital were included in the
determination of the PRAs. Under
Medicare’s previous reasonable cost
method of payment for approved
medical education activities, any costs
incurred by a hospital for resident
training that took place outside of the
hospital setting were not allowable costs
to that hospital (66 FR 3371). In
establishing PRAs, fiscal intermediaries
used a count of FTE residents for the
1984 base period that reflected ‘‘the
average number of FTE residents
working in the health care complex
during the GME base period’’ (54 FR
40299). Section 9314 of Pub. L. 99–509
changed the law to allow resident time
spent training in nonhospital settings to
be counted for the first time for
purposes of direct GME payments on
and after July 1, 1987. Furthermore,
regarding the specific language from the
1990 Q&As quoted by the commenter,
neither that question, nor the answer
provided by CMS (then HCFA) gives
any indication of where the educational
activities took place. Therefore, the fact
that CMS stated that the costs of
educational activities incurred directly
by a hospital are included in the PRA
does not mean that the costs incurred by
a hospital for all educational activities
are allowable, regardless of the location
in which they occurred. Similarly, just
because the FTE time associated with
certain costs is allowable (according to
the statute) does not mean that the costs
of a particular activity are necessarily
allowable. Certainly, if the Congress had
not changed the law in 1987 to allow
residents training in nonhospital
settings to be counted (for direct GME
purposes), then even the time spent in
direct patient care activities in
nonhospital sites would not be allowed
PO 00000
Frm 00219
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48087
to be counted by a hospital. The
relevant point, however, is that
educational costs incurred by a hospital
in providing didactic activities to
residents in approved programs are paid
by Medicare via the direct GME
payment, which is a payment for costs
of education.
The purpose of the IME adjustment is
different from that of direct GME in that
it is designed to adjust the IPPS
payment to teaching hospitals for the
higher operating costs they incur in
furnishing patient care. It is intended to
pay a teaching hospital for those
additional patient care costs that are an
indirect result of the presence of the
teaching program at the hospital, and
not the direct costs associated with
didactic learning. Although the
commenters argue that didactic
activities have long been recognized by
CMS as ‘‘related to patient care,’’
despite the fact that none of these
activities involves the ‘‘care and
treatment of individual patients’’ or
‘‘services for which a physician or other
practitioner may bill,’’ we believe that
because IME is a payment specifically
for patient care costs, the regulations
and subregulatory guidance concerning
‘‘costs related to patient care’’ are not
sufficient for determining what actually
constitutes patient care and is therefore,
an activity for which FTE resident time
in the hospital may be counted for IME.
As stated in response to a previous
comment, with respect to residency
training in the hospital, our policy
limiting the IME count to only time
spent in patient care activities is rooted
in the creation and the purpose of the
IME adjustment. Before Congress passed
the 1983 law that included the IPPS and
an IME adjustment, the Secretary
submitted a report to Congress in 1982
that (in part) explained that, ‘‘the
indirect costs of graduate medical
education are higher patient care costs
incurred by hospitals with medical
education programs’’ (Report to
Congress required by the Tax Equity and
Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982,
December 1982, pp. 48–49, italics
emphasis added). Similarly, in passing
the IPPS legislation in 1983, the House
Committee on Ways and Means
acknowledged the link between higher
patient care costs of teaching hospitals,
and noted that the IME adjustment was
important due to—
‘‘* * * serious doubts about the
ability of the DRG case classification
system to account fully for factors such
as severity of illness of patients
requiring the specialized services and
treatment programs provided by
teaching institutions and the additional
costs associated with the teaching of
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48088
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
residents * * * the adjustment for
indirect medical education costs is only
a proxy to account for a number of
factors which may legitimately increase
costs in teaching hospitals (U.S. House
of Representatives, 1983).’’
Essentially, Congress listed two
reasons for the IME adjustment, similar
to those stated in the Secretary’s 1982
report: (1) Teaching hospitals typically
offer more technologically advanced
treatments to their patients, and
therefore, patients who are sicker and
need more sophisticated treatment are
more likely to go to teaching hospitals,
and (2) the presence of inefficiencies
associated with teaching residents
resulting from the additional tests or
procedures ordered by residents and the
demands put on physicians who
supervise, and staff that support, the
residents. That is, because teaching
hospitals attract sicker patients, they
incur higher costs in caring for those
sicker patients—whether due to
additional tests ordered by residents or
more intensive treatments provided in
an educational setting. The Secretary
and Congress recognized that the
learning process in which the residents
are engaged results in more intensive,
and therefore more costly, treatment.
Thus, the purpose of the IME
adjustment is clearly limited to the
unique characteristics and conditions of
teaching hospitals that directly relate to
the delivery of patient care.30 Since the
purpose of the IME adjustment is rooted
in patient care, there is a clear and
compelling reason to limit the FTE
resident time that can be counted for
IME to time spent by residents in
patient care; that is, in the care and the
treatment of particular patients, or in
furnishing services for which a
physician or practitioner may bill.
Commenters argued that during the
time the residents are involved in
didactic activities, higher costs incurred
by teaching hospitals ‘‘are in no way
reduced,’’ and emphasized the language
in the Committee report describing the
purpose of the IME adjustment as
addressing (in part), ‘‘* * * the
additional costs associated with the
teaching of residents.’’ To address these
30 Similarly, to the extent that the higher costs are
caused by other factors such as a greater relative
share of medically complex or indigent patients, the
IPPS includes payments in the form of the outlier
and disproportionate share hospital (DSH)
adjustments to specifically compensate for those
costs. (Health Care Financing Review, Winter 1992,
Vol. 14, No. 2, p. 69, and Health Care Financing
Review, Spring 1990, Vol. 11, No. 3, pp. 31–
41).Therefore, the additional indirect medical
education costs that remain after controlling for
outlier and DSH payments are the essentially the
higher patient care costs resulting from the presence
and involvement of residents in patient care.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
comments, we refer to the August 1,
2001 final rule (66 FR 39898), in which
we reiterated our policy that IME is a
payment for patient care, and we also
included an example from that rule to
illustrate how the FTE resident count
for IME should be determined in a
manner that would properly reimburse
a hospital with residents that are
engaged in non-patient care research
activities. Although the discussion in
the August 1, 2001 Federal Register
focused on research, this example is
useful for this discussion on nonpatient
care didactic activities. In the example
(66 FR 39898), a hospital has 20 FTE
residents who were furnishing patient
care in the areas of the hospital subject
to the PPS, and 4 FTE residents engaged
exclusively in research. We stated that
the IME payment to the hospital should
reflect the additional operating costs
resulting from those 20 FTE residents
delivering patient care, and would not
include the 4 FTEs engaged exclusively
in research, as those 4 FTE residents did
not contribute to the hospital’s higher
operating costs. While it may be that the
existence of the research activities did
contribute in some marginal way to the
higher operating costs of the hospital,
for instance, by attracting more severely
ill or uninsured patients to the hospital
for non-research treatment, those
residents engaged exclusively in
research are not involved in and do not
contribute to more intensive or
inefficient patient care, and therefore,
their presence does not result in higher
allowable operating costs. We believe
the same holds true for the time
residents spend in didactic activities—
during this time, the residents are not
participating in or contributing to more
intensive or inefficient patient care.
Moreover, we believe that it is the
combination of the factors enumerated
by the Secretary and Congress as the
reasons for the IME adjustment that
contribute to the higher operating costs
of teaching hospitals. We believe the
Congress’ reference to ‘‘additional costs
associated with the teaching of
residents’’ refers to the presence of
inefficiencies associated with teaching
residents resulting from the additional
tests or procedures ordered by residents
and the demands put on physicians who
supervise, and staff that support, the
residents; and not to costs associated
with research or didactic activities.
Since direct GME payments are made to
teaching hospitals to cover the explicit
educational costs of training residents,
we do not believe Congress intended for
the IME adjustment to duplicate those
educational payments. In fact, it first
became evident that an adjustment to
PO 00000
Frm 00220
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
payments for teaching hospitals was
necessary, in addition to the cost-based
GME payments, after 1972 when
Congress instituted what became known
as the ‘‘section 223’’ limits to hospitals’
routine operating costs. Since the
agency’s analyses showed that the
section 223 cost limits adversely
impacted teaching hospitals, a
calculation based on a regression
formula was computed to adjust the
routine operating cost limits of teaching
hospitals. Consequently, the IME
adjustment was instituted to address the
higher patient care costs not sufficiently
compensated under the cost limits, and
later the DRG system. In the example
above, the inclusion of the four FTE
residents engaged in nonpatient care
research in the resident count for IME
would vastly overcompensate the
hospital for any marginal contribution
to operating costs resulting from the
presence of those FTE residents.
Similarly, a resident that is participating
in a seminar or a conference is not
contributing to the higher patient care
costs of the hospital. Thus, although it
would be appropriate to count such
nonpatient care time in calculating
direct GME payments, it would not be
appropriate to count that time for
purposes of the IME adjustment.
Accordingly, we believe it is
appropriate and fully consistent with
Congressional intent to apply the plain
meaning of the term ‘‘patient care
activities’’ and to limit the FTE resident
count to time spent in patient care
activities for IME for training in the
hospital, and for both IME and direct
GME for training in nonhospital sites.
That is, only time spent in the care and
treatment of particular patients, or in
providing services for which a
physician or other practitioner may bill,
may be counted.
Comment: One commenter said that
independent research activity rotations
were included in the allowable FTE
count used to determine hospitals’
direct GME base year PRAs. The
commenter said that these research
electives, which are part of the ACGME
approved program, ‘‘may happen at the
hospital’s medical library’’ or ‘‘may
happen at home at the resident’s study
desk,’’ but ‘‘all of it has been included
in the FTEs used to calculate the PRA
amount.’’ The commenter suggested
that, by the clarification in the April 25,
2006 proposed rule, CMS is adopting a
‘‘change in accounting method,’’ and
that, therefore, CMS should consider
adopting a change in the PRAs for
hospitals that ‘‘exclude these newly
excluded’’ FTEs.
Response: We believe the commenter
is confusing our policy of including the
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
FTE time spent in research activities in
the denominator of the PRA calculation,
and, in the FTE count in years
subsequent to the PRA base year, our
policy of excluding the costs of research
activities from the numerator of the
PRA. As we explained in the September
29, 1989 Federal Register and again in
the August 1, 2001 Federal Register (66
FR 39898 through 39899), each
hospital’s PRA is determined by taking
the hospital’s total allowable graduate
medical education costs (which do not
include costs allocated to the nursery
cost center, research, and other
nonreimbursable cost centers) in a base
year and dividing the costs by the
number of FTE residents working in all
areas of the hospital complex in the base
year (§ 413.77(a)(1)(i)). In the case of
research and other nonreimbursable cost
centers, costs were excluded from the
PRA calculation because they were
nonreimbursable in the base year,
consistent with longstanding Medicare
policy on Medicare cost reimbursement
to teaching hospitals. Ideally, residents
participating in research electives
would also have been excluded from the
base year FTE count used in the PRA
calculation. However, for a number of
hospitals, the FTE count for the base
year did include residents engaged in
such research because the 1984 base
year information available from
hospitals when the PRAs were
determined in 1990 did not consistently
distinguish between residents involved
in furnishing patient care services and
residents engaged in nonpatient care
research. The inclusion of such
additional FTEs in the denominator of
the PRA calculation lowered the PRAs
for these hospitals.
In order to avoid disadvantaging these
hospitals, in making direct GME
payments for a given year, we included
and continue to include residents
engaged in nonpatient care research in
the direct GME FTE count both in the
base year PRA calculation and in the
FTE count in subsequent payment year
calculations. This policy was adopted to
‘‘offset’’ the effects of the inclusion of
such FTE residents in the denominator
of the direct GME PRA calculation (no
such ‘‘offset’’ is warranted in the context
of IME). Thus, there has been no
‘‘change in accounting method,’’ and it
is not necessary to consider changing
the PRAs of hospitals that exclude
independent research rotations, as the
commenter suggests. Furthermore,
because the nonreimburseable costs
were excluded in calculating the PRA,
the end result is that the direct GME
payment does not encompass the costs
of residents engaged exclusively in
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
research. Therefore, as with the IME
payment, Medicare is not and has not
been reimbursing teaching hospitals
under direct GME for costs the hospital
incurs associated with resident time
spent in nonpatient care research.
Comment: One commenter disputed
CMS’ policy to exclude nonpatient care
time from the IME count on the grounds
that the IME statute states that ‘‘the
Secretary shall provide for an additional
payment amount for subsection (d)
hospitals with indirect costs of medical
education, in an amount computed in
the same manner as the adjustment for
such costs under regulations (in effect as
of January 1, 1983) * * *’’ (section
1886(d)(5)(B) of the Act). The
commenter maintained that because the
regulations in effect as of January 1,
1983, did not exclude nonpatient care
activities from the IME count, the plain
meaning of the statute requires that this
time continue to be included in the IME
resident count.
Response: The exclusion of time spent
in nonpatient care activities from the
IME count is longstanding CMS policy,
and consistent with the rules in effect as
of January 1, 1983. The statute
implementing the IME adjustment at
section 1886(d)(5)(B) of the Act requires
that, ‘‘[t]he Secretary shall provide for
an additional payment amount for
subsection (d) hospitals with indirect
costs of medical education in an amount
computed in the same manner as the
adjustment for such costs under
regulations (in effect as of January 1,
1983) * * *’’).
For the initial analysis of the
operating costs of teaching hospitals
versus non-teaching hospitals that was
used to develop the IME adjustment,
while analysts could distinguish
between allowable and non-allowable
costs, they did not have a method to
consistently and accurately isolate all
the time spent by residents in
nonpatient care activities. Therefore, no
consideration was given to where the
residents were training in the hospital
or what the residents were doing (that
is, patient care or other activities). Prior
to the implementation of the IPPS,
under the reasonable cost system of
reimbursement, the concept of an ‘‘FTE
resident’’ had little, if any, relevance.
Thus, for this analysis, an ‘‘FTE’’ simply
distinguished between a resident that
was employed at the hospital on a fulltime basis and a resident that was
employed at the hospital only part-time.
Accordingly, while only allowable costs
were considered in the analysis, the
time spent by residents in nonreimbursable activities or areas of the
hospital was not excluded from the
analysis.
PO 00000
Frm 00221
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48089
The April 1, 1980 Federal Register
implementing the initial IME
adjustment specified simplistic
requirements for hospitals to report FTE
residents to the fiscal intermediaries for
purposes of receiving the IME
adjustment to their cost limits,
consistent with the relatively crude
resident counts CMS used in computing
the IME adjustment (45 FR 21484). The
rules in effect as of January 1, 1983
concerning determining the resident
count for IME required, in part, that
only residents in approved programs
could be counted (47 FR 43310
(September 30, 1982)). Once the IPPS
was effective, CMS took certain steps to
modify the rules concerning FTE
resident counts for the resident-to-bed
ratio to more appropriately adapt the
IME adjustment to the new prospective
payment methodology under which
only inpatient operating costs were
reimbursed. (Other types of costs, such
as direct GME and outpatient hospital
costs were specifically excluded from
payment under the IPPS, and continued
to be paid under existing mechanisms.)
A distinction was drawn, for payment
purposes, between the acute inpatient
hospital (subject to the IPPS), and
distinct part units and hospitals not
paid under the IPPS. Since reasonable
cost payments to these ‘‘IPPS excluded’’
providers and units already included
the indirect costs of medical education,
in order to avoid a ‘‘double’’ payment
that would result from counting
residents in those IPPS-excluded
settings, CMS clarified in regulations
that the IPPS IME adjustment does not
apply to any hospitals or distinct part
units not paid under the PPS, and
consequently, both the number of beds
and the time spent by residents in those
areas could not be included in the
resident-to-bed ratio (48 FR 39844). The
agency modified the rules for counting
FTE residents and hospital beds for
purposes of the IME adjustment so that
the adjustment would be more closely
tailored to reflect the higher allowable
patient care costs of teaching hospitals
under the prospective payment system
for inpatient acute care hospitals.
In the September 3, 1985 final rule,
CMS responded to comments regarding
its proposal to exclude FTE resident
time spent in outpatient departments
from the numerator of the resident-tobed ratio. CMS had proposed this
exclusion ‘‘because outpatient
departments also are not subject to the
prospective payment system and
because the additional operating costs of
outpatient departments associated with
interns and residents are already
recognized through reasonable cost
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48090
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
reimbursement for hospital services
furnished to outpatients’’ (50 FR 35681
through 35682). The commenters stated
that CMS was required to count
residents training in outpatient
departments since section 1886(d)(5)(B)
of the Act requires that the IME
adjustment be ‘‘computed in the same
manner’’ as set forth in the regulations
on January 1, 1983. The commenters
further argued that in the September 1,
1983 interim final rule, CMS said that
residents in outpatient departments
would be counted so as to avoid
‘‘altering only one element of the
variable and failing to maintain
comparability between the methodology
used for developing the adjustment
factors and subsequently standardizing
hospital costs based on that factor’’ (48
FR 39778).
In response to those comments, CMS
stated that the agency believed that in
excluding residents training in the
outpatient departments from the FTE
count, it was computing the adjustment
‘‘in the same manner’’ as previously,
since the adjustment continued to be
based on a resident-to-bed ratio. CMS
noted that, although the statute purports
to refer to regulations in effect on
January 1, 1983, there were no specific
regulations in effect on that date, and,
although the September 30, 1982
Federal Register (47 FR 43310)
contained a description of the method to
be used, the agency believed that
‘‘Congress, in enacting the prospective
payment system, intended that the
methodology in effect be adopted rather
than the entire description published in
that notice’’ (emphasis added). CMS
further noted that the agency had
already made changes to the
methodology for counting interns and
residents in the January 3, 1984 and
August 31, 1984 final rules (the latter in
response to a provision in Pub. L. 98–
369) to ‘‘adapt the previous system to
the prospective payment system more
effectively.’’ (In fact, the Agency had
also made changes in the September 1,
1983 Federal Register (48 FR 39844) to
exclude FTE training time in distinct
part units that are excluded from the
PPS). We noted that, in response to the
refinements the agency made in 1983
and 1984 to the rules for counting
residents for purposes of the IME
adjustment, Congress could have made
adjustments to the IME multiplier, but
chose not to do so even though it passed
legislation (Pub. L. 98–369) dealing
specifically with indirect medical
education payments. In response to
comments, the agency observed that
‘‘the current [IME] adjustment itself is
no longer entirely consistent with the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
original factor’’ (50 FR 35682). We
concluded that, ‘‘if the deletion of time
furnishing services to outpatients,
which decreases the count of interns
and residents, invalidates the indirect
medical education adjustment, it should
follow that the expansion of programs
that took place since the current factor
was developed also should have
invalidated the adjustment. However,
especially since Congress did not
mandate that the factor be recalculated,
we believe that if there are, as here,
overriding concerns, the revision to the
method of counting interns and
residents is justified’’ (50 FR 35682).
We acknowledge that soon after
publication of this rule, Congress passed
the Consolidated Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act (COBRA) (Pub. L.
99–272) on April 7, 1986, which
included a provision (section 9104(a))
that addressed the agency’s regulation,
and required that time spent by
residents training in outpatient
departments ‘‘will continue to be
counted for purposes of determining the
indirect teaching adjustment’’ (See 51
FR 16773, May 6, 1986). We note
further, however, that although
Congress addressed CMS’s rule on
excluding time spent in outpatient
departments, Congress could have, but
did not, also address the agency’s
regulations concerning the exclusion of
training time in distinct part psychiatric
and rehabilitation units. Congress has
considered and taken legislative action
with respect to the IME adjustment
many times since 1986, but has not
found it necessary to modify the
agency’s policies with respect to the
counting of FTE residents for IME
purposes. We do not believe that we are
obligated to adhere rigidly to the
rudimentary methodology of counting
FTE residents for IME purposes that was
in effect prior to and in the early days
of the IPPS. Rather, since the IME
adjustment is a payment for additional
patient care costs, we believe there is a
clear and compelling reason to limit the
FTE resident time counted for IME
purposes to the time spent by residents
in the care and the treatment of
particular patients, or to services for
which a physician or other practitioner
may bill.
Comment: One commenter argued
that CMS’ position in the April 25, 2006
proposed rule that nonpatient care
activities must be excluded from the
IME FTE count ‘‘flies in the face of’’ the
United States District Court’s decision
in Riverside Methodist Hospital v.
Thompson, Case No. C2–02–94 (S.D.
Ohio 2003). In Riverside, the hospital
appealed the fiscal intermediary’s
disallowance of time spent in the
PO 00000
Frm 00222
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
hospital in journal clubs and seminars
from the IME FTE count. In that
decision, the Court ruled ‘‘1) that the
2001 rule excluding nonpatient care
time from the FTE count must not apply
retroactively and 2) that resident time
spent on nonpatient care activities
should be included in the IME FTE
count.’’ The commenter contended that
CMS’ position in the proposed rule is
‘‘an unconstitutional attempt to use the
regulatory process to overturn the
decision of an Article III court.’’
Another commenter claimed that the
Court in Riverside affirmed Congress’
intent that the IME adjustment should
compensate teaching hospitals for more
than just the direct costs of residents’
involvement in patient care because
those higher operating costs are difficult
to separately identify and measure
precisely. The commenter quoted part of
the ruling in the Riverside case: ‘‘It is
precisely because the indirect costs
cannot be adequately itemized and
quantified that Congress devised a
formula based on the degree of teaching
intensity in a particular hospital, as a
substitution for any other method of
reimbursing such costs. If Congress had
believed that the indirect medical
education costs of a teaching hospital
could be separately identified and
quantified, and that higher direct
patient care costs could be so
determined from the hospital’s records,
then Congress could easily have
qualified its formula for reimbursement
to restrict the number of FTE residents
to a number based only on hours that
residents spent providing ‘patient care.’
It obviously did not do so’’.
Response: The first commenter is
correct that the Court in the Riverside
case ruled to reverse the fiscal
intermediary’s disallowance of time
spent by the hospital’s residents in
nonpatient care activities from the IME
FTE count. We respect and will give full
effect to that Court’s decision. However,
we do not read that decision to restrict
the Secretary’s discretion to promulgate
regulations on the issues litigated in that
case. Although we acknowledge the
Court’s recognition that the statute did
not specify that the IME formula be
based only on hours spent in providing
patient care, we believe, as explained
above, that such a limitation is
appropriate and in accordance with the
purpose of the IME payment, as well as
Congressional intent, under the IPPS. It
is also noteworthy that Congress has not
acted to modify the agency’s policies
with respect to counting FTE residents
even though Congress has recently
enacted several provisions relating to
IME and direct GME in the MMA. We
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
would also note that the cost report at
issue in the Riverside case was from
Fiscal Year 1996, which is clear
evidence that the agency’s policy to
disallow the time spent in nonpatient
care activities from the IME FTE count
in the hospital is, indeed, longstanding.
Comment: Many commenters voiced
their concern that if CMS were to
‘‘inappropriately’’ require that all
didactic activities must be excluded for
IME purposes in the hospital, and for
direct GME and IME purposes in the
nonhospital sites, it would result in a
‘‘quagmire of administrative
difficulties,’’ and enormously increase
teaching hospitals’ documentation
burdens. It would mean a ‘‘sea change’’
for many hospitals, as rotation
schedules are often weekly or monthly,
and vary widely not only from hospital
to hospital, but also from program to
program. Especially for very large
teaching hospitals, reporting residents’
activities in hour-long increments is
‘‘literally not achievable.’’ One
commenter alleged that CMS’s
‘‘nefarious’’ separation of patient care
time from didactic activities which
‘‘devolve[s] to discussions of particular
patients seems a capricious exercise in
futility.’’ With respect to training in
nonhospital settings, one commenter
warned that CMS’ proposal would have
a ‘‘chilling effect’’ on training outside
the hospital. The commenter believed
that hospitals will be ‘‘forced to
demand’’ that nonhospital sites closely
monitor the portion of time that is spent
in nonpatient care activities, which may
be difficult to distinguish from the
patient care activities. The commenter
believed that physicians will refuse to
supervise residents in nonhospital sites
if the documentation requirements
become too burdensome, which would
‘‘frustrate’’ Congress’ intent in enacting
the IME nonhospital site payment
provision. Another commenter
expressed concern that CMS’ ‘‘shortsighted’’ approach ‘‘penalizes’’ hospitalbased residency programs that provide
their residents with nonhospital training
experiences, ‘‘exacerbating other recent
CMS policy changes that disadvantage
training programs conducted outside the
hospital.’’
Response: We have carefully
considered the comments, and we
recognize that providing hour-by-hour
schedules for, in some cases, more than
1,000 residents, could be a daunting
task. We would point out, however, that
nowhere in the preamble discussion of
the April 25, 2006 proposed rule did we
explicitly require hourly rotation
schedules. We did say that ‘‘it is
important for hospitals to be able to
document the activities in which
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
residents are engaged because there are
certain activities that are not allowable
for direct GME or IME payment
purposes, even though those activities
may be performed as part of an
approved residency program’’ (71 FR
24114). Although we need to ensure that
Medicare payments are paid accurately,
it is not our desire to impose
unreasonably complicated and timeconsuming recordkeeping requirements.
It has always been the general practice
of fiscal intermediaries to use rotation
schedules as the primary source of
documentation to determine whether
residents’ time is allowable for IME and
direct GME payment purposes.
However, we are sympathetic to the fact
that up to this point, hospitals have
been inconsistent in their reporting of
nonpatient care activities, either
because of confusion surrounding our
FTE-counting policy, or because of
differing approaches to developing and
maintaining rotation schedules.
Therefore, we believe it is appropriate
from an administrative perspective to
distinguish between the treatment of
cost reports for cost reporting periods
beginning prior to October 1, 2006, and
cost reporting periods starting on or
after October 1, 2006, with respect to
documentation requirements.
Prospectively, (for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2006), to ensure consistent reporting by
hospitals and auditing by fiscal
intermediaries, we believe it is
appropriate to require all teaching
hospitals to document residents’ time at
some minimum level of detail.
Specifically, for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006,
for training occurring either in the
hospital or in nonhospital settings, we
are instituting a ‘‘one workday’’
threshold for documentation purposes.
That is, we are not requiring that
hospitals overhaul their current rotation
schedules, nor are we mandating that
rotation schedules be in one-day
increments. Rather, if a resident’s
workday consists entirely of scheduled
didactic activities and no scheduled
patient care activities (for example, no
care and treatment of individual
patients, or no services which are
billable) then, for documentation
purposes, that workday must not be
recorded as ‘‘patient care’’ (or, as
occurring in a patient care unit such as
ICU or Pediatrics, etc.). Instead that
workday must be identified as
nonpatient care and the time must be
subtracted from the allowable FTE
count (for IME if the training occurred
within the hospital complex, and for
both IME and direct GME if the training
PO 00000
Frm 00223
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48091
occurred in a nonhospital site). In other
words, as long as an entire workday is
not scheduled for didactic activities,
then for documentation purposes, that
day may be recorded as spent in patient
care activities. For example, if a hospital
maintains rotation schedules in monthly
blocks for each resident in a particular
program, and if a resident that is
otherwise assigned to the Coronary Care
Unit (CCU) for the month of January was
scheduled to attend an all day
conference on January 10 and not to
participate in any planned patient care
activities on that day, then the hospital
must note on the rotation schedule that
it submits to the fiscal intermediary that
this resident was not in ‘‘patient care’’
on January 10. The hospital would
subtract that time from the resident’s
allowable IME and/or direct GME FTE
count accordingly. We believe this ‘‘one
workday’’ approach to documentation of
residents’ time is an appropriate
administrative measure that will assist
our fiscal intermediaries in enforcing
the policy concerning time spent in
nonpatient care activities for cost
reporting periods starting on or after
October 1, 2006, while not
overburdening hospitals with
excessively detailed recordkeeping
requirements. However, our policy
continues to be that only time spent in
patient care activities may be counted
for IME purposes in the hospital
complex, and for direct GME and IME
purposes in nonhospital sites.
Accordingly, we are amending
§ 413.75(b) to add a definition of the
term ‘‘patient care activities’’ which
means, ‘‘the care and treatment of
particular patients, including services
for which a physician or other
practitioner may bill.’’ (We note that in
the proposed rule, we defined patient
care activities as ‘‘the care and treatment
of particular patients or services for
which a physician or other practitioner
may bill’’ (emphasis added). In this final
rule, we are changing the word ‘‘or’’ to
‘‘including,’’ because we did not mean
to imply that the phrase ‘‘the care and
treatment of particular patients’’ and
‘‘services for which a physician or other
practitioner may bill’’ are mutually
exclusive. Rather, services that are
billable are a subset of the more general
category of activities involving the ‘‘care
and treatment of particular patients,’’
and are indicative of patient care
delivery). In addition, we are amending
the IME regulations at § 412.105(f)(1)(iii)
to add a paragraph (C) to state that ‘‘In
order to be counted, a resident must be
spending time in patient care activities,
as defined in § 413.75(b).’’
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48092
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Comment: One commenter requested
that if CMS decides to implement the
policy expressed in the proposed rule,
CMS should clarify that ‘‘only planned
activities expressly undertaken to meet
programmatic requirements should be
included as part of the approved
residency program.’’ The commenter
was concerned that without such a
clarification, CMS may interpret
‘‘spontaneous’’ encounters at
nonhospital settings (such as unplanned
lunch meetings with a teaching
physician and a resident where they
‘‘happen’’ to discuss a medical topic) as
nonpatient care time. Another
commenter listed several residency
training scenarios that he believed
would need further clarification with
respect to whether the time could be
counted for IME and/or direct GME
purposes, if CMS’s policy is finalized.
The scenarios included the time that a
resident is called out of a conference to
care for a patient, lunch time lectures,
and requires courses of study or
activities that the resident may complete
at home or at a faculty member’s home.
Response: As we stated in response to
the previous comment, as long as an
entire workday is not scheduled for
didactic activities, then for
documentation purposes, that day may
be recorded as spent in patient care
activities. Of course, activities must be
part of the approved residency training
program in order to be counted for IME
and direct GME payment purposes and
a resident must be training within the
hospital complex or in a nonhospital
site. If a hospital documents that time
was spent studying at a resident’s or a
teaching physician’s home, this time is
not permitted to be included in the IME
count because it is not time spent in
patient care, nor is it permitted to be
included in the direct GME count
because it did not take place in the
hospital complex.
Comment: One commenter stated that
if CMS decides to implement the policy
in the proposed rule in some form
(although the commenter believed CMS
shouldn’t), then the final policy would
represent a change that must be
modified formally through the process
of notice and comment rulemaking, and
therefore, should only apply
prospectively for rotations beginning on
or after July 1, 2007.
Response: Although we recognize that
there has been some misapprehension of
our policies among the teaching hospital
community, in particular with respect to
the counting of FTE residents training in
the hospital for purposes of IME, the
only change we are making to current
policy is the ‘‘one workday’’ approach
to identifying nonpatient care time
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
spent by residents. We do not believe it
is necessary to wait until July 1, 2007,
to implement our recordkeeping policy.
We believe that an effective date stated
above, for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006,
provides hospitals with sufficient time
to either modify their rotation schedules
to reflect the ‘‘one workday’’ approach
or to find other comparable
documentation that can be used by the
fiscal intermediaries in auditing cost
reports.
Comment: A commenter said that it is
unclear how CMS intends to exclude
nonpatient care time for cost reporting
purposes; that is, just from the time
allowable as part of a hospital’s resident
count (that is, the numerator), or from
the total time worked (in all locations)
by the resident (that is, the
denominator). The commenter observed
that the statute quoted by CMS in the
proposed rule states that ‘‘only time
spent in activities relating to patient
care shall be counted’’ (emphasis added,
section 1886(h)(4)(E) of the Act). The
commenter believed that to be
‘‘counted’’, the time appears both in the
allowable time claimed by the hospital
and the total time worked by the
resident in a given year, and conversely,
if the activities do not relate to patient
care, then the time should not be
counted either as allowable time or as
part of the total time worked. The
commenter requested that CMS specify
that these activities are not to be
included at all in IRIS, either as
allowable or unallowable, so as not to
dilute the total resident count that may
be claimed by all of the hospitals
training the resident.
Response: The effect of the
commenter’s request would be to ignore
portions of training time spent by
residents in approved residency training
programs with the result that, in total,
less than a full-time equivalent resident
would be counted. We do not believe
such a policy would be appropriate or
comport with Congressional intent.
Section 1886(h)(4)(A) of the Act states
that, ‘‘The Secretary shall establish rules
consistent with this paragraph for the
computation of the number full-time
equivalent residents in an approved
medical residency training program’’
and the remainder of the subsection is
replete with references to ‘‘full-time
equivalent’’ residents. Accordingly, the
regulations at § 412.105(f)(1)(iii)(A) for
IME and § 413.78(b) for direct GME
indicate that, in computing the FTE
count of a hospital, for each resident,
the denominator consists of the total
time necessary to fill a residency slot,
which constitutes full-time equivalent
status. Full-time equivalent status, in
PO 00000
Frm 00224
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
turn, is based upon the total amount of
training time necessary to fulfill the
requirements of the approved medical
residency training program in a given
academic year. Therefore, the
denominator must consist of the total
time worked by a resident throughout
the academic year in activities that are
part of the approved program, whether
or not the time is permitted to be
counted for IME or direct GME payment
purposes. As stated in response to a
previous comment, the starting point
(denominator) for determining the
allowable FTE count is the total time
necessary to fill a residency slot
consistent with the requirements of the
approved residency program. However,
the hospital must then subtract all nonallowable training time, such as time
spent at other providers, time spent in
IPPS-excluded distinct part units,
nonpatient care activities (for example,
research, didactic time), and so on, and
only include the allowable time in the
numerator. Thus, while a hospital’s
allowable FTE count is certainly
‘‘based’’ on the total time necessary to
fill a resident slot that total time is often
greater than the FTE time a particular
hospital is permitted to count for
payment purposes. Furthermore,
certainly no FTE resident time that is
outside the scope of the approved
program would be included in either the
numerator or the denominator of the
FTE computation.
Comment: A commenter noted that
CMS uses the definition of ‘‘hospital
complex’’ as explained in the September
29, 1989 Federal Register to determine
which residents may be included in a
hospital’s direct GME count.
Specifically, the September 29, 1989
Federal Register (54 FR 40286) states
that the hospital complex consists of the
hospital and hospital-based providers
and subproviders. The commenter
observed that CMS’s regulations
concerning the requirements for
provider-based status are at § 413.65,
and stated that it is their understanding
that if a facility qualifies as providerbased under these regulations, the
facility will be considered part of the
hospital complex. The commenter
requested that the connection between
‘‘hospital complex’’ and ‘‘providerbased’’ be clarified in the final rule,
since the September 29, 1989 Federal
Register seems to imply that only
facilities such as SNFs and HHAs
(facilities that bill Medicare and have
direct patient care activities) can qualify
as provider-based. The commenter
noted that, for example, a separate
building where only research is
conducted may qualify for provider-
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
based status and should be included as
part of the hospital complex.
Response: The commenter is correct
that the regulations that would be used
to determine if a facility is part of the
hospital complex (that is, providerbased) for direct GME purposes, are at
§ 413.65. As the commenter pointed out,
it may be necessary to determine for
direct GME purposes if a facility in
which no patient care is provided is
‘‘provider-based,’’ even though a
provider-based determination would not
otherwise be made for such a facility.
The example mentioned by the
commenter of a separate building in
which only research is conducted
would be an instance where it would be
appropriate for the fiscal intermediary
to use the criteria at § 413.65 to
determine if a facility is part of the
hospital complex for direct GME
purposes. Thus, training that occurs in
facilities that meet the provider-based
criteria at § 413.65 is training ‘‘in the
hospital’’, and training that occurs in
facilities that do not meet the providerbased criteria is training ‘‘in nonhospital
settings,’’ (and, of course, in the case of
the training in nonhospital settings, the
hospital must meet certain requirements
in order to count any FTE resident
training time spent in that setting).
Comment: Some commenters urged
CMS not to distinguish between direct
GME and IME payments based on
hospital versus nonhospital locations.
One commenter argued that
‘‘geography’’ is irrelevant, particularly
in the era of telephone and Internet
communications. Another commenter
believed that distinctions between
provider-based versus freestanding
practices or medical school facilities are
‘‘founded on legal, structural, or
financial issuances.’’ The commenter
stated that hospital and nonhospital
locations might be ‘‘across the hall or on
the next floor from each other’’ with no
difference between the patient care and
learning experiences in each place. The
commenter believed that CMS has
recently distinguished between these
sites for reimbursement purposes based
solely on who is bearing ‘‘all or
substantially all’’ of the costs of the
residency program, which has created
‘‘confusion, complexity, and
controversy’’ in the provider
community. Further ‘‘clarifications’’ of
payment based on location or on type of
activity are ‘‘unnecessary and onerous.’’
Response: We understand that it is
quite common for hospitals, especially
large academic medical centers, to be
located on the same campus as a
medical school, where the buildings are
very closely situated or even connected,
and the facilities are often shared.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
However, as the commenter indicated,
hospitals, nonhospital sites, and
medical schools are structured
separately for legal and financial
purposes, and are recognized
independently for state licensing and
Medicare cost reporting purposes. To
put it simply, a hospital is not a medical
school, and a medical school is not a
hospital. As we stated in response to the
previous comment, the criteria to be
used in determining if a facility is
provider-based are in the regulations at
§ 413.65. Facilities that meet the
provider-based criteria are part of the
hospital, and facilities that do not meet
the provider-based criteria are
nonhospital sites, even if they are
located on the same campus as the
hospital. Additionally, while there is no
requirement that hospitals incur the
costs of residents training in a hospital
in order for those residents to be
counted for IME and direct GME
purposes, hospitals are required by
statute (not merely by CMS regulations,
as the commenter implies) to incur ‘‘all,
or substantially all of the costs’’ of a
residency training program in a
nonhospital site (such as a medical
school) in order to count any of the
resident FTE training time spent in
those nonhospital sites for IME and
direct GME purposes. Similarly, the
statutes for IME and direct GME clearly
indicate that only training in patient
care activities may be counted in the
nonhospital sites. Since the statute
makes these distinctions, we do not
believe we have created ‘‘unnecessary’’
and ‘‘confusing’’ distinctions between
where the residents are training, or the
type of activities in which the residents
are engaged.
Comment: Many comments from
members of an academy of family
medicine in a particular State indicated
that they were informed that ‘‘CMS is
considering the disallowance of faculty
development activity in the calculation
of IME and DME reimbursement.’’ Some
of the activities they listed as being at
risk included development, review, and
delivery of curriculum, scholarly
activities such as written publications
and faculty development conferences,
resident evaluation, faculty training,
and alumni evaluation and research.
The commenters were concerned that
future physicians cannot be properly
trained ‘‘without support for the
educational aspects of their
experience.’’ Another group of
commenters, also teaching faculty for
family medicine programs, stated that
they were attracted to a profession in
family medicine because ‘‘the
community recognized the value of
PO 00000
Frm 00225
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48093
experience and academic inquiry to the
well-being of our communities and the
training of future physicians.’’ These
teaching physicians stated that less than
one-third of their academic time is
compensated, and if funding for their
work on program development, clinical
research, writing critical reviews, and
evaluating resident performance is
reduced, then they may find it necessary
to return to full time clinical practice,
since the ‘‘thought of being told by a
program that [we] will need to see more
patients to pay for the time [we are]
developing and delivering curriculum
will be unacceptable.’’ The commenters
concluded by wishing CMS ‘‘the best of
luck’’ if CMS implements this rule, and
stated that they would not continue as
faculty members. Another commenter
cautioned that ‘‘with every additional
burden placed’’ on residency training by
CMS or the ACGME, more valuable
teaching physicians will be lost.
Response: It appears the commenters
have confused the time that residents in
approved programs spend in nonpatient
care activities, with the time that
teaching faculty spend in nonpatient
care activities. While the direct GME
payments, through the PRAs, do
compensate teaching hospitals for the
portion of the teaching physicians’’
salaries and fringe benefits attributable
to GME activities, only the FTE time of
residents participating in approved
programs is included in the hospital’s
FTE resident count for both IME and
direct GME. Accordingly, the activities
listed by the commenters in which
teaching faculty engage either on behalf
of, or independent of, the residents they
supervise are not affected by the rule
that only time spent by residents in
patient care activities may be counted
for IME purposes in the hospital, and for
IME and direct GME purposes in the
nonhospital sites.
Comment: One commenter, a hospital
system, said that their understanding,
which has been ‘‘reaffirmed time and
again by our annual fiscal intermediary
audits,’’ is that, with respect to direct
GME, time spent in a nonpatient care
activity, ‘‘no matter where it took place
(on site or off), was allowed to be
counted if that activity was needed for
Board certification.’’ The commenter
stated that it seems CMS ‘‘largely
agrees’’ with this position ‘‘If the
nonpatient care activities occur on site,
but doesn’t if the activity is offsite’’
(emphasis included in the original). The
commenter believes this is ‘‘illogical’’
considering that the hospital continues
to bear the direct costs of the resident
in either case. The commenter
concluded that, although they were
commenting on the implications for
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48094
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
direct GME, ‘‘at least for IME, [CMS’s]
position is consistent—nonpatient care
activities are not allowed whether one is
on site OR offsite’’ (emphasis included
in the original).
Response: As we indicated in
response to a previous comment,
although our position with respect to
IME and FTE time spent in nonpatient
care activities is a longstanding policy
as we explained in greater detail above,
it has become apparent to us that there
actually has been significant confusion
regarding this policy in the teaching
hospital community. Our policy has
been to apply the plain meaning of the
term ‘‘patient care activities,’’ which
means that, even if the nonpatient care
activities that occur in nonhospital sites
count toward Board certification (that is,
they are part of the approved program),
such time must not be included in the
direct GME or IME count. With respect
to training in the hospital, resident time
spent training in didactic activities that
are part of an approved program can be
counted for direct GME purposes, but
not for IME. It makes no difference
whether the hospital is paying the
residents’’ salaries when the training
occurs in the hospital complex; whether
a hospital incurs the costs for the
residents it trains in the hospital is
irrelevant for purposes of both IME and
direct GME. The requirement to incur
the costs of the residency training
program only applies in the instances
where hospitals wish to count FTE
residents that are training in
nonhospital settings. In that case, the
hospital must incur all or substantially
all of the costs of the training program
in the nonhospital site (and meet certain
other requirements) in order to count
any FTE residents training in that site.
In summary, we are finalizing the
clarification of our policy that only time
spent in patient care activities may be
counted for IME purposes in the
hospital complex and for direct GME
and IME purposes in nonhospital sites.
We are amending § 413.75(b) to add a
definition of the term ‘‘patient care
activities’’ which means, ‘‘the care and
treatment of particular patients,
including services for which a physician
or other practitioner may bill.’’ In
addition, we are amending the IME
regulations at § 412.105(f)(1)(iii) to add
a paragraph (C) to state that ‘‘In order to
be counted, a resident must be spending
time in patient care activities, as defined
in § 413.75(b).’’ We are also making
conforming changes to the regulations
text at § 412.105(f)(1)(iii)(C), and
§ 413.78(c)(1), (d)(1), and (e)(1) for
residency training in nonhospital
settings. Lastly for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
2006, we are implementing a ‘‘one
workday’’ approach to documentation of
residents’ time, where, if a resident’s
workday consists entirely of scheduled
nonpatient care activities, that workday
must be identified as nonpatient care
time and must be subtracted from the
allowable FTE count (for IME, if the
training occurred in the hospital
complex, and for both IME and direct
GME, if the training occurred in a
nonhospital site).
6. Medicare GME Affiliated Groups:
Technical Changes to Regulations
In the FY 2005 IPPS final rule (69 FR
49112 and 49254 through 49265), we
redesignated the contents of § 413.86
(which contained the regulations
governing Medicare payment for direct
GME) as §§ 413.75 through 413.83 and
made corresponding cross-reference
changes in the text of these regulations.
We have discovered that under the
definition of ‘‘Medicare GME affiliated
group’’ under § 413.75(b), we incorrectly
cited the cross-reference to the rotation
requirements for GME affiliated groups
in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3), as
‘‘§ 413.79(g)(2)’’. In the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24115), we
proposed to correct the cross-reference
for the rotation requirements in
paragraphs (2) and (3) of the definition
to read ‘‘§ 413.79(f)(2)’’.
We did not receive any public
comments on this proposed technical
change and, therefore, are adopting it as
final.
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47457 and 47489), we made additional
changes to certain sections of the GME
redesignated regulations to correct
cross-references to other parts of 42 CFR
Chapter IV relating to the definitions of
the ‘‘urban’’ and ‘‘rural’’ location of a
hospital. In one of the corrections, in
paragraph (1) under the definition of
‘‘Medicare GME affiliated group’’ under
§ 413.75(b), we inadvertently dropped
the language in that paragraph relating
to the rotational requirements for these
groups, including the incorrect crossreference to § 413.79(g)(2). In the FY
2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR 24115),
we proposed to correct the language of
paragraph (1) under the definition of
‘‘Medicare GME affiliated group’’ under
§ 413.75(b) by adding the dropped
language and correcting the crossreference to read ‘‘§ 413.79(f)(2).’’
We did not receive any public
comments on this proposed technical
change and, therefore, are adopting it as
final.
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47454 and 47489), we revised
§ 413.79(e)(1)(iv) to provide that a new
urban teaching hospital that qualifies for
PO 00000
Frm 00226
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
an adjustment to its FTE cap for a newly
approved program may enter into a
Medicare GME affiliation agreement, but
only if the resulting adjustments to its
direct GME and IME caps are ‘‘positive
adjustments.’’ We specified in the
preamble of that final rule that this
provision is effective for affiliation
agreements entered into on or after
October 1, 2005. However, we
inadvertently did not include this
effective date in the regulation text. In
the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR
24115 and 24116), we proposed to
revise § 413.79(e)(1)(iv) to include the
effective date as part of the text of that
section.
In addition, we proposed to correct a
cross-reference in the introductory text
of paragraph (f) of § 413.79 relating to
Medicare GME affiliated groups. The
cross-reference to ‘‘paragraph (e)(3)’’ of
§ 413.79 should read ‘‘paragraph (d)’’ of
that section. This proposed change is
necessary to accurately cite the
reference to our rules regarding the 3year rolling average.
We did not receive any public
comments on the proposed technical
change and cross-reference change and,
therefore, are adopting them as final.
I. Payment for the Costs of Nursing and
Allied Health Education Activities:
Clarification (§ 413.85)
In addition to direct GME and IME
payments to hospitals for the direct and
indirect costs incurred for their graduate
medical education programs in
medicine, osteopathy, dentistry, and
podiatry, Medicare makes payments to
hospitals for two other categories of
education-related costs for which
different payment policies apply:
• Approved nursing and allied health
education programs operated by the
hospital. The costs of these programs are
excluded from the definition of
inpatient hospital operating costs and
are not included in the calculation of
the per discharge payment rates for
hospitals paid under the IPPS, or in the
calculation of payments to hospitals and
hospital units excluded from the IPPS
that are subject to the rate-of-increase
ceiling. These costs are separately
identified and ‘‘passed through’’ (that is,
paid separately, on a reasonable cost
basis).
• All other costs that can be
categorized as educational programs and
activities (for example, continuing
education, on the job training, or
seminars). These costs are considered to
be part of the hospitals’ normal
operating costs and payment for these
costs is included in the per discharge
payment amount for hospitals subject to
the IPPS, the IRF PPS, or the LTCH PPS
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
and the prospective per diem payment
amount for facilities under the IPF PPS.
Similarly, these costs are considered to
be part of the hospitals’ normal
operating costs and are included as
reasonable costs that are subject to the
TEFRA rate-of-increase limits applicable
to hospitals that continue to receive
payments subject to those limits,
including cancer and children’s
hospitals.
Regulations governing payment for
the costs of approved and allied health
education activities are located at 42
CFR 413.85.
In the FY 2004 IPPS final rule (68 FR
45429), we revised the regulations at
§ 413.85(h)(3) to further clarify the
difference between provider-operated
and continuing education programs. We
revised the regulations to state that,
effective October 1, 2003, programs in
which employees participate that do not
lead to the ability to practice and begin
employment in a nursing or allied
health specialty are also treated as
normal operating costs. We now realize
that when we revised § 413.85(h)(3) to
include this clarification, we
inadvertently did not specify that the
provision was applicable to trainees as
well as employees. In the preamble of
the FY 2004 IPPS final rule, we stated
that because § 413.85(h)(3) refers to
education that will not lead to the
ability to practice and begin
employment, we intended the
provisions to apply not only to
employees but to trainees as well.
Therefore, in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FF 24116), we
proposed to make a technical change to
§ 413.85(h)(3) to make it applicable to
both employees and trainees. We
proposed this technical change to clarify
that the educational activities in which
employees or trainees participate, but
that do not lead to the ability to practice
and begin employment in a nursing or
allied health specialty, are treated as
normal operating costs. We noted that
we did not propose to expand or make
any changes to the current payment
policy for nursing and allied health
education activities; rather, we merely
proposed to clarify the language of the
existing regulations.
Comment: One commenter requested
that, in response to CMS’’ clarification
of the regulations pertaining to normal
operating costs, CMS make ‘‘* * * a
regulation revision to reflect that
trainees are included in the normal
operation costs to avoid confusion.’’
Response: We agree with the
commenter and note that as we
proposed, we are revising the
regulations at § 413.85(h)(3) to read:
Educational seminars, workshops, and
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
continuing education programs in
which the employees or trainees
participate that enhance the quality of
medical care or operating efficiency of
the provider and, effective October 1,
2003, do not lead to the ability to
practice and begin employment in a
nursing or allied health specialty.
In this final rule, we are adopting as
final, without modifications, the
proposed technical change to
§ 413.85(h)(3) to make it applicable to
both employees and trainees.
J. Hospital Emergency Services Under
EMTALA (§ 489.24)
1. Background
Sections 1866(a)(1)(I), 1866(a)(1)(N),
and 1867 of the Act impose specific
obligations on certain Medicareparticipating hospitals and CAHs.
(Throughout this section of this
proposed rule, when we reference the
obligation of a ‘‘hospital’’ under these
sections of the Act and in our
regulations, we mean to include CAHs
as well.) These obligations concern
individuals who come to a hospital
emergency department and request
examination or treatment for medical
conditions, and apply to all of these
individuals, regardless of whether they
are beneficiaries of any program under
the Act.
The statutory provisions cited above
are frequently referred to as the
Emergency Medical Treatment and
Labor Act (EMTALA), also known as the
patient antidumping statute. EMTALA
was passed in 1986 as part of the
Consolidated Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1985 (COBRA),
Pub. L. 99–272. Congress enacted these
antidumping provisions in the Social
Security Act to ensure that individuals
with emergency medical conditions are
not denied essential lifesaving services
because of a perceived inability to pay.
Under section 1866(a)(1)(I)(i) of the
Act, a hospital that fails to fulfill its
EMTALA obligations under these
provisions may be liable for termination
of its Medicare provider agreement,
which would result in loss of all
Medicare and Medicaid payments.
Section 1867 of the Act sets forth
requirements for medical screening
examinations for individuals who come
to the hospital and request examination
or treatment for a medical condition.
The section further provides that if a
hospital finds that such an individual
has an emergency condition, it is
obligated to provide that individual
with either necessary stabilizing
treatment or an appropriate transfer to
another medical facility where
stabilization can occur.
PO 00000
Frm 00227
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48095
The EMTALA statute also outlines the
obligation of hospitals to receive
appropriate transfers from other
hospitals. Section 1867(g) of the Act
states that a participating hospital that
has specialized capabilities or facilities
(such as burn units, shock-trauma units,
neonatal intensive care units or (with
respect to rural areas) regional referral
centers as identified by the Secretary in
regulation) shall not refuse to accept an
appropriate transfer of an individual
who requires these specialized
capabilities or facilities if the hospital
has the capacity to treat the individual.
The regulations implementing section
1867 of the Act are found at 42 CFR
489.24.
2. Role of the EMTALA Technical
Advisory Group (TAG)
Section 945 of Pub. L. 108–173
(MMA) required the Secretary to
establish a Technical Advisory Group
(TAG) to provide the Secretary with
advice concerning issues related to
EMTALA regulations and
implementation. Section 945 of Pub. L.
108–173 further required that the
EMTALA TAG be composed of 19
members, including the Administrator
of CMS, the Inspector General of HHS,
hospital representatives and physicians
representing various specialties, patient
representatives, and representatives of
organizations involved in EMTALA
enforcement.
The EMTALA TAG was first
established in 2005 and held three
meetings during that year. At each of its
meetings, the EMTALA TAG heard
testimony from representatives of
physician groups, hospital associations,
and others regarding EMTALA issues
and concerns. As explained more fully
below in sections IV.K.3. and 4. of this
preamble, in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule (71 FR 24116 through 24118) we
proposed to revise the EMTALA
regulations at § 489.24 based on the
recommendations adopted and
forwarded to the Secretary by the
EMTALA TAG.
3. Definition of ‘‘Labor’’
As noted in the background portion of
this section, the EMTALA statute and
regulations require that if an individual
comes to a hospital emergency
department and a request is made on the
individual’s behalf for examination or
treatment for a medical condition, the
hospital is obligated to provide that
individual with an appropriate medical
screening examination within the
capability of the hospital. If the
individual is found to have an
emergency medical condition, the
hospital is obligated by EMTALA to
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48096
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
provide either necessary stabilizing
treatment or an appropriate transfer to
another medical facility where
stabilization can occur.
Section 489.24(b) of the regulations
defines the key terms used in the
section. The term ‘‘emergency medical
condition’’ is defined as—
‘‘A medical condition manifesting
itself by acute symptoms of sufficient
severity (including severe pain,
psychiatric disturbances and/or
symptoms of substance abuse) such that
the absence of immediate medical
attention could reasonably be expected
to result in placing the health of the
individual (or, with respect to a
pregnant woman, the health of the
woman or her unborn child) in serious
jeopardy; serious impairment to bodily
functions; or serious dysfunction of any
bodily organ or part; or with respect to
a pregnant woman who is having
contractions, that there is inadequate
time to effect a safe transfer to another
hospital before delivery; or that transfer
may pose a threat to the health and
safety of the woman or the unborn
child.’’
This definition closely follows the
definition of ‘‘emergency medical
condition’’ in section 1867(e)(1) of the
Act with the exception that the
regulation text further expands on
‘‘acute symptoms of sufficient severity’’
by including ‘‘psychiatric disturbances
and/or symptoms of substance abuse’’ in
addition to severe pain. In recognition
of the fact that this definition gives
special consideration to women in
labor, the term ‘‘labor’’ is itself defined,
in paragraph (b) of § 489.24, to mean
‘‘the process of childbirth beginning
with the latent or early phases of labor
and continuing through the delivery of
the placenta.’’ The definition further
states: ‘‘A woman experiencing
contractions is in true labor unless a
physician certifies that, after a
reasonable period of observation, the
woman is in false labor.’’ A woman
found to be in false labor is considered
not to have an emergency medical
condition and that finding thus means
that the hospital has no further
EMTALA obligation to her.
The CMS interpretative guidelines
used by State surveyors in EMTALA
investigations provide that once an
individual has presented to a hospital
seeking emergency care, the
determination as to whether an
emergency medical condition exists is
made by the examining physician(s) or
other qualified medical person(s)
actually caring for the individual at the
treating facility. The guidelines further
provide that the medical screening
examination must be conducted by one
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
or more individuals who are determined
to be qualified by the hospital bylaws or
rules and regulations and who meet the
hospital condition of participation in 42
CFR 482.55 regarding emergency
services personnel and direction. (Of
course, these individuals would not be
expected or permitted to perform any
screening functions other than those
which they are allowed to perform
under State scope of practice laws.)
However, consistent with the definition
of ‘‘labor’’ at § 489.24(b), the guidelines
also state that if a qualified medical
person other than a physician
determines that a woman is in false
labor, a physician must certify the
diagnosis. The guidelines permit this
certification to be made based either on
actual examination of the patient or on
a telephone consultation with the
qualified medical person who actually
examined the patient. (Medicare State
Operations Manual, Appendix V—
Interpretive Guidelines—Responsibility
of Participating Hospitals in Emergency
Cases, TAG A–406.)
At its meeting held on June 15–17,
2005, the EMTALA TAG heard
testimony from representatives of both
physician and nonphysician
professional societies regarding the
competence of practitioners other than
physicians to certify false labor. In
particular, a representative of the
American College of Nurse-Midwives
stated that the current requirement that
allows only a physician to certify false
labor is overly restrictive and does not
adequately recognize the training and
competence of certified nursemidwives. Testimony was also
presented by the American College of
Obstetricians and Gynecologists, which
recommended amending the EMTALA
regulations to allow certified nursemidwives and other qualified medical
persons to determine whether a woman
is in false labor.
After extensive consideration of the
issue, the members of the EMTALA
TAG voted to recommend to the
Secretary that the definition of ‘‘labor’’
at § 489.24(b) be amended to permit
certified nurse-midwives and other
qualified medical personnel to certify
false labor. The TAG recommended
deleting the second sentence, which
states that a woman experiencing
contractions is in true labor unless a
physician certifies that, after a
reasonable time of observation, the
woman is in false labor.
We agree with the TAG’s
recommendation that other health care
practitioners besides physicians should
be allowed to certify false labor, and
believe that the recommendation is
consistent with CMS’ current policy
PO 00000
Frm 00228
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
regarding who may conduct medical
screening examinations. However, we
do not believe such a change can be best
accomplished by simply deleting the
second sentence of the current
definition of ‘‘labor’’ in the existing
regulations because doing so would also
remove the explicit statement that a
woman experiencing contractions is in
labor unless she has been found to be
in false labor. To achieve the principal
objective of the EMTALA TAG
recommendation without compromising
the protections of EMTALA for women
having contractions, in the FY 2007
IPPS proposed rule, we proposed to
modify the definition of ‘‘labor’’ in
§ 489.24(b) by revising the second
sentence of that definition to state that
a woman experiencing contractions is in
true labor unless a physician, certified
nurse-midwife, or other qualified
medical person acting within his or her
scope of practice as defined in hospital
medical staff bylaws and State law,
certifies that, after a reasonable time of
observation, the woman is in false labor.
The effect of this change would be to
have a single, uniform policy on the
personnel who are authorized to make
a determination as to whether an
individual has an emergency medical
condition.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed approval of the proposed
change to the regulations to allow
nonphysician practitioners to certify
when a woman is in false labor,
pursuant to State law and hospital
bylaws. The commenters stated that this
change to the regulations would provide
hospitals greater flexibility in staffing
and help ensure access to necessary
services.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support for this change to
the regulations and have kept their
remarks in mind while finalizing this
proposal.
Comment: One commenter disagreed
with the proposed change to the
regulations. The commenter stated that
one cause of higher rates of premature
labor and malformed and malpresented
neonates in the United States than
among other industrialized nations is
the use of nurses for labor and delivery
services. The commenter recommended
that CMS not only continue to require
that a physician determine when a
woman is in false labor but also that
such physician be specialized in
obstetrics.
Response: While we understand this
commenter’s concerns, the commenter
has not provided evidence to support
the allegation that there is a higher rate
of premature labor and malformed and
malpresented neonates in the United
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
States than other industrialized nations.
Nor has the commenter demonstrated
that the problems as cited are directly
linked to nonphysician practitioners’
involvement in labor and delivery
services. Therefore, we are not
modifying the proposed change based
on this comment.
Comment: One commenter expressed
approval of the concept of allowing
practitioners other than physicians to
certify false labor, but objected to the
use of the phrase ‘‘qualified medical
person’’ in § 489.24(b) to describe the
kind of individual who may perform
this function. The commenter stated
that use of the term ‘‘medical’’ could
suggest, incorrectly, that only a
physician could certify false labor. The
commenter recommended that the term
used be ‘‘other qualified health care
professional’’.
Response: The term ‘‘qualified
medical person’’ is used in section
1867(c)(1)(A)(ii) of the Act and in
current regulations at § 489.24 (e)(1)(C).
Both statutory and regulatory usages of
this term make reference to a ‘‘qualified
medical person’’ as an individual other
than a physician who is authorized to
sign a certificate outlining the risks and
benefits of transfer in the absence of a
physician. Thus, we do not believe the
language in our proposed revision will
be misleading. However, we will keep
the commenter’s concern in mind as we
draft conforming revisions to the
EMTALA program instructions and
other issuances, to make it clear that a
qualified medical person need not be
(and in fact will not be) a physician.
After consideration of the public
comments received, we are adopting as
final, without modifications, the
proposed change in the definition of
‘‘labor’’ in § 489.24(b).
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
4. Application of EMTALA
Requirements to Hospitals Without
Dedicated Emergency Departments
Section 489.24(b) of the regulations
outlines when a hospital will be
considered to be a hospital with a
‘‘dedicated emergency department’’ and
makes it clear that only a hospital with
a dedicated emergency department has
an EMTALA responsibility with respect
to an individual for whom no
appropriate transfer is sought but who
comes to the hospital seeking
examination or treatment for a medical
condition. However, it has come to
CMS’ attention that our policy regarding
the application of EMTALA to hospitals
that have specialized capabilities but are
without dedicated emergency
departments may be less well
understood as it relates to individuals
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
for whom an appropriate transfer is
sought.
It has been CMS’ longstanding policy
that any Medicare-participating hospital
with a specialized capability must, in
accordance with section 1867(g) of the
Act, accept, within the capacity of the
hospital, an appropriate transfer from a
requesting hospital. This policy has
been applied to hospitals without regard
to whether they have dedicated
emergency departments. In fact, in the
past, CMS has taken enforcement
actions against hospitals with
specialized capabilities that failed to
accept appropriate transfers under
EMTALA when the hospitals had the
capacity to treat the transferred
individuals.
At its meeting held on October 26–28,
2005, the EMTALA TAG heard
testimony from representatives of
physician groups, hospital associations,
and others regarding EMTALA
compliance by specialty hospitals that
typically do not have dedicated
emergency departments. After extensive
consideration and discussion of the
issues raised and views presented, the
members of the EMTALA TAG voted to
recommend to the Secretary that
hospitals with specialized capabilities
(as defined in § 489.24(f) of the
regulation) that do not have a dedicated
emergency department be bound by the
same responsibility to accept an
appropriate transfer under EMTALA as
hospitals with a dedicated emergency
department.
We agree with the EMTALA TAG’s
assessment. We believe that the
recommendation is consistent with
CMS’ current policy and highlights the
need to clarify CMS’ policy regarding
hospitals with specialized capabilities.
Therefore, in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24118), we
proposed to modify the regulations at
§ 489.24(f) to specifically indicate that
any participating hospital with
specialized capabilities or facilities,
even if it does not have a dedicated
emergency department, may not refuse
to accept an appropriate transfer if the
hospital has the capacity to treat the
individual. We noted that the proposed
revision does not reflect any change in
current CMS policy. We further noted
that the revision would not require
hospitals without dedicated emergency
departments to open dedicated
emergency departments nor would it
impose any EMTALA obligations on
those hospitals with respect to
individuals who come to the hospital as
their initial point of entry into the
medical system seeking a medical
screening examination or treatment for
a medical condition. Although the
PO 00000
Frm 00229
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48097
proposed revision sought only to clarify,
rather than change, current policy, we
nevertheless, solicited comments on
what effect, if any, commenters believe
the proposed clarification might have on
EMTALA compliance and patient health
and safety.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed approval of the proposed
change to the regulations to clarify that
hospitals with specialized capabilities
have an obligation under EMTALA to
accept appropriate transfers within their
capabilities whether or not the hospital
has a dedicated emergency department,
including all physician-owned limited
service facilities.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support for this change to
the regulations and have kept their
remarks in mind while finalizing this
proposal.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that CMS provide additional
guidance on the definition of
‘‘specialized capabilities or facilities.’’
Response: We refer these commenters
to the regulations at § 489.24(f) for a
partial list of specialized capabilities or
facilities. These include, but are not
limited to, burn units, shock-trauma
units, neonatal intensive care units, and
certain referral centers. We recognize
that this list is not exhaustive and
would include physician-owned limited
service facilities with special
capabilities. We also would note that
the EMTALA TAG is currently
considering whether the definition of
‘‘specialized capabilities’’ should be
further revised. However, no expansion
of the list of specialized facilities or
capabilities was specifically proposed in
the proposed rule published on April
25, 2006. In view of this fact and in
consideration of the fact that the
EMTALA TAG may make
recommendations relating to this issue,
we have decided not to make any
further revision to the list of examples
noted above. However, we will consider
carefully any recommendations made by
the EMTALA TAG on the issue and may
propose changes in the future.
Comment: Several commenters asked
CMS to emphasize that all physicianowned limited service facilities are
required to maintain adequate on-call
panels to comply with the Medicare
hospital conditions of participation. In
addition, the commenters requested that
CMS require these hospitals to have
preexisting transfer agreements with any
community hospital to which it may
send patients for emergency services.
Two commenters suggested that the
Secretary establish the terms of such
agreements. The commenters
recommended three issues to be
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48098
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
addressed in the agreements: Procedures
for an appropriate transfer for patients
not covered under EMTALA; continuity
of care; and support for maintaining
full-time emergency capacity at the
community hospital, including on-call
coverage. The commenters also
requested that CMS require physicians
who practice at such hospitals to
participate in on-call panels at the
community hospitals with which their
hospital has a transfer agreement.
Response: While physician-owned
limited service hospitals certainly are
required to maintain compliance with
the hospital conditions of participation,
those regulations set forth in 42 CFR
Part 482 do not include an explicit oncall requirement. Thus, we are not
including a revision in this final rule to
include the specific change requested by
the commenter. However, we note that
the conditions of participation relating
to a hospital’s governing body at
§ 482.12(c)(3) requires that all Medicareparticipating hospitals have a doctor of
medicine or osteopathy either on duty
or on call at all times. In addition, the
governing body condition of
participation and the condition of
participation for medical staff found at
§ 482.22 include various other
requirements that make the hospital
governing body and medical staff
accountable for providing adequate
physician services for hospital patients.
These requirements also apply to
physician-owned limited service
facilities, including those that do not
operate emergency departments, on the
same basis as to community and other
hospitals.
In general, we believe the comments
concerning transfer agreements are
outside the scope of the proposed
change to the regulations. In addition,
the terms of transfer agreements
between hospitals are decided upon by
the individual hospitals party to the
agreement. However, we will refer these
comments to the EMTALA TAG for
further consideration, and may propose
some further change in Medicare
regulations on these topics in the future
if they are warranted.
5. Clarification of Reference to ‘‘Referral
Centers’’
The language of the existing
regulations at § 489.24(f) duplicates the
language of section 1867(g) of the Act in
that it identifies, as an example of a
hospital with specialized capabilities,
‘‘(with respect to rural areas) regional
referral centers identified by the
Secretary in regulation)’’. Because the
term ‘‘regional referral centers’’ is not
used elsewhere in the Medicare
regulations, it is unclear whether the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
reference is to referral centers as defined
in 42 CFR 412.96, which must be
located in rural areas and meet other
criteria spelled out in that section, or to
any facilities that are located in rural
areas and accept patients on referral. To
maintain consistency in the Medicare
regulations and avoid confusion as to
which facilities are considered to have
specialized capabilities for purposes of
EMTALA, in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24118), we
proposed to amend § 489.24 by
clarifying that ‘‘regional referral
centers’’ are those centers meeting the
requirements of § 412.96.
We did not receive any public
comments on this clarification and,
therefore, are adopting, as final without
modification, the amendment to
§ 489.24 to clarify that ‘‘regional referral
centers’’ are those centers meeting the
requirements of § 412.96.
K. Other Technical Changes
1. Cross-Reference Correction in
Regulations on Limitations on
Beneficiary Charges (§ 412.42)
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
Fr 24118), we proposed to amend
§ 412.42 to correct an obsolete crossreference. Paragraph (d) of § 412.42
contains a cross-reference to
‘‘§ 405.310(k).’’ This section was
redesignated as § 411.15(k) in 1989 (54
FR 41737, October 11, 1989). We
proposed to amend paragraph (d) of
§ 412.42 to delete the obsolete crossreference and insert the correct crossreference.
We did not receive any public
comments on this proposed crossreference change and are, therefore,
adopting it as final.
2. Cross-Reference Corrections in
Regulations on Payment Denials Based
on Admissions and Quality Reviews
(§ 412.48)
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24118), we proposed to amend
§ 412.48 to correct an obsolete crossreference. Paragraph (b) of § 412.48
contains a cross-reference to
‘‘§§ 405.330 through 405.332’’. Section
405.330 was redesignated as § 411.400,
and § 405.332 was redesignated as
§ 411.402 in 1989 (54 FR 41746, October
11, 1989). (There was no § 405.331.) We
proposed to amend paragraph (b) of
§ 412.48 to delete the obsolete crossreferences and to insert the correct
cross-references.
We did not receive any public
comments on this proposed crossreference change and are, therefore,
adopting it as final.
PO 00000
Frm 00230
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
3. Cross-Reference Correction in
Regulations on Outlier Payments
(§ 412.84)
On June 9, 2003, we published a final
rule in the Federal Register (68 FR
34494) that amended the portion of the
hospital IPPS regulations that sets out
the methodology for determining
payments for extraordinarily high-cost
cases (outliers). We changed the
methodology because we concluded
that, in certain cases, hospitals were
dramatically and inappropriately
increasing charges, thereby inflating
CCRs, resulting in overestimation of
these hospitals’ costs per case, a critical
factor in determining outlier payments.
As a part of these methodology
changes, we required that outlier
payments be reconciled using a
hospital’s settled cost report for the cost
reporting year in which the outlier
discharge occurred. This approach
meant that there would be some delay
in computing the final outlier payment.
To address this issue, we added
§ 412.84(m), which provided that
reconciled outlier payments would be
adjusted to account for the time value of
any underpayments or overpayments.
We inadvertently included in
paragraph (m) of § 412.84 a crossreference to paragraph (h)(3) of § 412.84.
The cross-reference should be to
paragraph (i)(4), which sets out the
requirement for reconciling outlier
payments when the cost report for the
year in which the discharge occurred is
settled. In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule (71 FR 24118 and 24119), we
proposed to amend paragraph (m) of
§ 412.84 to correct the cross-reference to
read ‘‘paragraph (i)(4)’’ of § 412.84.
We did not receive any public
comments on this proposed crossreference change and are, therefore,
adopting it as final.
4. Removing References to Two Paper
Claims Forms
Section 1862(a)(22) of the Act
generally requires electronic submission
of initial Medicare claims requesting
payment for items and services. Section
1862(h) of the Act provides for limited
exceptions when paper claims still may
be used. Our existing regulations at 42
CFR 424.32 set out the requirements for
submitting electronic and paper claims
for payment, as well as when the
exceptions apply and paper forms still
may be used. Our existing regulations at
paragraph (b) of § 424.32 list six forms
that are to be used for submitting paper
claims.
We have evaluated the use of two of
these forms, Form CMS–1490U (Request
for Medicare Payment by Organization)
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
and Form CMS–1491 (Request for
Medicare Payment—Ambulance). We
found that these forms have limited use,
we would incur expensive costs in
redesigning these forms to comply with
other reporting requirements, and that
an alternate form is available to claim
payments. For these reasons, we intend
to no longer use these forms. Therefore,
in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24119), we proposed to remove the
references to these forms from
paragraph (b) of § 424.32.
Form CMS–1490U is a paper claim
form used by employers, unions,
employer-employee organizations that
pay physicians and suppliers for their
services to employees, group practice
prepayment plans, and health
maintenance organizations. Form CMS–
1490U is used to claim payment from
carriers for bills already paid by these
entities. We concluded that this form
should no longer be used for several
reasons. It is duplicative of Form CMS–
1500 (Health Insurance Claim Form),
which also may be used to claim
payment for these services. We have
encouraged suppliers to submit their
paper claims using the Form CMS–1500.
Unlike Form CMS–1500, Form CMS–
1490U cannot accommodate an
additional reporting requirement, the
National Provider Identifier (NPI),
without an expensive redesign. Finally,
according to our records, relatively few
suppliers currently use the form. The
CMS component that supplies blank
copies of this form for users reported
that, between 2002 and 2005, only 2,550
copies of Form CMS–1490U were
ordered by carriers. A 2005 survey of
Part B carriers indicated that requests
for the form are very low and that
receipts of the form vary from very few
to none.
Form CMS–1491 is a paper claim
form used by ambulance suppliers to
apply for payment for ambulance
services. We concluded that this form
should no longer be used for several
reasons. It also is duplicative of Form
CMS–1500, which also may be used to
claim payment for ambulance services.
In addition, we have encouraged
suppliers to submit their paper
ambulance claims using the Form CMS–
1500. Unlike Form CMS–1500, Form
CMS–1491 cannot accommodate the
NPI without an expensive redesign and
usage of this form is low. A recent
survey of carriers, initiated by Joint
Signature Memorandum RO–2324,
Request for Information Concerning the
CMS–1491, issued October 30, 2003,
from the Centers for Medicare
Management, was conducted to
ascertain the usage of Form CMS–1491.
The results of the survey showed that
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
fewer than 2 percent (1.71 percent) of all
suppliers of ambulance services
currently use the Form CMS–1491. CMS
received approximately 240,000
ambulance claims using Form CMS–
1491 during the period from October 1,
2002, to September 30, 2003. These data
were used for the most recent OMB
renewal under the Paperwork Reduction
Act. Since the last OMB renewal
approval in 2001, CMS has printed a
total of 1,620,000 forms at a cost of
$42,890.
We did not receive any public
comments on our proposal. Therefore,
we are adopting, as final without
modification, the proposed removal of
the references to the identified forms
from paragraph (b) of § 424.32.
L. Rural Community Hospital
Demonstration Program
In accordance with the requirements
of section 410A(a) of Pub. L. 108–173,
the Secretary has established a 5-year
demonstration program (beginning with
selected hospitals’ first cost reporting
period beginning on or after October 1,
2004) to test the feasibility and
advisability of establishing ‘‘rural
community hospitals’’ for Medicare
payment purposes for covered inpatient
hospital services furnished to Medicare
beneficiaries. A rural community
hospital, as defined in section
410A(f)(1), is a hospital that:
• Is located in a rural area (as defined
in section 1886(d)(2)(D) of the Act) or is
treated as being located in a rural area
under section 1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act;
• Has fewer than 51 beds (excluding
beds in a distinct part psychiatric or
rehabilitation unit) as reported in its
most recent cost report;
• Provides 24-hour emergency care
services; and
• Is not designated or eligible for
designation as a CAH.
As we indicated in the FY 2005 IPPS
final rule (69 FR 49078), in accordance
with sections 410A(a)(2) and (a)(4) of
Pub. L.108–173 and using 2002 data
from the U.S. Census Bureau, we
identified 10 States with the lowest
population density from which to select
hospitals: Alaska, Idaho, Montana,
Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North
Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, and
Wyoming (Source: U.S. Census Bureau
Statistical Abstract of the United States:
2003). Nine rural community hospitals
located within these States are currently
participating in the demonstration
program for FY 2007. (Of the 13
hospitals that participated in the first 2
years of the demonstration program, 4
hospitals located in Nebraska have
withdrawn from the program; they have
become CAHs.)
PO 00000
Frm 00231
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48099
Under the demonstration program,
participating hospitals are paid the
reasonable costs of providing covered
inpatient hospital services (other than
services furnished by a psychiatric or
rehabilitation unit of a hospital that is
a distinct part), applicable for
discharges occurring in the first cost
reporting period beginning on or after
the October 1, 2004, implementation
date of the demonstration program.
Payments to the participating hospitals
will be the lesser amount of the
reasonable cost or a target amount in
subsequent cost reporting periods. The
target amount in the second cost
reporting period is defined as the
reasonable costs of providing covered
inpatient hospital services in the first
cost reporting period, increased by the
inpatient prospective payment update
factor (as defined in section
1886(b)(3)(B) of the Act) for that
particular cost reporting period. The
target amount in subsequent cost
reporting periods is defined as the
preceding cost reporting period’s target
amount, increased by the inpatient
prospective payment update factor (as
defined in section 1886(b)(3)(B) of the
Act) for that particular cost reporting
period.
Covered inpatient hospital services
are inpatient hospital services (defined
in section 1861(b) of the Act), and
include extended care services
furnished under an agreement under
section 1883 of the Act.
Section 410A of Pub. L. 108–173
requires that ‘‘in conducting the
demonstration program under this
section, the Secretary shall ensure that
the aggregate payments made by the
Secretary do not exceed the amount
which the Secretary would have paid if
the demonstration program under this
section was not implemented.’’
Generally, when CMS implements a
demonstration program on a budget
neutral basis, the demonstration
program is budget neutral in its own
terms; in other words, the aggregate
payments to the participating providers
do not exceed the amount that would be
paid to those same providers in the
absence of the demonstration program.
This form of budget neutrality is viable
when, by changing payments or aligning
incentives to improve overall efficiency,
or both, a demonstration program may
reduce the use of some services or
eliminate the need for others, resulting
in reduced expenditures for the
demonstration program’s participants.
These reduced expenditures offset
increased payments elsewhere under
the demonstration program, thus
ensuring that the demonstration
program as a whole is budget neutral or
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48100
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
yields savings. However, the small scale
of this demonstration program, in
conjunction with the payment
methodology, makes it extremely
unlikely that this demonstration
program could be viable under the usual
form of budget neutrality. Specifically,
cost-based payments to the nine
participating small rural hospitals are
likely to increase Medicare outlays
without producing any offsetting
reduction in Medicare expenditures
elsewhere. Therefore, a rural
community hospital’s participation in
this demonstration program is unlikely
to yield benefits to the participant if
budget neutrality were to be
implemented by reducing other
payments for these providers.
In order to achieve budget neutrality
for this demonstration program for FY
2007, we are adjusting the national
inpatient PPS rates by an amount
sufficient to account for the added costs
of this demonstration program. We are
applying budget neutrality across the
payment system as a whole rather than
merely across the participants in this
demonstration program. As we
discussed in the FY 2005 and FY 2006
IPPS final rules (69 FR 49183 and 70 FR
47462), we believe that the language of
the statutory budget neutrality
requirements permits the agency to
implement the budget neutrality
provision in this manner. For FY 2007,
using cost report data for FY 2003,
adjusted to account for the increased
estimated costs for the remaining nine
participating hospitals, we estimate that
the adjusted amount would be
$9,197,870. This estimated adjusted
amount reflects the estimated difference
between the participating hospitals’
costs and the IPPS payment based on
data from the hospitals’ cost reports. We
discuss the payment rate adjustment
that will be required to ensure the
budget neutrality of the demonstration
program for FY 2007 in section II.A.4.
of the Addendum to this final rule.
We did not receive any public
comments on the provisions of the
demonstration program discussed in the
proposed rule.
M. Health Care Information
Transparency Initiative
The United States faces a dilemma in
health care. Although the rate of
increase in health care spending slowed
last year, costs are still growing at an
unsustainable rate. The United States
spends $1.9 trillion on health care, or 16
percent of the gross domestic product
(GDP). By 2015, projections are that
health care will consume 20 percent of
the GDP. The Medicare program alone
consumes 3.4 percent of the GDP; by
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
2040, it will consume 8.1 percent of the
GDP, and by 2070, 14 percent of the
GDP.
Part of the reason health care costs are
rising so quickly is that most consumers
of health care—the patients—are
frequently not aware of the actual cost
of their care. Health insurance shields
them from the full cost of services, and
they have only limited information
about the quality and costs of their care.
Consequently, consumers do not have
the incentive or means to carefully shop
for providers offering the best value.
Thus, providers of care are not subject
to the competitive pressures that exist in
other markets for offering quality
services at the best possible price.
Reducing the rate of increase in health
care prices and avoiding health services
of little value could help to stem the
growth in health care spending, and
potentially translate into fewer
individuals who are unable to afford
health insurance. Part of the President’s
health care agenda is to expand Health
Savings Accounts (HSAs), which would
provide consumers with greater
financial incentives to compare
providers in terms of price and quality,
and choose those that offer the best
value.
In order to exercise such choices,
consumers must have accessible and
useful information on price and quality
of health care items and services.
Typically, health care providers do not
publicly quote or publish their prices.
Moreover, list prices, or charges,
generally differ from the actual prices
negotiated and paid by different health
plans. Thus, even if consumers were
financially motivated to shop for the
best price, it would be very difficult at
the current time for them to access
usable information.
Similarly, individuals have very little
information available to them about the
quality of care that they receive.
Although there are preliminary steps
underway to rectify that fact, including
the hospital quality reporting initiative
in which a significant number of acute
care hospitals are participating (see
sections IV.A and IV.B of this
preamble), those data are nascent and
consumers lack sufficient information
on which to base a judgment about
where to receive care based on quality
of care.
For these reasons, in the FY 2007
IPPS proposed rule (71 FR 24120), we
announced that the Department intends
to launch a major health care
information transparency initiative in
2006. This effort will build on steps
already taken by CMS to make quality
and price information available. For
example, we currently collect quality
PO 00000
Frm 00232
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
information and publish it through the
CMS Hospital Compare Web site, which
we reference in other parts of this final
rule. We also make available
unprecedented information on the
prices of drugs to beneficiaries in the
Medicare prescription drug plan for
each pharmacy in the United States.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule,
we also stated that we intend to take
further steps to collect and publish
useful information on quality and cost.
The Department intends to identify
several regions in the United States
where health care costs are high, and
where there is significant interest in
reducing health care costs and
improving health care quality. The
Department will use its leadership role
in health care policy to help lead change
in those areas.
The Secretary also has significant
regulatory authority as well. In the FY
2007 IPPS proposed rule, we solicited
comments on several proposals that the
Secretary might adopt to increase the
transparency of quality and pricing
information, and how this can be used
to attenuate the growth in health care
costs. In addition, we solicited
comments from the public on additional
ways that we could use our regulatory
authority to enhance transparency of
quality and pricing information.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule,
we addressed several possibilities that
we believe exist. First, we could publish
a list of hospital charges either for every
region of the country or for selected
regions of the country. In addition, we
could publish the rates that Medicare
actually pays to a particular hospital for
every DRG or for selected DRGs that
could be adjusted to take into account
the hospital’s labor market area,
teaching hospital status, and DSH
status. Some might argue that
publishing these payment rates does not
provide meaningful information to
consumers because Medicare payment
rates are not set by the market, but
rather by a statutory payment formula.
In addition, providing information on
hospital payments only does not
disclose the true cost of an episode of
care because it would not take into
account the cost of physician services,
laboratory tests, and other procedures
that go along with hospital charges. On
the other hand, Medicare payment rates
may provide a helpful benchmark,
especially for uninsured individuals, to
determine whether the charges they see
on a hospital bill bear any relationship
to what third-party fee-for-service
payors pay to the hospital.
A second option would be for the
Secretary to use his authority to
establish conditions of participation for
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
hospitals to propose a rule that relates
to charges for uninsured patients. For
example, the conditions of participation
could include a requirement that
hospitals post their prices and/or post
their policies regarding discounts or
other assistance for uninsured patients.
Yet another alternative to posting
Medicare DRG payment rates would be
to make publicly available the total
Medicare payments for an episode of
care. For example, one of the most
common inpatient hospital procedures
under the Medicare program (based on
total dollars spent) is hip replacement
surgery. Under this proposal, we could
make publicly available the expected
total payment for an episode of care for
hip replacement surgery, including the
inpatient hospital stay, physician
payments (including the surgeon and
the anesthesiologist), and payments for
post-acute care services such as services
provided in an IRF, SNF, or LTCH. In
the proposed rule, we indicated that we
are currently assessing methods for
making such information available and
were seeking comments on how to do so
as quickly and effectively as possible.
We solicited comment on any ways in
which the Department can encourage
transparency in health care quality and
pricing whether through its leadership
on voluntary initiatives or through
regulatory requirements. We also sought
comment on the Department’s statutory
authority to impose such requirements.
We indicated that discussion of
particular options in the proposed rule
should not be taken as an indication
that the Department will adopt any of
these proposals. Rather, the proposals
were included to foster comment on
possible options to promote the aims of
transparency of quality and pricing
information and the Department’s
authority and ability potentially to
implement these options. We indicated
that the Department is anxious to
receive comments on any of these
proposals, or on other options that may
be available that the Department could
adopt either through voluntary
initiatives or through its regulatory
authority.
Thirty-eight commenters made more
than a hundred specific comments on
the transparency discussion in the FY
2007 IPPS proposed rule. We received
comments from providers, practitioners,
and their representatives or
associations, including hospital
associations, physician associations,
and organizations representing other
health care professionals, as well as the
medical device industry. We also
received comments from organizations
that promote quality measures in health
care, from employers, and from health
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
care-related companies. We found these
comments to be extremely helpful and
constructive as we seek to promote
transparency in the health care system.
Listed below are the eight issue areas
related to transparency that we
identified in the comments and which
generated the greatest number of
comments:
• Features of transparency;
• Types of pricing information;
• Leadership/stakeholder
participation;
• Medicare Conditions of
Participation;
• Limited effectiveness of
transparency efforts to address
uninsured and safety net providers;
• Physician-identifiable Medicare
claims data;
• Concerns regarding the June 1, 2006
posting of payment information on the
30 common elective procedures by DRG;
and
• The link between value-based
purchasing and making the health care
system more transparent.
Comment: The majority of
commenters provided comments on
what types of transparency features
would be important to consumers with
the end goal of providing consumers
with meaningful, easily accessible
information for health care decisionmaking. Many commenters suggested
conducting research on what
information consumers would want. For
example, ease of use and ease of access
to posted price information (which may
include a web-based tool), common
definitions and language to describe
pricing information, and offering
explanations of the potential sources of
variation in price are features that
numerous commenters identified. They
also noted that the integration of price
and quality information is critical and
that price should only be one
consideration in consumers’ decisionmaking process. Several commenters
highlighted the importance of a feasible
approach to implementation,
specifically highlighting the complexity
of hospital pricing. One commenter
noted that physician ownership in
specialty hospitals should be
transparent to the public. One
commenter suggested that transparency
should promote the continuum of care.
Finally, several commenters noted that
promoting the use of health information
technology as well as further developing
quality measurements are important
factors in advancing transparency.
Response: We agree that it is
important to understand what
information beneficiaries want, how
they use the information, whom
beneficiaries consult in making
PO 00000
Frm 00233
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48101
decisions, and the needs of different
types of users of information.
Particularly with regard to Medicare
beneficiaries—many of whom face
challenges in accessing and
understanding information—CMS has
strived to provide information on
quality in a way that is accessible and
meaningful to beneficiaries and to those
who assist beneficiaries in making
health care decisions. CMS and AHRQ
have sponsored research in this area and
will continue to examine these issues.
We will continue to improve the webbased tools currently in use (such as
Hospital Compare and Nursing Home
Compare), and will continue to explore
other means of improving our ability to
disseminate information and means of
encouraging the use of available
information.
We recognize the complexities
involved in attempting to present
pricing information in an accurate and
useful manner that is accessible for the
intended users. We agree that in making
health care decisions, consumers must
have access to both cost and quality
information and that information must
be available across the continuum of
care. Consumers also must have access
to other types of information that may
be considered relevant when they are
making decisions about their health
care. While CMS has recently begun
releasing information on Medicare
payments to hospitals by procedure, and
we plan to make pricing information
available for other types of providers
and practitioners, we recognize that an
education effort is required to enable the
best use of pricing information.
Similarly, from the provider and
practitioner point of view, there are
many complexities involved in the
reporting of information on price and
quality. We agree that standardizing
terminology and greater use of health
information technology would support
transparency by reducing reporting
burdens. The ideal is to design a system
that is feasible and accomplishes its
intended goals in the most efficient
manner possible.
Comment: We received a significant
number of comments on what types of
pricing information should be made
publicly available based on reliable
claims data. Many commenters
recommended making both hospital
charges and out-of-pocket costs
available, and several commenters
recommended this as a Federal
requirement. However, some
commenters cautioned against using
hospital charges since they do not
reflect consumers’ expected costs.
Commenters noted that it is important
to help consumers understand that there
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48102
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
are price variations that reflect factors
such as additional payments to fund
teaching and research missions, caring
for the under- and uninsured, and other
costs. Several commenters noted the
importance of measuring costs and
quality across settings and over
appropriate timeframes using evidencebased protocols. One commenter
recommended displaying CCRs.
Another commenter recommended
reporting national average charges for
certain common procedures. One
commenter noted that the cost of
nursing care is not shown as a separate
cost to patients. One commenter noted
that costs of supplies and services
should be transparent as well. With
regard to possible studies of costs in
areas of the country where there are
relatively high health care costs, one
commenter recommended that a studied
region be homogenous, but
heterogeneous outside of the study area.
Response: As mentioned previously,
we recognize the complexities involved
in attempting to present pricing
information in an accurate and useful
manner that is accessible for the
intended users. As also noted above, we
agree that in making health care
decisions, consumers must have access
to both cost and quality information, as
well as other information that may be
considered relevant when consumers
are making decisions about their health
care. As noted above, while CMS has
recently begun to release information on
Medicare payments to hospitals by
procedure as well as the number of
procedures performed by the hospital,
and we plan to make pricing
information available for other types of
providers and practitioners, we
recognize that an education effort is
required to enable the best use of
pricing information. Consumers must
take into account the many factors noted
by commenters which are components
of the prices that consumers (or
insurers) will pay for care. For example,
consumers may want to know the costs
of all the services they received in an
episode-of-care when determining the
total costs for a course of treatment.
Similarly, with an episode-of-care
approach, consumers also may want
information about the quality of care at
each point in the continuum of care
when multiple providers and
practitioners are involved.
With regard to beneficiary out-ofpocket costs, the current pricing tools
available to Medicare beneficiaries—the
Medicare Personal Plan Finder and the
tools beneficiaries use in evaluating Part
D drug plans—are intended to give
beneficiaries important, accurate
information about their expected out-of-
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
pocket costs when faced with various
choices. At the same time, we believe it
is desirable for consumers to know how
much their insurer—or the Medicare
program (and therefore taxpayers)—is
paying for a person’s care. The cost of
care to the primary payer should be a
factor when a person is attempting to
make judicious decisions about his or
her health care.
Comment: A considerable number of
commenters addressed the importance
of leadership and stakeholder
participation in efforts to bring greater
transparency to the health care system.
Many commenters noted the success of
existing public-private partnerships and
recommended that CMS continue to
build on these partnerships. Many
commenters recommended that the
further expansion of hospital quality
information should be accomplished
through the Hospital Quality Alliance.
Also, commenters noted that the AHRQ
is best suited to conduct research on
what consumers want in helping them
with health care purchasing decisions.
Several commenters suggested
collaborative efforts though workshops.
Several commenters recommended a
hospital-led effort to create consumerfriendly pricing language. One
commenter suggested that insurance
companies are best positioned to be
advisors to patients and to provide
information on the expected costs for an
entire episode of care. One commenter
supported a hospital-led effort in
making transparent information
available to consumers, rather than a
government-led initiative.
Response: The views of many of the
commenters are consistent with CMS’
current practices in the development
and dissemination of quality measures
for Medicare beneficiaries, and are
consistent with our future direction
with respect to transparency in
providing price and quality information.
Many of the tools and measures that
CMS currently uses in providing
information on quality have been
developed through public-private
collaborations. CMS has used a
collaborative approach for many years,
and CMS actively participates in efforts
such as the Hospital Quality Alliance,
the Ambulatory Care Quality Alliance,
the National Committee on Quality
Assurance, the National Quality Forum,
and numerous other organizations
whose mission is to improve the quality
of health care by making valid, reliable
information available to providers and
consumers. In particular, CMS is
supporting pilot programs in Boston,
Indianapolis, Minneapolis-St. Paul,
Wisconsin, Phoenix, and California, in
conjunction with the Hospital Quality
PO 00000
Frm 00234
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Alliance and Ambulatory Care Quality
Alliance, to identify and implement
effective ways of providing better
information on quality and improving
quality. As the commenters noted, the
AHRQ is a leader in this arena, and
CMS will continue to work with AHRQ
to ensure that there is continuing
progress in providing information on
quality. A broad, collaborative approach
to the development and dissemination
of information also promotes
improvement in the usefulness of the
information and improvement in the
mechanisms of dissemination.
As noted above, we agree that it is
important to understand the information
needs of Medicare beneficiaries, and we
will continue to examine that issue as
it pertains to beneficiaries. As more
information on quality continues to be
made available, and as pricing
information becomes more commonly
available, we need to understand
whether the new information and the
manner in which it is disseminated is
effectively serving the needs of
beneficiaries and the needs of other
individuals and entities that assist
beneficiaries in their decisionmaking
processes.
Comment: Several commenters
opposed the option which suggested
that we modify the Medicare conditions
of participation to require hospitals to
post price information on assistance
programs for the uninsured.
Commenters noted that hospitals
provide community financial assistance
to the uninsured in their service areas
based on local patient demographics
and the local poverty level. They believe
that as patient demographics and
poverty levels vary from community to
community, so must charity care
policies. One commenter noted that
without Congressional action, CMS does
not have the authority to require
hospitals to produce price information
unrelated to Federal program
beneficiaries. This commenter also
advocated that CMS allow the current
hospital pricing marketplace, that
includes the provision of charity care to
the uninsured, to continue to operate
without Federal interference.
Response: Although we are not
adopting our proposal to amend the
Medicare conditions of participation to
require hospitals to post price
information, including information on
assistance programs for the uninsured at
this time, we have not abandoned the
idea and may consider it in the future.
As noted in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule, we are considering several options
to achieve greater transparency in the
health care system. We agree that any
transparency policy must take into
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
consideration the current programs
operated by hospitals across the country
to provide financial assistance to the
uninsured and the variances in the
patient demographics that are addressed
by these programs. However, we believe
that providing true cost transparency in
the health care system will require
making available price information
across populations through publicprivate collaboratives, such as the AQA
pilots. We appreciate the current efforts
of the hospital and insurance industries
to work with CMS towards greater
transparency in the health care system.
Comment: Two commenters suggested
that pricing transparency will not
address the problem of the uninsured
and will have a marginal impact on
costs. Specifically, the commenters
argued that the complexity of, and
variances in, hospital charge structures
make price comparisons among
hospitals nearly impossible; and
therefore posting hospital-specific
charges will not accomplish CMS’
transparency goals. Rather the
commenters stated that CMS should
work with Congress to expand Medicaid
and other safety net programs.
Alternatively, the commenters
supported the expansion of CMS’
current efforts to report national average
charges for certain common procedures,
as this information would allow patients
to encourage their local hospitals to
align their charges with national
averages. The commenters also noted
that for the privately insured, the
relevant financial information is the
amount that is the patient’s
responsibility.
Response: We believe by increasing
the transparency of health care costs
and providing cost and quality
information to consumers to make
better-informed health care choices,
overall costs to the health care system
should decrease and the quality of care
will improve. Greater health care
efficiency is critical for the long-term
sustainability of the health care system,
including the ability to deliver care to
the uninsured population. As we
continue to develop policies to support
transparency in the health care system,
CMS is committed to ensuring that the
needs of the uninsured population and
the safety net providers that serve them
are addressed.
Comment: Three commenters
recommended the release of physicianidentifiable Medicare claims data (fully
protecting patient privacy), to allow for
better quality and efficiency
performance reporting.
Response: Those making this
comment suggest that releasing
physician-identifiable Medicare claims
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
data to the public would increase the
scope and breadth of performance
measures. CMS is firmly committed to
increasing the scope and breadth of
performance measures in all settings of
care in which Medicare patients receive
care. Specifically, in this regulation,
CMS is requiring hospitals to report on
a broader set of quality measures to
receive the full payment update. We
agree that physician-identifiable claims
are an important source of information
and are evaluating the potential to use
physician-identifiable Medicare claims
in this initiative.
Comment: One commenter noted that
the June 1, 2006 CMS posting of
payment information on the 30 common
elective procedures by diagnosis-related
group (DRG) does not include
information on the quality of care
delivered within each specific DRG.
Response: We agree that both quality
and cost information must be used to
assess the value of health care. We
disagree with the commenter’s view that
CMS is not releasing information for
beneficiaries on both quality and cost on
the same conditions. Many of the
patients who would receive care for the
high-utilization condition for which
payment information has been posted
would be the same patients whose care
would be assessed for Hospital Compare
quality measures. Further, the HQA
surgical measures would apply to some
of the surgical procedures for which
payment information was posted. Many
quality measures, such as the Hospital
Consumer Assessment of Healthcare
Providers and Systems Survey
(HCAHPS), are not specific to certain
procedures and may be just as important
to beneficiaries and other consumers as
condition-specific clinical measures.
Other information included in the
posting, such as how many patients a
hospital treats for a certain condition,
also adds to the information that people
can use to make better decisions on
their care.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the link between value-based
purchasing and making the health care
system more transparent.
Response: We agree that financial
incentives can be a powerful tool to
encourage quality improvement. Almost
all hospitals chose to report and
improve on certain quality measures
when Congress determined that
reporting them should be a condition of
receiving the full payment update for
inpatient care. Further, the initial
results from the Premier Hospital
Quality Incentive Demonstration show
that participating hospitals, on average,
improved on the quality measures upon
which they were assessed for purposes
PO 00000
Frm 00235
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48103
of receiving a payment bonus. In
addition to these efforts, CMS has
embarked on a variety of initiatives that
use public reporting to provide useful
information to beneficiaries and to
improve the quality and value of care.
Payers, beneficiaries, and providers
share a common interest in having
consumers make informed health care
decisions. Providers who deliver high
quality services at a lower cost than
others should be given the opportunity
to be publicly acknowledged for their
efforts.
V. Changes to the PPS for CapitalRelated Costs
A. Background
Section 1886(g) of the Act requires the
Secretary to pay for the capital-related
costs of inpatient acute hospital services
‘‘in accordance with a PPS established
by the Secretary.’’ Under the statute, the
Secretary has broad authority in
establishing and implementing the PPS
for hospital inpatient capital-related
costs. We initially implemented the PPS
for capital-related costs in the August
30, 1991 IPPS final rule (56 FR 43358),
in which we established a 10-year
transition period to change the payment
methodology for Medicare hospital
inpatient capital-related costs from a
reasonable cost-based methodology to a
prospective methodology (based fully
on the Federal rate).
Federal fiscal year (FFY) 2001 was the
last year of the 10-year transition period
established to phase in the PPS for
hospital inpatient capital-related costs.
For cost reporting periods beginning in
FY 2002, capital PPS payments are
based solely on the Federal rate for most
acute care hospitals (other than certain
new hospitals and hospitals receiving
certain exception payments). The basic
methodology for determining capital
prospective payments using the Federal
rate is set forth in § 412.312. For the
purpose of calculating payments for
each discharge, the standard Federal
rate is adjusted as follows:
(Standard Federal Rate) × (DRG
Weight) × (Geographic Adjustment
Factor (GAF)) × (Large Urban Add-on, if
applicable) × (COLA for hospitals
located in Alaska and Hawaii) × (1 +
Capital DSH Adjustment Factor +
Capital IME Adjustment Factor, if
applicable).
Hospitals also may receive outlier
payments for those cases that qualify
under the threshold established for each
fiscal year as specified in § 412.312(c) of
the regulations.
The regulations at § 412.348(f)
provide that a hospital may request an
additional payment if the hospital
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48104
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
incurs unanticipated capital
expenditures in excess of $5 million due
to extraordinary circumstances beyond
the hospital’s control. This policy was
originally established for hospitals
during the 10-year transition period, but
as we discussed in the August 1, 2002
IPPS final rule (67 FR 50102), we
revised the regulations at § 412.312 to
specify that payments for extraordinary
circumstances are also made for cost
reporting periods after the transition
period (that is, cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2001).
Additional information on the exception
payment for extraordinary
circumstances in § 412.348(f) can be
found in the FY 2005 IPPS final rule (69
FR 49185 and 49186).
During the transition period, under
§§ 412.348(b) through (e), eligible
hospitals could receive regular
exception payments. These exception
payments guaranteed a hospital a
minimum payment percentage of its
Medicare allowable capital-related costs
depending on the class of hospital
(§ 412.348(c)), but were available only
during the 10-year transition period.
After the end of the transition period,
eligible hospitals can no longer receive
this exception payment. However, even
after the transition period, eligible
hospitals receive additional payments
under the special exceptions provisions
at § 412.348(g), which guarantees all
eligible hospitals a minimum payment
of 70 percent of its Medicare allowable
capital-related costs provided that
special exceptions payments do not
exceed 10 percent of total capital IPPS
payments. Special exceptions payments
may be made only for the 10 years from
the cost reporting year in which the
hospital completes its qualifying
project, and the hospital must have
completed the project no later than the
hospital’s cost reporting period
beginning before October 1, 2001. Thus,
an eligible hospital may receive special
exceptions payments for up to 10 years
beyond the end of the capital PPS
transition period. Hospitals eligible for
special exceptions payments were
required to submit documentation to the
intermediary indicating the completion
date of their project. (For more detailed
information regarding the special
exceptions policy under § 412.348(g),
refer to the August 1, 2001 IPPS final
rule (66 FR 39911 through 39914) and
the August 1, 2002 IPPS final rule (67
FR 50102).)
Under the PPS for capital-related
costs, § 412.300(b) of the regulations
defines a new hospital as a hospital that
has operated (under current or previous
ownership) for less than 2 years. (For
more detailed information, see the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
August 30, 1991 final rule (56 FR
43418).) During the 10-year transition
period, a new hospital was exempt from
the capital PPS for its first 2 years of
operation and was paid 85 percent of its
reasonable costs during that period.
Originally, this provision was effective
only through the transition period and,
therefore, ended with cost reporting
periods beginning in FY 2002. Because
we believe that special protection to
new hospitals is also appropriate even
after the transition period, as discussed
in the August 1, 2002 IPPS final rule (67
FR 50101), we revised the regulations at
§ 412.304(c)(2) to provide that, for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2002, a new hospital (defined
under § 412.300(b)) is paid 85 percent of
its Medicare allowable capital-related
costs through its first 2 years of
operation, unless the new hospital
elects to receive fully prospective
payment based on 100 percent of the
Federal rate. (Refer to the August 1,
2001 IPPS final rule (66 FR 39910) for
a detailed discussion of the statutory
basis for the system, the development
and evolution of the system, the
methodology used to determine capitalrelated payments to hospitals both
during and after the transition period,
and the policy for providing exception
payments.)
Section 412.374 provides for the use
of a blended payment amount for
prospective payments for capital-related
costs to hospitals located in Puerto Rico.
Accordingly, under the capital PPS, we
compute a separate payment rate
specific to Puerto Rico hospitals using
the same methodology used to compute
the national Federal rate for capitalrelated costs. In general, hospitals
located in Puerto Rico are paid a blend
of the applicable capital PPS Puerto
Rico rate and the applicable capital PPS
Federal rate.
Prior to FY 1998, hospitals in Puerto
Rico were paid a blended capital PPS
rate that consisted of 75 percent of the
capital PPS Puerto Rico specific rate and
25 percent of the capital PPS Federal
rate. However, effective October 1, 1997
(FY 1998), in conjunction with the
change to the operating PPS blend
percentage for Puerto Rico hospitals
required by section 4406 of Pub. L. 105–
33, we revised the methodology for
computing capital PPS payments to
hospitals in Puerto Rico to be based on
a blend of 50 percent of the capital PPS
Puerto Rico rate and 50 percent of the
capital PPS Federal rate. Similarly, in
conjunction with the change in
operating PPS payments to hospitals in
Puerto Rico for FY 2005 required by
section 504 of Pub. L. 108–173, we again
revised the methodology for computing
PO 00000
Frm 00236
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
capital PPS payments to hospitals in
Puerto Rico to be based on a blend of
25 percent of the capital PPS Puerto
Rico rate and 75 percent of the capital
PPS Federal rate effective for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2004.
B. Treatment of Certain Urban Hospitals
Reclassified as Rural Hospitals Under
§ 412.103
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24122), we proposed technical
changes to §§ 412.316(b) and
412.320(a)(1) to clarify that hospitals
reclassified as rural under § 412.103 are
not eligible for the large urban add-on
payment or for the capital DSH
adjustment. These changes were
proposed to reflect our historic policy
that hospitals reclassified as rural under
§ 412.103 also are considered rural
under the capital PPS. Since the genesis
of the capital PPS in FY 1992, the same
geographic classifications used under
the operating PPS also have been used
under the capital PPS.
These changes and clarifications are
necessary because we inadvertently
made an error when we updated our
capital PPS regulations to incorporate
OMB’s new CBSA definitions for IPPS
hospital labor market areas beginning in
FY 2005. In the FY 2005 IPPS final rule
(69 FR 49187 through 49188), in order
to incorporate the new CBSA
designations and the provisions of the
newly established § 412.64, which
incorporated the CBSA-based
geographic classifications, we revised
§ 412.316(b) and § 412.320 to specify
that, effective for discharges occurring
on or after October 1, 2004, the capital
PPS payment adjustments are based on
the geographic classifications under
§ 412.64. However, § 412.64 does not
reference the provisions of § 412.103
regarding the urban-to-rural
reclassifications, as was previously
found in § 412.63(b)(1).
We believe that this error must be
corrected in order to maintain our
historic policy for treating urban-torural hospital reclassifications under the
operating PPS the same for purposes of
the capital PPS. Therefore, we proposed
to specify under §§ 412.316(b)(2) and
(b)(3) and 412.320(a)(1)(ii) and (a)(1)(iii)
that, for discharges on or after October
1, 2006, hospitals that are reclassified
from urban to rural under § 412.103
would be considered rural.
We did not receive any public
comments on our proposal. Therefore,
we are adopting as final, without
modification, the proposed changes to
§§ 412.316(b)(2) and (b)(3) and
412.320(a)(1)(ii) and (a)(1)(iii) which
specify that, for discharges on or after
October 1, 2006, hospitals that are
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
reclassified from urban to rural under
§ 412.103 would be considered rural.
C. Other Technical Corrections Relating
to the Capital PPS Geographic
Adjustment Factors
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24122) we proposed to make
technical corrections to the regulations
under paragraphs (a) and (c) of
§ 412.316. Specifically, we proposed to
make a technical change under
§ 412.316(a) to correct the crossreference to ‘‘§ 412.63(k)’’ to clarify that
the same wage index that applies to
hospitals under the operating PPS is
used to determine the geographic
adjustment factor (GAF) under the
capital PPS. We proposed to cross-refer
instead to subpart D of Part 412 to
capture the applicable requirements in
their entirety.
We did not receive any public
comments on our proposal. Therefore,
we are adopting as final without
modification the proposed technical
change under § 412.316(a) to correct the
cross-reference to ‘‘§ 412.63(k)’’ to
clarify that the same wage index that
applies to hospitals under the operating
PPS is used to determine the geographic
adjustment factor (GAF) under the
capital PPS. We cross-refer instead to
subpart D of Part 412 to capture the
applicable requirements in their
entirety. This technical correction does
not change any current payment
policies because the regulation, as
written, makes clear that the GAF
adjustment for local cost variation under
the capital PPS is based on a hospital’s
operating PPS wage index value. Thus,
the same payment policies that are in
effect prior to FY 2007 (that is, the GAF
is based on a hospital’s operating PPS
wage index value) will continue in
effect for FY 2007 and beyond; the only
change in the regulation is a correction
of the erroneous cross-reference.
In addition, we proposed to make a
technical correction under § 412.316(c)
to correct the cross-reference to
‘‘§ 412.115’’ to clarify that, for hospitals
located in Alaska and Hawaii, the same
COLA factor that applies to these
hospitals under the operating PPS is
used to determine the COLA factor
under the capital PPS. The existing
regulation erroneously references the
COLA factor used to determine payment
under § 412.115, which is not related to
the operating PPS COLA factor or any
other payment factors. Again, we
proposed to cross-refer instead to
subpart D of Part 412 to capture the
applicable requirements in their
entirety.
We did not receive any public
comments on this proposal. Therefore,
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
we are adopting as final, without
modification, the proposed technical
correction. This technical correction
does not change any current payment
policy; rather it makes clear that the
capital PPS COLA factor is based on the
hospital’s COLA factor under the
operating PPS. This technical correction
reflects our historic policy that the
COLA factor under the capital PPS is
based on the hospital’s operating PPS
COLA factor, which is how the capital
PPS COLA factor has been determined
since the implementation of the capital
PPS in FY 1992. Thus, the same
payment policy that has been in effect
prior to FY 2007 (that is, the use of the
operating PPS COLA factor as shown in
the table in section II.B.2 of the
Addendum of this final rule in
determining a hospital’s capital PPS
COLA factor) will continue to be in
effect for FY 2007 and beyond; the only
change in the regulation is a correction
of the erroneous cross-reference.
VI. Changes for Hospitals and Hospital
Units Excluded From the IPPS
A. Payments to Excluded Hospitals and
Hospital Units (§ 413.40)
1. Payments to Existing and New
Excluded Hospitals and Hospital Units
Historically, hospitals and hospital
units excluded from the prospective
payment system received payment for
inpatient hospital services they
furnished on the basis of reasonable
costs, subject to a rate-of-increase
ceiling. An annual per discharge limit
(the target amount as defined in
§ 413.40(a)) was set for each hospital or
hospital unit based on the hospital’s
own cost experience in its base year.
The target amount was multiplied by
the Medicare discharges and applied as
an aggregate upper limit (the ceiling as
defined in § 413.40(a)) on total inpatient
operating costs for a hospital’s cost
reporting period. Prior to October 1,
1997, these payment provisions applied
consistently to all categories of excluded
providers (rehabilitation hospitals and
units (now referred to as IRFs),
psychiatric hospitals and units (now
referred to as IPFs), LTCHs, children’s
hospitals, and cancer hospitals).
Payment for children’s hospitals and
cancer hospitals that are excluded from
the IPPS continues to be subject to the
rate-of-increase ceiling based on the
hospital’s own historical cost
experience. (We note that, in accordance
with § 403.752(a) of the regulations,
RNHCIs are also subject to the rate-ofincrease limits established under
§ 413.40 of the regulations.) For IRFs,
IPFs, and LTCHs, reasonable cost
payment provisions changed
PO 00000
Frm 00237
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48105
significantly for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 1997.
Section 1886(b)(3)(H) of the Act
established caps on the target amounts
for cost reporting periods beginning on
or after October 1, 1997, through
September 30, 2002, for certain existing
hospitals and hospital units excluded
from the IPPS. Section 413.40(c)(4)(iii)
of the implementing regulations states
that ‘‘In the case of a psychiatric
hospital or unit, rehabilitation hospital
or unit, or long-term care hospital, the
target amount is the lower of amounts
specified in paragraph (c)(4)(iii)(A) or
(c)(4)(iii)(B) of this section.’’
Accordingly, in general, for ‘‘existing’’
IPFs, IRFs, or LTCHs for the applicable
5-year period, the target amount is the
lower of: The hospital-specific target
amount (§ 413.40(c)(4)(iii)(A)) or the
75th percentile cap
(§ 413.40(c)(4)(iii)(B)).
For cost reporting periods beginning
on or after October 1, 2002, all IRFs are
paid 100 percent of the adjusted Federal
rate under the IRF PPS. Therefore, an
IRF, considered ‘‘existing’’ under
section 1886(b)(3)(H) of the Act would
have no portion of its payment subject
to § 413.40(c)(4)(ii) of the regulations for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 2002.
For cost reporting periods beginning
on or after October 1, 2002, to the extent
an IPF or LTCH has all or a portion of
its payment determined under
reasonable cost principles, the target
amounts for the reasonable cost-based
portion of the payment are determined
in accordance with section
1886(b)(3)(A)(ii) of the Act and the
regulations at § 413.40(c)(4)(ii). Section
413.40(c)(4)(ii) states, ‘‘Subject to the
provisions of [§ 413.40] paragraph
(c)(4)(iii) of this section, for subsequent
cost reporting periods, the target amount
equals the hospital’s target amount for
the previous cost reporting period
increased by the update factor for the
subject cost reporting period unless the
provisions of [§ 413.40] paragraph
(c)(5)(ii) of this section apply.’’ Thus,
because § 413.40(c)(4)(ii) indicates that
the provisions of that paragraph are
subject to the provisions of
§ 413.40(c)(4)(iii), which are applicable
only for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 1997,
through September 30, 2002, the target
amount for FY 2003 was determined by
updating the target amount for FY 2002
by the applicable update factor. For
example, if a provider was paid the cap
amount in FY 2002, the target amount
for FY 2003 would be the amount paid
in FY 2002, updated to FY 2003 (that is,
the target amount from the previous
year increased by the applicable update
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48106
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
factor). As discussed below, IRFs, IPFs,
and LTCHs are now paid under separate
PPSs, although some are subject to
transition payment provisions.
In addition, a new method of
determining the payment amount for
‘‘new’’ excluded providers for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 1997. Section 413.40(f)(2)(ii)
of the implementing regulations states
that, ‘‘* * * the amount of payment for
a new psychiatric hospital or unit, a
new rehabilitation hospital or unit, or a
new long term care hospital that was not
paid and excluded prior to October 1,
1997, is the lower of the hospital’s net
inpatient operating cost per case or 110
percent of the nation median of the
target amounts for the class of excluded
hospitals and units (psychiatric,
rehabilitation, long-term care) as
adjusted for the difference in wage
levels and updated to the first cost
reporting period in which the hospital
receives payment. The second cost
reporting period is subject to the same
target amount as the first cost reporting
period.’’ For the third cost reporting
period, the target amount determined
for the preceding cost reporting period
is updated to the third cost reporting
period. (See § 413.40(c)(4)(v).)
The 110 percent of the national
median payment limits for new
providers under TEFRA
(§ 413.40(f)(2)(ii)) do not apply to those
IPFs or LTCHs, whose first cost
reporting period begins on or after the
date the particular class of hospitals
implemented their respective PPS
because they are paid 100 percent of
their Federal PPS rate. IRFs are paid 100
percent of the Federal rate under the IRF
PPS for cost reporting periods beginning
on or after October 1, 2002. Therefore,
the 110 percent of the median payment
limitations are not applicable to IRFs for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after that date.
2. Separate PPS for IRFs
Section 1886(j) of the Act, as added by
section 4421(a) of Pub. L. 105–33,
provided for a phase-in of a case-mix
adjusted PPS for inpatient hospital
services furnished by IRFs for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2000, and before October 1,
2002, with payments based entirely on
the adjusted Federal prospective
payment for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2002.
Section 1886(j) of the Act was amended
by section 125 of Pub. L. 106–113 to
require the Secretary to use a discharge
as the payment unit under the PPS for
inpatient hospital services furnished by
IRFs and to establish classes of patient
discharges by functional-related groups.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Section 305 of Pub. L. 106–554 further
amended section 1886(j) of the Act to
allow IRFs, subject to the blend
methodology, to elect to be paid the full
Federal prospective payment rather than
the transitional period payments
specified in the Act.
On August 7, 2001, we issued a final
rule in the Federal Register (66 FR
41316) establishing the PPS for IRFs,
effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after January 1, 2002.
There was a transition period for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
January 1, 2002, and ending before
October 1, 2002. For cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2002, payments are based entirely on
the adjusted Federal prospective
payment rate determined under the IRF
PPS.
3. Separate PPS for LTCHs
In accordance with the requirements
of section 123 of Pub. L. 106–113, as
modified by section 307(b) of Pub. L.
106–554, we established a per
discharge, DRG-based PPS for LTCHs as
described in section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv) of
the Act for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2002, in
a final rule issued on August 30, 2002
(67 FR 55954). The LTCH PPS uses
information from LTCH hospital patient
records to classify patients into distinct
LTC–DRGs based on clinical
characteristics and expected resource
needs. Separate payments are calculated
for each LTC–DRG with additional
adjustments applied.
On May 7, 2004, we issued in the
Federal Register a final rule (69 FR
25673) that updated the payment rates
for the LTCH PPS and made policy
changes effective for a new LTCH PPS
rate year of July l, 2004 through June 30,
2005. For the LTCH PPS rate year of July
1, 2005 through June 30, 2006, we
issued in the Federal Register a final
rule (70 FR 24168) that further updated
the payment rates and made policy
changes. For the LTCH PPS rate year of
July 1, 2006 through June 30, 2007, we
issued in the Federal Register a final
rule (71 FR 27798) that further updated
the payment rates, discussed the LTC–
DRG classifications and relative weights
which remain linked to the inpatient
DRG system, and made several policy
changes. The 5-year period for LTCHs to
transition from a PPS payment
consisting of a blend of reasonable costbased reimbursement and the adjusted
Federal prospective payment rate to a
payment based on 100 percent of the
Federal prospective rate ends with cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2005, and before October 1,
2006. LTCHs with cost reporting periods
PO 00000
Frm 00238
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
beginning on or after October 1, 2006,
are paid entirely on the adjusted Federal
prospective payment rate.
4. Separate PPS for IPFs
In accordance with section 124 of the
BBRA and section 405(g)(2) of Pub. L.
108–173, we established a PPS for
inpatient hospital services furnished in
IPFs. On November 15, 2004, we issued
in the Federal Register a final rule (69
FR 66922) that established the IPF PPS,
effective for IPF cost reporting periods
beginning on or after January 1, 2005.
Under the final rule, we compute a
Federal per diem base rate to be paid to
all IPFs for inpatient psychiatric
services based on the sum of the average
routine operating, ancillary, and capital
costs for each patient day of psychiatric
care in an IPF, adjusted for budget
neutrality. The Federal per diem base
rate is adjusted to reflect certain patient
characteristics, including age, specified
DRGs, selected high-cost comorbidities,
days of the stay, and certain facility
characteristics, including a wage index
adjustment, rural location, indirect
teaching costs, the presence of a fullservice emergency department, and
COLAs for IPFs located in Alaska and
Hawaii. We have established a 3-year
transition period during which IPFs
whose first cost reporting periods began
before January 1, 2005, will be paid
based on a blend of reasonable costbased payment and IPF PPS payments.
For cost reporting periods beginning on
or after January 1, 2008, all IPFs will be
paid 100 percent of the Federal per
diem payment amount.
5. Grandfathering of Hospitals-WithinHospitals (HwHs) and Satellite Facilities
Existing regulations at 42 CFR
412.22(e) define a hospital-within-ahospital (HwH) as a hospital that
occupies space in a building also used
by another hospital, or in one or more
separate buildings located on the same
campus as buildings used by another
hospital. In order to be paid as an
excluded hospital, an HwH is required
to demonstrate compliance with
requirements at § 412.22(e)(1) through
(e)(3), as applicable, which were
established to create operational and
organizational separateness between the
HwH and the host hospital with which
it is co-located.
The existing regulations at
§ 412.22(h), relating to satellite facilities
of hospitals excluded from the IPPS,
define a satellite facility as a part of a
hospital that provides inpatient services
in a building also used by another
hospital, or in one or more entire
buildings located on the same campus
as buildings used by another hospital.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Section 412.25(e), relating to satellite
facilities of excluded hospital units,
defines a satellite facility as a part of a
hospital unit that provides inpatient
services in a building also used by
another hospital, or in one or more
entire buildings located on the same
campus as buildings used by another
hospital.
There are significant similarities
between the definition of a satellite
facility and the definition of an HwH as
it relates to their co-location with other
Medicare hospital-level providers
(hosts). There are also similarities in our
policy concerns with the potential for
patient-shifting (and its consequences
for the Medicare program) between the
co-located entities and their hosts.
Regarding HwHs and satellite facilities,
particularly LTCH HwHs and satellite
facilities of LTCHs, which were the
original entities that we regulated
beginning with FY 1995, we have
repeatedly expressed our concerns (for
example, in the FY 2005 IPPS final rule
(69 FR 49191)) that an HwH’s or a
satellite facility’s ‘‘configuration could
result in patient admission, treatment,
and discharge patterns that are guided
more by attempts to maximize Medicare
payments than by patient welfare.’’ (69
FR 48916 and 49191). We further
believe that ‘‘the unregulated linking of
an IPPS hospital and a hospital
excluded from the IPPS could lead to
two Medicare payments for what was
essentially one episode of patient care.’’
(69 FR 48916 and 49191). Therefore, we
established ‘‘separateness and control’’
criteria to govern these relationships
with host hospitals, at § 412.22(e) for
HwHs, and at §§ 412.22(h) and 412.25(e)
for satellite facilities of excluded
hospitals and satellite facilities of
hospital units, respectively. Moreover,
for HwHs and satellite facilities, we
provided for the ‘‘grandfathering’’ of
existing facilities, thereby exempting
those that were in existence prior to the
establishment of the ‘‘separateness and
control’’ requirements from compliance
with the criteria. At § 412.22(f), we
provided for the grandfathering of
HwHs that were in existence on or
before September 30, 1995, as long as
the hospital continues to operate under
the same terms and conditions. We also
provided for grandfathering HwHs that
changed the terms and conditions under
which they operated between
September 30, 1995 and before October
1, 2003, but subsequently continued to
operate under the terms and conditions
in effect on September 30, 2003. At
§ 412.22(h)(3) and (h)(4) we
grandfathered satellite facilities that
were part of a hospital, that were in
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
existence on September 30, 1999, and
that met certain other conditions.
Further, at § 412.25(e)(3) and (e)(4), we
grandfathered satellite facilities that
were part of a hospital unit, were in
existence on September 30, 1999, and
that met certain other conditions. The
purpose of our grandfathering certain
existing HwHs and satellites was to
reflect reliance interests and settled
expectations that existed on the part of
these facilities at the time the
separateness and control requirements
were created.
The regulations addressing
‘‘separateness and control’’ policies for
each of the above types of entities are
presently not entirely uniform. This
situation has arisen, in part, because the
policies were implemented at different
times and also because there are
differences among the types of entities.
(For example, in the FY 2003 IPPS final
rule (67 FR 49982 and 50105), we
included a detailed discussion of the
‘‘performance of basic functions’’ test
utilized for HwHs and how this test was
not applicable to satellite facilities.)
There are also differences between
specific features of the grandfathering
provisions for HwHs and satellite
facilities, despite the fact that, as noted
above, the intent of each of the
grandfathering provisions was the same
(for HwHs at § 412.22(f), for satellite
facilities of hospitals at § 412.22(h)(3)(i)
and (h)(4), and for satellite facilities of
hospital units at § 412.25(e)(3) and
(e)(4)). The regulations exempt certain
HwHs and satellite facilities from
compliance with the ‘‘separateness and
control’’ criteria governing the
relationships with their host hospitals
as long as they continue to operate
under the same ‘‘terms and conditions,’’
including the number of beds and
square footage considered to be part of
the hospital or satellite facility as of the
date that they were grandfathered.
This particular policy was adopted
because we believed that those entities
that were designated as grandfathered,
versus those that were required to meet
the ‘‘separateness and control’’
requirements, should not be permitted
to alter their operations from the
‘‘snapshot in time’’ taken when they
were grandfathered and thus benefit
even more from this status. In other
words, we believed that grandfathered
facilities received a benefit not enjoyed
by nongrandfathered facilities—namely,
they were free from compliance with the
‘‘separateness and control’’ regulations
and we did not want to allow these
entities to realize additional economic
advantages by expansion that would
increase their Medicare payments by
virtue of their grandfathered status.
PO 00000
Frm 00239
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48107
Furthermore, it has been our policy that
if a grandfathered HwH or satellite
facility of the HwH chooses not to
operate under the same terms and
conditions in effect as of its
grandfathering, it could still be paid
under the applicable excluded hospital
payment system if it changed its
relationship with its host to the extent
that it has come into compliance with
the applicable ‘‘separateness and
control’’ requirements. In addition, our
rationale for the separateness and
control requirements (and limiting the
grandfathering provision) was to
prevent abusive gaming of the Medicare
payment system by co-located hospitals.
Because the underlying rationale for
the grandfathering policies for both
HwHs and satellite facilities of HwHs is
the same, upon review of these various
provisions, we believe that, where
appropriate, the grandfathering
provisions should be consistent. Under
the authority of section 1871(a)(1) of the
Act, which authorizes the Secretary to
prescribe such regulations as may be
necessary to carry out the
administration of the Medicare program,
in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24124) we proposed the following
revisions to make the policies
consistent. We proposed to revise the
HwH provision at § 412.22(f) to include
an exception to the requirement that a
grandfathered HwH be operated under
the terms and conditions in effect on
October 1, 2003, that corresponds to the
existing exceptions for satellite facilities
of hospitals and for satellite facilities of
hospital units at § 412.22(h)(4) and
412.25(e)(4), respectively. (As provided
in § 412.22(f), the original September 30,
1995, ‘‘snapshot in time’’ date for
grandfathered HwHs was extended to
hospitals that changed the terms and
conditions under which they operated
between September 30, 1995, and before
October 1, 2003, in the FY 2004 IPPS
final rule (68 FR 45462).) Specifically,
we proposed a corresponding change to
the HwH grandfathering provision at
§ 412.22(f)(3) that would allow for
increases or decreases in square footage,
or decreases in the number of beds of
the HwH that are needed for specific
circumstances beyond the control of the
facility. We proposed to specify that
increases or decreases in square footage
or decreases in the number of beds that
are required because of the relocation of
a facility to permit construction or
renovation necessary for compliance
with Federal, State, or local law
affecting the physical facility or because
of catastrophic events such as fires,
floods, earthquakes, or tornadoes. (64
FR 14535) We also proposed to add a
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48108
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
provision for grandfathered hospital
satellites and satellites of units at
§ 412.22(h)(5) and § 412.25(e)(5)
respectively, allowing a decrease in
square footage or numbers of beds for
consistency with the proposed
regulations for grandfathered HwHs at
§ 412.22(f)(3)(i) and we proposed to
amend § 412.22(h)(4)(i) to mirror to the
language in § 412.25(e)(4)(i).
The comments we received on our
proposals, and our responses, are set
forth below.
Comment: All of the commenters,
including commenters representing
grandfathered HwHs, including
grandfathered LTCHs, children’s
hospitals, a cancer hospital, and an IRF,
hospital associations, legislators, and
industry consultants, endorsed our
reexamination of the existing
restrictions on grandfathered HwHs
changing the ‘‘terms and conditions’’
under which they operate. A number of
commenters questioned whether or not
HwHs would lose their grandfathered
status if they were required by Federal,
State, or local law, or catastrophic
events to increase or decrease their
square footage or to decrease their
number of beds in ways that did not
involve relocations of the facilities. Two
commenters described hypothetical
situations that could result in a need for
an increase in square footage for the
grandfathered HwH such as the
following: Making necessary repairs to
the existing physical plant that are now
governed by building standards
established by the American Institute of
Architects (AIA) or the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA) since the facility
was established (and now required by
law); compliance with privacy and
security requirements of the Health
Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA); or
meeting fire or safety codes that were
not in existence when the facility was
built. The commenters requested that
CMS clarify its grandfathering policies
in light of such scenarios.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support for our proposals. After
reviewing the comments, we agree that
there are indeed situations not related to
the relocation of a facility that could
make it necessary to add or reduce
square footage, or decrease the number
of beds in a grandfathered facility.
Moreover, after consideration of this
concern and of the comments we
received on our proposals, and for the
reasons summarized below, and in
accordance with our authority in section
1871(a)(1) of the Act we have decided
to revise our regulations on
grandfathering of HwHs, satellites of
IPPS-excluded hospitals, and satellites
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
of IPPS-excluded hospital units to allow
these facilities more flexibility to adjust
their square footage upward or
downward or to decrease their number
of beds. Specifically, in this final rule,
for cost reporting periods beginning on
or after October 1, 2006, we are revising
the regulations in
§§ 412.22(f)(3)(applicable to HwHs),
412.22(h)(4)(applicable to satellites of
IPPS-excluded hospitals), and
412.25(e)(4)(applicable to satellites of
IPPS-excluded units) to allow these
facilities to increase or decrease the
square footage of the facility or to
decrease the number of beds in the
facility without affecting the facility’s
grandfathered status. Under the final
rule, such changes could be undertaken
for any reason and would not be limited
to situations involving changes in
Federal, State, or local laws or
catastrophic events. Such changes also
would not be limited to cases in which
a facility must be relocated. Therefore,
we have not finalized our proposed
provisions that specified such
exceptions for HwHs, and in the case of
satellites hospitals, we have restored the
existing terminology of § 412.22(h)(4)
for cost reporting periods beginning
before October 1, 2006. This is the case
because under our finalized policy,
which is effective for cost periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006, as
discussed in detail below, we are not
restricting grandfathered HwHs at
§ 412.22(h)(3) and grandfathered
satellites at 412.22(h)(5) from increasing
or decreasing their square footage or
decreasing their number of beds. As
discussed elsewhere in these responses,
even though grandfathered satellite
units will also be permitted to increase
or decrease their square footage or
decrease their number of beds at
§ 412.25(e), such facilities are subject to
the existing regulations regarding
changes in size of excluded units unless
the change in size is necessitated by
relocation of the unit to permit
construction or renovation necessary for
compliance with a law affecting the
physical facility or because of
catastrophic event.
As noted above, in establishing
grandfathering provisions generally, we
intended to protect certain existing
hospitals and satellite facilities from
‘‘the potentially adverse impact of
recent, more specific regulations that we
now believe to be essential to the goals
of the Medicare program’’ (68 FR
45463). However, they were not
intended to establish a separate class of
providers. Moreover, it was our
intention that our ‘‘snapshot in time’’
policy prevented grandfathered entities
PO 00000
Frm 00240
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
that were advantaged more than their
nongrandfathered peer facilities as a
result of their protected status from
realizing additional benefits by
changing their ‘‘terms and conditions’’
in ways that could increase their
Medicare reimbursement. It also helps
prevent the program abuse associated
with co-located facilities that may result
from patient shifting whereby Medicare
makes two separate payments for what
is essentially a single episode of care.
Recently, several grandfathered LTCH
HwHs and satellite facilities questioned
whether a decrease in their square
footage or their number of beds would
result in negating their grandfathered
status, because compliance with each of
the above cited grandfathering
provisions requires that they continue to
operate under the same terms and
conditions, including the number of
beds and square footage considered to
be part of the hospital, the satellite
facility, or the hospital unit in effect on
the day that the grandfathering policy
was implemented. We also have been
urged to modify our policies to allow
these grandfathered entities to increase
in square footage and number of beds
without requiring compliance with the
‘‘separateness and control’’policies
discussed above. Clearly, under existing
regulations, an increase or a decrease in
square footage or number of beds would
result in a loss of status as a
grandfathered HwH or hospital satellite
facility (unless § 412.22(h)(4) or
§ 412.25(b)(3) applies) because the
existing regulations prohibit any change
in the terms and conditions of
operation, as described above.
As stated above, under our broad
authority in section 1871(a)(1) of the
Act, we have now decided to revise the
regulations in §§ 412.22(f) (applicable to
HwHs), 412.22(h)(4) and (h)(5)
(applicable to satellites of IPPSexcluded hospitals) and 412.25(e)(4)
and (e)(5) (applicable to satellites of
IPPS-excluded units) to allow these
facilities for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006, to
increase or decrease the square footage
of the facility or to decrease the number
of beds in the facility at any time
without affecting the facility’s
grandfathered status.
We made this decision following a
review of public comments on our
proposed rule, as summarized below. In
reaching this decision, we recognize
that allowing increases in the square
footage of those grandfathered facilities
could, in some cases, increase their
reimbursement under Federal health
insurance programs administered by
CMS. For example, any increase in the
square footage of a grandfathered facility
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
could result in increased operating
costs. Therefore, an increase in square
footage in a grandfathered HwH that is
paid for services to Medicare
beneficiaries under the TEFRA system
could lead to an increase in Medicare
payments. We recognize that this result
is not fully consistent with our objective
of not allowing a grandfathered facility
to make changes that would lead to
increased costs to the Medicare
program. However, we believe it is
necessary to weigh the importance of
this objective against the need,
described by many of those whose
comments are summarized below, for
hospitals and other grandfathered
facilities to have the flexibility to
upgrade their facilities and services to
incorporate new technology or
additional services to meet patient
needs or to comply with applicable new
laws. After considering these two
competing objectives in relation to one
another, we concluded that allowing
increases in square footage is justified
even though in a very limited number
of cases (as explained below), it may
result in some additional cost to the
Medicare program.
We note that with the exception of
children’s and cancer hospitals, the only
IPPS-excluded facilities are IRFs, IPFs,
and LTCHs. The payment
methodologies applicable to IRFs, IPFs,
and LTCHs use prospectively
determined rates, so that payments to an
individual facility are not affected by
increases in the square footage of that
facility. Children’s and cancer hospitals
are paid through the use of a TEFRA
system under which increases in the
square footage of a facility would
increase the facility’s Medicare
payments. However, there is only one
grandfathered cancer HwH and only
three grandfathered children’s HwHs.
For this reason, we believe that the total
Medicare cost increases, if any, will be
very small.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that we establish a policy that
would enable them to maintain their
grandfathered status while also being
permitted to increase square footage to
accommodate advancements in patient
care, and improvements in medical
technology that have evolved since they
were grandfathered, and that would also
permit expansion for administrative or
nonpatient related care activities. The
comments focused on each facility’s
need for additional space (square
footage) which would allow them the
ability to expand to accommodate
dialysis, rehabilitation, telemetry, and
hyperbaric services, isolation areas, and
additional diagnostic equipment which
are essential in order to maintain high
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
quality patient services. A number of
commenters also noted that their needs
for additional space for administrative
activities, professional instruction, and
computer hardware had grown since
they were grandfathered. These
commenters argued that such
expansions of square footage are
essential in order to efficiently deliver
the highest quality care to Medicare
beneficiaries and, furthermore, would
not result in any increased costs to the
Medicare program.
Several of the commenters asserted
that the legislative intent of section
4417(a) of the BBA of 1997, which
established grandfathering for those
LTCH HwHs that were certified to
participate in the Medicare program on
or before September 30, 1995, and that
were co-located with another hospital,
was to protect these hospitals and not
limit their functioning. These
commenters maintained that Congress
did not intend for a grandfathered HwH
to lose the ability to participate in the
Medicare program as a hospital
excluded from the IPPS if they added
beds or increased square footage in
order to better serve Medicare
beneficiaries. Another commenter stated
that the issue of how Medicaid
payments might be impacted by
grandfathering of certain LTCHs was not
contemplated by the grandfathering
provision in the BBA of 1997, and asks
CMS to clarify the application of the
HwH rules to an excluded hospital’s
participation in the Medicaid program.
Response: When we established the
basic grandfathering requirements for
HwHs, we had two objectives. As we
have noted above, we believed the
grandfathering provision enacted by
Congress reflected a legitimate interest
in protecting certain existing hospitals
that were co-located with other
hospitals from ‘‘the potentially adverse
impact of recent, more specific
regulations that we now believe to be
essential to the goals of the Medicare
program’’ (68 FR 45463). The
grandfathering provisions are an
exception to the separateness and
control requirements that reflect
reliance interests and settled
expectations that existed at the time the
rule was set into place. Grandfathering
provisions for these facilities allowed
existing HwHs to continue to be paid
outside of the IPPS, despite the fact that,
among other factors, they did not
demonstrate operational or
organizational separateness between
these grandfathered entities and their
host hospitals. However, the second
objective was to ensure that these
entities would not make changes that
would lead to increased costs to the
PO 00000
Frm 00241
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48109
Medicare program or that could
encourage inappropriate patient shifting
by co-located hospitals. This particular
policy was adopted because we believed
that those entities that were designated
as grandfathered should not be
permitted to alter their operations from
the ‘‘snapshot in time’’ taken when they
were grandfathered and thus benefit
even more from this status than those
facilities that were required to meet the
‘‘separateness and control’’
requirements. As noted above, an HwH
could change its terms and conditions
under which it operates after September
39, 1995 but before October 1, 2003,
after which time its terms and
conditions may not further change. (See
FY 2004 IPPS final rule (68 FR 45462).)
In other words, we believed that
grandfathered facilities received a
benefit not enjoyed by nongrandfathered
facilities—namely, they were free from
compliance with the ‘‘separateness and
control’’ regulations and we did not
want to allow these entities to realize
additional economic advantages by
expansion that could increase Medicare
payments by virtue of their
grandfathered status.
With respect to section 4417(a) of the
BBA, we believe its purpose was to
protect LTCH HwHs that existed prior to
September 30, 1995, from losing their
IPPS excluded status because they failed
to meet the separateness and control
requirements recently promulgated by
the Secretary. We do not believe that it
is reasonable to assume that by creating
a limited exception for these hospitals,
Congress was immunizing these
facilities from any further regulation by
the Secretary as to their growth and
financial impact on the Medicare
program. We do not believe Congress
was establishing a separate class of
providers. Furthermore, contrary to
commenter’s assertions, grandfathered
facilities continue to remain free to add
beds or square footage at any time, as
long as they meet the separation and
control requirements outlined in these
regulations. Consequently, it is
inaccurate to suggest that a
grandfathered HwH would lose its
ability to participate in the Medicare
program as an excluded hospital if it
increases the number of beds or square
footage since complying with the
separateness and control requirements
remains an option for these facilities.
In response to the comments stating
that the issue of Medicaid payments is
not contemplated by the grandfathering
provision in the BBA of 1997 and asking
us to clarify the application of the HwH
rules to an excluded hospital’s
participation in the Medicaid program,
we note that the grandfathering rules’
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48110
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
impact on the Medicaid payments to a
hospital, to the extent there is an
impact, will depend on the particular
payment methodology adopted by the
State in its State Medicaid plan. In
general, if a State pays grandfathered
HwHs under a predetermined
prospective rate which is unaffected by
changes in square footage, then
individual hospitals would not be
directly affected by increases or
decreases in their square footage. By
contrast, if the State were to pay
grandfathered HwHs under the TEFRA
system used by Medicare or under
another cost-based system, payment
could be directly affected by changes in
square footage. With respect to changes
in the numbers of beds, to the extent a
hospital seeks to increase its number of
beds because it is already operating at
or near its State licensed and Medicarecertified bed capacity, increasing the
number of beds would lead to a
proportionate increase in utilization and
payment. We believe that it is
appropriate to consider the impact of
revisions in Medicare policy on the
Medicaid payment system.
We continue to believe that it is
entirely reasonable and appropriate for
to us regulate the growth of HwHs that
have been otherwise favored by
exemptions from the more rigorous
‘‘separateness and control’’ provisions
that we have implemented for nongrandfathered co-located providers. We
also note that the issue here, namely our
reexamination of our grandfathering
policies, is an exception to a general
rule to permit reliance on expectations
that existed at the time the rule was put
in place. However, we do understand
that, in order to provide the highest
level of patient care, any hospital will
have to respond to advancements in
patient care, some of which may involve
the introduction of new technology
requiring an increased need for space,
such as new imaging equipment or the
installation of a hyperbaric chamber. We
also understand that a hospital may also
have reasonable need to create
additional administrative space for a
number of reasons, among which are
instructional space, updated computer
hardware, and record storage.
We believe that these commenters
have presented cogent arguments for our
reconsideration of the preclusion
against a grandfathered HwH expanding
square footage. We have evaluated the
impact on the Medicare program of
allowing an increase in square footage
for grandfathered HwHs and have
determined that we believe that such a
policy change will not result in
additional Medicare payments to those
grandfathered HwHs that are paid under
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
the excluded hospital PPSs (LTCH, IRF,
and IPF). For those grandfathered HwHs
that are still reimbursed under the
TEFRA payment system (that is, certain
cancer and children’s hospitals) square
footage is used to allocate certain costs,
so there may be a corresponding
increase in Medicare payment for those
costs. However, we believe (as we
discuss in greater detail below) that
because there is only one grandfathered
cancer HwH and three grandfathered
children’s HwHs, the increased costs
will be ‘‘de minimus’’ and we see no
reason, therefore, to distinguish them
from other grandfathered HwHs in a
way that might discourage them from
making necessary and appropriate
changes to their facilities that would
result in increases in their square
footage. Therefore, we believe the de
minimus costs to the Medicare program
associated with increases in square
footage are outweighed by the benefits
associated with advancements in
technology and other patient care
enhancements that may be achieved
through changes to hospital facilities
that concurrently increase the square
footage of the facilities. Even though it
is likely that any increase in the square
footage of a hospital or satellite paid
under the TEFRA system will increase
the costs upon which Medicare payment
is based, certain improvements, such as
the adoption of new technology or
modernization of a physical facility,
may also result in reduced operating
costs that partially or entirely offset any
cost increases.
Therefore, in this final rule, we are
revising the policy that we proposed at
§ 412.22(f)(3) to specify that a
grandfathered HwH may increase or
decrease its square footage or decrease
its number of beds, or both, without
affecting its exception from the
‘‘separateness and control’’
requirements for HwHs at § 412.22(e).
However, as explained below, we
continue to believe that an increase in
the number of beds, which could have
a much more significant impact on the
level of payments to the facility under
the Medicare programs, is a change to
the facility that should be a basis for
terminating its grandfathered status.
This policy will be effective for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2006. Although we
considered allowing increases in square
footage to situations involving new
technology or new laws affecting
hospitals’ physical facilities, we
concluded that such a policy would be
overly prescriptive and that its
enforcement would not be cost effective
in light of the limited increases in
PO 00000
Frm 00242
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Medicare spending we expect to result
from this change. Thus, we have not
included any provision restricting the
reasons for which such changes may be
made.
In the interest of consistent treatment
of HwHs, hospital satellite facilities (as
defined in § 412.22(h)), and satellite
facilities of units (as defined in section
412.25(e)(1)), and because similar
considerations underlie our policies
with respect to each type of
grandfathered facility, we are also
applying this policy to satellites,
effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006.
To accomplish these changes, we are
revising §§ 412.22(f), 412.22(h), and
412.25(e) as set forth below.
In the case of facilities that are
satellites of IPPS-excluded units, we
note that there are existing rules in
§ 412.25(b)(1) and (2) which govern
changes in the square footage and
number of beds in an IPPS-excluded
unit and where applicable, the
regulations that we are finalizing for the
increase or decrease in square footage of
the decrease in number or beds of a
grandfathered satellite unit will be
subject to these rules. Section
412.25(b)(1) permits increases in the
square footage or number of beds of a
unit to be made only at the start of a cost
reporting period. However, as we have
discussed previously, in these finalized
revisions of our grandfathering policy,
while we are allowing for an increase in
square footage of grandfathered satellite
units, we are not allowing these
facilities to increase their number of
beds. Therefore, we specify in
§ 412.25(e)(5)(i), a grandfathered unit
structured as a satellite facility may only
increase in square footage at the
beginning of a cost reporting period.
Further, existing regulations for
excluded hospitals at § 412.25(b)(2)
permit reductions in the square footage
or number of beds of a unit to be made
only with 30 days’ advance written
notice to the fiscal intermediary and
CMS, requires maintenance of sufficient
information to accurately determine
costs, and specifies that reductions in
the number of beds or square footage
considered to be part of an excluded
unit made during a cost reporting period
must remain in effect for the remainder
of that period. Since our finalized policy
at § 412.25(e)(5)(i) allows for both
reductions in square footage or bed
number for grandfathered satellite units,
under circumstance other than those
specified at § 412.25(e)(4) we are
requiring that any such decreases by
these facilities be subject to existing
regulations for units of excluded
hospitals at 412.25(b)(2). We believe
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
that these requirements are reasonable
and necessary because changes in the
square footage or a decrease in the
number of beds in a satellite of a unit
may affect the bed size or square footage
of the facility of which it is a part. We
believe this requirement is needed to
avoid confusion and provide for
equitable and consistent treatment of all
excluded units.
However, under existing regulations
at 412.25(e)(4), a grandfathered satellite
of a unit would be able to increase or
decrease its square footage or decrease
its number of beds at any time, for
purposes of relocation of the facility to
permit construction or renovation
necessary for compliance with changes
in the law affecting the physical facility,
or because of catastrophic events.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that if the proposed revisions allowing
for a decrease in square footage, but not
an increase, were finalized, their
grandfathered HwHs would face the
very onerous choice of either not
making necessary operational or clinical
improvements to their facilities or of
having to disrupt longstanding favorable
relationships with the administration of
their host hospital.
Response: As we have stated above,
under the policy in this final rule, we
are not attempting to prescribe the
reasons for which changes in the square
footage of grandfathered HwHs and
satellites may be made. We believe this
approach will give the hospitals and
satellites the flexibility they need to
increase or decrease square footage in
response to technological innovation,
changes in hospital practice patterns,
shifts in the types of services required
by the hospital’s or satellite’s patients,
and other factors relevant to the
operation of the facilities, without
having to alter their historic relationship
with their host hospital.
Comment: One commenter stated that
our proposed regulations indicated a
new flexibility to our implementation of
grandfathering rules for HwHs but
found no logic in why we would allow
certain changes in ‘‘terms and
conditions’’ but not others.
Response: Although we are making
significant changes to the proposed
revisions of our grandfathering policy
for HwHs and satellite facilities in this
final rule, as noted throughout these
responses, we believe that the rationale
underlying our determinations is quite
apparent. We are permitting
grandfathered HwHs and satellite
facilities an increase in square footage
because we believe that there have been
significant clinical advances, some of
which are detailed elsewhere in these
responses, reasonably requiring a
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
hospital to increase its physical space in
order to accommodate new equipment
or treatment modalities so that it could
continue it to offer the highest level of
medical care to its patients. We could
also envision circumstances under
which changing administrative or
otherwise nonclinical needs could
require additional space, and we have
noted that we understand that an
increase in square footage by those
HwHs and satellite facilities paid under
the TEFRA system may result in a de
minimus increase in Medicare costs.
However, we do not believe that any of
these changes require the establishment
of additional beds. Because the number
of beds is directly related to hospital
capacity, adding bed capacity will
significantly increase costs to the
Medicare program across all excluded
providers. This case is unlike that of an
increase in square footage because
square footage increases would increase
Medicare spending only for services of
those hospitals paid under the TEFRA
system. By contrast, increasing the bed
capacity of a grandfathered HwH or unit
would allow increased utilization not
only in TEFRA facilities but in HwHs
and satellites paid under the
prospective payment systems applicable
to IRFs, IPFs, and LTCHs. To the extent
that any of these systems provides a
higher level of payment for certain
services than the IPPS, allowing bed
size increases by grandfathered facilities
might lead to the shifting of utilization
from less expensive to more expensive
settings, thereby inappropriately
increasing Medicare spending.
Furthermore, a significant increase in
the number of beds could dramatically
alter the size and character of the
facility, thereby defeating one of the
primary purposes of grandfathering
which was, as noted above, to capture
the ‘‘snapshot in time’’ for the
grandfathered facility. By allowing
existing co-located facilities (HwHs or
satellite facilities) to continue to
function as they had been, we were
enabling these facilities to continue to
function as they were, without having to
make the organizational and operating
changes necessary for compliance with
our separateness and control policies.
Therefore, in answer to the commenter,
we believe that our rationale for the
changes that we are finalizing to the
grandfathering regulations is apparent.
We are permitting changes that relate
directly to the quality of patient care
and services and we are not allowing
changes that we believe could
substantially and inappropriately
increase costs to the Medicare program.
In addition, we note that we have never
PO 00000
Frm 00243
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48111
adopted a policy that would preclude
one of these facilities from changing
other terms and conditions under which
it operates, including its bed size. We
would only require that such a facility
begin to comply with the separateness
and control requirements.
Comment: Several hospitals requested
that we allow them to increase their bed
numbers. One commenter, a children’s
hospital, noted that it wanted to
establish mental health beds for
children and adolescents. Another
commenter suggested alternatives to our
preclusion of increase in bed size for
grandfathered HwHs: that CMS allow a
‘‘modest’’ increase in beds equivalent to
those permitted during the 18-month
moratorium established by Congress in
section 507 of Pub. L. 108–173 for
physician-owned specialty hospitals or
if the grandfathered HwH admitted a
‘‘de minimus’’ percentage (for example,
10 percent or less) of patients from its
host. This commenter and one other
commenter, a grandfathered LTCH colocated with an IRF from which the
commenter stated that the LTCH
receives a minimum of admissions,
suggested that CMS establish another
exemption from the bed size increase
preclusion of the grandfathering
regulations if the inpatient facility with
which the grandfathered HwH is colocated is not an acute care hospital, but
rather is an IRF or an IPF or if the HwH
is located on a campus of the host acute
care hospital but is not physically colocated with an acute care hospital. The
commenters believed that this particular
exemption is reasonable because, in the
view of the commenter, our most
significant concern regarding HwHs is
inappropriate shifting of patients from a
host acute care hospital to a LTCH
HwH.
Response: In considering these
comments, we believe it is important to
recall that grandfathered HwHs, as well
as satellite facilities, are organized and
operated in ways that make them unable
to meet the minimal tests of
separateness and control applicable to
nongrandfathered facilities, so that they
effectively function as units of their host
facilities. Because of this, we continue
to believe that, in grandfathering HwHs
and satellites facilities, we have
conferred a significant advantage on
them as compared to like facilities that
are required to meet our ‘‘separateness
and control’’ requirements and are
closely monitored. Therefore, although
we are finalizing regulations that will
allow grandfathered HwHs and satellite
facilities the ability to increase their
square footage, we are not allowing
grandfathered facilities an increase in
the number of beds because such an
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48112
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
increase would result in unjustifiable
additional payments to the
grandfathered HwH and inappropriate
additional costs to the Medicare
program.
With respect to the childrens’ hospital
that indicated that it wanted to be able
to add additional beds to its hospital in
order to establish mental health beds for
children and adolescents, we note the
following. First, grandfathered HwHs
are not precluded from increasing the
number of beds, and in fact, they may
do so at any time, so long as they
comply with the separateness and
control requirements. In addition, the
fiscal intermediary for the grandfathered
childrens’ HwHs that commented on
this issue has indicated that based upon
the hospital’s average inpatient census
figures, there appear to be sufficient
beds available at the hospital to
establish inpatient mental health
services for children and adolescents
without adding additional beds.
In response to the commenter’s
suggestions of either allowing a
‘‘modest’’ increase in bed numbers
equivalent to that permitted for
physician-owned specialty hospitals
under Pub. L. 108–173 or of 10 percent,
or allowing an increase in bed numbers
if the grandfathered HwH was only
admitting a ‘‘de minimus’’ percentage of
patients from its host, we do not believe
that allowing any increase in the
number of beds for a grandfathered
HwH is either necessary or appropriate.
We also do not believe that it is
appropriate to establish a distinction
between grandfathered HwHs
depending upon the hospital category of
the host, as did the commenters
referring to a LTCH HwH that is colocated with an IRF. Nor do we believe
that it would be appropriate to broaden
this commenter’s suggested exemption
to grandfathered HwHs that are on the
campus of an acute care hospital but are
physically co-located with IRFs or IPFs.
Our intent in establishing the
grandfathering provisions for HwHs and
satellite facilities was never to establish
separate classes of grandfathered
providers. Rather, it was to protect
settled expectations that existed at the
time that the grandfathering rules were
put in place. In addition, in each of
these configurations, an increase in bed
size could result in a significant
increase in Medicare utilization and
payment and given the close integration
between a grandfathered HwH or
satellite and its host hospital, we believe
the potential for inappropriate Medicare
spending increases exists.
As discussed above, although the
original ‘‘separateness and control’’
regulations focused on the particular
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
configuration of an acute care host being
paid under the IPPS and a LTCH being
paid under the TEFRA system (59 FR
45389 through 45393), the regulations
were extended for FY 1998 (62 FR
46014) to include all hospitals excluded
from the IPPS and not just those that
were co-located with an acute care
hospital. (In the FY 1999 IPPS final rule,
among other rules, we established
‘‘separateness and control’’
requirements for satellites (65 FR 41532
through 41535)). Thus, contrary to the
commenter’s assertion, our concern
with HwHs is not limited to an acute
care hospital co-located with a LTCH
HwH.). Despite the fact that the LTCH
HwH commenter received very few
patients from its host IRF, we do not
believe that the behavior of one
grandfathered HwH can be generalized
to indicate the behavior of an entire
LTCH industry or the behavior of all
grandfathered facilities. Although we
endorse the behavior that the
commenter describes, we do not believe
that it is necessary or appropriate to
establish an additional exemption that
would allow a grandfathered HwH that
is already advantaged by not having to
comply with ‘‘separateness and control’’
regulations to expand its number of
beds solely because it is not ‘‘gaming’’
the system but rather it is functioning
within accepted Medicare policies and
procedures.
Comment: One commenter asked us
to clarify whether CMS would permit a
grandfathered HwH that reduced its size
and bed number from the number that
it had at the time at which it had been
grandfathered to return to that original
size and bed number at a future time
without threatening its grandfathered
status. A number of commenters asked
CMS to specify that grandfathered
HwHs would be able to add or
discontinue direct patient care services
in the same manner as any other
hospital and whether the scope and
amount of those services would be
limited to those that were in place when
the HwH was grandfathered.
Specifically, commenters asked whether
a grandfathered HwH could provide
outpatient services or establish provider
based services.
Response: After considering the
question raised by the first commenter,
we have decided to adopt a policy
under which a grandfathered HwH that
reduced its bed number from the point
at which it had been grandfathered
would be permitted to return at a future
time to the number of Medicare-certified
beds that existed at the time it was
grandfathered, as governed either by
§ 412.22(f)(1) or (f)(2), without
threatening its grandfathered status.
PO 00000
Frm 00244
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Specifically, we are revising
§ 412.22(f)(3) to provide that if a
hospital decreases its number of beds
below the number of beds considered to
be part of the hospital on September 30,
1995, it may subsequently increase the
number of beds at any time as long as
the resulting total number of beds
considered to be part of the hospital
does not exceed the number in effect on
September 30, 1995 (for hospitals that
continue to operate under the same
terms and conditions in effect on that
date, as described in § 412.22(f)(1)) or
the number in effect on September 30,
2003, as described in § 412.22(f)(1) (for
hospitals that changed the terms and
conditions under which they operated
after September 30, 1995 but before
October 1, 2003), as described in
§ 412.22(f)(2). We are including similar
changes in § 412.22(h)(4) (applicable to
satellites of IPPS-excluded hospitals)
and § 412.25(h)(4) (applicable to
satellites of IPPS-excluded units). We
believe this policy is consistent with our
stated intent to allow hospitals that
were in existence prior to the
implementation of the HwH or the
satellite rules to continue to operate
under the same terms and conditions
they had operated under at the time
those provisions were implemented.
Allowing a hospital that had decreased
its number of beds below the number it
had as of the date of the implementation
of the HwH and satellite provisions to
increase its number of beds up to the
level it had on the implementation date,
allows the hospital to maintain its
original ‘‘terms and conditions’’. These
changes, like the rest of our revisions to
sections 412.22 and 412.25, will be
effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006.
In response to the question as to
whether a grandfathered HwH could
provide outpatient services or establish
provider-based services, we wish to note
that the statutory provisions of section
1886(d)(1)(B) of the Act govern
Medicare payment for inpatient hospital
services of hospitals and units that are
excluded from the IPPS. Our HwH
regulations at § 412.22 address the
relationship between an inpatient acute
care hospital payable under the IPPS
and an inpatient hospital that is
excluded from the IPPS that are colocated. For this reason, our HwH
regulations, including the exemption for
grandfathered facilities, only address
space used for inpatient services and
this would also be true for satellite
facilities. As has always been the case,
an HwH or satellite facility would be
able to discontinue or to initiate
noninpatient services, including onsite
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
or offsite outpatient hospital services
without compromising its grandfathered
status. Such changes in scope of
outpatient services or the establishment
of provider-based departments would of
course have to be done in compliance
with other applicable regulations, such
as 42 CFR 413.65 governing providerbased status for facilities or
organizations.
Comment: Several commenters urged
CMS to make an exception for
grandfathered children’s hospitals and
allow them to expand square footage
and also bed numbers without any
deleterious impact on their status as
hospitals certified by Medicare as
exempt from the IPPS. The commenters
noted that there are only three
grandfathered children’s hospitals. One
commenter emphasized that, as opposed
to other excluded HwHs, children’s
hospitals do not serve a Medicare
population, because very few
beneficiaries are children. Therefore,
any expansion that CMS allows for the
three grandfathered facilities would not
lead to increased Medicare costs.
Although these HwHs do not treat a
significant number of Medicare
beneficiaries, however, the commenters
emphasize that loss of the Medicare
exclusion from the IPPS would have a
significant and negative impact on their
Medicaid reimbursements as well as on
their ability to receive funds to train
residents under the Federal CHGME.
The commenters believed that, despite
the fact that each of the children’s
hospitals are major Medicaid providers,
the number of beds in a facility has no
bearing on whether or not a patient is
deemed Medicaid eligible. Furthermore,
they added, since Federal funding for
State Medicaid disproportionate share
hospital payments is capped, if these
hospitals are allowed to grow, such
growth would not cause the Federal
portion of Medicaid to exceed the caps.
The commenters claimed that there is
no benefit to Medicare from applying
the prohibition against growth or
increase in bed numbers to children’s
hospitals; rather, they believe that there
would be significant harm to these
hospitals and to their community if they
had to choose one of the three
alternatives open to them: not
expanding to serve their communities;
losing their Medicare IPPS-exempt
status; or altering their administrative
and medical governance with regard to
their co-located hospital, which would
pose significant legal, operational, and
financial barriers.
This commenter further asserted that
the three reasons why CMS has
established special regulations for
grandfathered HwHs are not germane for
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
children’s hospitals, that is, ‘‘to prevent
proliferation of LTCHs that function as
units of host acute care hospitals; to
prevent the avoidance of TEFRA target
rates; and to avoid two Medicare
payments for one episode of care.’’ The
commenter also asserted the following
points: there is no proliferation of
children’s hospitals; children are
admitted directly to their facilities and
do not spend time in the acute care
hospital, so there are no issues about
two hospital payments for one spell of
illness; and the three grandfathered
children’s HwHs have not reorganized
since they were established at least 30
years ago, long before this category was
recognized for payment purposes by
CMS.
Some commenters stated that CMS
has established a precedent of treating
children’s hospitals differently from
other excluded hospital types in
establishing our regulations at
§ 412.22(i), which exempted children’s
hospitals from the general policy that
disallowed excluded hospitals with
satellite facilities that were in existence
prior to October 1, 1997, from
expanding their total bed numbers (the
sum of the beds in the hospital and the
satellite) beyond the number that they
had on October 1, 1997. These
commenters further maintained that
CMS has stated that it believes that the
grandfathering regulations for satellite
regulations and grandfathering
regulations for HwHs should be
consistent and that, specifically, the
satellite regulations at § 412.22(h)(2)(i)
exempt children’s hospitals from the
limitation on bed number expansion to
which other excluded hospital satellites
are subject. Therefore, the commenter
requested that CMS provide the same
exception for grandfathered children’s
HwH and allow expansion in the
number of beds without compromising
their grandfathered status.
Response: The commenters have
urged us to establish a policy that would
distinguish grandfathered children’s
HwHs from the other categories of
grandfathered HwHs and allow them to
expand both in square footage and in
number of beds. We understand the
commenters’ statements that, although
the facilities do not serve a significant
Medicare population and hence there
would be little or no additional costs to
the Medicare program should they be
permitted to expand, their continued
status as hospitals excluded from the
IPPS under Medicare is important to
them because it might enhance their
ability to obtain higher Medicaid
payment or more for CHGME.
As we have noted above, we are
finalizing a policy for all grandfathered
PO 00000
Frm 00245
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48113
excluded HwHs that would allow them
to increase or decrease their square
footage without compromising their
status of IPPS-excluded hospitals or
their grandfathered status and this
policy would also be applicable to the
three grandfathered children’s HwHs.
We are making this change because we
believe that the commenters have
presented cogent arguments regarding
their facility’s need to physically
expand in order to accommodate new
medical equipment and services as well
as to meet new administrative needs in
order to continue to deliver high quality
medical care. However, we have stated
that we are not allowing grandfathered
HwHs to increase their number of beds
without compromising their
grandfathered status. The commenters
claimed that children’s HwHs treat few
Medicare beneficiaries, and therefore
there would be no significant additional
costs to the Medicare system should
they be allowed to increase their bed
numbers. Because a change allowing
children’s HwHs to keep grandfathered
status while increasing their number of
beds would not significantly increase
Medicare spending but would increase
Medicaid payments to the hospitals,
these hospitals recommend that such a
change be made.
We considered this comment
carefully but do not find it persuasive.
As stated above, a key objective of
revising our HwH and satellite
grandfathering regulations is to provide
a high degree of uniformity and
consistency for all grandfathered IPPSexcluded facilities. We do not believe it
would be consistent with this objective
if we were to single out a particular type
of excluded facility for special, more
favorable treatment simply because the
patient population treated by the
hospital typically includes very few
Medicare patients. (In addition, even
though Medicare payment amounts
might not increase in this circumstance,
we find it important to maintain a high
level of credibility in the Medicare
system because it is typically used as a
reference for Medicaid payments.) We
also do not believe the absence of
adverse Medicare cost impact is a
sufficient reason for making a change to
national Medicare policy solely in order
to increase Medicaid payments to a
select class of hospitals. In this context,
we note under Medicaid, the States are
not bound to follow Medicare payment
rules for children’s hospitals, but
instead have considerable flexibility to
modify their individual State plans to
provide the level of payments for
services that will best meet the needs of
Medicaid recipients in the particular
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48114
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
State. To the extent additional payment
under Medicaid is appropriate in a
State, we believe provision for it should
be made through the State Medicaid
plan rather than by a national Medicare
change affecting all States. Moreover, as
we have noted, our data reveal that the
there presently is no shortage of bed
capacity for the three grandfathered
children’s HwHs, but that, on the
contrary, all three are operating below
the licensed bed capacity under State
law. Thus, it appears that the current
number of beds in these hospitals is
adequate. Further, we wish to
emphasize that grandfathered facilities
remain free at any time to increase their
number of beds so long as the applicable
separateness and control regulations are
met.
In regard to the comment that CMS
should allow grandfathered children’s
HwHs to increase their bed size without
losing their grandfathered status
because CMS has established a
precedent for special treatment of
children’s hospitals through the
regulations at § 412.22(h)(2)(i), which
exempt children’s hospitals from the
satellite restrictions applicable to
certain other types of IPPS-excluded
hospitals, we believe this comment
reflects a misunderstanding of the scope
and purpose of § 412.22(h)(2)(i).
To respond fully to this comment, it
will be necessary to review the
background of § 412.22(h)(2)(i). Under
the BBA of 1997, certain types of
hospitals and hospital units which were
first excluded from the IPPS for a cost
reporting period beginning on or after
October 1, 1997 were paid under lower
TEFRA ceilings than hospitals and units
that were excluded from the IPPS for a
cost reporting period beginning before
that date (64 FR 41533). Following
enactment of this provision, CMS
became aware of some interest by
existing hospitals in establishing
satellite units in new locations that
would function in much the same way
as new hospitals, but would qualify for
payment under the higher TEFRA
ceilings applicable to previouslyexcluded hospitals. To prevent satellite
facilities of this type from being used to
circumvent the BBA provision, we
added new regulatory requirements, in
§ 412.22(h)(2)(i). Under those
requirements, an IPPS-excluded
hospital’s number of beds, including
both beds at the main campus and beds
at any satellite locations, could not
exceed the hospital’s number of beds on
the last day of its last cost reporting
period beginning before October 1,
1997. As noted earlier, the lower TEFRA
ceilings imposed by the BBA applied
only to certain types of hospitals,
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
specifically long-term care, psychiatric,
and rehabilitation hospitals. They did
not apply to children’s hospitals. In
determining the scope of section
412.22(h)(2)(i), therefore, we decided
not to impose the satellite restrictions
on children’s hospitals because those
new children’s hospitals were not
subject to the new, lower TEFRA
ceilings and therefore would have no
incentive to attempt to evade them.
In other words, the inapplicability of
§ 412.22(h)(2)(i) to children’s hospitals
does not reflect any decision by CMS to
provide special, favorable treatment for
children’s hospitals by excluding them
from a restriction that would otherwise
apply to them. On the contrary, it
simply reflects a policy decision by
CMS that a regulation designed to
prevent a particular abusive practice
should not be applied to those hospitals
that would not have an incentive to
engage in that practice.
(Although not raised by any
commenter, a question might arise as to
why CMS did not exempt cancer
hospitals from the bed size restriction
since they, like children’s hospitals,
were not subject to the lower TEFRA
ceilings imposed by the BBA. The
legislative provision under which
cancer hospitals are excluded from the
IPPS at section 1886(d)(1)(B)(v)(I), (II)
and (III)] limits cancer hospital status to
those specified hospitals. These
provisions effectively prevent the
recognition of new cancer hospitals. We
were concerned that this provision
might create an incentive for the
opening of new satellites in an attempt
to circumvent the restriction inherent in
the legislative provision, which would
be an abusive practice of the same type
as using satellites to evade the BBA
provisions. To counter the incentive
that might exist for such a practice,
cancer hospitals have not been excluded
from the scope of § 412.22(h)(2)(i).)
We also would address the
commenter’s specific assertions that
children’s hospitals should not be
subject to general restrictions on growth
that we have established for
grandfathered HwHs and satellite
facilities because of the following
reasons: there is no proliferation of
children’s hospitals; children are
admitted directly to their facilities and
do not spend time in acute care
hospitals; the three grandfathered
children’s HwHs have not reorganized
since they were established at least 30
years ago, long before this category was
established for payment purposes by
CMS. Although these assertions may be
accurate, we do not believe that they are
germane to the issue of the revisions of
PO 00000
Frm 00246
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
the regulations for grandfathered HwHs
and satellite.
In this final rule, we are finalizing
policies that revise the preclusion on
changing ‘‘terms and conditions’’ and
will allow grandfathered HwHs and
satellite facilities to decrease their
square footage or bed numbers and also
to increase their square footage. As
discussed above, expansion in square
footage of the three grandfathered
children’s HwHs, could result in
increased costs to the Medicare
program, since children’s hospitals are
paid for under the TEFRA system. We
have determined, however, that the
increased costs will be ‘‘de minimus’’
and we believe that such costs to the
Medicare program associated with
increases in square footage are
outweighed by the benefits associated
with advancements in technology and
other patient care enhancements that
may be achieved through changes to
hospital facilities that concurrently
increase the square footage of the
facilities.
Comment: One commenter
representing a cancer hospital, which
the commenter identifies as the only
grandfathered hospital in this provider
category, stated that limiting the growth
of this cancer hospital is inequitable and
punitive since it is the only cancer
hospital being affected. The commenter
stated that the regulatory criteria have
ensured that there will be no future
hospitals in this category developed
and, therefore, our concerns about the
negative impact of HwH growth on the
Medicare system has no policy rationale
in this case. The commenter urged CMS
to exempt this cancer hospital from the
growth restrictions for grandfathered
HwHs.
Response: We do not agree that the
grandfathering provision for HwHs in
existence before September 30, 1995, is
‘‘inequitable or punitive.’’ Although we
understand that the specific statutory
provision at section 1886(d)(1)(B)(v) of
the Act and the regulatory criteria at
§ 412.23(f) make it unlikely that there
will be additional cancer HwHs
established, we reiterate that our
grandfathering policy for HwHs was not
established in order to limit HwH
growth. Our goal, as noted above, was
to enable hospitals excluded from the
IPPS that were co-located prior to the
recognition of HwHs as an entity to
continue in their present arrangement
with their ‘‘host’’ hospital without
having to comply with the regulatory
framework that we were establishing for
HwHs. Because we were giving these
hospitals a significant advantage, we
believe that it was reasonable and
equitable to put restrictions on their
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
growth unless they elected to comply
with the HwH regulations at § 412.22(e).
As we have indicated previously,
grandfathered facilities remain free at
any time to increase their beds so long
as they comply with separateness and
control requirements.
Based on our reconsideration of our
proposed policy, at this time we are
finalizing regulations at § 412.22(f)(3)
that allow grandfathered HwHs to
increase in square footage because we
believe that there have been significant
clinical advances, some of which are
detailed elsewhere in these responses,
reasonably requiring a hospital to
physically expand in order to
accommodate new equipment or
treatment modalities that would enable
it to continue to offer the highest level
medical care to its patients. We could
also envision that circumstances under
which changing administrative or
otherwise non-clinical needs could
require additional space. However, we
emphasize that we do not believe that
any of these changes require the
establishment of additional beds.
Therefore, although the commenter’s
hospital will be permitted to increase its
square footage, we are not establishing
an exemption for a grandfathered cancer
HwH from the limitation on increasing
the number of beds.
After consideration of the public
comments received, we are revising
§ 412.22(f)(3) and (h)(5) and
§ 412.25(c)(4) of the regulations to state
that grandfathered HwHs and satellites
will be permitted to decrease their
square footage or number of beds, or
both or increase their square footage
without compromising their
grandfathered status. This policy is
effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006.
Because grandfathered HwHs or
grandfathered satellite facilities may be
co-located with an acute care hospital or
may be co-located with another
excluded hospital (69 FR 49198), we
want to emphasize that under our policy
revisions described above, where the
HwH or satellite facility decreases its
number of beds or square footage, there
could be an impact on the host hospital
if the hospital is also a PPS-exempt
hospital and is also exempted because
of grandfathering from compliance with
the ‘‘separateness and control’’
requirements. (Because excluded
hospitals are prohibited from having
excluded hospital units under
§ 412.25(a)(1)(ii), this discussion is
limited to HwHs and satellite facilities
of hospitals.) For example, if
grandfathered HwH ‘‘A’’ is co-located
with another hospital excluded from the
IPPS, hospital ‘‘B’’ (which is a
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
rehabilitation hospital), a decrease in
the number of beds in hospital ‘‘A’’
could impact the grandfathered status of
hospital ‘‘B’’ if hospital ‘‘B’’ absorbed
the extra beds. In such a case, if the
determination were made that hospital
‘‘B’’ would expand, in order to maintain
status as an excluded hospital, hospital
‘‘B’’ would then have to meet the
applicable ‘‘separateness and control’’
requirements at § 412.22(e).
6. Changes to the Methodology for
Determining LTCH Cost-to-Charge
Ratios (CCRs) and the Reconciliation of
High-Cost and Short-Stay Outlier
Payments under the LTCH PPS
a. Background
In the June 9, 2003 IPPS high-cost
outlier final rule (68 FR 34498), we
made revisions to our policies
concerning the determination of LTCHs’
CCRs and the reconciliation of high-cost
and short-stay outlier payments under
the LTCH PPS. As we stated in that final
rule, (68 FR 34507), because the LTCH
PPS high-cost outlier and short-stay
outlier policies are modeled after the
IPPS outlier policy, we believe they are
susceptible to the same payment
vulnerabilities and, therefore, merited
revision.
We revised our regulations to specify
that fiscal intermediaries will use either
the most recent settled cost report or the
most recent tentative settled cost report,
whichever is from the later cost
reporting period, because we believe
that a hospital has the ability to
inappropriately increase its outlier
payments during the time lag between
the current charges and the CCR from
the settled cost report, through dramatic
charge increases. Using either the most
recent settled cost report or the most
recent tentative settled cost report,
whichever is from the later cost
reporting period, in many cases, reduces
the time lag for updating CCRs by a year
or more.
We also revised the regulations to
specify that, in the event more recent
charge data indicate that an alternative
CCR would be more appropriate, CMS
has the authority to direct the fiscal
intermediary to change the LTCH’s CCR
to reflect the change evidenced by the
more recent data. We made this change
because even the later (that is, most
recent) CCRs calculated from the
tentatively settled cost reports would
overestimate costs for hospitals that
have continued to increase charges
much faster than costs during the time
between the tentatively settled cost
report and the time when the claim is
processed. In addition, we further
revised the regulations to allow a
PO 00000
Frm 00247
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48115
hospital to contact its fiscal
intermediary to request that its
otherwise applicable CCR be changed if
the LTCH presents substantial evidence
that its CCR is inaccurate (68 FR 34497
and 34506 through 34508).
Also in the June 9, 2003 final rule (68
FR 34499 through 34500 and 34506
through 34507), we revised the
regulations to specify that a fiscal
intermediary may use a statewide
average CCR if it is unable to determine
an accurate CCR in one of three
circumstances discussed in greater
detail below. We made this revision
because we noted that as hospitals raise
their charges faster than their costs
increase, over time their CCRs will
decline. If hospitals continue to increase
charges at a faster rate than their costs
increase over a long period of time, or
if they increase charges at extreme rates,
their CCRs may fall below the range
considered reasonable and, under our
former policy, fiscal intermediaries
would, in most cases, assign a statewide
average CCR. These statewide averages
are generally considerably higher than
the threshold. Therefore, prior to the
change in the regulations, these
hospitals benefited from an artificially
high ratio being applied to their already
high charges. Furthermore, hospitals
could continue to increase charges faster
than costs, without any further
downward adjustment to their CCR.
In addition, in the June 9, 2003 final
rule (68 FR 34500 through 34502 and
34506 through 34508), we added a
provision to our regulations to provide
that outlier payments would become
subject to reconciliation when hospitals’
cost reports are settled. We noted that
we had become increasingly aware that
some hospitals had taken advantage of
the former outlier policy by increasing
their charges at extremely high rates,
knowing that there would be a time lag
before their CCRs would be adjusted to
reflect the higher charges. We believed
that even the revisions to the regulations
described above would not completely
eliminate all such opportunity. We
explained that we believed that a
hospital would still be able to
dramatically increase its charges by far
above the rate-of-increase in costs
during any given year.
In the RY 2007 LTCH PPS proposed
rule (71 FR 4648, 4674 through 4676,
and 4690 through 4692), we discussed
our current methodology for
determining hospitals’ CCRs under the
LTCH PPS high-cost and short-stay
outlier policies, and we presented
proposals to refine our methodology for
determining the annual CCR ceiling and
statewide average CCRs. In that same
proposed rule, we also discussed our
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48116
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
existing policy for the reconciliation of
LTCH PPS high-cost and short-stay
outlier payments, along with our
proposal to codify in Subpart O of 42
CFR Part 412 those policies, including
proposed modifications and editorial
clarifications to those existing policies.
In that RY 2007 LTCH PPS proposed
rule, we proposed that the proposed
revisions to the policies governing the
determination of LTCHs’ CCRs and the
reconciliation of high-cost and shortstay outlier payments would be effective
October 1, 2006, noting that historically,
annual updates to LTCH CCR ceiling
and statewide average CCRs have been
effective on October 1. In addition, our
proposal stated that the LTCH CCR
ceiling and statewide average CCRs that
would be effective October 1, 2006,
would be presented in the annual IPPS
proposed and final rules.
As we stated in both the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27832
through 27833 and 27871) and the FY
2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR 24127),
we received a few specific comments on
this portion of the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
proposed rule concerning the proposed
changes to the policies governing the
determination of LTCHs’ CCRs. As
mentioned below, one commenter in
this final rule supported our proposal.
Several other commenters referenced
one of the specific comments raised by
another commenter on the proposed
changes to the methodology for
determining LTCH CCRs in their own
comments on the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
proposed rule. In addition, a commenter
on the RY 2007 LTCH PPS proposed
rule included a synopsis of our
proposed changes concerning the
determination of LTCHs’ CCRs. Based
on the commenter’s synopsis of the
proposed changes, we believe that the
commenters clearly understood the
nature and purpose of the proposed
changes. However, the commenter
pointed out that, in the RY 2007 LTCH
PPS proposed rule, we did not provide
an analysis of the effect of this proposed
change, nor did we provide an example
of the new CCR values under this
proposed methodology. Another
commenter did not ‘‘object in concept to
the proposed combination of [IPPS]
operating and capital cost-to-charge
ratios’’ (to compute a ‘‘total’’ CCR for
each IPPS hospital by adding together
each hospital’s operating CCR and its
capital CCR) from which to compute the
LTCH CCR ceiling and applicable
statewide average CCRs. However, the
commenter also pointed out that we did
not provide any impact data and
requested that we defer adoption of that
proposed change until such data are
provided for comment.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Therefore, in light of the comments
referenced above, we proposed in the
FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR
24126 through 24135) the same changes
to the policies governing the
determination of LTCHs’ CCRs and the
reconciliation of high-cost and shortstay outlier payments that we proposed
in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS proposed
rule. We included in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule the values of the
proposed LTCH CCR ceiling and the
proposed statewide average LTCH CCRs
that would be effective October 1, 2006,
based on our proposed policy changes,
along with the values of the proposed
LTCH CCRs that would be determined
under our current methodology. We also
indicated that we would respond further
to any comments received on the
proposed changes to the policies
governing the determination of LTCHs’
CCRs and the reconciliation of LTCH
PPS high-cost outlier and short-stay
payments presented in the FY 2007
IPPS proposed rule in the FY 2007 IPPS
final rule that will be published this
summer. We received two public
comments concerning the proposed
changes to the policies governing the
determination of LTCHs’ CCRs and the
reconciliation of LTCH high-cost outlier
and short-stay payments presented in
the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR
24125 through 24136). As discussed in
greater detail below in this section, in
this final rule, we are finalizing the
proposed changes to the policies
governing the determination of LTCHs’
CCRs and the reconciliation of LTCH
high-cost outlier and short-stay
payments as proposed. In the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27871), we
revised the short-stay outlier payment
formula based on the existing regulatory
language at § 412.529(c) concerning the
determination of LTCH CCRs and the
reconciliation of short-stay outlier
payments since we did not finalize any
changes to our policy regarding the
determination of LTCHs’ CCRs and the
reconciliation of LTCH PPS short-stay
outlier payments in that LTCH PPS final
rule.
In that same final rule, we noted that,
to the extent the policy changes we
proposed in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule regarding the determination of
LTCHs’ CCRs and the reconciliation of
short-stay outlier payments are
implemented, we may need to make
conforming changes to the regulatory
language in § 412.529 in the FY 2007
IPPS final rule to ensure that any such
changes are consistent with (and do not
contradict) the changes we made to
§ 412.529 in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
final rule. Accordingly, in adopting the
PO 00000
Frm 00248
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
proposed changes to the regulations
regarding the determination of LTCHs’
CCRs and the reconciliation of outlier
payments in this final rule, we are
making conforming changes to the
regulatory language in § 412.529 as
necessary based on the changes to the
short-stay outlier policy at § 412.529
established in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
proposed rule (71 FR 27899 through
27900).
Comment: One commenter supported
our proposed changes to the
methodology for determining LTCH
CCRs and LTCH PPS outlier
reconciliation. The commenter was
particularly appreciative of the impact
analysis presented in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s support and are pleased
that our impact analysis was able to
assist in the understanding of our
proposal.
b. High-Cost Outliers
Under the broad authority conferred
upon the Secretary by section 123 of the
BBRA as amended by section 307(b) of
BIPA, when we implemented the LTCH
PPS, we established an adjustment for
additional payments for outlier cases
that have extraordinarily high-costs
relative to the costs of most discharges
at § 412.525(a). Providing additional
payments for outliers strongly improves
the accuracy of the LTCH PPS in
determining resource costs at the patient
level and hospital level. Specifically,
under § 412.525(a), we make outlier
payments for any discharge if the
estimated cost of the case exceeds the
adjusted LTCH PPS payment for the
LTC–DRG plus a fixed-loss amount.
Under the LTCH PPS high-cost outlier
policy, the LTCH’s loss is limited to the
fixed-loss amount and a fixed
percentage of costs above the marginal
cost factor. We calculate the estimated
cost of a case by multiplying the overall
hospital CCR by the Medicare allowable
covered charge. In accordance with
§ 412.525(a)(3), we pay outlier cases 80
percent of the difference between the
estimated cost of the patient case and
the outlier threshold (the sum of the
adjusted Federal prospective payment
for the LTC–DRG and the fixed-loss
amount).
c. Short-Stay Outliers
When we implemented the LTCH
PPS, under § 412.529, we established a
special payment policy for short-stay
outlier cases, that is, LTCH PPS cases
with a length of stay that is less than or
equal to five-sixths of the geometric
average length of stay for each LTC–
DRG. Generally, LTCHs are defined by
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
statute as having an average length of
stay of greater than 25 days. We believe
that a short-stay outlier payment
adjustment results in more appropriate
payments, because these cases most
likely would not receive a full course of
a LTCH-level of treatment in such a
short period of time and a full LTC–DRG
payment may not always be appropriate.
A short-stay outlier is defined at
§ 412.529(a) as a LTCH discharge with a
length of stay of up to and including
five-sixths the geometric average length
of stay for the LTC–DRG. Under the
short-stay outlier policy at
§ 412.529(c)(1), for LTCH PPS
discharges occurring before July 1, 2006,
in general, we adjust the per discharge
payment under the LTCH PPS by the
least of 120 percent of the estimated cost
of the case, 120 percent of the LTC–DRG
specific per diem amount, or the full
LTC–DRG payment. Under the shortstay outlier policy at § 412.529(c)(2), for
LTCH PPS discharges occurring on or
after July 1, 2006, in general, we adjust
the per discharge payment under the
LTCH PPS by the least of 100 percent
of the estimated cost of the case, 120
percent of the LTC–DRG specific per
diem amount, the full LTC–DRG
payment, or a blend of an amount
comparable to the IPPS per diem
amount (capped at the full IPPS
comparable amount) and the 120
percent of the LTC–DRG specific
amount (71 FR 27899). Consistent with
the LTCH PPS high-cost outlier policy,
we calculate the estimated cost of a case
by multiplying the overall hospital CCR
by the Medicare allowable covered
charges.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
d. CCR Ceiling
Under the LTCH PPS, a single
prospective payment per discharge is
made for both inpatient operating and
capital-related costs. Therefore, we
compute a single ‘‘overall’’ LTCHspecific CCR based on the sum of LTCH
operating and capital-related costs (as
described in Chapter 3, section 150.24,
of the Medicare Claims Processing
Manual (CMS Pub. 100–4)) as compared
to total charges. A LTCH’s CCR is
calculated by dividing its total Medicare
costs (that is, the sum of its operating
and capital inpatient routine and
ancillary costs) by its total Medicare
charges (that is, the sum of its operating
and capital inpatient routine and
ancillary charges). (Instructions
regarding the changes established in the
June 9, 2003 IPPS high-cost outlier final
rule for both LTCHs and IPPS hospitals
can be found in Program Transmittal A–
03–058 (Change Request 2785; July 3,
2003).)
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Under our current policy, a LTCH is
assigned the applicable statewide
average CCR instead of using its CCR
computed from data in its most recent
(settled or tentatively settled) cost report
if, among other things, the LTCH’s CCR
is found to be in excess of the applicable
maximum CCR threshold. The
applicable maximum CCR threshold is
the combined IPPS operating and
capital CCR ceiling. For instance, for FY
2006, under the current policy, the IPPS
operating CCR ceiling is 1.254 and the
IPPS capital CCR ceiling is 0.169 (70 FR
47496). Therefore, under our current
policy, the combined operating and
capital CCR ceiling is 1.423 (1.254 +
0.169 = 1.423) as specified in Program
Transmittal 692 (Change Request 4046,
September 30, 2005).
These ceilings represent 3.0 standard
deviations from the mean of the log
distribution of operating and capital
cost-to-charge ratios for all IPPS
hospitals. As we explained in the June
9, 2003 final rule (68 FR 34507), LTCH
CCRs above this threshold are most
likely due to faulty data reporting or
entry, and, therefore, these CCRs should
not be used to identify and make
payments for outlier cases. Such data
are clearly errors and should not be
relied upon. (There are also other
circumstances, discussed below, when
we use a statewide CCR instead of a
LTCH-specific CCR.)
Under the current methodology, we
determine a ‘‘combined’’ statewide
average CCR for LTCHs located in rural
areas of a State that accounts for
operating and capital costs and charges
and a ‘‘combined’’ statewide average
CCR for LTCHs located in urban areas
of a State that accounts for operating
and capital-related costs and charges. In
order to calculate a combined statewide
average CCR under our current
methodology, we first calculate separate
statewide average operating CCRs and
capital CCRs. Under the IPPS, two
statewide average operating CCRs are
computed for each State: a statewide
average CCR for rural areas and a
statewide average CCR for urban areas.
One statewide average capital CCR is
computed for each State (applicable to
both urban and rural areas). We use the
same capital CCR for urban and rural
areas because capital costs are the same
regardless of geographic location.
(Below we discuss our proposed
revisions to this methodology, which we
are adopting as final in this final rule.)
As we explained in the RY 2006
LTCH PPS final rule (70 FR 24192), we
believe it is appropriate to use the
combined IPPS operating and capital
CCR ceiling and the applicable
combined IPPS statewide average urban
PO 00000
Frm 00249
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48117
and rural CCRs in determining LTCHs’
CCRs because LTCHs’ cost and charge
structures are similar to that of IPPS
acute care hospitals. For instance,
LTCHs are certified as acute care
hospitals, as set forth in section 1861(e)
of the Act, to participate as a hospital
in the Medicare program, and these
hospitals, in general, are paid as LTCHs
only because their Medicare average
length of stay is greater than 25 days
(§ 412.23(e)). Furthermore, as also
explained in that same final rule, prior
to qualifying as a LTCH under
§ 412.23(e)(2)(i), a hospital generally is
paid as an acute care hospital under the
IPPS during the period in which it
demonstrates that it has an average
length of stay of greater than 25 days. In
addition, because there are less than 400
LTCHs, and they are unevenly
geographically distributed throughout
the United States, there may not be
sufficient LTCH CCR data to determine
an appropriate LTCH PPS CCR ceiling
using LTCH data.
Because LTCHs have a single ‘‘total’’
CCR (rather than separate operating and
capital CCRs), under the broad authority
of section 123 of the BBRA and section
307(b)(1) of BIPA, in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24128 through
24129 and 24132 through 24133), we
proposed to revise our regulations for
high-cost outliers and short-stay outliers
(§§ 412.525(a)(4) and 412.529(c)(5),
respectively) to specify that, for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2006, if a LTCH’s CCR is in excess of
the LTCH CCR ceiling (which would be
calculated as 3 standard deviations
above the corresponding national
geometric mean total CCR (established
and published annually by CMS)), the
fiscal intermediary may use a statewide
average CCR (also established annually
by CMS and discussed in more detail
below). (We also proposed a change in
our methodology for calculating the
applicable statewide average CCRs
under the LTCH PPS, which we are
finalizing in this final rule, as discussed
in greater detail below.)
Specifically, for purposes of
determining a LTCH’s CCR under the
LTCH PPS high-cost and short-stay
outlier policies at §§ 412.525(a)(4) and
412.529 respectively, for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2006,
we proposed that we would determine
the single ‘‘total’’ CCR ceiling, based on
IPPS CCR data, by first calculating the
total (that is, operating and capital) IPPS
CCR for each hospital and then
determining the average total CCR for all
IPPS hospitals. For example, if an IPPS
hospital’s operating CCR is 0.432 and its
capital CCR is 0.027, its total CCR
would be 0.459 (0.432 + 0.027 = 0.459).
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48118
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
This calculation would be repeated for
all IPPS hospitals in order to determine
a total CCR for all IPPS hospitals. Next,
the total IPPS CCR would be used to
determine the average total IPPS CCR
and standard deviation across all IPPS
hospitals. The LTCH CCR ceiling would
then be established at 3 standard
deviations from the national geometric
mean total IPPS CCR, rather than
determining the LTCH total CCR ceiling
as we do under our current policy by
adding the separate IPPS operating CCR
and capital CCR ceilings, which are
each separately determined at 3
standard deviations from the average
operating IPPS CCR and average capital
IPPS CCR, respectively.
Under this proposed policy, we
would use the same IPPS CCR data that
we currently use to annually determine
the separate IPPS operating CCR and
capital CCR ceilings (that we add
together under our current policy to
determine the annual CCR ceiling for
LTCHs) to compute IPPS hospitalspecific total CCRs that would be used
to determine the single LTCH total CCR
ceiling. We believe that determining a
LTCH CCR ceiling based on IPPS total
(operating and capital-related) Medicare
costs and charges rather than adding the
separate IPPS CCR ceilings determined
from operating CCRs and capital CCRs,
respectively, would be more consistent
with the LTCH PPS single payment,
which does not differentiate payments
between operating and capital-related
costs. We noted that we still believe that
it is appropriate to continue to use IPPS
data to determine the annual LTCH CCR
ceiling.
We also explained in both the RY
2007 LTCH PPS proposed rule (71 FR
4675) and the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule (71 FR 24129), that these proposed
revisions to our policy concerning the
determination of the annual LTCH CCR
ceiling would be effective for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2006,
rather than July 1, 2006. We proposed
this approach because we proposed to
continue to use the same IPPS data used
to determine the individual IPPS
operating and capital CCR ceilings
established and published annually in
the IPPS proposed and final rules.
Because both the separate IPPS
operating and capital CCRs ceilings and
the new LTCH ‘‘total’’ CCR ceiling
would be determined using the same
data, we believe it would be
administratively expedient to continue
to establish the LTCH CCR ceiling to be
effective for discharges occurring on or
after October 1 of each year. (As stated
previously, this is consistent with our
current policy, where the LTCH CCR
ceiling is updated annually on October
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
1.) Therefore, under this proposal, the
public would continue to consult the
annual IPPS proposed and final rules for
changes to the LTCH CCR ceiling that
would be effective for discharges
occurring on or after October 1. Under
this proposal, the current LTCH CCR
ceiling established for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2005, in
the FY 2006 IPPS final rule would
remain in effect for discharges occurring
on or before September 30, 2006.
Comment: One commenter questioned
why CMS’ proposal concerning LTCH
CCRs did not utilize a floor for applying
the statewide average similar to using a
ceiling. The commenter explained that
even though a hospital could increase
payment by increasing its charges, if a
hospital has a historically low CCR,
then it should be assigned the statewide
average.
Response: As discussed in the June 9,
2003 outlier final rule (68 FR 34494 and
34507), we no longer assign the
statewide average when a hospital’s
CCR falls below a minimum CCR
threshold or ‘‘floor,’’ as we believe a
LTCH could arbitrarily increase its
charges in order to maximize outlier
payments. Even though this increase in
charges should result in a lower CCR in
the future (due to the time lag in cost
report settlement), a floor would result
in a LTCH being assigned the statewide
average CCR. This would result in
inappropriately higher outlier payments
because in order to avoid making
excessive outlier payments, under both
our current policy and the proposed
LTCH CCR policy, we apply the LTCH’s
actual CCR no matter how low the
hospital’s CCR falls. This policy for
LTCHs is consistent with the policy we
have adopted under the IPPS.
Under both our current policy and the
proposed LTCH CCR policy, we apply a
CCR maximum threshold or ‘‘ceiling’’
for those hospitals beyond three
standard deviations of the national
mean CCR to address what we believe
is questionable data. As we explained in
the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR
24127), CCRs above this threshold are
most likely due to faulty data reporting
or entry, and, therefore, these CCRs
should not be used to identify and make
payments for outlier cases. Such data
are likely errors and should not be
relied upon, and therefore, we assign
the hospital the statewide average CCR.
We note that, if a hospital has a
historically low CCR, then a consistent
pattern of a low CCR suggests that this
CCR is reflective of their actual ratio of
costs to charges as opposed to an
instance of the data being aberrant.
Therefore, we believe application of the
statewide average CCR is not necessary.
PO 00000
Frm 00250
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
While it is possible that this low CCR
may be based on questionable data,
under both our current policy and the
proposed LTCH CCR policy, a hospital
may request its fiscal intermediary to
use a different (higher or lower) CCR
based on substantial evidence presented
by the hospital.
We did not remove the ceiling similar
to removing the floor, as the
vulnerability of a hospital gaming the
outlier payment system applies to
hospitals raising their charges, thus
lowering their CCR and then receiving
the statewide average (if a floor was in
place). Hospitals with high CCRs reflect
costs that are high or exceed their
charges, which is uncommon.
Therefore, as stated above, we believe if
a hospital does cross the ceiling, it is
likely due to an error and we assign the
statewide average. However, as noted
above, a hospital may request its fiscal
intermediary to use a different (higher
or lower) CCR based on substantial
evidence presented by the hospital even
if a hospital’s CCR is above the ceiling.
Therefore, consistent with our current
CCR policy, the applicable statewide
average CCR will only be assigned when
a LTCH’s CCR exceeds the maximum
CCR threshold (ceiling) determined as
three standard deviations of the national
mean total CCR (as described above),
and not when it falls below the
minimum threshold (floor).
We received no other comments and
after consideration of the public
comments received, we are adopting as
final, without modification, the policy
proposed in the proposed rule.
Accordingly, in this final rule, under the
broad authority of section 123 of the
BBRA and section 307(b)(1) of BIPA, we
are establishing under the LTCH PPS
high-cost outlier policy at
§ 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(C)(2) and the LTCH
PPS short-stay outlier policy at
§ 412.529(c)(3)(iv)(C)(2), that the fiscal
intermediary may use a statewide CCR
if it is unable to determine an accurate
CCR for a LTCH if, amoung other things,
a LTCHs’ CCR is in excess of 3 standard
deviations above the corresponding
national geometric mean cost-to-charge
ratio. Furthermore,
§§ 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(C)(2) and
412.529(c)(3)(iv)(C)(2) specify that CMS
will establish and publish this mean
annually. As discussed above, as
proposed, for discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2006, the LTCH total
CCR ceiling will be calculated as three
standard deviations above the
corresponding national geometric mean
total CCR, which will be determined
based on IPPS CCR data, by first
calculating the total (that is, operating
and capital) IPPS CCR for each hospital
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
and then determining the average total
IPPS CCR for all hospitals. As noted in
the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR
24129) and reiterated above, consistent
with our current policy, the LTCH total
CCR ceiling will be updated annually
and will be effective for discharges
occurring on or after October 1 of each
year. Therefore, the public should
continue to consult the annual IPPS
proposed and final rules for changes to
the LTCH CCR ceiling that would be
effective for discharges occurring on or
after October 1.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule,
based on IPPS total CCR data from the
December 2005 update to the ProviderSpecific File, we proposed a total CCR
ceiling of 1.313 under the LTCH PPS
that would be effective October 1, 2006.
Furthermore, in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule, we proposed that, if
more recent data are available, we
would use those data to determine the
final total CCR ceiling under the LTCH
PPS for FY 2007 using the proposed
methodology described above. Based on
the latest available data (data from the
March 2006 update to the ProviderSpecific File), for this final rule, the
CCR ceiling under our proposed
methodology would be 1.321.
The LTCH CCR ceiling determined
under our current ‘‘combined’’
methodology using the most recent data
would result in a slightly higher LTCH
CCR ceiling (that is, 1.26 + 0.154 =
1.414) for FY 2007 compared to the
‘‘total’’ CCR ceiling of 1.321 for FY 2007
calculated using our new methodology.
However, based on CCRs from the
March 2006 update of the ProviderSpecific File, there are no LTCHs that
have a CCR that is greater than the
ceiling of 1.321 (the highest LTCH CCR
in the current database of 392 LTCHs is
1.27).
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
e. Statewide Average CCRs
In addition to being authorized to
assign the applicable statewide average
CCR to a LTCH whose CCR is above the
ceiling, the fiscal intermediary may use
the applicable statewide average CCR in
other circumstances. In the June 9, 2003
IPPS high-cost outlier final rule, we also
established our current policy that the
fiscal intermediary may use the
applicable statewide average CCR for
LTCHs for whom data with which to
calculate a CCR are not available (for
example, missing or faulty data) or for
new LTCHs that have not yet submitted
their first Medicare cost report. For this
purpose, a ‘‘new’’ LTCH is defined as an
entity that has not accepted assignment
of an existing hospital’s provider
agreement in accordance with § 489.18.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
We note that, consistent with our
current policy, either CMS or the LTCH
may request the use of a different
(higher or lower) CCR based on
substantial evidence that such a CCR
more accurately reflects the LTCH’s
actual costs and charges. This applies to
new LTCHs (as defined above) as well.
For instance, CMS may determine that
the applicable statewide average CCR
should not be applied to hospitals that
convert from acute care IPPS hospitals
to LTCHs and receive new LTCH
provider numbers. Rather, the cost and
charge data from the IPPS hospitals’ cost
reports (even if they are for more or less
than a 12-month cost reporting period)
would be used to determine the LTCH’s
CCR.
In addition to proposing to revise our
methodology for determining the annual
CCR ceiling under the LTCH PPS for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2006, under the broad authority of
section 123 of the BBRA and section
307(b)(1) of BIPA, in the FY 2007
proposed rule (71 FR 24131 through
24134), we proposed to revise our
regulations for high-cost outliers and
short-stay outliers (§§ 412.525(a)(4) and
412.529(c)(5), respectively) for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2006, to codify in Subpart O of 42
CFR Part 412 the remaining LTCH PPS
outlier policy changes that were
established in the June 9, 2003 IPPS
high-cost outlier final rule (68 FR 34506
through 34513), including proposed
modifications and editorial
clarifications to those existing policies
established in that final rule, which are
discussed in greater detail below in this
section. We proposed these additional
revisions to §§ 412.525(a)(4) and
412.529(c)(5) because we believe that
making these revisions would more
precisely describe the application of
those policies as they relate to the
determination of LTCH CCRs and
because these proposed changes would
be consistent with the proposed changes
to the calculation of the LTCH CCR
ceiling discussed above in this section.
Specifically, we proposed to specify
under the LTCH PPS high-cost outlier
policy at § 412.525(a)(4) and the LTCH
PPS short-stay outlier policy at
§ 412.529 that the fiscal intermediary
may use a statewide average CCR, which
would be established annually by CMS,
if it is unable to determine an accurate
CCR for a LTCH in one of the following
three circumstances: (1) new LTCHs that
have not yet submitted their first
Medicare cost report (for this purpose,
consistent with current policy, a new
LTCH would be defined as an entity that
has not accepted assignment of an
existing hospital’s provider agreement
PO 00000
Frm 00251
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48119
in accordance with § 489.18); (2) LTCHs
whose CCR is in excess of the LTCH
CCR ceiling; and (3) other LTCHs for
whom data with which to calculate a
CCR are not available (for example,
missing or faulty data). (Other sources of
data that the fiscal intermediary may
consider in determining a LTCH’s CCR
included data from a different cost
reporting period for the LTCH, data
from the cost reporting period preceding
the period in which the hospital began
to be paid as a LTCH (that is, the period
of at least 6 months that it was paid as
a short-term acute care hospital), or data
from other comparable LTCHs, such as
LTCHs in the same chain or in the same
region.)
We did not receive any public
comments on our proposal. Therefore,
in this final rule, we are adopting as
final, without modification, our
proposed policy. Accordingly, under the
broad authority of section 123 of the
BBRA and section 307(b)(1) of BIPA, in
this final rule, we are establishing
§§ 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(C)(1) through (3)
and 412.529(c)(3)(iv)(C)(1) through (3),
which specify that the fiscal
intermediary may use a statewide
average CCR if it is unable to determine
an accurate CCR for a LTCH in one of
the following three circumstances: (1)
new LTCHs that have not yet submitted
their first Medicare cost report (for this
purpose, consistent with current policy,
a new LTCH would be defined as an
entity that has not accepted assignment
of an existing hospital’s provider
agreement in accordance with § 489.18;
(2) LTCHs whose CCR is in excess of the
LTCH CCR ceiling; and (3) other LTCHs
for whom data with which to calculate
a CCR are not available (for example,
missing or faulty data). (Other sources of
data that the fiscal intermediary may
consider in determining a LTCH’s CCR
included data from a different cost
reporting period for the LTCH, data
from the cost reporting period preceding
the period in which the hospital began
to be paid as a LTCH (that is, the period
of at least 6 months that it was paid as
a short-term acute care hospital), or data
from other comparable LTCHs, such as
LTCHs in the same chain or in the same
region.) These regulations further
specify that the statewide average CCRs
used under the LTCH PPS, as described
in greater detail below, will be
established annually by CMS.
Also, in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule (71 FR 24130 through 24131 and
24133 through 24134) we described our
existing methodology for calculating the
combined statewide average CCR for
rural and urban LTCHs. Under the
proposed LTCH PPS high-cost outlier
policy at § 412.525(a)(4) and the
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48120
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
proposed LTCH PPS short-stay outlier
policy at § 412.529 for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2006,
we proposed to compute statewide
average CCRs for use under the LTCH
PPS in a manner similar to the way we
proposed to compute LTCH PPS CCR
ceilings. Specifically, under this
proposed policy, we would use the
same IPPS CCR data that we currently
use to annually establish the separate
IPPS operating and capital statewide
CCRs to compute statewide average total
CCRs. Below we outline our proposed
methodology for calculating the total
statewide average CCR for a rural LTCH:
Step 1: Calculate the total CCR for
each rural IPPS hospital by adding
together its operating CCR and its
capital CCR.
Step 2: Calculate the weighted average
total CCR for all rural IPPS hospitals in
the State (as shown in the third column
of Table 8C of the Addendum to the FY
2007 IPPS proposed rule). This same
proposed methodology would be
applied when determining the ‘‘total’’
statewide average CCR for LTCHs
located in urban areas, except that we
would replace ‘‘rural IPPS hospitals’’
with ‘‘urban IPPS hospitals’’ in Steps 1
and 2. Under this proposal, the
underlying data, that is, the IPPS CCRs,
would remain the same. (We note that
the weighted average total CCR for all
urban IPPS hospitals in the State is
shown in the second column of Table
8C of the Addendum to this final rule
and the weighted average total CCR for
all rural IPPS hospitals in the State is
shown in the third column of Table 8C
of the Addendum to this final rule,
based on the policies finalized in this
final rule as discussed below.)
We also proposed that these statewide
average ‘‘total’’ (operating and capital)
CCRs that would be used under the
LTCH PPS would continue to be
published annually in the IPPS
proposed and final rules, and, therefore,
the public would continue to consult
the annual IPPS proposed and final
rules for changes to the applicable
statewide average total CCRs that would
be effective for discharges occurring on
or after October 1. Under this proposal,
the current applicable statewide average
operating and capital CCRs, established
for discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 2005, would remain in effect
for discharges occurring on or before
September 30, 2006. Our rationale for
proposing to establish statewide average
‘‘total’’ CCRs (as described above in this
section) based on IPPS data under the
proposed revisions to the high-cost
outlier policy at § 412.525(a)(4) and
short-stay outlier policy at § 412.529 is
the same as the one stated above for
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
proposing to use IPPS data to determine
a ‘‘total’’ LTCH CCR ceiling.
We did not receive any public
comments on our proposed changes.
Therefore, we are adopting them as final
without modification. Accordingly,
under the broad authority of section 123
of the BBRA and section 307(b)(1) of
BIPA, in this final rule, under
§§ 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(C) and
412.529(c)(3)(iv)(C), as proposed and as
described above, for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2006,
the applicable LTCH statewide average
total CCRs will be determined based on
IPPS CCR data in a manner similar to
the way we will be computing the LTCH
PPS CCR ceiling, as discussed above. As
also noted in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24129 and 24134)
and reiterated above, consistent with
our policy, the LTCH PPS statewide
average total CCRs will be updated
annually and will be effective for
discharges occurring on or after October
1 of each year. Therefore, the public
should continue to consult the annual
IPPS proposed and final rules for
changes to the LTCH PPS statewide
average total CCRs that would be
effective for discharges occurring on or
after October 1.
We also proposed to determine the
urban and rural statewide average total
CCRs for Maryland LTCHs paid under
the LTCH PPS using, as a proxy, the
national average total CCR for urban
IPPS hospitals and the national average
total CCR for rural IPPS hospitals,
respectively (71 FR 24130 through
24131 and 24134). As we explained in
the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule, we
proposed this proxy because we believe
that the CCR data on the ProviderSpecific File for Maryland hospitals
may not be accurate. This is because
acute care hospitals in Maryland are
operating under a waiver of Medicare’s
ratesetting methodologies for inpatient
and outpatient services under the
authorities of sections 1814(b)(3) and
1833(a)(2) of the Act. The State’s Health
Services Cost Review Commission
(HSCRC) is the regulatory body that
establishes hospital-specific rates for all
hospital services in Maryland.
Because all Maryland short-term acute
care hospitals are paid based on the
hospital-specific rates set by the HSCRC
rather than under the IPPS, CCRs are not
required to determine their Medicare
payments (as they are for other acute
care hospitals that are not governed
under the waiver at sections 1814(b)(3)
and 1833(a)(2) of the Act, and who are
reimbursed for their treatment of
Medicare patients under the IPPS).
Therefore, CCRs in the Provider-Specific
File for Maryland acute care hospitals,
PO 00000
Frm 00252
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
for the most part, are missing (because
they are not used for payment). Those
CCRs that are inputted into the
Provider-Specific File for Maryland
acute care hospitals by the fiscal
intermediary are most likely unaudited
because they are not used for making
payments. For all these reasons, we are
concerned that CCRs for Medicare acute
care hospitals located in Maryland that
are in the Provider-Specific File may not
be reliable. Therefore, we believe that
they should not be used as proxies for
setting the statewide average total CCRs
for Maryland LTCHs.
As we discussed in the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24130 and 24134),
we believe it would be more appropriate
to establish statewide average total CCRs
for Maryland LTCHs based on national
average total CCRs of IPPS hospitals that
were audited by fiscal intermediaries.
Therefore, we proposed to establish
statewide average total CCRs for
Maryland LTCHs based on the national
average total CCRs of all IPPS hospitals
because we believe that the average of
the CCRs of all the IPPS hospitals across
the country that were audited by fiscal
intermediaries would be based on
sufficient rigorous complete data that
would be a representative proxy for the
ratio of costs-to-charges of LTCHs in
Maryland that are subject to LTCH PPS.
(We note that, under our proposal, the
fiscal intermediary may assign the
statewide average CCR in one of three
circumstances (that is, ‘‘new’’ LTCHs, as
defined above; LTCHs with a CCR that
is in excess of the LTCH ceiling; and
LTCHs with unavailable data, as
discussed above).) We solicited
comments or suggestions for an
alternative proxy statewide average CCR
to use for LTCHs that are located in
Maryland and are paid under the LTCH
PPS in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule.
We did not receive any public
comments on our proposal or any
alternative proxy statewide average CCR
to use for LTCHs that are located in
Maryland and are paid under the LTCH
PPS. Therefore, under the broad
authority of section 123 of the BBRA
and section 307(b)(1) of BIPA, we are
adopting our proposed methodology for
determining the statewide average CCR
for Maryland under the LTCH PPS as
final without modification.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24130 and 24134) we stated that, if
more recent data are available for the
final rule, we would use those data to
determine the final LTCH PPS statewide
average CCRs for FY 2007 using the
proposed methodology describe above
that we are adopting as final in this final
rule. Therefore, in this final rule, based
on the most recent complete IPPS total
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
CCR data from the March 2006 update
of the Provider-Specific File, the final
LTCH PPS statewide average total CCRs
for urban and rural hospitals that will be
effective October 1, 2006, are presented
in Table 8C of the Addendum to this
final rule. (As was proposed, we note
that for this final rule, as is the case
under the IPPS, all areas in the District
of Columbia, New Jersey, Puerto Rico,
and Rhode Island are classified as
urban, and therefore there are no rural
statewide average total CCRs listed for
those jurisdictions in Table 8C of the
Addendum to this final rule. As was
proposed, we also note that for this final
rule, as is the case under the IPPS,
although Massachusetts has areas that
are designated as rural, there are no
short-term acute care IPPS hospitals or
LTCHs located in those areas as of
March 2006, and therefore there are no
rural statewide average total CCR listed
for rural Massachusetts in Table 8C of
the Addendum of this final rule.)
Comparing the statewide average
‘‘total’’ CCRs in Table 8C of the
Addendum to this final rule to the
‘‘combined’’ statewide average CCRs
that would have been calculated using
our existing methodology shows that the
changes to our methodology for
determining LTCH statewide average
CCRs results in only minor changes in
the average CCR for each State. In
particular, the largest decrease in a
statewide average CCR (with the
exception of Maryland, as discussed
above) will be in urban Wyoming (¥0.7
percent). However, there is currently
only 1 LTCH located in Wyoming. The
largest increase in a statewide average
CCR will be in urban District of
Columbia (0.7 percent), and there are
currently only 2 LTCHs located in the
District of Columbia.
f. Data Used to Determine a CCR
Similar to our current policy, in the
FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR
24131 and 24134), we also proposed to
specify under our proposed revision to
the LTCH PPS high-cost outlier policy at
§ 412.525(a)(4) and the LTCH PPS shortstay outlier policy at § 412.529 that, for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2006, the CCR applied at the time a
claim is processed would be based on
either the most recently settled cost
report or the most recent tentatively
settled cost report, whichever is from
the latest cost reporting period.
Furthermore, in the same proposed rule,
we proposed under the LTCH PPS highcost outlier policy at § 412.525(a)(4) and
the LTCH PPS short-stay outlier policy
at § 412.529 to state that CMS may
specify an alternative to the CCR
computed from the most recently settled
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
cost report or the most recent tentatively
settled cost report, whichever is later
(under proposed §§ 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(B)
and 412.529(c)(3)(iv)(B)), or a hospital
may also request that the fiscal
intermediary use a different (higher or
lower) CCR based on substantial
evidence presented by the hospital.
These proposed revisions to our policy
for determining a LTCH’s CCR for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2006, under the proposed revisions to
the LTCH PPS high-cost and short-stay
outlier policies, described above, are
similar to our existing policy
established in the June 9, 2003 IPPS
high-cost outlier final rule (68 FR 34506
through 34513). In addition, we
proposed a technical correction to
existing § 412.525(a)(3) to change the
plural reference from cost-to-charge
‘‘ratios’’ to the singular reference to a
cost-to-charge ‘‘ratio’’ because, under
the LTCH PPS, a single (total) CCR is
computed for LTCHs.
We did not receive any comment on
our proposal. Therefore, we are
adopting as final without modification
the proposed policy changes.
Accordingly, under the broad authority
of section 123 of the BBRA and section
307(b)(1) of BIPA, in this final rule, we
are establishing under
§§ 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(B) and
412.529(c)(3)(iv) that, for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2006,
the CCR applied at the time a claim is
processed will be based on either the
most recently settled cost report or the
most recent tentatively settled cost
report, whichever is from the latest cost
reporting period. Under the broad
authority of section 123 of the BBRA
and section 307(b)(1) of BIPA, we are
also establishing at
§§ 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(A) and
412.529(c)(3)(iv)(A) that, for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2006,
CMS may specify an alternative to the
CCR computed under new
§§ 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(B) and
412.529(c)(3)(iv)(B) (that is, computed
from the most recently settled cost
report or the most recent tentatively
settled cost report, whichever is later),
or a hospital may also request that the
fiscal intermediary use a different
(higher or lower) CCR based on
substantial evidence presented by the
hospital. In addition, as proposed,
under the broad authority of section 123
of the BBRA and section 307(b)(1) of
BIPA, we are revising § 412.525(a)(3) to
change the plural reference from cost-tocharge ‘‘ratios’’ to the singular reference
to a cost-to-charge ‘‘ratio’’ in this final
rule.
PO 00000
Frm 00253
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48121
g. Reconciliation of Outlier Payments
Upon Cost Report Settlement
In the June 9, 2003 IPPS high-cost
outlier final rule (68 FR 34508 through
34512), we established our policy for
LTCHs that effective with LTCH PPS
discharges occurring on or after August
8, 2003, any reconciliation of outlier
payments will be based upon the actual
CCR computed from the costs and
charges incurred in the period during
which the discharge occurs. In that
same final rule, we also established our
current policy that for discharges
occurring on or after August 8, 2003, at
the time of any reconciliation, outlier
payments may be adjusted to account
for the time value of any underpayments
or overpayments based upon a widely
available index to be established in
advance by the Secretary and will be
applied from the midpoint of the cost
reporting period to the date of
reconciliation. Additional information
on the administration of the
reconciliation process under the IPPS is
provided in Program Transmittal 707
(Change Request 3966, October 12,
2005). We note that, in addition to the
changes to the high-cost outlier and
short-stay outlier policies presented in
this final rule, we are currently
developing additional instructions on
the administration of the existing
reconciliation process under the LTCH
PPS that would be similar to the IPPS
reconciliation process.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24131 and 24134), for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2006,
we proposed to codify into the LTCH
PPS section of the regulations (Subpart
O of 42 CFR Part 412) the provisions
governing the determination of LTCHs’’
CCRs, including proposed modifications
and editorial clarifications to our
existing methodology for determining
the annual LTCH CCR ceiling and
applicable statewide average CCRs
under the LTCH PPS. In addition, in
that same proposed rule, under the
broad authority of section 123 of the
BBRA and section 307(b)(1) of BIPA, we
proposed to revise §§ 412.525(a)(4), and
412.529(c)(3) for discharges occurring
on or after October 1, 2006, to codify in
Subpart O of 42 CFR Part 412 the
provisions discussed above concerning
the reconciliation of LTCH PPS outlier
payments, including proposed editorial
clarifications discussed in greater detail
below in this section, that would more
precisely describe the application of
those policies. We proposed the
additional revisions to §§ 412.525(a)(4)
and 412.529(c)(3) concerning the
reconciliation of outlier payments,
which are discussed in greater detail
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48122
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
below in this section, because these
proposed changes would be consistent
with the proposed changes to the
calculation of the LTCH CCR ceiling
discussed above.
Specifically, we proposed under the
LTCH PPS high-cost outlier policy at
§ 412.525(a)(4) and the LTCH PPS shortstay outlier policy at § 412.529, similar
to our current policy, to specify that, for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2006, any reconciliation of outlier
payments would be based on the CCR
calculated based on a ratio of costs to
charges computed from the relevant cost
report and charge data determined at the
time the cost report coinciding with the
discharge is settled. In addition, we
proposed under the LTCH PPS high-cost
outlier policy at § 412.525(a)(4)and the
LTCH PPS short-stay outlier policy at
§ 412.529, similar to our current policy,
to specify that, for discharges occurring
on or after October 1, 2006, at the time
of any reconciliation, outlier payments
may be adjusted to account for the time
value of any underpayments or
overpayments. Consistent with our
current policy, we also proposed that
such an adjustment would be based
upon a widely available index to be
established in advance by the Secretary
and would be applied from the
midpoint of the cost reporting period to
the date of reconciliation. As we
discussed in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule (71 FR 24131 and 24134), we
proposed to make these additions to
§§ 412.525(a)(4) and 412.529 because we
believe that such proposed changes
reinforce the concept that the LTCH PPS
has a single payment rate for inpatient
operating and capital-related costs (as
discussed in greater detail previously),
and because we believe it would be
more appropriate and administratively
simpler to include all of the regulatory
provisions concerning the
determination of LTCH PPS (high-cost
and short-stay) outlier payments
applicable under the LTCH PPS
regulations in Subpart O of 42 CFR Part
412.
We did not receive any public
comments on the proposed changes
regarding the reconciliation of LTCH
PPS outlier payments upon cost report
settlement. Therefore, under the broad
authority of section 123 of the BBRA
and section 307(b)(1) of BIPA, we are
adopting as final, without modification,
the proposed changes to the regulations
at § 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(D) through (E) for
LTCH PPS high-cost outliers and
§ 412.529(c)(3)(iv)(D) through (E) for
LTCH PPS short-stay outliers regarding
the methodology for determining LTCH
CCRs and LTCH PPS outlier
reconciliation.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
7. Technical Corrections Relating to
LTCHs
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24135), we proposed to make the
following technical changes to various
sections of the regulations relating to
LTCHs to update or correct crossreferences or to include inadvertently
omitted provisions: a. In the following
sections, we proposed to correct several
incorrect cross-references in the existing
regulations:
• In § 412.505(b)(1), we proposed to
change the cross-reference ‘‘§ 412.22(e)
and (h)(5)’’ to the phrase ‘‘§ 412.22(e)(3)
and (h)(6), if applicable’’.
• In § 412.508(c)(3), we proposed to
change the cross-reference ‘‘§ 1001.301’’
to ‘‘§ 1001.201.’’
• In § 412.541(b)(2)(i), we proposed to
change the cross-reference
‘‘§ 412.533(b)’’ to ‘‘§ 412.533(a)(5) and
§ 412.533(c)’’ to correctly refer to the
provisions on the determination of the
LTCH PPS rates.
b. We proposed to revise § 412.511 to
change the cross-reference ‘‘§ 412.22(e)
and (h)(5)’’ to the phrase ‘‘§ 412.22(e)(3)
and (h)(6)’’ and to clarify the
requirement that LTCHs must meet
under §§ 412.22(e)(3) and (h)(6) to
report co-location status as part of its
overall reporting requirements.
c. We proposed to revise § 412.525(d)
by adding new paragraphs (d)(3) and
(d)(4) to specify two additional payment
adjustments to the per discharge
payments under the LTCH PPS that
were inadvertently omitted; that is, the
special payment under the onsite
transfer and readmission policy at
§ 412.532 and the special payment
provisions for LTCH HwHs and
satellites of LTCHs at § 412.534.
d. We proposed to revise
§ 412.532(a)(2) to correct the crossreference to the definition of a satellite
facility by changing ‘‘§ 412.22(f)’’ to
‘‘§ 412.22(h)’’. In addition, we proposed
to revise paragraph (b) of § 412.532 to
include satellite facilities and SNFs as
part of the definition of entities that may
be ‘‘co-located’’ or ‘‘onsite’’ with a
hospital. In existing § 412.532(a)(2) and
(a)(3), we include satellite facilities and
SNFs, respectively, within the onsite
provider payment policy as entities that
may be co-located with a LTCH, but
omitted to mention them in § 412.532(b)
as being included when we defined ‘‘colocated or onsite’’ facilities. We
proposed to conform § 412.532(b) to
include their mention.
We did not receive any public
comments on these technical changes
and, therefore, are adopting them as
final without modification.
PO 00000
Frm 00254
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
8. Cross-Reference Correction in
Authority Citations for 42 CFR Parts 412
and 413
As stated earlier, on November 15,
2004, we published in the Federal
Register the final rule establishing a PPS
for IPFs (69 FR 66922). As a part of that
rule, we amended the authority citations
for 42 CFR Parts 412 and 413 to include
references to section 124 of Pub. L. 106–
113. Section 124 directed us to take
various actions regarding a per diem
PPS for IPFs. We included incorrect
cross-references to the United States
Statutes at Large citation for this
provision. We proposed to amend the
authority citations for Parts 412 and 413
by removing the incorrect crossreference to ‘‘113 Stat. 1515’’ and
inserting the correct cross-reference
‘‘113 Stat. 1501A–332’’.
We did not receive any public
comments on the proposed crossreference correction and, therefore, are
adopting it as final without
modification.
9. Report of Adjustment (Exceptions)
Payments
Section 4419(b) of Pub. L. 105–33
requires the Secretary to publish
annually in the Federal Register a
report describing the total amount of
adjustment payments made to excluded
hospitals and units, by reason of section
1886(b)(4) of the Act, during the
previous fiscal year.
The process of requesting,
adjudicating, and awarding an
adjustment payment is likely to occur
over a 2-year period or longer. First, an
excluded hospital or excluded unit of a
hospital must file its cost report for a
fiscal year with its fiscal intermediary
within 5 months after the close of its
cost reporting period in accordance with
§ 413.24(f)(2). The fiscal intermediary
then reviews the cost report and issues
a Notice of Program Reimbursement
(NPR) within approximately 2 months
after the filing of the cost report. If the
hospital’s operating costs are in excess
of the ceiling, the hospital may file a
request for an adjustment payment
within 180 days from the date of the
NPR. The fiscal intermediary, or CMS,
depending on the type of adjustment
requested, then reviews the request and
determines if an adjustment payment is
warranted. This determination is often
not made until more than 6 months after
the date the request is filed. However,
in an attempt to provide interested
parties with data on the most recent
adjustments for which we do have data,
we are publishing data on adjustment
payments that were processed by the
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
fiscal intermediary or CMS during FY
2005.
The table below includes the most
recent data available from the fiscal
intermediaries and CMS on adjustment
payments that were adjudicated during
FY 2005. As indicated above, the
adjustments made during FY 2005 only
pertain to cost reporting periods ending
in years prior to FY 2004. Total
adjustment payments awarded to
excluded hospitals and units during FY
Class of hospital
2005 are $21,362,945. The table depicts
for each class of hospitals, in the
aggregate, the number of adjustment
requests adjudicated, the excess
operating cost over ceiling, and the
amount of the adjustment payments.
1. Background
Section 1820 of the Act provides for
the establishment of Medicare Rural
Hospital Flexibility Programs
(MRHFPs), under which individual
States may designate certain facilities as
critical access hospitals (CAHs).
Facilities that are so designated and
meet the CAH conditions of
participation under 42 CFR Part 485,
Subpart F, will be certified as CAHs by
CMS. Regulations governing payments
to CAHs for services to Medicare
beneficiaries are located in 42 CFR Part
413.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
2. Sunset of Designation of CAHs as
Necessary Providers: Technical
Correction
Under section 1820(c)(2)(B)(i) of the
Act, a CAH is required to be located
more than a 35-mile drive (or in the case
of mountainous terrain or only
secondary roads, a 15-mile drive) from
a hospital or another CAH, unless the
CAH is certified by the State as a
necessary provider of health care
services to residents in the area. Section
405(h) of Pub. L. 108-173 amended
section 1820(c)(2)(B)(i)(II) of the Act by
adding language that terminated a
State’s authority to waive the location
requirement for a CAH by designating
the CAH as a necessary provider,
effective January 1, 2006. As a result of
this amendment, as of January 1, 2006,
States are no longer able to designate
CAH status based upon a determination
that an entity is a necessary provider of
health care. However, section 405(h) of
Pub. L. 108–173 also included a
grandfathering provision for CAHs that
are certified as necessary providers prior
to January 1, 2006. Under this provision,
a CAH that is designated as a necessary
provider in its State’s rural health plan
prior to January 1, 2006, is permitted to
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
maintain its necessary provider
designation.
The regulations that specify the
location requirements for CAHs
described above are set forth at 42 CFR
485.610(c). To implement the
amendment made by section 405(h) of
Pub. L. 108–173, we published a final
rule in the Federal Register on August
11, 2004 (69 FR 49271) to revise the
regulations under paragraph (c) of
§ 485.610. In that revision, we
inadvertently included an erroneous
date: In the second sentence of
paragraph (c), we stated that a CAH that
is designated as a necessary provider as
of October 1, 2006, will maintain its
necessary provider designation after
October 1, 2006. Although a correction
notice was published in the Federal
Register on October 7, 2004 (69 FR
60252), the notice corrected only the
second citation of the date in that
paragraph. As a result, the second
sentence of § 485.610(c) continues to
state, incorrectly, that a CAH that is
designated as a necessary provider as of
October 1, 2006, will maintain its
necessary provider designation as of
January 1, 2006.
To avoid further confusion, and to
ensure that the regulations
implementing the CAH location
requirement under section
1820(c)(2)(B)(i)(II) of the Act specify that
requirement accurately, we proposed to
revise the second sentence of
§ 485.610(c) to state that a CAH that was
designated as a necessary provider on or
before December 31, 2005, will maintain
its necessary provider designation as of
January 1, 2006. We note that this
change would merely correct the
previous error and does not reflect any
change in our policy as to how the
statutory provision is implemented.
Comment: A number of commenters
raised issues concerning the
interpretative guidelines that we issued
PO 00000
Frm 00255
Excess cost
over ceiling
Number
Rehabilitation ...............................................................................................................................
Psychiatric ....................................................................................................................................
Long-Term Care ..........................................................................................................................
Children’s .....................................................................................................................................
Cancer .........................................................................................................................................
Religious Nonmedical.
Health Care Institution .................................................................................................................
B. Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48123
Adjustment
payments
12
34
2
—
—
$ 4,753,618
27,408,956
2,147,623
—
—
$1,352,043
18,362,262
1,485,380
—
—
3
383,951
163,260
relating to implementation of the CAH
necessary provider provision.
Response: These interpretative
guidelines were developed after the FY
2005 IPPS final rule was published. We
consider the comments that we received
to be outside the scope of the May 12,
2006 proposed rule and, therefore, are
not responding to them in this final
rule. However, we are considering these
comments as part of our ongoing policy
review efforts and will take appropriate
action if warranted.
In this final rule, we are adopting as
final, without modification, the revision
to the second sentence of § 412.610(c)
described above.
VII. Payment for Services Furnished
Outside the United States
A. Background
Section 1862(a)(4) of the Act generally
prohibits payment under Medicare for
items and services furnished outside the
United States. Under sections 1861(x)
and 210(i) of the Act, ‘‘United States’’ is
defined to include the 50 States, the
District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the
Virgin Islands, Guam, and America
Samoa. Furthermore, under Pub. L. 94–
241, ‘‘those laws which provide Federal
services and financial assistance
programs’’ apply to the Northern
Mariana Islands to the same extent as
they do to Guam. In addition, we have
interpreted the term ‘‘United States’’ as
including U.S. territorial waters. We
consider shipboard services furnished
in a port of the United States or within
6 hours before arrival at, or departure
from, a port of the United States to be
furnished in the United States territorial
waters (54 FR 41723). Therefore, in our
regulations at § 411.9(a), we define the
United States to include the 50 States,
the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico,
the Virgin Islands, Guam, American
Samoa, the Northern Mariana Islands,
and for purposes of services furnished
on board ship, the territorial waters
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48124
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
adjoining the land areas of the United
States. This general prohibition has
exceptions, under which payment may
be made for inpatient hospital services,
emergency inpatient hospital services,
and for physician and ambulance
services associated with these hospital
services that are furnished outside the
United States.
Payment may be made for inpatient
hospital services if a Medicare
beneficiary who is a United States
resident received these services at a
hospital located outside of the United
States that either was closer to, or was
substantially more accessible from, the
beneficiary’s residence than the nearest
United States hospital that was
adequately equipped and available to
treat the beneficiary. Payment may be
made for emergency inpatient hospital
services if a beneficiary was in the
United States (or in Canada while
traveling between Alaska and another
State without unreasonable delay and
by the most direct route) when the
emergency arose, and the hospital
located outside the United States was
closer to, or substantially more
accessible from, the place where the
emergency arose than the nearest
available adequately equipped hospital
within the United States. Payment may
be made for physician and ambulance
services furnished in connection with
these inpatient and emergency inpatient
hospital services. Our existing
regulations that implement these
statutory provisions are located at 42
CFR 409.3, 409.5, 410.14, 410.66, 411.9,
413.74 and Subparts G and H of Part
424.
B. Proposed Clarification of Regulations
Services that fall under these
exceptions typically are furnished in
Canada or Mexico. However, in
accordance with section 1814(f) of the
Act and the definition of the term
‘‘United States’’ (42 CFR 411.9(a)), it is
permissible for Medicare to pay for
services furnished in foreign countries
other than Canada and Mexico. For
example, if a Medicare beneficiary who
is in Guam needed emergency inpatient
hospital services and the nearest
available hospital adequately equipped
to treat that beneficiary was located in
the Philippines, Medicare payment
would be permitted for the services.
Several of our existing regulations
(§§ 409.3, 409.5, 410.66, and 413.74)
specifically refer to services furnished
in Canada and Mexico and do not
indicate that it is permissible for
Medicare payment to be made for
services furnished in other foreign
countries. The references in these
sections also are more limited than the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
provisions of 42 CFR Part 424, Subpart
H, the portion of our regulations that
addresses treatment furnished in a
foreign country. Therefore, in the FY
2007 IPPS proposed rule (71 FR 24136),
we proposed to amend those regulations
that refer to Canada and Mexico in order
to conform them to the Act and to our
other regulations addressing these
situations.
Comment: Commenters indicated that
they believed additional clarification of
the proposed revisions on payment for
services outside the United States may
be necessary to avoid confusion.
Specifically, they noted that the
example cited in the preamble states: if
a Medicare beneficiary who is in Guam
needed emergency inpatient hospital
services and the nearest available
hospital adequately equipped was
located in the Philippines, Medicare
payment would be permitted for the
services. The commenters indicated that
this statement and the proposed
accompanying changes to the
regulations raise several questions. First,
does it matter that the beneficiary
happens to be in Guam, or is there an
expectation that the beneficiary resides
in Guam? Second, does it matter if the
beneficiary is in a United States
Territory (that is, Guam), or would
payment be permitted for services
furnished to a beneficiary who was in
another foreign country? Finally, what
is the applicability of these provisions
to a beneficiary who maintains
residence outside the 50 States, the
District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the
Virgin Islands, Guam, or American
Samoa?
Further, the commenters believed that
CMS should evaluate the safety
concerns of beneficiaries living outside
the United States, but in close proximity
to hospitals accredited by Joint
Commission on Accreditation of
Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) in
foreign countries. They stated that these
beneficiaries are forced to travel great
distances to reach hospitals in the U.S.,
sometimes at great risk to their health,
while adequately equipped, accredited
hospitals are immediately available to
meet their health care needs.
Response: If a Medicare beneficiary is
in Guam (or any other U.S. Territory)
and an emergency arises that results in
the beneficiary receiving emergency
inpatient services from a foreign
hospital, Medicare may pay for such
services irrespective of whether the
beneficiary is a resident of Guam (or any
other U.S. Territory). That is, section
1814(f)(2) of the Act and 42 CFR
424.122 do not require that a beneficiary
be a resident of Guam (or any other U.S.
Territory where an emergency occurs) in
PO 00000
Frm 00256
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
order for Medicare to pay for those
services. Because section 1814(f)(2) of
the Act and our regulations at § 424.122
already directly address when Medicare
payment may be made for emergency
inpatient services furnished in foreign
hospitals, it is unnecessary to outline
those provisions again in 42 CFR 409.3,
409.5, 410.66, and 413.74 of the
regulations.
With respect to the question
concerning Medicare beneficiaries who
maintain their residence outside the 50
States, the District of Columbia, Puerto
Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam,
American Samoa, or the Northern
Mariana Islands as we noted above,
section 1814(f)(2) of the Act and
§ 424.122 of the regulations do not
require that a beneficiary be a resident
of Guam (or any other U.S. Territory
where an emergency occurs) in order for
Medicare to pay for emergency inpatient
services that a Medicare beneficiary
receives from a foreign hospital.
However, section 1814(f)(1) of the Act
and § 424.123 of the regulations require
that, in order for payment to be made for
nonemergency inpatient hospital
services that a Medicare beneficiary
receives at a hospital located outside the
United States, the beneficiary must be a
U.S. resident who received these
nonemergency services at a hospital
located outside of the United States that
either was closer to, or was substantially
more accessible from, the beneficiary’s
residence than the nearest U.S. hospital
that was adequately equipped and
available to treat the beneficiary.
With respect to beneficiaries who are
forced to travel great distances to reach
hospitals in the United States, although
we are concerned about the health and
safety of Medicare beneficiaries, CMS
does not have the legal authority to
expand upon the foreign services for
which Medicare may make payment,
because Medicare law prohibits
payment for items and services
furnished outside the United States,
except for certain limited services (see
sections 1814(f) and 1862(a)(4) of the
Act).
After consideration of the public
comments received, we are adopting as
final, without modification, the
amendments to our existing regulations
regarding services furnished outside the
United States described above.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule,
we also proposed to make some related
technical changes. In §§ 409.3(e) and
424.123(c)(2), we proposed to change
the references from the Joint
Commission on Accreditation of
Hospitals (JCAH) to the Joint
Commission on Accreditation of
Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO), the
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
current name of that organization. In
§ 424.121(c), we proposed to change the
obsolete cross-reference from § 405.313
to the correct cross-reference, § 411.9.
We did not receive any public
comments on these technical changes.
Therefore, we are adopting as final,
without modification, the technical
changes to §§ 409.3(e), 424.123(c)(2),
and 424.121(c) described above.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
VIII. Payment for Blood Clotting Factor
Administered to Inpatients With
Hemophilia
Section 1886(a)(4) of the Act excludes
the costs of administering blood clotting
factors to inpatients with hemophilia
from the definition of ‘‘operating costs
of inpatient hospital services.’’ Section
6011(b) of Pub. L. 101–239 states that
the Secretary of Health and Human
Services shall determine the payment
amount made to hospitals under
Medicare Part A for the costs of
administering blood clotting factors to
individuals with hemophilia by
multiplying a predetermined price per
unit of blood clotting factor by the
number of units provided to the
individual. The regulations governing
payment for blood clotting factors
furnished to hospital inpatients and for
payment for the furnishing fee are
located in §§ 412.2(f)(8) and 412.115(b).
In FY 2005, we made payments for
blood clotting factors furnished to
inpatients at 95 percent of average
wholesale price (AWP), consistent with
the rates then paid under section
1842(o) of the Act for Medicare Part B
drugs (including blood clotting factor
furnished to beneficiaries who are not
inpatients).
Section 303 of Pub. L. 108–173 added
section 1847A to the Act. Effective
January 1, 2005, this section requires
that almost all Medicare Part B drugs
not paid on a cost or prospective basis
be paid at 106 percent of average sales
price (ASP), while section 1842(o)(5) of
the Act provides for a Medicare Part B
payment of a furnishing fee for blood
clotting factor. On November 15, 2004,
we published regulations in the Federal
Register (69 FR 66310 through 66319)
that implemented the provisions of
section 1847A of the Act. These
regulations are codified at Subpart K of
Part 414 and § 410.63, respectively.
The furnishing fee is updated each
calendar year as specified by section
1842(o)(5) of the Act. The furnishing fee
for clotting factor for years after CY 2005
is equal to the fee for the previous year
increased by the percentage increase in
the consumer price index (CPI) for
medical care for the 12-month period
ending with June of the previous year.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
This requirement is set forth in our
regulations at § 410.63.
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47473), we amended our regulations at
§§ 412.2(f)(8) and 412.115(b) to state
that, for discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 2005, we make payment for
blood clotting factor administered to
hospital inpatients using the Medicare
Part B payment amounts for blood
clotting factor as determined under
Subpart K of 42 CFR Part 414 and for
the furnishing fee as determined under
§ 410.63.
On November 21, 2005, we issued
regulations in the Federal Register (70
FR 70225) updating the furnishing fee
payment amount for CY 2006. We
announced that the increase in the CPI
for medical care for the 12 months
ending June 30, 2005 was 4.2 percent.
Consequently, the furnishing fee for CY
2006, initially established effective
January 1, 2005, at $0.14 per unit of
clotting factor, for CY 2006 was set at
$0.146 per individual unit (I.U.) for
blood clotting factor. We indicated in
the preamble to that rule that while ‘‘the
furnishing fee payment rate is
calculated at 3 digits, the actual amount
paid to providers and suppliers is
rounded to 2 digits.’’
The fiscal intermediaries continue to
use the Medicare Part B Drug Pricing
File to make payments for blood clotting
factor. The furnishing fee is included in
the ASP price per unit sent with the
Medicare Part B Drug Pricing File that
is updated annually. By using the
Medicare Part B Drug Pricing File,
Medicare will be making consistent
payments for blood clotting factor
provided to inpatients and outpatients.
For further updates on pricing, we refer
readers to the Medicare Part B drug
pricing regulations.
Comment: Two commenters
addressed the blood clotting policy in
response to the proposed rule. One
commenter supported CMS in its quest
for a uniform approach for drug
payment. Both commenters
recommended that CMS continue to
provide the additional payment for
blood clotting factor administered to
hemophiliac inpatients in the future
even if severity-adjusted DRGs are
implemented.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support. The blood
clotting factor policy will remain
unchanged even if there are changes to
the DRG system. CMS will continue to
provide the additional payment for
blood clotting factor administered to
hemophilia inpatients. As we stated in
our proposed rule (79 FR 24136) and
restated in this final rule, by fiscal
intermediaries utilizing the Medicare
PO 00000
Frm 00257
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48125
Part B Drug Pricing File, Medicare will
be making consistent payments for
blood clotting factor provided to
inpatients and outpatients. For further
updates on pricing, readers should refer
to the Medicare Part B drug pricing
regulations.
IX. Limitation on Payments to Skilled
Nursing Facilities for Bad Debt
A. Background
Under section 1861(v)(1) of the Act
and § 413.89 of our existing regulations,
Medicare may pay some or all of the
uncollectible deductible and
coinsurance amounts to those entities
paid under a reasonable cost payment
methodology that are eligible to receive
payment for bad debt. Under our
existing regulations, Medicare generally
pays 100 percent of allowable bad debt
amounts to most entities eligible to
receive bad debt payment, including
SNFs, CAHs, rural health clinics,
federally qualified health clinics,
community mental health clinics, health
maintenance organizations reimbursed
on a cost basis, competitive medical
plans, and health care prepayment
plans. To determine if bad debt amounts
are allowable, the requirements at
§ 413.89 and the Provider
Reimbursement Manual (PRM) (CMS
Pub. 15 Part 1, Chapter 3) must be met.
However, under section
1861(v)(1)(T)(iv) of the Act and our
existing regulations, Medicare payments
for allowable bad debt amounts for
hospitals are reduced by 30 percent.
Moreover, under our existing
regulations, Medicare does not pay for
bad debt amounts arising from
anesthetists’ services paid under a fee
schedule (§ 413.89(i)). In addition,
although Medicare pays end-stage renal
disease (ESRD) facilities 100 percent of
allowable bad debt claims, these
payments are capped at facilities’
unrecovered cost (§ 413.178 of the
regulations).
B. Changes Made by Section 5004 of
Pub. L. 109–171
Section 5004 of Pub. L. 109–171 (DRA
of 2005) amended section 1861(v)(1) of
the Act to mandate that, for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2005, Medicare payments to
SNFs for certain allowable bad debt
amounts be reduced. Specifically, for
Medicare beneficiaries who are not dual
eligible individuals (as defined in
section 1935(c)(6)(A)(ii) of the Act),
allowable bad debt amounts attributable
to the coinsurance amounts under the
Medicare program are reduced by 30
percent (deductibles are not applicable
to patients in SNFs). Allowable bad debt
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48126
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
amounts for Medicare beneficiaries who
are dual eligible individuals (as defined
in section 1935(c)(6)(A)(ii) of the Act)
will continue to be paid at 100 percent.
C. Proposed Regulation Changes
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24137), we proposed to conform the
Medicare regulations under § 413.89 to
the provisions of section 5004 of Pub. L.
109–171. Specifically, we proposed to
revise paragraph (h) by redesignating
the existing contents as paragraph (h)(1)
and add a new paragraph (h)(2) to
reflect this payment limitation. We
proposed to include in paragraph (h)(2)
a cross-reference to the definition of
‘‘full-benefit dual eligible individual’’
found at § 423.772 of our regulations. In
addition, we proposed to revise
§ 413.89(a) to add a cross-reference to
the existing limitations on payments to
hospitals and the proposed new
limitations on payments to SNFs found
in paragraph (h), and to correct the
cross-reference to the exception for
payments for bad debts arising from
anesthetists’ services paid under a fee
schedule from ‘‘paragraph (h)’’ to
‘‘paragraph (i).’’
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern that under the proposed
definition of a ‘‘full benefit dual eligible
individual’’ found at § 423.772 of our
regulations, SNFs will not only have to
document that the patient is eligible for
both Medicare and Medicaid services
but also will now have to document that
the patient has coverage under a
prescription drug plan under Part D of
Title XVIII of the Act or under an MA–
PD plan under Part C of Title XVIII of
the Act. The commenter stated that the
additional documentation will increase
the burden on SNFs to provide
documentation.
Response: After reviewing the
legislative background associated with
section 5004 of Pub. L. 109–171, we
determined that it was not the Congress’
intent to reduce bad debt payments to
SNFs for individuals who are eligible
for both Medicare and Medicaid, also
known as dual eligible individuals.
Section 5004 defines ‘‘dual eligible
individuals’’ as individuals who are
entitled to benefits under Part A of
Medicare and are described in section
1935(c)(6)(A)(ii) of the Act.
The definition of a ‘‘full-benefit dual
eligible individual’’ at section
1935(c)(6)(A) of the Act is codified at
§ 423.772 of the regulations.
Specifically, section 1935(c)(6)(A) of the
Act defines a ‘‘full-benefit dual eligible
individual’’ in terms of both clause (i)
and (ii). Section 1935(c)(6)(A)(i) of the
Act (and paragraph (1) under the
definition of ‘‘full-benefit dual eligible
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
individual’’ at § 423.772) states that the
individual must have coverage for the
month for covered Part D drugs under
a prescription drug plan under Part D of
Title XVUIII of the Act or under an MA–
PD plan under Part C of title XVIII of the
Act. Section 1935(c)(6)(A)(ii) of the Act
(and paragraph (2) under the definition
of ‘‘full-benefit dual eligible individual’’
at § 423.772) states the individual must
be determined eligible by the State for
medical assistance for full benefits
under Title XIX of the Act under section
1902(a)(10)(A) or section 1902(a)(10)(C),
by reason of section 1902(f) of the Act,
or under any other category of eligibility
for medical assistance for full benefits
under Title XIX of the Act. Clearly, the
Congress did not include the criterion at
section 1935(c)(6)(A)(i) of the Act (and,
thus, paragraph (1) under the definition
of ‘‘full-benefit dual eligible individual’’
at § 423.772) for defining dual eligible
individuals to determine the
applicability of the reduction of bad
debt payments under section 5004 of
Pub. L. 109–171.
Accordingly, for this final rule, we are
revising the proposed regulation text at
new § 413.89(h)(2) to better conform
with the language of the statute by
defining a dual eligible individual as an
individual who is entitled to benefits
under Part A of Medicare and is
determined eligible by the State for
medical assistance under title XIX as
described under paragraph (2) of the
definition of a full-benefit dual eligible
individual at § 423.772. We believe that
this revision addresses the concerns
expressed by the commenter.
Comment: One commenter stated that,
in April 2006, CMS issued revisions to
the freestanding SNF Medicare cost
reporting Form 2540–96 and
instructions to implement the
provisions of section 5004 of Pub. L.
109–171 but has not issued similar
revisions to the hospital-based (distinct
part) SNF Medicare cost reporting Form
2552–96. The commenter requested that
CMS clarify whether the provisions of
section 5004 will or will not apply to
both freestanding and hospital-based
SNFs.
Response: Section 5004 of Pub. L.
109–171 applies to both freestanding
and hospital-based SNFs. We are
currently preparing revisions to the
hospital-based SNF Medicare cost
reporting Form 2552–96 and
instructions to implement the
provisions of section 5004. We
anticipate that the revisions will be
issued in a Transmittal to the Provider
Reimbursement Manual—Part 2 (Pub.
#15–2) prior to the publication of this
final rule.
PO 00000
Frm 00258
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
After consideration of the public
comments received, we are adopting as
final, with one modification, the
amendments needed to conform our
regulations to the provisions of section
5004 of Pub. L. 109–171, and to add and
correct the cross-references, as
described above.
X. MedPAC Recommendations
We are required by section
1886(e)(4)(B) of the Act to respond to
MedPAC’s IPPS recommendations in
our annual proposed IPPS rule. We have
reviewed MedPAC’s March 2006
‘‘Report to the Congress: Medicare
Payment Policy’’ and have given it
careful consideration in conjunction
with the proposed policies set forth in
this document. MedPAC’s
Recommendation 2A states that ‘‘The
Congress should increase payment rates
for the acute inpatient and outpatient
prospective payment systems in 2007 by
the projected increase in the hospital
market basket index less half of the
Commission’s expectation for
productivity growth.’’ This
recommendation is discussed in
Appendix B to this final rule.
In section II.C. of the preamble of this
final rule, we further address MedPAC’s
2005 recommendations included in
Recommendation 1 in the March 2005
Report to Congress on Physician-Owned
Specialty Hospitals as well as
Recommendation 3, which
recommended that the Secretary
implement MedPAC’s recommended
policies over a transition period. The
recommendations in Recommendation 1
relate to refining the DRGs used under
the IPPS to more fully capture
differences in severity of illness among
patients; basing the DRG relative
weights on the estimated cost of
providing care rather than on charges;
and basing the weights on the national
average of hospitals’’ relative values in
each DRG. In section II.E. of the
preamble to this final rule, we also
further address Recommendation 2 of
the March 2005 Report on PhysicianOwned Specialty Hospitals, which
recommended adjusting the DRG
relative weights to account for
differences in the prevalence of highcost outlier cases.
For further information relating
specifically to the MedPAC reports or to
obtain a copy of the reports, contact
MedPAC at (202) 653–7220, or visit
MedPAC’s Web site at:
www.medpac.gov.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
XI. Health Care Infrastructure
Improvement Program: Selection
Criteria for Loan Program for
Qualifying Hospitals Engaged in
Cancer-Related Health Care and
Forgiveness of Indebtedness
A. Background
Section 1016 of the Medicare
Prescription Drug, Improvement and
Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA) (Pub.
L. 108–173) amended the Act to add
section 1897, which establishes the
Health Care Infrastructure Improvement
Program. Section 1897 of the Act
authorizes the Secretary to establish a
loan program that provides loans to
qualifying hospitals for payment of the
capital costs of eligible projects. Section
1897(d) of the Act specifies that an
eligible project is a project of a
qualifying hospital that is designed to
improve the health care infrastructure of
the hospital, including construction,
renovation, or other capital
improvements. Section 1897(b) of the
Act requires the Secretary to establish
the application process, the terms and
conditions, and other requirements for
the loan program. The statute was
subsequently amended by section 6045
of the Emergency Supplemental
Appropriations Act for Defense, the
Global War on Terror, and Tsunami
Relief, 2005 (the Tsunami Relief Act of
2005) (Pub. L. 109–13) to also provide
that any determination made by the
Secretary under section 1897 of the Act
is not subject to any administrative or
judicial review.
Section 1897(c)(2) of the Act defines
a ‘‘qualifying hospital’’ as a hospital or
entity that is engaged in research in the
causes, prevention, and treatment of
cancer; and is designated as a cancer
center by the National Cancer Institute
(NCI) or is designated by the State
legislature as the official cancer institute
of the State and such designation by the
State legislature occurred prior to
December 8, 2003. Section 1897(c)(3) of
the Act, as added by Pub. L. 109–13,
specifies that an ‘‘entity’’ has the same
meaning as specified in section
501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986 and is exempt from tax under
section 501(a) of the Code; has at least
one existing memorandum of
understanding or affiliation agreement
with a hospital located in the State in
which the entity is located; and retains
clinical outpatient treatment for cancer
on site as well as laboratory research
and education and outreach for cancer
in the same facility. Section 1897(c)(3)
of the Act is effective as if included in
the enactment of Pub. L. 108–173.
Section 1897(f) of the Act provides
that the Secretary may forgive a loan
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
provided to a qualifying hospital, under
terms and conditions that are analogous
to the loan forgiveness provision for
student loans under part D of title IV of
the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20
U.S.C.1087a et seq.). However, the
Secretary must condition such
forgiveness on the establishment by the
hospital of (1) an outreach program for
cancer prevention, early diagnosis, and
treatment that provides services to a
substantial majority of the residents of
the State or region, including residents
of rural areas; (2) an outreach program
for cancer prevention, early diagnosis,
and treatment that provides services to
multiple Indian tribes; and (3) unique
research resources (such as population
databases), or an affiliation with an
entity that has unique research
resources.
In addition, section 1897(h) of the Act
requires the Secretary to submit to
Congress within 4 years after enactment
of Pub. L. 108–173 a report on the
projects for which loans are provided
under section 1897 of the Act and a
recommendation as to whether the
Congress should authorize the Secretary
to continue loans under this section
beyond FY 2008.
Prior to the enactment of Pub. L. 109–
13, section 1897(g) (1) of the Act
provided for the appropriation of
$200,000,000 to carry out the loan
program. The funds allocated for the
loan program are to remain available
during the period beginning on July 1,
2004, and ending on September 30,
2008. However, the Congress rescinded
$58,000,000, through Pub. L. 109–13,
leaving $142,000,000 available for the
loan program. Section 1897(g) of the Act
also states that, of the $142,000,000, not
more than $2,000,000 can be used for
the administration of the loan program
for each fiscal year from FY 2004
through FY 2008). (We note that no
administrative funding was used in FY
2004.)
B. Issuance of an Interim Final Rule
With Comment Period and a Proposed
Regulation
On September 30, 2005, we published
two rules in the Federal Register (an
interim final rule with comment period
(70 FR 57368) and a proposed rule (70
FR 57376)) to establish the loan program
to improve certain hospital
infrastructure, including capital
improvement, as provided for under the
Health Care Infrastructure Improvement
Program established under section 1897
of the Act. In the September 30, 2005
interim final rule with comment period,
we set forth, under a new 42 CFR
Chapter IV, Subchapter H, Part 505, the
Federal regulations established by the
PO 00000
Frm 00259
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48127
Secretary governing requirements for
qualifying hospitals or entities, the
application process, and the criteria and
conditions for selecting eligible projects
under the loan program. In the
September 30, 2005 proposed rule, we
proposed to establish the loan
forgiveness criteria for qualifying
hospitals that receive loans under the
Health Care Infrastructure Improvement
Program.
C. Provisions of the Interim Final Rule
With Comment Period
1. Loan Qualifying Criteria (§§ 505.3,
505.5(a), and 505.11)
In order to receive a loan under the
Health Care Infrastructure Improvement
Program, an applicant must meet the
statutory definition of a qualifying
hospital as defined in sections
1897(c)(2) and (c)(3) of the Act. We
incorporated these definitions in the
regulations at § 505.3.
We specified in the regulations at
§ 505.11 that a qualifying hospital must
submit an application to CMS by a
specified date to request a loan for the
capital costs of an eligible project. We
specified the requirements and
procedures for submittal of the
application.
In § 505.5(a), we provided that the
capital costs for which a qualifying
hospital may obtain a loan are limited
to the reasonable costs incurred by the
hospital, and capitalized on the
Medicare cost report, for any facility or
item of equipment that it has acquired
the possession or use of at the time the
loan funding is awarded.
2. Selection Criteria (§ 505.5(b) and (c))
We established the criteria under
which qualifying hospitals are
prioritized for the loan program. We
specified that we prioritize applicants
that meet the following conditions:
(a) The hospital is located in a State
that, based on population density, is
defined as a rural State.
(2) The hospital is located in a State
with multiple Indian tribes.
We indicated that CMS will send
written notice to qualifying hospitals
that have been selected to participate in
the loan program.
3. Terms of the Loan (§§ 505.7 and
505.9)
Under the terms of the loan program,
we specified that we require an
authorized official of each qualifying
hospital to execute a promissory note,
loan agreement, or any other approved
form that we may designate, to ensure
compliance with the terms of the loan
program. In the interim final rule, we
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48128
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
indicated that each loan recipient
receives a lump sum distribution for
which payment of principal and interest
is deferred for 60 months beginning
with the day of official notification to
the qualifying hospital of loan award.
The loan repayment period is 20 years.
(However, as discussed in section XI.B.
of this preamble, in the September 30,
2005 proposed rule, we further
proposed forgiveness criteria for loans,
as directed by the statute.)
In accordance with the loan criteria,
the loan recipient must agree to make
payments every month for 20 years until
the loan, including interest, is repaid. A
loan recipient may make full
prepayment or partial prepayment
without paying any prepayment charge.
When a prepayment is made, the
qualifying hospital must provide CMS
with written notice.
Furthermore, the loan recipient must
agree that the provisions of a loan under
section 1897 of the Act does not—
• Relieve the hospital of any
obligation to obtain any required State
or local permit or approval with respect
to the project;
• Limit the right of any unit of State
or local government to approve or
regulate any rate of return on private
equity invested in the project; or
• Otherwise supersede any State or
local law (including any regulation)
applicable to the construction or
operation of the project.
4. Public Comments Received on the
Interim Final Rule With Comment
Period
We received seven public comments
on the September 30, 2005 interim final
rule.
Comment: In general, commenters
expressed concern that many qualifying
hospitals providing cancer care to rural
areas and Native populations
throughout the country may not qualify
to participate in the loan program since
the regulatory criteria require that
qualifying hospitals be located in one of
the ten states listed. Moreover, one
commenter was concerned that CMS
may have misconstrued Congressional
intent in establishing the selection
criteria based on the statutory terms for
loan forgiveness. The commenter noted
that the proposed selection criteria
relied on location and population rather
than the merits of the application in
order to award loans. Some commenters
expressed concern that the selection
criteria were too restrictive because
preference was conferred to the 10 least
populated states with the greatest
numbers of Indian tribes in the country.
Some commenters suggested that CMS
expand the selection criteria to allow all
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
qualifying hospitals that serve rural and
Indian tribe populations to be
considered for loan funds. In addition,
one commenter suggested that in order
to maximize the benefit to a greater
number of applicants, CMS limit the
amount of available loan funds to $10
million per State.
Response: The statute instructs the
Secretary to establish criteria for
selecting among qualifying hospitals
that apply for a loan under this section.
The criteria are to consider the extent to
which the project for which the loan is
sought is nationally or regionally
significant, in terms of expanding or
improving the healthcare infrastructure
of the United States or the region or in
terms of the medical benefit that the
project will have. Section 1897 of the
Act also provides for loan forgiveness
and, in setting conditions for loan
forgiveness, requires that qualifying
hospitals establish certain outreach
programs that include rural areas and
Indian tribe populations. Therefore, we
continue to believe it is appropriate to
prioritize qualifying hospitals for
purposes of making loans to qualifying
hospitals based on rural and Indian tribe
criteria as previously discussed in the
interim final rule. We stated in the
interim final rule that, ‘‘Since the statute
outlines specific criteria in which to
forgive loans, we believe that it is
consistent with the Congressional intent
to give priority to qualifying hospitals
that meet at least some of the statutory
conditions for loan forgiveness when
selecting qualifying hospitals for the
loan program’’ (70 FR 57369). We note
that there are many outstanding
hospitals providing cancer care in the
country and we believe the selection
criteria will allow us to select from
applicants that both demonstrate merit
and meet the priorities that are
indicated in the statutory language for
this loan program.
In response to the comment regarding
State limits on available loan funds, we
disagree that a $10 million limit per
State would be in the best interests of
qualifying hospitals. Section 1897(d) of
the Act directs that loan funds are to be
used for qualifying projects, defined in
statute as ‘‘designed to improve the
healthcare infrastructure of the hospital,
including construction, renovation, or
other capital improvements.’’ We note
that construction, renovation, or other
capital improvement projects for
qualifying hospitals providing cancer
care are likely to be costly and require
large expenditures. We believe limiting
the loan amount to a total of $10 million
for all applicants within a State could
inadvertently cause some qualifying
hospitals to receive insufficient funding
PO 00000
Frm 00260
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
for their eligible project. Insufficient
funding may also hinder a qualifying
hospital’s ability to establish the
outreach programs and unique research
resources that are required for loan
forgiveness and intended to benefit the
community through the qualifying
hospital’s participation in this loan
program.
Comment: One commenter noted that
the statutory language did not limit
qualifying hospitals to entities that file
cost reports and suggested that the
regulations be modified to allow a state
university/cancer research center that is
not an entity described at section
501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986, but that meets all other
requirements, to be considered a
qualifying hospital under this loan
program. In addition, the commenter
asked why CMS proposed that a
qualifying hospital that had not
acquired the possession and use of
assets which it intends as a qualifying
project under this loan program must
have entered into a contractual
obligation for those projects before
December 8, 2003, the date of enactment
of Pub. L. 108–173.
Response: We are not requiring that
qualifying hospitals be entities that file
cost reports. Since CMS is administering
the program, we believe that it is
appropriate to apply our reasonable cost
methodology to determine the capital
costs of an eligible project where
applicable. We note that it is the statute
that defines qualifying hospitals to
include an entity described at section
501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986 and not a definition established
through regulations. Finally, we believe
it is appropriate to specify a deadline for
which qualifying hospitals must have
had a written commitment of assets
intended as eligible projects. A deadline
allows CMS to make a determination
that the requested loan amount is
reasonable and appropriate for the
eligible project. Without a deadline we
would not be able to determine the
parameters of the eligible project. We
chose December 8, 2003, because that
was the date Pub. L. 108–173 was
enacted.
5. Provisions of This Final Rule
This final rule finalizes the provisions
set forth in the September 30, 2005
interim final rule with comment,
without modification.
D. Proposed Rule on Forgiveness of
Indebtedness
In the September 30, 2005 proposed
rule, we proposed to establish the loan
forgiveness criteria for qualifying
hospitals that are selected to participate
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
in the loan program under the Health
Care Infrastructure Improvement
Program.
1. Conditions for Loan Forgiveness
(§ 505.13)
As specified in section 1897(f) of the
Act, we proposed to forgive a loan
provided to a qualifying hospital under
terms and conditions that are analogous
to the loan forgiveness provision for
student loans under part D of title IV of
the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20
U.S.C. 1087a et seq.). The student loan
program specifies that in order to be
eligible for loan forgiveness, borrowers
are required to satisfy certain
conditions, such as completing a service
obligation that satisfies certain terms
and conditions as determined by the
Secretary. Therefore, we proposed that,
to fulfill the service obligation,
borrowers must meet the loan
forgiveness conditions based on the
provisions of section 1897(f) of the Act.
Section 1897(f) of the Act provides that
the Secretary shall condition such
forgiveness on the establishment by the
hospital of (1) an outreach program for
cancer prevention, early diagnosis, and
treatment that provides services to a
substantial majority of the residents of
a State or region, including residents of
rural areas; (2) an outreach program for
cancer prevention, early diagnosis, and
treatment that provides services to
multiple Indian tribes; and (3) unique
research resources (such as population
databases), or an affiliation with an
entity that has unique research
resources.
In addition, we proposed that the
qualifying hospital must submit a
written request for loan forgiveness to
CMS by the effective date of the final
rule (that is, October 1, 2006).
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
2. Plan Criteria for Meeting the
Conditions for Loan Forgiveness
(§ 505.15)
In the September 30, 2005 proposed
rule, we proposed to specify the loan
forgiveness criteria under three
domains, as outlined in section XI.C.1 of
this preamble, that are consistent with
the sections 1897(f)(A), (f)(B), and (f)(C)
of the Act: (a) Domain 1—Outreach
program for cancer prevention, early
diagnosis, and treatment that provides
services to a substantial majority of the
residents of a State or region, including
residents of rural areas; (b) Domain 2—
Outreach program for cancer
prevention, early diagnosis, and
treatment that provides services to
multiple Indian tribes; and (c) Domain
3—Unique research resources (such as
population databases), or an affiliation
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
with an entity that has unique research
resources.
Specifically, we proposed to add
§§ 505.13, 505.15, and 505.17 to provide
that the qualifying hospital must
designate in its plan to CMS—
• The population(s) for which it
would target its outreach programs.
• Sufficient detail to clearly describe
how it would designate its targeted
populations and that the populations
designated should be in accordance
with the provisions of the statute.
• A detailed description of how it
would identify the cancer types that it
is targeting.
• A detailed description of the
approaches it would be conducting or
implementing, including the reasons
why the intervention approaches were
selected and why they may make a
difference in improving cancer care for
the targeted population.
• Improvement goals for the
prevention, early diagnosis, and
treatment, for each cancer type
identified in its outreach programs.
• At least one measure (for example,
either an outcome measure or a process
measure) used to track its progress in
achieving the goals it has established for
each area of prevention, early diagnosis,
and treatment, for each cancer type
identified in its plan.
• A description of how it would
establish or maintain existing unique
research resources or how it would
establish or maintain existing unique
research resources or an affiliation with
another entity that has unique research
resources.
We proposed at § 505.13(c) that the
qualifying hospital must submit to CMS
by the timeframe specified by the
Secretary the following: (1) A written
request for loan forgiveness; (2) a plan
describing how the qualifying hospital
would establish, implement or maintain
existing outreach programs for its
targeted populations; and (3) how it
would establish or maintain existing
unique research resources or an
affiliation with an entity that has unique
research resources over the loan
deferment period. We proposed to make
that timeframe 60 days after the
publication of the final rule.
In proposed § 505.3, we proposed to
define ‘‘outreach programs’’ as formal
cancer programs for teaching, diagnostic
screening, therapy or treatment,
prevention, or interventions to enhance
the health and knowledge of their
designated population(s). Likewise, we
proposed to define ‘‘unique research
resources’’ as resources that are used for
the purpose of discovering or testing
options related to the causes,
prevention, and treatment of cancer.
PO 00000
Frm 00261
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48129
We invited specific public comments
on the type of information that must be
included in the plan and the timeframe
for a qualifying hospital to submit its
plan to CMS. We also solicited
comments on whether we should
provide more specific criteria for the
qualifying hospital to use in defining its
targeted populations.
We believed that 60 days after the
final rule publication date is reasonable
time for qualifying hospitals intending
to apply for loan forgiveness to prepare
and submit their initial plan, since the
loan deferment period is up to 60
months after notification of acceptance
in the program and the qualifying
hospital would be assessed on its
performance during the loan deferment
period.
Furthermore, we believed that
requiring the qualifying hospitals to
submit a plan in which they would
determine the targeted population, the
types of cancers (that is, the cancer
types to be considered), goals for
improving prevention, diagnosis, and
treatment, and the measures to track
their progress in reaching the goals
provides flexibility to the qualifying
hospitals as they develop, implement, or
maintain their outreach programs.
We also believed that it is appropriate
to request this level of detail from the
qualifying hospitals because section
1897(h) of the Act requires the Secretary
to submit a report to the Congress before
fiscal year 2008. The report must
indicate the projects for which loans are
provided under this section and
recommend whether the Congress
should authorize the Secretary to
continue loans under this section
beyond fiscal year 2008. Receiving this
information from the qualifying
hospitals is necessary for the Secretary
to make a fully informed
recommendation to the Congress.
Under § 505.17, we proposed that the
qualifying hospital must submit annual
progress reports to CMS describing its
progress in achieving its plan or any
changes to the initial plan and a final
annual report at least 6 months before
the end of the 60-month loan deferment
period.
Further, we proposed under § 505.19
that, if a qualifying hospital meets the
conditions, plan criteria, and reporting
requirements for loan forgiveness
specified in § 505.13, § 505.15, and
§ 505.17, the loan would be forgiven.
We proposed that if the loan is forgiven,
we would send written notification for
the loan forgiveness approval to the loan
recipient at least 90 days before the end
of the loan deferment period. If the loan
recipient does not meet the conditions,
plan criteria, or reporting requirements
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48130
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
for the loan forgiveness specified in
§ 505.13, § 505.15, and § 505.17, we
proposed that we would send written
notification for the denial of the loan
forgiveness.
3. Public Comments Received on the
Proposed Rule and Our Responses
We received one public comment on
the September 30, 2005 proposed rule.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that the proposed loan deferment period
of 60 months, during which the
qualifying hospital is to establish
outreach programs and unique research
resources in accordance with the
statutory conditions for loan
forgiveness, is unnecessarily and
excessively protracted. The commenter
noted that the statute does not dictate
the duration of the loan deferment
period and that the statutory conditions
for loan forgiveness can and should be
accomplished with appropriate speed.
The commenter urged CMS to shorten
the deferment period, suggesting that 36
months is sufficient time for qualifying
hospitals to satisfy the statutory
conditions for loan forgiveness. In fact,
the commenter believed that the most
meaningful steps toward satisfaction of
the conditions for loan forgiveness
should be accomplished within the first
twelve months of the program. The
commenter noted that the shortened
time period would spur qualifying
hospitals to establish the outreach
programs and unique research resources
more quickly thereby maximizing the
benefit to the community and making
the most out of the funding.
Response: The proposed loan
deferment period of 60 months was
intended to ensure that qualifying
hospitals had sufficient time to establish
the outreach programs and unique
research resources to achieve loan
forgiveness. In the proposed rule, we
specifically requested comments from
the public regarding the timeframe in
order to assess whether the proposed
period was appropriate. We appreciate
the commenter’s input that it is possible
to establish the outreach programs and
unique research resources as specified
in the proposed rule within 36 months
and possibly as early as 12 months, the
shortest timeframe for which the
commenter suggested the most
meaningful steps could be
accomplished. While the commenter
suggested that 36 months is sufficient
time for qualifying hospitals to satisfy
the statutory conditions for loan
forgiveness, we find that the
commenter’s additional argument that
delaying loan forgiveness could
inadvertently and unnecessarily delay
providing intended benefits to the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
public to be compelling. Therefore,
considering that a qualifying hospital
may be well on the way to satisfying the
conditions for loan forgiveness within
12 months, and in order to motivate
loan recipients intending to strive for
loan forgiveness to provide this benefit
to the public as soon as feasible, we are
changing the time period in which a
qualifying hospital may be assessed and
approved for loan forgiveness to as early
as 12 months from the date that CMS
notifies the qualifying hospital of the
award of the loan. We note that, while
60 months was likely an overestimate of
the time needed to satisfy the terms for
loan forgiveness, we are reluctant to
limit all qualifying hospitals to 12
months to accomplish the initiatives
required for loan forgiveness based on
the submission of one comment.
Therefore, we believe it is more
appropriate to provide for consideration
of loan forgiveness as early as 12
months from the date CMS notifies the
qualifying hospital of the awarding of
the loan and require that all evaluations
for loan forgiveness must conclude no
later than 60 months from the date CMS
notifies the qualifying hospital of the
awarding of the loan.
4. Provisions of the Final Rule
We are adopting as final the proposed
changes to § 505.3 and the addition of
§§ 505.13 and 505.15, with only minor
editorial changes. To accommodate the
option in which qualifying hospitals
may establish the outreach programs
and unique research resources to
achieve loan forgiveness as early as 12
months after loan notification, we are
modifying § 505.17(b) as proposed to
specify that CMS will use the annual
report to assess the qualifying hospital’s
loan forgiveness status and if the annual
report shows that the qualifying hospital
has fulfilled the conditions, plan
criteria, and reporting requirements for
loan forgiveness specified in §§ 505.13,
505.15, and § 505.17, CMS will notify
the qualifying hospital in writing that
the loan is forgiven. We note that at
§ 505.17(c), we specify that the
qualifying hospital’s final annual report
is due to CMS at least 6 months before
the end of the loan deferment period
specified in § 505.7(b). We are also
modifying § 505.19 to specify that CMS
will send a written notification of
approval for loan forgiveness to the
qualifying hospital by the earlier of (1)
30 days from the date of receipt of the
annual report that shows the qualifying
hospital has satisfied the requirements
for loan forgiveness; or (2) 90 days
before the end of the loan deferment
period defined in § 505.7(b).
PO 00000
Frm 00262
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E. Statutory Requirements for Issuance
of Regulations
Section 902 of Pub. L. 108–173
(MMA) amended section 1871(a) of the
Act and requires the Secretary, in
consultation with the Director of the
Office of Management and Budget, to
establish and publish timelines for the
publication of Medicare final
regulations based on the previous
publication of a Medicare proposed or
interim final regulation. Section 902 of
the MMA also states that the timelines
for these regulations may vary but shall
not exceed 3 years after publication of
the preceding proposed or interim final
regulation except under exceptional
circumstances.
This final rule finalizes provisions set
forth in the September 30, 2005 interim
final rule with comment (70 FR 57368)
and the September 30, 2005 proposed
rule (70 FR 57376). In addition, this
final rule is being published within the
3-year time limit imposed by section
902 of the MMA. Therefore, we believe
that the final rule is in accordance with
the Congress’ intent to ensure timely
publication of final regulations.
XII. Exclusion of Vendor Purchases
Made Under the Competitive
Acquisition Program (CAP) for
Outpatient Drugs and Biologicals Under
Part B for the Purpose of Calculating
the Average Sales Price (ASP)
[If you choose to comment on issues in
this section, please include the caption
‘‘Exclusion of CAP from the ASP
Calculation’’ at the beginning of your
comments.]
A. Background
1. Average Sales Price (ASP)
Section 303(c) of Pub. L. 108–173 (the
MMA) revised the drug payment
methodology by creating a new pricing
system based on the ASP of a drug or
biological. Effective January 2005,
Medicare pays for the vast majority of
Part B covered drugs and biologicals
using a drug payment methodology
based on the ASP. (Please note that
information on covered outpatient drugs
and biologicals can be found at:
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
McrPartBDrugAvgSalesPrice/.) In
accordance with sections 1847A and
1927(b)(3)(A) of the Act, manufacturers
submit the ASP data for their products
to us on a quarterly basis, at the 11-digit
National Drug Code (NDC) level.
These data include each
manufacturer’s total sales (in dollars)
and number of units of a drug to all
purchasers in the United States in a
calendar quarter (excluding certain sales
exempted by statute), with limited
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
exceptions, and other data elements
pertaining to the NDC. The sales price
is net of discounts such as volume
discounts, prompt pay discounts, cash
discounts, free goods that are contingent
on any purchase requirement,
chargebacks, and rebates (other than
rebates under section 1927 of the Act).
The Medicare payment rate is based on
106 percent of the ASP, less applicable
deductible and coinsurance amounts,
and is updated quarterly.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
2. Competitive Acquisition Program
(CAP)
Section 303(d) of Pub. L. 108–173
added a new section 1847B to the Act.
This section provides for an alternative
payment methodology to the ASP for
certain Part B covered drugs and
biologicals that are not paid on a cost or
prospective payment basis by
establishing a CAP for the acquisition of
and payment for competitively-biddable
Part B covered drugs and biologicals.
This program began on July 1, 2006.
Physicians now have a choice
between—(1) obtaining these drugs from
approved CAP vendors; and (2)
acquiring and billing for Part B covered
drugs under the ASP system. In the
March 4, 2005 Federal Register (70 FR
10746), we proposed regulations to
establish provisions for acquiring and
billing for drugs and biologicals through
the CAP . (Please note that information
on the CAP can be found at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/
CompetitiveAcquisforBios/.)
3. Regulatory History
In response to the March 4, 2005
proposed rule, many commenters
requested clarification about whether
the prices determined under the CAP
are taken into account in computing the
ASP under section 1847A of the Act.
Most commenters recommended that
purchases made under the CAP be
excluded from the ASP calculation.
However, one commenter suggested
that, because the CAP was not included
in the list of sales that are exempt from
the ASP calculation set forth in section
1847A(c)(2) of the Act, prices under the
CAP could not be excluded. In our July
6, 2005 interim final rule with comment
period (70 FR 39022), we responded
that because the CAP was not included
in the section 1847A(c)(2) of the Act list
of sales that are exempt from the ASP
calculation, we believed that sales to
vendors made under the CAP must be
included in the ASP.
Commenters on the July 6, 2005
interim final rule with comment period
reiterated their objections to including
purchases made by vendors under the
CAP in the ASP calculations. These
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
commenters requested that we change
our interpretation of our statutory
authority. Several commenters provided
detailed legal arguments supporting the
exclusion of purchases by vendors made
under the CAP from the calculation of
ASP.
Some commenters stated that we
could use our demonstration authority
to exclude CAP prices from ASP. Other
commenters took the position that we
could use our authority to establish CAP
drug categories to establish a category of
drugs and biologicals that would be
excluded from the ASP calculation.
Several commenters stated that sales to
approved CAP vendors should be
considered excluded from the
determination of ‘‘best price’’ under
section 1927(c)(1)(C) of the Act. These
commenters maintained that by virtue
of this exclusion, prices of CAP drugs
and biologicals could be excluded from
the calculation of ASP. One commenter
contended that sales to CAP vendors are
excluded from best price because CAP
vendors do not fit squarely into the list
of entities contained in the definition of
‘‘best price’’ in section 1927(c)(1)(C)(i)
of the Act. Another commenter
suggested that approved CAP vendors,
as Medicare contractors, should be
considered Federal purchasers exempt
from the determination of best price
under sections 1927(c)(1)(C)(i)(I)
through (II) of the Act.
Finally, several commenters stated
that the intent of Congress was to create
two different and separate structures,
with separate pricing, in order to
provide physicians with a choice of
programs. These commenters referenced
the language contained in sections
1847A(a)(2) and 1847B(a)(1)(A) of the
Act in support of their contentions.
Section 1847A(a)(2) of the Act states
that section 1847A ‘‘shall not apply in
the case of a physician who elects under
subsection (a)(1)(A)(ii) of section 1847B
for that section to apply instead of this
section for the payment for drugs and
biologicals.’’ Section 1847B(a)(1)(A) of
the Act states that ‘‘this section shall not
apply in the case of a physician who
elects section 1847A to apply.’’ These
commenters stated that this language,
which is contained in both the ASP and
CAP statutory provisions, clearly
indicates that Congress intended the
two programs to operate independently.
These commenters asserted that as
independent programs, the pricing
methodologies under ASP and the CAP
should not be linked. These commenters
further believed that including CAP
prices in the calculation of ASP would
undermine the CAP program by
virtually eliminating any incentive that
PO 00000
Frm 00263
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48131
a manufacturer might have to offer
discounts to CAP vendors.
In response to the comments that we
received on this issue, we revisited our
analysis of our statutory authority. In
the November 21, 2005 Federal Register
(70 FR 70477), we published an interim
final rule with comment in which we
stated that we did not find entirely
persuasive the commenters’ arguments
regarding demonstration authority, best
price, or the definition of categories as
a legal basis for revising our
interpretation. However, we recognized
the commenters’ concerns about the
effect of including CAP prices in the
calculation of ASP and agreed that the
best outcome for both the ASP
methodology and the CAP programs
would be one in which prices under
CAP did not affect payment amounts
under the ASP methodology. In
addition, we found compelling the
commenters’ statements about the
separation of the ASP and CAP
programs and that the two programs are
intended to be alternatives to each
other. We acknowledged the possibility
that Congress intended the programs to
be completely independent of each
other.
Therefore, as a result of our
reassessment, and in accordance with
our statutory authority, including our
authority under section 1847A(b)(2)(B)
of the Act to establish methods for
counting units, we decided to exclude,
for the initial 3-year contract period
under the CAP, units of CAP drugs that
are administered to beneficiaries by
participating CAP physicians. We
revised § 414.802 (definition of unit) to
reflect the exclusion of units of CAP
drugs administered to beneficiaries by
participating CAP physicians. We
further stated that we intend to examine
the effect of this exclusion and, if
necessary, revisit our decision at the
end of the initial 3-year period of the
CAP. We also clarified that
manufacturers must exclude rebates and
lagged price concessions attributable to
units of CAP drugs administered to a
beneficiary by a participating CAP
physician when using the estimation
methodology specified in § 414.804.
On April 21, 2006, we announced the
selection of the approved CAP vendor
for the initial phase of the CAP. The
approved CAP vendor is required to
provide manufacturers, upon request,
with information necessary to determine
which sales to the approved CAP
vendor are sales of CAP drugs that are
excluded from the ASP calculation.
We did not receive any timely
comments on the November 21, 2005
interim final rule with comment period.
In a March 3, 2006 Federal Register
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48132
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
notice (71 FR 10975), we published a
PRA notice soliciting comment on our
proposed modification of the OMBapproved ASP information collection
requirements, regarding the collection of
the number of CAP units excluded from
the ASP calculation. In response to this
notice, a commenter stated that, in
certifying the accuracy of the submitted
ASP data, manufacturers must rely on
approved CAP vendors to provide the
number of units of CAP drugs that are
administered to beneficiaries by
participating CAP physicians. The
commenter noted that CAP vendors are
the only entities with direct information
on CAP units sold. Because of this
circumstance, the commenter believed
that the requirement to exclude units of
CAP drugs administered to beneficiaries
by participating CAP physicians places
the manufacturer in the untenable
position of reporting ASP and certifying
reports of ASP based on second-hand
information. Further, the commenter
noted that manufacturers may not have
timely access to this information and
they cannot independently confirm its
accuracy. The commenter suggested that
we consider an alternative approach.
B. Regulation Change
Existing § 414.802 requires that,
during the first 3 years of the CAP, the
method for counting units excludes
units of CAP drugs (as defined in
§ 414.902) administered to a beneficiary
by a participating CAP physician (as
defined in § 414.902). As a result of
comments received on our March 3,
2006 PRA notice and our ongoing work
with manufacturers, we learned that
manufacturers were concerned that they
would have difficulty obtaining the
information necessary to accurately
exclude CAP units (as currently defined
in § 414.802) from the ASP calculation.
We have reexamined our current
definition of unit based on the
manufacturers concerns.
After reexamination of the issues, we
have determined that we did not fully
consider that the current definition of
unit may have unintended results. For
example, an unintended result occurs
when, as permitted by the statute in
certain emergency situations under the
CAP, the participating CAP physician
administers a drug from his or her stock
and orders a replacement from the
approved CAP vendor. Our existing
regulations specify a unit qualifies as a
CAP unit when it is administered to a
beneficiary by a participating CAP
physician. However, in this instance,
the drug that was administered was
obtained outside the CAP, and the drug
supplied by the approved CAP vendor
was not administered to the beneficiary.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Therefore, under our current definition
of ‘‘unit,’’ under the CAP, the
manufacturer could not exclude the
units of CAP drugs that participating
CAP physicians obtain from approved
CAP vendors in accordance with the
resupply provisions of § 414.906(e).
This result would have the effect of
inappropriately including the sales of
units of CAP drugs in the ASP
calculation. Moreover, this result is
inconsistent with our intended policy.
In addition, requiring manufacturers to
track administration of units of CAP
drugs that approved CAP vendors
supply to participating CAP physicians
to resupply the physician’s stock (in
order to determine whether such drugs
are ever administered to a Medicare
beneficiary for purposes of excluding
them from the calculation of ASP)
would be burdensome for manufacturers
and participating CAP physicians.
These burdens are caused by the fact
that manufacturers would have to rely
on data from the participating CAP
physicians to identify such units.
However, our regulations and CAP
participation agreement do not require
participating CAP physicians to track
the administration of drugs from their
private stock.
Our decision to exclude CAP units
from the ASP was based on our
concerns about the effect of including
CAP prices in the calculation of ASP.
The decision also was based on our
belief that the best outcome for both the
ASP methodology and the CAP
programs would be one in which prices
under CAP did not affect payment
amounts under the ASP methodology.
To remedy this unintended result and to
better effectuate our intent in excluding
CAP units, we are revising the
definition of ‘‘unit’’ at § 414.802 for ASP
purposes during the first 3 years of the
CAP. We are persuaded by the
commenters and by our review of the
current regulation that: (1) the current
definition of unit does not achieve the
policy goal of establishing methods of
counting units so that the payment
amounts under the ASP methodology
are not affected by the CAP; and (2) an
alternative definition of unit will be
significantly less burdensome on
manufacturer, CAP vendors, and
participating CAP physicians.
Therefore, as a result of our
reexamination, and in accordance with
our authority under section
1847A(b)(2)(B) of the Act to establish
methods for counting units, we have
decided to revise our definition of
‘‘unit’’ in our regulations to exclude, for
the initial 3-year contract period under
the CAP, units of CAP drugs sold to an
approved CAP vendor for use under the
PO 00000
Frm 00264
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
CAP. We note that the revised definition
is consistent with suggestions made by
commenters in response to the March 4,
2005 proposed rule. Many commenters
suggested that ‘‘sales to’’ or ‘‘purchases
by’’ approved CAP vendors be excluded
from the calculation of ASP. However,
we are clarifying, that only those units
of CAP drugs sold to an approved CAP
vendor for use under the CAP are
excluded from the calculation of ASP.
In implementing this revised
definition of unit, it is our intent to
facilitate the start up of the CAP and
reduce complexities and burdens
associated with identifying units of CAP
drugs excluded from the calculation of
ASP. We believe the revised definition
of unit establishes a method for
counting units so that the payment
amounts under the ASP methodology
are not affected by the CAP. Further, we
believe that manufacturers can more
readily verify excluded units of CAP
drugs in accordance with the revised
definition.
Manufacturers must continue to
exclude rebates and lagged price
concessions attributable to units of CAP
drugs sold to approved CAP vendors for
use under the CAP.
We welcome comments on the
exclusion of CAP drug units from the
calculation of the ASP. We also seek
comments on accounting for this
exclusion when estimating lagged price
concessions. We will address comments
received in a subsequent Federal
Register document.
After the initial 3-year period of the
CAP, we will evaluate the impact on
approved CAP vendors, manufacturers,
and others of excluding units sold to
approved CAP vendors for use under
the CAP from the calculation of ASP. If
there appears to be a reason not to
continue to exclude units of CAP drugs
sold to approved CAP vendors for use
under the CAP from the calculation of
ASP, we will undertake rulemaking to
describe our findings and conclusions
and to seek public comment.
XIII. Other Required Information
A. Requests for Data From the Public
In order to respond promptly to
public requests for data related to the
prospective payment system, we have
established a process under which
commenters can gain access to raw data
on an expedited basis. Generally, the
data are available in computer tape or
cartridge format; however, some files are
available on diskette as well as on the
Internet at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
providers/hipps. In the FY 2007 IPPS
proposed rule (71 FR 24137 through
24139), we published a list of data files
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
that are available for purchase from
CMS or that may be downloaded from
the Internet without charge.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
B. Collection of Information
Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 (PRA), we are required to
provide 60-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
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.
The following information collection
requirements are included in this final
rule and their associated burdens are
subject to the PRA:
Section 412.64 Federal Rates for
Inpatient Operating Costs for Federal
Fiscal Year 2005 and Subsequent Fiscal
Years (Reporting of Hospital Quality
Data for Annual Hospital Payment
Update)
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 23996), we outlined the
requirements for this section and we are
restating those requirements and burden
estimates as part of this final rule.
Section 412.64(d)(2) requires hospitals,
in order to qualify for the full annual
market basket update, to submit quality
data on a quarterly basis to CMS, as
specified by CMS.
As discussed in the section IV.A. of
this preamble, section 5001(a) of Pub. L.
109–171 sets forth new requirements for
the Reporting of Hospital Quality Data
for Annual Payment Update
(RHQDAPU) program. New sections
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(III) and (IV) of the Act
require that we expand the ‘‘starter’’ set
of 10 measures that we currently use. In
accordance with section 238(b) of Pub.
L. 108–173, effective for all payments
beginning with FY 2007, the set of
measures will expand from 10 to 21
measures, as we adopt the baseline set
of performance measures set forth in a
2005 report issued by the Institute of
Medicine (IOM) of the National
Academy of Sciences.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
The burden estimate has been
updated based on increased number of
collected measures and the anticipated
levels of participation by hospitals. We
estimate that there will be
approximately 3,700 respondents per
year. Of this number, approximately
3,100 hospitals are JCAHO accredited
and are currently collected measures
and submitting data to the JCAHO on a
quarterly basis. Of the JCAHO
accredited hospitals, approximately
1,080 are collecting the same measures
CMS will be collecting for public
reporting and there is no additional
burden for these hospitals.
Approximately 1,940 of the JCAHOaccredited hospitals will need to collect
SCIP in addition to the data already
collected for maintaining JCAHO
accreditation. Approximately 60
accredited hospitals do not submit for
the three starter set topics and must
begin collecting and submitting data on
all four topics. In addition, there are
approximately 600 hospitals that do not
participate in the JCAHO accreditation
process. These non-JCAHO hospitals
will have the additional burden of
collecting data on all four topics.
For JCAHO hospitals, we estimate it
will take 25 hours per quarter per topic
for collection. We expect the burden for
hospitals to total 238,560 hours per
year, including time allotted for
overhead. For non-JCAHO accredited
hospitals, we estimate the burden to be
246,000 hours per year including
overhead. The total number of burden
hours for all hospitals is 485,560 hours.
The number of respondents will vary
according to the level of voluntary
participation. One hundred percent of
the data may be collected electronically.
There will be no additional burden
placed on hospitals that submit this data
in response to section 5001(b) of Pub. L.
109–171.
We are revising this collection to
include the burden associated with the
collection of the additional quality
measures. However, the burden
associated with the requirements under
§ 412.64(d) is currently approved under
OMB Number 0938–0918, with an
expiration date of December 31, 2008.
Section 412.92 Special Treatment:
Sole Community Hospitals
In the FY 2007 proposed rule (71 FR
23996), we outlined the requirements
for § 412.92. We are restating those
requirements and burden estimates as
part of this final rule. Section
412.92(b)(3) requires an approved sole
community hospital (SCH) to notify the
appropriate fiscal intermediary of any
change which would affect its
classification as an SCH.
PO 00000
Frm 00265
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48133
The burden associated with this
requirement is the time and effort it
would take for the SCH to provide such
notification to the fiscal intermediary.
We estimate that on an annual basis it
would take an SCH 1 hour to provide
notification. While this requirement is
subject to the PRA, we believe the
requirement is exempt because it
impacts less than 10 SCHs.
Section 412.108 Special Treatment:
Medicare-Dependent, Small Rural
Hospitals
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 23996), we outlined the
requirements for this section. We are
restating those requirements and burden
estimates as part of this final rule.
Section 412.108(b)(4) requires an
approved MDH to notify the appropriate
fiscal intermediary of any change which
would affect its status as an MDH.
The burden associated with this
requirement is the time and effort it
would take for the MDH to provide such
notification to the fiscal intermediary.
We estimate that on an annual basis it
would take an MDH 1 hour to provide
notification. While this requirement is
subject to the PRA, we believe the
requirement is exempt because it
impacts less than 10 MDHs.
Section 412.525 Adjustments to the
Federal Prospective Payment
In the RY 2007 LTCH PPS proposed
rule (71 FR 4648), we outlined the
collection of information requirements
associated with § 412.525 and we are
restating those requirements and burden
estimates as part of this final rule.
Section 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(A) states that
CMS may specify an alternative to the
cost-to-charge ratio otherwise applicable
under paragraph (a)(4)(iv)(B) of this
section. In addition, a hospital may also
request that its fiscal intermediary use a
different (higher or lower) CCR based on
substantial evidence provided by the
hospital.
The burden associated with this
requirement is the time and effort
necessary for a hospital to gather,
process, and submit the necessary
documentation to its fiscal intermediary
to substantiate its request for the use of
a different CCR by its fiscal
intermediary. For example, necessary
documentation, as stipulated by CMS
and the fiscal intermediary, may include
but not be limited to financial records
documenting the hospital’s cost and
charges.
The estimated burden for this
requirement is 8 hours per hospital.
Therefore, we estimate that it would
require 80 annual hours (8 hours x 10
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48134
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
facilities), to comply with this
requirement.
We initiated the OMB approval
process by publishing a 60-day Federal
Register notice on July 21, 2006 (71 FR
41448).
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Section 412.529 Special Payment
Provision for Short-Stay Outliers
In the RY 2007 LTCH PPS proposed
rule (71 FR 4648), we also outlined the
collection of information requirements
associated with § 412.529 and we are
restating these requirements and burden
estimates as part of this final rule.
Section 412.529(c)(4)(iv)(A) states that
CMS may specify an alternative to the
CCR otherwise applicable under
paragraph (c)(4)(iv)(B) of this section. In
addition, a hospital may also request
that its FI use a different (higher or
lower) CCR based on substantial
evidence provided by the hospital.
The burden associated with this
requirement is the time and effort
necessary for a hospital to gather,
process, and submit the necessary
documentation to its fiscal intermediary
to substantiate its request for the use of
a different CCR by its fiscal
intermediary. For example, necessary
documentation, as stipulated by CMS
and the fiscal itnermediary, may include
but not be limited to financial records
documenting the hospital’s cost and
charges.
The estimated burden for this
requirement is 8 hours per hospital.
Therefore, we estimate that it would
require 80 annual hours (8 hours x 10
facilities), to comply with this
requirement.
We initiated the OMB approval
process by publishing a 60-day Federal
Register notice on July 21, 2006 (71 FR
41448).
Section 505.13 Conditions for Loan
Forgiveness
In the September 30, 2005 Federal
Register (70 FR 57376), we published a
proposed rule that outlined the
requirements for § 505.13 and we are
restating those requirements and
evaluation of the burden as part of this
final rule. Section 505.13(d) requires a
hospital seeking loan forgiveness to
submit to CMS, within the timeframe
specified by the Secretary, a written
request for loan forgiveness and a loan
forgiveness plan that meets the criteria
specified in § 505.15.
The burden associated with this
requirement is the time and effort
needed to draft and submit the written
request of forgiveness and the time and
effort to develop and submit a loan
forgiveness plan. While these
requirements are subject to the PRA, we
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
believe they are exempt as defined in 5
CFR 1320.3(c)(4). These requirements
will impact less than 10 hospitals.
This final rule imposes collection of
information requirements as outlined in
the regulation text and specified above.
However, this final rule also makes
reference to several associated
information collections that are not
discussed in the regulation text. The
following is a discussion of these
collections, which have received the
Office of Management and Budget’s
(OMB) approval:
Occupational Mix Adjustment to the FY
2007 Index (Hospital Wage Index
Occupational Mix Survey)
As stated in section III.C. and III.G. of
this preamble, for FY 2007 in order to
comply with the Bellevue decision,
CMS will base the occupational mix
adjustment on data collected from the
2006 survey. CMS submitted a revised
information collection request to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) that contained the existing
burden and the additional burden
associated with collecting new
occupational mix data from hospitals to
determine the occupational mix
adjustment by September 30, 2006.
The burden associated with this
information collection request is the
time and effort required to collect and
submit the data in the Hospital Wage
Index Occupational Mix Survey to CMS.
While this burden is subject to the PRA,
it is already approved under OMB
control number 0938–0907, with an
expiration date of May 31, 2009.
Revisions to the Wage Index Based on
Hospital Redesignations (Medicare
Geographic Classification Review
Board)
As noted in section III.H of this
preamble, section 1886(d)(10) of the Act
established the MGCRB, an entity that
has the authority to accept IPPS hospital
applications requesting geographic
reclassification for wage index or
standardized payment amounts and to
issue decisions on these requests. It is
important for CMS to ensure the
accuracy of the MGCRB decisions and
remain apprised of potential payment
impacts. Our regulations at § 412.256
require a hospital to submit a copy of its
MGCRB application to CMS.
The burden associated with this
requirement is the time and effort
associated with a hospital compiling
and submitting a copy of its MGCRB
application to CMS. While this
requirement is subject to the PRA, it is
currently approved under OMB control
number 0938–0573, with an expiration
date of November 30, 2008.
PO 00000
Frm 00266
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Exclusion of Vendor Purchases Made
Under the Competitive Acquisition
Program (CAP) for Outpatient Drugs and
Biologicals Under Part B for the Purpose
of Calculating the Average Sales Price
(ASP)
Section XII.A.1 of this preamble
provides background information
pertaining to the use of the average sales
price (ASP) as the basis for our drug
payment methodology. In accordance
with section 1847A of the Act, most
Medicare Part B covered drugs and
biologicals not paid on a cost or
prospective payment basis are paid
based on the average sales price of the
drug or biological, beginning in CY
2005. The ASP data reporting
requirements are specified in Section
1927 of the Act. The reported ASP data
are used to establish the Medicare
payment amounts.
Section XII.A.2 and XII.A.3 of this
preamble discuss the ASP payment
methodology, the CAP for certain Part B
covered drugs, and the regulatory
history of ASP and CAP. The CAP
program began on July 1, 2006. The
program provides physicians with a
choice between obtaining Part B covered
drugs from approved CAP vendors, or
acquiring and billing for Part B drugs
under the ASP system.
As discussed in a November 21, 2005
(70 FR 70478) interim final rule with
comment period and a March 3, 2006
(71 FR 10975) 30-day PRA Federal
Register notice, the collection of ASP
data imposes information collection
requirements on the public. The burden
associated with ASP information
collection requirements is the time and
effort required by manufacturers of
Medicare Part B drugs and biologicals to
prepare and submit the required data to
CMS. While these requirements are
subject to the PRA, they are currently
approved under OMB control number
0938–0921, with an expiration date of
May 31, 2009.
As required by section 3504(h) of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, we
have submitted a copy of this document
to the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for its review of these
information collection requirements.
C. Waiver of Proposed Rulemaking and
Delay in the Effective Date
We ordinarily publish a notice of
proposed rulemaking in the Federal
Register and invite public comment on
the proposed rule. The notice of
proposed rulemaking includes a
reference to the legal authority under
which the rule is proposed, and the
terms and substances of the proposed
rule or a description of the subjects and
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
issues involved. This procedure can be
waived, however, if an agency finds
good cause that a notice-and-comment
procedure is impracticable,
unnecessary, or contrary to the public
interest and incorporates a statement of
the finding and its reasons in the rule
issued.
We find good cause to waive the
requirement for publication of a notice
of proposed rulemaking and public
comment for the provisions of section
XII. of this preamble on the grounds that
it is necessary to implement this change
immediately in order to ensure that a
more accurate, and less burdensome,
implementation of our policy is in place
in time for it to be effective for the next
ASP reporting period. We believe that
revising the definition of ‘‘unit’’ as
described in this rule will best ensure
that the payment amounts under the
ASP methodology are not affected by
the CAP, consistent with our stated
policy. Without an immediate revision
to the definition of ‘‘unit,’’ the
regulation requires a level of complexity
in determining how to exclude CAP
prices that we did not intend and places
unintended burdens on participating
CAP physicians. Further, unless the
revised definition of ‘‘unit’’ is
implemented immediately, it would not
be effective in time for manufacturers to
accurately exclude units of CAP drugs
sold to approved CAP vendors for use
under the CAP during the third calendar
quarter of 2006 and certify their reports.
We also ordinarily provide a 60-day
delay in the effective date of the
provisions of a rule in accordance with
the Administrative Procedure Act,
which normally requires a 30-day delay
in the effective date of a final rule, and
the Congressional Review Act, which
requires a 60-day delay in the effective
date of a major rule. However, we can
waive the delay in effective date if the
Secretary finds, for good cause, that the
delay is impracticable, unnecessary or
contrary to the public interest, and
incorporates a statement of the finding
and the reasons in the rule issued (5
U.S.C. 553(d)(3); 5 U.S.C. 808(2)).
We find that good cause exists to
waive the 60-day delay in effectiveness
for the provisions of section XII. of this
preamble and § 414.802 so that these
portions of this rule take effect
immediately upon publication in the
Federal Register. Unless the revised
definition of ‘‘unit’’ is implemented
immediately, it would not be effective
in time for manufacturers to accurately
exclude units of CAP drugs sold to
approved CAP vendors for use under
the CAP during the third calendar
quarter of 2006. As noted above, a delay
in implementation of this refinement
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
would impose costs burdens on
manufacturers and participating CAP
physicians that we did not intend.
Further, without this refinement,
manufacturers may be unable to certify
the accuracy of their ASPs. Because
manufactures must certify their ASPs,
this refinement must be in place before
the beginning of the next ASP reporting
period. For these reasons, we find good
cause to waive the 60-day delay in the
effective date and these regulations will
be effective on August 18, 2006.
Moreover, in section II.c.iv. of the
Addendum to this final rule, we discuss
a technical correction that we are
making to remove the second sentence
from § 412.116(e) of our regulations. We
find it unnecessary to undertake noticeand-comment rulemaking with respect
to removing this sentence because this
correction merely removes a sentence
that previously was struck from our
regulations, but was inadvertently
reinstated. We note that this change to
the regulations underwent notice-andcomment rulemaking when it was
initially removed from the regulations
(68 FR 34515). Thus, because the public
already had opportunity to comment on
this policy, additional comment would
be unnecessary.
D. Response to Comments
Because of the large number of
comments we normally receive on
Federal Register documents, we are not
able to acknowledge or respond to them
individually. We will consider all
comments on the CAP ASP provisions
we receive by the date and time
specified in the ‘‘DATES’’ section of this
preamble, and, when we proceed with
a subsequent document, we will
respond to the comments in the
preamble to that document.
48135
42 CFR Part 414
Administrative practice and
procedure, Health facilities, Health
professions, Kidney diseases, Medicare,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
42 CFR Part 424
Emergency medical services, Health
facilities, Health professions, Medicare.
42 CFR Part 485
Grant programs—health, Health
facilities, Medicaid, Medicare,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
42 CFR Part 489
Health facilities, Medicare, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 505
Administrative practice and
procedure, Health facilities, Loan
programs, Infrastructure improvement
program, Reporting and recordkeeping,
and Rural areas.
I For the reasons stated in the preamble
of this final rule, the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services is
amending 42 CFR Chapter IV as follows:
PART 409—HOSPITAL INSURANCE
BENEFITS
1. The authority citation for part 409
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the
Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302 and
1395hh).
2. Section 409.3 is amended by
revising paragraph (e) under the
definition of ‘‘Qualified hospital’’ to
read as follows:
I
§ 409.3
Definitions.
Administrative practice and
procedure, Health facilities, Medicare,
Puerto Rico, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
*
*
*
*
Qualified hospital means a facility
that—* * *
(e) If it is a foreign hospital, is
licensed, or approved as meeting the
standard for licensing, by the
appropriate foreign licensing agency,
and for purposes of furnishing
nonemergency services to U.S.
residents, is accredited by the Joint
Commission on Accreditation of
Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO), or
by a foreign program under standards
that CMS finds to be equivalent to those
of JCAHO.
I 3. Section 409.5 is revised to read as
follows:
42 CFR Part 413
§ 409.5
List of Subjects
42 CFR Part 409
Health Facilities, Medicare.
42 CFR Part 410
Health facilities, Health professions,
Kidney diseases, Laboratories,
Medicare, Rural areas, X-rays.
42 CFR Part 412
Health facilities, Kidney diseases,
Medicare, Puerto Rico, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
PO 00000
Frm 00267
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
*
General description of benefits.
Hospital insurance (Part A of
Medicare) helps pay for inpatient
hospital or inpatient CAH services and
posthospital SNF care. It also pays for
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48136
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
home health services and hospice care.
There are limitations on the number of
days of care that Medicare can pay for
and there are deductible and
coinsurance amounts for which the
beneficiary is responsible. For each type
of service, certain conditions must be
met as specified in the pertinent
sections of this subpart and in part 418
of this chapter regarding hospice care.
Conditions for payment of emergency
inpatient services furnished by a
nonparticipating U.S. hospital and for
services furnished in a foreign country
are set forth in subparts G and H of part
424 of this chapter.
PART 410—SUPPLEMENTARY
MEDICAL INSURANCE (SMI)
BENEFITS
4. The authority citation for part 410
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the
Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302 and
1395hh).
5. Section 410.66 is revised to read as
follows:
I
§ 410.66 Emergency outpatient services
furnished by a nonparticipating hospital
and services furnished in a foreign country.
Conditions for payment of emergency
inpatient services furnished by a
nonparticipating U.S. hospital and for
services furnished in a foreign country
are set forth in subparts G and H of part
424 of this chapter.
PART 412—PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT
SYSTEMS FOR INPATIENT HOSPITAL
SERVICES
6. The authority citation for part 412
is revised to read as follows:
I
Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the
Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302 and
1395hh), and sec. 124 of Pub. L. 106–113
(113 Stat. 1501A–332).
7. Section 412.8 is amended by—
a. Revising paragraph (b)(2).
b. Adding a new paragraph (c).
The revision and addition read as
follows:
I
I
I
§ 412.8 Publication of schedules for
determining prospective payment rates.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) Except as provided in paragraph
(c) of this section, CMS publishes a
Federal Register document setting forth
final methods, amounts, and factors for
determining inpatient prospective
payment rates not later than the August
1 before the Federal fiscal year in which
the rates would apply.
(c) Publication schedule for FY 2007.
For FY 2007, not later than August 1,
2006, CMS publishes a Federal Register
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
document setting forth a description of
the methodology and data used in
computing the inpatient prospective
payment rates for that year.
I 8. Section 412.22 is amended by—
I a. Revising the introductory text of
paragraph (f).
I b. Adding a new paragraph (f)(3).
I c. Revising paragraph (h)(1).
I d. In paragraph (h)(2), removing the
phrase ‘‘(h)(3), (h)(6), and (h)(7) of this
section’’ and adding the phrase ‘‘(h)(3),
(h)(4), (h)(5), (h)(7), and (h)(8) of this
section’’ in its place.
I e. Redesignating paragraphs (h)(5),
(h)(6), and (h)(7) as paragraphs (h)(6),
(h)(7), and (h)(8), respectively.
I f. Revising paragraph (h)(3).
I g. Revising paragraph (h)(4).
I h. Adding a new paragraph (h)(5).
I i. In newly redesignated paragraph
(h)(6), removing the phrase ‘‘(h)(1)
through (h)(4) of this section’’ and
adding the phrase ‘‘(h)(1) through (h)(5)
of this section’’ in its place.
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
§ 412.22 Excluded hospitals and hospital
units: General rules.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Application for certain hospitals.
Except as provided in paragraph (f)(3) of
this section, if a hospital was excluded
from the prospective payment systems
under the provisions of this section on
or before September 30, 1995, and at
that time occupied space in a building
also used by another hospital, or in one
or more buildings located on the same
campus as buildings used by another
hospital, the criteria in paragraph (e) of
this section do not apply to the hospital
as long as the hospital—
*
*
*
*
*
(3) For cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006, in
applying the provisions of paragraph
(f)(1) or (f)(2) of this section, any
hospital that was excluded from the
prospective payment systems under the
provisions of this section on or before
September 30, 1995, and at that time
occupied space in a building also used
by another hospital, or in one or more
buildings located on the same campus
as buildings used by another hospital
may increase or decrease the square
footage or decrease the number of beds
considered to be part of the hospital at
any time without affecting the
provisions of paragraph (f)(1) or (f)(2) of
this section.
(i) If a hospital to which the
provisions of paragraph (f)(1) of this
section applies decreases its number of
beds below the number of beds
considered to be part of the hospital on
September 30, 1995, it may
PO 00000
Frm 00268
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
subsequently increase the number of
beds at any time as long as the resulting
total number of beds considered to be
part of the hospital does not exceed the
number of beds at the hospital on
September 30, 1995.
(ii) If a hospital to which the
provisions of paragraph (f)(2) of this
section applies decreases its number of
beds below the number of beds
considered to be part of the hospital on
September 30, 2003, it may
subsequently increase the number of
beds at any time as long as the resulting
total number of beds considered to be
part of the hospital does not exceed the
number of beds at the hospital on
September 30, 2003.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) Satellite facilities. (1) For purposes
of paragraphs (h)(2) through (h)(5) of
this section, a satellite facility is a part
of a hospital that provides inpatient
services in a building also used by
another hospital, or in one or more
entire buildings located on the same
campus as buildings used by another
hospital.
*
*
*
*
*
(3) Except as provided in paragraphs
(h)(4) and (h)(5) of this section, the
provisions of paragraph (h)(2) of this
section do not apply to—
*
*
*
*
*
(4) For cost reporting periods
beginning before October 1, 2006, in
applying the provisions of paragraph
(h)(3) of this section, any hospital
structured as a satellite facility on
September 30, 1999, may increase or
decrease the square footage of the
satellite facility or may decrease the
number of beds in the satellite facility
if these changes are made necessary by
relocation of a facility—
(i) To permit construction or
renovation necessary for compliance
with changes in Federal, State, or local
law; or
(ii) Because of catastrophic events
such as fires, floods, earthquakes, or
tornadoes.
(5) For cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006, in
applying the provisions of paragraph
(h)(3) of this section—
(i) Any hospital structured as a
satellite facility on September 30, 1999,
may increase or decrease the square
footage or decrease the number of beds
considered to be part of the satellite
facility at any time without affecting the
provisions of paragraph (h)(3) of this
section; and
(ii) If the satellite facility decreases its
number of beds below the number of
beds considered to be part of the
satellite facility on September 30, 1999,
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
it may subsequently increase the
number of beds at any time as long as
the resulting total number of beds
considered to be part of the satellite
facility does not exceed the number of
beds at the satellite facility on
September 30, 1999.
*
*
*
*
*
I 9. Section 412.25 is amended by—
I a. In paragraph (e) introductory text,
remove the cross-reference ‘‘paragraph
(e)(2) and (e)(4)’’ and add the crossreference ‘‘paragraph (e)(2) and (e)(5)’’
in its place.
I b. In paragraph (e)(2) introductory
text, remove the cross-reference
‘‘paragraph (e)(3) and (e)(5)’’ and add
the cross-reference ‘‘paragraph (e)(3)
and (e)(6)’’ in its place.
I c. Revising paragraph (e)(3).
I d. Revising paragraph (e)(4)
introductory text.
I e. Redesignating paragraph (e)(5) as
(e)(6).
I f. Adding a new paragraph (e)(5).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
§ 412.25 Excluded hospital units: Common
requirements.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(3) Except as specified in paragraphs
(e)(4) and (e)(5) of this section, the
provisions of paragraph (e)(2) of this
section do not apply to any unit
structured as a satellite facility on
September 30, 1999, and excluded from
the prospective payment systems on
that date, to the extent the unit
continues operating under the same
terms and conditions, including the
number of beds and square footage
considered to be part of the unit at the
satellite facility on September 30, 1999.
(4) In applying the provisions of
paragraph (e)(3) of this section, any unit
structured as a satellite facility on
September 30, 1999, may increase or
decrease the square footage of the
satellite facility or may decrease the
number of beds in the satellite facility
considered to be part of the satellite
facility at any time, if these changes are
made by the relocation of a facility—
*
*
*
*
*
(5) For cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006, in
applying the provisions of paragraph
(e)(3) of this section—
(i) Any unit structured as a satellite
facility on September 30, 1999, may
increase the square footage of the unit
only at the beginning of a cost reporting
period or decrease the square footage or
number of beds considered to be part of
the satellite facility subject to the
provisions of paragraph (b)(2) of this
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
section, without affecting the provisions
of paragraph (e)(3) of this section; and
(ii) If the unit structured as a satellite
facility decreases its number of beds
below the number of beds considered to
be part of the satellite facility on
September 30, 1999, subject to the
provisions of paragraph (b)(2) of this
section, it may subsequently increase
the number of beds at the beginning or
a cost reporting period as long as the
resulting total number of beds
considered to be part of the satellite
facility does not exceed the number of
beds at the satellite facility on
September 30, 1999.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 412.42
[Amended]
10. In paragraph (d) of § 412.42, the
cross-reference ‘‘§ 405.310(k)’’ is
removed, and the cross-reference
‘‘§ 411.15(k)’’ is added in its place.
I
§ 412.48
[Amended]
11. In paragraph (b) of § 412.48, the
cross-reference ‘‘§§ 405.330 through
405.332’’ is removed and the crossreference ‘‘§ 411.400 and § 411.402’’ is
added in its place.
I 12. Section 412.64 is amended by—
I a. Revising paragraph (d)(2).
I b. Adding a new paragraph (h)(6).
The revision and addition read as
follows:
I
§ 412.64 Federal rates for inpatient
operating costs for Federal fiscal year 2005
and subsequent fiscal years.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(2)(i) In the case of a ‘‘subsection (d)
hospital,’’ as defined under section
1886(d)(1)(B) of the Act, that does not
submit quality data on a quarterly basis
to CMS, in the form and manner
specified by CMS, the applicable
percentage change specified in
paragraph (d)(1) of this section is
reduced—
(A) For fiscal years 2005 and 2006, by
0.4 percentage points; and
(B) For fiscal year 2007 and
subsequent fiscal years, by 2.0
percentage points.
(ii) Any reduction of the percentage
change will apply only to the fiscal year
involved and will not be taken into
account in computing the applicable
percentage change for a subsequent
fiscal year.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
(6) If a new rural hospital that is
subject to the hospital inpatient
prospective payment system opens in a
State that has an imputed rural floor and
has rural areas, CMS uses the imputed
PO 00000
Frm 00269
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48137
floor as the hospital’s wage index until
the hospital’s first cost report as an
inpatient prospective payment system
provider is contemporaneous with the
cost reporting period being used to
develop a given fiscal year’s wage index.
*
*
*
*
*
I 13. A new § 412.79 is added to
Subpart E to read as follows:
§ 412.79 Determination of the hospitalspecific rate for inpatient operating costs
for Medicare-dependent, small rural
hospitals based on a Federal fiscal year
2002 base period.
(a) Base-period costs—(1) General
rule. Except as provided in paragraph
(a)(2) of this section, for each MDH, the
intermediary determines the MDH’s
Medicare Part A allowable inpatient
operating costs, as described in
§ 412.2(c), for the 12-month or longer
cost reporting period beginning on or
after October 1, 2001, and before
October 1, 2002.
(2) Exceptions. (i) If the MDH’s last
cost reporting period beginning before
October 1, 2002, is for less than 12
months, the base period is the MDH’s
most recent 12-month or longer cost
reporting period beginning before that
short cost reporting period.
(ii) If the MDH does not have a cost
reporting period beginning on or after
October 1, 2001, and before October 1,
2002, and does have a cost reporting
period beginning on or after October 1,
2000, and before October 1, 2001, that
cost reporting period is the base period
unless the cost reporting is for less than
12 months. In that case, the base period
is the MDH’s most recent 12-month or
longer cost reporting period beginning
before that short cost reporting period.
(b) Costs on a per discharge basis. The
intermediary determines the MDH’s
average base-period operating cost per
discharge by dividing the total operating
costs by the number of discharges in the
base period. For purposes of this
section, a transfer as described in
§ 412.4(b) is considered to be a
discharge.
(c) Case-mix adjustment. The
intermediary divides the average baseperiod cost per discharge by the MDH’s
case-mix index for the base period.
(d) Updating base period costs. For
purposes of determining the updated
base-period costs for cost reporting
periods beginning in Federal fiscal year
2002, the update factor is determined
using the methodology set forth in
§ 412.73(c)(14) and (c)(15).
(e) DRG adjustment. The applicable
hospital-specific cost per discharge is
multiplied by the appropriate DRG
weighting factor to determine the
hospital-specific base payment amount
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48138
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
(target amount) for a particular covered
discharge.
(f) Notice of hospital-specific rate. The
intermediary furnishes the MDH a
notice of its hospital-specific rate which
contains a statement of the hospital’s
Medicare Part A allowable inpatient
operating costs, number of Medicare
discharges, and case-mix index
adjustment factor used to determine the
hospital’s cost per discharge for the
Federal fiscal year 2002 base period.
(g) Right to administrative and
judicial review. An intermediary’s
determination of the hospital-specific
rate for a hospital is subject to
administrative and judicial review.
Review is available to an MDH upon
receipt of the notice of the hospitalspecific rate. The notice is treated as a
final intermediary determination of the
amount of program reimbursement for
purposes of subpart R of Part 405 of this
chapter, governing provider
reimbursement determinations and
appeals.
(h) Modification of hospital-specific
rate. (1) The intermediary recalculates
the hospital-specific rate to reflect the
following:
(i) Any modifications that are
determined as a result of administrative
or judicial review of the hospitalspecific rate determinations; or
(ii) Any additional costs that are
recognized as allowable costs for the
MDH’s base period as a result of
administrative or judicial review of the
base-period notice of amount of program
reimbursement.
(2) With respect to either the hospitalspecific rate determination or the
amount of program reimbursement
determination, the actions taken on
administrative or judicial review that
provide a basis for recalculations of the
hospital-specific rate include the
following:
(i) A reopening and revision of the
MDH’s base-period notice of amount of
program reimbursement under
§§ 405.1885 through 405.1889 of this
chapter.
(ii) A prehearing order or finding
issued during the provider payment
appeals process by the appropriate
reviewing authority under § 405.1821 or
§ 405.1853 of this chapter that resolved
a matter at issue in the MDH’s baseperiod notice of amount of program
reimbursement.
(iii) An affirmation, modification, or
reversal of a Provider Reimbursement
Review Board decision by the
Administrator of CMS under § 405.1875
of this chapter that resolved a matter at
issue in the hospital’s base-period
notice of amount of program
reimbursement.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
(iv) An administrative or judicial
review decision under §§ 405.1831,
405.1871, or 405.1877 of this chapter
that is final and no longer subject to
review under applicable law or
regulations by a higher reviewing
authority, and that resolved a matter at
issue in the hospital’s base-period
notice of amount of program
reimbursement.
(v) A final, nonappealable court
judgment relating to the base-period
costs.
(3) The adjustments to the hospitalspecific rate made under paragraphs
(h)(1) and (2) of this section are effective
retroactively to the time of the
intermediary’s initial determination of
the rate.
(i) Maintaining budget neutrality.
CMS makes an adjustment to the
hospital-specific rate to ensure that
changes to the DRG classifications and
recalibrations of the DRG relative
weights are made in a manner so that
aggregate payments to section 1886(d)
hospitals are not affected.
§ 412.84
[Amended]
14. In paragraph (m) of § 412.84, the
cross-reference ‘‘paragraph (h)(3)’’ is
removed and the cross-reference
‘‘paragraph (i)(4)’’ is added in its place.
I 15. Section 412.90 is amended by
revising paragraph (j) to read as follows:
I
§ 412.90
General rules.
*
*
*
*
*
(j) Medicare-dependent, small rural
hospitals. For cost reporting periods
beginning on or after April 1, 1990, and
before October 1, 1994, and for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 1997, and before October 1, 2011,
CMS adjusts the prospective payment
rates for inpatient operating costs
determined under subparts D and E of
this part if a hospital is classified as a
Medicare-dependent, small rural
hospital.
*
*
*
*
*
I 16. Section 412.92 is amended by—
I a. In paragraph (b)(2)(iv) of § 412.92,
the word ‘‘djustment’’ is removed and
the word ‘‘adjustment’’ is added in its
place.
I b. Revising paragraph (b)(3) to read as
follows:
§ 412.92 Special treatment: Sole
community hospitals.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(3) Duration of classification.
(i) An approved classification as a
sole community hospital remains in
effect without need for reapproval
unless there is a change in the
circumstances under which the
PO 00000
Frm 00270
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
classification was approved. An
approved sole community hospital must
notify the fiscal intermediary if any
change that is specified in paragraph
(b)(3)(ii) of this section occurs. If CMS
determines that a sole community
hospital failed to comply with this
requirement, CMS will cancel the
hospital’s classification as a sole
community hospital effective with the
date that the hospital no longer met the
criteria for such classification,
consistent with the provisions of
§ 405.1885 of this chapter.
(ii) A sole community hospital must
report the following to the fiscal
intermediary within 30 days of the
event:
(A) The opening of a new hospital in
its service area.
(B) The opening of a new road
between itself and a like provider
within 35 miles.
(C) An increase in the number of beds
to more than 50 if the hospital qualifies
as a sole community hospital under
paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this section.
(D) Its geographic classification
changes.
(E) Any changes to the driving
conditions that result in a decrease in
the amount of travel time between itself
and a like provider if the hospital
qualifies as a sole community hospital
under paragraph (a)(3) of this section.
(iii) A sole community hospital must
report to the fiscal intermediary if it
becomes aware of any change that
would affect its classification as a sole
community hospital beyond the events
listed in paragraph (b)(3)(ii) of this
section within 30 days of the event. If
CMS determines that a sole community
hospital has failed to comply with this
requirement, CMS will cancel the
hospital’s classification as a sole
community hospital effective with the
date the hospital became aware of the
event that resulted in the sole
community hospital no longer meeting
the criteria for such classification,
consistent with the provisions of
§ 405.1885 of this chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
I 17. Section 412.96 is amended by—
I a. Revising paragraph (c)(2)(i)
introductory text.
I b. Revising paragraph (c)(2)(ii).
I c. Revising paragraph (i)(3).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 412.96 Special Treatment: Referral
centers.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(2) Number of discharges. (i) CMS sets
forth the national and regional number
of discharges in each year’s annual
notice of prospective payment rates
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
published under § 412.8(b). The
methodology CMS uses to calculate
these criteria is described in paragraph
(i) of this section. Except as provided in
paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of this section for an
osteopathic hospital, for the hospital’s
cost reporting period that began during
the same fiscal year as the cost reporting
periods used to compute the regional
median discharges under paragraph (i)
of this section, its number of discharges
(not including discharges from units
excluded from the prospective
payments system under subpart B of
this part or from newborn units) is at
least equal to—
*
*
*
*
*
(ii) For cost reporting periods
beginning on or after January 1, 1986, an
osteopathic hospital, recognized by the
American Osteopathic Healthcare
Association (or any successor
organization), that is located in a rural
area must have at least 3,000 discharges
during its cost reporting period that
began during the same fiscal year as the
cost reporting periods used to compute
the regional median discharges under
paragraph (i) of this section to meet the
number of discharges criterion.
*
*
*
*
*
(i) * * *
(3) Annual notice. CMS sets forth the
national and regional criteria in the
annual notice of prospective payment
rates published under § 412.8(b). These
criteria are compared to an applying
hospital’s number of discharges for the
same cost reporting period used to
develop the regional criteria in this
section in determining if the hospital
qualifies for referral center status for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1 of the Federal fiscal year
to which the notice applies.
I 18. Section 412.105 is amended by—
I a. Revising paragraph (f)(1)(ii)(C).
I b. Adding a new paragraph
(f)(1)(iii)(C).
The addition reads as follows:
§ 412.105 Special treatment: Hospitals that
incur indirect costs for graduate medical
education programs.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) * * *
(C) Effective for discharges occurring
on or after October 1, 1997, the time
spent by a resident in a nonhospital
setting in patient care activities, as
defined in § 413.75(b) of this
subchapter, under an approved medical
residency training program is counted
towards the determination of full-time
equivalency if the criteria set forth in
§ 413.78(c), § 413.78(d), or § 413.78(e) of
this subchapter, as applicable, are met.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
(iii) * * *
(C) In order to be counted, a resident
must be spending time in patient care
activities, as defined in § 413.75(b) of
this subchapter.
*
*
*
*
*
I 19. Section 412.106 is amended by—
I a. Revising paragraph (a)(1)(iii).
I b. Republishing the introductory text
of paragraph (d)(2)(iv).
I c. Revising paragraph (d)(2)(iv)(C)(3).
I d. Adding a new paragraph
(d)(2)(iv)(D).
I e. Adding a new paragraph (d)(2)(v).
The revision and additions read as
follows:
§ 412.106 Special treatment: Hospitals that
serve a disproportionate share of lowincome patients.
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) The hospital’s location, in an
urban or rural area, is determined in
accordance with the definitions in
§ 412.64, except that a reclassification
that results from an urban hospital
reclassified as rural as set forth in
§ 412.103 is classified as rural.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(2) * * *
(iv) If the hospital meets the criteria
of paragraph (c)(1)(iv) of this section—
*
*
*
*
*
(C) * * *
(3) Except as provided in paragraph
(d)(2)(iv)(D) of this section, the
maximum payment adjustment factor is
12 percent.
(D) Effective for discharges occurring
on or after October 1, 2006, for a
hospital that is classified as a Medicaredependent, small rural hospital under
§ 412.108, the payment adjustment
factor limitation specified in paragraph
(d)(2)(iv)(C)(3) does not apply.
(v) If the hospital meets the criteria of
paragraph (c)(2) of this section, the
payment adjustment factor is as follows:
(A) 30 percent for discharges
occurring on or after April 1, 1990, and
before October 1, 1991.
(B) 35 percent for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 1991.
*
*
*
*
*
I 20. Section 412.108 is amended by—
I a. Revising paragraph (a)(1)
introductory text.
I b. Revising paragraph (b)(4).
I c. Adding a new paragraph (c)(2)(iii).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
§ 412.108 Special Treatment: Medicaredependent, small rural hospitals.
(a) Criteria for classification as a
Medicare-dependent, small rural
PO 00000
Frm 00271
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48139
hospital. (1) General considerations. For
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after April 1, 1990, and ending before
October 1, 1994, or for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 1997,
and before October 1, 2011, a hospital
is classified as a Medicare-dependent,
small rural hospital if it is located in a
rural area (as defined in subpart D of
this part) and meets all of the following
conditions:
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(4) A determination of MDH status
made by the fiscal intermediary is
effective 30 days after the date the fiscal
intermediary provides written
notification to the hospital. An
approved MDH status determination
remains in effect unless there is a
change in the circumstances under
which the status was approved.
(i) An approved MDH must notify the
fiscal intermediary if any change occurs
that is specified in paragraph (b)(4)(ii) of
this section occurs. If CMS determines
that an MDH failed to comply with this
requirement, CMS will cancel the
hospital’s classification as an MDH
effective with the date that the hospital
no longer met the criteria for such
status, consistent with the provisions of
§ 405.1885 of this chapter.
(ii) An MDH must report the
following to the fiscal intermediary
within 30 days of the event:
(A) The number of beds increases to
more than 100.
(B) Its geographic classification
changes.
(iii) An MDH must report to the fiscal
intermediary if it becomes aware of any
change that would affect its
classification as an MDH beyond the
events listed in paragraph (b)(4)(ii) of
this section within 30 days of the event.
If CMS determines that an MDH has
failed to comply with this requirement,
CMS will cancel the hospital’s
classification as an MDH effective with
the date the hospital became aware of
the event that resulted in the MDH no
longer meeting the criteria for such
classification, consistent with the
provisions of § 405.1885 of this chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) For discharges occurring during
cost reporting periods (or portions
thereof) beginning on or after October 1,
2006, and before October 1, 2011, 75
percent of the amount that the Federal
rate determined under paragraph (c)(1)
of this section is exceeded by the
highest of the following:
(A) The hospital-specific rate as
determined under § 412.73.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48140
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
(B) The hospital-specific rate as
determined under § 412.75.
(C) The hospital-specific rate as
determined under § 412.79.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 412.116
[Amended]
21. In § 412.116(e), the second
sentence is removed.
I 22. Section 412.234 is amended by—
I a. In paragraph (a)(3)(ii), removing the
term ‘‘fiscal year’’ and adding the term
‘‘Federal fiscal year’’ in its place.
I b. Revising paragraph (a)(3)(iii).
I c. Adding a new paragraph (a)(3)(iv).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
I
§ 412.234 Criteria for all hospitals in an
urban county seeking redesignation to
another urban area.
(a) * * *
(3) * * *
(iii) For Federal fiscal year 2007,
hospitals located in counties that are in
the same Combined Statistical Area
(CSA) (under the MSA definitions
announced by the OMB on June 6, 2003)
as the urban area to which they seek
redesignation qualify as meeting the
proximity requirement for
reclassification to the urban area to
which they seek redesignation.
(iv) For Federal fiscal year 2008 and
thereafter, hospitals located in counties
that are in the same Combined
Statistical Area (CSA) or Core-Based
Statistical Area (CBSA) (under the MSA
definitions announced by the OMB on
June 6, 2003) as the urban area to which
they seek redesignation qualify as
meeting the proximity requirements for
reclassification to the urban area to
which they seek redesignation.
*
*
*
*
*
I 23. Section 412.316 is amended by—
I a. Revising paragraph (a).
I b. Revising paragraph (b)(2).
I c. Adding a new paragraph (b)(3).
I d. Revising paragraph (c).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
§ 412.316
Geographic adjustment factors.
(a) Local cost variation. CMS adjusts
for local cost variation based on the
hospital wage index value that is
applicable to the hospital under subpart
D of this part. The adjustment factor
equals the hospital wage index value
applicable to the hospital raised to the
.6848 power and is applied to 100
percent of the Federal rate.
(b) * * *
(2) For discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2004, the definition of
large urban area under § 412.63(c)(6)
continues to be in effect for purposes of
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
the payment adjustment under this
section, based on the geographic
classification under § 412.64, except as
provided for in paragraph (b)(3) of this
section.
(3) For purposes of this section, the
geographic classifications specified
under § 412.64 apply, except that,
effective for discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2006, for an urban
hospital that is reclassified as rural as
set forth in § 412.103, the geographic
classification is rural.
(c) Cost-of-living adjustment. CMS
provides an additional payment to a
hospital located in Alaska and Hawaii
equal to [0.3152 x (the cost-of-living
adjustment factor used to determine
payments under subpart D of this part—
1)] percent.
24. Section 412.320 is amended by—
a. Revising paragraph (a)(1)(ii).
b. Adding a new paragraph (a)(1)(iii).
The revision and addition read as
follows:
I
I
§ 412.320 Disproportionate share
adjustment factor.
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) For discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2004, the payment
adjustment under this section is based
on the geographic classifications
specified under § 412.64, except as
provided for in paragraph (a)(1)(iii) of
this section.
(iii) For purposes of this section, the
geographic classifications specified
under § 412.64 apply, except that,
effective for discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2006, for an urban
hospital that is reclassified as rural as
set forth in § 412.103, the geographic
classification is rural.
*
*
*
*
*
25. Section 412.505 is amended by
revising paragraph (b)(1) to read as
follows:
I
§ 412.505 Conditions for payment under
the prospective payment system for longterm care hospitals.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) General requirements. (1) Effective
for cost reporting periods beginning on
or after October 1, 2002, a long-term
care hospital must meet the conditions
for payment of this section,
§ 412.22(e)(3) and (h)(6), if applicable,
and § 412.507 through § 412.511 to
receive payment under the prospective
payment system described in this
subpart for inpatient hospital services
furnished to Medicare beneficiaries.
*
*
*
*
*
PO 00000
Frm 00272
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
§ 412.508
[Amended]
26. In paragraph (c)(3) of § 412.508,
the cross-reference ‘‘§ 1001.301’’ is
removed and the cross-reference
‘‘1001.201’’ is added in its place.
I 27. Section 412.511 is revised to read
as follows:
I
§ 412.511 Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
A long-term care hospital
participating in the prospective
payment system under this subpart
must meet the requirement of
§§ 412.22(e)(3) and 412.22(h)(6) to
report co-located status, if applicable,
and the recordkeeping and cost
reporting requirements of §§ 413.20 and
413.24 of this subchapter.
I 28. Section 412.525 is amended by—
I a. Revising paragraph (a)(3).
I b. Revising paragraph (a)(4)(ii).
I c. Revising paragraph (a)(4)(iii).
I d. Adding a new paragraph (a)(4)(iv).
I e. Adding a new paragraph (d)(3).
I f. Adding a new paragraph (d)(4).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 412.525 Adjustments to the Federal
prospective payment.
(a) * * *
(3) The additional payment equals 80
percent of the difference between the
estimated cost of the patient’s care
(determined by multiplying the
hospital-specific cost-to-charge ratio by
the Medicare allowable covered charge)
and the sum of the adjusted LTCH PPS
Federal prospective payment and the
fixed-loss amount.
(4) * * *
(ii) For discharges occurring on or
after August 8, 2003, and before October
1, 2006, high-cost outlier payments are
subject to the provisions of
§ 412.84(i)(1), (i)(3), and (i)(4) and (m)
for adjustments of cost-to-charge ratios.
(iii) For discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2003, and before
October 1, 2006, high-cost outlier
payments are subject to the provisions
of § 412.84(i)(2) for adjustments to costto-charge ratios.
(iv) For discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2006, high-cost outlier
payments are subject to the following
provisions:
(A) CMS may specify an alternative to
the cost-to-charge ratio otherwise
applicable under paragraph (a)(4)(iv)(B)
of this section. A hospital may also
request that its fiscal intermediary use a
different (higher or lower) cost-to-charge
ratio based on substantial evidence
presented by the hospital. A request
must be approved by the CMS Regional
Office.
(B) The cost-to-charge ratio applied at
the time a claim is processed is based
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
on either the most recent settled cost
report or the most recent tentatively
settled cost report, whichever is from
the latest cost reporting period.
(C) The fiscal intermediary may use a
statewide average cost-to-charge ratio,
which CMS establishes annually, if it is
unable to determine an accurate cost-tocharge ratio for a hospital in one of the
following circumstances:
(1) A new hospital that has not yet
submitted its first Medicare cost report.
(For this purpose, a new hospital is
defined as an entity that has not
accepted assignment of an existing
hospital’s provider agreement in
accordance with § 489.18 of this
chapter.)
(2) A hospital whose cost-to-charge
ratio is in excess of 3 standard
deviations above the corresponding
national geometric mean cost-to-charge
ratio. CMS establishes and publishes
this mean annually.
(3) Any other hospital for which data
to calculate a cost-to-charge ratio are not
available.
(D) Any reconciliation of outlier
payments is based on the cost-to-charge
ratio calculated based on a ratio of costs
to charges computed from the relevant
cost report and charge data determined
at the time the cost report coinciding
with the discharge is settled.
(E) At the time of any reconciliation
under paragraph (a)(4)(iv)(D) of this
section, outlier payments may be
adjusted to account for the time value of
any underpayments or overpayments.
Any adjustment is based upon a widely
available index to be established in
advance by the Secretary, and is applied
from the midpoint of the cost reporting
period to the date of reconciliation.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(3) Patients who are transferred to
onsite providers and readmitted to a
long-term care hospital, as provided for
in § 412.532.
(4) Long-term care hospitals-withinhospitals and satellites of long-term care
hospitals as provided in § 412.534.
I 29. Section 412.529 is amended by
revising paragraph (c)(3) to read as
follows:
§ 412.529 Special payment provision for
short-stay outliers.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(3)(i) For discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2002, and before August
8, 2003, no reconciliations are made to
short-stay outlier payments upon cost
report settlement to account for
differences between cost-to-charge ratio
and the actual cost-to-charge ratio of the
case.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
(ii) For discharges occurring on or
after August 8, 2003, and before October
1, 2006, short-stay outlier payments are
subject to the provisions of
§ 412.84(i)(1), (i)(3), and (i)(4) and (m)
for adjustments of cost-to-charge ratios.
(iii) For discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2003, and before
October 1, 2006, short-stay outlier
payments are subject to the provisions
of § 412.84(i)(2) for adjustments to costto-charge ratios.
(iv) For discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2006, short-stay outlier
payments are subject to the following
provisions:
(A) CMS may specify an alternative to
the cost-to-charge ratio otherwise
applicable under paragraph (c)(3)(iv)(B)
of this section. A hospital may also
request that its fiscal intermediary use a
different (higher or lower) cost-to-charge
ratio based on substantial evidence
presented by the hospital. This request
must be approved by the CMS Regional
Office.
(B) The cost-to-charge ratio applied at
the time a claim is processed is based
on either the most recent settled cost
report or the most recent tentatively
settled cost report, whichever is from
the latest cost reporting period.
(C) The fiscal intermediary may use a
statewide average cost-to-charge ratio,
which CMS establishes annually, if it is
unable to determine an accurate cost-tocharge ratio for a hospital in one of the
following circumstances:
(1) A new hospital that has not yet
submitted its first Medicare cost report.
(For this purpose, a new hospital is
defined as an entity that has not
accepted assignment of an existing
hospital’s provider agreement in
accordance with § 489.18 of this
chapter.)
(2) A hospital whose cost-to-charge
ratio is in excess of 3 standard
deviations above the corresponding
national geometric mean. CMS
establishes and publishes this mean
annually.
(3) Any other hospital for which data
to calculate a cost-to-charge ratio are not
available.
(D) Any reconciliation of outlier
payments is based on the cost-to-charge
ratio calculated based on a ratio of costs
to charges computed from the relevant
cost report and charge data determined
at the time the cost report coinciding
with the discharge is settled.
(E) At the time of any reconciliation
under paragraph (c)(3)(iv)(D) of this
section, outlier payments may be
adjusted to account for the time value of
any underpayments or overpayments.
Any adjustment is based upon a widely
available index to be established in
PO 00000
Frm 00273
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48141
advance by the Secretary, and is applied
from the midpoint of the cost reporting
period to the date of reconciliation.
I 30. Section 412.532 is amended by—
I a. Revising paragraph (a)(2).
I b. Revising paragraph (b).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 412.532 Special payment provisions for
patients who are transferred to onsite
providers and readmitted to a long-term
care hospital.
(a) * * *
(2) A satellite facility, as defined in
§ 412.22(h), that is co-located with the
long-term care hospital.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) As used in this section, ‘‘colocated’’ or ‘‘onsite’’ facility means a
hospital, satellite facility, unit, or SNF
that occupies space in a building also
used by another hospital or unit or in
one or more buildings on the same
campus, as defined in § 413.65(a)(2) of
this subchapter, as buildings used by
another hospital or unit.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 412.541
[Amended]
31. In § 412.541, paragraph (b)(2)(i),
remove the cross-reference
‘‘§ 412.533(b)’’ and add in its place
‘‘§ 412.533(a)(5) and § 412.533(c)’’.
I
PART 413—PRINCIPLES OF
REASONABLE COST
REIMBURSEMENT; PAYMENT FOR
END-STAGE RENAL DISEASE
SERVICES; PROSPECTIVELY
DETERMINED PAYMENT RATES FOR
SKILLED NURSING FACILITIES
32. The authority citation for part 413
is revised to read as follows:
I
Authority: Secs. 1102, 1812(d), 1814(b),
1815, 1833(a), (i), and (n), 1861(v), 1871,
1881, 1883, and 1886 of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395d(d), 1395f(b),
1395g, 1395l(a), (i), and (n), 1395x(v),
1395hh, 1395rr, 1395tt, and 1395ww); and
sec. 124 of Pub. L. 106–133 (113 Stat. 1501A–
332).
33. Section 413.74 is amended by
revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
I
§ 413.74
Payment to a foreign hospital.
(a) Principle. Section 1814(f) of the
Act provides for the payment of
emergency and nonemergency inpatient
hospitals services furnished by foreign
hospitals to Medicare beneficiaries.
Subpart H of part 424 of this chapter,
together with this section, specifies the
conditions for payment.
*
*
*
*
*
I 34. Section 413.75 is amended by—
I a. In paragraph (b), revising paragraph
(1) under the definition of ‘‘Medicare
GME affiliated group’’.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48142
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
b. In paragraph (b), removing the
cross-reference ‘‘§ 413.79(g)(2)’’ under
paragraph (2) of the definition of
‘‘Medicare GME affiliated group’’ and
adding the cross-reference
‘‘§ 413.79(f)(2)’’ in its place.
I c. In paragraph (b), removing the
cross-reference ‘‘§ 413.79(g)(2)’’ under
paragraph (3) of the definition of
‘‘Medicare GME affiliated group’’ and
adding the cross-reference
‘‘§ 413.79(f)(2)’’ in its place.
I d. In paragraph (b), adding in
alphabetical order the definition of
‘‘Patient care activities’’.
The addition and revision read as
follows:
I
§ 413.75 Direct GME payments: General
requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
Medicare GME affiliated group
means—
(1) Two or more hospitals that are
located in the same urban or rural area
(as those terms are defined in subpart D
of Part 412 of this subchapter) or in a
contiguous area and meet the rotation
requirements in § 413.79(f)(2).
*
*
*
*
*
Patient care activities means the care
and treatment of particular patients,
including services for which a physician
or other practitioner may bill.
*
*
*
*
*
I 35. Section 413.77 is amended by—
I a. Revising paragraph (e)(1)
introductory text.
I b. Revising paragraph (e)(1)(i).
I c. Adding a new paragraph (h).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
§ 413.77 Direct GME payments:
Determination of per resident amounts.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Exceptions—(1) Base period for
certain hospitals. If a hospital did not
have any approved medical residency
training programs or did not participate
in Medicare during the base period, but
either condition changes in a cost
reporting period beginning on or after
July 1, 1985, the fiscal intermediary
establishes a per resident amount for the
hospital using the information from the
first cost reporting period during which
the hospital participates in Medicare
and the residents are on duty during the
first month of that period. Effective for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 2006, if a hospital did
not have any approved medical
residency training programs or did not
participate in Medicare during the base
period, but either condition changes in
a cost reporting period beginning on or
after October 1, 2006, and the residents
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
are not on duty during the first month
of that period, the fiscal intermediary
establishes a per resident amount for the
hospital using the information from the
first cost reporting period immediately
following the cost reporting period
during which the hospital participates
in Medicare and residents began
training at the hospital. The per resident
amount is based on the lower of the
amount specified in paragraph (e)(1)(i)
or paragraph (e)(1)(ii) of this section,
subject to the provisions of paragraph
(e)(1)(iii) of this section. Any GME costs
incurred by the hospital during the cost
reporting period prior to the base period
used for calculating the PRA are
reimbursed on a reasonable cost basis.
(i) The hospital’s actual cost per
resident incurred in connection with the
GME program(s) based on the cost and
resident data from the hospital’s base
year cost reporting period as established
in paragraph (e)(1) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) Hospital mergers. Effective for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2006, when multiple
hospitals merge, a primary care and
obstetrics and gynecology weighted
average per resident amount and a
nonprimary care weighted average per
resident amount is calculated, if
applicable, for the surviving hospital,
using FTE resident data and per resident
amount data from the most recently
settled cost reports of the respective
hospitals prior to the merger.
I 36. Section 413.78 is amended by—
I a. Revising paragraph (c)(1).
I b. Revising paragraph (d)(1).
I c. Revising paragraph (e)(1).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 413.78 Direct GME payments:
Determinations of the total number of FTE
residents.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(1) The resident spends his or her
time in patient care activities, as defined
in § 413.75(b).
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) The resident spends his or her
time in patient care activities, as defined
in § 413.75(b).
(e) * * *
(1) The resident spends his or her
time in patient care activities, as defined
in § 413.75(b).
*
*
*
*
*
I 37. Section 413.79 is amended by—
I a. Revising paragraph (e)(1)(iv).
I b. In the introductory text of
paragraph (f), removing the crossreference ‘‘paragraph (e)(3) of this
section’’ and adding the cross-reference
PO 00000
Frm 00274
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
‘‘paragraph (d) of this section’’ in its
place.
The revision reads as follows:
§ 413.79 Direct GME payments:
Determination of the weighted number of
FTE residents.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(1) * * *
(iv) Effective for affiliation agreements
entered into on or after October 1, 2005,
an urban hospital that qualifies for an
adjustment to its FTE cap under
paragraph (e)(1) of this section is
permitted to be part of a Medicare GME
affiliated group for purposes of
establishing an aggregate FTE cap only
if the adjustment that results from the
affiliation is an increase to the urban
hospital’s FTE cap.
*
*
*
*
*
I 38. Section 413.85 is amended by
revising paragraph (h)(3) to read as
follows:
§ 413.85 Costs of approved nursing and
allied health education activities.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
(3) Educational seminars, workshops,
and continuing education programs in
which the employees or trainees
participate that enhance the quality of
medical care or operating efficiency of
the provider and, effective October 1,
2003, do not lead to the ability to
practice and begin employment in a
nursing or allied health specialty.
*
*
*
*
*
I 39. Section 413.89 is amended by—
I a. Revising paragraph (a).
I b. Revising paragraph (h).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 413.89 Bad debts, charity, and courtesy
allowances.
(a) Principle. Bad debts, charity, and
courtesy allowances are deductions
from revenue and are not to be included
in allowable cost. However, subject to
the limitations described under
paragraph (h) of this section and the
exception for anesthetists’ services
described under paragraph (i) of this
section, bad debts attributable to the
deductibles and coinsurance amounts
are reimbursable under the program.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) Limitations on bad debts. (1)
Hospitals. In determining reasonable
costs for hospitals, the amount of bad
debt otherwise treated as allowable
costs (as defined in paragraph (e) of this
section) is reduced—
(i) For cost reporting periods
beginning during fiscal year 1998, by 25
percent;
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
(ii) For cost reporting periods
beginning during fiscal year 1999, by 40
percent;
(iii) For cost reporting periods
beginning during fiscal year 2000, by 45
percent; and
(iv) For cost reporting periods
beginning during a subsequent fiscal
year, by 30 percent.
(2) Skilled nursing facilities. For cost
reporting periods beginning during
fiscal year 2006 or during a subsequent
fiscal year, the amount of skilled
nursing facility bad debts for
coinsurance otherwise treated as
allowable costs (as defined in paragraph
(e) of this section) for services furnished
to a patient who is not a dual eligible
individual is reduced by 30 percent. A
dual eligible individual is defined for
this section as an individual that is
entitled to benefits under Part A of
Medicare and is determined eligible by
the State for medical assistance under
Title XIX of the Act as described under
paragraph (2) of the definition of a ‘‘fullbenefit dual eligible individual’’ at
§ 423.772 of this chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 414—PAYMENT FOR PART B
MEDICAL AND OTHER HEALTH
SERVICES
40. The authority citation for part 414
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: Secs. 1102, 1871, and 1881(b)(1)
of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302,
1395hh, and 1395rr(b)(1)).
41. Section 414.802 is amended by
revising the definition of ‘‘unit’’ to read
as follows:
I
§ 414.802
*
*
*
*
Unit means the product represented
by the 11-digit National Drug Code.
During the first 3 years of the CAP (as
defined in § 414.902), the method of
counting units excludes units of CAP
drugs (as defined in § 414.902) sold to
an approved CAP vendor (as defined in
§ 414.902) for use under the CAP (as
defined in § 414.902).
PART 424—CONDITIONS FOR
MEDICARE PAYMENT
42. The authority citation for part 424
continues to read as follows:
I
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the
Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302 and
1395hh).
§ 424.32
43. In § 424.32, in paragraph (b), the
phrase ‘‘CMS–1490U—Request for
Medicare Payment by Organization. (For
use by an organization requesting
I
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
46. The authority citation for part 485
continues to read as follows:
SUBCHAPTER H—HEALTH CARE
INFRASTRUCTURE IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM
§ 424.121
[Amended]
44. In § 424.121, paragraph (c) is
amended by removing the crossreference ‘‘§ 405.313’’ and adding the
cross-reference ‘‘§ 411.9’’ in its place.
I 45. Section 424.123 is amended by
revising paragraph (c)(2) to read as
follows:
I
§ 424.123 Conditions for payment for
nonemergency inpatient hospital services
furnished by a hospital closer to the
individual’s residence.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(2) Accredited by the Joint
Commission on Accreditation of
Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) or
accredited or approved by a program of
the country where it is located under
standards the CMS finds to be
essentially equivalent to those of the
JCAHO.
*
*
*
*
*
I
Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the
Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302 and
1395hh).
§ 485.610
[Amended]
Jkt 208001
PART 505—ESTABLISHMENT OF THE
HEALTH CARE INFRASTRUCTURE
IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM
47. In paragraph (c) of § 485.610, the
phrase ‘‘as of October 1, 2006’’ is
removed and the phrase ‘‘on or before
December 31, 2005’’ is added in its
place.
I
PART 489—PROVIDER AGREEMENTS
AND SUPPLIER APPROVAL
51. In § 505.3, the introductory text is
republished and definitions of
‘‘Outreach programs’’ and ‘‘Unique
research resources’’ are added in
alphabetical order to read as follows:
48. The authority citation for part 489
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: Secs. 1102, 1819, 1861,
1864(m), 1866, 1869, and 1871 of the Social
Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395i–3, 1395x,
1395aa(m), 1395cc, 1395ff, and 1395hh).
49. Section 489.24 is amended by—
a. Revising the definition of ‘‘Labor’’
under paragraph (b).
I b. Revising paragraph (f).
The revisions read as follows:
I
I
§ 489.24 Special responsibilities of
Medicare hospitals in emergency cases.
[Amended]
VerDate Aug<31>2005
PART 485—CONDITIONS OF
PARTICIPATION: SPECIALIZED
PROVIDERS
of labor and continuing through the
delivery of the placenta. A woman
experiencing contractions is in true
labor unless a physician, certified nursemidwife, or other qualified medical
person acting within his or her scope of
practice as defined in hospital medical
staff bylaws and State law, certifies that,
after a reasonable time of observation,
the woman is in false labor.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Recipient hospital responsibilities.
A participating hospital that has
specialized capabilities or facilities
(including, but not limited to, facilities
such as burn units, shock-trauma units,
neonatal intensive care units, or (with
respect to rural areas) regional referral
centers, which, for purposes of this
subpart, means hospitals meeting the
requirements of referral centers found at
§ 412.96 of this chapter) may not refuse
to accept from a referring hospital
within the boundaries of the United
States an appropriate transfer of an
individual who requires such
specialized capabilities or facilities if
the receiving hospital has the capacity
to treat the individual. This requirement
applies to any participating hospital
with specialized capabilities, regardless
of whether the hospital has a dedicated
emergency department.
*
*
*
*
*
payment for medical services.)’’ is
removed and the phrase ‘‘CMS–1491—
Request for Medicare Payment—
Ambulance. (For use by an organization
requesting payment for ambulance
services.)’’ is removed.
I
Definitions.
*
48143
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
Labor means the process of childbirth
beginning with the latent or early phase
PO 00000
Frm 00275
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
50. The authority citation for part 505
continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the
Social Security Act (42 U.S.C 1302 and
1395hh).
I
§ 505.3
Definitions.
For purposes of this subpart, the
following definitions apply:
*
*
*
*
*
Outreach programs mean formal
cancer programs for teaching, diagnostic
screening, therapy or treatment,
prevention, or interventions to enhance
the health and knowledge of their
designated population(s).
*
*
*
*
*
Unique research resources means
resources that are used for the purpose
of discovering or testing options related
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48144
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
to the causes, prevention, and treatment
of cancer.
I 52. A new Subpart B, containing
§§ 505.13, 505.15, 505.17, and 505.19, is
added to Part 505 to read as follows:
Subpart B—Forgiveness of Indebtedness
Secs.
505.13 Conditions for loan forgiveness.
505.15 Plan criteria for meeting the
conditions for loan forgiveness.
505.17 Reporting requirements for meeting
the conditions for loan forgiveness.
505.19 Approval or denial of loan
forgiveness.
Subpart B—Forgiveness of
Indebtedness
§ 505.13
Conditions for loan forgiveness.
The Secretary may forgive a loan
provided under this part if the
qualifying hospital—
(a) Has been selected to participate in
the loan program specified in § 505.5(c).
(b) Has established the following in
accordance with a plan that meets the
criteria specified in § 505.15:
(1) An outreach program for cancer
prevention, early diagnosis, and
treatment that provides services to a
substantial majority of the residents of
a State or region, including residents of
rural areas;
(2) An outreach program for cancer
prevention, early diagnosis, and
treatment that provides services to
multiple Indian tribes; and
(3) Unique research resources (such as
population databases) or an affiliation
with an entity that has unique research
resources.
(c) Submits to CMS, within the
timeframe specified by the Secretary,
a—
(1) Written request for loan
forgiveness; and
(2) Loan forgiveness plan that meets
the criteria specified in § 505.15 of this
subpart.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
§ 505.15 Plan criteria for meeting the
conditions for loan forgiveness.
The qualifying hospital requesting
loan forgiveness must submit to CMS a
plan specifying how it will develop,
implement, or maintain an existing
outreach program for cancer prevention,
early diagnosis, and treatment for a
substantial majority of the residents of
a State or region, including residents of
rural areas and for multiple Indian
tribes and specifying how the qualifying
hospital will establish or maintain
existing unique research resources or an
affiliation with an entity that has unique
research resources.
(a) Outreach programs. The initial
plan must specify how the hospital will
establish or develop, implement, or
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
maintain existing outreach programs.
The plan must—
(1) Address cancer prevention for
cancers that are prevalent in the
designated populations or cancers that
are targeted by the qualifying hospital,
interventions, and goals for decreasing
the targeted cancer rates during the loan
deferment program; and
(2) Address early diagnosis of cancers
that are prevalent in the designated
populations or cancers that are targeted
by the qualifying hospital,
interventions, and goals for improving
early diagnosis rates for the targeted
cancer(s) during the loan deferment
period;
(3) Address cancer treatment for
cancers that are prevalent in the
designated populations or cancers that
are targeted by the qualifying hospital,
interventions, and goals for improving
cancer treatment rates for the targeted
cancer(s) during the loan deferment; and
(4) Identify the measures that will be
used to determine the qualifying
hospital’s annual progress in meeting
the initial goals specified in paragraphs
(a)(1) through (a)(3) of this section.
(b) Unique research resources. The
plan must specify how the qualifying
hospital will establish or maintain
existing unique research resources or an
affiliation with an entity that has unique
research resources.
§ 505.17 Reporting requirements for
meeting the conditions for loan
forgiveness.
(a) Annual reporting requirements. On
an annual basis, beginning one year
from the date that CMS notified the
qualifying hospital of the loan award,
the qualifying hospital must submit a
report to CMS that updates the plan
specified in § 505.15 by—
(1) Describing the qualifying
hospital’s progress in meeting its initial
plan goals;
(2) Describing any changes to the
qualifying hospital’s initial plan goals;
and
(3) Including at least one measure
used to track the qualifying hospital’s
progress in meeting its plan goals.
(b) Review of annual reports. CMS
will review each qualifying hospital’s
annual report to provide the hospital
with feedback regarding its loan
forgiveness status. If CMS determines
that the annual report shows that the
qualifying hospital has fulfilled the
conditions, plan criteria, and reporting
requirements for loan forgiveness
specified in §§ 505.13, 505.15, and
§ 505.17, CMS will notify the qualifying
hospital in writing that the loan is
forgiven.
(c) Final annual reporting
requirements. A qualifying hospital
PO 00000
Frm 00276
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
must submit its final report to CMS at
least 6 months before the end of the loan
deferment period specified in § 505.7(b).
§ 505.19 Approval or denial of loan
forgiveness.
(a) Approval of loan forgiveness. If
CMS determines that a qualifying
hospital has met the conditions, plan
criteria, and reporting requirements for
loan forgiveness specified in § 505.13,
§ 505.15, and § 505.17, CMS will send a
written notification of approval for loan
forgiveness to the qualifying hospital by
the earlier of—
(1) 30 days from the date of receipt of
the annual report that shows the
qualifying hospital has satisfied the
requirements for loan forgiveness; or
(2) 90 days before the end of the loan
deferment period defined in § 505.7(b).
(b) Denial of loan forgiveness. If CMS
determines that a qualifying hospital
has not met the conditions, plan criteria,
or reporting requirements for loan
forgiveness specified in § 505.13,
§ 505.15, or § 505.17 of this part, CMS
will send a written notification of denial
of loan forgiveness to the qualifying
hospital at least 30 days before the end
of the loan deferment period defined in
§ 505.7(b).
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program No. 93.773, Medicare—Hospital
Insurance; and Program No. 93.774,
Medicare—Supplementary Medical
Insurance Program)
Dated: July 27, 2006.
Mark B. McClellan,
Administrator, Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services.
Dated: July 31, 2006.
Michael O. Leavitt,
Secretary.
[Editorial Note: The following Addendum
and appendixes will not appear in the Code
of Federal Regulations.]
Addendum—Schedule of Tentative
Standardized Amounts, Tentative
Update Factors and Rate-of-Increase
Percentages Effective With Cost
Reporting Periods Beginning On or
After October 1, 2006
I. Summary and Background
Due to the unusual circumstances
imposed by the order of the Court of
Appeals for the Second Circuit in the
decision in Bellevue Hospital Center v.
Leavitt, discussed in detail in section
III.C. of the preamble of this final rule,
we are not able to provide the final FY
2007 occupational mix adjusted wage
index tables, payment rates, or impacts
in this final rule. Because the wage data
affect the calculation of the outlier
threshold as well as the outlier offset
and budget neutrality factors that are
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
applied to the standardized amounts,
we are only able to provide tentative
figures at this time. These tentative
amounts will be revised once the
occupational mix adjusted wage index
is finalized. Subsequent to this final
rule, we will publish a Federal Register
document listing the final standardized
amounts, outlier offsets, and budget
neutrality factors that are effective
October 1, 2006 for FY 2007. The final
data also will be published on the CMS
Web site.
In this Addendum, we are setting
forth a final description of the methods
and data we are using to determine the
prospective payment rates for Medicare
hospital inpatient operating costs and
Medicare hospital inpatient capitalrelated costs. We are also setting forth
the final rate-of-increase percentages for
updating the target amounts for
hospitals and hospital units excluded
from the IPPS. We note that, because
hospitals excluded from the IPPS are
paid on a cost basis (and not by the
IPPS), these hospitals are not affected by
the tentative figures for standardized
amounts, offsets, and budget neutrality
factors. Therefore, in this final rule, we
are finalizing the rate-of-increase
percentages for updating the target
amounts for hospitals and hospital units
excluded from the IPPS that are
effective October 1, 2006.
In general, except for SCHs, MDHs,
and hospitals located in Puerto Rico,
each hospital’s payment per discharge
under the IPPS is based on 100 percent
of the Federal national rate, which is
based on the national adjusted
standardized amount. This amount
reflects the national average hospital
cost per case from a base year, updated
for inflation.
SCHs are paid based on whichever of
the following rates yields the greatest
aggregate payment: the Federal national
rate; the updated hospital-specific rate
based on FY 1982 costs per discharge;
the updated hospital-specific rate based
on FY 1987 costs per discharge; or the
updated hospital-specific rate based on
FY 1996 costs per discharge.
Under section 1886(d)(5)(G) of the
Act, MDHs historically have been paid
based on the Federal national rate or, if
higher, the Federal national rate plus 50
percent of the difference between the
Federal national rate and the updated
hospital-specific rate based on FY 1982
or FY 1987 costs per discharge,
whichever is higher. (MDHs did not
have the option to use their FY 1996
hospital-specific rate.) Section
5003(a)(1) of Pub. L. 109–171 extended
and modified the MDH special payment
provision which was previously set to
expire on October 1, 2006, to discharges
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
occurring on or after October 1, 2006,
but before October 1, 2011. Under
section 5003(b) of Pub. L. 109–171, if
the change results in an increase to its
target amount, an MDH must rebase its
hospital-specific rates to its FY 2002
cost report. In addition, under section
5003(c) of Pub. L. 109–171, MDHs will
now be paid based on the Federal
national rate or, if higher, the Federal
national rate plus 75 percent of the
difference between the Federal national
rate and the updated hospital-specific
rate. Further, based upon section
5003(d) of Pub. L. 109–171, MDHs will
no longer be subject to the 12-percent
cap on their DSH payment adjustment
factor.
For hospitals in Puerto Rico, the
payment per discharge is based on the
sum of 25 percent of a Puerto Rico rate
that reflects base year average costs per
case of Puerto Rico hospitals and 75
percent of the Federal national rate. (See
section II.D.3. of this Addendum for a
complete description.)
As discussed below in section II. of
this Addendum, we are making changes
in the determination of the prospective
payment rates for Medicare inpatient
operating costs for FY 2007. In section
III. of this Addendum, we discuss our
changes for determining the prospective
payment rates for Medicare inpatient
capital-related costs for FY 2007.
Section IV. of this Addendum sets forth
our final changes for determining the
rate-of-increase limits for hospitals
excluded from the IPPS for FY 2007.
Section V. of this Addendum sets forth
policies on payment for blood clotting
factors administered to hemophilia
inpatients. The tables to which we refer
in the preamble of this final rule are
presented in section VI. of this
Addendum of this final rule. Some of
these tables are based upon tentative
data, and the final tables will be
presented in a separate document that
will be published on the CMS Web site,
as well as in the Federal Register after
publication of this final rule but prior to
October 1, 2006.
II. Changes To Prospective Payment
Rates for Hospital Inpatient Operating
Costs
The basic methodology for
determining prospective payment rates
for hospital inpatient operating costs for
FY 2005 and subsequent fiscal years is
set forth at § 412.64. The basic
methodology for determining the
prospective payment rates for hospital
inpatient operating costs for hospitals
located in Puerto Rico for FY 2005 and
subsequent fiscal years is set forth at
§§ 412.211 and 412.212. Below we
PO 00000
Frm 00277
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48145
discuss the factors used for determining
the prospective payment rates.
In summary, the tentative
standardized amounts set forth in
Tables 1A, 1B, 1C, and 1D of section VI.
of this Addendum reflect—
• Equalization of the standardized
amounts for urban and other areas at the
level computed for large urban hospitals
during FY 2004 and onward, as
provided for under section
1886(d)(3)(A)(iv) of the Act, updated by
the applicable percentage increase
required under sections
1886(b)(3)(B)(i)(XX) and
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act.
• The labor-related share that is
applied to the tentative standardized
amounts and tentative Puerto Ricospecific standardized amounts to give
the hospital the highest payment, as
provided for under sections
1886(d)(3)(E), and 1886(d)(9)(C)(iv) of
the Act.
• Final updates of 3.4 percent for all
areas (that is, the full market basket
percentage increase of 3.4 percent), as
required by section 1886(b)(3)(B)(i)(XX)
of the Act, as amended by section
5001(a)(1) of Pub. L. 109–171, and
reflecting the requirements of section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act, as added
by section 5001(a)(3) of Pub. L. 109–171,
to reduce the applicable percentage
increase by 2.0 percentage points for a
hospital that fails to submit data, in a
form and manner specified by the
Secretary, relating to the quality of
inpatient care furnished by the hospital.
• An adjustment to ensure the DRG
recalibration, as provided for under
section 1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act, by
applying a final budget neutrality
adjustment factor to the standardized
amount.
• An adjustment to ensure the wage
index update and changes are budget
neutral, as provided for under section
1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act.
• An adjustment to ensure the effects
of the special transition measures
adopted in relation to the
implementation of new labor market
areas are budget neutral.
• An adjustment to ensure the effects
of geographic reclassification are budget
neutral, as provided for in section
1886(d)(8)(D) of the Act, by removing
the FY 2006 budget neutrality factor and
applying a revised factor.
• An adjustment to remove the FY
2006 outlier offset and apply an offset
for FY 2007.
• An adjustment to ensure the effects
of the rural community hospital
demonstration required under section
410A of Pub. L. 108–173 are budget
neutral, as required under section
410A(c)(2) of Pub. L. 108–173.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48146
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
A. Calculation of the Tentative Adjusted
Standardized Amount
1. Standardization of Base-Year Costs or
Target Amounts
In general, the national standardized
amount is based on per discharge
averages of adjusted hospital costs from
a base period (section 1886(d)(2)(A) of
the Act) or, for Puerto Rico, adjusted
target amounts from a base period
(section 1886(d)(9)(B)(i) of the Act),
updated and otherwise adjusted in
accordance with the provisions of
section 1886(d) of the Act. The
September 1, 1983 interim final rule (48
FR 39763) contained a detailed
explanation of how base-year cost data
(from cost reporting periods ending
during FY 1981) were established in the
initial development of standardized
amounts for the IPPS. The September 1,
1987 final rule (52 FR 33043 and 33066)
contains a detailed explanation of how
the target amounts were determined,
and how they are used in computing the
Puerto Rico rates.
Sections 1886(d)(2)(B) and (d)(2)(C) of
the Act require us to update base-year
per discharge costs for FY 1984 and
then standardize the cost data in order
to remove the effects of certain sources
of cost variations among hospitals.
These effects include case-mix,
differences in area wage levels, cost-ofliving adjustments for Alaska and
Hawaii, indirect medical education
costs, and costs to hospitals serving a
disproportionate share of low-income
patients.
In accordance with section
1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, the Secretary
estimates, from time-to-time, the
proportion of hospitals’ costs that are
attributable to wages and wage-related
costs. In general, the standardized
amount is divided into labor-related and
nonlabor-related amounts; only the
proportion considered the labor-related
amount is adjusted by the wage index.
Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act requires
that 62 percent of the standardized
amount be adjusted by the wage index,
unless doing so would result in lower
payments to a hospital than would
otherwise be made. (Section
1886(d)(9)(C)(iv)(II) of the Act extends
this provision to the labor-related share
for hospitals located in Puerto Rico.)
For FY 2007, we are not changing the
national and Puerto Rico-specific laborrelated and nonlabor-related shares from
the percentages established for FY 2006.
Therefore, the labor-related share will
continue to be 69.7 percent for the
national standardized amounts and 58.7
percent for the Puerto Rico specific
standardized amount. Consistent with
section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, we are
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
applying the wage index to a laborrelated share of 62 percent for all nonPuerto Rico hospitals whose wage
indexes are less than or equal to 1.0000.
For all non-Puerto Rico hospitals whose
wage indices are greater than 1.0000, we
are applying the wage index to a labor
share of 69.7 percent of the national
standardized amount. For a Puerto Rico
hospital, we will apply a labor share of
58.7 percent if its Puerto Rico-specific
wage index is less than or equal to
1.0000. For Puerto Rico hospitals whose
Puerto Rico-specific wage index values
are greater than 1.0000, we will apply a
labor share of 62 percent.
The tentative standardized amounts
appear in Table 1A, 1B, and 1C of the
Addendum to this final rule.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS raise the labor
share from 69.7 percent to the previous
level of 71.1 percent for hospitals with
a wage index greater than one. The
commenters explained that a reduced
labor share has a negative impact and
severe financial strain on their
hospitals.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their comments. We refer the
commenters to the FY 2006 final rule
(70 FR 47392–47396) where a full
discussion (including comments and
responses) on the labor share percentage
can be found. As we indicated, our
analysis in last year’s rule showed that
the labor-related share should equal
69.7 percent nationally based on the
latest available data.
2. Computing the Tentative Average
Standardized Amount
Section 1886(d)(3)(A)(iv) of the Act
requires that, beginning with FY 2004
and thereafter, an equal standardized
amount is to be computed for all
hospitals at the level computed for large
urban hospitals during FY 2003,
updated by the applicable percentage
update. Section 1886(d)(9)(A) of the Act
equalizes the Puerto Rico-specific urban
and rural area rates. Accordingly, we
will calculate FY 2007 national and
Puerto Rico standardized amounts,
irrespective of whether a hospital is
located in an urban or rural location.
3. Updating the Tentative Average
Standardized Amount
In accordance with section
1886(d)(3)(A)(iv)(II) of the Act, we are
updating the equalized standardized
amount for FY 2007 by the full
estimated market basket percentage
increase for hospitals in all areas, as
specified in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(i)(XX)
of the Act, as amended by section
5001(a)(1) of Pub. L. 109–171. The
percentage change in the market basket
PO 00000
Frm 00278
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
reflects the average change in the price
of goods and services purchased by
hospitals to furnish inpatient care. The
most recent forecast of the hospital
market basket increase for FY 2007 is
3.4 percent. Thus, for FY 2007, the
update to the average standardized
amount is 3.4 percent for hospitals in all
areas.
Section 1886(b)(3)(B) of the Act
specifies the mechanism used to update
the standardized amount for payment
for inpatient hospital operating costs.
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act, as
added by section 5001(a)(3) of Pub. L.
109–171, provides for a reduction of 2.0
percentage points to the update
percentage increase (also known as the
market basket update) for FY 2007 and
each subsequent fiscal year for any
‘‘subsection (d) hospital’’ that does not
submit quality data as discussed in
section IV.A. of the preamble of this
final rule. The tentative standardized
amounts in Tables 1A through 1C of
section VI. of this Addendum reflect
these differential amounts.
Although the update factors for FY
2007 are set by law, we are required by
section 1886(e)(4) of the Act to
recommend, taking into account
MedPAC’s recommendations,
appropriate update factors for FY 2007
for both IPPS hospitals and hospitals
and hospital units excluded from the
IPPS. Our recommendation on the
update factors (which is required by
sections 1886(e)(4)(A) and (e)(5)(A) of
the Act) is set forth in Appendix B of
this final rule.
We note that the occupational mix
wage index data will have no affect on
the market basket increase factor of 3.4
percent. Therefore, the update factors of
3.4 and 1.4 percent are final and not
tentative. These update factors (3.4 and
1.4 percent) are one element that will be
used to determine the FY 2007
standardized amounts. Other factors,
such as the outlier offset and budget
neutrality adjustments for wage index
and reclassification that are applied to
the standardized amounts, are yet to be
determined pending the calculation of
the occupational mix adjustment. The
market basket increase of 3.4 percent is
based on the second quarter forecast of
the hospital market basket increase by
the Office of the Actuary (as discussed
in Appendix B of this final rule).
4. Other Adjustments to the Average
Standardized Amount
As in the past, we are adjusting the
FY 2007 standardized amount to remove
the effects of the FY 2006 geographic
reclassifications and outlier payments
before applying the FY 2007 updates.
We then apply budget neutrality offsets
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
for outliers and geographic
reclassifications to the standardized
amount based on FY 2007 payment
policies.
We do not remove the prior year’s
budget neutrality adjustments for
reclassification and recalibration of the
DRG weights and for updated wage data
because, in accordance with sections
1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) and 1886(d)(3)(E) of
the Act, estimated aggregate payments
after the changes in the DRG relative
weights and wage index should equal
estimated aggregate payments prior to
the changes. If we removed the prior
year adjustment, we would not satisfy
these conditions.
Budget neutrality is determined by
comparing aggregate IPPS payments
before and after making the changes that
are required to be budget neutral (for
example, reclassifying and recalibrating
the DRGs, updating the wage data, and
geographic reclassifications). We
include outlier payments in the
simulations because they may be
affected by changes in these parameters.
We are also adjusting the
standardized amount this year by an
estimated amount to ensure that
aggregate IPPS payments do not exceed
the amount of payments that would
have been made in the absence of the
rural community hospital
demonstration required under section
410A of Pub. L. 108–173. This
demonstration is required to be budget
neutral under section 410A(c)(2) of Pub.
L. 108–173.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
a. Recalibration of DRG Weights and
Updated Wage Index—Budget
Neutrality Adjustment
Section 1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act
specifies that, beginning in FY 1991, the
annual DRG reclassification and
recalibration of the relative weights
must be made in a manner that ensures
that aggregate payments to hospitals are
not affected. As discussed in section II.
of the preamble of this final rule, we
normalized the recalibrated DRG
weights by an adjustment factor, so that
the average case weight after
recalibration is equal to the average case
weight prior to recalibration. However,
equating the average case weight after
recalibration to the average case weight
before recalibration does not necessarily
achieve budget neutrality with respect
to aggregate payments to hospitals
because payments to hospitals are
affected by factors other than average
case weight. Therefore, as we have done
in past years, we are making a budget
neutrality adjustment to ensure that the
requirement of section 1886(d)(4)(C)(iii)
of the Act is met.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
As noted above, due to the decision
of the Bellevue court, we are unable to
finalize the wage data used in
establishing the FY 2007 IPPS payment
factors at this time. We use the wage
data to standardize the charges when
recalibrating the DRG weights, and
therefore, we will recalculate the final
DRG weights when the occupational
mix adjusted wage data become
available. Since the DRG relative
weights are not yet final, at this time we
are only able to provide the tentative
DRG reclassification and recalibration
budget neutrality adjustment.
Subsequent to this final rule and prior
to October 1, 2006, the recalculated DRG
weights and the final DRG
reclassification and recalibration budget
neutrality adjustment will be published
in a Federal Register notice.
Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act
requires us to update the hospital wage
index on an annual basis beginning
October 1, 1993. This provision also
requires us to make any updates or
adjustments to the wage index in a
manner that ensures that aggregate
payments to hospitals are not affected
by the change in the wage index. For FY
2007, we are adjusting 100 percent of
the wage index factor for occupational
mix. We describe the occupational mix
adjustment in section III.C. of the
preamble to this final rule. However, the
data to compute the 100 percent
occupational mix adjustment are not
available to us at this time. Although
section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act requires
us to update the wage index on a budget
neutral basis, we cannot include the
effects of the occupational mix
adjustment on the wage index in our
budget neutrality calculations at this
time. Therefore, the budget neutrality
adjustment to the standardized amounts
that we calculated below is tentative
pending the calculation of the
occupational mix adjusted wage indices
that will be provided on the CMS Web
site and in a Federal Register notice
prior to October 1.
In FY 2005, those urban hospitals that
became rural under the new labor
market area definitions were assigned
the wage index of the urban area in
which they were located under the
previous labor market definitions for a
3-year period of FY 2005, FY 2006, and
FY 2007. Because we are in the third
year of this 3-year transition, we are
adjusting the standardized amounts for
FY 2007 to ensure budget neutrality for
this policy. We discuss this adjustment
in section III.B. of the preamble to this
final rule. Again, the adjustment for this
factor will be affected by the
occupational mix adjusted wage indices
that will be recalculated prior to
PO 00000
Frm 00279
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48147
October 1. For this reason, the
adjustment for previously urban
hospitals that become rural under the
new labor market area definitions is
tentative pending final calculation of
the occupational mix adjusted wage
indices.
Section 4410 of Pub. L. 105–33
provides that, for discharges on or after
October 1, 1997, the area wage index
applicable to any hospital that is not
located in a rural area may not be less
than the area wage index applicable to
hospitals located in rural areas in that
State. This provision is required by
section 4410(b) of Pub. L. 105–33 to be
budget neutral. Therefore, we include
the effects of this provision in our
calculation of the wage update budget
neutrality factor. As discussed in the FY
2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR 47493), FY
2007 is the third and final year of the
3-year provision that uses an imputed
wage index floor for States that have no
rural areas and States that have
geographic rural areas, but that have no
hospitals actually classified as rural. We
are also adjusting for the effects of this
provision in our calculation of the wage
update budget neutrality factor. This
figure will also be updated pending
calculation of the occupational mix
adjusted wage indices.
To comply with the requirement that
DRG reclassification and recalibration of
the relative weights and the updated
wage index be budget neutral, we used
FY 2005 discharge data to simulate
payments and compared aggregate
payments using the FY 2006 relative
weights and wage indexes to aggregate
payments using the FY 2007 relative
weights and wage indexes. The same
methodology was used for the FY 2006
budget neutrality adjustment.
Based on this comparison, we
computed a tentative budget neutrality
adjustment factor equal to 0.997030. We
also are adjusting the Puerto Ricospecific standardized amount for the
effect of DRG reclassification and
recalibration. We computed a tentative
budget neutrality adjustment factor for
the Puerto Rico-specific standardized
amount equal to 0.997968. These budget
neutrality adjustment factors are applied
to the standardized amounts without
removing the effects of the FY 2006
budget neutrality adjustments. In
addition, as discussed in section IV.E. of
the preamble to this final rule, we are
applying the same tentative DRG
reclassification and recalibration budget
neutrality factor of 0.997968 to the
hospital-specific rates that are to be
effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006.
Using the same data, we calculated a
tentative transition budget neutrality
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48148
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
adjustment to account for the ‘‘hold
harmless’’ policy under which urban
hospitals that became rural under the
new labor market area definitions were
assigned the wage index of the urban
area in which they were located under
the previous labor market area
definitions for a 3-year period of FY
2005, FY 2006, and FY 2007. Using the
pre-reclassified wage index, we
simulated payments under the new
labor market area definitions and
compared them to simulated payments
under the ‘‘hold harmless’’ policy.
Based on this comparison, we computed
a tentative transition budget neutrality
adjustment of 0.999605.
Comment: Several commenters
addressed CMS’’ policy of excluding
data from CAHs when computing the
wage index. The commenters believed
that the artificial increase in the
national average hourly wage has
lowered the budget neutrality
adjustment by an estimated $1.52
billion over 5 years (2003 through 2007).
The commenters stated that CMS should
apply a one-time positive budget
neutrality adjustment in FY 2007 to
compensate for the prior
underpayments. They did not believe
similar future adjustments would be
necessary since very few hospitals are
expected ‘‘to convert to CAH status now
that the necessary provider designation
is no longer an option.’’
Response: We do not believe that the
elimination of these data has resulted in
an overstated national average hourly
wage, nor has the budget neutrality
adjustment been inappropriately
reduced. Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the
Act requires that wage index
adjustments be made in a manner that
assures that aggregate payments in a
fiscal year are not greater or less than
those that would have been made
without the wage index adjustment. We
calculate the budget neutrality
adjustment for the wage index by
comparing simulated payments under
our current wage index adjustment
policies with simulated payments with
no wage index adjustment. Our current
policy is to exclude CAH data from our
calculation of the IPPS wage index, so
we believe this policy should be taken
into account when we calculate the
budget neutrality adjustment for the
wage index. Consequently, we will not
apply a one-time positive budget
neutrality adjustment in FY 2007. We
note that a full discussion on the wage
index can be found in section III. of the
preamble to this final rule.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
b. Reclassified Hospitals—Tentative
Budget Neutrality Adjustment
Section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
provides that, effective with discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 1988,
certain rural hospitals are deemed
urban. In addition, section 1886(d)(10)
of the Act provides for the
reclassification of hospitals based on
determinations by the MGCRB. Under
section 1886(d)(10) of the Act, a hospital
may be reclassified for purposes of the
wage index.
Under section 1886(d)(8)(D) of the
Act, the Secretary is required to adjust
the standardized amount to ensure that
aggregate payments under the IPPS after
implementation of the provisions of
sections 1886(d)(8)(B) and (C) and
1886(d)(10) of the Act are equal to the
aggregate prospective payments that
would have been made absent these
provisions. We note that neither the
wage index reclassifications provided
under section 508 of Pub. L. 108–173
nor the wage index adjustments
provided under section 1886(d)(13) of
the Act are budget neutral. Section
508(b) of Pub. L. 108–173 provides that
the wage index reclassifications
approved under section 508(a) of Pub. L.
108–173 ‘‘shall not be effected in a
budget neutral manner.’’ Section
1886(d)(13)(H) of the Act similarly
provides that any increase in a wage
index under section 1886(d)(13) shall
not be taken into account ‘‘in applying
any budget neutrality adjustment with
respect to such index’’ under section
1886(d)(8)(D) of the Act. To calculate
the tentative budget neutrality factor, we
used FY 2005 discharge data to simulate
payments, and compared total IPPS
payments prior to any reclassifications
under sections 1886(d)(8)(B) and (C) and
1886(d)(10) of the Act to total IPPS
payments after such reclassifications.
Based on these simulations, we
calculated a tentative adjustment factor
of 0.991850 to ensure that the effects of
this reclassification are budget neutral.
The tentative adjustment factor is
applied to the standardized amount
after removing the effects of the FY 2006
budget neutrality adjustment factor. We
note that the FY 2007 tentative
adjustment reflects FY 2007 wage index
reclassifications approved by the
MGCRB or the Administrator, and the
effects of MGCRB reclassifications
approved in FY 2005 and FY 2006
(section 1886(d)(10)(D)(v) of the Act
makes wage index reclassifications
effective for 3 years). As we note earlier
in this final rule, CMS will make a FY
2007 reclassification determination for a
hospital based on what we believe will
be most advantageous to the hospital
PO 00000
Frm 00280
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
using the fully occupational mix
adjusted wage index. We will calculate
the final budget neutrality adjustments
for geographic reclassification
subsequent to this final rule, but prior
to October 1, and will make this
information available with the
occupational mix adjusted wage indices
and final IPPS rates.
c. Outliers
Section 1886(d)(5)(A) of the Act
provides for payments in addition to the
basic prospective payments for ‘‘outlier’’
cases involving extraordinarily high
costs. To qualify for outlier payments, a
case must have costs greater than the
sum of the prospective payment rate for
the DRG, any IME and DSH payments,
any new technology add-on payments,
and the ‘‘outlier threshold’’ or ‘‘fixed
loss’’ amount (a dollar amount by which
the costs of a case must exceed
payments in order to qualify for an
outlier payment). We refer to the sum of
the prospective payment rate for the
DRG, any IME and DSH payments, any
new technology add-on payments, and
the outlier threshold as the outlier
‘‘fixed-loss cost threshold.’’ To
determine whether the costs of a case
exceed the fixed-loss cost threshold, a
hospital’s CCR is applied to the total
covered charges for the case to convert
the charges to costs. Payments for
eligible cases are then made based on a
marginal cost factor, which is a
percentage of the costs above the fixedloss cost threshold. The marginal cost
factor for FY 2007 is 80 percent, the
same marginal cost factor we have used
since FY 1995 (59 FR 45367).
In accordance with section
1886(d)(5)(A)(iv) of the Act, outlier
payments for any year are projected to
be not less than 5 percent nor more than
6 percent of total operating DRG
payments plus outlier payments.
Section 1886(d)(3)(B) of the Act requires
the Secretary to reduce the average
standardized amount by a factor to
account for the estimated proportion of
total DRG payments made to outlier
cases. Similarly, section
1886(d)(9)(B)(iv) of the Act requires the
Secretary to reduce the average
standardized amount applicable to
hospitals in Puerto Rico to account for
the estimated proportion of total DRG
payments made to outlier cases. More
information on outlier payments may be
found on the CMS Web site at https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/
04_outlier.asp#TopOfPage.
i. FY 2007 tentative outlier fixed-loss
cost threshold.
As stated above, the wage index
tables, rates, and impacts will not be
final in this final rule because we are yet
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
to determine occupational mix adjusted
wage indices. Therefore, we are only
able to provide tentative standardized
amounts, relative weights, offsets, and
budget neutrality factors in this final
rule. Once we have the final
occupational mix data, we will
recalculate these amounts to reflect the
final occupational mix adjusted wage
indices. The same circumstances apply
to the outlier threshold. Without final
wage index data, final standardized
amounts, final offsets and final budget
neutrality factors, we are only able to
provide a tentative fixed loss outlier
threshold in this final rule. Subsequent
to this final rule, we will publish a final
fixed loss outlier threshold that will be
effective for discharges on and after
October 1, 2006 for FY 2007. However,
in this final rule, we are adopting as
final the methodology we will use to
calculate the final outlier fixed-loss cost
threshold.
For FY 2007, we proposed to use the
same methodology used for FY 2006 (70
FR 47493) to calculate the outlier
threshold. As we have done in the past,
to calculate the proposed FY 2007
outlier threshold, we simulated
payments by applying FY 2007 rates
and policies using cases from the FY
2005 MedPAR files. Therefore, in order
to determine the FY 2007 outlier
threshold, we inflate the charges on the
MedPAR claims by 2 years, from FY
2005 to FY 2007.
In certain years in the past, we have
inflated MedPAR claims by calculating
a 2-year average annual rate-of-change
in charges-per-case using the charge
data for the two most recent years for
which we had relatively complete
MedPAR data. As discussed in the FY
2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR 47494),
however, we believe that charge data
from FY 2003 may be distorted due to
the atypically high rate of hospital
charge inflation during FY 2003.
Therefore, we are not inflating charges
using a 2-year average annual rate-ofchange from FY 2003 to FY 2004 and FY
2004 to FY 2005.
Instead, we proposed to continue
using a refined methodology that takes
into account the lower inflation in
hospital charges that is occurring as a
result of the outlier final rule (68 FR
34494), which changed our
methodology for determining outlier
payments by implementing the use of
more current and accurate CCRs. Our
refined methodology uses more recent
data that reflects the rate-of-change in
hospital charges under the new outlier
policy. Specifically, we proposed to
establish the FY 2007 outlier threshold
as follows: Using the latest data
available, we would calculate the 1-year
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
average annualized rate-of-change in
charges-per-case from the last quarter of
FY 2004 in combination with the first
quarter of FY 2005 (July 1, 2004 through
December 31, 2004) to the last quarter
of FY 2005 in combination with the first
quarter of FY 2006 (July 1, 2005 through
December 31, 2005). This rate of change
was 7.57 percent (1.0757) or 15.15
percent (1.1515) over 2 years.
As we have done in the past, we
proposed to establish the FY 2007
outlier threshold using hospital CCRs
from the March 2006 update to the
Provider-Specific File—the most recent
available at the time of this final rule.
This file includes CCRs that reflect
implementation of the changes to the
policy for determining the applicable
CCRs that became effective August 8,
2003 (68 FR 34494).
Using this methodology, we proposed
to establish an outlier fixed-loss cost
threshold for FY 2007 equal to the
prospective payment rate for the DRG,
plus any IME and DSH payments, and
any add-on payments for new
technology, plus $25,530.
We noted that the case-weighted
national average CCR declined by
approximately 1 percent from the March
2005 to the March 2006 update of the
Provider-Specific File. Hospital charges
continue to increase at a steady rate of
growth between 7 and 8 percent over
each of the last 2 years, resulting in a
decline to the CCRs that are used to
compute the outlier threshold. Using
lower CCRs from the March 2006
Provider-Specific File, in combination
with the FY 2005 MedPAR claims and
inflated charges, contributes to a higher
outlier threshold for FY 2007 compared
to FY 2006.
As we did in establishing the FY 2006
outlier threshold (70 FR 47494), in our
projection of FY 2007 outlier payments,
we proposed not to make an adjustment
for the possibility that hospitals’ CCRs
and outlier payments may be reconciled
upon cost report settlement. We stated
that we continue to believe that, due to
the policy implemented in the June 9,
2003 outlier final rule, CCRs will no
longer fluctuate significantly and,
therefore, few hospitals will actually
have these ratios reconciled upon cost
report settlement. In addition, it is
difficult to predict which specific
hospitals will have CCRs and outlier
payments reconciled in their cost
reports in any given year. We also noted
that reconciliation occurs because
hospitals’ actual CCRs for the cost
reporting period are different than the
interim CCRs used to calculate outlier
payments when a bill is processed. Our
simulations assume that CCRs
accurately measure hospital costs and,
PO 00000
Frm 00281
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48149
therefore, are more indicative of postreconciliation than pre-reconciliation
outlier payments. As a result, we
proposed to continue to omit any
assumptions about the effects of
reconciliation from the outlier threshold
calculation.
Comment: Many commenters,
including two major hospital
associations, were concerned that the
proposed outlier threshold for FY 2007
remains too high and CMS will have
removed over $300 million from the
IPPS rates that were not paid back as
outliers. The commenters noted that
total estimated outlier payments in FY
2004 and FY 2005 were well under the
5.1 percent target. As a result, the
commenters recommended further
refining the outlier methodology so that,
in their view, it will be more likely that
CMS projects a threshold that meets the
5.1 target. The commenters explained
that aside from inflating the claim
charges, CMS should also use an
adjustment factor to project CCRs. The
commenters believed that the use of
more than one indicator will make the
threshold calculation more reliable and
accurate.
The commenters used data from the
March 31, 2006 HCRIS update to
determine hospitals’ CCRs (instead of
using CCRs from the PSF per CMS’s
methodology). The commenters
accounted for a nine month time lag
from the end of a cost reporting period
until the fiscal intermediary is able to
update the CCR to project the CCRs
expected to be used for outlier
calculations in FY 2007. The
commenters then calculated a cost
inflation factor of 5.69 percent by
determining the 2002–2004 aggregate
annual rate of increase in cost per
discharge. The commenters used this
cost inflation factor along with CMS’
charge inflation factor of 7.57 percent to
project CCRs. These projected CCRs
were applied to projected FY 2007
charges to simulate the determination of
costs for FY 2007 outlier payments.
Using this methodology, the
commenters determined and
recommended an outlier threshold of
$24,000 that they assert would result in
5.1 percent outlier payments. The
commenters also indicated that CMS
would have paid 5.1 percent of total
IPPS payments as outliers in FY 2006
using a threshold of $21,275 instead of
$23,600. In addition, the commenters
asserted that CMS removed a total of $3
billion more from the IPPS rates than it
spent on outlier payments over FY 2004,
2005, and 2006. Therefore, the
commenters urged CMS to adopt a
better methodology of projecting the
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48150
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
CCRs, regardless of the DRG refinements
being adopted for FY 2007.
One commenter argued that using
CMS’ previous methodology with costs
instead of charges resulted in an outlier
threshold of $23,055 for FY 2007 that
would be more likely to result in 5.1
percent of total IPPS payments being
paid as outliers. Using a methodology
with costs and data from HCRIS (to
determine hospital CCRs), the
commenter computed a threshold of
$22,645. The commenter asserted that
projections using a cost threshold for FY
2004–2006 would have been much
closer to the ultimate threshold needed
to achieve the 5.1 percent target.
Because the commenter believed there
is now 3 years of data demonstrating
that a cost methodology is a better
predictor of the threshold, the
commenter recommended that CMS
adopt a threshold of $22,645.
MedPAC also commented that CMS
should adjust the outlier methodology
and apply an adjustment to project
CCRs. MedPAC explained that using
CCRs that are too high will overstate
costs resulting in a fixed loss threshold
that is too high. Therefore, MedPAC
recommended that CMS project the
average costs and charge per case to
project hospitals’ CCRs using the charge
inflation factor already determined by
CMS and the cost inflation factor using
the market basket when projecting the
CCRs.
Another commenter stated that it is
inappropriate to use a methodology that
ignores cost inflation. The commenter
argued that the threshold is a ‘‘cost
outlier threshold’’ and therefore an
adjustment for cost should be
incorporated into the outlier threshold
methodology.
One commenter asked CMS to
strongly reconsider the increase to the
outlier threshold and implement a
reduction that is consistent with the
trends for FY 2005 and FY 2006 in
outlier payments. Another commenter
recommended that CMS calculate what
the outlier threshold would need to be
for the current fiscal year (2006) to
enable outlier payments to meet the 5.1
percent target and apply that threshold
for FY 2007.
Response: As the commenters noted,
the outlier thresholds we have projected
in the last several years have resulted in
payments below the 5.1 percent target.
However, we have been hesitant to
change our model because, in the early
years of this decade, outlier payments
were significantly higher than the 5.1
percent target we projected because the
charging practices of some hospitals
resulted in overestimation of hospitals’
cost-per-case. However, now that data
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
for later years in which charging
practices were stabilized are available,
after careful consideration, we agree that
a refinement to the proposed
methodology to account for the rate of
change in the relationship between costs
and charges would likely increase the
precision of our model and we believe
this would be an appropriate refinement
to adopt in determining the FY 2007
outlier threshold.
For FY 2007, we are using the same
methodology we proposed, except that
we are using more recent data to
determine the charge inflation factor (as
explained below). In addition, we are
applying an adjustment factor to the
CCRs to account for cost and charge
inflation (as explained below). As we
proposed, for this final rule, we
simulated payments by applying FY
2007 rates and policies using cases from
the FY 2005 MedPAR files. Therefore, as
stated above, in order to determine the
FY 2007 outlier threshold, we inflated
the charges on the MedPAR claims by
2 years, from FY 2005 to FY 2007.
As noted above, the commenters
supported our charge inflation
methodology. Therefore, using the most
recent data available (updated from the
proposed rule), we calculated the 1-year
average annualized rate-of-change in
charges-per-case from the first quarter of
FY 2005 in combination with the
second quarter of FY 2005 (October 1,
2004 through March 31, 2005) to the
first quarter of FY 2006 in combination
with the second quarter of FY 2006
(October 1, 2005 through March 31,
2006). This rate of change was 7.9
percent (1.079) or 16.42 percent (1.1642)
over 2 years.
As we have done in the past, we are
establishing the FY 2007 outlier
threshold using hospital CCRs from the
March 2006 update to the ProviderSpecific File—the most recent data
available at the time of this final rule.
However, as noted above, many
commenters believe an adjustment to
the CCRs would be appropriate in
projecting a threshold that meets the 5.1
percent target. The commenters
referenced above used cost report data
from HCRIS and applied a cost inflation
factor based on the annual rate of
increase in the cost per discharge from
2002 through 2004. However, we still
believe the best source of hospital’s
operating and capital CCRs are those
that come from the Provider-Specific
File. As noted in the FY 2006 final rule
(70 FR 47495), fiscal intermediaries will
determine actual outlier payment
amounts using some of the same CCRs
that are in the March 2006 PSF. Fiscal
intermediaries will begin using an
updated CCR to calculate the outlier
PO 00000
Frm 00282
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
payments for a hospital only after a
more recent cost report of the hospital
has been tentatively settled.
Nevertheless, we now agree with the
commenters that it is appropriate to
apply an adjustment factor to the CCRs
so that the CCRs we are using in our
simulation more closely reflect the CCRs
that will be used in FY 2007.
We worked with our actuarial office
in deriving the methodology described
below to develop the CCR adjustment
factor. Specifically, we used the
operating cost per discharge increase in
combination with the final updated
market basket increase determined by
Global Insight, Inc., as well as the
charge inflation factor described above
to estimate the adjustment to the CCRs.
By using the market basket rate-ofincrease and the increase in the average
cost per discharge from hospital cost
reports, we are using two different
measures of cost inflation. For FY 2007,
we determined the adjustment by taking
the percentage increase in the operating
costs per discharge from FY 2003 to FY
2004 (1.0645) from the cost report and
dividing it by the final market basket
increase from FY 2004 (1.039) We
repeated this calculation for 2 prior
years to determine the 3-year average of
the rate of adjusted change in costs
between the market basket rate-ofincrease and the increase in cost per
case from the cost report (FY 2001 to FY
2002 percentage increase of operating
costs per discharge of 1.0836 divided by
FY 2002 final market basket increase of
1.04, FY 2002 to FY 2003 percentage
increase of operating costs per discharge
of 1.0698 divided by FY 2003 final
market basket increase of 1.04). For FY
2007, we averaged the differentials
calculated for FY 2002, FY 2003, and FY
2004 which resulted in a mean ratio of
1.0327. We multiplied the 3-year
average of 1.0327 by the 2005 market
basket percentage increase of 1.0420,
which resulted in an operating cost
inflation factor of 7.61 percent or
1.0761. We then divided the operating
cost inflation factor by the 1-year
average change in charges (1.079) and
applied an adjustment factor of 0.9973
to the operating CCRs from the ProviderSpecific File.
We believe it is appropriate to apply
only a one year adjustment factor to the
CCRs. On average, it takes
approximately 9 months for fiscal
intermediaries to tentatively settle a cost
report from the fiscal year end of a
hospital’s cost reporting period. The
average ‘‘age’’ of hospitals’ CCRs from
the time the fiscal intermediary inserts
the CCR in the PSF until the beginning
of FY 2007 is approximately 1 year.
Therefore, as stated above, we believe a
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
one year adjustment to the CCRs is
appropriate.
We used the same methodology for
the capital CCRs and applied an
adjustment factor of 0.9574 (cost
inflation factor of 1.0303 divided by a
charge inflation factor of 1.0761) to the
capital CCRs. We are using the same
charge inflation factor for the capital
CCRs that was used for the operating
CCRs. The charge inflation factor is
based on the overall billed charges and
therefore we believe it is appropriate to
apply the charge factor to both the
operating and capital CCRs.
We believe this calculation of an
adjustment to the CCRs is more accurate
and stable than the commenters’
methodology because it takes into
account the costs per discharge and the
market basket percentage increase when
determining a cost adjustment factor.
Using this methodology, we are
establishing a tentative outlier fixed-loss
cost threshold for FY 2007 equal to the
prospective payment rate for the DRG,
plus any IME and DSH payments, and
any add-on payments for new
technology, plus $24,475. The tentative
outlier threshold that we calculated for
this final rule is $1,055 lower than the
$25,530 threshold from the proposed
rule. We anticipate that a threshold
based on the methodology above will
reach the target of 5.1 percent. We note
that, in this final rule, we are adopting
this methodology to compute the final
outlier fixed-loss cost threshold for FY
2007, although the final dollar amount
of the outlier threshold will be
published in a subsequent Federal
Register document.
We also note, that the case-weighted
national average CCR declined by
approximately an additional 1 percent
from the December 2005 to the March
2006 update of the Provider-Specific
File. We further reduced the CCRs by
applying an adjustment to reflect the
differential increase between costs and
charges. As noted above, using lower
CCRs from the March 2006 ProviderSpecific File, in combination with the
FY 2005 MedPAR claims and inflated
charges, contributes to a lower outlier
threshold for FY 2007 in this final rule
compared to the proposed rule.
Finally, charges are a key influence
over outlier payments. Therefore, we
continue to believe it is appropriate to
use a methodology based on charges
instead of costs. Please refer to our
response to a similar comment in the FY
2006 final rule (70 FR 47495) for a more
detailed discussion of this issue.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that CMS consider making mid-year
adjustments to the outlier threshold if it
appears that outlier payments are going
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
to be significantly above or below the
5.1 percent target. The commenter
believed that a mid-year adjustment
would aid CMS in reaching the 5.1
percent target irrespective of the
methodology CMS uses to determine the
threshold. However, the commenter did
note that a mid-year correction will be
of less need if CMS were to adopt a
methodology based on cost or the CMS
model that projects CCRs. Another
commenter recommended that CMS
evaluate the practicality and effects of a
correction error similar to the update
forecast error adjustment used in
recommending an update for the market
basket rate of increase.
One commenter urged CMS to
publicly account for the amount of
unspent outlier payments over the last
3 years and to establish a policy
whereby the unspent money is returned
to the base rate for inpatient spending.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters suggestions for improving
payment accuracy for outliers. However,
we have already responded to similar
comments in the FY 2006 final rule (70
FR 47495).
Furthermore, we believe that a policy
whereby the standardized amounts
would be adjusted to reflect differences
between the 5.1 percent removed from
the rates and the amounts actually paid
as outliers would be inconsistent with
the purpose of the statute relating to
outlier payments and the prospective
payment system. Section 1886(d)(3)(B)
of the Act requires that we reduce the
standardized amounts by a factor equal
to the proportion of outlier payments
‘‘as estimated by the Secretary.’’
Therefore, we believe that the statute
does not contemplate adjustments to the
standardized amounts in an upcoming
year because actual outlier payments in
past years were more or less than we
had estimated.
Comment: One commenter was
concerned that CMS has not met the 5.1
percent target in previous years and
suggested that CMS project the outlier
threshold at 5.5 percent of total
payments to ensure it meets the 5.1
percent target.
Another commenter was concerned
about the impact that the DRG
refinement will have on outlier
payments. The commenter
recommended that CMS maintain the
threshold at $23,600 for FY 2007 while
hospitals adjust to the other PPS
payment changes that will occur.
One commenter supported
eliminating outlier payments in its
entirety and recommended a more
equitable approach by simply increasing
the standardized amounts by 5.1
percent. The commenter explained that
PO 00000
Frm 00283
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48151
this method would remove the ability to
game the system and would be more
desirable to deserving providers that do
not abuse the system.
Response: As noted above, section
1886(d)(5)(A)(iv) of the Act requires
outlier payments to be not less than 5
percent nor more than 6 percent of total
estimated or projected payments.
Therefore, we cannot eliminate outlier
payments as suggested by one
commenter or set a threshold that is
based on the current fiscal year for the
coming fiscal year. Although we are
refining the DRGs, the statute requires
us to set an outlier threshold so that
estimated total outlier payments are
between 5 and 6 percent of total IPPS
payments. If we failed to project a new
outlier threshold for FY 2007, but rather
simply continued to use the outlier
threshold for FY 2006, we would not
meet the mandate of the statute.
We also note that we project outlier
payments at 5.1 percent to ensure that
we offset the minimum amount
necessary from the standardized
amounts to meet our statutory
obligation. Although CMS could legally
project an outlier threshold so that 5.5
percent of total IPPS payments are paid
as outliers, the law would also require
us to remove 5.5 percent from the
standardized amounts to finance the
outlier pool, which would reduce funds
available for typical cases. As a result,
we believe setting the outlier threshold
so that 5.1 percent of total IPPS
payments are paid as outliers is more
equitable to all hospitals, as less money
is withdrawn from the standardized
amounts due to the outlier offset and it
allows proportionally greater payment
for typical cases. Therefore, we are
adopting as final our proposal to set the
outlier threshold so that 5.1 percent of
estimated total IPPS payments are paid
as outliers.
ii. Other changes concerning outliers.
As stated in the FY 1994 IPPS final
rule (58 FR 46348, September 1, 1993),
we establish outlier thresholds that are
applicable to both hospital inpatient
operating costs and hospital inpatient
capital-related costs. When we modeled
the combined operating and capital
outlier payments, we found that using a
common set of thresholds resulted in a
lower percentage of outlier payments for
capital-related costs than for operating
costs. We project that the thresholds for
FY 2007 will result in outlier payments
equal to 5.1 percent of operating DRG
payments and 4.87 percent of capital
payments based on the Federal rate.
In accordance with section
1886(d)(3)(B) of the Act, we are
reducing the FY 2007 standardized
amount by the same percentage to
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48152
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
to outliers on October 12, 2005. The
manual update covered an array of
topics, including CCRs, reconciliation,
and the time value of money. To
download and view the manual update,
please visit https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
transmittals/downloads/R707CP.pdf.
Operating
Capital
iii. FY 2005 and FY 2006 outlier
standardized
federal
payments.
amounts
rate
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
National .....
0.948966
0.956763 47496), we stated that, based on
Puerto Rico
0.967415
0.967670 available data, we estimated that actual
FY 2005 outlier payments would be
approximately 4.1 percent of actual total
We are applying the tentative outlier
DRG payments. This estimate was
adjustment factors to the tentative FY
computed based on simulations using
2007 rates after removing the effects of
the FY 2004 MedPAR file (discharge
the FY 2006 outlier adjustment factors
data for FY 2004 bills). That is, the
on the standardized amount.
To determine whether a case qualifies estimate of actual outlier payments did
for outlier payments, we apply hospital- not reflect actual FY 2005 bills, but
instead reflected the application of FY
specific CCRs to the total covered
2005 rates and policies to available FY
charges for the case. Operating and
2004 bills.
capital costs for the case are calculated
Our current estimate, using available
separately by applying separate
operating and capital CCRs. These costs FY 2005 bills, is that actual outlier
payments for FY 2005 were
are then combined and compared with
approximately 3.96 percent of actual
the outlier fixed-loss cost threshold.
total DRG payments. Thus, the data
The outlier final rule (68 FR 34494)
indicate that, for FY 2005, the
eliminated the application of the
percentage of actual outlier payments
statewide average CCRs for hospitals
relative to actual total payments is lower
whose CCRs fall below 3 standard
deviations from the national mean CCR. than we projected before FY 2005 (and,
thus, is less than the percentage by
However, for those hospitals for which
which we reduced the standardized
the fiscal intermediary computes
amounts for FY 2005). We note that, for
operating CCRs greater than 1.26 or
FY 2006, the outlier threshold was
capital CCRs greater than 0.154, or
lowered to $23,600 compared to $25,800
hospitals for whom the fiscal
for FY 2005. The outlier threshold was
intermediary is unable to calculate a
CCR (as described at § 412.84(i)(3) of our lower in FY 2006 than FY 2005 as a
regulations), we are still using statewide result of slower growth in hospital
charge inflation following
average CCRs to determine whether a
implementation of the outlier final rule
hospital qualifies for outlier
that went into effect on August 9, 2003.
payments.31 Table 8A in section VI. of
Nevertheless, consistent with the policy
this Addendum contains the statewide
and statutory interpretation we have
average operating CCRs for urban
maintained since the inception of the
hospitals and for rural hospitals for
IPPS, we do not plan to make retroactive
which the fiscal intermediary is unable
adjustments to outlier payments to
to compute a hospital-specific CCR
ensure that total outlier payments for FY
within the above range. Effective for
discharges occurring on or after October 2005 are equal to 5.1 percent of total
DRG payments.
1, 2006, these statewide average ratios
We currently estimate that actual
will replace the ratios published in the
outlier payments for FY 2006 will be
IPPS final rule for FY 2006 (70 FR
approximately 4.62 percent of actual
47672). Table 8B in section VI. of this
total DRG payments, 0.48 percentage
Addendum contains the comparable
points lower than the 5.1 percent we
statewide average capital CCRs. Again,
projected in setting the outlier policies
the CCRs in Tables 8A and 8B will be
for FY 2006. This estimate is based on
used during FY 2007 when hospitalsimulations using the FY 2005 MedPAR
specific CCRs based on the latest settled
file (discharge data for FY 2005 bills).
cost report are either not available or are
We used these data to calculate an
outside the range noted above. For an
estimate of the actual outlier percentage
explanation of Table 8C, please see
for FY 2006 by applying FY 2006 rates
section VI. of this Addendum.
and policies, including an outlier
We finally note that we published a
threshold of $23,600 to available FY
manual update (Change Request 3966)
2005 bills. Even though we are
estimating payments below the 5.1
31 These figures represent 3.0 standard deviations
percent threshold for FY 2006, our
from the mean of the log distribution of CCRs for
all hospitals.
simulations using FY 2005 Medicare
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
account for the projected proportion of
payments paid to outliers.
The tentative outlier adjustment
factors that will be applied to the
standardized amount for FY 2007 are as
follows:
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00284
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
data show consistent levels of charge
inflation and a need to increase the
threshold for FY 2007 to ensure that 5.1
percent of total IPPS payments are paid
as outliers.
iv. Technical changes.
Subpart F of Part 412 of the existing
regulations discusses payment for
outlier cases and special payment for
new technology. We have become aware
of an inadvertent mistake in
§ 412.84(m). Currently, § 412.84(m)
discusses the application of the time
value of money when a hospital’s
outlier payments are reconciled. When
referencing reconciliation, the section
mistakenly references paragraph (h)(3)
instead of paragraph (i)(4). We received
no comments on this change and
therefore are finalizing our proposal to
revise § 412.84(m) to reference the
current policy under paragraph (i)(4).
In addition, in the June 9, 2003 outlier
final rule, we amended § 412.116(e) to
remove the second sentence, which
stated that payments for outliers ‘‘are
made based on submitted bills and
represent final payment.’’ It was
necessary to remove this sentence, as we
added a provision to the regulations that
provides that outlier payments are
subject to reconciliation when hospitals’
cost reports are settled. In the FY 2004
IPPS final rule (68 FR 45393), we again
amended § 412.116(e) to provide that
new technology add-on payments are
made on a case-by-case basis, rather
than on an interim basis. However, it
has come to our attention that, in the FY
2004 IPPS final rule, we inadvertently
reinserted the sentence that we had
struck in the June 9, 2003 outlier final
rule. We never intended to reinsert this
sentence, and our policy since the
implementation of the outlier final rule
has always been the same (that outlier
payments are subject to reconciliation
when hospitals’ cost reports are settled).
Therefore, in order to correct the
regulations to reflect our current policy,
we are removing the second sentence
from § 412.116(e). Although we did not
propose this technical correction, as
further discussed in section XIII.C. of
this final rule, we find it unnecessary to
undertake notice and comment
rulemaking with respect to this
technical correction.
d. Tentative Rural Community Hospital
Demonstration Program Adjustment
(Section 410A of Pub. L. 108–173)
Section 410A of Pub. L. 108–173
requires the Secretary to establish a
demonstration that will modify
reimbursement for inpatient services for
up to 15 small rural hospitals. Section
410A(c)(2) of Pub. L. 108–173 requires
that ‘‘in conducting the demonstration
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
program under this section, the
Secretary shall ensure that the aggregate
payments made by the Secretary do not
exceed the amount which the Secretary
would have paid if the demonstration
program under this section was not
implemented.’’ As discussed in section
IV.M. of the preamble to this final rule,
we are satisfying this requirement by
adjusting national IPPS rates by a factor
that is sufficient to account for the
added costs of this demonstration. We
estimate that the average additional
annual payment that will be made to
each participating hospital under the
demonstration will be approximately
$1,021,985. We based this estimate on
the recent historical experience of the
difference between inpatient cost and
payment for hospitals that are
participating in the demonstration. For
9 participating hospitals, the total
annual impact of the demonstration
program is estimated to be $9,197,870.
The required tentative adjustment to the
Federal rate used in calculating
Medicare inpatient prospective
payments as a result of the
demonstration is 0.999905.
In order to achieve budget neutrality,
we are adjusting the tentative national
IPPS rates by a tentative amount
sufficient to account for the added costs
of this demonstration. In other words,
we are applying budget neutrality across
the payment system as a whole rather
than merely across the participants of
this demonstration. We believe that the
language of the statutory budget
neutrality requirement permits the
agency to implement the budget
neutrality provision in this manner. The
statutory language requires that
‘‘aggregate payments made by the
Secretary do not exceed the amount
which the Secretary would have paid if
the demonstration * * * was not
implemented,’’ but does not identify the
range across which aggregate payments
must be held equal.
5. Tentative FY 2007 Standardized
Amount
The tentative adjusted standardized
amount is divided into labor-related and
nonlabor-related portions. Tables 1A
and 1B in section VI. of this Addendum
contain the tentative national
standardized amount that we are
applying to all hospitals, except
hospitals in Puerto Rico. The tentative
Puerto Rico-specific amounts are shown
in Table 1C. The tentative amounts
shown in Tables 1A and 1B differ only
in that the labor-related share applied to
the tentative standardized amounts in
Table 1A is 69.7 percent, and the laborrelated share applied to the tentative
standardized amounts in Table 1B is 62
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
percent. In accordance with sections
1886(d)(3)(E) and 1886(d)(9)(C)(iv) of
the Act, we are applying the laborrelated share of 62 percent, unless the
application of that percentage would
result in lower payments to a hospital
than would otherwise be made. The
effect of this application is that the
labor-related share of the tentative
standardized amount is 62 percent for
all hospitals (other than those in Puerto
Rico) whose wage indexes are less than
or equal to 1.0000.
In addition, Tables 1A and 1B include
tentative standardized amounts
reflecting the full 3.4 percent update for
FY 2007, and tentative standardized
amounts reflecting the 2.0 percentage
point reduction to the update (a 1.4
percent update) applicable for hospitals
that fail to submit quality data
consistent with section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act.
We note that in this final rule we are
not supplying a table that illustrates the
changes from the FY 2006 national
average standardized amount. Because
we are only setting the standardized
amounts tentatively, we do not believe
it is appropriate to include this table in
this final rule. However, we will publish
a table in the subsequent notice to this
final rule that details the calculation of
the final standardized amounts.
Under section 1886(d)(9)(A)(ii) of the
Act, the Federal portion of the Puerto
Rico payment rate is based on the
discharge-weighted average of the
national large urban standardized
amount (this tentative amount is set
forth in Table 1A). The tentative laborrelated and nonlabor-related portions of
the national average standardized
amounts for Puerto Rico hospitals for
FY 2007 are set forth in Table 1C of
section VI. of this Addendum. This table
also includes the tentative Puerto Rico
standardized amounts. The labor-related
share applied to the tentative Puerto
Rico specific standardized amount is
58.7 percent, or 62 percent, depending
on which is more advantageous to the
hospital. (Section 1886(d)(9)(C)(iv) of
the Act, as amended by section 403(b)
of Pub. L. 108–173, provides that the
labor-related share for hospitals in
Puerto Rico will be 62 percent, unless
the application of that percentage would
result in lower payments to the
hospital.)
B. Tentative Adjustments for Area Wage
Levels and Cost-of-Living
Tables 1A through 1C, as set forth in
section VI. of this Addendum, contain
the tentative labor-related and tentative
nonlabor-related shares of the
standardized amount that we are using
to calculate the prospective payment
PO 00000
Frm 00285
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48153
rates for hospitals located in the 50
States, the District of Columbia, and
Puerto Rico for FY 2007. This section
addresses two types of adjustments to
the tentative standardized amounts that
are made in determining the prospective
payment rates as described in this
Addendum.
1. Tentative Adjustment for Area Wage
Levels
Sections 1886(d)(3)(E) and
1886(d)(9)(C)(iv) of the Act require that
we make an adjustment to the laborrelated portion of the national and
Puerto Rico prospective payment rates,
respectively, to account for area
differences in hospital wage levels. This
adjustment is made by multiplying the
labor-related portion of the adjusted
standardized amounts by the
appropriate wage index for the area in
which the hospital is located. In section
III. of the preamble to this final rule, we
discuss the data and methodology for
the FY 2007 wage index. We note that
because the occupational mix adjusted
wage index data will not be finalized
until after this final rule, we will not be
publishing Tables 4A–1, 4A–2, 4B, 4C–
1, 4C–2, and 4F in this final rule.
However, we will publish these tables
in the Federal Register and on the CMS
Web site once all the data is finalized
and prior to October 1, 2006.
2. Final Adjustment for Cost-of-Living
in Alaska and Hawaii
Section 1886(d)(5)(H) of the Act
authorizes an adjustment to take into
account the unique circumstances of
hospitals in Alaska and Hawaii. Higher
labor-related costs for these two States
are taken into account in the adjustment
for area wages described above. For FY
2007, we are adjusting the payments for
hospitals in Alaska and Hawaii by
multiplying the nonlabor-related
portion of the standardized amount by
the appropriate adjustment factor
contained in the table below.
TABLE OF COST-OF-LIVING ADJUSTMENT FACTORS: ALASKA AND HAWAII
HOSPITALS
Area
Alaska—All areas ...............
Hawaii:
County of Honolulu .........
County of Hawaii .............
County of Kauai ..............
County of Maui ................
County of Kalawao ..........
Cost of living
adjustment factor
1.25
1.25
1.165
1.2325
1.2375
1.2375
(The above factors are based on data obtained from the U.S. Office of Personnel
Management.)
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48154
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
C. DRG Relative Weights
As discussed in section II. of the
preamble of this final rule, we have
developed a classification system for all
hospital discharges, assigning them into
DRGs, and have developed relative
weights for each DRG that reflect the
resource utilization of cases in each
DRG relative to Medicare cases in other
DRGs. Table 5 of section VI. of this
Addendum contains the relative weights
that we are using for discharges
occurring in FY 2007. These factors
have been recalibrated as explained in
section II. of the preamble of this final
rule.
D. Calculation of the Prospective
Payment Rates
General Formula for Calculation of
Prospective Payment Rates for FY 2007
In general, the operating prospective
payment rate for all hospitals paid
under the IPPS located outside of Puerto
Rico, except SCHs and MDHs, for FY
2007 equals the Federal rate.
The prospective payment rate for
SCHs for FY 2007 equals the higher of
the applicable Federal rate or the
hospital-specific rate as described
below. The prospective payment rate for
MDHs for FY 2007 equals the higher of
the Federal rate, or the Federal rate plus
75 percent of the difference between the
Federal rate and the hospital-specific
rate as described below. The prospective
payment rate for Puerto Rico for FY
2007 equals 25 percent of the Puerto
Rico rate plus 75 percent of the
applicable national rate.
As noted above, we are not able to
provide the final FY 2007 occupational
mix adjusted wage index tables.
Although Tables 4A–1, 4A–2, 4B, 4C–1,
and 4C–2 will be published on the CMS
Web site and in a subsequent Federal
Register document to this final rule, any
reference to these tables below refers to
these future tables.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
1. Federal Rate
The Federal rate is determined as
follows:
Step 1—Select the appropriate
average standardized amount
considering the applicable wage index
and whether the hospital has submitted
qualifying quality data (full update for
qualifying hospitals, update minus 2.0
percentage points for nonqualifying
hospitals).
Step 2—Multiply the labor-related
portion of the standardized amount by
the applicable wage index for the
geographic area in which the hospital is
located or the area to which the hospital
is reclassified.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Step 3—For hospitals in Alaska and
Hawaii, multiply the nonlabor-related
portion of the standardized amount by
the appropriate cost-of-living
adjustment factor.
Step 4—Add the amount from Step 2
and the nonlabor-related portion of the
standardized amount (adjusted, if
appropriate, under Step 3).
Step 5—Multiply the final amount
from Step 4 by the relative weight
corresponding to the appropriate DRG
(see Table 5 of section VI. of this
Addendum).
The Federal rate as determined in
Step 5 may then be further adjusted if
the hospital qualifies for either the IME
or DSH adjustment. In addition, for
hospitals that qualify for a low-volume
payment adjustment under section
1886(d)(12) of the Act, the payment in
Step 5 would be increased by 25
percent.
2. Hospital-Specific Rate (Applicable
Only to SCHs and MDHs)
a. Calculation of Hospital-Specific Rate
Section 1886(b)(3)(C) of the Act
provides that SCHs are paid based on
whichever of the following rates yields
the greatest aggregate payment: the
Federal rate; the updated hospitalspecific rate based on FY 1982 costs per
discharge; the updated hospital-specific
rate based on FY 1987 costs per
discharge; or the updated hospitalspecific rate based on FY 1996 costs per
discharge.
As discussed previously, MDHs are
required to rebase their hospital-specific
rates to their FY 2002 cost reports if
doing so results in higher payments. In
addition, effective for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2006,
MDHs are to be paid based on the
Federal national rate or, if higher, the
Federal national rate plus 75 percent
(changed from 50 percent) of the
difference between the Federal national
rate and the greater of the updated
hospital-specific rates based on either
FY 1982, FY 1987 or FY 2002 costs per
discharge. Further, MDHs will no longer
be subject to the 12-percent cap on their
DSH payment adjustment factor.
Hospital-specific rates have been
determined for each of these hospitals
based on the FY 1982 costs per
discharge, the FY 1987 costs per
discharge, or, for SCHs, the FY 1996
costs per discharge and for MDHs, the
FY 2002 cost per discharge. For a more
detailed discussion of the calculation of
the hospital-specific rates, we refer the
reader to the FY 1984 IPPS interim final
rule (48 FR 39772); the April 20, 1990
final rule with comment (55 FR 15150);
the FY 1991 IPPS final rule (55 FR
PO 00000
Frm 00286
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
35994); and the FY 2001 IPPS final rule
(65 FR 47082). In addition, for both
SCHs and MDHs, the hospital-specific
rate is adjusted by the budget neutrality
adjustment factor as discussed in
section IV.C. of the preamble to this
final rule. The resulting rate will be
used in determining the payment rate an
SCH or MDH will receive for its
discharges beginning on or after October
1, 2006.
b. Updating the FY 1982, FY 1987, FY
1996, and FY 2002 Hospital-Specific
Rates for FY 2007
We are increasing the hospitalspecific rates by 3.4 percent (the
hospital market basket percentage
increase) for SCHs and MDHs for FY
2007. Section 1886(b)(3)(C)(iv) of the
Act provides that the update factor
applicable to the hospital-specific rates
for SCHs is equal to the update factor
provided under section 1886(b)(3)(B)(iv)
of the Act, which, for SCHs in FY 2007,
is the market basket rate-of-increase.
Section 1886(b)(3)(D) of the Act
provides that the update factor
applicable to the hospital-specific rates
for MDHs also equals the update factor
provided under section 1886(b)(3)(B)(iv)
of the Act, which, for FY 2007, is the
market basket rate-of-increase.
3. General Formula for Calculation of
Prospective Payment Rates for Hospitals
Located in Puerto Rico Beginning On or
After October 1, 2006, and Before
October 1, 2007
Section 1886(d)(9)(E)(iv) of the Act
provides that, effective for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2004,
hospitals located in Puerto Rico are paid
based on a blend of 75 percent of the
national prospective payment rate and
25 percent of the Puerto Rico-specific
rate.
a. Puerto Rico Rate
The Puerto Rico prospective payment
rate is determined as follows:
Step 1—Select the appropriate
average standardized amount
considering the applicable wage index
(see Table 1C).
Step 2—Multiply the labor-related
portion of the standardized amount by
the appropriate Puerto Rico-specific
wage index.
Step 3—Add the amount from Step 2
and the nonlabor-related portion of the
standardized amount.
Step 4—Multiply the amount from
Step 3 by the appropriate DRG relative
weight (see Table 5 of section IV. of the
Addendum).
Step 5—Multiply the result in Step 4
by 25 percent.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
b. National Rate
The national prospective payment
rate is determined as follows:
Step 1—Select the appropriate
average standardized amount
considering the applicable wage index.
Step 2—Multiply the labor-related
portion of the standardized amount by
the applicable wage index for the
geographic area in which the hospital is
located or the area to which the hospital
is reclassified.
Step 3—Add the amount from Step 2
and the nonlabor-related portion of the
national average standardized amount.
Step 4—Multiply the amount from
Step 3 by the appropriate DRG relative
weight (see Table 5 of section VI. of the
Addendum).
Step 5—Multiply the result in Step 4
by 75 percent.
The sum of the Puerto Rico rate and
the national rate computed above equals
the prospective payment for a given
discharge for a hospital located in
Puerto Rico. This rate may then be
further adjusted if the hospital qualifies
for either the IME or DSH adjustment.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
III. Changes to Payment Rates for Acute
Care Hospital Inpatient Capital-Related
Costs for FY 2007
The PPS for acute care hospital
inpatient capital-related costs was
implemented for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 1991.
Effective with that cost reporting period,
hospitals were paid during a 10-year
transition period (which extended
through FY 2001) to change the
payment methodology for Medicare
acute care hospital inpatient capitalrelated costs from a reasonable costbased methodology to a prospective
methodology (based fully on the Federal
rate).
The basic methodology for
determining Federal capital prospective
rates is set forth in regulations at
§§ 412.308 through 412.352. Below we
discuss the factors that we are using to
determine the tentative capital Federal
rate for FY 2007, which will be effective
for discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 2006. As discussed in section
I. of the Addendum of this final rule, we
are not able to provide the final FY 2007
capital Federal prospective rates in this
rule due to requirements imposed by the
Second Circuit Court’s order regarding
wage index information as collected for
the inpatient Federal rates. This affects
the Federal capital payment rates, as
well, because wage index information is
used to determine the GAF/DRG budget
neutrality factor, the GAF, and outlier
adjustment factor that are used in
arriving at the capital Federal rates. We
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
are providing tentative amounts, where
applicable, as proxies for these rates and
factors until the occupational mix
adjusted wage index is finalized.
Subsequent to this final rule, we will
publish in a Federal Register document
a listing the capital Federal rates, offsets
and budget neutrality factors that are
effective October 1, 2006 for FY 2007.
The 10-year transition period ended
with hospital cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2001
(FY 2002). Therefore, for cost reporting
periods beginning in FY 2002, all
hospitals (except ‘‘new’’ hospitals under
§ 412.304(c)(2)) are paid based on 100
percent of the capital Federal rate. For
FY 1992, we computed the standard
Federal payment rate for capital-related
costs under the IPPS by updating the FY
1989 Medicare inpatient capital cost per
case by an actuarial estimate of the
increase in Medicare inpatient capital
costs per case. Each year after FY 1992,
we update the capital standard Federal
rate, as provided at § 412.308(c)(1), to
account for capital input price increases
and other factors. The regulations at
§ 412.308(c)(2) provide that the capital
Federal rate is adjusted annually by a
factor equal to the estimated proportion
of outlier payments under the capital
Federal rate to total capital payments
under the capital Federal rate. In
addition, § 412.308(c)(3) requires that
the capital Federal rate be reduced by an
adjustment factor equal to the estimated
proportion of payments for (regular and
special) exceptions under § 412.348.
Section 412.308(c)(4)(ii) requires that
the capital standard Federal rate be
adjusted so that the effects of the annual
DRG reclassification and the
recalibration of DRG weights and
changes in the geographic adjustment
factor are budget neutral.
For FYs 1992 through 1995, § 412.352
required that the capital Federal rate
also be adjusted by a budget neutrality
factor so that aggregate payments for
inpatient hospital capital costs were
projected to equal 90 percent of the
payments that would have been made
for capital-related costs on a reasonable
cost basis during the fiscal year. That
provision expired in FY 1996. Section
412.308(b)(2) describes the 7.4 percent
reduction to the capital rate that was
made in FY 1994, and § 412.308(b)(3)
describes the 0.28 percent reduction to
the capital rate made in FY 1996 as a
result of the revised policy of paying for
transfers. In FY 1998, we implemented
section 4402 of Pub. L. 105-33, which
required that, for discharges occurring
on or after October 1, 1997, and before
October 1, 2002, the unadjusted capital
standard Federal rate is reduced by
17.78 percent. As we discussed in the
PO 00000
Frm 00287
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48155
FY 2003 IPPS final rule (67 FR 50102)
and implemented in § 412.308(b)(6), a
small part of that reduction was restored
effective October 1, 2002.
To determine the appropriate budget
neutrality adjustment factor and the
regular exceptions payment adjustment
during the 10-year transition period, we
developed a dynamic model of
Medicare inpatient capital-related costs;
that is, a model that projected changes
in Medicare inpatient capital-related
costs over time. With the expiration of
the budget neutrality provision, the
capital cost model was only used to
estimate the regular exceptions payment
adjustment and other factors during the
transition period. As we explained in
the FY 2002 IPPS final rule (66 FR
39911), beginning in FY 2002, an
adjustment for regular exception
payments is no longer necessary
because regular exception payments
were only made for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
1991, and before October 1, 2001 (see
§ 412.348(b)). Because payments are no
longer being made under the regular
exception policy effective with cost
reporting periods beginning in FY 2002,
we no longer use the capital cost model.
The capital cost model and its
application during the transition period
are described in Appendix B of the FY
2002 IPPS final rule (66 FR 40099).
Section 412.374 provides for the use
of a blended payment system for
payments to Puerto Rico hospitals under
the PPS for acute care hospital inpatient
capital-related costs. Accordingly, under
the capital PPS, we compute a separate
payment rate specific to Puerto Rico
hospitals using the same methodology
used to compute the national Federal
rate for capital-related costs. In
accordance with section 1886(d)(9)(A)
of the Act, under the PPS for acute care
hospital operating costs, hospitals
located in Puerto Rico are paid for
operating costs under a special payment
formula. Prior to FY 1998, hospitals in
Puerto Rico were paid a blended
operating rate that consisted of 75
percent of the applicable standardized
amount specific to Puerto Rico hospitals
and 25 percent of the applicable
national average standardized amount.
Similarly, prior to FY 1998, hospitals in
Puerto Rico were paid a blended capital
rate that consisted of 75 percent of the
applicable capital Puerto Rico-specific
rate and 25 percent of the applicable
capital Federal rate. However, effective
October 1, 1997, in accordance with
section 4406 of Pub. L. 105–33,
operating payments to hospitals in
Puerto Rico were revised to be based on
a blend of 50 percent of the applicable
standardized amount specific to Puerto
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48156
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Rico hospitals and 50 percent of the
applicable national average
standardized amount. In conjunction
with this change to the operating blend
percentage, effective with discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 1997,
we also revised the methodology for
computing capital payments to hospitals
in Puerto Rico to be based on a blend
of 50 percent of the Puerto Rico capital
rate and 50 percent of the capital
Federal rate.
As we discussed in the FY 2005 IPPS
final rule (69 FR 49185), section 504 of
Pub. L. 108–173 increased the national
portion of the operating IPPS payments
for Puerto Rico hospitals from 50
percent to 62.5 percent and decreased
the Puerto Rico portion of the operating
IPPS payments from 50 percent to 37.5
percent for discharges occurring on or
after April 1, 2004 through September
30, 2004 (see the March 26, 2004 OneTime Notification (Change Request
3158)). In addition, section 504 of Pub.
L. 108-173 provided that the national
portion of operating IPPS payments for
Puerto Rico hospitals is equal to 75
percent and the Puerto Rico portion of
operating IPPS payments is equal to 25
percent for discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2004. Consistent with
that change in operating IPPS payments
to hospitals in Puerto Rico, for FY 2005
(as we discussed in the FY 2005 IPPS
final rule), we revised the methodology
for computing capital payments to
hospitals located in Puerto Rico to be
based on a blend of 25 percent of the
Puerto Rico capital rate and 75 percent
of the capital Federal rate for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2004.
A. Determination of Federal Hospital
Inpatient Capital-Related Prospective
Payment Rate Update
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47503), we established a capital Federal
rate of $420.65 for FY 2006. In the
discussion that follows, we explain the
factors that we are using to determine
the tentative FY 2007 capital Federal
rate. In particular, we explain why the
tentative FY 2007 capital Federal rate
will increase approximately 1.60
percent compared to the FY 2006 capital
Federal rate. However, we estimate
aggregate capital payments will decrease
by 0.2 percent during this same period.
This decrease is due to a decrease in the
estimated total number of Medicare feefor-service discharges for FY 2007 as
compared to the estimated total number
of Medicare fee-for-service discharges in
FY 2006. We are estimating a decrease
in Medicare fee-for-service discharges in
FY 2007 as compared to FY 2006, in
part because we are projecting an
increase in beneficiary Medicare
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
managed care enrollment as a result of
the implementation of several
provisions of Pub. L. 108–173.
Therefore, although we are projecting
that capital PPS payments per discharge
will increase slightly from FY 2006 to
FY 2007, we project that aggregate
capital PPS payments will decrease for
the same period.
Total payments to hospitals under the
IPPS are relatively unaffected by
changes in the capital prospective
payments. Because capital payments
constitute about 10 percent of hospital
payments, a 1-percent change in the
capital Federal rate yields only about
0.1 percent change in actual payments
to hospitals. As noted above, aggregate
payments under the capital IPPS are
estimated to decrease slightly in FY
2007 compared to FY 2006.
1. Projected Capital Standard Federal
Rate Update
a. Description of the Update Framework
Under § 412.308(c)(1), the capital
standard Federal rate is updated on the
basis of an analytical framework that
takes into account changes in a capital
input price index (CIPI) and several
other policy adjustment factors.
Specifically, we have adjusted the
projected CIPI rate-of-increase as
appropriate each year for case-mix
index-related changes, for intensity, and
for errors in previous CIPI forecasts. The
update factor for FY 2007 under that
framework is 1.10 percent based on the
best data available at this time. The
update factor is based on a projected 1.1
percent increase in the CIPI, a 0.0
percent adjustment for intensity, a 0.0
percent adjustment for case-mix, a 0.0
percent adjustment for the FY 2005 DRG
reclassification and recalibration, and a
forecast error correction of 0.0 percent.
As discussed below in section III.C. of
this Addendum, we believe that the CIPI
is the most appropriate input price
index for capital costs to measure
capital price changes in a given year.
We also explain the basis for the FY
2007 CIPI projection in that same
section of this Addendum. Below we
describe the policy adjustments that
have been applied.
The case-mix index is the measure of
the average DRG weight for cases paid
under the IPPS. Because the DRG weight
determines the prospective payment for
each case, any percentage increase in
the case-mix index corresponds to an
equal percentage increase in hospital
payments.
The case-mix index can change for
any of several reasons:
PO 00000
Frm 00288
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
• The average resource use of
Medicare patients changes (‘‘real’’ casemix change);
• Changes in hospital coding of
patient records result in higher weight
DRG assignments (‘‘coding effects’’); and
• The annual DRG reclassification
and recalibration changes may not be
budget neutral (‘‘reclassification
effect’’).
We define real case-mix change as
actual changes in the mix (and resource
requirements) of Medicare patients as
opposed to changes in coding behavior
that result in assignment of cases to
higher weighted DRGs but do not reflect
higher resource requirements. The
capital update framework includes the
same case-mix index adjustment used in
the former operating IPPS update
framework (as discussed in the May 18,
2005 IPPS proposed rule for FY 2005
(69 FR 28816)). (We are no longer using
an update framework in making a
recommendation for updating the
operating IPPS standardized amounts as
discussed in section II, of Appendix B
in the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47707)).
For FY 2007, we are projecting a 1.0
percent total increase in the case-mix
index. We estimate that the real casemix increase will also equal 1.0 percent
in FY 2007. The net adjustment for
change in case-mix is the difference
between the projected increase in casemix and the projected total increase in
case-mix. Therefore, the net adjustment
for case-mix change in FY 2007 is 0.0
percentage points.
The capital update framework also
contains an adjustment for the effects of
DRG reclassification and recalibration.
This adjustment is intended to remove
the effect on total payments of prior year
changes to the DRG classifications and
relative weights, in order to retain
budget neutrality for all case-mix indexrelated changes other than those due to
patient severity. Due to the lag time in
the availability of data, there is a 2-year
lag in data used to determine the
adjustment for the effects of DRG
reclassification and recalibration. For
example, we are adjusting for the effects
of the FY 2005 DRG reclassification and
recalibration as part of our update for
FY 2007. We estimate that FY 2005 DRG
reclassification and recalibration will
result in a 0.0 percent change in the
case-mix when compared with the casemix index that would have resulted if
we had not made the reclassification
and recalibration changes to the DRGs.
Therefore, we are making a 0.0 percent
adjustment for DRG reclassification and
recalibration in the update for FY 2007
to maintain budget neutrality.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
The capital update framework also
contains an adjustment for forecast
error. The input price index forecast is
based on historical trends and
relationships ascertainable at the time
the update factor is established for the
upcoming year. In any given year, there
may be unanticipated price fluctuations
that may result in differences between
the actual increase in prices and the
forecast used in calculating the update
factors. In setting a prospective payment
rate under the framework, we make an
adjustment for forecast error only if our
estimate of the change in the capital
input price index for any year is off by
0.25 percentage points or more. There is
a 2-year lag between the forecast and the
measurement of the forecast error. A
forecast error of 0.1 percentage point
was calculated for the FY 2005 update.
That is, current historical data indicate
that the forecasted FY 2005 CIPI used in
calculating the FY 2005 update factor
(0.7 percent) slightly understated the
actual realized price increases (0.8
percent) by 0.1 percentage point. This
slight underprediction was mostly due
to the incorporation of newly available
source data for fixed asset prices into
the market basket. However, because
this estimation of the change in the CIPI
is less than 0.25 percentage points, it is
not reflected in the update
recommended under this framework.
Therefore, we are making a 0.0 percent
adjustment for forecast error in the
update for FY 2007.
Under the capital IPPS update
framework, we also make an adjustment
for changes in intensity. We calculate
this adjustment using the same
methodology and data that were used in
the framework used in the past under
the operating IPPS. The intensity factor
for the operating update framework
reflects how hospital services are
utilized to produce the final product,
that is, the discharge. This component
accounts for changes in the use of
quality-enhancing services, for changes
in within-DRG severity, and for
expected modification of practice
patterns to remove noncost-effective
services.
We calculate case-mix constant
intensity as the change in total charges
per admission, adjusted for price level
changes (the CPI for hospital and related
services) and changes in real case-mix.
The use of total charges in the
calculation of the intensity factor makes
it a total intensity factor; that is, charges
for capital services are already built into
the calculation of the factor. Therefore,
we have incorporated the intensity
adjustment from the operating update
framework into the capital update
framework. Without reliable estimates
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
of the proportions of the overall annual
intensity increases that are due,
respectively, to ineffective practice
patterns and to the combination of
quality-enhancing new technologies and
within-DRG complexity, we assume, as
in the operating update framework, that
one-half of the annual increase is due to
each of these factors. The capital update
framework thus provides an add-on to
the input price index rate of increase of
one-half of the estimated annual
increase in intensity, to allow for
within-DRG severity increases and the
adoption of quality-enhancing
technology.
We have developed a Medicarespecific intensity measure based on a 5year average. Past studies of case-mix
change by the RAND Corporation (Has
DRG Creep Crept Up? Decomposing the
Case Mix Index Change Between 1987
and 1988’’ by G. M. Carter, J. P.
Newhouse, and D. A. Relles, R–4098–
HCFA/ProPAC (1991)) suggest that real
case-mix change was not dependent on
total change, but was usually a fairly
steady 1.0 to 1.4 percent per year. We
use 1.4 percent as the upper bound
because the RAND study did not take
into account that hospitals may have
induced doctors to document medical
records more completely in order to
improve payment.
We calculate case-mix constant
intensity as the change in total charges
per admission, adjusted for price level
changes (the CPI for hospital and related
services), and changes in real case-mix.
As we noted above, in accordance with
§ 412.308(c)(1)(ii), we began updating
the capital standard Federal rate in FY
1996 using an update framework that
takes into account, among other things,
allowable changes in the intensity of
hospital services. For FYs 1996 through
2001, we found that case-mix constant
intensity was declining and we
established a 0.0 percent adjustment for
intensity in each of those years. For FYs
2002 and 2003, we found that case-mix
constant intensity was increasing and
we established a 0.3 percent adjustment
and 1.0 percent adjustment for intensity,
respectively. For FYs 2004 and 2005, we
found that the charge data appeared to
be skewed (as discussed in greater detail
below) and we established a 0.0 percent
adjustment in each of those years.
Furthermore, we stated that we would
continue to apply a 0.0 percent
adjustment for intensity until any
increase in charges can be tied to
intensity rather than attempts to
maximize outlier payments.
As noted above, our intensity measure
is based on a 5-year average, and
therefore, the intensity adjustment for
FY 2007 is based on data from the 5-
PO 00000
Frm 00289
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48157
year period FY 2001 through FY 2005.
We found a dramatic increase in
hospital charges for each of those 5
years without a corresponding increase
in the hospital case-mix index. These
findings are similar to the considerable
increase in hospitals’ charges, which we
found when we were determining the
intensity factor in the FY 2004, FY 2005
and FY 2006 update recommendations
as discussed in the FY 2004 IPPS final
rule (68 FR 45482), the FY 2005 IPPS
final rule (69 FR 49285) and the FY
2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR 47500),
respectively. If hospitals were treating
new or different types of cases, which
would result in an appropriate increase
in charges per discharge, then we would
expect hospitals’ case-mix to increase
proportionally.
As we discussed in the FY 2006 IPPS
final rule (70 FR 47500), because our
intensity calculation relies heavily upon
charge data and we believe that these
charge data may be inappropriately
skewed, we established a 0.0 percent
adjustment for intensity for FY 2006.
On June 9, 2003, we published
revisions to our outlier policy for
determining the additional payment for
extraordinarily high-cost cases (68 FR
34494 through 34515). These revised
policies were effective on August 8,
2003, and October 1, 2003. While it does
appear that a response to these policy
changes is beginning to occur, that is,
the change in charges for FYs 2004 and
2005 are somewhat less than the
previous 4 years, they still show a
significant annual increase in charges
without a corresponding increase in
hospital case-mix. The increase in
charges in FY 2004, for example, is
approximately 12 percent, which, while
less than the increase in the previous 3
years, is still much higher than
increases in years prior to FY 2001. In
addition, this approximate 12-percent
increase in charges for FY 2004
significantly exceeds the case-mix
increase for the same period. Based on
the approximate 12-percent increase in
charges for FY 2004, we believe residual
effects of hospitals’ charge practices
prior to the implementation of the
outlier policy revisions established in
the June 9, 2003 final rule continue to
appear in the data because hospitals
may not have had enough time to adopt
changes in their behavior in response to
the new outlier policy. Thus, we believe
that the FY 2004 and FY 2005 charge
data may still be skewed. Because the
intensity adjustment is based on a 5year average, and although the new
outlier policy was generally effective in
FY 2004, we believe it still will be
several years before all the effects of
hospitals attempting to maximize outlier
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48158
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
payments are removed from the
intensity calculation. Therefore, as
proposed, we are making a 0.0 percent
adjustment for intensity for FY 2007. In
the past (FYs 1996 through 2001) when
we found intensity to be declining, we
believed a zero (rather than negative)
intensity adjustment was appropriate.
Similarly, we believe that it is
appropriate to apply a zero intensity
adjustment for FY 2007 until any
increase in charges can be tied to
intensity rather than to attempts to
maximize outlier payments.
Above, we described the basis of the
components used to develop the 1.1
percent capital update factor for FY
2007 as shown in the table below.
CMS FY 2007 UPDATE FACTOR TO
THE CAPITAL FEDERAL RATE
1.0
¥1.0
Subtotal .....................................
0.0
Effect of FY 2005 Reclassification
and Recalibration ..........................
Forecast Error Correction .................
0.0
0.0
Total Update ..............................
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Capital Input Price Index ..................
Intensity ............................................
Case-Mix Adjustment Factors:
Real Across DRG Change ............
Projected Case-Mix Change .........
1.1
0.0
1.1
b. Comparison of CMS and MedPAC
Update Recommendation
In the past, MedPAC has included
update recommendations for capital
PPS in a Report to Congress. In its
March 2006 Report to Congress,
MedPAC did not make an update
recommendation for capital PPS
payments for FY 2007. However, in that
same report, MedPAC made an update
recommendation for hospital inpatient
and outpatient services (page 46).
MedPAC reviews inpatient and
outpatient services together because
they are so closely interrelated. For FY
2007, MedPAC recommended an
increase in the payment rate for the
operating IPPS by the projected increase
in the hospital market basket index, less
half of MedPAC’s expectation for
productivity growth (or 0.45 percent,
based on its assessment of beneficiaries’
access to care and changes in hospital
capacity, volume of services, access to
capital, quality of care, and the
relationship of Medicare payments and
hospitals’ costs.) In addition, MedPAC
recommended combining the annual
rate update with an incentive payment
policy for quality. (MedPAC’s Report to
the Congress: Medicare Payment Policy,
March 2006, Section 2A.)
VerDate Aug<31>2005
19:01 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
2. Outlier Payment Adjustment Factor
Section 412.312(c) establishes a
unified outlier methodology for
inpatient operating and inpatient
capital-related costs. A single set of
thresholds is used to identify outlier
cases for both inpatient operating and
inpatient capital-related payments.
Section 412.308(c)(2) provides that the
standard Federal rate for inpatient
capital-related costs be reduced by an
adjustment factor equal to the estimated
proportion of capital-related outlier
payments to total inpatient capitalrelated PPS payments. The outlier
thresholds are set so that operating
outlier payments are projected to be 5.1
percent of total operating DRG
payments.
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47501), we estimated that outlier
payments for capital would equal 4.85
percent of inpatient capital-related
payments based on the capital Federal
rate in FY 2006. Based on the tentative
thresholds as set forth in section
II.A.4.c. of this Addendum, we estimate
that tentative outlier payments for
capital-related costs would equal 4.32
percent for inpatient capital-related
payments based on the tentative Federal
rate in FY 2007. Therefore, we are
applying a tentative outlier adjustment
factor of 0.9568 to the tentative capital
Federal rate. Thus, we estimate that the
percentage of capital outlier payments
to total capital standard payments for
FY 2007 will be slightly lower than the
percentages for FY 2006.
The outlier reduction factors are not
built permanently into the capital rates;
that is, they are not applied
cumulatively in determining the capital
Federal rate. The tentative FY 2007
outlier adjustment of 0.9568 is a 0.56
percent change from the FY 2006 outlier
adjustment of 0.9515. Therefore, the net
change in the tentative outlier
adjustment to the tentative capital
Federal rate for FY 2007 is 1.0056
(0.9568/0.9915). Thus, the outlier
adjustment increases the tentative FY
2007 capital Federal rate by 0.56 percent
compared with the FY 2006 outlier
adjustment.
3. Budget Neutrality Adjustment Factor
for Changes in DRG Classifications and
Weights and the GAF
Section 412.308(c)(4)(ii) requires that
the capital Federal rate be adjusted so
that aggregate payments for the fiscal
year based on the capital Federal rate
after any changes resulting from the
annual DRG reclassification and
recalibration and changes in the GAF
are projected to equal aggregate
payments that would have been made
PO 00000
Frm 00290
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
on the basis of the capital Federal rate
without such changes. Because we
implemented a separate GAF for Puerto
Rico, we apply separate budget
neutrality adjustments for the national
GAF and the Puerto Rico GAF. We
apply the same budget neutrality factor
for DRG reclassifications and
recalibration nationally and for Puerto
Rico. Separate adjustments were
unnecessary for FY 1998 and earlier
because the GAF for Puerto Rico was
implemented in FY 1998.
In the past, we used the actuarial
capital cost model (described in
Appendix B of the FY 2002 IPPS final
rule (66 FR 40099)) to estimate the
aggregate payments that would have
been made on the basis of the capital
Federal rate with and without changes
in the DRG classifications and weights
and in the GAF to compute the
adjustment required to maintain budget
neutrality for changes in DRG weights
and in the GAF. During the transition
period, the capital cost model was also
used to estimate the regular exception
payment adjustment factor. As we
explain in section III.A.4. of this
Addendum, beginning in FY 2002, an
adjustment for regular exception
payments is no longer necessary.
Therefore, we are no longer using the
capital cost model. Instead, we are using
historical data based on hospitals’ actual
cost experiences to determine the
exceptions payment adjustment factor
for special exceptions payments.
To determine the tentative factors for
FY 2007, we compared (separately for
the national capital rate and the Puerto
Rico capital rate) estimated aggregate
capital Federal rate payments based on
the FY 2006 DRG relative weights and
the FY 2006 GAF to estimated aggregate
capital Federal rate payments based on
the FY 2007 relative weights and the
tentative FY 2007 GAF. As we
established in the FY 2006 IPPS final
rule (70 FR 47503), the budget neutrality
factors were 0.9920 for the national
capital rate and 0.9959 for the Puerto
Rico capital rate. In making the
comparison, we set the exceptions
reduction factor to 1.00. To achieve
budget neutrality for the changes in the
national GAF, based on calculations
using updated data, we are applying a
tentative incremental budget neutrality
adjustment of 1.0003 for FY 2007 to the
previous cumulative FY 2006
adjustments of 0.9920, yielding a
tentative adjustment of 0.9923, through
FY 2007 (calculations done on
unrounded numbers). For the Puerto
Rico GAF, we are applying a tentative
incremental budget neutrality
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
adjustment of 1.0021 for FY 2007 to the
previous cumulative FY 2006
adjustment of 0.9959, yielding a
tentative cumulative adjustment of
0.9980 through FY 2007.
We then compared estimated
aggregate capital Federal rate payments
based on the FY 2006 DRG relative
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
weights and the FY 2006 GAF to
estimated aggregate capital Federal rate
payments based on the FY 2007 DRG
relative weights and the tentative FY
2007 GAF. The incremental adjustment
for DRG classifications and changes in
relative weights is 0.9992 both
nationally and for Puerto Rico. The
PO 00000
Frm 00291
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48159
cumulative adjustments for DRG
classifications and changes in relative
weights and for changes in the tentative
GAF through FY 2007 are 0.9914
nationally and 0.9972 for Puerto Rico.
The following table summarizes the
adjustment factors for each fiscal year:
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
VerDate Aug<31>2005
18:47 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00292
Fmt 4701
1992 .........................................................................
1993 .........................................................................
1994 .........................................................................
1995 .........................................................................
1996 .........................................................................
1997 .........................................................................
1998 .........................................................................
1999 .........................................................................
2000 .........................................................................
20011 .......................................................................
2001 2 .......................................................................
2002 .........................................................................
2003 5 .......................................................................
2003 6 .......................................................................
2004 8 .......................................................................
2004 10 .....................................................................
2005 11 .....................................................................
2005 13 .....................................................................
2006 .........................................................................
2007 .........................................................................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
1.00335
0.99991
1.00009
3 1.00009
4 0.99668
0.99662
7 0.99662
9 1.00081
9 1.00081
1.00094
1.00094
0.99892
0.99915
........................
0.99800
1.00531
0.99980
0.99940
0.99873
0.99892
1.00279
0.99848
0.99791
3 0.99780
4 0.99335
0.99577
7 0.99558
9 1.00256
9 1.00245
12 1.00061
12 1.00040
14 1.00076
15 0.99943
Combined
1.00000
0.99800
1.00330
1.00310
1.00250
1.00123
1.00015
1.00294
1.00142
0.99933
0.99922
0.99268
0.98848
0.98830
0.99083
0.99072
0.99137
0.99117
0.99198
15 0.99142
Cumulative
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
0.99898
0.99910
1.00365
3 1.00365
4 0.98991
1.00809
1.00809
1.00028
1.00028
0.99115
0.99115
1.00762
15 1.00213
Geographic
adjustment
factor
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
1.00335
0.99991
1.00009
3 1.00009
4 0.99668
0.99662
0.99662
1.00081
1.00081
1.00094
1.00094
0.99892
0.99915
DRG reclassifications and
recalibration
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
1.00233
0.99901
1.00374
3 1.00374
4 0.99662
1.00468
1.00468
1.00109
1.00109
0.99208
0.99208
1.00653
15 1.00128
Combined
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
1.00000
1.00233
1.00134
1.00508
1.00508
0.99164
0.99628
0.99628
0.99736
0.99736
0.98946
0.98946
0.99592
15 0.99719
Cumulative
2 Factors
effective for the first half of FY 2001 (October 2000 through March 2001).
effective for the second half of FY 2001 (April 2001 through September 2001).
3 Incremental factors are applied to FY 2000 cumulative factors.
4 Incremental factors are applied to the cumulative factors for the first half of FY 2001.
5 Factors effective for the first half of FY 2003 (October 2002 through March 2003).
6 Factors effective for the second half of FY 2003 (April 2003 through September 2003).
7 Incremental factors are applied to FY 2002 cumulative factors.
8 Factors effective for the first half of FY 2004 (October 2003 through March 2004).
9 Incremental factors are applied to the cumulative factors for the second half of FY 2003.
10 Factors effective for the second half of FY 2004 (April 2004 through September 2004).
11 Factors effective for the first quarter of FY 2005 (September 2004 through December 2004).
12 Incremental factors are applied to average of the cumulative factors for the first half (October 1, 2003 through March 31, 2004) and second half (April 1, 2004 through September 30,
2004) of FY 2004.
13 Factors effective for the last three quarters of FY 2005 (January 2005 through September 2005).
14 Incremental factors are applied to average of the cumulative factors for 2005.
15 Tentative factors for FY 2007, as discussed above in section III. of this Addendum.
1 Factors
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
0.99944
0.99857
0.99782
3 0.99771
4 0.99666
0.99915
7 0.99896
9 1.00175
9 1.00164
12 0.99967
12 0.99946
14 1.00185
15 1.00029
Fiscal year
DRG reclassifications and
recalibration
Incremental adjustment
Incremental adjustment
Geographic
adjustment
factor
Puerto Rico
National
BUDGET NEUTRALITY ADJUSTMENT FOR DRG RECLASSIFICATIONS AND RECALIBRATION AND THE GEOGRAPHIC ADJUSTMENT FACTORS
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48160
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
The methodology used to determine
the recalibration and geographic (DRG/
GAF) budget neutrality adjustment
factor is similar to that used in
establishing budget neutrality
adjustments under the PPS for operating
costs. One difference is that, under the
operating PPS, the budget neutrality
adjustments for the effect of geographic
reclassifications are determined
separately from the effects of other
changes in the hospital wage index and
the DRG relative weights. Under the
capital PPS, there is a single DRG/GAF
budget neutrality adjustment factor (the
national capital rate and the Puerto Rico
capital rate are determined separately)
for changes in the GAF (including
geographic reclassification) and the DRG
relative weights. In addition, there is no
adjustment for the effects that
geographic reclassification has on the
other payment parameters, such as the
payments for serving low-income
patients, indirect medical education
payments, or the large urban add-on
payments.
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47503), we calculated a GAF/DRG
budget neutrality factor of 1.0008 for FY
2006. For FY 2007, we are establishing
a tentative GAF/DRG budget neutrality
factor of 0.9994. The GAF/DRG budget
neutrality factors are built permanently
into the capital rates; that is, they are
applied cumulatively in determining the
capital Federal rate. This follows from
the requirement that estimated aggregate
payments each year be no more or less
than they would have been in the
absence of the annual DRG
reclassification and recalibration and
changes in the GAF. The tentative
incremental change in the adjustment
from FY 2006 to FY 2007 is 0.9994. The
tentative cumulative change in the
capital Federal rate due to this
adjustment is 0.9914 (the product of the
incremental factors for FYs 1993 though
2006 and the tentative incremental
factor of 0.9994 for FY 2007). (We note
that averages of the incremental factors
that were in effect during FYs 2005 and
2006, respectively, were used in the
calculation of the tentative cumulative
adjustment of 0.9994 for FY 2007.)
This factor accounts for DRG
reclassifications and recalibration and
for changes in the GAF. It also
incorporates the effects on the tentative
GAF of FY 2007 geographic
reclassification decisions made by the
MGCRB compared to FY 2006 decisions.
However, it does not account for
changes in payments due to changes in
the DSH and IME adjustment factors or
in the large urban add-on.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
4. Exceptions Payment Adjustment
Factor
Section 412.308(c)(3) requires that the
capital standard Federal rate be reduced
by an adjustment factor equal to the
estimated proportion of additional
payments for both regular exceptions
and special exceptions under § 412.348
relative to total capital PPS payments. In
estimating the proportion of regular
exception payments to total capital PPS
payments during the transition period,
we used the actuarial capital cost model
originally developed for determining
budget neutrality (described in
Appendix B of the FY 2002 IPPS final
rule (66 FR 40099)) to determine the
exceptions payment adjustment factor,
which was applied to both the Federal
and hospital-specific capital rates.
An adjustment for regular exception
payments is no longer necessary in
determining the FY 2007 capital Federal
rate because, in accordance with
§ 412.348(b), regular exception
payments were only made for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 1991 and before October 1,
2001. Accordingly, as we explained in
the FY 2002 IPPS final rule (66 FR
39949), in FY 2002 and subsequent
fiscal years, no payments will be made
under the regular exceptions provision.
However, in accordance with
§ 412.308(c), we still need to compute a
budget neutrality adjustment for special
exception payments under § 412.348(g).
We describe our methodology for
determining the exceptions adjustment
used in calculating the FY 2007 capital
Federal rate below.
Under the special exceptions
provision specified at § 412.348(g)(1),
eligible hospitals include SCHs, urban
hospitals with at least 100 beds that
have a disproportionate share
percentage of at least 20.2 percent or
qualify for DSH payments under
§ 412.106(c)(2), and hospitals with a
combined Medicare and Medicaid
inpatient utilization of at least 70
percent. An eligible hospital may
receive special exceptions payments if it
meets: (1) A project need requirement as
described at § 412.348(g)(2), which, in
the case of certain urban hospitals,
includes an excess capacity test as
described at § 412.348(g)(4); (2) an age of
assets test as described at
§ 412.348(g)(3); and (3) a project size
requirement as described at
§ 412.348(g)(5).
Based on information compiled from
our fiscal intermediaries, six hospitals
have qualified for special exceptions
payments under § 412.348(g). Because
we have cost reports ending in FY 2005
for all of these hospitals, we calculated
PO 00000
Frm 00293
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48161
the adjustment based on actual cost
experience. Using data from cost reports
ending in FY 2005 from the December
2005 update of the HCRIS data, we
divided the capital special exceptions
payment amounts for the six hospitals
that qualified for special exceptions by
the total capital PPS payment amounts
(including special exception payments)
for all hospitals. Based on the data from
cost reports ending in FY 2005, this
ratio is rounded to 0.0003. Because we
have not received all cost reports ending
in FY 2005, we also divided the FY
2005 special exceptions payments by
the total capital PPS payment amounts
for all hospitals with cost reports ending
in FY 2004. This ratio also rounds to
0.0003. Because special exceptions are
budget neutral, we are offsetting the
tentative capital Federal rate by 0.03
percent for special exceptions payments
for FY 2007. Therefore, the exceptions
adjustment factor is equal to 0.9997 (1—
0.0003) to account for special
exceptions payments in FY 2007.
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47503), we estimated that total (special)
exceptions payments for FY 2006 would
equal 0.03 percent of aggregate
payments based on the capital Federal
rate. Therefore, we applied an
exceptions adjustment factor of 0.9997
(1—0.0003) in determining the FY 2006
capital Federal rate. As we stated above,
we estimate that exceptions payments in
FY 2007 will equal 0.03 percent of
aggregate payments based on the
tentative FY 2007 capital Federal rate.
Therefore, we are applying an
exceptions payment adjustment factor of
0.9997 to the capital Federal rate for FY
2007. The exceptions adjustment factor
for FY 2007 is the same as the factor
used in determining the FY 2006 capital
Federal rate in the FY 2006 IPPS final
rule (70 FR 47503). The exceptions
reduction factors are not built
permanently into the capital rates; that
is, the factors are not applied
cumulatively in determining the capital
Federal rate. Therefore, the net change
in the exceptions adjustment factor used
in determining the tentative FY 2007
capital Federal rate is 1.0000 (0.9997/
0.9997).
5. Capital Standard Federal Rate for FY
2007
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47503), we established a capital Federal
rate of $420.65 for FY 2006. In this final
rule, we are establishing a tentative
capital Federal rate of $427.38 for FY
2007. The tentative capital Federal rate
for FY 2007 was calculated as follows:
• The FY 2007 update factor is
1.0110; that is, the update is 1.1 percent.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48162
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
• The tentative FY 2007 budget
neutrality adjustment factor that is
applied to the capital standard Federal
payment rate for changes in the DRG
relative weights and in the GAF is
0.9994.
• The tentative FY 2007 outlier
adjustment factor is 0.9568.
• The FY 2007 (special) exceptions
payment adjustment factor is 0.9997.
Because the tentative capital Federal
rate has already been adjusted for
differences in case-mix, wages, cost-ofliving, indirect medical education costs,
and payments to hospitals serving a
disproportionate share of low-income
patients, we are not making additional
Federal rate by 0.06 percent. The
tentative FY 2007 outlier adjustment
factor has the effect of increasing the
tentative capital Federal rate by 0.56
percent compared to the average FY
2006 capital Federal rate. The FY 2007
exceptions payment adjustment factor
remains unchanged from the FY 2006
exceptions payment adjustment factor,
and therefore, has a 0.0 percent net
effect on the tentative FY 2007 capital
Federal rate. The combined effect of all
the changes is to tentatively increase the
capital Federal rate by 1.6 percent
compared to the average FY 2006 capital
Federal rate.
adjustments in the capital standard
Federal rate for these factors, other than
the tentative budget neutrality factor for
changes in the DRG relative weights and
the GAF.
We are providing a chart that shows
how each of the factors and adjustments
for FY 2007 affected the computation of
the tentative FY 2007 capital Federal
rate in comparison to the average FY
2006 capital Federal rate. The FY 2007
update factor has the effect of increasing
the tentative capital Federal rate by 1.1
percent compared to the average FY
2006 Federal rate. The tentative GAF/
DRG budget neutrality factor has the
effect of decreasing the tentative capital
COMPARISON OF FACTORS AND ADJUSTMENTS: FY 2006 CAPITAL FEDERAL RATE AND FY 2007 CAPITAL FEDERAL RATE
FY 2006
Update Factor 1 ........................................................................................
GAF/DRG Adjustment Factor 1 ................................................................
Outlier Adjustment Factor 2 ......................................................................
Exceptions Adjustment Factor 2 ...............................................................
Capital Federal Rate ................................................................................
FY 2007
1.0080
1.0008
0.9515
0.9997
$420.65
Change
1.0110
3 0.9994
3 0.9568
0.9997
3 $427.38
1.0110
0.9994
1.0056
0.0000
1.0160
Percent
change
1.10
¥0.06
0.56
0.00
1.60
1 The update factor and the GAF/DRG budget neutrality factors are built permanently into the capital rates. Thus, for example, the incremental
change from FY 2006 to FY 2007 resulting from the application of the tentative 0.9994 GAF/DRG budget neutrality factor for FY 2007 is 0.9994.
2 The outlier reduction factor and the exceptions adjustment factor are not built permanently into the capital rates; that is, these factors are not
applied cumulatively in determining the capital rates. Thus, for example, the net change resulting from the application of the tentative FY 2007
outlier adjustment factor would be 0.9568/0.9515, or 1.0056.
3 Tentative factors for FY 2007, as discussed above in section III. of this Addendum.
We are also providing a chart that
shows how the tentative final FY 2007
capital Federal rate differs from the
proposed FY 2007 capital Federal rate
presented in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule (71 FR 24158–24159).
COMPARISON OF FACTORS AND ADJUSTMENTS: PROPOSED FY 2007 CAPITAL FEDERAL RATE AND TENTATIVE FINAL FY
2007 CAPITAL FEDERAL RATE
Proposed
FY 2007
Update factor ...........................................................................................
GAF/DRG Adjustment Factor ..................................................................
Outlier Adjustment Factor ........................................................................
Exceptions Adjustment Factor .................................................................
Capital Federal Rate ................................................................................
Final
FY 2007
1.0080
1.0012
0.9513
0.9997
$424.42
Change
1.0110
*0.9994
*0.9568
0.9997
*$427.38
1.0030
0.9982
1.0058
0.0000
1.0070
Percent
change
0.30
¥0.18
0.58
0.00
0.70
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
* Tentative factors for FY 2007, as discussed above in section III. of this Addendum.
6. Special Capital Rate for Puerto Rico
Hospitals
Section 412.374 provides for the use
of a blended payment system for
payments to Puerto Rico hospitals under
the PPS for acute care hospital inpatient
capital-related costs. Accordingly, under
the capital PPS, we compute a separate
payment rate specific to Puerto Rico
hospitals using the same methodology
used to compute the national Federal
rate for capital-related costs. Under the
broad authority of section 1886(g) of the
Act, as discussed in section VI. of the
preamble of this final rule, beginning
with discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 2004, capital payments to
hospitals in Puerto Rico are based on a
VerDate Aug<31>2005
19:10 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
blend of 25 percent of the Puerto Rico
capital rate and 75 percent of the capital
Federal rate. The Puerto Rico capital
rate is derived from the costs of Puerto
Rico hospitals only, while the capital
Federal rate is derived from the costs of
all acute care hospitals participating in
the IPPS (including Puerto Rico).
To adjust hospitals’ capital payments
for geographic variations in capital
costs, we apply a GAF to both portions
of the blended capital rate. The GAF is
calculated using the operating IPPS
wage index and varies, depending on
the labor market area or rural area in
which the hospital is located. We use
the Puerto Rico wage index to determine
the GAF for the Puerto Rico part of the
PO 00000
Frm 00294
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
capital-blended rate and the national
wage index to determine the GAF for
the national part of the blended capital
rate.
Because we implemented a separate
GAF for Puerto Rico in FY 1998, we also
apply separate budget neutrality
adjustments for the national GAF and
for the Puerto Rico GAF. However, we
apply the same budget neutrality factor
for DRG reclassifications and
recalibration nationally and for Puerto
Rico. As we stated above in section
III.A.4. of this Addendum, for Puerto
Rico, the tentative GAF budget
neutrality factor is 1.0021, while the
DRG adjustment is 0.9992, for a
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
combined tentative cumulative
adjustment of 0.9972.
In computing the payment for a
particular Puerto Rico hospital, the
Puerto Rico portion of the capital rate
(25 percent) is multiplied by the Puerto
Rico-specific GAF for the labor market
area in which the hospital is located,
and the national portion of the capital
rate (75 percent) is multiplied by the
national GAF for the labor market area
in which the hospital is located (which
is computed from national data for all
hospitals in the United States and
Puerto Rico). In FY 1998, we
implemented a 17.78 percent reduction
to the Puerto Rico capital rate as a result
of Pub. L. 105–33. In FY 2003, a small
part of that reduction was restored.
For FY 2006, before application of the
GAF, the special capital rate for Puerto
Rico hospitals was $201.93 for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2005 through September 30, 2006.
With the changes we are making to the
factors used to determine the capital
rate, the tentative FY 2007 special
capital rate for Puerto Rico is $203.13.
B. Calculation of the Inpatient CapitalRelated Prospective Payments for FY
2007
Because the 10-year capital PPS
transition period ended in FY 2001, all
hospitals (except ‘‘new’’ hospitals under
§ 412.324(b) and under § 412.304(c)(2))
are paid based on 100 percent of the
capital Federal rate in FY 2006. The
applicable capital Federal rate was
determined by making adjustments as
follows:
• For outliers, by dividing the capital
standard Federal rate by the outlier
reduction factor for that fiscal year; and
• For the payment adjustments
applicable to the hospital, by
multiplying the hospital’s GAF,
disproportionate share adjustment
factor, and IME adjustment factor, when
appropriate.
For purposes of calculating payments
for each discharge during FY 2007, the
capital standard Federal rate is adjusted
as follows: (Standard Federal Rate) ×
(DRG weight) × (GAF) × (Large Urban
Add-on, if applicable) × (COLA for
hospitals located in Alaska and Hawaii)
× (1 + Disproportionate Share
Adjustment Factor + IME Adjustment
Factor, if applicable). The result is the
adjusted capital Federal rate.
Hospitals also may receive outlier
payments for those cases that qualify
under the thresholds established for
each fiscal year. Section 412.312(c)
provides for a single set of thresholds to
identify outlier cases for both inpatient
operating and inpatient capital-related
payments. The tentative outlier
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
thresholds for FY 2007 are in section
II.A.4.c. of this Addendum. For FY
2007, a case qualifies as a cost outlier if
the cost for the case plus the IME and
DSH payments is greater than the
prospective payment rate for the DRG
plus the tentative fixed-loss amount of
$24,475.
An eligible hospital may also qualify
for a special exceptions payment under
§ 412.348(g) for up through the 10th
year beyond the end of the capital
transition period if it meets: (1) A
project need requirement described at
§ 412.348(g)(2), which in the case of
certain urban hospitals includes an
excess capacity test as described at
§ 412.348(g)(4); and (2) a project size
requirement as described at
§ 412.348(g)(5). Eligible hospitals
include SCHs, urban hospitals with at
least 100 beds that have a DSH patient
percentage of at least 20.2 percent or
qualify for DSH payments under
§ 412.106(c)(2), and hospitals that have
a combined Medicare and Medicaid
inpatient utilization of at least 70
percent. Under § 412.348(g)(8), the
amount of a special exceptions payment
is determined by comparing the
cumulative payments made to the
hospital under the capital PPS to the
cumulative minimum payment level.
This amount is offset by: (1) Any
amount by which a hospital’s
cumulative capital payments exceed its
cumulative minimum payment levels
applicable under the regular exceptions
process for cost reporting periods
beginning during which the hospital has
been subject to the capital PPS; and (2)
any amount by which a hospital’s
current year operating and capital
payments (excluding 75 percent of
operating DSH payments) exceed its
operating and capital costs. Under
§ 412.348(g)(6), the minimum payment
level is 70 percent for all eligible
hospitals.
During the transition period, new
hospitals (as defined under § 412.300)
were exempt from the capital PPS for
their first 2 years of operation and were
paid 85 percent of their reasonable costs
during that period. Effective with the
third year of operation through the
remainder of the transition period,
under § 412.324(b), we paid the
hospitals under the appropriate
transition methodology (if the holdharmless methodology were applicable,
the hold-harmless payment for assets in
use during the base period would
extend for 8 years, even if the holdharmless payments extend beyond the
normal transition period).
Under § 412.304(c)(2), for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2002, we pay a new hospital
PO 00000
Frm 00295
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48163
85 percent of its reasonable costs during
the first 2 years of operation unless it
elects to receive payment based on 100
percent of the capital Federal rate.
Effective with the third year of
operation, we pay the hospital based on
100 percent of the capital Federal rate
(that is, the same methodology used to
pay all other hospitals subject to the
capital PPS).
C. Capital Input Price Index
1. Background
Like the operating input price index,
the capital input price index (CIPI) is a
fixed-weight price index that measures
the price changes associated with
capital costs during a given year. The
CIPI differs from the operating input
price index in one important aspect—
the CIPI reflects the vintage nature of
capital, which is the acquisition and use
of capital over time. Capital expenses in
any given year are determined by the
stock of capital in that year (that is,
capital that remains on hand from all
current and prior capital acquisitions).
An index measuring capital price
changes needs to reflect this vintage
nature of capital. Therefore, the CIPI
was developed to capture the vintage
nature of capital by using a weightedaverage of past capital purchase prices
up to and including the current year.
We periodically update the base year
for the operating and capital input
prices to reflect the changing
composition of inputs for operating and
capital expenses. The CIPI was last
rebased to FY 2002 in the FY 2006 IPPS
final rule (70 FR 47387).
2. Forecast of the CIPI for FY 2007
Based on the latest forecast by Global
Insight, Inc. (second quarter of 2006),
we are forecasting the CIPI to increase
1.1 percent in FY 2007. This reflects a
projected 1.7 percent increase in
vintage-weighted depreciation prices
(building and fixed equipment, and
movable equipment) and a 3.1 percent
increase in other capital expense prices
in FY 2007, partially offset by a 2.1
percent decline in vintage-weighted
interest expenses in FY 2007. The
weighted average of these three factors
produces the 1.1 percent increase for the
CIPI as a whole in FY 2007.
The CIPI forecast of 1.1 percent is
higher than the CIPI forecast of 0.8
percent that appeared in the proposed
rule. This is mainly due to a change in
the forecast of vintage-weighted
depreciation prices from a 1.4 percent to
a 1.7 percent increase and a change in
vintage-weighted interest expenses from
a 2.3 to a 2.1 percent decline. The
change in the forecast for depreciation
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48164
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
prices reflects the incorporation of
newly available source data for fixed
asset prices into the market basket,
while the change in the forecast for
interest expenses reflects the
incorporation of recent increases in
interest rates.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
IV. Payment Rates for Excluded
Hospitals and Hospital Units: Rate-ofIncrease Percentages
A. Payments to Existing Excluded
Hospitals and Units
As discussed in section VI. of the
preamble of this final rule, the inpatient
operating costs of children’s hospitals
and cancer hospitals that are excluded
from the IPPS are paid on the basis of
reasonable cost subject to the rate-ofincrease ceiling established under the
authority of sections 1886(b)(3)(A)(i)
and (ii) of the Act and § 413.40 of the
regulations. The ceiling is based on a
target amount per discharge under
TEFRA. In addition, in accordance with
§ 403.752(a) of the regulations, RNHCIs
also are paid under § 413.40 which uses
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ii) of the Act to
update the percentage increase in the
rate of increase limits. The most recent
projected forecast of the market basket
percentage increase for FY 2007 for
children’s hospitals, cancer hospitals,
and RNHCIs using the IPPS market
basket (70 FR 47396 through 47405) is
3.4 percent (the same as we proposed).
LTCHs, rehabilitation hospitals and
units, and psychiatric hospitals and
units, historically, were excluded from
the IPPS and subject to the rate-ofincrease limits under § 413.40, as well.
However, prospective payment systems
have been developed for each of the
three types of hospitals, and each kind
of hospital is currently paid under its
own PPS, either at 100 percent of the
Federal rate or according to a transition
period methodology, if applicable. (For
more detailed discussion of these
payment methodologies, see 69 FR
49190; 69 FR 66922; 68 FR 45674; and
67 FR 55954.)
For cost reporting periods beginning
on or after October 1, 2002, to the extent
a LTCH or a psychiatric hospital or unit
has all or a portion of its payment
determined under reasonable cost
principles, the target amounts for the
reasonable cost-based portion of the
blended payment are determined in
accordance with sections
1886(b)(3)(A)(i) and 1886(b)(3)(B)(ii) of
the Act and the regulations at
§ 413.40(c)(4)(ii). Section 413.40(c)(4)(ii)
states, ‘‘Subject to the provisions of
[§ 413.40], paragraph (c)(4)(iii) of this
section, for subsequent cost reporting
periods, the target amount equals the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
hospital’s target amount for the previous
cost reporting period increased by the
update factor for the subject cost
reporting period, unless the provisions
of [§ 413.40] paragraph (c)(5)(ii) of this
section apply.’’ Thus, because
§ 413.40(c)(4)(ii) indicates that the
provisions of that paragraph are subject
to the provisions of § 413.40(c)(4)(iii),
which are applicable only for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 1997 through September 30,
2002, the target amount for FY 2003 is
determined by updating the target
amount for FY 2002 by the applicable
update factor. For example, if a provider
was paid the cap amount for FY 2002
(§ 413.40(c)(4)(iii)), the target amount for
FY 2003 would be the amount paid in
FY 2002, updated to FY 2003 (that is,
the target amount from the previous
year increased by the applicable update
factor).
Effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2002,
IRFs are paid 100 percent of the
adjusted Federal prospective payment
rate under the IRP PPS.
Effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2002,
LTCHs also are no longer paid on a
reasonable cost basis, but are paid under
a LTCH DRG-based PPS. In
implementing the LTCH PPS, an
existing LTCH (that is, not defined as
new under § 412.23(e)(4)) could have
elected to be paid based on 100 percent
of the standard Federal prospective
payment rate during the transition
period. However, we also established a
5-year transition period from reasonable
cost-based payments (subject to the
TEFRA limit) to fully Federal
prospective payment amounts during
which an existing LTCH could receive
a PPS-blended payment consisting of
two payment components—one based
on reasonable cost under the TEFRA
payment system, and the other based on
the standard Federal prospective
payment rate.
Effective for cost reporting periods
that will begin on or after October 1,
2006, the LTCHs that receive payment
based on a blended payment amount
will no longer receive a portion of their
payment that is based, in part, on
reasonable cost subject to the rate-ofincrease ceiling under § 413.40. This is
because, in accordance with § 412.533,
LTCHs are paid 100 percent of the
adjusted Federal prospective payment
amount and zero percent of the amount
calculated under reasonable cost
principles for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006.
As part of the PPS for existing IPFs,
we have established a 3-year transition
period during which existing IPFs will
PO 00000
Frm 00296
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
be paid based on a blend of reasonable
cost-based payment (subject to the
TEFRA limit) and the prospective per
diem payment rate. IPFs that are paid
under a blended methodology will have
the reasonable cost-based portion of
their payment subject to a hospital
target amount. The most recent
projected forecast of the market basket
percentage increase for FY 2007 for the
reasonable cost-based portion of an
IPF’s payment using the excluded
hospital market basket (70 FR 47396
through 47405) is 3.4 percent. For cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
January 1, 2008, IPFs will be paid 100
percent of the Federal prospective per
diem amount.
The market basket percentage
increases for FY 2007 are made by CMS’
Office of the Actuary and reflect the
average change in the price of goods and
services purchased by hospitals to
furnish inpatient hospital care. They are
based on the best available data. As
discussed in section III.L. of the
preamble of this FY 2006 IPPS final
rule, we use the IPPS market basket for
children’s hospitals, cancer hospitals,
and RNHCIs, and the excluded hospital
market basket for LTCHs, and IPFs for
the reasonable cost portion of its
payment to the extent a portion of its
PPS payment is based on reasonable
costs. We did not propose any changes
to our method of calculating the
hospital market basket for IPPS or for
excluded hospitals for FY 2007.
Consistent with our current
methodology of calculating the hospital
market basket for IPPS and excluded
hospitals, we use updated data for our
final rule to the extent it is available. As
we indicated above, based on updated
data, the projected IPPS market basket
increase is 3.4 percent (the same as we
proposed) and the projected excluded
hospital market basket increase is 3.4
percent (as opposed to 3.6 percent in the
proposed rule) for FY 2007.
B. New Excluded Hospitals and Units
Section 1886(b)(7) of the Act
established a payment methodology for
new (cost reporting periods beginning
on or after October 1, 1997)
rehabilitation hospitals and units,
psychiatric hospitals and units, and
LTCHs. For the first two 12-month cost
reporting periods, payment was based
on the lower of the hospital’s net
inpatient operating costs or 110 percent
of the national median of target amounts
for the particular class of hospital for FY
1996, updated to the applicable cost
reporting period, and adjusted for
differences in area wage levels.
Consequently, beginning with the FY
1998 IPPS final rule, we published
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
annually in the Federal Register, the
updated 110 percent median of the
wage-neutral national target amounts,
divided into the labor and nonlaborrelated share, for each of the three
classes of providers affected by the
payment limitation. As explained in the
FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR 47466
through 47467), the charts containing
the updated 110 percent median
payment amount information are no
longer needed and are discontinued.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
V. Payment for Blood Clotting Factor
Administered to Inpatient With
Hemophilia
As discussed in section VIII. of the
preamble to this final rule, in the FY
2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR 47473), we
amended our regulations at
§§ 412.2(f)(8) and 412.115(b) to state
that, for discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 2005, we make payment for
blood clotting factor administered to
hospital inpatients using the Medicare
Part B payment amounts for blood
clotting factor as determined under
Subpart K of 48 CFR Part 414 and for
the furnished fee as determined under
§ 410.63.
In accordance with § 410.63(c)(2) and
our November 21, 2005 regulations (70
FR 70225), the furnishing fee for blood
clotting factor for CY 2006 was
determined to be $0.146 per individual
unit (I.U.). Although the furnishing fee
payment rate is calculated at 3 digits,
the actual amount paid to providers and
suppliers is rounded to 2 digits. In
section VIII of the preamble to this final
rule, we are providing that fiscal
intermediaries continue to make
payment amounts for blood clotting
factor administered to hemophilia
inpatients using the Medicare Part B
payment amounts determined under
Subpart K of 42 CFR Part 414 and that
payment amounts for the furnishing fee
for the blood clotting factor be
calculated at 3 digits, currently at
$0.146 per I.U. of blood clotting factor.
The fiscal intermediaries continue to
use the Medicare Part B Drug Pricing
File to make payments for blood clotting
factors. The furnishing fee is included
in the ASP price per unit sent with the
Medicare Part B Drug Pricing File that
is updated quarterly. By using the
Medicare Part B Drug Pricing File,
Medicare will be making consistent
payments for blood clotting factor
provided to inpatients and outpatients.
For further updates on pricing, we refer
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
reader to the Medicare Part B drug
pricing regulations.
VI. Tables
This section includes a majority of the
tables referred to throughout the
preamble to this final rule and in this
Addendum.
The following tables, which contain
data relating to the FY 2007 wage
indices and the hospital
reclassifications and payment amounts
for operating and capital-related costs
that are affected by the new
occupational mix survey data discussed
in section III.C. of this final rule, will be
published on the CMS Web site and in
a subsequent Federal Register notice
between August 1 and October 1, 2006.
Table 2—Hospital Case-Mix Indexes for
Discharges Occurring in Federal Fiscal
Year 2005; Hospital Wage Indexes for
Federal Fiscal Year 2007; Hospital Average
Hourly Wage for Federal Fiscal Years 2005
(2001 Wage Data), 2006 (2002 Wage Data),
and 2007 (2003 Wage Data); Wage Indexes
and 3-Year Average of Hospital Average
Hourly Wages
Table 3A—FY 2007 and 3-Year Average
Hourly Wage for Urban Areas by CBSA
Table 3B—FY 2007 and 3-Year Average
Hourly Wage for Rural Areas by CBSA
Table 4A–1—Wage Index and Capital
Geographic Adjustment Factor (GAF) for
Urban Areas by CBSA—FY 2007
Table 4A–2—Wage Index and Capital
Geographic Adjustment Factor (GAF) for
Certain Urban Areas by CBSA for the
Period April 1 through September 30, 2007
Table 4B—Wage Index and Capital
Geographic Adjustment Factor (GAF) for
Rural Areas by CBSA—FY 2007
Table 4C–1—Wage Index and Capital
Geographic Adjustment Factor (GAF) for
Hospitals That Are Reclassified by CBSA—
FY 2007
Table 4C–2—Wage Index and Capital
Geographic Adjustment Factor (GAF) for
Certain Hospitals That Are Reclassified by
CBSA for the Period April 1 through
September 30, 2007
Table 4F—Puerto Rico Wage Index and
Capital Geographic Adjustment Factor
(GAF) by CBSA—FY 2007
The following tables are included in
this final rule as tentative tables and do
not reflect decisions that are yet to be
made by CMS pending the final
calculation of the occupational mix
adjusted wage index. Additional
information appears with each table.
Revised tables reflecting CMS’ decisions
on behalf of hospitals using
occupational mix adjusted wage indices
will be published on the CMS Web site,
as well as in a subsequent Federal
Register notice between August 1 and
October 1, 2006.
PO 00000
Frm 00297
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48165
Table 1A—National Adjusted Operating
Standardized Amounts, Labor/Nonlabor
(69.7 Percent Labor Share/30.3 Percent
Nonlabor Share if Wage Index Is Greater
Than 1)
Table 1B—National Adjusted Operating
Standardized Amounts, Labor/Nonlabor
(62 Percent Labor Share/38 Percent
Nonlabor Share if Wage Index Is Less Than
or Equal To 1)
Table 1C—Adjusted Operating Standardized
Amounts for Puerto Rico, Labor/Nonlabor
Table 1D—Capital Standard Federal Payment
Rate
Table 4J—Out-Migration Adjustment—FY
2007
Table 5—List of Diagnosis-Related Groups
(DRGs), Relative Weighting Factors, and
Geometric and Arithmetic Mean Length of
Stay (LOS)
Table 9A—Hospital Reclassifications and
Redesignations by Individual Hospitals
and CBSA for FY 2007
Table 9B—Hospital Reclassifications and
Redesignations by Individual Hospital
Under Section 508 of Pub. L. 108–173 for
FY 2007
Table 9C—Hospitals Redesignated as Rural
under Section 1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act for
FY 2007
Table 10—Tentative Geometric Mean Plus
the Lesser of .75 of the National Adjusted
Operating Standardized Payment Amount
(Increased to Reflect the Difference
Between Costs and Charges) or .75 of One
Standard Deviation of Mean Charges by
Diagnosis-Related Group (DRG)—July 2006
The following tables are final and not
subject to revision based on the final
calculation of the occupational mix
adjusted wage index.
Table 6A—New Diagnosis Codes
Table 6B—New Procedure Codes
Table 6C—Invalid Diagnosis Codes
Table 6D—Invalid Procedure Codes
Table 6E—Revised Diagnosis Code Titles
Table 6F—Revised Procedure Code Titles
Table 6G—Additions to the CC Exclusions
List
Table 6H—Deletions from the CC Exclusions
List
Table 7A—Medicare Prospective Payment
System Selected Percentile Lengths of Stay:
FY 2005 MedPAR Update March 2006
GROUPER V23.0
Table 7B—Medicare Prospective Payment
System Selected Percentile Lengths of Stay:
FY 2005 MedPAR Update March 2006
GROUPER V24.0
Table 8A—Statewide Average Operating
Cost-to-Charge Ratios—July 2006
Table 8B—Statewide Average Capital Cost-toCharge Ratios—July 2006
Table 8C—Statewide Average Total Cost-toCharge Ratios for LTCHs—July 2006
Table 11—FY 2007 LTC–DRGs, Relative
Weights, Geometric Average Length of
Stay, and 5/6ths of the Geometric Average
Length of Stay
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48166
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 1A.—NATIONAL ADJUSTED OPERATING STANDARDIZED AMOUNTS, 69.7 PERCENT LABOR SHARE/30.3 PERCENT
NONLABOR SHARE IF WAGE INDEX GREATER THAN 1
Full Update (3.4 percent) .........................................................................
Tentative Labor Related Share: $3,400.13*
Tentative Nonlabor Related Share: $1,478.10*
Reduced Update (1.4 percent) .................................................................
*Note: Subsequent to this final rule, we will publish the final standardized amounts based on the final occupational mix adjustment.
*Note: Subsequent to this final rule, we will publish the final standardized amounts based on the final occupational mix adjustment.
Tentative Labor Related Share: $3,334.36*
Tentative Nonlabor Related Share: $1,449.51*
TABLE 1B.—NATIONAL ADJUSTED OPERATING STANDARDIZED AMOUNTS, 62 PERCENT LABOR SHARE/38 PERCENT
NONLABOR SHARE IF WAGE INDEX LESS THAN OR EQUAL TO 1
Full Update (3.4 percent) .........................................................................
Tentative Labor Related Share: $3,024.51*
Tentative Nonlabor Related Share: $1,853.72*
Reduced Update (1.4 percent) .................................................................
*Note: Subsequent to this final rule, we will publish the final standardized amounts based on the final occupational mix adjustment.
*Note: Subsequent to this final rule, we will publish the final standardized amounts based on the final occupational mix adjustment.
Tentative Labor Related Share: $2,966.00*
Tentative Nonlabor Related Share: $1,817.87*
TABLE 1C.—ADJUSTED OPERATING STANDARDIZED AMOUNTS FOR PUERTO RICO, LABOR/NONLABOR
Rates if wage index greater than one (National) .....................................
Tentative Labor Related Share: $3,400.13*
Tentative Nonlabor Related Share: $1,478.10*
Rates if wage index greater than one (Puerto Rico) ...............................
Tentative Labor Related Share: $1,436.25*
Tentative Nonlabor Related Share: $880.28*
Rates if wage index less than one (National) ..........................................
Tentative Labor Related Share: $3,024.51*
Tentative Nonlabor Related Share: $1,853.72*
Rates if wage index less than one (Puerto Rico) ....................................
*Note: Subsequent to this final rule, we will publish the final standardized amounts based on the final occupational mix adjustment.
*Note: Subsequent to this final rule, we will publish the final standardized amounts based on the final occupational mix adjustment.
*Note: Subsequent to this final rule, we will publish the final standardized amounts based on the final occupational mix adjustment.
*Note: Subsequent to this final rule, we will publish the final standardized amounts based on the final occupational mix adjustment.
Tentative Labor Related Share: $1,359.80*
Tentative Nonlabor Related Share: $956.72*
TABLE 1D.—CAPITAL STANDARD FEDERAL PAYMENT RATE
National .....................................................................................................
Tentative Capital Payment Rate: $427.38*
Puerto Rico ...............................................................................................
*Note: Subsequent to this final rule, we will publish the final standardized amounts based on the final occupational mix adjustment.
*Note: Subsequent to this final rule, we will publish the final standardized amounts based on the final occupational mix adjustment.
Tentative Capital Payment Rate: $203.13*
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00298
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00299
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48167
ER18AU06.081
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00300
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.016
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48168
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00301
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48169
ER18AU06.017
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00302
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.018
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48170
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00303
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48171
ER18AU06.019
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00304
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.020
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48172
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00305
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48173
ER18AU06.021
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00306
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.022
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48174
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00307
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48175
ER18AU06.023
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00308
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.024
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48176
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00309
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48177
ER18AU06.025
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00310
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.026
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48178
48179
Note: The following Table 5 is a tentative
table. The final Table 5 will be published in
a subsequent Federal Register notice.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00311
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.027
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00312
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.028
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48180
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00313
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48181
ER18AU06.029
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00314
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.030
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48182
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00315
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48183
ER18AU06.031
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00316
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.032
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48184
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00317
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48185
ER18AU06.033
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00318
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.034
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48186
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00319
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48187
ER18AU06.035
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00320
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.036
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48188
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00321
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48189
ER18AU06.037
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00322
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.038
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48190
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00323
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48191
ER18AU06.039
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00324
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.040
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48192
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00325
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48193
ER18AU06.041
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00326
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.042
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48194
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00327
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48195
ER18AU06.043
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00328
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.044
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48196
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00329
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48197
ER18AU06.045
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00330
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.046
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48198
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00331
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48199
ER18AU06.047
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00332
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.048
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48200
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00333
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48201
ER18AU06.049
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00334
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.050
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48202
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00335
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48203
ER18AU06.051
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00336
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.052
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48204
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00337
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48205
ER18AU06.053
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00338
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.054
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48206
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00339
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48207
ER18AU06.055
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00340
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.056
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48208
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00341
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48209
ER18AU06.057
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00342
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.058
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48210
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00343
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48211
ER18AU06.059
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00344
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.060
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48212
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00345
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48213
ER18AU06.061
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00346
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.062
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48214
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00347
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48215
ER18AU06.063
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00348
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.064
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48216
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00349
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48217
ER18AU06.065
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00350
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.066
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48218
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00351
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48219
ER18AU06.067
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00352
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.068
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48220
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00353
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48221
ER18AU06.069
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00354
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.070
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48222
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00355
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48223
ER18AU06.071
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00356
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.072
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48224
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00357
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48225
ER18AU06.073
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
48226
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00358
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.074
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
[CCs that are added to the list are in this
Table 6G—Additions to the CC
Exclusions List. Each of the principal
diagnoses is shown with an asterisk,
and the revisions to the CC Exclusions
List are provided in an indented column
immediately following the affected
principal diagnosis.]
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST
*0519
0522
*0522
0520
0521
0522
0527
0528
0529
05314
05474
*0527
0522
*0528
0522
*0529
0522
*0530
05314
*05310
05314
*05311
05314
*05312
05314
*05313
05314
*05314
0522
0530
05310
05311
05312
05313
05314
05319
05379
0538
05474
5319
05314
*05379
05314
*0538
05314
*0539
05314
*05472
05314
*05474
0522
0530
05310
05311
05312
05313
05314
05319
05379
0538
0543
0545
05471
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
05472
05474
05479
0548
*05479
05314
05474
*0548
05314
05474
*0549
05314
05474
*07888
0522
05314
05474
*07889
0522
05314
05474
*07981
0522
05314
05474
*07988
0522
05314
05474
*07989
0522
05314
05474
*07998
0522
05314
05474
*07999
0522
05314
05474
*1398
0522
05314
05474
*28401
2800
2814
2818
28241
28242
28249
28260
28261
28262
28263
28264
28268
28269
2830
28310
28311
28319
2832
2839
2848
2849
2850
2851
*28409
2800
2814
2818
PO 00000
Frm 00359
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
28241
28242
28249
28260
28261
28262
28263
28264
28268
28269
2830
28310
28311
28319
2832
2839
2848
2849
2850
2851
*2841
2800
2814
2818
28241
28242
28249
28260
28261
28262
28263
28264
28268
28269
2830
28310
28311
28319
2832
2839
2848
2849
2850
2851
*2842
2800
2814
2818
28241
28242
28249
28260
28261
28262
28263
28264
28268
28269
2830
28310
28311
28319
2832
2839
2848
2849
2850
2851
*28800
2881
28981
28982
*28801
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48227
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48228
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
2881
28981
28982
*28802
2881
28981
28982
*28803
2881
28981
28982
*28804
2881
28981
28982
*28809
2881
28981
28982
*2884
2881
28981
28982
*28850
2881
28981
28982
*28851
2881
28981
28982
*28859
2881
28981
28982
*28860
2881
28981
28982
*28861
2881
28981
28982
*28862
2881
28981
28982
*28863
2881
28981
28982
*28864
2881
28981
28982
*28865
2881
28981
28982
*28869
2881
28981
28982
*28953
2881
28981
28982
*28983
2800
2814
2818
28241
28242
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
28249
28260
28261
28262
28263
28264
28268
28269
2830
28310
28311
28319
2832
2839
2848
2849
2850
2851
2860
2861
2862
2863
2864
2865
2866
2867
2869
2870
2871
2872
28730
28731
28732
28733
28739
2874
2875
2878
2879
2881
28981
28982
*32301
0522
05314
05474
34982
*32302
0522
05314
05474
34982
*32341
0522
05314
05474
34982
*32342
0522
05314
05474
34982
*32351
0522
05314
05474
34982
*32352
0522
05314
05474
34982
*32361
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00360
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
0522
05314
05474
34982
*32362
0522
05314
05474
34982
*32363
0522
05314
05474
34982
*32371
0522
05314
05474
34982
*32372
0522
05314
05474
34982
*32381
0522
05314
05474
34982
*32382
0522
05314
05474
34982
*33183
3314
*33371
7817
*33372
7817
*33379
7817
*33385
7817
*3380
04082
44024
78001
78003
7801
78031
78032
78039
7817
7854
78550
78551
78552
78559
7863
78820
78829
7895
7907
7911
7913
79901
79902
7991
7994
*33811
04082
44024
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
78001
78003
7801
78031
78032
78039
7817
7854
78550
78551
78552
78559
7863
78820
78829
7895
7907
7911
7913
79901
79902
7991
7994
*33812
04082
44024
78001
78003
7801
78031
78032
78039
7817
7854
78550
78551
78552
78559
7863
78820
78829
7895
7907
7911
7913
79901
79902
7991
7994
*33818
04082
44024
78001
78003
7801
78031
78032
78039
7817
7854
78550
78551
78552
78559
7863
78820
78829
7895
7907
7911
7913
79901
79902
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
7991
7994
*33819
04082
44024
78001
78003
7801
78031
78032
78039
7817
7854
78550
78551
78552
78559
7863
78820
78829
7895
7907
7911
7913
79901
79902
7991
7994
*33821
04082
44024
78001
78003
7801
78031
78032
78039
7817
7854
78550
78551
78552
78559
7863
78820
78829
7895
7907
7911
7913
79901
79902
7991
7994
*33822
04082
44024
78001
78003
7801
78031
78032
78039
7817
7854
78550
78551
78552
78559
7863
78820
78829
7895
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00361
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
7907
7911
7913
79901
79902
7991
7994
*33828
04082
44024
78001
78003
7801
78031
78032
78039
7817
7854
78550
78551
78552
78559
7863
78820
78829
7895
7907
7911
7913
79901
79902
7991
7994
*33829
04082
44024
78001
78003
7801
78031
78032
78039
7817
7854
78550
78551
78552
78559
7863
78820
78829
7895
7907
7911
7913
79901
79902
7991
7994
*3383
04082
44024
78001
78003
7801
78031
78032
78039
7817
7854
78550
78551
78552
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48229
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48230
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
78559
7863
78820
78829
7895
7907
7911
7913
79901
79902
7991
7994
*3384
04082
44024
78001
78003
7801
78031
78032
78039
7817
7854
78550
78551
78552
78559
7863
78820
78829
7895
7907
7911
7913
79901
79902
7991
7994
*34120
0522
05314
05474
34982
*34121
0522
05314
05474
34982
*34122
0522
05314
05474
34982
*34500
78032
*34501
78032
*34510
78032
*34511
78032
*3452
78032
*3453
78032
*34540
78032
*34541
78032
*34550
78032
*34551
78032
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
*34560
78032
*34561
78032
*34570
78032
*34571
78032
*34580
78032
*34581
78032
*34590
78032
*34591
78032
*3488
78032
*3489
78032
*34989
78032
*3499
78032
*37960
37700
37701
37702
*37961
37700
37701
37702
*37962
37700
37701
37702
*37963
37700
37701
37702
*5187
5187
9973
*51911
51900
51901
51902
51909
*51919
51900
51901
51902
51909
*52800
5283
*52801
5283
*52802
5283
*52809
5283
*538
5273
5274
53021
53100
53101
53110
53111
53120
53121
53131
53140
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00362
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
53141
53150
53151
53160
53161
53171
53191
53200
53201
53210
53211
53220
53221
53231
53240
53241
53250
53251
53260
53261
53271
53291
53300
53301
53310
53311
53320
53321
53331
53340
53341
53350
53351
53360
53361
53371
53391
53400
53401
53410
53411
53420
53421
53431
53440
53441
53450
53451
53460
53461
53471
53491
5400
5401
5409
55000
55001
55002
55003
55010
55011
55012
55013
55100
55101
55102
55103
5511
55120
55121
55129
5518
5519
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
55200
55201
55202
55203
*61681
6140
6143
6145
6150
6163
6164
*61689
6140
6143
6145
6150
6163
6164
*62929
6140
6143
6145
6150
6163
6164
6207
*62981
6140
6143
6145
6150
6163
6164
6207
*62989
6140
6143
6145
6150
6163
6164
6207
*64900
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00363
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48231
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48232
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64901
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00364
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64902
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00365
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48233
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48234
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64903
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00366
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64904
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00367
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48235
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48236
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64910
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00368
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64911
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00369
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48237
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48238
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64912
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00370
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64913
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00371
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48239
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48240
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00372
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64914
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00373
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64920
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48241
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48242
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00374
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64921
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00375
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64922
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48243
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48244
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00376
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64923
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00377
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64924
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48245
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48246
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00378
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67510
67511
67512
*64930
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00379
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48247
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48248
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64931
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00380
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64932
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00381
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48249
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48250
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64933
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00382
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64934
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00383
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48251
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48252
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64940
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00384
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
4743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67511
67512
*64941
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00385
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48253
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48254
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64942
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00386
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64943
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00387
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48255
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48256
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64944
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00388
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64950
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00389
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48257
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48258
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64951
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00390
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00391
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67512
*64953
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48259
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48260
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00392
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64960
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00393
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64961
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48261
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48262
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00394
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64962
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00395
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64963
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48263
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48264
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00396
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
*64964
63400
63401
63402
63410
63411
63412
63420
63421
63422
63430
63431
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
63432
63440
63441
63442
63450
63451
63452
63460
63461
63462
63470
63471
63472
63480
63481
63482
63490
63491
63492
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6398
6399
64000
64001
64003
64080
64081
64083
64090
64091
64093
64100
64101
64103
64110
64111
64113
64130
64131
64133
64180
64181
64183
64190
64191
64193
64240
64241
64242
64243
64244
64250
64251
64252
64253
64254
64260
64261
64262
64263
64264
64270
64271
64272
64273
64274
64400
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
64403
64410
64413
64660
64661
64662
64663
64664
64670
64671
64673
64730
64731
64732
64733
64734
64740
64741
64742
64743
64744
64800
64801
64802
64803
64804
64820
64821
64822
64823
64824
64830
64831
64832
64833
64834
64850
64851
64852
64853
64854
64860
64861
64862
64863
64864
65930
65931
65933
66500
66501
66503
66510
66511
66632
66634
66800
66801
66802
66803
66804
66810
66811
66812
66813
66814
66820
66821
66822
66823
66824
66880
66881
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00397
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
66882
66883
66884
66890
66891
66892
66893
66894
66910
66911
66912
66913
66914
66930
66932
66934
67000
67002
67004
67120
67121
67122
67123
67124
67130
67131
67133
67140
67142
67144
67300
67301
67302
67303
67304
67310
67311
67312
67313
67314
67320
67321
67322
67323
67324
67330
67331
67332
67333
67334
67380
67381
67382
67383
67384
67400
67401
67402
67403
67404
67410
67412
67420
67422
67424
67450
67451
67452
67453
67454
67510
67511
67512
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48265
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48266
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
*7790
78032
*7791
78032
*77985
77985
*78031
78032
*78032
78031
78032
78039
*78039
78032
*78091
78032
*78092
78032
*78093
78032
*78094
78032
*78095
78032
*78096
04082
44024
78001
78003
7801
78031
78032
78039
7817
7854
78550
78551
78552
78559
7863
78820
78829
7895
7907
7911
7913
79901
79902
7991
7994
*78097
04082
44024
78001
78003
7801
78031
78032
78039
7817
7854
78550
78551
78552
78559
7863
78820
78829
7895
7907
7911
7913
79901
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
79902
7991
7994
*78099
78032
*78864
78820
78829
*78865
78820
78829
*79981
78032
*79989
78032
*95890
80000
80001
80002
80003
80004
80005
80006
80009
80010
80011
80012
80013
80014
80015
80016
80019
80020
80021
80022
80023
80024
80025
80026
80029
80030
80031
80032
80033
80034
80035
80036
80039
80040
80041
80042
80043
80044
80045
80046
80049
80050
80051
80052
80053
80054
80055
80056
80059
80060
80061
80062
80063
80064
80065
80066
80069
80070
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00398
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80071
80072
80073
80074
80075
80076
80079
80080
80081
80082
80083
80084
80085
80086
80089
80090
80091
80092
80093
80094
80095
80096
80099
80100
80101
80102
80103
80104
80105
80106
80109
80110
80111
80112
80113
80114
80115
80116
80119
80120
80121
80122
80123
80124
80125
80126
80129
80130
80131
80132
80133
80134
80135
80136
80139
80140
80141
80142
80143
80144
80145
80146
80149
80150
80151
80152
80153
80154
80155
80156
80159
80160
80161
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80162
80163
80164
80165
80166
80169
80170
80171
80172
80173
80174
80175
80176
80179
80180
80181
80182
80183
80184
80185
80186
80189
80190
80191
80192
80193
80194
80195
80196
80199
8021
80220
80221
80222
80223
80224
80225
80226
80227
80228
80229
80230
80231
80232
80233
80234
80235
80236
80237
80238
80239
8024
8025
8026
8027
8028
8029
80300
80301
80302
80303
80304
80305
80306
80309
80310
80311
80312
80313
80314
80315
80316
80319
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80320
80321
80322
80323
80324
80325
80326
80329
80330
80331
80332
80333
80334
80335
80336
80339
80340
80341
80342
80343
80344
80345
80346
80349
80350
80351
80352
80353
80354
80355
80356
80359
80360
80361
80362
80363
80364
80365
80366
80369
80370
80371
80372
80373
80374
80375
80376
80379
80380
80381
80382
80383
80384
80385
80386
80389
80390
80391
80392
80393
80394
80395
80396
80399
80400
80401
80402
80403
80404
80405
80406
80409
80410
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00399
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80411
80412
80413
80414
80415
80416
80419
80420
80421
80422
80423
80424
80425
80426
80429
80430
80431
80432
80433
80434
80435
80436
80439
80440
80441
80442
80443
80444
80445
80446
80449
80450
80451
80452
80453
80454
80455
80456
80459
80460
80461
80462
80463
80464
80465
80466
80469
80470
80471
80472
80473
80474
80475
80476
80479
80480
80481
80482
80483
80484
80485
80486
80489
80490
80491
80492
80493
80494
80495
80496
80499
80500
80501
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48267
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48268
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80502
80503
80504
80505
80506
80507
80508
80510
80511
80512
80513
80514
80515
80516
80517
80518
8052
8053
8054
8055
8056
8057
8058
8059
80600
80601
80602
80603
80604
80605
80606
80607
80608
80609
80610
80611
80612
80613
80614
80615
80616
80617
80618
80619
80620
80621
80622
80623
80624
80625
80626
80627
80628
80629
80630
80631
80632
80633
80634
80635
80636
80637
80638
80639
8064
8065
80660
80661
80662
80669
80670
80671
80672
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80679
8068
8069
80704
80705
80706
80707
80708
80709
80710
80711
80712
80713
80714
80715
80716
80717
80718
80719
8072
8073
8074
8075
8076
8080
8081
8082
8083
80843
80849
80851
80852
80853
80859
8088
8089
82000
82001
82002
82003
82009
82010
82011
82012
82013
82019
82020
82021
82022
82030
82031
82032
8208
8209
82100
82101
82110
82111
83900
83901
83902
83903
83904
83905
83906
83907
83908
83910
83911
83912
83913
83914
83915
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00400
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
83916
83917
83918
8500
85011
85012
8502
8503
8504
8505
8509
85100
85101
85102
85103
85104
85105
85106
85109
85110
85111
85112
85113
85114
85115
85116
85119
85120
85121
85122
85123
85124
85125
85126
85129
85130
85131
85132
85133
85134
85135
85136
85139
85140
85141
85142
85143
85144
85145
85146
85149
85150
85151
85152
85153
85154
85155
85156
85159
85160
85161
85162
85163
85164
85165
85166
85169
85170
85171
85172
85173
85174
85175
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
85176
85179
85180
85181
85182
85183
85184
85185
85186
85189
85190
85191
85192
85193
85194
85195
85196
85199
85200
85201
85202
85203
85204
85205
85206
85209
85210
85211
85212
85213
85214
85215
85216
85219
85220
85221
85222
85223
85224
85225
85226
85229
85230
85231
85232
85233
85234
85235
85236
85239
85240
85241
85242
85243
85244
85245
85246
85249
85250
85251
85252
85253
85254
85255
85256
85259
85300
85301
85302
85303
85304
85305
85306
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
85309
85310
85311
85312
85313
85314
85315
85316
85319
85400
85401
85402
85403
85404
85405
85406
85409
85410
85411
85412
85413
85414
85415
85416
85419
8600
8601
8602
8603
8604
8605
86101
86102
86103
86110
86111
86112
86113
86122
86130
86131
86132
8621
86221
86222
86229
86231
86232
86239
8629
8631
86330
86331
86339
86350
86351
86352
86353
86354
86355
86356
86359
86390
86391
86392
86393
86394
86395
86399
86400
86401
86402
86403
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00401
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
86404
86405
86409
86410
86411
86412
86413
86414
86415
86419
86500
86501
86502
86503
86504
86509
86510
86511
86512
86513
86514
86519
86600
86601
86602
86603
86610
86611
86612
86613
8670
8671
8672
8673
8674
8675
8676
8677
8678
8679
86800
86801
86802
86803
86804
86809
86810
86811
86812
86813
86814
86819
8690
8691
8703
8704
8708
8709
8710
8711
8712
8713
8714
8719
87272
87273
87274
87333
8739
87400
87401
87402
87410
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48269
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48270
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
87411
87412
8743
8745
8750
8751
8870
8871
8872
8873
8874
8875
8876
8877
8960
8961
8962
8963
8970
8971
8972
8973
8974
8975
8976
8977
90000
90001
90002
90003
9001
90081
90082
90089
9009
9010
9011
9012
9013
90141
90142
90183
9020
90210
90211
90219
90220
90222
90223
90224
90225
90226
90227
90229
90231
90232
90233
90234
90239
90240
90241
90242
90249
90250
90251
90252
90253
90254
90259
90287
9251
9252
9290
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
95200
95201
95202
95203
95204
95205
95206
95207
95208
95209
95210
95211
95212
95213
95214
95215
95216
95217
95218
95219
9522
9523
9524
9528
9529
9530
9531
9532
9533
9534
9535
9538
9539
9580
9581
9582
9583
9584
9585
9587
*95891
80000
80001
80002
80003
80004
80005
80006
80009
80010
80011
80012
80013
80014
80015
80016
80019
80020
80021
80022
80023
80024
80025
80026
80029
80030
80031
80032
80033
80034
80035
80036
80039
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00402
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80040
80041
80042
80043
80044
80045
80046
80049
80050
80051
80052
80053
80054
80055
80056
80059
80060
80061
80062
80063
80064
80065
80066
80069
80070
80071
80072
80073
80074
80075
80076
80079
80080
80081
80082
80083
80084
80085
80086
80089
80090
80091
80092
80093
80094
80095
80096
80099
80100
80101
80102
80103
80104
80105
80106
80109
80110
80111
80112
80113
80114
80115
80116
80119
80120
80121
80122
80123
80124
80125
80126
80129
80130
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80131
80132
80133
80134
80135
80136
80139
80140
80141
80142
80143
80144
80145
80146
80149
80150
80151
80152
80153
80154
80155
80156
80159
80160
80161
80162
80163
80164
80165
80166
80169
80170
80171
80172
80173
80174
80175
80176
80179
80180
80181
80182
80183
80184
80185
80186
80189
80190
80191
80192
80193
80194
80195
80196
80199
8021
80220
80221
80222
80223
80224
80225
80226
80227
80228
80229
80230
80231
80232
80233
80234
80235
80236
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80237
80238
80239
8024
8025
8026
8027
8028
8029
80300
80301
80302
80303
80304
80305
80306
80309
80310
80311
80312
80313
80314
80315
80316
80319
80320
80321
80322
80323
80324
80325
80326
80329
80330
80331
80332
80333
80334
80335
80336
80339
80340
80341
80342
80343
80344
80345
80346
80349
80350
80351
80352
80353
80354
80355
80356
80359
80360
80361
80362
80363
80364
80365
80366
80369
80370
80371
80372
80373
80374
80375
80376
80379
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00403
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80380
80381
80382
80383
80384
80385
80386
80389
80390
80391
80392
80393
80394
80395
80396
80399
80400
80401
80402
80403
80404
80405
80406
80409
80410
80411
80412
80413
80414
80415
80416
80419
80420
80421
80422
80423
80424
80425
80426
80429
80430
80431
80432
80433
80434
80435
80436
80439
80440
80441
80442
80443
80444
80445
80446
80449
80450
80451
80452
80453
80454
80455
80456
80459
80460
80461
80462
80463
80464
80465
80466
80469
80470
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48271
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48272
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80471
80472
80473
80474
80475
80476
80479
80480
80481
80482
80483
80484
80485
80486
80489
80490
80491
80492
80493
80494
80495
80496
80499
80500
80501
80502
80503
80504
80505
80506
80507
80508
80510
80511
80512
80513
80514
80515
80516
80517
80518
8052
8053
8054
8055
8056
8057
8058
8059
80600
80601
80602
80603
80604
80605
80606
80607
80608
80609
80610
80611
80612
80613
80614
80615
80616
80617
80618
80619
80620
80621
80622
80623
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80624
80625
80626
80627
80628
80629
80630
80631
80632
80633
80634
80635
80636
80637
80638
80639
8064
8065
80660
80661
80662
80669
80670
80671
80672
80679
8068
8069
80704
80705
80706
80707
80708
80709
80710
80711
80712
80713
80714
80715
80716
80717
80718
80719
8072
8073
8074
8075
8076
8080
8081
8082
8083
80843
80849
80851
80852
80853
80859
8088
8089
82000
82001
82002
82003
82009
82010
82011
82012
82013
82019
82020
82021
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00404
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
82022
82030
82031
82032
8208
8209
82100
82101
82110
82111
83900
83901
83902
83903
83904
83905
83906
83907
83908
83910
83911
83912
83913
83914
83915
83916
83917
83918
8500
85011
85012
8502
8503
8504
8505
8509
85100
85101
85102
85103
85104
85105
85106
85109
85110
85111
85112
85113
85114
85115
85116
85119
85120
85121
85122
85123
85124
85125
85126
85129
85130
85131
85132
85133
85134
85135
85136
85139
85140
85141
85142
85143
85144
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
85145
85146
85149
85150
85151
85152
85153
85154
85155
85156
85159
85160
85161
85162
85163
85164
85165
85166
85169
85170
85171
85172
85173
85174
85175
85176
85179
85180
85181
85182
85183
85184
85185
85186
85189
85190
85191
85192
85193
85194
85195
85196
85199
85200
85201
85202
85203
85204
85205
85206
85209
85210
85211
85212
85213
85214
85215
85216
85219
85220
85221
85222
85223
85224
85225
85226
85229
85230
85231
85232
85233
85234
85235
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
85236
85239
85240
85241
85242
85243
85244
85245
85246
85249
85250
85251
85252
85253
85254
85255
85256
85259
85300
85301
85302
85303
85304
85305
85306
85309
85310
85311
85312
85313
85314
85315
85316
85319
85400
85401
85402
85403
85404
85405
85406
85409
85410
85411
85412
85413
85414
85415
85416
85419
8600
8601
8602
8603
8604
8605
86101
86102
86103
86110
86111
86112
86113
86122
86130
86131
86132
8621
86221
86222
86229
86231
86232
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00405
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
86239
8629
8631
86330
86331
86339
86350
86351
86352
86353
86354
86355
86356
86359
86390
86391
86392
86393
86394
86395
86399
86400
86401
86402
86403
86404
86405
86409
86410
86411
86412
86413
86414
86415
86419
86500
86501
86502
86503
86504
86509
86510
86511
86512
86513
86514
86519
86600
86601
86602
86603
86610
86611
86612
86613
8670
8671
8672
8673
8674
8675
8676
8677
8678
8679
86800
86801
86802
86803
86804
86809
86810
86811
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48273
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48274
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
86812
86813
86814
86819
8690
8691
8703
8704
8708
8709
8710
8711
8712
8713
8714
8719
87272
87273
87274
87333
8739
87400
87401
87402
87410
87411
87412
8743
8745
8750
8751
8870
8871
8872
8873
8874
8875
8876
8877
8960
8961
8962
8963
8970
8971
8972
8973
8974
8975
8976
8977
90000
90001
90002
90003
9001
90081
90082
90089
9009
9010
9011
9012
9013
90141
90142
90183
9020
90210
90211
90219
90220
90222
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
90223
90224
90225
90226
90227
90229
90231
90232
90233
90234
90239
90240
90241
90242
90249
90250
90251
90252
90253
90254
90259
90287
9251
9252
9290
95200
95201
95202
95203
95204
95205
95206
95207
95208
95209
95210
95211
95212
95213
95214
95215
95216
95217
95218
95219
9522
9523
9524
9528
9529
9530
9531
9532
9533
9534
9535
9538
9539
9580
9581
9582
9583
9584
9585
9587
*95892
80000
80001
80002
80003
80004
80005
80006
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00406
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80009
80010
80011
80012
80013
80014
80015
80016
80019
80020
80021
80022
80023
80024
80025
80026
80029
80030
80031
80032
80033
80034
80035
80036
80039
80040
80041
80042
80043
80044
80045
80046
80049
80050
80051
80052
80053
80054
80055
80056
80059
80060
80061
80062
80063
80064
80065
80066
80069
80070
80071
80072
80073
80074
80075
80076
80079
80080
80081
80082
80083
80084
80085
80086
80089
80090
80091
80092
80093
80094
80095
80096
80099
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80100
80101
80102
80103
80104
80105
80106
80109
80110
80111
80112
80113
80114
80115
80116
80119
80120
80121
80122
80123
80124
80125
80126
80129
80130
80131
80132
80133
80134
80135
80136
80139
80140
80141
80142
80143
80144
80145
80146
80149
80150
80151
80152
80153
80154
80155
80156
80159
80160
80161
80162
80163
80164
80165
80166
80169
80170
80171
80172
80173
80174
80175
80176
80179
80180
80181
80182
80183
80184
80185
80186
80189
80190
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80191
80192
80193
80194
80195
80196
80199
8021
80220
80221
80222
80223
80224
80225
80226
80227
80228
80229
80230
80231
80232
80233
80234
80235
80236
80237
80238
80239
8024
8025
8026
8027
8028
8029
80300
80301
80302
80303
80304
80305
80306
80309
80310
80311
80312
80313
80314
80315
80316
80319
80320
80321
80322
80323
80324
80325
80326
80329
80330
80331
80332
80333
80334
80335
80336
80339
80340
80341
80342
80343
80344
80345
80346
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00407
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80349
80350
80351
80352
80353
80354
80355
80356
80359
80360
80361
80362
80363
80364
80365
80366
80369
80370
80371
80372
80373
80374
80375
80376
80379
80380
80381
80382
80383
80384
80385
80386
80389
80390
80391
80392
80393
80394
80395
80396
80399
80400
80401
80402
80403
80404
80405
80406
80409
80410
80411
80412
80413
80414
80415
80416
80419
80420
80421
80422
80423
80424
80425
80426
80429
80430
80431
80432
80433
80434
80435
80436
80439
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48275
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48276
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80440
80441
80442
80443
80444
80445
80446
80449
80450
80451
80452
80453
80454
80455
80456
80459
80460
80461
80462
80463
80464
80465
80466
80469
80470
80471
80472
80473
80474
80475
80476
80479
80480
80481
80482
80483
80484
80485
80486
80489
80490
80491
80492
80493
80494
80495
80496
80499
80500
80501
80502
80503
80504
80505
80506
80507
80508
80510
80511
80512
80513
80514
80515
80516
80517
80518
8052
8053
8054
8055
8056
8057
8058
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
8059
80600
80601
80602
80603
80604
80605
80606
80607
80608
80609
80610
80611
80612
80613
80614
80615
80616
80617
80618
80619
80620
80621
80622
80623
80624
80625
80626
80627
80628
80629
80630
80631
80632
80633
80634
80635
80636
80637
80638
80639
8064
8065
80660
80661
80662
80669
80670
80671
80672
80679
8068
8069
80704
80705
80706
80707
80708
80709
80710
80711
80712
80713
80714
80715
80716
80717
80718
80719
8072
8073
8074
8075
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00408
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
8076
8080
8081
8082
8083
80843
80849
80851
80852
80853
80859
8088
8089
82000
82001
82002
82003
82009
82010
82011
82012
82013
82019
82020
82021
82022
82030
82031
82032
8208
8209
82100
82101
82110
82111
83900
83901
83902
83903
83904
83905
83906
83907
83908
83910
83911
83912
83913
83914
83915
83916
83917
83918
8500
85011
85012
8502
8503
8504
8505
8509
85100
85101
85102
85103
85104
85105
85106
85109
85110
85111
85112
85113
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
85114
85115
85116
85119
85120
85121
85122
85123
85124
85125
85126
85129
85130
85131
85132
85133
85134
85135
85136
85139
85140
85141
85142
85143
85144
85145
85146
85149
85150
85151
85152
85153
85154
85155
85156
85159
85160
85161
85162
85163
85164
85165
85166
85169
85170
85171
85172
85173
85174
85175
85176
85179
85180
85181
85182
85183
85184
85185
85186
85189
85190
85191
85192
85193
85194
85195
85196
85199
85200
85201
85202
85203
85204
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
85205
85206
85209
85210
85211
85212
85213
85214
85215
85216
85219
85220
85221
85222
85223
85224
85225
85226
85229
85230
85231
85232
85233
85234
85235
85236
85239
85240
85241
85242
85243
85244
85245
85246
85249
85250
85251
85252
85253
85254
85255
85256
85259
85300
85301
85302
85303
85304
85305
85306
85309
85310
85311
85312
85313
85314
85315
85316
85319
85400
85401
85402
85403
85404
85405
85406
85409
85410
85411
85412
85413
85414
85415
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00409
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
85416
85419
8600
8601
8602
8603
8604
8605
86101
86102
86103
86110
86111
86112
86113
86122
86130
86131
86132
8621
86221
86222
86229
86231
86232
86239
8629
8631
86330
86331
86339
86350
86351
86352
86353
86354
86355
86356
86359
86390
86391
86392
86393
86394
86395
86399
86400
86401
86402
86403
86404
86405
86409
86410
86411
86412
86413
86414
86415
86419
86500
86501
86502
86503
86504
86509
86510
86511
86512
86513
86514
86519
86600
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48277
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48278
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
86601
86602
86603
86610
86611
86612
86613
8670
8671
8672
8673
8674
8675
8676
8677
8678
8679
86800
86801
86802
86803
86804
86809
86810
86811
86812
86813
86814
86819
8690
8691
8703
8704
8708
8709
8710
8711
8712
8713
8714
8719
87272
87273
87274
87333
8739
87400
87401
87402
87410
87411
87412
8743
8745
8750
8751
8870
8871
8872
8873
8874
8875
8876
8877
8960
8961
8962
8963
8970
8971
8972
8973
8974
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
8975
8976
8977
90000
90001
90002
90003
9001
90081
90082
90089
9009
9010
9011
9012
9013
90141
90142
90183
9020
90210
90211
90219
90220
90222
90223
90224
90225
90226
90227
90229
90231
90232
90233
90234
90239
90240
90241
90242
90249
90250
90251
90252
90253
90254
90259
90287
9251
9252
9290
95200
95201
95202
95203
95204
95205
95206
95207
95208
95209
95210
95211
95212
95213
95214
95215
95216
95217
95218
95219
9522
9523
9524
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00410
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
9528
9529
9530
9531
9532
9533
9534
9535
9538
9539
9580
9581
9582
9583
9584
9585
9587
*95893
80000
80001
80002
80003
80004
80005
80006
80009
80010
80011
80012
80013
80014
80015
80016
80019
80020
80021
80022
80023
80024
80025
80026
80029
80030
80031
80032
80033
80034
80035
80036
80039
80040
80041
80042
80043
80044
80045
80046
80049
80050
80051
80052
80053
80054
80055
80056
80059
80060
80061
80062
80063
80064
80065
80066
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80069
80070
80071
80072
80073
80074
80075
80076
80079
80080
80081
80082
80083
80084
80085
80086
80089
80090
80091
80092
80093
80094
80095
80096
80099
80100
80101
80102
80103
80104
80105
80106
80109
80110
80111
80112
80113
80114
80115
80116
80119
80120
80121
80122
80123
80124
80125
80126
80129
80130
80131
80132
80133
80134
80135
80136
80139
80140
80141
80142
80143
80144
80145
80146
80149
80150
80151
80152
80153
80154
80155
80156
80159
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80160
80161
80162
80163
80164
80165
80166
80169
80170
80171
80172
80173
80174
80175
80176
80179
80180
80181
80182
80183
80184
80185
80186
80189
80190
80191
80192
80193
80194
80195
80196
80199
8021
80220
80221
80222
80223
80224
80225
80226
80227
80228
80229
80230
80231
80232
80233
80234
80235
80236
80237
80238
80239
8024
8025
8026
8027
8028
8029
80300
80301
80302
80303
80304
80305
80306
80309
80310
80311
80312
80313
80314
80315
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00411
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80316
80319
80320
80321
80322
80323
80324
80325
80326
80329
80330
80331
80332
80333
80334
80335
80336
80339
80340
80341
80342
80343
80344
80345
80346
80349
80350
80351
80352
80353
80354
80355
80356
80359
80360
80361
80362
80363
80364
80365
80366
80369
80370
80371
80372
80373
80374
80375
80376
80379
80380
80381
80382
80383
80384
80385
80386
80389
80390
80391
80392
80393
80394
80395
80396
80399
80400
80401
80402
80403
80404
80405
80406
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48279
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48280
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80409
80410
80411
80412
80413
80414
80415
80416
80419
80420
80421
80422
80423
80424
80425
80426
80429
80430
80431
80432
80433
80434
80435
80436
80439
80440
80441
80442
80443
80444
80445
80446
80449
80450
80451
80452
80453
80454
80455
80456
80459
80460
80461
80462
80463
80464
80465
80466
80469
80470
80471
80472
80473
80474
80475
80476
80479
80480
80481
80482
80483
80484
80485
80486
80489
80490
80491
80492
80493
80494
80495
80496
80499
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80500
80501
80502
80503
80504
80505
80506
80507
80508
80510
80511
80512
80513
80514
80515
80516
80517
80518
8052
8053
8054
8055
8056
8057
8058
8059
80600
80601
80602
80603
80604
80605
80606
80607
80608
80609
80610
80611
80612
80613
80614
80615
80616
80617
80618
80619
80620
80621
80622
80623
80624
80625
80626
80627
80628
80629
80630
80631
80632
80633
80634
80635
80636
80637
80638
80639
8064
8065
80660
80661
80662
80669
80670
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00412
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80671
80672
80679
8068
8069
80704
80705
80706
80707
80708
80709
80710
80711
80712
80713
80714
80715
80716
80717
80718
80719
8072
8073
8074
8075
8076
8080
8081
8082
8083
80843
80849
80851
80852
80853
80859
8088
8089
82000
82001
82002
82003
82009
82010
82011
82012
82013
82019
82020
82021
82022
82030
82031
82032
8208
8209
82100
82101
82110
82111
83900
83901
83902
83903
83904
83905
83906
83907
83908
83910
83911
83912
83913
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
83914
83915
83916
83917
83918
8500
85011
85012
8502
8503
8504
8505
8509
85100
85101
85102
85103
85104
85105
85106
85109
85110
85111
85112
85113
85114
85115
85116
85119
85120
85121
85122
85123
85124
85125
85126
85129
85130
85131
85132
85133
85134
85135
85136
85139
85140
85141
85142
85143
85144
85145
85146
85149
85150
85151
85152
85153
85154
85155
85156
85159
85160
85161
85162
85163
85164
85165
85166
85169
85170
85171
85172
85173
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
85174
85175
85176
85179
85180
85181
85182
85183
85184
85185
85186
85189
85190
85191
85192
85193
85194
85195
85196
85199
85200
85201
85202
85203
85204
85205
85206
85209
85210
85211
85212
85213
85214
85215
85216
85219
85220
85221
85222
85223
85224
85225
85226
85229
85230
85231
85232
85233
85234
85235
85236
85239
85240
85241
85242
85243
85244
85245
85246
85249
85250
85251
85252
85253
85254
85255
85256
85259
85300
85301
85302
85303
85304
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00413
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
85305
85306
85309
85310
85311
85312
85313
85314
85315
85316
85319
85400
85401
85402
85403
85404
85405
85406
85409
85410
85411
85412
85413
85414
85415
85416
85419
8600
8601
8602
8603
8604
8605
86101
86102
86103
86110
86111
86112
86113
86122
86130
86131
86132
8621
86221
86222
86229
86231
86232
86239
8629
8631
86330
86331
86339
86350
86351
86352
86353
86354
86355
86356
86359
86390
86391
86392
86393
86394
86395
86399
86400
86401
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48281
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48282
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
86402
86403
86404
86405
86409
86410
86411
86412
86413
86414
86415
86419
86500
86501
86502
86503
86504
86509
86510
86511
86512
86513
86514
86519
86600
86601
86602
86603
86610
86611
86612
86613
8670
8671
8672
8673
8674
8675
8676
8677
8678
8679
86800
86801
86802
86803
86804
86809
86810
86811
86812
86813
86814
86819
8690
8691
8703
8704
8708
8709
8710
8711
8712
8713
8714
8719
87272
87273
87274
87333
8739
87400
87401
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
87402
87410
87411
87412
8743
8745
8750
8751
8870
8871
8872
8873
8874
8875
8876
8877
8960
8961
8962
8963
8970
8971
8972
8973
8974
8975
8976
8977
90000
90001
90002
90003
9001
90081
90082
90089
9009
9010
9011
9012
9013
90141
90142
90183
9020
90210
90211
90219
90220
90222
90223
90224
90225
90226
90227
90229
90231
90232
90233
90234
90239
90240
90241
90242
90249
90250
90251
90252
90253
90254
90259
90287
9251
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00414
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
9252
9290
95200
95201
95202
95203
95204
95205
95206
95207
95208
95209
95210
95211
95212
95213
95214
95215
95216
95217
95218
95219
9522
9523
9524
9528
9529
9530
9531
9532
9533
9534
9535
9538
9539
9580
9581
9582
9583
9584
9585
9587
*95899
80000
80001
80002
80003
80004
80005
80006
80009
80010
80011
80012
80013
80014
80015
80016
80019
80020
80021
80022
80023
80024
80025
80026
80029
80030
80031
80032
80033
80034
80035
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80036
80039
80040
80041
80042
80043
80044
80045
80046
80049
80050
80051
80052
80053
80054
80055
80056
80059
80060
80061
80062
80063
80064
80065
80066
80069
80070
80071
80072
80073
80074
80075
80076
80079
80080
80081
80082
80083
80084
80085
80086
80089
80090
80091
80092
80093
80094
80095
80096
80099
80100
80101
80102
80103
80104
80105
80106
80109
80110
80111
80112
80113
80114
80115
80116
80119
80120
80121
80122
80123
80124
80125
80126
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80129
80130
80131
80132
80133
80134
80135
80136
80139
80140
80141
80142
80143
80144
80145
80146
80149
80150
80151
80152
80153
80154
80155
80156
80159
80160
80161
80162
80163
80164
80165
80166
80169
80170
80171
80172
80173
80174
80175
80176
80179
80180
80181
80182
80183
80184
80185
80186
80189
80190
80191
80192
80193
80194
80195
80196
80199
8021
80220
80221
80222
80223
80224
80225
80226
80227
80228
80229
80230
80231
80232
80233
80234
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00415
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80235
80236
80237
80238
80239
8024
8025
8026
8027
8028
8029
80300
80301
80302
80303
80304
80305
80306
80309
80310
80311
80312
80313
80314
80315
80316
80319
80320
80321
80322
80323
80324
80325
80326
80329
80330
80331
80332
80333
80334
80335
80336
80339
80340
80341
80342
80343
80344
80345
80346
80349
80350
80351
80352
80353
80354
80355
80356
80359
80360
80361
80362
80363
80364
80365
80366
80369
80370
80371
80372
80373
80374
80375
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48283
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48284
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80376
80379
80380
80381
80382
80383
80384
80385
80386
80389
80390
80391
80392
80393
80394
80395
80396
80399
80400
80401
80402
80403
80404
80405
80406
80409
80410
80411
80412
80413
80414
80415
80416
80419
80420
80421
80422
80423
80424
80425
80426
80429
80430
80431
80432
80433
80434
80435
80436
80439
80440
80441
80442
80443
80444
80445
80446
80449
80450
80451
80452
80453
80454
80455
80456
80459
80460
80461
80462
80463
80464
80465
80466
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80469
80470
80471
80472
80473
80474
80475
80476
80479
80480
80481
80482
80483
80484
80485
80486
80489
80490
80491
80492
80493
80494
80495
80496
80499
80500
80501
80502
80503
80504
80505
80506
80507
80508
80510
80511
80512
80513
80514
80515
80516
80517
80518
8052
8053
8054
8055
8056
8057
8058
8059
80600
80601
80602
80603
80604
80605
80606
80607
80608
80609
80610
80611
80612
80613
80614
80615
80616
80617
80618
80619
80620
80621
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00416
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
80622
80623
80624
80625
80626
80627
80628
80629
80630
80631
80632
80633
80634
80635
80636
80637
80638
80639
8064
8065
80660
80661
80662
80669
80670
80671
80672
80679
8068
8069
80704
80705
80706
80707
80708
80709
80710
80711
80712
80713
80714
80715
80716
80717
80718
80719
8072
8073
8074
8075
8076
8080
8081
8082
8083
80843
80849
80851
80852
80853
80859
8088
8089
82000
82001
82002
82003
82009
82010
82011
82012
82013
82019
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
82020
82021
82022
82030
82031
82032
8208
8209
82100
82101
82110
82111
83900
83901
83902
83903
83904
83905
83906
83907
83908
83910
83911
83912
83913
83914
83915
83916
83917
83918
8500
85011
85012
8502
8503
8504
8505
8509
85100
85101
85102
85103
85104
85105
85106
85109
85110
85111
85112
85113
85114
85115
85116
85119
85120
85121
85122
85123
85124
85125
85126
85129
85130
85131
85132
85133
85134
85135
85136
85139
85140
85141
85142
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
85143
85144
85145
85146
85149
85150
85151
85152
85153
85154
85155
85156
85159
85160
85161
85162
85163
85164
85165
85166
85169
85170
85171
85172
85173
85174
85175
85176
85179
85180
85181
85182
85183
85184
85185
85186
85189
85190
85191
85192
85193
85194
85195
85196
85199
85200
85201
85202
85203
85204
85205
85206
85209
85210
85211
85212
85213
85214
85215
85216
85219
85220
85221
85222
85223
85224
85225
85226
85229
85230
85231
85232
85233
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00417
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
85234
85235
85236
85239
85240
85241
85242
85243
85244
85245
85246
85249
85250
85251
85252
85253
85254
85255
85256
85259
85300
85301
85302
85303
85304
85305
85306
85309
85310
85311
85312
85313
85314
85315
85316
85319
85400
85401
85402
85403
85404
85405
85406
85409
85410
85411
85412
85413
85414
85415
85416
85419
8600
8601
8602
8603
8604
8605
86101
86102
86103
86110
86111
86112
86113
86122
86130
86131
86132
8621
86221
86222
86229
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48285
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48286
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
86231
86232
86239
8629
8631
86330
86331
86339
86350
86351
86352
86353
86354
86355
86356
86359
86390
86391
86392
86393
86394
86395
86399
86400
86401
86402
86403
86404
86405
86409
86410
86411
86412
86413
86414
86415
86419
86500
86501
86502
86503
86504
86509
86510
86511
86512
86513
86514
86519
86600
86601
86602
86603
86610
86611
86612
86613
8670
8671
8672
8673
8674
8675
8676
8677
8678
8679
86800
86801
86802
86803
86804
86809
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
86810
86811
86812
86813
86814
86819
8690
8691
8703
8704
8708
8709
8710
8711
8712
8713
8714
8719
87272
87273
87274
87333
8739
87400
87401
87402
87410
87411
87412
8743
8745
8750
8751
8870
8871
8872
8873
8874
8875
8876
8877
8960
8961
8962
8963
8970
8971
8972
8973
8974
8975
8976
8977
90000
90001
90002
90003
9001
90081
90082
90089
9009
9010
9011
9012
9013
90141
90142
90183
9020
90210
90211
90219
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00418
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
90220
90222
90223
90224
90225
90226
90227
90229
90231
90232
90233
90234
90239
90240
90241
90242
90249
90250
90251
90252
90253
90254
90259
90287
9251
9252
9290
95200
95201
95202
95203
95204
95205
95206
95207
95208
95209
95210
95211
95212
95213
95214
95215
95216
95217
95218
95219
9522
9523
9524
9528
9529
9530
9531
9532
9533
9534
9535
9538
9539
9580
9581
9582
9583
9584
9585
9587
*9973
5187
*99791
5187
*99799
5187
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 6G.—ADDITIONS TO THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
TABLE 6H.—DELETIONS FROM THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
[CCs that are deleted from the list are in this
Table 6H—Deletions to the CC Exclusions
List. Each of the principal diagnoses is
shown with an asterisk, and the revisions to
the CC Exclusions List are provided in an
indented column immediately following the
affected principal diagnosis.]
*2800
2840
*2801
2840
*2808
2840
*2809
2840
*2810
2840
*2811
2840
*2812
2840
*2813
2840
*2814
2840
*2818
2840
*2819
2840
*2820
2840
*2821
2840
*2822
2840
*2823
2840
*28241
2840
*28242
2840
*28249
2840
*2825
2840
*28260
2840
*28261
2840
*28262
2840
*28263
2840
*28264
2840
*28268
2840
*28269
2840
*2827
2840
VerDate Aug<31>2005
TABLE 6H.—DELETIONS FROM THE CC TABLE 6H.—DELETIONS FROM THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
[CCs that are deleted from the list are in this
Table 6H—Deletions to the CC Exclusions
List. Each of the principal diagnoses is
shown with an asterisk, and the revisions to
the CC Exclusions List are provided in an
indented column immediately following the
affected principal diagnosis.]
*99881
5187
*99883
5187
*99889
5187
*9989
5187
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
48287
*2828
2840
*2829
2840
*2830
2840
*28310
2840
*28311
2840
*28319
2840
*2832
2840
*2839
2840
*2840
2800
2814
2818
28241
28242
28249
28260
28261
28262
28263
28264
28268
28269
2830
28310
28311
28319
2832
2839
2840
2848
2849
2850
2851
*2848
2840
*2849
2840
*2850
2840
*2851
2840
*28521
2840
*28522
2840
*28529
2840
*2858
2840
*2859
2840
*2880
2880
2881
28981
28982
*2881
2880
PO 00000
Frm 00419
[CCs that are deleted from the list are in this
Table 6H—Deletions to the CC Exclusions
List. Each of the principal diagnoses is
shown with an asterisk, and the revisions to
the CC Exclusions List are provided in an
indented column immediately following the
affected principal diagnosis.]
*2882
2880
*2883
2880
*2888
2880
*2889
2880
*28981
2840
2880
*28982
2840
2880
*28989
2840
2880
*2899
2840
2880
*3230
34982
*3234
34982
*3235
34982
*3236
34982
*3237
34982
*3238
34982
*3337
7817
*5173
2840
*5191
51900
51901
51902
51909
*5280
5283
*6168
6140
6143
6145
6150
6163
6164
*6298
6140
6143
6145
6150
6163
6164
6207
*7758
00841
00842
00843
00844
00845
00846
00847
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48288
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 6H.—DELETIONS FROM THE CC TABLE 6H.—DELETIONS FROM THE CC TABLE 6H.—DELETIONS FROM THE CC
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
EXCLUSIONS LIST—Continued
[CCs that are deleted from the list are in this
Table 6H—Deletions to the CC Exclusions
List. Each of the principal diagnoses is
shown with an asterisk, and the revisions to
the CC Exclusions List are provided in an
indented column immediately following the
affected principal diagnosis.]
00849
7751
7752
[CCs that are deleted from the list are in this
Table 6H—Deletions to the CC Exclusions
List. Each of the principal diagnoses is
shown with an asterisk, and the revisions to
the CC Exclusions List are provided in an
indented column immediately following the
affected principal diagnosis.]
7753
7754
7755
[CCs that are deleted from the list are in this
Table 6H—Deletions to the CC Exclusions
List. Each of the principal diagnoses is
shown with an asterisk, and the revisions to
the CC Exclusions List are provided in an
indented column immediately following the
affected principal diagnosis.]
7756
7757
TABLE 7A.—MEDICARE PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEM SELECTED PERCENTILE LENGTHS OF STAY FY 2005 MEDPAR
UPDATE MARCH 2006 GROUPER V23.0
Number
discharge
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
1 ...............................................................
2 ...............................................................
3 ...............................................................
6 ...............................................................
7 ...............................................................
8 ...............................................................
9 ...............................................................
10 .............................................................
11 .............................................................
12 .............................................................
13 .............................................................
14 .............................................................
15 .............................................................
16 .............................................................
17 .............................................................
18 .............................................................
19 .............................................................
20 .............................................................
21 .............................................................
22 .............................................................
23 .............................................................
24 .............................................................
25 .............................................................
26 .............................................................
27 .............................................................
28 .............................................................
29 .............................................................
31 .............................................................
32 .............................................................
34 .............................................................
35 .............................................................
36 .............................................................
37 .............................................................
38 .............................................................
39 .............................................................
40 .............................................................
42 .............................................................
43 .............................................................
44 .............................................................
45 .............................................................
46 .............................................................
47 .............................................................
49 .............................................................
50 .............................................................
51 .............................................................
52 .............................................................
53 .............................................................
55 .............................................................
56 .............................................................
57 .............................................................
59 .............................................................
60 .............................................................
61 .............................................................
62 .............................................................
63 .............................................................
64 .............................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Arithmetic
mean LOS
24,464
10,338
3
288
15,034
3,441
1,775
19,639
3,074
56,196
7,529
278,864
20,004
17,310
2,967
33,512
8,422
6,409
2,220
3,169
10,671
63,246
27,218
25
5,974
19,919
6,517
5,043
1,900
27,478
7,843
1,045
1,219
50
328
1,188
901
125
1,291
2,771
3,930
1,308
2,416
2,026
193
316
2,147
1,370
451
888
126
3
222
4
2,827
3,234
PO 00000
Frm 00420
10th
percentile
9.6076
4.3927
11.0000
3.0833
9.2559
2.7629
6.0248
5.9172
3.5501
5.3631
4.8515
5.3705
4.0156
6.3008
3.0334
5.1525
3.3749
9.8313
6.1752
5.0104
3.8995
4.6433
3.1280
3.8000
4.7370
5.5701
3.2118
3.9038
2.2716
4.7063
3.0360
1.7962
4.1132
2.8000
2.1220
4.2315
3.0844
2.9600
4.7506
3.0278
4.1913
3.0145
4.5219
1.8638
2.6684
1.6962
4.0051
2.8832
2.6785
3.1543
2.3730
1.6667
6.0541
1.5000
4.5313
6.2004
Fmt 4701
25th
percentile
2
1
4
1
2
1
1
2
1
2
2
2
1
2
1
2
1
3
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
Sfmt 4700
50th
percentile
4
2
4
1
4
1
3
3
2
3
3
3
2
3
1
3
2
5
3
2
2
2
2
1
1
2
1
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
2
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
75th
percentile
7
3
8
2
7
2
4
4
3
4
4
4
3
5
2
4
3
8
5
4
3
3
2
2
3
4
3
3
2
4
3
1
3
2
1
3
2
2
4
2
3
2
3
1
1
1
2
1
2
2
2
1
4
1
3
4
18AUR2
12
6
21
3
12
3
7
7
5
6
6
7
5
8
4
6
4
12
8
6
5
6
4
5
6
7
4
5
3
6
4
1
5
3
2
4
3
4
6
4
5
4
5
2
3
2
5
3
3
3
3
3
8
1
6
8
90th
percentile
19
8
21
7
19
6
11
11
7
10
8
10
7
12
6
9
6
18
12
10
7
9
6
9
10
11
6
7
4
9
5
1
8
6
3
6
5
5
8
6
8
6
9
3
5
3
9
6
5
7
5
3
13
3
10
13
48289
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 7A.—MEDICARE PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEM SELECTED PERCENTILE LENGTHS OF STAY FY 2005 MEDPAR
UPDATE MARCH 2006 GROUPER V23.0—Continued
Number
discharge
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
65 .............................................................
66 .............................................................
67 .............................................................
68 .............................................................
69 .............................................................
70 .............................................................
71 .............................................................
72 .............................................................
73 .............................................................
74 .............................................................
75 .............................................................
76 .............................................................
77 .............................................................
78 .............................................................
79 .............................................................
80 .............................................................
81 .............................................................
82 .............................................................
83 .............................................................
84 .............................................................
85 .............................................................
86 .............................................................
87 .............................................................
88 .............................................................
89 .............................................................
90 .............................................................
91 .............................................................
92 .............................................................
93 .............................................................
94 .............................................................
95 .............................................................
96 .............................................................
97 .............................................................
98 .............................................................
99 .............................................................
100 ...........................................................
101 ...........................................................
102 ...........................................................
103 ...........................................................
104 ...........................................................
105 ...........................................................
106 ...........................................................
108 ...........................................................
110 ...........................................................
111 ...........................................................
113 ...........................................................
114 ...........................................................
117 ...........................................................
118 ...........................................................
119 ...........................................................
120 ...........................................................
121 ...........................................................
122 ...........................................................
123 ...........................................................
124 ...........................................................
125 ...........................................................
126 ...........................................................
127 ...........................................................
128 ...........................................................
129 ...........................................................
130 ...........................................................
131 ...........................................................
132 ...........................................................
133 ...........................................................
134 ...........................................................
135 ...........................................................
136 ...........................................................
138 ...........................................................
139 ...........................................................
140 ...........................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Arithmetic
mean LOS
40,495
8,197
379
18,963
5,104
25
70
1,326
9,961
3
46,867
48,182
2,096
49,708
160,452
7,128
6
63,222
7,154
1,402
22,231
1,714
96,725
427,153
554,440
43,208
53
16,523
1,436
13,657
1,576
59,742
26,592
13
21,402
6,406
23,399
4,907
884
20,125
32,635
3,440
8,759
57,721
10,783
34,750
7,960
5,350
7,634
963
33,561
150,085
54,555
29,576
120,562
92,475
5,424
667,522
4,213
3,527
87,554
22,885
101,433
5,845
39,838
7,171
939
206,296
73,965
31,123
PO 00000
Frm 00421
10th
percentile
2.7634
3.1080
3.6834
3.8500
2.9414
2.4000
4.3429
3.3205
4.2979
3.3333
9.5747
10.4832
4.4938
6.0925
8.0513
5.2173
6.1667
6.6658
5.1918
3.1284
6.1082
3.4568
6.3706
4.8563
5.5245
3.7030
3.4151
5.9402
3.7632
5.9022
3.3839
4.2995
3.3652
3.0769
3.0982
2.1071
4.1820
2.5345
35.1640
14.6458
9.9310
10.9392
10.7132
8.0026
3.1055
12.5640
8.3485
4.2781
3.0183
5.3998
8.9647
6.1981
3.2992
4.7318
4.3876
2.7008
10.6875
5.0851
5.1899
2.5373
5.3511
3.6965
2.8006
2.1384
3.1001
4.2924
2.6944
3.8764
2.4267
2.4049
Fmt 4701
25th
percentile
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
3
3
1
2
3
2
2
2
2
1
2
1
2
2
2
1
1
2
1
2
1
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
8
6
4
5
4
1
1
4
2
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
1
1
3
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
Sfmt 4700
50th
percentile
1
1
2
2
2
1
2
2
2
3
5
5
2
4
4
3
3
3
3
2
3
2
3
3
3
2
1
3
2
3
2
2
2
2
1
1
2
1
11
8
6
7
6
3
1
6
4
1
1
1
3
3
1
1
2
1
6
3
3
1
3
2
1
1
2
2
1
2
1
1
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
2
2
3
3
2
2
3
3
3
3
7
8
4
5
7
4
5
5
4
3
5
3
5
4
5
3
2
5
3
5
3
4
3
2
2
2
3
2
22
12
8
9
9
6
2
10
7
2
2
3
6
5
3
3
3
2
9
4
5
1
4
3
2
2
2
3
2
3
2
2
18AUR2
75th
percentile
3
4
5
5
4
3
5
4
5
4
12
13
6
7
10
6
8
9
6
4
8
4
8
6
7
5
4
7
5
8
4
5
4
4
4
3
5
3
46
18
11
13
13
10
4
15
11
5
4
7
12
8
4
6
6
3
13
6
6
2
7
5
3
3
4
5
3
5
3
3
90th
percentile
5
6
8
7
5
4
7
6
8
4
19
20
9
10
15
9
8
13
10
5
12
7
12
9
10
6
6
11
7
12
6
7
6
6
6
4
8
5
78
26
18
18
19
16
6
24
16
9
7
13
19
11
6
11
9
5
19
9
9
5
10
6
5
4
6
8
5
7
4
4
48290
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 7A.—MEDICARE PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEM SELECTED PERCENTILE LENGTHS OF STAY FY 2005 MEDPAR
UPDATE MARCH 2006 GROUPER V23.0—Continued
Number
discharge
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
210
211
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Arithmetic
mean LOS
123,214
49,069
237,871
104,970
5,698
10,278
2,613
133,146
19,525
22,987
5,401
5,016
1,953
27,071
6,015
4
8,329
3,716
19,241
11,945
10,158
4,952
5
6,003
2,457
5,157
4,922
1,538
774
17,939
1,404
33,099
2,192
261,557
29,879
14,653
7,659
2,559
14,734
91,464
25,262
297,116
81,577
79
6,254
7
647
93,711
13,047
65
10,595
1,380
4,044
461
2,846
595
16,435
4,114
1,484
1,017
2,717
27,516
32,434
69,460
32,822
2,051
38,329
9,427
126,884
25,813
PO 00000
Frm 00422
10th
percentile
3.4307
2.4897
2.0978
5.8254
2.5470
9.7685
5.5427
11.9344
5.6364
10.7225
5.0224
7.9314
4.8669
12.9678
3.9583
9.2500
5.6899
2.6453
5.0838
2.6548
4.5026
2.0889
2.4000
7.6838
3.9935
4.3198
2.1260
4.8563
2.7661
10.6904
4.1660
6.7836
3.4995
4.6848
2.8529
5.0912
4.4332
3.0770
5.7800
5.2570
3.3086
4.4864
2.8984
4.2911
4.4915
3.1429
4.1468
5.4548
3.0530
4.8000
12.3655
5.5087
12.5321
6.2603
10.5569
5.3345
9.0254
4.2859
8.9892
10.3520
13.5628
6.1264
6.4368
5.3914
5.8530
3.8035
5.2350
2.9434
6.6228
4.5833
Fmt 4701
25th
percentile
1
1
1
1
1
4
2
5
3
4
1
3
2
3
1
7
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
2
1
1
1
1
2
1
2
1
2
1
2
2
1
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
1
5
2
4
2
3
2
2
1
3
2
2
2
2
1
1
1
3
3
Sfmt 4700
50th
percentile
2
1
1
2
1
6
4
6
4
6
2
5
3
6
2
7
2
1
2
1
2
1
1
4
2
2
1
2
1
5
2
3
1
3
2
3
2
2
3
3
2
2
1
2
2
2
2
2
1
2
6
3
7
4
6
3
5
3
4
3
6
3
3
3
3
2
2
1
4
3
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
3
2
2
4
2
8
5
9
5
9
4
7
5
10
3
8
4
2
4
2
3
1
2
7
4
3
2
3
2
8
3
5
3
4
2
4
4
3
4
4
3
3
2
3
3
2
3
4
2
3
9
5
10
6
9
5
7
4
7
7
10
5
5
4
4
3
4
2
5
4
18AUR2
75th
percentile
4
3
3
7
3
11
7
15
7
13
7
9
6
16
6
8
7
3
6
3
6
3
3
9
5
5
3
6
3
13
5
8
4
6
4
6
5
4
7
6
4
5
4
4
6
3
6
7
4
6
15
7
15
8
13
7
11
5
12
13
17
7
8
6
7
5
7
4
8
5
90th
percentile
6
4
4
11
5
17
8
22
8
19
9
14
7
25
8
14
11
5
10
5
9
4
5
13
7
8
4
10
5
21
8
13
7
8
5
9
8
5
11
10
6
8
5
8
9
5
8
10
6
8
25
9
23
11
19
9
16
7
19
21
27
12
12
10
11
7
10
5
11
7
48291
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 7A.—MEDICARE PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEM SELECTED PERCENTILE LENGTHS OF STAY FY 2005 MEDPAR
UPDATE MARCH 2006 GROUPER V23.0—Continued
Number
discharge
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
212
213
216
217
218
219
220
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
283
284
285
286
287
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Arithmetic
mean LOS
10
9,511
19,925
15,693
30,213
21,194
2
12,689
9,927
6,275
6,776
4,855
2,683
1,117
2,474
572
18,500
9,052
4,763
41,789
1,925
9,693
40,343
12,933
2,818
2,725
100,998
16,946
5,798
1,393
21,356
16,406
13,490
4,165
2,059
1
24,816
10,019
1
7,606
13,128
11,400
2,660
2,431
1,571
602
22,544
3,912
4,036
2,230
276
1,007
11,070
2,573
21,579
6,079
1,256
2,222
173
1,611
119,184
33,737
6
19,335
6,583
6,770
1,845
8,079
2,869
5,462
PO 00000
Frm 00423
10th
percentile
2.5000
8.9931
5.3298
12.1157
5.3787
3.1641
4.0000
3.2720
1.9411
5.2709
6.3719
2.6360
4.2046
2.5004
5.4321
2.7395
6.3363
2.6740
4.6431
4.4010
3.7844
7.9706
6.0356
6.4411
3.6427
6.4499
4.4968
4.4343
3.0942
3.5635
3.2905
4.8154
3.9493
3.8363
2.7936
1.0000
4.5259
3.0639
1.0000
4.9471
2.5517
1.6964
2.8173
1.4048
2.2037
4.6561
10.4724
6.2150
6.5347
3.0296
4.2428
3.6495
7.9865
3.5876
6.7917
5.8195
3.7070
6.1787
3.2081
4.6096
5.4238
3.9926
4.1667
3.9854
2.7961
4.5786
2.9176
9.8267
5.1921
9.5002
Fmt 4701
25th
percentile
1
2
1
3
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
2
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
2
1
1
1
1
2
1
2
2
1
1
1
1
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
3
2
3
Sfmt 4700
50th
percentile
2
4
1
5
3
2
1
1
1
2
3
1
1
1
2
1
2
1
2
3
2
4
3
3
2
3
2
2
1
2
2
3
1
2
1
1
3
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
2
5
3
2
1
1
1
3
1
3
3
2
3
1
2
3
2
2
2
1
2
1
5
2
5
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
75th
percentile
2
7
3
8
4
3
7
2
1
4
4
2
3
2
4
2
5
1
4
4
3
6
5
5
3
5
4
4
3
3
3
4
3
3
3
1
4
3
1
4
2
1
1
1
1
3
7
5
4
2
3
2
6
3
5
4
3
5
2
4
4
3
3
3
2
3
2
8
4
7
18AUR2
4
11
7
15
7
4
7
4
2
7
8
3
5
3
7
3
8
3
6
5
5
9
7
8
4
8
6
5
4
4
4
6
5
5
3
1
5
4
1
6
3
2
3
1
2
6
13
7
8
4
5
4
10
5
8
7
5
7
4
6
7
5
5
5
3
6
4
12
6
11
90th
percentile
4
18
12
24
10
5
7
6
3
11
13
5
9
5
11
6
13
6
8
8
7
14
11
12
6
12
8
8
5
6
6
8
8
7
5
1
8
5
1
9
5
3
7
2
4
9
20
11
14
6
8
7
15
7
12
11
7
11
6
8
9
7
5
7
5
8
5
18
10
18
48292
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 7A.—MEDICARE PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEM SELECTED PERCENTILE LENGTHS OF STAY FY 2005 MEDPAR
UPDATE MARCH 2006 GROUPER V23.0—Continued
Number
discharge
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Arithmetic
mean LOS
11,463
6,352
11,894
60
7,592
317
96,836
4,384
247,467
42,523
111
1,529
21,700
3,909
10,499
24,646
14,090
3,012
5,818
1,950
6,684
3,266
25,386
5,890
1,328
505
2
34,911
204,550
2,716
5,914
384
225,069
31,860
67
20,427
4,637
9,930
2,586
11
574
54
57,039
4,145
247
9,532
12,203
28,202
21,501
674
1,237
1
3,131
457
2,343
1,390
3,963
234
4,262
554
7,281
1,177
3,092
7,572
5,006
22,278
5,543
20,961
28,665
14,282
PO 00000
Frm 00424
10th
percentile
3.7000
2.3909
2.0268
1.4833
9.9870
4.7192
4.2502
3.7003
4.6444
3.0312
3.5405
5.0680
5.8032
3.3592
7.9355
7.2778
8.3271
3.1016
5.5734
2.0292
6.1339
1.9801
4.4935
1.8514
4.9315
2.3921
89.0000
6.7495
6.1591
3.5044
5.9731
2.5651
4.9879
3.5371
3.5821
3.1029
1.8462
3.7407
2.5607
2.0000
3.4146
1.6852
5.4034
3.0625
5.3320
4.0415
2.4946
3.2201
1.8442
5.7953
5.1924
2.0000
3.2031
3.0394
2.7222
5.4324
5.9066
2.7094
4.0082
2.6408
4.5187
4.1623
6.0155
5.5539
3.0224
1.8696
8.0319
3.8545
2.3497
2.5518
Fmt 4701
25th
percentile
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
4
3
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
5
1
2
1
1
1
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
1
2
1
2
2
2
1
3
2
1
1
Sfmt 4700
50th
percentile
2
1
1
1
4
2
2
2
2
2
1
2
3
2
5
4
3
2
2
1
2
1
2
1
2
1
5
1
3
1
3
1
3
2
2
1
1
2
1
1
1
1
2
1
2
2
2
1
1
2
2
2
1
1
1
2
3
1
2
1
2
2
3
3
2
1
4
2
2
1
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
3
1
1
1
8
3
3
3
4
3
2
4
5
3
6
6
6
3
3
2
4
1
3
1
3
2
173
4
5
2
4
2
4
3
3
2
1
3
2
2
3
1
4
2
4
3
2
2
2
4
3
2
1
2
1
3
4
2
3
2
4
3
4
4
3
2
6
3
2
2
18AUR2
75th
percentile
4
2
2
1
12
6
5
4
6
4
4
6
7
4
9
8
10
4
8
2
8
2
6
2
6
3
173
9
8
4
7
3
6
4
4
4
2
5
3
2
4
2
7
4
6
5
3
4
2
8
7
2
3
3
3
7
7
3
5
3
5
5
7
6
3
2
10
4
3
3
90th
percentile
6
5
3
2
19
8
8
7
9
5
6
9
11
6
13
14
17
6
13
3
14
4
10
3
10
5
173
16
12
7
12
5
9
6
6
6
3
7
5
3
6
3
10
6
9
7
4
7
3
13
12
2
7
6
7
12
11
5
7
5
8
9
11
10
4
3
15
7
3
4
48293
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 7A.—MEDICARE PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEM SELECTED PERCENTILE LENGTHS OF STAY FY 2005 MEDPAR
UPDATE MARCH 2006 GROUPER V23.0—Continued
Number
discharge
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
387
389
392
394
395
396
397
398
399
401
402
403
404
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
439
440
441
442
443
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Arithmetic
mean LOS
287
2
1,981
1,380
1,617
4,654
438
4,145
3,727
2,251
2,715
1,377
5,284
153
12
476
109
202
500
111
170
48
2,806
151
1
3
2,140
2,761
115,607
20
16,443
18,696
1,643
6,462
1,348
31,551
3,624
2,304
616
1,949
1,750
29,067
5
9
5,748
481
55,992
288,502
33
29,991
17,719
3,023
13,262
79
8,970
1,041
13,101
4,237
1,579
845
23,941
75,545
333
402
4,472
1,759
5,216
686
18,608
3,590
PO 00000
Frm 00425
10th
percentile
2.9303
1.0000
4.0848
4.1754
7.8411
6.2426
2.9612
6.4068
3.2659
4.9964
3.3908
3.4415
2.2470
2.9739
6.5000
3.2815
4.4954
2.1782
3.2960
2.0180
2.4647
1.4792
3.6433
2.5960
9.0000
8.6667
8.8757
7.3032
4.2768
2.9500
5.1098
5.7191
3.3603
11.0371
3.8858
7.8595
3.9914
9.3859
3.4935
8.2104
6.0383
3.7654
2.0000
1.5556
6.7189
4.0146
14.0950
7.4508
6.5455
6.0675
4.3438
3.1667
4.0156
3.6456
8.0750
11.5053
3.4571
4.3099
4.6390
7.2769
5.4509
7.7573
6.6667
4.0199
2.8233
8.3337
8.1532
3.4125
8.6730
3.5279
Fmt 4701
25th
percentile
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
1
2
2
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
9
1
2
1
1
1
1
2
1
2
1
2
1
2
1
1
2
1
1
1
2
1
4
2
2
2
1
1
1
1
2
2
1
1
1
1
2
2
1
1
1
1
2
1
2
1
Sfmt 4700
50th
percentile
1
1
2
2
3
3
1
3
1
3
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
9
1
4
2
2
2
2
3
2
5
1
3
2
4
2
2
3
2
1
1
3
2
6
3
3
3
2
2
2
2
3
4
1
2
2
2
3
3
2
1
1
3
3
1
3
1
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
2
1
2
3
5
5
2
5
2
4
3
2
2
2
3
2
3
2
2
1
1
1
2
1
9
2
6
5
3
3
4
4
3
8
3
6
3
7
3
5
4
3
1
2
5
3
11
6
5
5
3
3
3
2
6
8
3
3
3
4
4
6
4
3
2
5
5
2
6
3
18AUR2
75th
percentile
3
1
4
5
10
8
3
8
4
5
4
3
3
3
6
4
6
3
3
2
2
1
4
3
9
3
11
9
5
3
6
7
4
14
5
10
5
12
5
10
6
4
3
2
9
5
17
9
8
7
5
4
5
4
10
14
4
5
5
8
6
9
7
4
3
9
9
4
10
5
90th
percentile
6
1
9
8
16
12
5
12
6
7
4
5
3
4
8
7
8
4
6
4
4
2
7
4
9
3
19
16
8
4
10
11
6
22
9
16
8
20
7
19
12
6
4
2
13
7
27
14
12
11
8
5
7
7
15
23
6
8
9
14
10
15
11
8
4
17
16
6
17
7
48294
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 7A.—MEDICARE PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEM SELECTED PERCENTILE LENGTHS OF STAY FY 2005 MEDPAR
UPDATE MARCH 2006 GROUPER V23.0—Continued
Number
discharge
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
444
445
447
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
471
473
475
476
477
479
480
481
482
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
515
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
528
529
530
531
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Arithmetic
mean LOS
6,014
2,243
6,324
40,869
7,453
2
28,831
5,388
4,741
885
2,290
7,891
32,925
7,635
163
1,204
1,028
52,062
16,780
8,582
119,965
2,851
28,211
27,660
908
1,199
5,084
472
3,714
2,712
5,017
828
13,555
5,255
22,688
3,924
61,129
24,558
342
3,727
31,236
21,296
35,261
46,497
3,203
762
5,916
192
180
964
322
655
155
1,783
627
550
216
58,668
23,803
12,597
16,544
29,404
3,423
14,428
109,116
206
1,845
5,115
3,391
4,910
PO 00000
Frm 00426
10th
percentile
4.0328
2.8270
2.5745
3.6910
1.9804
10.5000
4.9369
2.7572
4.1080
2.2802
5.5782
9.5516
3.8763
2.8998
3.4724
4.9086
2.6722
12.5395
4.8545
12.4204
10.6382
9.9056
8.5081
2.5490
19.1013
22.0025
11.1810
12.7564
9.4715
12.1962
6.8405
17.6437
8.1669
5.3115
3.0224
13.8081
6.0304
2.6900
17.3421
8.7631
5.6849
3.6794
4.1633
2.1981
9.8392
5.6995
3.9238
28.0260
6.8889
15.1432
7.7112
7.3542
5.2323
6.0432
3.6364
13.6200
10.7407
3.8406
2.4598
4.6702
1.9403
5.2599
10.2875
3.7573
3.1429
14.2718
16.3252
7.2502
2.9451
8.9709
Fmt 4701
1
1
1
1
1
8
1
1
1
1
1
4
1
1
1
1
1
3
3
2
2
1
1
1
6
12
4
2
4
2
1
4
2
1
1
3
2
1
8
3
3
2
1
1
4
2
1
8
1
3
1
1
1
1
1
6
5
1
1
1
1
1
3
1
1
1
6
1
1
2
Sfmt 4700
25th
percentile
50th
percentile
2
1
1
1
1
8
2
1
2
1
1
5
2
1
1
1
1
6
3
3
5
4
3
1
8
16
6
5
5
5
3
7
3
2
2
5
3
1
10
4
3
3
2
1
5
3
2
13
1
7
3
3
2
2
1
8
7
1
1
1
1
2
4
2
2
3
9
2
1
4
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
3
2
2
3
1
13
3
2
3
2
3
7
3
2
2
2
2
10
4
7
9
8
7
2
13
20
9
10
7
10
5
12
6
4
2
6
5
2
13
6
5
3
3
2
8
5
3
24
2
12
6
5
3
4
2
10
8
1
1
3
1
4
5
3
3
7
14
4
2
7
18AUR2
75th
percentile
5
3
3
4
2
13
6
3
5
3
7
10
5
4
4
4
3
16
5
17
14
14
11
3
23
24
13
17
11
16
9
21
10
6
3
23
8
4
20
10
6
4
5
3
12
7
5
36
6
20
10
9
6
7
4
14
11
5
3
6
2
6
7
4
4
17
21
9
3
11
90th
percentile
7
5
5
7
4
13
10
5
8
4
12
13
7
5
6
7
5
24
8
32
20
20
17
5
39
33
20
26
18
24
14
33
15
9
5
32
11
5
33
17
9
5
8
4
18
10
7
51
13
30
14
14
11
12
7
25
17
9
5
11
3
8
8
5
6
35
29
16
6
18
48295
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 7A.—MEDICARE PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEM SELECTED PERCENTILE LENGTHS OF STAY FY 2005 MEDPAR
UPDATE MARCH 2006 GROUPER V23.0—Continued
Number
discharge
DRG
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
Arithmetic
mean LOS
2,849
46,773
42,812
8,822
8,260
8,986
5,461
4,978
1,501
25,114
23,126
5,507
446,467
43,772
2,364
32,723
32,268
13,145
34,583
53,960
82,137
39,301
77,365
37,404
19,008
124,278
193,170
2,895
10th
percentile
3.6413
3.6548
1.7223
9.2409
7.2738
6.5032
2.9145
10.5552
3.5097
41.6431
30.3529
11.7066
4.3995
5.0362
8.7657
12.1254
8.7755
10.0860
6.7752
6.0685
3.4766
9.0530
5.5722
4.8144
2.0085
4.1023
1.8108
6.8370
25th
percentile
1
1
1
2
2
1
1
2
1
16
11
2
3
3
3
6
5
5
4
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
50th
percentile
1
1
1
4
3
3
1
4
1
23
17
5
3
3
4
8
6
6
5
2
1
3
2
2
1
2
1
3
75th
percentile
3
2
1
8
6
5
2
7
3
34
25
9
4
4
7
10
8
8
6
5
2
7
4
3
1
3
1
5
5
4
2
12
9
8
4
14
4
50
37
16
5
6
10
14
10
12
8
8
5
12
7
6
2
5
2
8
90th
percentile
7
8
3
18
14
13
6
23
7
72
52
23
7
8
16
20
13
18
10
12
7
19
12
10
4
8
4
13
12,150,46
TABLE 7A.—MEDICARE PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEM SELECTED PERCENTILE LENGTHS OF STAY FY 2005 MEDPAR
UPDATE MARCH 2006 GROUPER V24.0
Number
discharge
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
1 ...............................................................
2 ...............................................................
3 ...............................................................
6 ...............................................................
7 ...............................................................
8 ...............................................................
9 ...............................................................
10 .............................................................
11 .............................................................
12 .............................................................
13 .............................................................
14 .............................................................
15 .............................................................
16 .............................................................
17 .............................................................
18 .............................................................
19 .............................................................
21 .............................................................
22 .............................................................
23 .............................................................
26 .............................................................
27 .............................................................
28 .............................................................
29 .............................................................
31 .............................................................
32 .............................................................
34 .............................................................
35 .............................................................
36 .............................................................
37 .............................................................
38 .............................................................
39 .............................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Arithmetic
mean LOS
24,403
10,188
3
288
15,033
3,442
1,775
19,628
3,085
55,972
7,529
278,864
20,004
17,302
2,975
33,467
8,467
2,220
3,169
10,671
25
5,974
19,912
6,524
5,039
1,904
27,632
7,913
308
1,219
50
328
PO 00000
Frm 00427
10th
percentile
9.6172
4.4271
11.0000
3.0833
9.2561
2.7638
6.0248
5.9178
3.5546
5.3686
4.8515
5.3705
4.0156
6.3015
3.0376
5.1537
3.3795
6.1752
5.0104
3.8995
3.8000
4.7370
5.5699
3.2149
3.9036
2.2757
4.7034
3.0404
1.9156
4.1132
2.8000
2.1220
Fmt 4701
25th
percentile
2
1
4
1
2
1
1
2
1
2
2
2
1
2
1
2
1
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
Sfmt 4700
50th
percentile
4
2
4
1
4
1
3
3
2
3
3
3
2
3
1
3
2
3
2
2
1
1
2
1
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
75th
percentile
7
4
8
2
7
2
4
4
3
4
4
4
3
5
2
4
3
5
4
3
2
3
4
3
3
2
4
3
1
3
2
1
18AUR2
12
6
21
3
12
3
7
7
5
6
6
7
5
8
4
6
4
8
6
5
5
6
7
4
5
3
6
4
1
5
3
2
90th
percentile
19
8
21
7
19
6
11
11
7
10
8
10
7
12
6
9
6
12
10
7
9
10
11
6
7
4
9
5
2
8
6
3
48296
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 7A.—MEDICARE PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEM SELECTED PERCENTILE LENGTHS OF STAY FY 2005 MEDPAR
UPDATE MARCH 2006 GROUPER V24.0—Continued
Number
discharge
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
40 .............................................................
42 .............................................................
43 .............................................................
44 .............................................................
45 .............................................................
46 .............................................................
47 .............................................................
49 .............................................................
50 .............................................................
51 .............................................................
52 .............................................................
53 .............................................................
55 .............................................................
56 .............................................................
57 .............................................................
59 .............................................................
60 .............................................................
61 .............................................................
62 .............................................................
63 .............................................................
64 .............................................................
65 .............................................................
66 .............................................................
67 .............................................................
68 .............................................................
69 .............................................................
70 .............................................................
71 .............................................................
72 .............................................................
73 .............................................................
74 .............................................................
75 .............................................................
76 .............................................................
77 .............................................................
78 .............................................................
79 .............................................................
80 .............................................................
81 .............................................................
82 .............................................................
83 .............................................................
84 .............................................................
85 .............................................................
86 .............................................................
87 .............................................................
88 .............................................................
89 .............................................................
90 .............................................................
91 .............................................................
92 .............................................................
93 .............................................................
94 .............................................................
95 .............................................................
96 .............................................................
97 .............................................................
98 .............................................................
99 .............................................................
100 ...........................................................
101 ...........................................................
102 ...........................................................
103 ...........................................................
104 ...........................................................
105 ...........................................................
106 ...........................................................
108 ...........................................................
110 ...........................................................
111 ...........................................................
113 ...........................................................
114 ...........................................................
117 ...........................................................
118 ...........................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Arithmetic
mean LOS
1,188
1,638
125
1,291
2,771
3,929
1,309
2,416
2,026
193
235
2,147
1,370
451
742
126
3
222
4
2,827
3,234
40,495
8,197
379
18,918
5,149
25
70
1,326
9,961
3
46,867
48,166
2,112
49,708
160,420
7,160
6
63,222
7,153
1,403
22,228
1,717
96,725
427,153
554,136
43,512
53
16,519
1,440
13,656
1,577
59,631
26,703
13
21,392
6,416
23,370
4,936
886
20,125
32,635
3,440
8,758
57,710
10,785
34,750
7,959
5,350
7,634
PO 00000
Frm 00428
10th
percentile
4.2315
2.4823
2.9600
4.7506
3.0278
4.1917
3.0145
4.5219
1.8638
2.6684
1.5149
4.0051
2.8832
2.6785
3.2520
2.3730
1.6667
6.0541
1.5000
4.5313
6.2004
2.7634
3.1080
3.6834
3.8500
2.9493
2.4000
4.3429
3.3205
4.2979
3.3333
9.5747
10.4844
4.5123
6.0925
8.0517
5.2197
6.1667
6.6658
5.1922
3.1276
6.1087
3.4549
6.3706
4.8563
5.5251
3.7080
3.4151
5.9408
3.7625
5.9023
3.3843
4.3002
3.3674
3.0769
3.0989
2.1061
4.1822
2.5432
35.2641
14.6458
9.9310
10.9392
10.7099
8.0024
3.1058
12.5640
8.3465
4.2781
3.0183
Fmt 4701
25th
percentile
1
1
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
3
3
1
2
3
2
2
2
2
1
2
1
2
2
2
2
1
2
1
2
1
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
8
6
4
5
4
1
1
4
2
1
1
Sfmt 4700
50th
percentile
1
1
1
3
2
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
2
2
1
2
2
2
3
5
5
2
4
4
3
3
3
3
2
3
2
3
3
3
2
1
3
2
3
2
2
2
2
1
1
2
1
11
8
6
7
6
3
1
6
4
1
1
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
3
1
2
4
2
3
2
3
1
1
1
2
1
2
2
2
1
4
1
3
4
2
2
3
3
2
2
3
3
3
3
7
8
4
5
7
4
5
5
4
3
5
3
5
4
5
3
2
5
3
5
3
4
3
2
2
2
3
2
22
12
8
9
9
6
2
10
7
2
2
18AUR2
75th
percentile
4
2
4
6
4
5
4
5
2
3
2
5
3
3
3
3
3
8
1
6
8
3
4
5
5
4
3
5
4
5
4
12
13
6
7
10
6
8
9
6
4
8
4
8
6
7
5
4
7
5
8
4
5
4
4
4
3
5
3
46
18
11
13
13
10
4
15
11
5
4
90th
percentile
6
3
5
8
6
8
6
9
3
5
2
9
6
5
7
5
3
13
3
10
13
5
6
8
7
5
4
7
6
8
4
19
20
9
10
15
9
8
13
10
5
12
6
12
9
10
6
6
11
7
12
6
7
6
6
6
4
8
5
78
26
18
18
19
16
6
24
16
9
7
48297
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 7A.—MEDICARE PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEM SELECTED PERCENTILE LENGTHS OF STAY FY 2005 MEDPAR
UPDATE MARCH 2006 GROUPER V24.0—Continued
Number
discharge
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
149
150
151
152
153
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Arithmetic
mean LOS
963
33,561
150,085
54,555
29,576
120,562
92,475
5,424
667,522
4,213
3,527
87,480
22,959
101,418
5,860
39,838
7,167
943
206,188
74,073
31,123
123,116
49,167
237,871
104,925
5,743
10,276
2,615
19,545
22,981
5,407
5,016
1,953
6,019
4
8,321
3,724
19,233
11,953
10,152
4,958
5
5,999
2,461
5,156
4,923
1,640
899
17,935
1,408
33,065
2,226
253,265
29,252
14,653
7,656
2,562
14,734
91,370
25,356
255,772
79,046
72
6,254
7
647
87,040
12,406
10
10,592
PO 00000
Frm 00429
10th
percentile
5.3998
8.9647
6.1981
3.2992
4.7318
4.3876
2.7008
10.6875
5.0851
5.1899
2.5373
5.3514
3.7009
2.8006
2.1410
3.1001
4.2931
2.6957
3.8769
2.4274
2.4049
3.4312
2.4904
2.0978
5.8262
2.5581
9.7688
5.5449
5.6387
10.7232
5.0255
7.9314
4.8669
3.9621
9.2500
5.6913
2.6488
5.0843
2.6555
4.5036
2.0896
2.4000
7.6861
3.9939
4.3200
2.1261
4.7726
2.6151
10.6919
4.1648
6.7846
3.5341
4.6853
2.8605
5.0912
4.4327
3.0800
5.7800
5.2580
3.3125
4.0692
2.8475
3.7361
4.4915
3.1429
4.1468
5.3291
2.9703
3.0000
12.3671
Fmt 4701
25th
percentile
1
1
2
1
1
1
1
3
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
4
2
3
4
1
3
2
1
7
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
2
1
1
1
1
2
1
2
1
2
1
2
2
1
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
Sfmt 4700
50th
percentile
1
3
3
1
1
2
1
6
3
3
1
3
2
1
1
2
2
1
2
1
1
2
1
1
2
1
6
4
4
6
2
5
3
2
7
2
1
2
1
2
1
1
4
2
2
1
2
1
5
2
3
1
3
2
3
2
2
3
3
2
2
1
1
2
2
2
2
1
1
6
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
75th
percentile
3
6
5
3
3
3
2
9
4
5
1
4
3
2
2
2
3
2
3
2
2
3
2
2
4
2
8
5
5
9
4
7
5
3
8
4
2
4
2
3
1
2
7
4
3
2
3
2
8
3
5
3
4
2
4
4
3
4
4
3
3
2
2
3
2
3
4
2
2
9
18AUR2
7
12
8
4
6
6
3
13
6
6
2
7
5
3
3
4
5
3
5
3
3
4
3
3
7
3
11
7
7
13
7
9
6
6
8
7
3
6
3
6
3
3
9
5
5
3
6
3
13
5
8
4
6
4
6
5
4
7
6
4
5
4
4
6
3
6
6
4
6
15
90th
percentile
13
19
11
6
11
9
5
19
9
9
5
10
6
5
4
6
8
5
7
4
4
6
4
4
11
5
17
8
8
19
9
14
7
8
14
11
5
10
5
9
4
5
13
7
8
4
10
4
21
8
13
7
8
5
9
8
5
11
10
6
7
5
7
9
5
8
10
5
6
25
48298
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 7A.—MEDICARE PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEM SELECTED PERCENTILE LENGTHS OF STAY FY 2005 MEDPAR
UPDATE MARCH 2006 GROUPER V24.0—Continued
Number
discharge
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
210
211
212
213
216
217
218
219
220
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Arithmetic
mean LOS
1,380
4,042
463
2,846
595
16,432
4,117
1,484
1,017
2,717
27,516
32,434
69,460
32,803
2,070
38,305
9,451
126,867
25,830
10
9,553
19,883
15,724
30,210
21,197
2
12,688
9,928
6,275
6,771
4,860
2,679
1,121
2,474
572
18,493
9,059
4,763
41,789
1,925
9,693
40,343
12,896
2,855
2,725
100,998
16,933
5,811
1,393
21,356
16,406
13,490
4,164
2,060
1
24,805
10,030
1
7,606
13,126
11,402
2,660
2,431
1,571
602
22,532
3,924
4,036
2,230
276
PO 00000
Frm 00430
10th
percentile
5.5087
12.5339
6.2721
10.5569
5.3345
9.0256
4.2888
8.9892
10.3520
13.5628
6.1264
6.4368
5.3914
5.8542
3.8024
5.2356
2.9471
6.6230
4.5839
2.5000
9.0206
5.3088
12.1410
5.3789
3.1642
4.0000
3.2719
1.9413
5.2709
6.3738
2.6372
4.2027
2.5112
5.4321
2.7395
6.3374
2.6746
4.6431
4.4010
3.7844
7.9706
6.0356
6.4472
3.6515
6.4499
4.4968
4.4351
3.0950
3.5635
3.2905
4.8154
3.9493
3.8365
2.7937
1.0000
4.5258
3.0656
1.0000
4.9471
2.5519
1.6964
2.8173
1.4048
2.2037
4.6561
10.4725
6.2273
6.5347
3.0296
4.2428
Fmt 4701
25th
percentile
1
5
2
4
2
3
2
2
1
3
2
2
2
2
1
1
1
3
3
1
2
1
3
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
2
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
2
1
1
1
Sfmt 4700
50th
percentile
3
7
4
6
3
5
3
4
3
6
3
3
3
3
2
2
1
4
3
2
4
1
5
3
2
1
1
1
2
3
1
1
1
2
1
2
1
2
3
2
4
3
3
2
3
2
2
1
2
2
3
1
2
1
1
3
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
2
5
3
2
1
1
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
5
10
6
9
5
7
4
7
7
10
5
5
4
4
3
4
2
5
4
2
7
3
8
4
3
7
2
1
4
4
2
3
2
4
2
5
1
4
4
3
6
5
5
3
5
4
4
3
3
3
4
3
3
3
1
4
3
1
4
2
1
1
1
1
3
7
5
4
2
3
18AUR2
75th
percentile
7
15
8
13
7
11
5
12
13
17
7
8
6
7
5
7
4
8
5
4
11
7
15
7
4
7
4
2
7
8
3
5
3
7
3
8
3
6
5
5
9
7
8
4
8
6
5
4
4
4
6
5
5
3
1
5
4
1
6
3
2
3
1
2
6
13
7
8
4
5
90th
percentile
9
23
11
19
9
16
7
19
21
27
12
12
10
11
7
10
5
11
7
4
18
12
24
10
5
7
6
3
11
13
5
9
5
11
6
13
6
8
8
7
14
11
12
6
12
8
8
5
6
6
8
8
7
5
1
8
5
1
9
5
3
7
2
4
9
20
11
14
6
8
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
48299
TABLE 7A.—MEDICARE PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEM SELECTED PERCENTILE LENGTHS OF STAY FY 2005 MEDPAR
UPDATE MARCH 2006 GROUPER V24.0—Continued
Number
discharge
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Arithmetic
mean LOS
1,007
11,061
2,582
21,579
6,067
1,268
2,214
181
1,611
119,041
33,880
6
19,329
6,589
6,755
1,860
8,082
2,869
5,462
11,460
6,352
11,894
60
7,590
318
96,836
4,384
247,119
42,871
111
1,529
21,678
3,931
10,496
19,984
13,649
2,690
5,818
1,950
5,454
2,964
25,380
5,896
1,328
505
2
34,913
205,633
2,716
5,912
386
224,944
31,985
67
20,425
4,639
9,924
2,592
11
574
54
56,139
3,963
244
9,529
12,206
28,193
21,510
674
1,237
PO 00000
Frm 00431
10th
percentile
3.6495
7.9889
3.5930
6.7917
5.8218
3.7161
6.1847
3.2652
4.6096
5.4248
3.9954
4.1667
3.9844
2.8001
4.5760
2.9403
9.8285
5.1921
9.5002
3.6971
2.3909
2.0268
1.4833
9.9858
4.7673
4.2502
3.7003
4.6457
3.0365
3.5405
5.0680
5.8044
3.3666
7.9354
6.3149
8.1660
3.0331
5.5734
2.0292
5.2913
1.7190
4.4933
1.8552
4.9315
2.3921
89.0000
6.7494
6.1505
3.5044
5.9738
2.5725
4.9886
3.5383
3.5821
3.1030
1.8463
3.7401
2.5656
2.0000
3.4146
1.6852
5.4124
3.0636
5.3648
4.0421
2.4946
3.2206
1.8441
5.7953
5.1924
Fmt 4701
25th
percentile
1
2
1
2
2
1
1
1
1
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
3
2
3
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
4
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
5
1
2
1
1
1
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
Sfmt 4700
50th
percentile
1
3
1
3
3
2
3
1
2
3
2
2
2
1
2
1
5
2
5
2
1
1
1
4
2
2
2
2
2
1
2
3
2
5
3
3
2
2
1
2
1
2
1
2
1
5
1
3
1
3
1
3
2
2
1
1
2
1
1
1
1
2
1
2
2
2
1
1
2
2
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
2
6
3
5
4
3
5
2
4
4
3
3
3
2
3
2
8
4
7
3
1
1
1
8
3
3
3
4
3
2
4
5
3
6
5
6
2
3
2
3
1
3
1
3
2
173
4
5
2
4
2
4
3
3
2
1
3
2
2
3
1
4
2
4
3
2
2
2
4
3
18AUR2
75th
percentile
4
10
5
8
7
5
7
4
6
7
5
5
5
3
6
4
12
6
11
4
2
2
1
12
6
5
4
6
4
4
6
7
4
9
7
10
4
8
2
7
2
6
2
6
3
173
9
8
4
7
3
6
4
4
4
2
5
3
2
4
2
7
4
6
5
3
4
2
8
7
90th
percentile
7
15
7
12
11
7
11
6
8
9
7
5
7
5
8
5
18
10
18
6
5
3
2
19
8
8
7
9
5
6
9
11
6
13
12
17
5
13
3
12
3
10
3
10
5
173
16
12
7
12
5
9
6
6
6
3
7
5
3
6
3
10
6
10
7
4
7
3
13
12
48300
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 7A.—MEDICARE PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEM SELECTED PERCENTILE LENGTHS OF STAY FY 2005 MEDPAR
UPDATE MARCH 2006 GROUPER V24.0—Continued
Number
discharge
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
340
341
342
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
387
389
392
394
395
396
397
398
399
401
402
403
404
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
417
418
419
420
421
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Arithmetic
mean LOS
1
3,131
457
2,343
1,390
3,962
235
4,262
554
7,281
1,177
3,092
7,572
5,006
22,085
5,543
20,947
28,679
13,879
287
2
2,157
1,800
1,617
4,645
447
4,145
3,727
2,251
2,715
1,377
5,284
153
12
476
109
202
500
111
170
48
2,806
151
1
3
2,140
2,761
101,519
18
16,443
6,708
1,084
6,451
1,359
31,351
3,824
2,304
616
1,949
1,750
29,067
5
9
5,742
487
33
29,991
17,640
3,102
13,262
PO 00000
Frm 00432
10th
percentile
2.0000
3.2031
3.0394
2.7222
5.4324
5.9079
2.7021
4.0082
2.6408
4.5187
4.1623
6.0155
5.5539
3.0224
1.8693
8.0319
3.8543
2.3506
2.5012
2.9303
1.0000
4.2165
3.8100
7.8411
6.2474
2.9776
6.4068
3.2659
4.9964
3.3908
3.4415
2.2470
2.9739
6.5000
3.2815
4.4954
2.1782
3.2960
2.0180
2.4647
1.4792
3.6433
2.5960
9.0000
8.6667
8.8757
7.3032
4.0933
3.0556
5.1098
5.4499
3.2260
11.0460
3.9014
7.8732
4.0811
9.3859
3.4935
8.2104
6.0383
3.7654
2.0000
1.5556
6.7180
4.0575
6.5455
6.0675
4.3459
3.1847
4.0156
Fmt 4701
25th
percentile
2
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
1
2
1
2
2
2
1
3
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
1
2
2
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
9
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
2
1
2
1
1
2
1
1
1
2
1
2
2
1
1
1
Sfmt 4700
50th
percentile
2
1
1
1
2
3
1
2
1
2
2
3
3
2
1
4
2
2
1
1
1
2
1
3
3
1
3
1
3
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
9
1
4
2
2
2
2
2
1
5
1
3
2
4
2
2
3
2
1
1
3
2
3
3
2
2
2
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
75th
percentile
2
1
2
1
3
4
2
3
2
4
3
4
4
3
2
6
3
2
2
2
1
3
3
5
5
2
5
2
4
3
2
2
2
3
2
3
2
2
1
1
1
2
1
9
2
6
5
3
3
4
4
3
8
3
6
3
7
3
5
4
3
1
2
5
3
5
5
3
3
3
18AUR2
2
3
3
3
7
7
3
5
3
5
5
7
6
3
2
10
4
3
3
3
1
5
5
10
8
4
8
4
5
4
3
3
3
6
4
6
3
3
2
2
1
4
3
9
3
11
9
5
3
6
7
4
14
5
10
5
12
5
10
6
4
3
2
9
5
8
7
5
4
5
90th
percentile
2
7
6
7
12
11
5
7
5
8
9
11
10
4
3
15
7
3
4
6
1
9
8
16
12
5
12
6
7
4
5
3
4
8
7
8
4
6
4
4
2
7
4
9
3
19
16
8
4
10
10
6
22
9
16
8
20
7
19
12
6
4
2
13
7
12
11
8
6
7
48301
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 7A.—MEDICARE PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEM SELECTED PERCENTILE LENGTHS OF STAY FY 2005 MEDPAR
UPDATE MARCH 2006 GROUPER V24.0—Continued
Number
discharge
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
447
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
471
473
476
477
479
480
481
482
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
Arithmetic
mean LOS
79
8,970
1,041
13,101
4,237
1,579
845
23,941
75,545
333
402
4,472
1,759
5,216
686
18,606
3,592
6,013
2,244
6,324
40,859
7,463
2
28,822
5,397
4,739
887
2,290
7,891
32,894
7,666
163
1,204
1,028
52,050
15,677
8,582
2,851
28,205
27,673
908
1,199
5,084
472
3,714
2,712
5,017
828
13,555
5,255
22,688
3,924
61,105
24,582
342
3,727
31,227
21,305
35,251
46,507
3,201
764
5,916
192
180
963
323
655
155
1,783
PO 00000
Frm 00433
10th
percentile
3.6456
8.0750
11.5053
3.4571
4.3099
4.6390
7.2769
5.4509
7.7573
6.6667
4.0199
2.8233
8.3337
8.1532
3.4125
8.6736
3.5276
4.0331
2.8266
2.5745
3.6912
1.9812
10.5000
4.9372
2.7589
4.1087
2.2807
5.5782
9.5516
3.8764
2.9032
3.4724
4.9086
2.6722
12.5411
4.5470
12.4204
9.9056
8.5083
2.5493
19.1013
22.0025
11.1810
12.7564
9.4715
12.1962
6.8405
17.6437
8.1669
5.3115
3.0224
13.8081
6.0306
2.6927
17.3421
8.7631
5.6855
3.6795
4.1635
2.1984
9.8416
5.7003
3.9238
28.0260
6.8889
15.1547
7.6997
7.3542
5.2323
6.0432
Fmt 4701
1
2
2
1
1
1
1
2
2
1
1
1
1
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
8
1
1
1
1
1
4
1
1
1
1
1
3
3
2
1
1
1
6
12
4
2
4
2
1
4
2
1
1
3
2
1
8
3
3
2
1
1
4
2
1
8
1
3
1
1
1
1
Sfmt 4700
25th
percentile
50th
percentile
2
3
4
1
2
2
2
3
3
2
1
1
3
3
1
3
1
2
1
1
1
1
8
2
1
2
1
1
5
2
1
1
1
1
6
3
3
4
3
1
8
16
6
5
5
5
3
7
3
2
2
5
3
1
10
4
3
3
2
1
5
3
2
13
1
7
3
3
2
2
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
2
6
8
3
3
3
4
4
6
4
3
2
5
5
2
6
3
3
2
2
3
1
13
3
2
3
2
3
7
3
2
2
2
2
10
4
7
8
7
2
13
20
9
10
7
10
5
12
6
4
2
6
5
2
13
6
5
3
3
2
8
5
3
24
2
12
6
5
3
4
18AUR2
75th
percentile
4
10
14
4
5
5
8
6
9
7
4
3
9
9
4
10
5
5
3
3
4
2
13
6
3
5
3
7
10
5
4
4
4
3
16
5
17
14
11
3
23
24
13
17
11
16
9
21
10
6
3
23
8
4
20
10
6
4
5
3
12
7
5
36
6
20
10
9
6
7
90th
percentile
7
15
23
6
8
9
14
10
15
11
8
4
17
16
6
17
7
7
5
5
7
4
13
10
5
8
4
12
13
7
5
6
7
5
24
7
32
20
17
5
39
33
20
26
18
24
14
33
15
9
5
32
11
5
33
17
9
5
8
4
18
10
7
51
13
30
14
14
11
12
48302
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 7A.—MEDICARE PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEM SELECTED PERCENTILE LENGTHS OF STAY FY 2005 MEDPAR
UPDATE MARCH 2006 GROUPER V24.0—Continued
Number
discharge
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
511
512
513
515
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
Arithmetic
mean LOS
627
550
226
58,749
23,803
12,589
16,552
29,368
3,425
14,462
109,116
205
1,845
5,027
3,362
4,994
2,882
43,722
40,255
8,831
8,262
8,985
5,462
4,974
1,505
25,113
23,126
5,718
446,467
44,844
2,364
32,721
32,268
13,144
34,583
53,881
82,137
39,303
77,366
37,404
19,008
124,278
193,170
2,895
3,457
2,952
52,973
21,161
16,330
46,864
73,101
10,369
16,698
60,835
72,291
11,162
49,006
6,687
26,637
10,982
277,520
5,608
35,320
20,672
10th
percentile
3.6364
13.6200
10.6327
3.8459
2.4598
4.6711
1.9409
5.2609
10.2908
3.7574
3.1429
13.7366
16.3252
7.1317
2.9140
9.0631
3.6724
3.6996
1.7365
9.2481
7.2781
6.5037
2.9143
10.5589
3.5163
41.6433
30.3529
11.3902
4.3995
5.1255
8.7657
12.1244
8.7755
10.0859
6.7752
6.0660
3.4766
9.0525
5.5730
4.8144
2.0085
4.1023
1.8108
6.8370
10.2242
9.3713
4.8176
3.1806
3.4475
15.3640
7.6086
15.6256
11.3181
14.2697
9.9702
4.7775
6.9624
10.9047
5.6791
15.6028
7.1282
2.3229
15.9644
10.9008
1
6
5
1
1
1
1
1
3
1
1
1
6
1
1
2
1
1
1
2
2
1
1
2
1
16
11
2
3
3
3
6
5
5
4
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
3
2
1
1
1
6
1
6
2
6
4
2
2
5
2
6
2
1
5
3
25th
percentile
50th
percentile
1
8
7
1
1
1
1
2
4
2
2
3
9
2
1
4
1
1
1
4
3
3
1
4
1
23
17
4
3
3
4
8
6
6
5
2
1
3
2
2
1
2
1
3
5
5
2
2
2
9
3
8
5
8
6
2
3
6
3
8
3
1
8
5
2
10
8
2
1
3
1
4
5
3
3
7
14
4
2
7
3
2
1
8
6
5
2
7
3
34
25
9
4
4
7
10
8
8
6
5
2
7
4
3
1
3
1
5
8
8
4
3
3
13
6
12
9
12
8
4
5
8
4
13
6
1
13
8
12,150,466
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00434
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
75th
percentile
4
14
11
5
3
6
2
6
7
4
4
17
21
9
3
12
5
4
2
12
9
8
4
14
4
50
37
16
5
6
10
14
10
12
8
8
5
12
7
6
2
5
2
8
13
12
6
4
4
19
10
19
14
17
12
6
8
12
7
19
9
2
20
13
90th
percentile
7
25
17
9
5
11
3
8
8
5
6
35
29
16
5
18
7
9
3
18
14
13
6
23
7
72
52
23
7
9
16
20
13
18
10
12
7
19
12
10
4
8
4
13
19
18
9
6
6
26
15
29
22
26
18
9
13
19
11
27
14
5
30
22
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 8A.— STATEWIDE AVERAGE
OPERATING COST-TO-CHARGE RATIOS—JULY 2006
State
Urban
Alabama ....................
Alaska .......................
Arizona ......................
Arkansas ...................
California ...................
Colorado ...................
Connecticut ...............
Delaware ...................
District of Columbia ..
Florida .......................
Georgia .....................
Hawaii .......................
Idaho .........................
Illinois ........................
Indiana ......................
Iowa ..........................
Kansas ......................
Kentucky ...................
Louisiana ..................
Maine ........................
Maryland ...................
Massachusetts ..........
Michigan ...................
Minnesota .................
Mississippi ................
Missouri ....................
Montana ....................
Nebraska ..................
Nevada .....................
New Hampshire ........
New Jersey ...............
New Mexico ..............
New York ..................
North Carolina ..........
North Dakota ............
Ohio ..........................
Oklahoma .................
Oregon ......................
Pennsylvania ............
Puerto Rico ...............
Rhode Island ............
South Carolina ..........
South Dakota ............
Tennessee ................
Texas ........................
Utah ..........................
Vermont ....................
Virginia ......................
Washington ...............
West Virginia ............
Wisconsin .................
Wyoming ...................
Rural
0.263
0.407
0.284
0.336
0.238
0.308
0.427
0.496
0.357
0.251
0.351
0.366
0.474
0.327
0.417
0.376
0.299
0.381
0.301
0.496
0.763
0.476
0.373
0.39
0.327
0.329
0.427
0.365
0.229
0.455
0.181
0.382
0.362
0.441
0.438
0.372
0.317
0.472
0.277
0.457
0.409
0.291
0.354
0.317
0.278
0.423
0.556
0.363
0.424
0.484
0.431
0.4
State
0.336
0.7
0.36
0.356
0.342
0.508
0.501
0.462
................
0.295
0.403
0.447
0.541
0.417
0.453
0.458
0.443
0.386
0.361
0.457
0.882
................
0.47
0.523
0.376
0.381
0.497
0.477
0.455
0.448
................
0.384
0.526
0.43
0.456
0.543
0.402
0.43
0.436
................
................
0.298
0.447
0.383
0.353
0.588
0.627
0.377
0.469
0.466
0.48
0.562
Florida ...........................................
Georgia .........................................
Hawaii ...........................................
Idaho .............................................
Illinois ............................................
Indiana ..........................................
Iowa ..............................................
Kansas ..........................................
Kentucky .......................................
Louisiana ......................................
Maine ............................................
Maryland .......................................
Massachusetts ..............................
Michigan .......................................
Minnesota .....................................
Mississippi ....................................
Missouri ........................................
Montana ........................................
Nebraska ......................................
Nevada .........................................
New Hampshire ............................
New Jersey ...................................
New Mexico ..................................
New York ......................................
North Carolina ..............................
North Dakota ................................
Ohio ..............................................
Oklahoma .....................................
Oregon ..........................................
Pennsylvania ................................
Puerto Rico ...................................
Rhode Island ................................
South Carolina ..............................
South Dakota ................................
Tennessee ....................................
Texas ............................................
Utah ..............................................
Vermont ........................................
Virginia ..........................................
Washington ...................................
West Virginia ................................
Wisconsin .....................................
Wyoming .......................................
TABLE 8B.— STATEWIDE AVERAGE
CAPITAL
COST-TO-CHARGE
RATIOS— JULY 2006
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
State
Ratio
Alabama ........................................
Alaska ...........................................
Arizona ..........................................
Arkansas .......................................
California .......................................
Colorado .......................................
Connecticut ...................................
Delaware .......................................
District of Columbia ......................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
TABLE 8B.— STATEWIDE AVERAGE
CAPITAL
COST-TO-CHARGE
RATIOS— JULY 2006—Continued
0.025
0.04
0.025
0.026
0.016
0.029
0.031
0.037
0.024
Jkt 208001
Ratio
0.023
0.03
0.032
0.036
0.026
0.037
0.028
0.032
0.03
0.029
0.035
0.013
0.034
0.031
0.029
0.029
0.028
0.036
0.039
0.022
0.036
0.013
0.033
0.03
0.037
0.041
0.03
0.03
0.032
0.023
0.034
0.023
0.026
0.033
0.032
0.027
0.038
0.043
0.037
0.034
0.034
0.039
0.047
48303
TABLE 8C.—STATEWIDE AVERAGE
TOTAL COST-TO-CHARGE RATIOS
FOR LTCHS—JULY 2006—Continued
State
Louisiana ..................
Maine ........................
Maryland** ................
Massachusetts* ........
Michigan ...................
Minnesota .................
Mississippi ................
Missouri ....................
Montana ....................
Nebraska ..................
Nevada .....................
New Hampshire ........
New Jersey* .............
New Mexico ..............
New York ..................
North Carolina ..........
North Dakota ............
Ohio ..........................
Oklahoma .................
Oregon ......................
Pennsylvania ............
Puerto Rico* .............
Rhode Island* ...........
South Carolina ..........
South Dakota ............
Tennessee ................
Texas ........................
Utah ..........................
Vermont ....................
Virginia ......................
Washington ...............
West Virginia ............
Wisconsin .................
Wyoming ...................
Urban
0.331
0.533
0.450
0.505
0.406
0.418
0.356
0.355
0.459
0.400
0.250
0.492
0.194
0.415
0.390
0.482
0.476
0.398
0.345
0.504
0.296
0.489
0.432
0.315
0.384
0.348
0.303
0.459
0.601
0.398
0.459
0.517
0.473
0.440
Rural
0.392
0.473
0.360
................
0.506
0.552
0.400
0.415
0.543
0.526
0.525
0.481
................
0.417
0.561
0.471
0.503
0.587
0.439
0.454
0.469
................
................
0.326
0.487
0.417
0.384
0.650
0.667
0.415
0.516
0.499
0.519
0.615
* All counties in the State or Territory are
classified as urban, with the exception of Massachusetts, which has areas designated as
rural. However, no short-term acute care IPPS
hospitals or LTCHs are located in those areas
as of July 2006.
** National average IPPS total cost-tocharge ratios, as discussed in section II.E. of
this final rule.
TABLE 8C.—STATEWIDE AVERAGE
Note: The following Table 9A is a
TOTAL COST-TO-CHARGE RATIOS tentative table and does not reflect
decisions that are yet to be made by
FOR LTCHS—JULY 2006
State
Urban
Alabama ....................
Alaska .......................
Arizona ......................
Arkansas ...................
California ...................
Colorado ...................
Connecticut ...............
Delaware ...................
District of Columbia*
Florida .......................
Georgia .....................
Hawaii .......................
Idaho .........................
Illinois ........................
Indiana ......................
Iowa ..........................
Kansas ......................
Kentucky ...................
PO 00000
Frm 00435
Fmt 4701
0.287
0.441
0.308
0.367
0.252
0.332
0.458
0.532
0.388
0.272
0.380
0.397
0.510
0.351
0.454
0.397
0.326
0.411
Sfmt 4700
Rural
0.366
0.764
0.394
0.389
0.363
0.573
0.540
0.505
................
0.336
0.437
0.484
0.582
0.456
0.499
0.497
0.486
0.418
CMS pending the final calculation of the
occupationa l mix adjusted wage index.
The information about reclassifie d
CBSAs reflects the latest information
available to CMS regarding MGCRB and
Administrat or reclassific ation
decisions for FY 2007. A revised Table
9A reflecting CMS’ decisions on behalf
of hospitals using occupationa l mix
adjusted wage indices will be published
in a subsequent Federal Register notice
between August 1 and October 1, 2006,
as well as on CMS’ Web site. Hospitals
will then have 30 days from the date the
data appears on the CMS Web site to
revise a decision made by CMS on their
behalf. (See section III.H. of the
preamble (Revisions to the Wage Index
Based on Hospital Redesignations).)
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48304
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 9A.—HOSPITAL RECLASSIFICATIONS AND REDESIGNATIONS BY INDIVIDUAL HOSPITALS AND CBSA—FY 2007
Geographic
CBSA
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Provider No.
010005
010008
010009
010012
010022
010025
010029
010035
010044
010045
010054
010059
010065
010072
010083
010085
010100
010101
010118
010126
010143
010150
010158
010164
020008
030007
030033
040014
040017
040019
040020
040027
040039
040041
040047
040069
040071
040076
040078
040080
040088
040091
040100
040119
050006
050009
050013
050014
050022
050042
050046
050054
050065
050069
050071
050073
050076
050082
050089
050090
050099
050101
050102
050118
050129
050136
050140
050150
050159
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00436
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
01
01
19460
01
01
01
12220
01
01
01
19460
19460
01
01
01
19460
01
01
01
01
01
01
01
01
02
03
03
04
04
04
27860
04
04
04
04
04
38220
04
26300
04
04
04
04
04
05
34900
34900
05
40140
05
37100
40140
42044
42044
41940
46700
41884
37100
40140
42220
40140
46700
40140
44700
40140
42220
40140
05
37100
Reclassified
CBSA
10/1/2006–
3/31/2007
13820
33860
26620
16860
40660
17980
17980
13820
13820
13820
26620
26620
33860
11500
37860
26620
37860
11500
46220
33860
13820
33860
19460
11500
11260
22380
22380
30780
22220
32820
32820
44180
26
30780
26
32820
30780
30780
30780
27860
43340
45500
30780
30780
39820
46700
46700
40900
42044
39820
........................
42044
31084
31084
36084
36084
36084
........................
31084
41884
31084
36084
42044
33700
31084
41884
31084
40900
........................
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Reclassified
CBSA
4/1/2007–
9/30/2007
13820
33860
26620
16860
40660
17980
17980
13820
13820
13820
26620
26620
33860
11500
37860
26620
37860
11500
46220
33860
13820
33860
19460
11500
11260
22380
22380
30780
22220
32820
32820
44180
26
30780
26
32820
30780
30780
30780
27860
43340
45500
30780
30780
39820
46700
46700
40900
42044
39820
31084
42044
31084
31084
36084
36084
36084
31084
31084
41884
31084
36084
42044
33700
31084
41884
31084
40900
31084
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
48305
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 9A.—HOSPITAL RECLASSIFICATIONS AND REDESIGNATIONS BY INDIVIDUAL HOSPITALS AND CBSA—FY 2007—
Continued
Geographic
CBSA
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Provider No.
050168
050173
050174
050193
050197
050224
050226
050228
050230
050236
050243
050245
050251
050272
050279
050291
050292
050298
050300
050327
050329
050348
050367
050385
050390
050394
050423
050426
050430
050510
050517
050526
050534
050535
050541
050543
050547
050548
050549
050550
050551
050567
050569
050570
050573
050580
050584
050585
050586
050589
050592
050594
050603
050609
050616
050667
050678
050680
050684
050686
050690
050693
050694
050701
050709
050718
050720
050728
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00437
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
42044
42044
42220
42044
41884
42044
42044
41884
42044
37100
40140
40140
05
40140
40140
42220
40140
40140
40140
40140
40140
42044
46700
42220
40140
37100
40140
42044
05
41884
40140
42044
40140
42044
41884
42044
42220
42044
37100
42044
42044
42044
05
42044
40140
42044
40140
42044
40140
42044
42044
42044
42044
42044
37100
34900
42044
46700
40140
40140
42220
42044
40140
40140
40140
40140
42044
42220
Reclassified
CBSA
10/1/2006–
3/31/2007
31084
31084
41884
31084
36084
31084
31084
36084
31084
........................
42044
31084
39900
31084
31084
41884
42044
31084
31084
31084
42044
31084
36084
41884
42044
........................
42044
31084
39900
36084
31084
31084
42044
31084
36084
31084
41884
31084
........................
31084
31084
31084
42220
31084
42044
31084
31084
31084
31084
31084
31084
31084
31084
31084
........................
46700
31084
36084
42044
42044
41884
31084
42044
42044
31084
42044
31084
41884
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Reclassified
CBSA
4/1/2007–
9/30/2007
31084
31084
41884
31084
36084
31084
31084
36084
31084
31084
42044
31084
39900
31084
31084
41884
42044
31084
31084
31084
42044
31084
36084
41884
42044
31084
42044
31084
39900
36084
31084
31084
42044
31084
36084
31084
41884
31084
31084
31084
31084
31084
42220
31084
42044
31084
31084
31084
31084
31084
31084
31084
31084
31084
31084
46700
31084
36084
42044
42044
41884
31084
42044
42044
31084
42044
31084
41884
LUGAR
48306
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 9A.—HOSPITAL RECLASSIFICATIONS AND REDESIGNATIONS BY INDIVIDUAL HOSPITALS AND CBSA—FY 2007—
Continued
Geographic
CBSA
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Provider No.
050749
060001
060003
060023
060027
060044
060049
060075
060096
060103
070001
070003
070005
070006
070010
070016
070017
070018
070019
070021
070022
070028
070031
070033
070034
070036
070038
070039
080004
080006
080007
090001
100022
100023
100024
100045
100049
100081
100109
100118
100139
100150
100157
100176
100217
100232
100239
100249
100252
100258
100292
110001
110002
110003
110023
110025
110029
110038
110040
110041
110052
110054
110069
110075
110088
110095
110117
110122
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00438
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
37100
24540
14500
24300
14500
06
06
06
06
14500
35300
07
35300
14860
14860
35300
35300
14860
35300
07
35300
14860
35300
14860
14860
25540
35300
35300
20100
08
08
47894
33124
10
10
19660
10
10
10
10
10
10
29460
48424
42680
10
45300
10
10
48424
10
19140
11
11
11
15260
23580
11
11
11
11
40660
47580
11
11
11
11
46660
Reclassified
CBSA
10/1/2006–
3/31/2007
........................
19740
19740
19740
19740
19740
22660
24300
19740
19740
........................
25540
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
25540
........................
........................
........................
35644
........................
35300
........................
........................
48864
20100
36140
13644
22744
36740
33124
36740
29460
23020
36740
27260
23540
33124
45300
38940
38940
27260
42260
45300
38940
22744
23020
12060
12060
27260
12060
27260
12060
46660
12060
12020
16860
12060
31420
42340
12060
46660
12060
45220
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Reclassified
CBSA
4/1/2007–
9/30/2007
31084
19740
19740
19740
19740
19740
22660
24300
19740
19740
35004
25540
35004
35644
35644
35004
35004
35644
35004
25540
35004
35644
35004
35644
35644
35300
35004
35004
48864
20100
36140
13644
22744
36740
33124
36740
29460
23020
36740
27260
23540
33124
45300
38940
38940
27260
42260
45300
38940
22744
23020
12060
12060
27260
12060
27260
12060
46660
12060
12020
16860
12060
31420
42340
12060
46660
12060
45220
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
48307
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 9A.—HOSPITAL RECLASSIFICATIONS AND REDESIGNATIONS BY INDIVIDUAL HOSPITALS AND CBSA—FY 2007—
Continued
Geographic
CBSA
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Provider No.
110125
110128
110150
110153
110168
110187
110189
110205
120028
130002
130003
130018
130049
130067
140012
140015
140032
140033
140034
140040
140043
140046
140058
140064
140084
140093
140100
140110
140130
140143
140160
140161
140164
140189
140202
140233
140234
140236
140291
150002
150004
150006
150008
150011
150015
150030
150034
150048
150051
150065
150069
150076
150088
150090
150102
150112
150113
150122
150125
150126
150133
150146
150147
160001
160016
160057
160064
160080
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00439
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Reclassified
CBSA
10/1/2006–
3/31/2007
11
11
11
47580
40660
11
11
11
12
13
30300
13
17660
13
14
14
14
29404
14
14
14
14
14
14
29404
19180
29404
14
29404
14
14
14
14
14
29404
40420
14
14
29404
23844
23844
33140
23844
15
33140
15
23844
15
14020
15
15
15
11300
23844
15
18020
11300
15
23844
23844
15
15
23844
16
16
16
16
16
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
31420
42340
12060
31420
12060
12060
12060
12060
26180
29
28420
38540
44060
26820
16974
41180
41180
16974
41180
37900
40420
41180
41180
37900
16974
16580
16974
16974
16974
37900
40420
16974
41180
16580
16974
16974
37900
28100
16974
16974
16974
43780
16974
26900
16974
26900
16974
17140
26900
26900
17140
43780
26900
16974
23844
26900
26900
26900
16974
16974
23060
23060
16974
19780
19780
26980
24
19340
18AUR2
Reclassified
CBSA
4/1/2007–
9/30/2007
31420
42340
12060
31420
12060
12060
12060
12060
26180
29
28420
38540
44060
26820
16974
41180
41180
16974
41180
37900
40420
41180
41180
37900
16974
16580
16974
16974
16974
37900
40420
16974
41180
16580
16974
16974
37900
28100
16974
16974
16974
43780
16974
26900
16974
26900
16974
17140
26900
26900
17140
43780
26900
16974
23844
26900
26900
26900
16974
16974
23060
23060
16974
19780
19780
26980
24
19340
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
48308
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 9A.—HOSPITAL RECLASSIFICATIONS AND REDESIGNATIONS BY INDIVIDUAL HOSPITALS AND CBSA—FY 2007—
Continued
Geographic
CBSA
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Provider No.
160089
160147
170006
170010
170012
170013
170020
170023
170033
170058
170068
170120
170142
170175
170190
170193
180005
180011
180012
180013
180017
180018
180019
180024
180027
180029
180044
180048
180066
180069
180075
180078
180080
180093
180102
180104
180116
180124
180127
180132
180139
190001
190003
190015
190086
190099
190106
190131
190155
190164
190191
190208
190218
190223
200020
200024
200034
200039
200050
200063
220001
220002
220008
220010
220011
220019
220020
220025
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00440
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Reclassified
CBSA
10/1/2006–
3/31/2007
16
16
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
18
18
21060
14540
18
18
18
18
18
18
18
18
18
18
18
18
18
18
18
18
18
14540
18
18
18
19
19
19
19
19
19
12940
19
19
19
19
19
19
38860
30340
30340
20
20
20
49340
15764
39300
21604
15764
49340
38860
49340
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
19780
19780
27900
46140
48620
48620
48620
48620
48620
28140
11100
27900
45820
48620
45820
48620
26580
30460
31140
34980
21060
30460
17140
31140
17300
28700
26580
31140
34980
26580
14540
26580
28940
21780
17300
17300
14
34980
31140
30460
30460
35380
29180
35380
33740
12940
10780
35380
12940
10780
12940
4
43340
12940
40484
38860
38860
38860
12620
38860
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
40484
14484
18AUR2
Reclassified
CBSA
4/1/2007–
9/30/2007
19780
19780
27900
46140
48620
48620
48620
48620
48620
28140
11100
27900
45820
48620
45820
48620
26580
30460
31140
34980
21060
30460
17140
31140
17300
28700
26580
31140
34980
26580
14540
26580
28940
21780
17300
17300
14
34980
31140
30460
30460
35380
29180
35380
33740
12940
10780
35380
12940
10780
12940
4
43340
12940
40484
38860
38860
38860
12620
38860
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
40484
14484
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
48309
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 9A.—HOSPITAL RECLASSIFICATIONS AND REDESIGNATIONS BY INDIVIDUAL HOSPITALS AND CBSA—FY 2007—
Continued
Geographic
CBSA
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Provider No.
220028
220029
220033
220035
220049
220058
220060
220062
220063
220070
220073
220077
220080
220082
220084
220090
220095
220098
220101
220105
220133
220163
220171
220174
230002
230003
230013
230019
230020
230022
230024
230029
230030
230035
230036
230037
230047
230053
230054
230065
230069
230071
230072
230077
230080
230089
230092
230093
230096
230097
230099
230104
230105
230119
230121
230130
230134
230135
230142
230146
230151
230165
230174
230176
230195
230204
230207
230208
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00441
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
49340
21604
21604
21604
15764
49340
14484
49340
15764
15764
39300
44140
21604
15764
15764
49340
49340
15764
15764
15764
15764
49340
15764
21604
19804
26100
47644
47644
19804
23
19804
47644
23
23
23
23
47644
19804
23
19804
47644
47644
26100
40980
23
19804
27100
23
23
23
33780
19804
23
19804
23
47644
23
19804
19804
19804
47644
19804
26100
19804
47644
47644
47644
23
Reclassified
CBSA
10/1/2006–
3/31/2007
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
12700
14484
14484
14484
14484
25540
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
29620
........................
........................
40980
24340
13020
11460
19804
........................
24580
........................
11460
........................
........................
22420
40980
........................
29620
24340
28020
24340
11460
........................
13020
........................
29620
........................
26100
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
19804
19804
........................
24340
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Reclassified
CBSA
4/1/2007–
9/30/2007
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
12700
14484
14484
14484
14484
25540
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
14484
11460
34740
19804
19804
11460
29620
11460
19804
40980
24340
13020
11460
19804
11460
24580
11460
11460
19804
34740
22420
40980
11460
29620
24340
28020
24340
11460
11460
13020
11460
29620
19804
26100
11460
11460
11460
19804
11460
34740
11460
19804
19804
19804
24340
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
48310
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 9A.—HOSPITAL RECLASSIFICATIONS AND REDESIGNATIONS BY INDIVIDUAL HOSPITALS AND CBSA—FY 2007—
Continued
Geographic
CBSA
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Provider No.
230217
230223
230227
230244
230254
230257
230264
230269
230270
230273
230277
230279
230293
230295
240018
240030
240036
240064
240069
240071
240075
240088
240093
240105
240150
240187
240211
250002
250004
250006
250009
250023
250031
250034
250040
250042
250044
250069
250079
250081
250082
250094
250097
250099
250100
250104
250117
260009
260011
260015
260017
260022
260025
260049
260050
260064
260074
260094
260110
260113
260116
260119
260175
260183
260186
270003
270011
270017
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00442
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
12980
47644
47644
19804
47644
47644
47644
47644
19804
19804
47644
47644
19804
23
24
24
41060
24
24
24
24
24
24
24
24
24
24
25
25
25
25
25
25
25
37700
25
25
25
25
25
25
25620
25
25
25
25
25
26
27620
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
27
27
27
Reclassified
CBSA
10/1/2006–
3/31/2007
29620
........................
19804
........................
........................
19804
19804
........................
........................
........................
........................
11460
........................
26100
33460
41060
33460
20260
40340
40340
41060
41060
33460
40340
40340
33460
33460
22520
32820
32820
27180
25060
27140
32820
25060
32820
22520
46220
27140
46220
38220
25060
12940
27140
46220
27140
25060
28140
17860
27860
41180
16
41180
44180
41140
17860
17860
44180
41180
14
14
27860
28140
41180
17860
24500
24500
33540
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Reclassified
CBSA
4/1/2007–
9/30/2007
29620
19804
19804
11460
19804
19804
19804
19804
11460
11460
19804
11460
11460
26100
33460
41060
33460
20260
40340
40340
41060
41060
33460
40340
40340
33460
33460
22520
32820
32820
27180
25060
27140
32820
25060
32820
22520
46220
27140
46220
38220
25060
12940
27140
46220
27140
25060
28140
17860
27860
41180
16
41180
44180
41140
17860
17860
44180
41180
14
14
27860
28140
41180
17860
24500
24500
33540
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
48311
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 9A.—HOSPITAL RECLASSIFICATIONS AND REDESIGNATIONS BY INDIVIDUAL HOSPITALS AND CBSA—FY 2007—
Continued
Geographic
CBSA
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Provider No.
270051
280009
280023
280032
280061
280065
280077
280125
290002
290006
290008
290019
300005
300011
300012
300014
300017
300018
300019
300020
300023
300029
300034
310002
310009
310013
310014
310015
310017
310018
310021
310031
310038
310039
310048
310050
310054
310070
310076
310078
310081
310083
310093
310096
310108
310119
320005
320006
320013
320014
320033
320063
320065
330004
330008
330027
330038
330073
330079
330085
330094
330103
330106
330136
330157
330167
330181
330182
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00443
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
27
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
29
29
29
16180
30
31700
31700
40484
40484
40484
30
31700
40484
40484
31700
35084
35084
35084
15804
35084
35084
35084
45940
15804
20764
20764
20764
35084
35084
20764
35084
35084
15804
35084
35084
35084
20764
35084
22140
32
32
32
32
32
32
28740
33
35004
33
33
33
33
33
33
35004
33
33
35004
35004
35004
Reclassified
CBSA
10/1/2006–
3/31/2007
33540
30700
30700
30700
53
24540
36540
43580
16180
39900
41620
39900
31700
15764
15764
31700
21604
31700
49340
15764
21604
21604
15764
35644
35644
35644
37964
35644
35644
35644
35084
20764
35644
35644
35084
35644
35644
35644
35644
35644
37964
35644
35644
35644
35644
35644
10740
42140
42140
29740
42140
36220
36220
39100
15380
35644
40380
40380
47
45060
28740
39
........................
45060
45060
........................
........................
35644
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Reclassified
CBSA
4/1/2007–
9/30/2007
33540
30700
30700
30700
53
24540
36540
43580
16180
39900
41620
39900
31700
15764
15764
31700
21604
31700
49340
15764
21604
21604
15764
35644
35644
35644
37964
35644
35644
35644
35084
20764
35644
35644
35084
35644
35644
35644
35644
35644
37964
35644
35644
35644
35644
35644
10740
42140
42140
29740
42140
36220
36220
39100
15380
35644
40380
40380
47
45060
28740
39
35644
45060
45060
35644
35644
35644
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
48312
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 9A.—HOSPITAL RECLASSIFICATIONS AND REDESIGNATIONS BY INDIVIDUAL HOSPITALS AND CBSA—FY 2007—
Continued
Geographic
CBSA
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Provider No.
330191
330198
330224
330225
330229
330235
330239
330250
330259
330277
330331
330332
330359
330372
330386
340004
340008
340010
340013
340014
340021
340023
340027
340039
340047
340050
340051
340068
340069
340070
340071
340073
340091
340109
340114
340115
340124
340126
340127
340129
340131
340136
340138
340144
340145
340147
340148
340173
350003
350006
350009
360008
360010
360011
360013
360014
360019
360020
360025
360027
360036
360039
360054
360065
360078
360079
360084
360086
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00444
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
24020
35004
28740
35004
27460
33
27460
33
35004
33
35004
35004
33
35004
33
24660
34
24140
34
49180
34
11700
34
34
49180
34
34
34
39580
15500
34
39580
24660
34
39580
34
34
34
34
34
34
34
39580
34
34
40580
49180
39580
35
35
35
36
36
36
36
36
10420
10420
41780
10420
36
36
36
36
10420
19380
15940
44220
Reclassified
CBSA
10/1/2006–
3/31/2007
10580
........................
39100
........................
21500
45060
21500
15540
35644
27060
........................
........................
39100
........................
39100
49180
16740
39580
24860
24660
16740
24860
24780
16740
24660
22180
25860
48900
20500
24660
39580
20500
49180
47260
20500
20500
39580
39580
20500
16740
24780
20500
20500
16740
16740
39580
24660
20500
13900
13900
22020
26580
10420
18140
30620
18140
17460
17460
17460
17460
17460
18140
26580
17460
17460
17140
10420
19380
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Reclassified
CBSA
4/1/2007–
9/30/2007
10580
35644
39100
35644
21500
45060
21500
15540
27060
35644
35644
39100
35644
39100
49180
16740
39580
24860
24660
16740
24860
24780
16740
24660
22180
25860
48900
20500
24660
39580
20500
49180
47260
20500
20500
39580
39580
20500
16740
24780
20500
20500
16740
16740
39580
24660
20500
13900
13900
22020
26580
10420
18140
30620
18140
17460
17460
17460
17460
17460
18140
26580
17460
17460
17140
10420
19380
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
48313
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 9A.—HOSPITAL RECLASSIFICATIONS AND REDESIGNATIONS BY INDIVIDUAL HOSPITALS AND CBSA—FY 2007—
Continued
Geographic
CBSA
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Provider No.
360095
360096
360107
360121
360150
360159
360175
360185
360187
360197
360211
360238
360241
360245
360253
370004
370006
370014
370015
370016
370018
370022
370025
370026
370034
370047
370049
370099
370103
370113
380001
380022
380027
380050
380090
390006
390013
390030
390031
390046
390048
390052
390065
390066
390071
390079
390081
390086
390091
390093
390110
390113
390133
390138
390150
390151
390156
390180
390222
390246
400048
410010
410012
410013
420007
420009
420020
420027
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00445
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Reclassified
CBSA
10/1/2006–
3/31/2007
36
36
36
36
10420
36
36
36
44220
36
48260
36
10420
36
19380
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
38
38
38
38
38
39
39
39
39
49620
39
39
39
30140
39
39
37964
39
39
39
27780
39
10900
39
39
39
37964
37964
37964
39
25020
39300
39300
39300
43900
42
42
11340
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
45780
49660
45780
11460
17460
18140
18140
49660
19380
18140
38300
49660
17460
17460
17140
27900
17
43300
46140
36420
46140
30020
46140
36420
22900
43300
36420
46140
45
22220
38900
18700
21660
32780
21660
25420
25420
10900
39740
29540
25420
11020
47894
25420
48700
13780
48864
44300
38300
38300
38300
36
37964
47894
38300
13644
48864
48864
48864
48700
41980
14484
14484
35980
24860
24860
16700
24860
18AUR2
Reclassified
CBSA
4/1/2007–
9/30/2007
45780
49660
45780
11460
17460
18140
18140
49660
19380
18140
38300
49660
17460
17460
17140
27900
17
43300
46140
36420
46140
30020
46140
36420
22900
43300
36420
46140
45
22220
38900
18700
21660
32780
21660
25420
25420
10900
39740
29540
25420
11020
47894
25420
48700
13780
48864
44300
38300
38300
38300
36
37964
47894
38300
13644
48864
48864
48864
48700
41980
14484
14484
35980
24860
24860
16700
24860
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
48314
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 9A.—HOSPITAL RECLASSIFICATIONS AND REDESIGNATIONS BY INDIVIDUAL HOSPITALS AND CBSA—FY 2007—
Continued
Geographic
CBSA
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Provider No.
420028
420030
420036
420039
420067
420068
420069
420070
420071
420080
420083
420085
430012
430014
430094
440002
440008
440020
440024
440025
440035
440050
440056
440058
440059
440060
440067
440068
440072
440073
440148
440151
440175
440180
440185
440192
450007
450032
450039
450059
450064
450073
450080
450087
450099
450121
450135
450137
450144
450148
450187
450192
450194
450196
450211
450214
450224
450283
450286
450324
450347
450351
450389
450393
450395
450400
450419
450438
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00446
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Reclassified
CBSA
10/1/2006–
3/31/2007
42
42
42
42
42
42
42
44940
42
42
43900
34820
43
43
43
27180
44
44
17420
44
17300
44
34100
44
44
44
34100
44
44
44
44
44
44
44
17420
44
45
45
23104
41700
23104
45
45
23104
45
23104
23104
23104
45
23104
45
45
45
45
45
45
45
45
45
43300
45
45
45
43300
45
45
23104
45
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
44940
16700
16740
43900
42340
12260
44940
17900
24860
42340
24860
48900
43620
22020
53
32820
27180
26620
16860
34
34980
11700
28940
16860
34980
27180
28940
16860
32820
34980
34980
34980
34980
28940
16860
34980
41700
43340
19124
12420
19124
10180
30980
19124
11100
19124
19124
19124
36220
19124
26420
19124
19124
19124
26420
26420
46340
19124
17780
19124
26420
23104
19124
19124
26420
47380
19124
26420
18AUR2
Reclassified
CBSA
4/1/2007–
9/30/2007
44940
16700
16740
43900
42340
12260
44940
17900
24860
42340
24860
48900
43620
22020
53
32820
27180
26620
16860
34
34980
11700
28940
16860
34980
27180
28940
16860
32820
34980
34980
34980
34980
28940
16860
34980
41700
43340
19124
12420
19124
10180
30980
19124
11100
19124
19124
19124
36220
19124
26420
19124
19124
19124
26420
26420
46340
19124
17780
19124
26420
23104
19124
19124
26420
47380
19124
26420
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
48315
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 9A.—HOSPITAL RECLASSIFICATIONS AND REDESIGNATIONS BY INDIVIDUAL HOSPITALS AND CBSA—FY 2007—
Continued
Geographic
CBSA
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Provider No.
450447
450451
450469
450484
450508
450547
450563
450639
450653
450656
450672
450675
450677
450694
450747
450755
450770
450779
450813
450830
450839
450858
450872
450880
460004
460005
460007
460011
460021
460039
460041
460042
470001
470011
470012
490004
490005
490013
490018
490042
490048
490079
490092
490105
490106
490109
500002
500003
500016
500021
500024
500039
500041
500072
500079
500108
500129
500139
500143
510001
510002
510006
510018
510024
510030
510046
510047
510062
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00447
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Reclassified
CBSA
10/1/2006–
3/31/2007
45
45
43300
45
45
45
23104
23104
45
45
23104
23104
23104
45
45
45
45
23104
45
45
45
23104
23104
23104
36260
36260
46
46
41100
46
36260
36260
47
47
47
25500
49020
49
49
13980
40220
49
49
49
49
47260
50
34580
48300
45104
36500
14740
31020
50
45104
45104
45104
36500
36500
34060
51
51
51
34060
51
51
51
51
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
19124
23104
19124
30980
46340
19124
19124
19124
33260
46340
19124
19124
19124
26420
19124
31180
12420
19124
41700
36220
43340
19124
19124
19124
41620
41620
41100
39340
29820
36260
41620
41620
30
15764
38340
16820
47894
31340
16820
40220
31340
24660
40060
28700
16820
40060
28420
42644
42644
42644
45104
42644
38900
42644
42644
42644
42644
45104
45104
38300
40220
38300
16620
38300
34060
16620
38300
16620
18AUR2
Reclassified
CBSA
4/1/2007–
9/30/2007
19124
23104
19124
30980
46340
19124
19124
19124
33260
46340
19124
19124
19124
26420
19124
31180
12420
19124
41700
36220
43340
19124
19124
19124
41620
41620
41100
39340
29820
36260
41620
41620
30
15764
38340
16820
47894
31340
16820
40220
31340
24660
40060
28700
16820
40060
28420
42644
42644
42644
45104
42644
38900
42644
42644
42644
42644
45104
45104
38300
40220
38300
16620
38300
34060
16620
38300
16620
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
48316
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 9A.—HOSPITAL RECLASSIFICATIONS AND REDESIGNATIONS BY INDIVIDUAL HOSPITALS AND CBSA—FY 2007—
Continued
510070
510071
510077
520002
520021
520028
520037
520059
520060
520066
520071
520076
520088
520094
520095
520096
520102
520107
520113
520116
520173
520189
530015
530025
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................
Note: The following Table 9B is a
tentative table and does not reflect
decisions that are yet to be made by
CMS pending the final calculation of the
occupational mix adjusted wage index.
The information about reclassified
CBSAs reflects the latest information
available to CMS regarding MGCRB and
Reclassified
CBSA
10/1/2006–
3/31/2007
Geographic
CBSA
Provider No.
51
51
51
52
29404
52
52
39540
52
27500
52
52
22540
39540
52
39540
52
52
52
52
52
29404
53
53
Administrator reclassification decisions
for FY 2007. A revised Table 9B
reflecting CMS’ decisions on behalf of
hospitals using occupational mix
adjusted wage indices will be published
in a subsequent Federal Register notice
between August 1 and October 1, 2006,
as well as on CMS’ Web site. Hospitals
Reclassified
CBSA
4/1/2007–
9/30/2007
16620
16620
26580
48140
16974
31540
48140
29404
22540
31540
33340
31540
33340
33340
31540
33340
33340
24580
24580
33340
20260
16974
26820
22660
16620
16620
26580
48140
16974
31540
48140
29404
22540
31540
33340
31540
33340
33340
31540
33340
33340
24580
24580
33340
20260
16974
26820
22660
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
LUGAR
will then have 30 days from the date the
data appears on the CMS Web site to
revise a decision made by CMS on their
behalf. (See section III.H. of the
preamble (Revisions to the Wage Index
Based on Hospital Redesignations)).
TABLE 9B.—HOSPITAL RECLASSIFICATIONS AND REDESIGNATIONS BY INDIVIDUAL HOSPITAL UNDER SECTION 508 OF PUB.
L. 108–173—FY 2007
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Provider No.
050494
050549
070001
070005
070006
070010
070016
070017
070018
070019
070022
070028
070031
070034
070039
140155
140186
160040
160067
160110
220046
230003
230004
Note
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
18:47 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
*
.....................
.....................
.....................
*
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
*
.....................
*
*
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
Frm 00448
Fmt 4701
Geograraphic
CBSA
05
37100
35300
35300
14860
14860
35300
35300
14860
35300
35300
14860
35300
14860
35300
28100
28100
47940
47940
47940
38340
26100
34740
Sfmt 4700
Wage index
CBSA—
10/1/06–
3/31/07
Wage Index
CBSA—
4/1/07–
9/30/07*
42220
42220
35004
35004
35644
35644
35004
35004
35644
35004
35004
35644
35004
35644
35004
16974
16974
16300
16300
16300
14484
28020
28020
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
16974
16974
18AUR2
Own wage index—
10/1/06–3/31/07
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
48317
TABLE 9B.—HOSPITAL RECLASSIFICATIONS AND REDESIGNATIONS BY INDIVIDUAL HOSPITAL UNDER SECTION 508 OF PUB.
L. 108–173—FY 2007—Continued
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Provider No.
230013
230019
230020
230024
230029
230038
230053
230059
230066
230071
230072
230089
230104
230106
230119
230130
230135
230146
230151
230165
230174
230176
230207
230223
230236
230254
230269
230270
230273
230277
250078
250122
270002
270012
270023
270032
270057
310028
310051
310060
310115
310120
330023
330049
330067
330106
330126
330135
330205
330209
330264
340002
350002
350010
350014
350015
350017
350019
350030
390001
390003
390044
390045
390096
390054
390072
390095
390119
Note
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
*
.....................
*
*
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
*
.....................
*
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
*
.....................
.....................
.....................
***
**
***
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
Frm 00449
Fmt 4701
Geograraphic
CBSA
47644
47644
19804
19804
47644
24340
19804
24340
34740
47644
26100
19804
19804
24340
19804
47644
19804
19804
47644
19804
26100
19804
47644
47644
24340
47644
47644
19804
19804
47644
25620
25
27
24500
33540
27
27
35084
35084
10900
10900
35084
39100
39100
39100
35004
39100
39100
39100
39100
39100
11700
13900
35
35
13900
35
24220
35
42540
39
39
39
39
42540
39
42540
42540
Sfmt 4700
Wage index
CBSA—
10/1/06–
3/31/07
22420
22420
11460
11460
22420
28020
11460
28020
28020
22420
28020
11460
11460
28020
11460
22420
11460
11460
22420
11460
28020
11460
22420
22420
28020
22420
22420
11460
11460
22420
25060
25060
33540
33540
13740
13740
13740
35644
35644
35644
35644
35644
35644
35644
35644
........................
35644
35644
35644
35004
35004
16740
22020
22020
22020
22020
22020
22020
22020
10900
10900
37964
10900
37964
29540
10900
10900
10900
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
Wage Index
CBSA—
4/1/07–
9/30/07*
Own wage index—
10/1/06–3/31/07
25060
33540
33540
35644
35644
........................
22020
37964
37964
18AUR2
To be determined
48318
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 9B.—HOSPITAL RECLASSIFICATIONS AND REDESIGNATIONS BY INDIVIDUAL HOSPITAL UNDER SECTION 508 OF PUB.
L. 108–173—FY 2007—Continued
Provider No.
390137
390169
390185
390192
390237
390270
430005
430008
430013
430015
430048
430060
430064
430077
430091
450010
450072
450591
470003
490001
490024
530008
530010
Geograraphic
CBSA
Note
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
*
*
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
*
*
Wage index
CBSA—
10/1/06–
3/31/07
42540
42540
42540
42540
42540
42540
43
43
43
43
43
43
43
39660
39660
48660
26420
26420
15540
49
40220
53
53
Wage Index
CBSA—
4/1/07–
9/30/07*
10900
10900
29540
10900
10900
29540
39660
43620
43620
43620
43620
43620
43620
43620
43620
32580
26420
26420
14484
31340
19260
16220
16220
Own wage index—
10/1/06–3/31/07
43620
43620
16220
16220
* These hospitals are assigned a wage index value under a special exceptions policy (see the FY 2005 IPPS final rule, 69 FR 49105).
** This hospital has been assigned a wage index for the 1st half of FY 2007 under a special exceptions policy. (See section IV.G.6. of the preamble).
*** These hospitals are receiving the same wage index for FY 2007 as hospitals reclassified to the wage index CBSA under a special exceptions policy. (See section IV.G.7. of the preamble). NOTE: The following Table 9C is a tentative table. The final Table 9C will be published in a
subsequent Federal Register notice.
TABLE 9C.—HOSPITALS REDESIGNATED AS RURAL UNDER SECTION
1886(D)(8)(E) OF THE ACT—FY
TABLE 9C.—HOSPITALS REDESIGNATED AS RURAL UNDER SECTION
1886(D)(8)(E) OF THE ACT—FY
2007
2007—Continued
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Provider
No.
050192
050469
050528
050618
070004
100048
100134
140167
170137
230078
250126
260006
260047
260195
330044
330245
330268
360125
370054
380040
390181
390183
390201
440135
440144
450052
450078
450243
450348
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Geographic
CBSA
Redesignated
rural area
23420
40140
32900
40140
25540
37860
27260
14
29940
35660
32820
41140
27620
44180
46540
46540
10580
36
36420
13460
39
39
39
34980
44
45
10180
10180
45
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
05
05
05
05
07
10
10
14
17
23
25
26
26
26
33
33
33
36
37
38
39
39
39
44
44
45
45
45
45
Jkt 208001
Provider
No.
500148
520060
Geographic
CBSA
Redesignated
rural area
48300
52
50
52
TABLE 10.—*TENTATIVE GEOMETRIC
MEAN PLUS THE LESSER OF .75 OF
THE NATIONAL ADJUSTED OPERATING
STANDARDIZED PAYMENT
AMOUNT (INCREASED TO REFLECT
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN COSTS
AND CHARGES) OR .75 OF ONE
STANDARD DEVIATION OF MEAN
CHARGES BY DIAGNOSIS-RELATED
GROUP (DRG) JULY 20061
DRG
1 ................
2 ................
3 ................
6 ................
7 ................
8 ................
9 ................
10 ..............
11 ..............
PO 00000
Frm 00450
Number of
cases
24,393
10,183
3
288
15,032
3,441
1,775
19,625
3,083
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Threshold
$53,859
$37,071
$58,210
$16,764
$41,272
$31,202
$25,427
$25,060
$18,954
TABLE 10.—*TENTATIVE GEOMETRIC
MEAN PLUS THE LESSER OF .75 OF
THE NATIONAL ADJUSTED OPERATING
STANDARDIZED PAYMENT
AMOUNT (INCREASED TO REFLECT
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN COSTS
AND CHARGES) OR .75 OF ONE
STANDARD DEVIATION OF MEAN
CHARGES BY DIAGNOSIS-RELATED
GROUP (DRG) JULY 20061—Continued
DRG
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
21
22
23
26
27
28
29
31
32
34
35
36
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Number of
cases
55,941
7,525
278,664
19,988
17,297
2,973
33,442
8,461
2,220
3,168
10,670
25
5,971
19,909
6,522
5,039
1,903
27,626
7,908
307
Threshold
$18,864
$17,686
$24,952
$20,852
$26,470
$15,671
$21,265
$15,788
$26,884
$23,889
$17,034
$20,742
$25,126
$25,472
$15,804
$21,114
$14,176
$21,155
$14,353
$17,756
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 10.—*TENTATIVE GEOMETRIC
MEAN PLUS THE LESSER OF .75 OF
THE NATIONAL ADJUSTED OPERATING
STANDARDIZED PAYMENT
AMOUNT (INCREASED TO REFLECT
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN COSTS
AND CHARGES) OR .75 OF ONE
STANDARD DEVIATION OF MEAN
CHARGES BY DIAGNOSIS-RELATED
GROUP (DRG) JULY 20061—Continued
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
37
38
39
40
42
43
44
45
46
47
49
50
51
52
53
55
56
57
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Number of
cases
1,219
50
328
1,187
1,636
125
1,290
2,770
3,929
1,309
2,415
2,024
193
234
2,145
1,368
451
742
126
3
222
4
2,827
3,234
40,485
8,195
379
18,914
5,147
25
70
1,326
9,957
3
46,851
48,157
2,111
49,690
160,369
7,158
6
63,189
7,153
1,403
22,221
1,717
96,689
427,043
553,984
43,488
53
16,513
1,440
13,655
1,577
59,616
26,688
13
21,386
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
TABLE 10.—*TENTATIVE GEOMETRIC
MEAN PLUS THE LESSER OF .75 OF
THE NATIONAL ADJUSTED OPERATING
STANDARDIZED PAYMENT
AMOUNT (INCREASED TO REFLECT
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN COSTS
AND CHARGES) OR .75 OF ONE
STANDARD DEVIATION OF MEAN
CHARGES BY DIAGNOSIS-RELATED
GROUP (DRG) JULY 20061—Continued
Threshold
$24,755
$12,318
$14,729
$22,468
$17,058
$12,886
$14,781
$16,499
$16,766
$12,103
$31,272
$19,196
$19,075
$14,080
$26,675
$20,084
$19,390
$20,308
$14,929
$18,786
$28,823
$7,163
$26,792
$23,219
$13,493
$12,916
$17,186
$14,138
$10,697
$7,437
$15,616
$16,659
$18,043
$8,024
$48,022
$43,553
$25,956
$26,233
$29,354
$18,880
$25,916
$26,608
$21,595
$12,778
$25,180
$15,470
$26,951
$19,077
$21,998
$13,140
$11,541
$24,878
$16,320
$23,750
$12,584
$15,882
$11,788
$12,310
$15,711
Jkt 208001
DRG
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
108
110
111
113
114
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
149
150
151
152
153
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
PO 00000
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
Frm 00451
Number of
cases
6,410
23,368
4,930
886
20,120
32,625
3,440
8,757
57,708
10,783
34,727
7,959
5,349
7,618
963
33,555
150,046
54,522
29,562
120,510
92,404
5,422
667,290
4,210
3,521
87,465
22,952
101,372
5,853
39,815
7,164
943
206,126
74,038
31,103
123,082
49,143
237,807
104,877
5,742
10,269
2,614
19,523
22,971
5,403
5,011
1,951
6,015
4
8,316
3,718
19,221
11,939
10,145
4,950
5
5,996
2,457
5,154
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Threshold
$12,191
$18,513
$12,459
$234,602
$123,729
$93,408
$110,994
$89,200
$59,122
$45,058
$45,309
$30,170
$25,612
$33,293
$25,956
$36,437
$29,682
$20,932
$25,715
$29,669
$23,736
$40,901
$21,942
$15,608
$21,829
$20,048
$12,056
$13,633
$12,293
$13,564
$19,603
$14,059
$17,760
$11,503
$11,146
$16,534
$13,230
$12,604
$24,605
$12,881
$45,041
$31,225
$30,188
$44,974
$27,702
$33,350
$23,250
$27,694
$42,508
$25,981
$14,389
$28,296
$18,822
$25,544
$15,299
$14,048
$38,818
$25,554
$29,280
48319
TABLE 10.—*TENTATIVE GEOMETRIC
MEAN PLUS THE LESSER OF .75 OF
THE NATIONAL ADJUSTED OPERATING
STANDARDIZED PAYMENT
AMOUNT (INCREASED TO REFLECT
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN COSTS
AND CHARGES) OR .75 OF ONE
STANDARD DEVIATION OF MEAN
CHARGES BY DIAGNOSIS-RELATED
GROUP (DRG) JULY 20061—Continued
DRG
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
210
211
212
213
216
217
218
219
220
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Number of
cases
4,909
1,640
895
17,929
1,408
33,047
2,225
253,126
29,235
14,648
7,654
2,557
14,727
91,335
25,350
255,693
79,005
72
6,251
7
646
87,004
12,389
10
10,586
1,379
4,040
461
2,846
594
16,420
4,109
1,481
1,017
2,717
27,495
32,423
69,425
32,781
2,069
38,288
9,444
126,728
25,766
10
9,549
19,882
15,719
30,181
21,168
2
12,681
9,900
6,275
6,770
4,857
2,678
1,121
2,473
Threshold
$19,591
$25,296
$16,736
$44,476
$26,705
$26,380
$17,045
$21,911
$12,602
$23,944
$20,572
$15,461
$22,980
$20,871
$12,528
$17,100
$13,059
$12,775
$18,862
$5,729
$18,324
$22,789
$12,993
$13,793
$54,694
$32,567
$51,607
$32,138
$50,174
$32,425
$41,918
$26,021
$37,144
$39,787
$52,741
$25,140
$26,174
$23,010
$23,351
$16,166
$24,720
$15,527
$36,053
$26,659
$18,683
$33,765
$35,362
$41,753
$32,729
$23,440
$23,903
$25,312
$18,601
$26,110
$29,333
$18,593
$24,524
$15,634
$26,447
48320
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 10.—*TENTATIVE GEOMETRIC
MEAN PLUS THE LESSER OF .75 OF
THE NATIONAL ADJUSTED OPERATING
STANDARDIZED PAYMENT
AMOUNT (INCREASED TO REFLECT
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN COSTS
AND CHARGES) OR .75 OF ONE
STANDARD DEVIATION OF MEAN
CHARGES BY DIAGNOSIS-RELATED
GROUP (DRG) JULY 20061—Continued
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
DRG
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
253
254
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Number of
cases
570
18,488
9,054
4,763
41,769
1,924
9,693
40,335
12,890
2,848
2,722
100,967
16,921
5,808
1,393
21,347
16,397
13,487
4,164
2,060
24,800
10,027
7,605
13,112
11,381
2,660
2,419
1,569
602
22,523
3,924
4,035
2,229
276
1,007
11,061
2,581
21,573
6,062
1,268
2,214
181
1,611
118,989
33,858
6
19,325
6,587
6,751
1,860
8,075
2,868
5,460
11,449
6,342
11,870
60
7,589
318
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
TABLE 10.—*TENTATIVE GEOMETRIC
MEAN PLUS THE LESSER OF .75 OF
THE NATIONAL ADJUSTED OPERATING
STANDARDIZED PAYMENT
AMOUNT (INCREASED TO REFLECT
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN COSTS
AND CHARGES) OR .75 OF ONE
STANDARD DEVIATION OF MEAN
CHARGES BY DIAGNOSIS-RELATED
GROUP (DRG) JULY 20061—Continued
Threshold
$20,883
$34,629
$27,553
$16,190
$15,355
$13,823
$26,230
$23,007
$24,447
$14,324
$22,524
$16,980
$15,376
$10,439
$13,417
$12,715
$18,868
$15,452
$15,019
$10,708
$16,458
$10,209
$17,958
$19,571
$15,394
$21,525
$15,097
$20,644
$20,936
$32,381
$22,357
$28,309
$19,597
$20,106
$25,612
$30,462
$17,761
$21,481
$20,880
$12,695
$22,743
$13,374
$15,518
$18,380
$11,743
$9,028
$16,053
$11,088
$15,599
$9,705
$35,308
$34,849
$31,315
$36,434
$19,683
$18,835
$12,847
$41,562
$27,393
Jkt 208001
DRG
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
341
342
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
352
353
354
355
356
PO 00000
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
Frm 00452
Number of
cases
96,811
4,383
247,069
42,864
111
1,529
21,669
3,928
10,492
19,976
13,647
2,957
5,818
1,947
5,453
2,964
25,376
5,889
1,328
505
2
34,913
205,567
2,713
5,910
386
224,861
31,967
67
20,412
4,635
9,919
2,592
11
574
54
56,121
3,962
244
9,525
12,194
28,187
21,481
674
1,237
3,131
457
2,341
1,390
3,961
235
4,262
554
7,277
1,177
3,089
7,566
4,987
22,033
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Threshold
$16,300
$16,230
$17,299
$10,800
$11,190
$21,390
$23,232
$13,530
$53,266
$35,819
$37,422
$25,305
$25,921
$13,760
$27,129
$19,731
$25,322
$14,252
$24,325
$16,679
$63,693
$34,732
$24,393
$17,231
$24,031
$13,806
$18,200
$12,268
$13,265
$18,194
$11,389
$14,495
$9,794
$4,294
$15,404
$11,795
$22,457
$13,793
$18,788
$29,865
$23,947
$18,026
$12,476
$26,938
$24,409
$26,307
$16,760
$26,248
$24,261
$22,447
$12,285
$15,649
$10,003
$16,400
$16,558
$31,178
$29,684
$19,221
$16,309
TABLE 10.—*TENTATIVE GEOMETRIC
MEAN PLUS THE LESSER OF .75 OF
THE NATIONAL ADJUSTED OPERATING
STANDARDIZED PAYMENT
AMOUNT (INCREASED TO REFLECT
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN COSTS
AND CHARGES) OR .75 OF ONE
STANDARD DEVIATION OF MEAN
CHARGES BY DIAGNOSIS-RELATED
GROUP (DRG) JULY 20061—Continued
DRG
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
389
392
394
395
396
397
398
399
401
402
403
404
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Number of
cases
5,537
20,928
28,580
13,854
287
2
2,155
1,799
1,617
4,645
446
4,145
3,723
2,249
2,705
1,376
5,273
153
12
476
109
201
499
111
169
48
2,806
151
3
2,139
2,759
101,471
18
16,393
6,706
1,080
6,450
1,356
31,326
3,820
2,303
615
1,948
1,748
29,054
5
9
5,741
487
33
29,977
17,634
3,099
13,255
79
8,963
1,041
13,096
4,235
Threshold
$37,740
$24,238
$17,269
$18,919
$23,680
$6,876
$23,016
$19,187
$32,690
$23,871
$12,997
$23,493
$14,329
$17,536
$12,708
$10,820
$7,551
$13,095
$22,605
$12,906
$24,239
$16,324
$8,220
$9,315
$15,169
$3,953
$10,556
$7,391
$46,615
$45,751
$31,094
$16,872
$13,668
$23,048
$23,192
$14,880
$43,894
$25,221
$29,940
$20,305
$42,371
$24,760
$33,871
$25,028
$23,858
$9,758
$9,301
$25,510
$16,429
$28,208
$22,175
$18,485
$12,971
$16,146
$11,674
$28,718
$36,310
$13,576
$10,358
48321
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 10.—*TENTATIVE GEOMETRIC
MEAN PLUS THE LESSER OF .75 OF
THE NATIONAL ADJUSTED OPERATING
STANDARDIZED PAYMENT
AMOUNT (INCREASED TO REFLECT
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN COSTS
AND CHARGES) OR .75 OF ONE
STANDARD DEVIATION OF MEAN
CHARGES BY DIAGNOSIS-RELATED
GROUP (DRG) JULY 20061—Continued
DRG
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
447
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
470
471
473
476
477
479
480
481
482
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
Number of
cases
1,579
845
23,937
75,524
333
402
4,471
1,759
5,216
686
18,596
3,589
6,012
2,242
6,323
40,846
7,446
2
28,815
5,394
4,738
887
2,290
7,872
32,884
7,661
163
1,204
1,026
52,034
128
15,629
8,578
2,850
28,196
27,646
908
1,198
5,081
472
3,713
2,712
5,016
828
13,547
5,252
TABLE 10.—*TENTATIVE GEOMETRIC
MEAN PLUS THE LESSER OF .75 OF
THE NATIONAL ADJUSTED OPERATING
STANDARDIZED PAYMENT
AMOUNT (INCREASED TO REFLECT
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN COSTS
AND CHARGES) OR .75 OF ONE
STANDARD DEVIATION OF MEAN
CHARGES BY DIAGNOSIS-RELATED
GROUP (DRG) JULY 20061—Continued
Threshold
$11,150
$13,754
$16,826
$13,556
$12,627
$13,998
$6,847
$29,659
$29,541
$20,435
$37,577
$22,629
$16,302
$11,469
$11,513
$18,238
$9,442
$19,193
$21,741
$11,421
$17,849
$10,666
$27,945
$17,133
$15,084
$11,312
$12,726
$14,603
$10,034
$57,083
$25,336
$55,462
$38,317
$35,279
$34,210
$30,664
$128,168
$88,802
$49,179
$75,098
$51,983
$69,277
$32,011
$63,276
$28,578
$21,783
DRG
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
515
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
Number of
cases
22,663
3,924
61,082
24,547
342
3,726
31,199
21,280
35,237
46,422
3,200
764
5,910
192
180
963
323
654
155
1,782
627
550
226
58,660
23,763
12,586
16,525
29,364
3,423
14,462
109,013
205
1,845
5,026
3,360
4,993
2,882
43,711
40,198
8,826
8,259
8,983
5,459
4,973
1,504
25,104
Threshold
$35,757
$44,444
$34,552
$22,715
$121,068
$96,376
$62,663
$52,014
$28,340
$19,794
$42,436
$29,393
$26,641
$146,326
$28,322
$50,293
$31,953
$23,720
$16,128
$21,239
$13,459
$90,167
$67,279
$86,655
$34,494
$44,219
$35,867
$15,459
$12,513
$8,492
$16,146
$156,053
$107,773
$36,123
$25,556
$45,570
$28,122
$29,882
$21,414
$119,398
$108,963
$32,586
$22,310
$44,568
$25,469
$250,678
TABLE 10.—*TENTATIVE GEOMETRIC
MEAN PLUS THE LESSER OF .75 OF
THE NATIONAL ADJUSTED OPERATING
STANDARDIZED PAYMENT
AMOUNT (INCREASED TO REFLECT
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN COSTS
AND CHARGES) OR .75 OF ONE
STANDARD DEVIATION OF MEAN
CHARGES BY DIAGNOSIS-RELATED
GROUP (DRG) JULY 20061—Continued
DRG
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
Number of
cases
Threshold
23,115
5,718
445,785
44,802
2,360
32,709
32,245
13,141
34,565
53,869
82,060
39,292
77,351
37,378
18,974
124,154
192,632
2,894
3,457
2,952
52,955
21,145
16,327
46,822
73,082
10,363
16,695
60,815
72,246
11,153
48,982
6,682
26,619
10,977
277,472
5,596
35,311
20,665
$151,096
$64,315
$39,430
$44,809
$83,370
$97,710
$79,387
$80,448
$63,344
$51,334
$40,475
$46,776
$36,869
$42,650
$37,645
$51,129
$42,278
$40,715
$44,371
$35,689
$22,123
$13,990
$15,294
$78,211
$39,116
$72,688
$48,792
$63,221
$44,142
$23,679
$25,169
$51,652
$24,475
$85,769
$28,296
$35,303
$64,885
$39,571
* As noted in section II.G.5 of the preamble
to this final rule, the final national adjusted operating standardized amounts as well as the
final version of this table will be published in a
subsequent FEDERAL REGISTER notice between
August 1 and October 1, 2006.
1 Cases taken from the FY 2005 MedPAR
file; DRGs are from GROUPER Version 24.0.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
TABLE 11.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, AND 5⁄6THS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY
LTC–DRG
1 ...............
2 ...............
3 ...............
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Relative
weight
Description
5 CRANIOTOMY
AGE >17 W CC .........................................................................
AGE >17 W/O CC .....................................................................
6 CRANIOTOMY AGE 0–17 ..................................................................................
6 CRANIOTOMY
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00453
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
1.6835
1.6835
1.6835
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Geometric
average length
of stay
⁄ ths of the
geometric
average length
of stay
37.1
37.1
37.1
30.9
30.9
30.9
56
48322
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 11.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, AND 5⁄6THS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY—Continued
LTC–DRG
6 ...............
7 ...............
8 ...............
9 ...............
10 .............
11 .............
12 .............
13 .............
14 .............
15 .............
16 .............
17 .............
18 .............
19 .............
21 .............
22 .............
23 .............
26 .............
27 .............
28 .............
29 .............
30 .............
31 .............
32 .............
33 .............
34 .............
35 .............
36 .............
37 .............
38 .............
39 .............
40 .............
41 .............
42 .............
43 .............
44 .............
45 .............
46 .............
47 .............
48 .............
49 .............
50 .............
51 .............
52 .............
53 .............
54 .............
55 .............
56 .............
57 .............
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
58 .............
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Description
6 CARPAL
TUNNEL RELEASE .............................................................................
PERIPH & CRANIAL NERVE & OTHER NERV SYST PROC W CC ..................
2 PERIPH & CRANIAL NERVE & OTHER NERV SYST PROC W/O CC ............
SPINAL DISORDERS & INJURIES ......................................................................
NERVOUS SYSTEM NEOPLASMS W CC ..........................................................
2 NERVOUS SYSTEM NEOPLASMS W/O CC ....................................................
DEGENERATIVE NERVOUS SYSTEM DISORDERS .........................................
MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS & CEREBELLAR ATAXIA .............................................
INTRACRANIAL HEMORRHAGE OR CEREBRAL INFARCTION .......................
NONSPECIFIC CVA & PRECEREBRAL OCCLUSION W/O INFARCT ..............
NONSPECIFIC CEREBROVASCULAR DISORDERS W CC ..............................
2 NONSPECIFIC CEREBROVASCULAR DISORDERS W/O CC ........................
CRANIAL & PERIPHERAL NERVEDISORDERS W CC ......................................
CRANIAL & PERIPHERAL NERVEDISORDERS W/O CC ..................................
3 VIRAL MENINGITIS ............................................................................................
3 HYPERTENSIVE ENCEPHALOPATHY .............................................................
NONTRAUMATIC STUPOR & COMA ..................................................................
6 SEIZURE & HEADACHE AGE 0–17 ..................................................................
TRAUMATIC STUPOR & COMA, COMA >1 HR .................................................
TRAUMATIC STUPOR & COMA, COMA <1 HR AGE >17 W CC ......................
1 TRAUMATIC STUPOR & COMA, COMA <1 HR AGE >17 W/O CC ................
6 TRAUMATIC STUPOR & COMA, COMA <1 HR AGE 0–17 .............................
1 CONCUSSION AGE >17 W CC .........................................................................
6 CONCUSSION AGE >17 W/O CC .....................................................................
6 CONCUSSION AGE 0–17 ..................................................................................
OTHER DISORDERS OF NERVOUS SYSTEM W CC .......................................
OTHER DISORDERS OF NERVOUS SYSTEMW/O CC .....................................
6 RETINAL PROCEDURES ...................................................................................
6 ORBITAL PROCEDURES ...................................................................................
6 PRIMARY IRIS PROCEDURES .........................................................................
6 LENS PROCEDURES WITH OR WITHOUT VITRECTOMY .............................
6 EXTRAOCULAR PROCEDURES EXCEPT ORBIT AGE >17 ...........................
6 EXTRAOCULAR PROCEDURES EXCEPT ORBIT AGE 0–17 .........................
6 INTRAOCULAR PROCEDURES EXCEPT RETINA, IRIS & LENS ...................
6 HYPHEMA ...........................................................................................................
3 ACUTE MAJOR EYE INFECTIONS ...................................................................
1 NEUROLOGICAL EYE DISORDERS .................................................................
2 OTHER DISORDERS OF THE EYE AGE >17 W CC .......................................
6 OTHER DISORDERS OF THE EYE AGE >17 W/O CC ...................................
6 OTHER DISORDERS OF THE EYE AGE 0–17 ................................................
6 MAJOR HEAD & NECK PROCEDURES ...........................................................
6 SIALOADENECTOMY .........................................................................................
6 SALIVARY GLAND PROCEDURES EXCEPT SIALOADENECTOMY ..............
6 CLEFT LIP & PALATE REPAIR .........................................................................
6 SINUS & MASTOID PROCEDURES AGE >17 ..................................................
6 SINUS & MASTOID PROCEDURES AGE 0–17 ................................................
4 MISCELLANEOUS EAR, NOSE, MOUTH & THROAT PROCEDURES ...........
6 RHINOPLASTY ...................................................................................................
6 T&A PROC, EXCEPT TONSILLECTOMY &/OR ADENOIDECTOMY ONLY,
AGE >17.
6 T&A PROC, EXCEPT TONSILLECTOMY &/OR ADENOIDECTOMY ONLY,
AGE 0–17.
6 TONSILLECTOMY &/OR ADENOIDECTOMY ONLY, AGE >17 .......................
6 TONSILLECTOMY &/OR ADENOIDECTOMYONLY, AGE 0–17 ......................
6 MYRINGOTOMY W TUBE INSERTION AGE >17 .............................................
6 MYRINGOTOMY W TUBE INSERTION AGE 0–17 ...........................................
4 OTHER EAR, NOSE, MOUTH & THROATO.R. PROCEDURES ......................
EAR, NOSE, MOUTH & THROAT MALIGNANCY ...............................................
1 DYSEQUILIBRIUM ..............................................................................................
6 EPISTAXIS ..........................................................................................................
3 EPIGLOTTITIS ....................................................................................................
OTITIS MEDIA & URI AGE >17 W CC ................................................................
1 OTITIS MEDIA & URI AGE >17 W/O CC ..........................................................
6 OTITIS MEDIA & URI AGE 0–17 .......................................................................
6 LARYNGOTRACHEITIS ......................................................................................
3 NASAL TRAUMA & DEFORMITY ......................................................................
OTHER EAR, NOSE, MOUTH & THROAT DIAGNOSES AGE >17 ...................
6 OTHER EAR, NOSE, MOUTH & THROAT DIAGNOSES AGE 0–17 ...............
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00454
Geometric
average length
of stay
⁄ ths of the
geometric
average length
of stay
0.4175
1.2052
0.5594
1.0424
0.6971
0.5594
0.6788
0.6003
0.6772
0.7705
0.6978
0.5594
0.7503
0.4512
0.7819
0.7819
1.0118
0.5594
0.9978
0.7983
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.7029
0.5080
0.5594
0.5594
0.5594
0.5594
0.5594
0.5594
0.5594
0.4175
0.7819
0.4175
0.5594
0.4175
0.4175
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
0.4175
17.0
36.1
21.0
34.0
22.1
21.0
25.1
23.1
24.9
26.1
23.1
21.0
25.4
19.5
23.9
23.9
29.4
21.0
30.6
25.8
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
23.4
21.1
21.0
21.0
21.0
21.0
21.0
21.0
21.0
17.0
23.9
17.0
21.0
17.0
17.0
29.5
29.5
29.5
29.5
29.5
29.5
29.5
29.5
17.0
14.2
30.1
17.5
28.3
18.4
17.5
20.9
19.3
20.8
21.8
19.3
17.5
21.2
16.3
19.9
19.9
24.5
17.5
25.5
21.5
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
19.5
17.6
17.5
17.5
17.5
17.5
17.5
17.5
17.5
14.2
19.9
14.2
17.5
14.2
14.2
24.6
24.6
24.6
24.6
24.6
24.6
24.6
24.6
14.2
0.4175
17.0
14.2
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
1.1625
1.1797
0.4175
0.4175
0.7819
0.6211
0.4175
0.4175
0.5594
0.7819
0.7745
0.4175
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
29.5
26.2
17.0
17.0
23.9
20.3
17.0
17.0
21.0
23.9
22.9
17.0
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
24.6
21.8
14.2
14.2
19.9
16.9
14.2
14.2
17.5
19.9
19.1
14.2
Relative
weight
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
56
48323
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 11.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, AND 5⁄6THS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY—Continued
LTC–DRG
Description
75 .............
76 .............
77 .............
78 .............
79 .............
80 .............
81 .............
82 .............
83 .............
84 .............
85 .............
86 .............
87 .............
88 .............
89 .............
90 .............
91 .............
92 .............
93 .............
94 .............
95 .............
96 .............
97 .............
98 .............
99 .............
100 ...........
101 ...........
102 ...........
103 ...........
104 ...........
MAJOR CHEST PROCEDURES ..........................................................................
OTHER RESP SYSTEM O.R. PROCEDURES W CC .........................................
2 OTHER RESP SYSTEM O.R. PROCEDURES W/O CC ...................................
PULMONARY EMBOLISM ....................................................................................
RESPIRATORY INFECTIONS & INFLAMMATIONS AGE >17 W CC ................
RESPIRATORY INFECTIONS & INFLAMMATIONS AGE >17 W/O CC .............
6 RESPIRATORY INFECTIONS & INFLAMMATIONS AGE 0–17 .......................
RESPIRATORY NEOPLASMS .............................................................................
1 MAJOR CHEST TRAUMA W CC .......................................................................
6 MAJOR CHEST TRAUMA W/O CC ...................................................................
PLEURAL EFFUSION W CC ................................................................................
6 PLEURAL EFFUSION W/O CC ..........................................................................
PULMONARY EDEMA & RESPIRATORY FAILURE ...........................................
CHRONIC OBSTRUCTIVE PULMONARY DISEASE ..........................................
SIMPLE PNEUMONIA & PLEURISY AGE >17 W CC .........................................
SIMPLE PNEUMONIA & PLEURISY AGE >17 W/O CC .....................................
6 SIMPLE PNEUMONIA & PLEURISY AGE 0–17 ................................................
INTERSTITIAL LUNG DISEASE W CC ................................................................
1 INTERSTITIAL LUNG DISEASE W/O CC ..........................................................
PNEUMOTHORAX W CC .....................................................................................
8 PNEUMOTHORAX W/O CC ...............................................................................
BRONCHITIS & ASTHMA AGE >17 W CC ..........................................................
8 BRONCHITIS & ASTHMA AGE >17 W/O CC ....................................................
6 BRONCHITIS & ASTHMA AGE 0–17 .................................................................
RESPIRATORY SIGNS & SYMPTOMS W CC ....................................................
3 RESPIRATORY SIGNS & SYMPTOMS W/O CC ..............................................
OTHER RESPIRATORY SYSTEM DIAGNOSES W CC ......................................
,1 OTHER RESPIRATORY SYSTEM DIAGNOSES W/O CC ....................
7 HEART TRANSPLANT OR IMPLANT OF HEART ASSIST SYSTEM ..............
,6 CARDIAC VALVE & OTHER MAJOR CARDIOTHORACIC PROC W
CARDIAC CATH.
6 CARDIAC VALVE & OTHER MAJOR CARDIOTHORACIC PROC W/O CARDIAC CATH.
6 CORONARY BYPASS W PTCA .........................................................................
6 OTHER CARDIOTHORACIC PROCEDURES ...................................................
4 MAJOR CARDIOVASCULAR PROCEDURES W CC ........................................
6 MAJOR CARDIOVASCULAR PROCEDURES W/O CC ....................................
AMPUTATION FOR CIRC SYSTEM DISORDERS EXCEPT UPPER LIMB &
TOE.
UPPER LIMB & TOE AMPUTATION FOR CIRC SYSTEM DISORDERS ..........
2 CARDIAC PACEMAKER REVISION EXCEPT DEVICE REPLACEMENT ........
3 CARDIAC PACEMAKER DEVICE REPLACEMENT ..........................................
3 VEIN LIGATION & STRIPPING ..........................................................................
OTHER CIRCULATORY SYSTEM O.R. PROCEDURES ....................................
CIRCULATORY DISORDERS W AMI & MAJOR COMP, DISCHARGED ALIVE
2 CIRCULATORY DISORDERS W AMI W/O MAJOR COMP, DISCHARGED
ALIVE.
CIRCULATORY DISORDERS W AMI, EXPIRED ................................................
4 CIRCULATORY DISORDERS EXCEPT AMI, W CARD CATH & COMPLEX
DIAG.
1 CIRCULATORY DISORDERS EXCEPT AMI, W CARD CATH W/O COMPLEX DIAG.
ACUTE & SUBACUTE ENDOCARDITIS ..............................................................
HEART FAILURE & SHOCK .................................................................................
2 DEEP VEIN THROMBOPHLEBITIS ...................................................................
1 CARDIAC ARREST, UNEXPLAINED .................................................................
PERIPHERAL VASCULAR DISORDERS W CC ..................................................
PERIPHERAL VASCULAR DISORDERS W/O CC ..............................................
ATHEROSCLEROSIS W CC ................................................................................
2 ATHEROSCLEROSIS W/O CC ..........................................................................
HYPERTENSION ..................................................................................................
CARDIAC CONGENITAL & VALVULAR DISORDERS AGE >17 W CC .............
1 CARDIAC CONGENITAL & VALVULAR DISORDERS AGE >17 W/O CC .......
6 CARDIAC CONGENITAL & VALVULAR DISORDERS AGE 0–17 ....................
CARDIAC ARRHYTHMIA & CONDUCTION DISORDERS W CC .......................
2 CARDIAC ARRHYTHMIA & CONDUCTION DISORDERS W/O CC .................
1 ANGINA PECTORIS ...........................................................................................
SYNCOPE & COLLAPSE W CC ..........................................................................
105 ...........
106
108
110
111
113
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
114
117
118
119
120
121
122
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
123 ...........
124 ...........
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
125 ...........
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00455
Geometric
average length
of stay
⁄ ths of the
geometric
average length
of stay
1.9944
2.3982
0.5594
0.6746
0.8182
0.6485
0.4175
0.8242
0.4175
0.4175
0.6956
0.4175
1.0295
0.6411
0.6802
0.4958
0.5594
0.6638
0.4175
0.6785
0.6785
0.6230
0.6230
0.5594
0.9381
0.7819
0.8147
0.4175
0.0000
1.1625
33.5
42.5
21.0
22.6
22.8
20.9
17.0
21.4
17.0
17.0
21.4
17.0
24.8
19.3
20.6
17.8
21.0
19.6
17.0
21.3
21.3
18.9
18.9
21.0
24.6
23.9
22.2
17.0
0.0
29.5
27.9
35.4
17.5
18.8
19.0
17.4
14.2
17.8
14.2
14.2
17.8
14.2
20.7
16.1
17.2
14.8
17.5
16.3
14.2
17.8
17.8
15.8
15.8
17.5
20.5
19.9
18.5
14.2
0.0
24.6
1.1625
29.5
24.6
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.3942
29.5
29.5
29.5
29.5
36.1
24.6
24.6
24.6
24.6
30.1
1.2425
0.5594
0.7819
0.7819
1.0893
0.7451
0.5594
33.0
21.0
23.9
23.9
31.4
22.4
21.0
27.5
17.5
19.9
19.9
26.2
18.7
17.5
0.7858
1.1625
17.0
29.5
14.2
24.6
0.4175
17.0
14.2
0.8867
0.6832
0.5594
0.4175
0.6484
0.5267
0.6621
0.5594
0.4909
0.8014
0.4175
0.4175
0.6618
0.5594
0.4175
0.5891
26.3
21.2
21.0
17.0
22.8
21.0
20.7
21.0
21.7
23.8
17.0
17.0
21.9
21.0
17.0
22.1
21.9
17.7
17.5
14.2
19.0
17.5
17.3
17.5
18.1
19.8
14.2
14.2
18.3
17.5
14.2
18.4
Relative
weight
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
56
48324
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 11.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, AND 5⁄6THS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY—Continued
LTC–DRG
142
143
144
145
146
147
149
150
151
152
153
155
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
184 ...........
185 ...........
186 ...........
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
194 ...........
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Description
8 SYNCOPE
& COLLAPSE W/O CC ....................................................................
PAIN .......................................................................................................
OTHER CIRCULATORY SYSTEM DIAGNOSESW CC .......................................
OTHER CIRCULATORY SYSTEM DIAGNOSES W/O CC ..................................
5 RECTAL RESECTION W CC .............................................................................
6 RECTAL RESECTION W/O CC .........................................................................
6 MAJOR SMALL & LARGE BOWEL PROCEDURES W/O CC ..........................
5 PERITONEAL ADHESIOLYSIS W CC ...............................................................
6 PERITONEAL ADHESIOLYSIS W/O CC ...........................................................
5 MINOR SMALL & LARGE BOWEL PROCEDURES W CC ...............................
6 MINOR SMALL & LARGE BOWEL PROCEDURES W/O CC ...........................
6 STOMACH, ESOPHAGEAL & DUODENAL PROCEDURES AGE >17 W/O
CC.
6 STOMACH, ESOPHAGEAL & DUODENAL PROCEDURES AGE 0–17 ..........
3 ANAL & STOMAL PROCEDURES W CC ..........................................................
6 ANAL & STOMAL PROCEDURES W/O CC ......................................................
5 HERNIA PROCEDURES EXCEPT INGUINAL & FEMORAL AGE >17 W CC
1 HERNIA PROCEDURES EXCEPT INGUINAL& FEMORAL AGE >17 W/O CC
6 INGUINAL & FEMORAL HERNIA PROCEDURES AGE >17 W CC .................
6 INGUINAL & FEMORAL HERNIA PROCEDURES AGE >17 W/O CC .............
6 HERNIA PROCEDURES AGE 0–17 ..................................................................
6 APPENDECTOMY W COMPLICATED PRINCIPAL DIAG W CC .....................
6 APPENDECTOMY W COMPLICATED PRINCIPAL DIAG W/O CC ..................
6 APPENDECTOMY W/O COMPLICATED PRINCIPAL DIAG W CC ..................
6 APPENDECTOMY W/O COMPLICATED PRINCIPAL DIAG W/O CC ..............
5 MOUTH PROCEDURES W CC ..........................................................................
6 MOUTH PROCEDURES W/O CC ......................................................................
OTHER DIGESTIVE SYSTEM O.R.PROCEDURES W CC .................................
3 OTHER DIGESTIVE SYSTEM O.R. PROCEDURES W/O CC ..........................
DIGESTIVE MALIGNANCY W CC ........................................................................
2 DIGESTIVE MALIGNANCY W/O CC ..................................................................
G.I. HEMORRHAGE W CC ..................................................................................
2 G.I. HEMORRHAGE W/O CC .............................................................................
COMPLICATED PEPTIC ULCER .........................................................................
2 UNCOMPLICATED PEPTIC ULCER W CC .......................................................
6 UNCOMPLICATED PEPTIC ULCER W/O CC ...................................................
INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE ...................................................................
G.I. OBSTRUCTION W CC ..................................................................................
1 G.I. OBSTRUCTION W/O CC .............................................................................
ESOPHAGITIS, GASTROENT & MISC DIGEST DISORDERS AGE >17 W CC
1 ESOPHAGITIS, GASTROENT & MISC DIGEST DISORDERS AGE >17 W/O
CC.
6 ESOPHAGITIS, GASTROENT & MISC DIGEST DISORDERS AGE 0–17 .......
DENTAL & ORAL DIS EXCEPT EXTRACTIONS & RESTORATIONS, AGE
>17.
6 DENTAL & ORAL DIS EXCEPT EXTRACTIONS & RESTORATIONS, AGE
0–17.
6 DENTAL EXTRACTIONS & RESTORATIONS ..................................................
OTHER DIGESTIVE SYSTEM DIAGNOSES AGE >17 W CC ............................
2 OTHER DIGESTIVE SYSTEM DIAGNOSES AGE >17 W/O CC ......................
6 OTHER DIGESTIVE SYSTEM DIAGNOSESAGE 0–17 ....................................
5 PANCREAS, LIVER & SHUNT PROCEDURES W CC .....................................
6 PANCREAS, LIVER & SHUNT PROCEDURES W/O CC ..................................
4 BILIARY TRACT PROC EXCEPT ONLY CHOLECYST W OR W/O C.D.E. W
CC.
6 BILIARY TRACT PROC EXCEPT ONLY CHOLECYST W OR W/O C.D.E. W/
O CC.
5 CHOLECYSTECTOMY W C.D.E. W CC ............................................................
6 CHOLECYSTECTOMY W C.D.E. W/O CC ........................................................
4 CHOLECYSTECTOMY EXCEPT BY LAPAROSCOPE W/O C.D.E. W CC ......
6 CHOLECYSTECTOMY EXCEPT BY LAPAROSCOPE W/O C.D.E. W/O CC ..
3 HEPATOBILIARY DIAGNOSTIC PROCEDURE FOR MALIGNANCY ..............
5 HEPATOBILIARY DIAGNOSTIC PROCEDURE FOR NON-MALIGNANCY .....
OTHER HEPATOBILIARY OR PANCREAS O.R. PROCEDURES ......................
CIRRHOSIS & ALCOHOLIC HEPATITIS .............................................................
MALIGNANCY OF HEPATOBILIARY SYSTEM OR PANCREAS .......................
DISORDERS OF PANCREAS EXCEPT MALIGNANCY ......................................
DISORDERS OF LIVER EXCEPT MALIG,CIRR,ALC HEPA W CC ....................
1 CHEST
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00456
Geometric
average length
of stay
⁄ ths of the
geometric
average length
of stay
0.5891
0.4175
0.7715
0.4292
1.6835
0.7819
0.7819
1.6835
0.4175
1.6835
1.6835
1.6835
22.1
17.0
22.1
17.0
37.1
23.9
23.9
37.1
17.0
37.1
37.1
37.1
18.4
14.2
18.4
14.2
30.9
19.9
19.9
30.9
14.2
30.9
30.9
30.9
1.6835
0.7819
0.7819
1.6835
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.7819
0.7819
0.7819
0.7819
1.6835
0.5594
1.6163
0.7819
0.8497
0.5594
0.7149
0.5594
0.9514
0.5594
0.4175
0.8157
0.9126
0.4175
0.7866
0.4175
37.1
23.9
23.9
37.1
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
23.9
23.9
23.9
23.9
37.1
21.0
35.8
23.9
21.8
21.0
22.9
21.0
24.8
21.0
17.0
23.3
22.8
17.0
21.8
17.0
30.9
19.9
19.9
30.9
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
19.9
19.9
19.9
19.9
30.9
17.5
29.8
19.9
18.2
17.5
19.1
17.5
20.7
17.5
14.2
19.4
19.0
14.2
18.2
14.2
0.4175
0.6634
17.0
23.2
14.2
19.3
0.5594
21.0
17.5
0.5594
0.9596
0.5594
0.5594
1.6835
1.6835
1.1625
21.0
24.4
21.0
21.0
37.1
37.1
29.5
17.5
20.3
17.5
17.5
30.9
30.9
24.6
1.1625
29.5
24.6
1.6835
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
0.7819
1.6835
1.5802
0.6011
0.7466
0.8853
0.6933
37.1
29.5
29.5
29.5
23.9
37.1
28.8
20.2
19.6
22.1
23.1
30.9
24.6
24.6
24.6
19.9
30.9
24.0
16.8
16.3
18.4
19.3
Relative
weight
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
56
48325
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 11.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, AND 5⁄6THS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY—Continued
LTC–DRG
206
207
208
210
211
212
213
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
216 ...........
217 ...........
218 ...........
219 ...........
220 ...........
223 ...........
224 ...........
225
226
227
228
229
230
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
255 ...........
256 ...........
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
257
258
259
260
261
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
262
263
264
265
...........
...........
...........
...........
266 ...........
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Description
8 DISORDERS
OF LIVER EXCEPT MALIG, CIRR, ALC HEPA W/O CC ...........
DISORDERS OF THE BILIARY TRACT W CC ....................................................
1 DISORDERS OF THE BILIARY TRACT W/O CC ..............................................
HIP & FEMUR PROCEDURES EXCEPT MAJOR JOINT AGE >17 W CC ........
6 HIP & FEMUR PROCEDURES EXCEPT MAJOR JOINT AGE >17 W/O CC ..
6 HIP & FEMUR PROCEDURES EXCEPT MAJOR JOINT AGE 0–17 ...............
AMPUTATION FOR MUSCULOSKELETAL SYSTEM & CONN TISSUE DISORDERS.
BIOPSIES OF MUSCULOSKELETAL SYSTEM& CONNECTIVE TISSUE .........
WND DEBRID & SKN GRFT EXCEPT HAND, FOR MUSCSKELET & CONN
TISS DIS.
5 LOWER EXTREM & HUMER PROC EXCEPT HIP, FOOT, FEMUR AGE >17
W CC.
6 LOWER EXTREM & HUMER PROC EXCEPT HIP, FOOT, FEMUR AGE >17
W/O CC.
6 LOWER EXTREM & HUMER PROC EXCEPT HIP, FOOT, FEMUR AGE 0–
17.
4 MAJOR SHOULDER/ELBOW PROC, OR OTHER UPPER EXTREMITY
PROC W CC.
1 SHOULDER, ELBOW OR FOREARM PROC, EXC MAJOR JOINT PROC, W/
O CC.
FOOT PROCEDURES ..........................................................................................
SOFT TISSUE PROCEDURES W CC .................................................................
3 SOFT TISSUE PROCEDURES W/O CC ...........................................................
3 MAJOR THUMB OR JOINT PROC, OR OTH HAND OR WRIST PROC W CC
6 HAND OR WRIST PROC, EXCEPT MAJOR JOINT PROC, W/O CC ..............
5 LOCAL EXCISION & REMOVAL OF INT FIX DEVICES OF HIP & FEMUR ....
5 ARTHROSCOPY .................................................................................................
OTHER MUSCULOSKELET SYS & CONN TISS O.R. PROC W CC .................
6 OTHER MUSCULOSKELET SYS & CONN TISS O.R. PROC W/O CC ...........
3 FRACTURES OF FEMUR ..................................................................................
FRACTURES OF HIP & PELVIS ..........................................................................
1 SPRAINS, STRAINS, & DISLOCATIONS OF HIP, PELVIS & THIGH ..............
OSTEOMYELITIS ..................................................................................................
PATHOLOGICAL FRACTURES & MUSCULOSKELETAL & CONN TISS MALIGNANCY.
CONNECTIVE TISSUE DISORDERS W CC .......................................................
1 CONNECTIVE TISSUE DISORDERS W/O CC .................................................
SEPTIC ARTHRITIS .............................................................................................
MEDICAL BACK PROBLEMS ..............................................................................
BONE DISEASES & SPECIFICARTHROPATHIES W CC ..................................
BONE DISEASES & SPECIFIC ARTHROPATHIES W/O CC .............................
2 NON-SPECIFIC ARTHROPATHIES ...................................................................
SIGNS & SYMPTOMS OF MUSCULOSKELETAL SYSTEM & CONN TISSUE
TENDONITIS, MYOSITIS & BURSITIS ................................................................
AFTERCARE, MUSCULOSKELETAL SYSTEM & CONNECTIVE TISSUE ........
1 FX, SPRN, STRN & DISL OF FOREARM, HAND, FOOT AGE >17 W CC ......
6 FX, SPRN, STRN & DISL OF FOREARM, HAND, FOOT AGE >17 W/O CC ..
6 FX, SPRN, STRN & DISL OF FOREARM, HAND, FOOT AGE 0–17 ...............
FX, SPRN, STRN & DISL OF UPARM, LOWLEG EX FOOT AGE >17 W CC ...
1 FX, SPRN, STRN & DISL OF UPARM, LOWLEG EX FOOT AGE >17 W/O
CC.
6 FX, SPRN, STRN & DISL OF UPARM, LOWLEG EX FOOT AGE 0–17 ..........
OTHER MUSCULOSKELETAL SYSTEM & CONNECTIVE TISSUE DIAGNOSES.
5 TOTAL MASTECTOMY FOR MALIGNANCY W CC ..........................................
6 TOTAL MASTECTOMY FOR MALIGNANCY W/O CC ......................................
3 SUBTOTAL MASTECTOMY FOR MALIGNANCY W CC ..................................
6 SUBTOTAL MASTECTOMY FOR MALIGNANCY W/O CC ..............................
2 BREAST PROC FOR NON-MALIGNANCY EXCEPT BIOPSY & LOCAL EXCISION.
4 BREAST BIOPSY & LOCAL EXCISION FOR NON-MALIGNANCY ..................
SKIN GRAFT &/OR DEBRID FOR SKN ULCER OR CELLULITIS W CC ..........
SKIN GRAFT &/OR DEBRID FOR SKN ULCER OR CELLULITIS W/O CC .......
SKIN GRAFT &/OR DEBRID EXCEPT FORSKIN ULCER OR CELLULITIS W
CC.
3 SKIN GRAFT &/OR DEBRID EXCEPT FOR SKIN ULCER OR CELLULITIS
W/O CC.
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00457
Geometric
average length
of stay
⁄ ths of the
geometric
average length
of stay
0.6933
0.7295
0.4175
1.4826
1.6835
1.6835
1.1871
23.1
21.5
17.0
41.9
37.1
37.1
33.5
19.3
17.9
14.2
34.9
30.9
30.9
27.9
1.2147
1.2414
37.6
36.5
31.3
30.4
1.6835
37.1
30.9
1.6835
37.1
30.9
1.6835
37.1
30.9
1.1625
29.5
24.6
0.4175
17.0
14.2
0.9550
1.0626
0.7819
0.7819
0.4175
1.6835
1.6835
1.1724
0.4175
0.7819
0.6802
0.4175
0.8589
0.6031
30.6
34.3
23.9
23.9
17.0
37.1
37.1
32.4
17.0
23.9
28.9
17.0
28.4
20.6
25.5
28.6
19.9
19.9
14.2
30.9
30.9
27.0
14.2
19.9
24.1
14.2
23.7
17.2
0.7134
0.4175
0.7700
0.6028
0.5516
0.4463
0.5594
0.4582
0.7328
0.6370
0.4175
0.4175
0.5594
0.5609
0.4175
22.4
17.0
26.2
22.3
22.0
19.4
21.0
17.6
23.2
24.0
17.0
17.0
21.0
24.0
17.0
18.7
14.2
21.8
18.6
18.3
16.2
17.5
14.7
19.3
20.0
14.2
14.2
17.5
20.0
14.2
0.5594
0.7132
21.0
23.6
17.5
19.7
1.6835
0.7819
0.7819
0.7819
0.5594
37.1
23.9
23.9
23.9
21.0
30.9
19.9
19.9
19.9
17.5
1.1625
1.2748
0.8507
1.1019
29.5
38.0
29.9
30.2
24.6
31.7
24.9
25.2
0.7819
23.9
19.9
Relative
weight
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
56
48326
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 11.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, AND 5⁄6THS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY—Continued
LTC–DRG
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
286 ...........
287 ...........
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Description
6 PERIANAL
& PILONIDAL PROCEDURES .........................................................
SUBCUTANEOUS TISSUE &BREAST PLASTIC PROCEDURES .........
OTHER SKIN, SUBCUT TISS & BREAST PROC W CC .....................................
3 OTHER SKIN, SUBCUT TISS & BREASTPROC W/O CC ................................
SKIN ULCERS ......................................................................................................
MAJOR SKIN DISORDERS W CC .......................................................................
1 MAJOR SKIN DISORDERS W/O CC .................................................................
MALIGNANT BREAST DISORDERS W CC .........................................................
6 MALIGNANT BREAST DISORDERS W/O CC ...................................................
2 NON-MALIGNANT BREAST DISORDERS ........................................................
CELLULITIS AGE >17 W CC ...............................................................................
CELLULITIS AGE >17 W/O CC ............................................................................
6 CELLULITIS AGE 0–17 ......................................................................................
TRAUMA TO THE SKIN, SUBCUT TISS & BREAST AGE >17 W CC ...............
2 TRAUMA TO THE SKIN, SUBCUT TISS & BREAST AGE >17 W/O CC .........
6 TRAUMA TO THE SKIN, SUBCUT TISS & BREAST AGE 0–17 ......................
MINOR SKIN DISORDERS W CC ........................................................................
2 MINOR SKIN DISORDERS W/O CC ..................................................................
AMPUTAT OF LOWER LIMB FOR ENDOCRINE,NUTRIT,& METABOL DISORDERS.
6 ADRENAL & PITUITARY PROCEDURES .........................................................
SKIN GRAFTS & WOUND DEBRID FOR ENDOC, NUTRIT & METAB DISORDERS.
4 O.R. PROCEDURES FOR OBESITY .................................................................
6 PARATHYROID PROCEDURES ........................................................................
6 THYROID PROCEDURES ..................................................................................
6 THYROGLOSSAL PROCEDURES .....................................................................
OTHER ENDOCRINE, NUTRIT & METAB O.R. PROC W CC ............................
8 OTHER ENDOCRINE, NUTRIT & METAB O.R. PROC W/O CC ......................
DIABETES AGE >35 .............................................................................................
2 DIABETES AGE 0–35 .........................................................................................
NUTRITIONAL & MISC METABOLIC DISORDERS AGE >17 W CC .................
NUTRITIONAL & MISC METABOLIC DISORDERS AGE >17 W/O CC .............
6 NUTRITIONAL & MISC METABOLIC DISORDERS AGE 0–17 ........................
3 INBORN ERRORS OF METABOLISM ...............................................................
ENDOCRINE DISORDERS W CC ........................................................................
2 ENDOCRINE DISORDERS W/O CC ..................................................................
7 KIDNEY TRANSPLANT ......................................................................................
6 KIDNEY AND URETER PROCEDURES FOR NEOPLASM ..............................
4 KIDNEY AND URETER PROCEDURES FOR NON-NEOPLASM W CC ..........
6 KIDNEY AND URETER PROCEDURES FOR NON-NEOPLASM W/O CC ......
4 PROSTATECTOMY W CC .................................................................................
6 PROSTATECTOMY W/O CC .............................................................................
4 MINOR BLADDER PROCEDURES W CC .........................................................
6 MINOR BLADDER PROCEDURES W/O CC .....................................................
4 TRANSURETHRAL PROCEDURES W CC .......................................................
6 TRANSURETHRAL PROCEDURES W/O CC ....................................................
3 URETHRAL PROCEDURES, AGE >17 W CC ..................................................
6 URETHRAL PROCEDURES, AGE >17 W/O CC ...............................................
6 URETHRAL PROCEDURES, AGE 0–17 ............................................................
OTHER KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT PROCEDURES .......................................
RENAL FAILURE ..................................................................................................
ADMIT FOR RENAL DIALYSIS ............................................................................
KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT NEOPLASMS WCC ..............................................
6 KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT NEOPLASMSW/O CC ........................................
KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT INFECTIONS AGE >17 W CC .............................
KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT INFECTIONS AGE >17 W/O CC .........................
6 KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT INFECTIONS AGE 0–17 ....................................
1 URINARY STONES W CC, &/OR ESW LITHOTRIPSY ....................................
1 URINARY STONES W/O CC ..............................................................................
2 KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT SIGNS & SYMPTOMS AGE >17 W CC ............
6 KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT SIGNS & SYMPTOMS AGE >17 W/O CC ........
6 KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT SIGNS & SYMPTOMS AGE 0–17 .....................
6 URETHRAL STRICTURE AGE >17 W CC ........................................................
6 URETHRAL STRICTURE AGE >17 W/O CC ....................................................
6 URETHRAL STRICTURE AGE 0–17 .................................................................
OTHER KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT DIAGNOSES AGE >17 W CC ................
1 OTHER KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT DIAGNOSES AGE >17 W/O CC ..........
4 SKIN,
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00458
Geometric
average length
of stay
⁄ ths of the
geometric
average length
of stay
0.7819
1.1625
1.2075
0.7819
0.8269
0.6584
0.4175
0.7231
0.7819
0.5594
0.6089
0.4254
0.4175
0.7148
0.5594
0.5594
0.6876
0.5594
1.2418
23.9
29.5
34.7
23.9
26.9
23.0
17.0
21.8
23.9
21.0
20.9
18.0
17.0
24.1
21.0
21.0
23.1
21.0
31.6
19.9
24.6
28.9
19.9
22.4
19.2
14.2
18.2
19.9
17.5
17.4
15.0
14.2
20.1
17.5
17.5
19.3
17.5
26.3
1.1625
1.0402
29.5
33.0
24.6
27.5
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.1549
1.1549
0.6958
0.5594
0.7092
0.4596
0.4175
0.7819
0.7004
0.5594
0.0000
0.7819
1.1625
0.7819
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
0.7819
0.7819
0.7819
1.4016
0.8321
0.9102
0.7565
0.7819
0.6200
0.4450
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.5594
0.4175
0.4175
0.5594
0.5594
0.5594
0.7773
0.4175
29.5
29.5
29.5
29.5
32.0
32.0
23.9
21.0
22.3
19.3
17.0
23.9
23.7
21.0
0.0
23.9
29.5
23.9
29.5
29.5
29.5
29.5
29.5
29.5
23.9
23.9
23.9
33.9
22.9
24.4
21.0
23.9
21.7
18.5
17.0
17.0
17.0
21.0
17.0
17.0
21.0
21.0
21.0
22.5
17.0
24.6
24.6
24.6
24.6
26.7
26.7
19.9
17.5
18.6
16.1
14.2
19.9
19.8
17.5
0.0
19.9
24.6
19.9
24.6
24.6
24.6
24.6
24.6
24.6
19.9
19.9
19.9
28.3
19.1
20.3
17.5
19.9
18.1
15.4
14.2
14.2
14.2
17.5
14.2
14.2
17.5
17.5
17.5
18.8
14.2
Relative
weight
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
56
48327
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 11.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, AND 5⁄6THS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY—Continued
LTC–DRG
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
345 ...........
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
386 ...........
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Description
6 OTHER
KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT DIAGNOSES AGE 0–17 .......................
MALE PELVIC PROCEDURES W CC .................................................
1 MAJOR MALE PELVIC PROCEDURES W/OCC ...............................................
4 TRANSURETHRAL PROSTATECTOMY W CC ................................................
6 TRANSURETHRAL PROSTATECTOMY W/O CC .............................................
3 TESTES PROCEDURES, FOR MALIGNANCY .................................................
3 TESTES PROCEDURES, NON-MALIGNANCY AGE >17 .................................
6 TESTES PROCEDURES, NON-MALIGNANCY AGE 0–17 ...............................
5 PENIS PROCEDURES .......................................................................................
6 CIRCUMCISION AGE >17 ..................................................................................
6 CIRCUMCISION AGE 0–17 ................................................................................
3 OTHER MALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM O.R. PROCEDURES FOR MALIGNANCY.
4 OTHER MALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM O.R. PROC EXCEPT FOR MALIGNANCY.
3 MALIGNANCY, MALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM, W CC ...............................
1 MALIGNANCY, MALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM, W/O CC ...........................
2 BENIGN PROSTATIC HYPERTROPHY W CC .................................................
6 BENIGN PROSTATIC HYPERTROPHY W/O CC ..............................................
INFLAMMATION OF THE MALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM ............................
6 STERILIZATION, MALE ......................................................................................
OTHER MALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM DIAGNOSES ...................................
6 PELVIC
EVISCERATION, RADICAL HYSTERECTOMY & RADICAL
VULVECTOMY.
6 UTERINE,ADNEXA PROC FOR NON-OVARIAN/ADNEXAL MALIG W CC .....
6 UTERINE,ADNEXA PROC FOR NON-OVARIAN/ADNEXAL MALIG W/O CC
6 FEMALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM RECONSTRUCTIVE PROCEDURES ...
6 UTERINE & ADNEXA PROC FOR OVARIAN OR ADNEXAL MALIGNANCY ..
6 UTERINE & ADNEXA PROC FOR NON-MALIGNANCY W CC ........................
6 UTERINE & ADNEXA PROC FOR NONMALIGNANCY W/O CC- ....................
6 VAGINA, CERVIX & VULVA PROCEDURES ....................................................
6 LAPAROSCOPY & INCISIONAL TUBAL INTERRUPTION ...............................
6 ENDOSCOPIC TUBAL INTERRUPTION ...........................................................
6 D&C, CONIZATION & RADIO-IMPLANT, FOR MALIGNANCY .........................
6 D&C, CONIZATION EXCEPT FOR MALIGNANCY ...........................................
4 OTHER FEMALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM O.R. PROCEDURES ...............
MALIGNANCY, FEMALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM W CC ..............................
1 MALIGNANCY, FEMALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM W/O CC ........................
INFECTIONS, FEMALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM ...........................................
3 MENSTRUAL & OTHER FEMALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM DISORDERS
6 CESAREAN SECTION W CC .............................................................................
6 CESAREAN SECTION W/O CC .........................................................................
6 VAGINAL DELIVERY W COMPLICATING DIAGNOSES ..................................
6 VAGINAL DELIVERY W/O COMPLICATING DIAGNOSES ..............................
6 VAGINAL DELIVERY W STERILIZATION &/OR D&C .......................................
6 VAGINAL DELIVERY W O.R. PROC EXCEPT STERIL &/OR D&C .................
4 POSTPARTUM & POST ABORTION DIAGNOSES W/O O.R. PROCEDURE
6 POSTPARTUM & POST ABORTION DIAGNOSES W O.R. PROCEDURE .....
6 ECTOPIC PREGNANCY .....................................................................................
6 THREATENED ABORTION ................................................................................
6 ABORTION W/O D&C .........................................................................................
6 ABORTION W D&C, ASPIRATION CURETTAGE OR HYSTEROTOMY .........
6 FALSE LABOR ....................................................................................................
1 OTHER ANTEPARTUM DIAGNOSES W MEDICAL COMPLICATIONS ...........
6 OTHER ANTEPARTUM DIAGNOSES W/O MEDICAL COMPLICATIONS .......
6 NEONATES, DIED OR TRANSFERRED TO ANOTHER ACUTE CARE FACILITY.
6 EXTREME IMMATURITY OR RESPIRATORY DISTRESS SYNDROME,
NEONATE.
6 PREMATURITY W MAJOR PROBLEMS ...........................................................
6 PREMATURITY W/O MAJOR PROBLEMS .......................................................
6 FULL TERM NEONATE W MAJOR PROBLEMS ..............................................
6 NEONATE W OTHER SIGNIFICANT PROBLEMS ............................................
6 NORMAL NEWBORN .........................................................................................
6 SPLENECTOMY AGE >17 .................................................................................
6 SPLENECTOMY AGE 0–17 ...............................................................................
4 OTHER O.R. PROCEDURES OF THE BLOOD AND BLOOD FORMING ORGANS.
6 MAJOR
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00459
Geometric
average length
of stay
⁄ ths of the
geometric
average length
of stay
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
1.1625
1.1625
0.7819
0.7819
0.7819
1.6835
0.7819
0.7819
0.7819
17.0
17.0
17.0
29.5
29.5
23.9
23.9
23.9
37.1
23.9
23.9
23.9
14.2
14.2
14.2
24.6
24.6
19.9
19.9
19.9
30.9
19.9
19.9
19.9
1.1625
29.5
24.6
0.7819
0.4175
0.5594
0.7819
0.5606
0.7819
0.8209
1.1625
23.9
17.0
21.0
23.9
21.0
23.9
27.5
29.5
19.9
14.2
17.5
19.9
17.5
19.9
22.9
24.6
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
1.1625
0.9106
0.4175
0.7846
0.7819
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
1.1625
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
29.5
29.5
29.5
29.5
29.5
29.5
29.5
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
29.5
21.6
17.0
21.3
23.9
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
29.5
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
24.6
24.6
24.6
24.6
24.6
24.6
24.6
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
24.6
18.0
14.2
17.8
19.9
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
24.6
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
0.4175
17.0
14.2
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
29.5
29.5
29.5
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
24.6
24.6
24.6
Relative
weight
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
56
48328
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 11.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, AND 5⁄6THS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY—Continued
LTC–DRG
395
396
397
398
399
401
402
403
404
405
406
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
407 ...........
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
461
462
463
464
465
466
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
467
468
469
470
471
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Description
RED BLOOD CELL DISORDERS AGE >17 ........................................................
BLOOD CELL DISORDERS AGE 0–17 ....................................................
COAGULATION DISORDERS ..............................................................................
RETICULOENDOTHELIAL & IMMUNITY DISORDERS W CC ...........................
1 RETICULOENDOTHELIAL & IMMUNITY DISORDERS W/O CC .....................
4 LYMPHOMA & NON-ACUTE LEUKEMIA WOTHER O.R. PROC W CC ..........
6 LYMPHOMA & NON-ACUTE LEUKEMIA W OTHER O.R. PROC W/O CC .....
LYMPHOMA & NON-ACUTE LEUKEMIA W CC ..................................................
3 LYMPHOMA & NON-ACUTE LEUKEMIA W/OCC .............................................
6 ACUTE LEUKEMIA W/O MAJOR O.R. PROCEDURE AGE 0–17 ....................
5 MYELOPROLIF DISORD OR POORLY DIFF NEOPL W MAJ O.R.PROC W
CC.
6 MYELOPROLIF DISORD OR POORLY DIFF NEOPL W MAJ O.R.PROC W/
O CC.
4 MYELOPROLIF DISORD OR POORLY DIFF NEOPL W OTHER O.R.PROC
RADIOTHERAPY ..................................................................................................
CHEMOTHERAPY W/O ACUTE LEUKEMIA ASSECONDARY DIAGNOSIS .....
6 HISTORY OF MALIGNANCY W/O ENDOSCOPY .............................................
6 HISTORY OF MALIGNANCY W ENDOSCOPY .................................................
OTHER MYELOPROLIF DIS OR POORLY DIFF NEOPL DIAG W CC ..............
3 OTHER MYELOPROLIF DIS OR POORLY DIFF NEOPL DIAG W/O CC ........
6 SEPTICEMIA AGE 0–17 .....................................................................................
POSTOPERATIVE & POST-TRAUMATIC INFECTIONS .....................................
2 FEVER OF UNKNOWN ORIGIN AGE >17 W CC .............................................
2 FEVER OF UNKNOWN ORIGIN AGE >17 W/O CC .........................................
VIRAL ILLNESS AGE >17 ....................................................................................
6 VIRAL ILLNESS & FEVER OF UNKNOWN ORIGIN AGE 0–17 .......................
OTHER INFECTIOUS & PARASITIC DISEASES DIAGNOSES ..........................
5 O.R. PROCEDURE W PRINCIPAL DIAGNOSES OF MENTAL ILLNESS ........
1 ACUTE ADJUSTMENT REACTION & PSYCHOSOCIAL DYSFUNCTION .......
DEPRESSIVE NEUROSES ..................................................................................
2 NEUROSES EXCEPT DEPRESSIVE .................................................................
DISORDERS OF PERSONALITY & IMPULSE CONTROL .................................
ORGANIC DISTURBANCES & MENTAL RETARDATION ..................................
PSYCHOSES ........................................................................................................
2 CHILDHOOD MENTAL DISORDERS .................................................................
1 OTHER MENTAL DISORDER DIAGNOSES .....................................................
6 ALCOHOL/DRUG ABUSE OR DEPENDENCE, LEFT AMA ..............................
SKIN GRAFTS FOR INJURIES ............................................................................
WOUND DEBRIDEMENTS FOR INJURIES .........................................................
2 HAND PROCEDURES FOR INJURIES .............................................................
OTHER O.R. PROCEDURES FOR INJURIES W CC ..........................................
6 OTHER O.R. PROCEDURES FOR INJURIES W/O CC ....................................
TRAUMATIC INJURY AGE >17 W CC ................................................................
2 TRAUMATIC INJURY AGE >17 W/O CC ..........................................................
6 TRAUMATIC INJURY AGE 0–17 .......................................................................
2 ALLERGIC REACTIONS AGE >17 ....................................................................
6 ALLERGIC REACTIONS AGE 0–17 ...................................................................
3 POISONING & TOXIC EFFECTS OF DRUGS AGE >17 W CC .......................
2 POISONING & TOXIC EFFECTS OF DRUGS AGE >17 W/O CC ...................
6 POISONING & TOXIC EFFECTS OF DRUGS AGE 0–17 ................................
COMPLICATIONS OF TREATMENT W CC .........................................................
COMPLICATIONS OF TREATMENT W/O CC .....................................................
3 OTHER INJURY, POISONING & TOXIC EFFECT DIAG W CC .......................
6 OTHER INJURY, POISONING & TOXIC EFFECT DIAG W/O CC ...................
O.R. PROC W DIAGNOSES OF OTHER CONTACT W HEALTH SERVICES ...
REHABILITATION .................................................................................................
SIGNS & SYMPTOMS W CC ...............................................................................
SIGNS & SYMPTOMS W/O CC ...........................................................................
AFTERCARE W HISTORY OF MALIGNANCY AS SECONDARY DIAGNOSIS
AFTERCARE W/O HISTORY OF MALIGNANCY AS SECONDARY DIAGNOSIS.
3 OTHER FACTORS INFLUENCING HEALTHSTATUS ......................................
EXTENSIVE O.R. PROCEDURE UNRELATED TO PRINCIPAL DIAGNOSIS ...
7 PRINCIPAL DIAGNOSIS INVALID AS DISCHARGE DIAGNOSIS ...................
7 UNGROUPABLE .................................................................................................
5 BILATERAL OR MULTIPLE MAJOR JOINT PROCS OF LOWER EXTREMITY.
6 RED
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00460
Geometric
average length
of stay
⁄ ths of the
geometric
average length
of stay
0.6651
0.4175
0.8276
0.6278
0.4175
1.1625
0.5594
0.8846
0.7819
0.7819
1.6835
21.9
17.0
20.4
20.8
17.0
29.5
21.0
23.9
23.9
23.9
37.1
18.3
14.2
17.0
17.3
14.2
24.6
17.5
19.9
19.9
19.9
30.9
1.1625
29.5
24.6
1.1625
0.8416
1.2527
0.5594
0.5594
0.8429
0.7819
0.7819
0.7961
0.5594
0.5594
0.7065
0.4175
1.0426
1.6835
0.4175
0.4038
0.5594
0.5183
0.5326
0.4024
0.5594
0.4175
0.4175
1.2203
1.2248
0.5594
1.3670
0.5594
0.6598
0.5594
0.5594
0.5594
0.5594
0.7819
0.5594
0.7819
0.9275
0.5790
0.7819
0.7819
1.1466
0.5823
0.6082
0.5831
0.6877
0.6700
29.5
23.2
28.7
21.0
21.0
21.4
23.9
23.9
24.1
21.0
21.0
20.4
17.0
23.2
37.1
17.0
22.5
21.0
24.5
24.0
23.1
21.0
17.0
17.0
36.0
34.4
21.0
34.9
21.0
23.2
21.0
21.0
21.0
21.0
23.9
21.0
23.9
25.7
21.6
23.9
23.9
32.7
22.1
22.9
24.3
21.2
21.7
24.6
19.3
23.9
17.5
17.5
17.8
19.9
19.9
20.1
17.5
17.5
17.0
14.2
19.3
30.9
14.2
18.8
17.5
20.4
20.0
19.3
17.5
14.2
14.2
30.0
28.7
17.5
29.1
17.5
19.3
17.5
17.5
17.5
17.5
19.9
17.5
19.9
21.4
18.0
19.9
19.9
27.3
18.4
19.1
20.3
17.7
18.1
0.7819
2.1478
0.0000
0.0000
1.6835
23.9
40.5
0.0
0.0
37.1
19.9
33.8
0.0
0.0
30.9
Relative
weight
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
56
48329
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 11.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, AND 5⁄6THS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY—Continued
LTC–DRG
473 ...........
476 ...........
477 ...........
479
480
481
482
484
485
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
486
487
488
489
490
491
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
492 ...........
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
505 ...........
506 ...........
507 ...........
508 ...........
509 ...........
510
511
512
513
515
518
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
519
520
521
522
...........
...........
...........
...........
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
523 ...........
524
525
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Description
ACUTE LEUKEMIA W/O MAJOR O.R. PROCEDURE AGE >17 ........................
O.R. PROCEDURE UNRELATED TO PRINCIPAL DIAGNOSIS
NON-EXTENSIVE O.R. PROCEDURE UNRELATED TO PRINCIPAL DIAGNOSIS.
2 OTHER VASCULAR PROCEDURES W/O CC ..................................................
7 LIVER TRANSPLANT AND/ORINTESTINAL TRANSPLANT ............................
6 BONE MARROW TRANSPLANT .......................................................................
5 TRACHEOSTOMY FOR FACE, MOUTH & NECK DIAGNOSES; .....................
6 CRANIOTOMY FOR MULTIPLE SIGNIFICANT TRAUMA ................................
6 LIMB
REATTACHMENT, HIP & FEMUR PROC FOR MULTIPLE
SIGNIFICANTTRAUMA.
3 OTHER O.R. PROCEDURES FOR MULTIPLE SIGNIFICANT TRAUMA .........
4 OTHER MULTIPLE SIGNIFICANT TRAUMA .....................................................
4 HIV W EXTENSIVE O.R. PROCEDURE ............................................................
HIV W MAJOR RELATED CONDITION ...............................................................
HIV W OR W/O OTHER RELATED CONDITION ................................................
5 MAJOR JOINT & LIMB REATTACHMENT PROCEDURES OF UPPER EXTREMITY.
2 CHEMO W ACUTE LEUKEMIA AS SDX OR W USE OF HIGH DOSE
CHEMO AGENT.
4 LAPAROSCOPIC CHOLECYSTECTOMY W/O C.D.E. W CC ..........................
6 LAPAROSCOPIC CHOLECYSTECTOMY W/O C.D.E. W/O CC .......................
7 LUNG TRANSPLANT ..........................................................................................
4 COMBINED ANTERIOR/POSTERIOR SPINAL FUSION ..................................
5 SPINAL FUSION EXCEPT CERVICAL WCC ....................................................
6 SPINAL FUSION EXCEPT CERVICAL W/O CC ...............................................
5 BACK & NECK PROCEDURES EXCEPT SPINAL FUSION W CC ..................
4 BACK & NECK PROCEDURES EXCEPT SPINAL FUSION W/O CC ..............
KNEE PROCEDURES W PDX OF INFECTION W CC .......................................
3 KNEE PROCEDURES W PDX OF INFECTION W/O CC .................................
4 KNEE PROCEDURES W/O PDX OFINFECTION ..............................................
5 EXTENSIVE BURNS OR FULL THICKNESS BURNS W MV 96+ HRS W
SKIN GRAFT.
5 EXTENSIVE BURNS OR FULL THICKNESS BURNS W MV 96+ HRS W/O
SKIN GRAFT.
4 FULL THICKNESS BURN W SKIN GRAFTOR INHAL INJ W CC OR SIG
TRAUMA.
6 FULL THICKNESS BURN W SKIN GRFT OR INHAL INJ W/O CC OR SIG
TRAUMA.
FULL THICKNESS BURN W/O SKIN GRFT OR INHAL INJ W CC OR SIG
TRAUMA.
1 FULL THICKNESS BURN W/O SKIN GRFTOR INH INJ W/O CC OR SIG
TRAUMA.
NON-EXTENSIVE BURNS W CC OR SIGNIFICANT TRAUMA ..........................
1 NON-EXTENSIVE BURNS W/O CC OR SIGNIFICANT TRAUMA ....................
7 SIMULTANEOUS PANCREAS/KIDNEYTRANSPLANT .....................................
7 PANCREAS TRANSPLANT ................................................................................
4 CARDIAC DEFIBRILLATOR IMPLANT W/O CARDIAC CATH .........................
6 PERCUTANEOUS CARDIOVASC PROC W/O CORONARY ARTERY STENT
OR AMI.
4 CERVICAL SPINAL FUSION W CC ...................................................................
6 CERVICAL SPINAL FUSION W/O CC ...............................................................
2 ALCOHOL/DRUG ABUSE OR DEPENDENCE W CC .......................................
6 ALCOHOL/DRUG ABUSE OR DEPENDENCE W REHABILITATION THERAPY W/O CC.
1 ALCOHOL/DRUG
ABUSE OR DEPENDENCE W/O REHABILITATION
THERAPY W/O CC.
2 TRANSIENT ISCHEMIA ......................................................................................
6 OTHER HEART ASSIST SYSTEM IMPLANT ....................................................
6 INTRACRANIAL VASCULAR PROCEDURES W PDX HEMORRHAGE ..........
5 VENTRICULAR SHUNT PROCEDURES W CC ................................................
6 VENTRICULAR SHUNT PROCEDURES W/O CC ............................................
5 SPINAL PROCEDURES W CC ..........................................................................
3 SPINAL PROCEDURES W/O CC ......................................................................
4 EXTRACRANIAL PROCEDURES W CC ...........................................................
6 EXTRACRANIAL PROCEDURES W/O CC ........................................................
5 CARDIAC DEFIB IMPLANT W CARDIAC CATH W AMI/HF/SHOCK ...............
6 CARDIAC DEFIB IMPLANT W CARDIACCATH W/O AMI/HF/SHOCK ............
5 PROSTATIC
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00461
Geometric
average length
of stay
⁄ ths of the
geometric
average length
of stay
0.9917
1.6835
1.5119
25.3
37.1
35.9
21.1
30.9
29.9
0.5594
0.0000
1.1625
1.6835
1.6835
1.1625
21.0
0.0
29.5
37.1
37.1
29.5
17.5
0.0
24.6
30.9
30.9
24.6
0.7819
1.1625
1.1625
0.9436
0.6456
1.6835
23.9
29.5
29.5
22.1
20.3
37.1
19.9
24.6
24.6
18.4
16.9
30.9
0.5594
21.0
17.5
1.1625
1.1625
0.0000
1.1625
1.6835
1.6835
1.6835
1.1625
1.2164
0.7819
1.1625
1.6835
29.5
29.5
0.0
29.5
37.1
37.1
37.1
29.5
33.3
23.9
29.5
37.1
24.6
24.6
0.0
24.6
30.9
30.9
30.9
24.6
27.8
19.9
24.6
30.9
1.6835
37.1
30.9
1.1625
29.5
24.6
0.4175
17.0
14.2
0.7588
25.6
21.3
0.4175
17.0
14.2
0.6720
0.4175
0.0000
0.0000
1.1625
0.4175
22.6
17.0
0.0
0.0
29.5
17.0
18.8
14.2
0.0
0.0
24.6
14.2
1.1625
1.6835
0.5594
0.5594
29.5
37.1
21.0
21.0
24.6
30.9
17.5
17.5
0.4175
17.0
14.2
0.5594
1.6835
1.6835
1.6835
1.6835
1.6835
0.7819
1.1625
1.1625
1.6835
1.1625
21.0
37.1
37.1
37.1
37.1
37.1
23.9
29.5
29.5
37.1
29.5
17.5
30.9
30.9
30.9
30.9
30.9
19.9
24.6
24.6
30.9
24.6
Relative
weight
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
56
48330
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 11.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, AND 5⁄6THS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY—Continued
LTC–DRG
Description
537 ...........
LOCAL EXCISION & REMOVAL INT FIX DEVICES EXCEPT HIP & FEMUR W
CC.
4 LOCAL EXCISION & REMOVAL INT FIX DEVICES EXCEPT HIP & FEMUR
W/O CC.
4 LYMPHOMA & LEUKEMIA W MAJOR O.R. PROCEDURE W CC ...................
6 LYMPHOMA & LEUKEMIA W MAJOR O.R. PROCEDURE W/O CC ...............
ECMO OR TRACH W MV 96+ HRS OR PDX EXC FACE, MOUTH & NECK W
MAJ O.R..
TRACH W MV 96+ HRS OR PDX EXC FACE, MOUTH & NECK W/O MAJ
O.R..
5 CRANIOTOMY W MAJOR DEVICE IMPLANT OR ACUTE COMPLEX CNS
PDX.
5 MAJOR JOINT REPLACEMENT OR REATTACHMENT OF LOWER EXTREMITY.
5 REVISION OF HIP OR KNEE REPLACEMENT ................................................
6 SPINAL FUSION EXC CERV WITH CURVATURE OF THE SPINE OR
MALIG.
6 CORONARY BYPASS W CARDIAC CATH W MAJOR CV DX ........................
6 CORONARY BYPASS W CARDIAC CATHW/O MAJOR CV DX ......................
6 CORONARY BYPASS W/O CARDIAC CATH W MAJOR CV DX .....................
6 CORONARY BYPASS W/O CARDIAC CATH W/O MAJOR CV DX .................
PERMANENT CARDIAC PACEMAKER IMPL W MAJ CV DX OR AICD LEAD
OR GNRTR.
4 OTHER PERMANENT CARDIAC PACEMAKER IMPLANT W/O MAJOR CV
DX.
OTHER VASCULAR PROCEDURES W CC W MAJOR CV DX .........................
OTHER VASCULAR PROCEDURES W CC W/O MAJOR CV DX .....................
3 PERCUTANEOUS CARDIOVASCULAR PROC W MAJOR CV DX ..................
6 PERCUTANEOUS CARDIOVASC PROC W NON-DRUG-ELUTING STENT
W/O MAJ CV DX.
4 PERCUTANEOUS CARDIOVASCULAR PROC W DRUG-ELUTING STENT
W MAJOR CV DX.
6 PERCUTANEOUS CARDIOVASCULAR PROC W DRUG-ELUTING STENT
W/O MAJ CV DX.
6 ACUTE ISCHEMIC STROKE WITH USE OTHROMBOLYTIC AGENT F .........
BACTERIAL & TUBERCULOUS INFECTIONS OF NERVOUS SYSTEM ...........
NON-BACTERIAL INFECTIONS OF NERVOUS SYSTEM EXCEPT VIRAL
MENINGITIS.
SEIZURE AGE >17 W CC ....................................................................................
2 SEIZURE AGE >17 W/O CC ..............................................................................
HEADACHES AGE >17 ........................................................................................
RESPIRATORY SYSTEM DIAGNOSIS WITH VENTILATOR SUPPORT 96+
HOURS.
RESPIRATORY SYSTEM DIAGNOSIS WITH VENTILATOR SUPPORT < 96
HOURS.
5 STOMACH, ESOPHAGEAL & DUODENAL PROC AGE >17 W CC W
MAJOR GI DX.
5 STOMACH, ESOPHAGEAL & DUODENAL PROC AGE >17 W CC W/O
MAJOR GI DX.
5 MAJOR SMALL & LARGE BOWEL PROCEDURES W CC W MAJOR GI DX
5 MAJOR SMALL & LARGE BOWEL PROCEDURES W CC W/O MAJOR GI
DX.
MAJOR ESOPHAGEAL DISORDERS ..................................................................
MAJOR GASTROINTESTINAL DISORDERS AND PERITONEAL INFECTIONS
5 MAJOR BLADDER PROCEDURES ...................................................................
MAJOR HEMATOLOGIC/IMMUNOLOGIC DIAG EXC SICKLE CELL CRISIS &
COAGUL.
SEPTICEMIA W MV 96+ HOURS AGE >17 ........................................................
SEPTICEMIA W/O MV 96+ HOURS AGE >17 ....................................................
6 CAROTID ARTERY STENT PROCEDURE .......................................................
O. R. PROCEDURE W PDX EXC POSTOPERATIVE OR POST-TRAUMATIC
INFECTION.
O. R. PROCEDURE W PDX OF POSTOPERATIVE OR POST-TRAUMATIC
INFECTION.
538 ...........
539 ...........
540 ...........
541 ...........
542 ...........
543 ...........
544 ...........
545 ...........
546 ...........
547
548
549
550
551
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
552 ...........
553
554
555
556
...........
...........
...........
...........
557 ...........
558 ...........
559 ...........
560 ...........
561 ...........
562
563
564
565
...........
...........
...........
...........
566 ...........
567 ...........
568 ...........
569 ...........
570 ...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
575
576
577
578
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
571
572
573
574
...........
...........
...........
...........
579 ...........
1 Relative
weights
weights
3 Relative weights
4 Relative weights
2 Relative
VerDate Aug<31>2005
for
for
for
for
these
these
these
these
LTC–DRGs
LTC–DRGs
LTC–DRGs
LTC–DRGs
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
were
were
were
were
determined
determined
determined
determined
PO 00000
Geometric
average length
of stay
⁄ ths of the
geometric
average length
of stay
1.4672
39.9
33.3
1.1625
29.5
24.6
1.1625
0.4175
3.8893
29.5
17.0
58.1
24.6
14.2
48.4
2.8689
45.1
37.6
1.6835
37.1
30.9
1.6835
37.1
30.9
1.6835
1.6835
37.1
37.1
30.9
30.9
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.6035
29.5
29.5
29.5
29.5
29.5
24.6
24.6
24.6
24.6
24.6
1.1625
29.5
24.6
1.5837
1.2817
0.7819
0.4175
32.5
31.6
23.9
17.0
27.1
26.3
19.9
14.2
1.1625
29.5
24.6
0.4175
17.0
14.2
0.7819
0.9308
0.8145
23.9
25.5
22.3
19.9
21.3
18.6
0.6844
0.5594
0.7565
2.0557
23.2
21.0
24.1
34.7
19.3
17.5
20.1
28.9
1.5445
27.4
22.8
1.6835
37.1
30.9
1.6835
37.1
30.9
1.6835
1.6835
37.1
37.1
30.9
30.9
0.8214
0.8505
1.6835
0.8106
21.9
23.3
37.1
19.7
18.3
19.4
30.9
16.4
1.6583
0.7925
1.1625
1.4849
27.8
23.0
29.5
35.7
23.2
19.2
24.6
29.8
1.2978
35.2
29.3
Relative
weight
by
by
by
by
Frm 00462
assigning
assigning
assigning
assigning
Fmt 4701
these
these
these
these
cases
cases
cases
cases
Sfmt 4700
to
to
to
to
low-volume
low-volume
low-volume
low-volume
quintile
quintile
quintile
quintile
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
1.
2.
3.
4.
18AUR2
56
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
5 Relative
weights for these LTC–DRGs were
weights for these LTC–DRGs were
LTCH cases in the FY 2005 MedPAR file.
7 Relative weights for these LTC–DRGs were
8 Relative weights for these LTC–DRGs were
6 Relative
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Appendix A—Regulatory Impact
Analysis
I. Overall Impact
We have examined the impacts of this final
rule, this interim final rule with comment
period, and this notice with comment period
as required by Executive Order 12866
(September 1993, Regulatory Planning and
Review) and the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA) (September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96–354),
section 1102(b) of the Social Security Act, the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(Pub. L. 104–4), and Executive Order 13132.
Executive Order 12866 (as amended by
Executive Order 13258, which merely
reassigns responsibility of duties) directs
agencies to assess all costs and benefits of
available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and equity). A
regulatory impact analysis (RIA) must be
prepared for major rules with economically
significant effects ($100 million or more in
any 1 year).
We have determined that these rules are a
major rule as defined in 5 U.S.C. 804(2). We
estimate that the changes for FY 2007
operating and capital payments will
redistribute in excess of $100 million among
different types of inpatient cases. The market
basket update to the IPPS rates required by
the statute, in conjunction with other
payment changes finalized in this rule, will
result in an approximate $3.4 billion increase
in FY 2007 operating and capital payments.
This amount does not reflect changes in
hospital admissions or case-mix intensity in
operating PPS payments, which would also
affect overall payment changes. The $142
million in funds for the loan program for
cancer center costs under the Health Care
Infrastructure Improvement Program is
appropriated specifically for the loan
program and not more than $2 million may
be used for the administration costs of the
program.
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.
Most hospitals and most other providers and
suppliers are considered to be small entities,
either by nonprofit status or by having
revenues of $6 million to $29 million in any
1 year. (For details, see the Small Business
Administration’s final rule that sets forth size
standards for health care industries at 65 FR
69432, November 17, 2000.) For purposes of
the RFA, all hospitals and other providers
and suppliers are considered to be small
entities. Individuals and States are not
included in the definition of a small entity.
We believe that this proposed rule will have
a significant impact on small entities as
explained in this Appendix. Because we
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
48331
determined by assigning these cases to low-volume quintile 5.
determined by assigning these cases to the appropriate low volume quintile because they had no
assigned a value of 0.0000.
determined after adjusting to account for nonmonotonicity (see step 5 above).
acknowledge that many of the affected
entities are small entities, the analysis
discussed throughout the preamble of this
proposed rule constitutes our initial
regulatory flexibility analysis. Therefore, in
the proposed rule, we solicited comments on
our estimates and analysis of the impact of
the proposed rule on those small entities.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act
requires us to prepare a regulatory impact
analysis for any proposed rule that 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 603 of the RFA. With the exception
of hospitals located in certain New England
counties, for purposes of section 1102(b) of
the Act, we previously defined a small rural
hospital as a hospital with fewer than 100
beds that is located outside of a Metropolitan
Statistical Area (MSA) or New England
County Metropolitan Area (NECMA).
However, under the new labor market
definitions, we no longer employ NECMAs to
define urban areas in New England.
Therefore, we now define a small rural
hospital as a hospital that is located outside
of an MSA and has fewer than 100 beds.
Section 601(g) of the Social Security
Amendments of 1983 (Pub. L. 98–21)
designated hospitals in certain New England
counties as belonging to the adjacent
NECMA. Thus, for purposes of the IPPS, we
continue to classify these hospitals as urban
hospitals.
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4) also
requires that agencies assess anticipated costs
and benefits before issuing any rule whose
mandates require spending in any 1 year of
$100 million in 1995 dollars, updated
annually for inflation. That threshold level is
currently approximately $120 million. This
proposed rule will not mandate any
requirements for State, local, or tribal
governments, nor will it affect private sector
costs.
Executive Order 13132 establishes certain
requirements that an agency must meet when
it promulgates a proposed rule (and
subsequent final rule) that imposes
substantial direct requirement costs on State
and local governments, preempts State law,
or otherwise has Federalism implications. As
stated above, this rule will not have a
substantial effect on State and local
governments.
The following analysis, in conjunction
with the remainder of this document,
demonstrates that this rule is consistent with
the regulatory philosophy and principles
identified in Executive Order 12866, the
RFA, and section 1102(b) of the Act. The rule
will affect payments to a substantial number
of small rural hospitals, as well as other
classes of hospitals, and the effects on some
hospitals may be significant.
PO 00000
Frm 00463
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
II. Objectives
The primary objective of the IPPS is to
create incentives for hospitals to operate
efficiently and minimize unnecessary costs
while at the same time ensuring that
payments are sufficient to adequately
compensate hospitals for their legitimate
costs. In addition, we share national goals of
preserving the Medicare Hospital Insurance
Trust Fund.
We believe the changes in this final rule
will further each of these goals while
maintaining the financial viability of the
hospital industry and ensuring access to high
quality health care for Medicare
beneficiaries. We expect that these changes
will ensure that the outcomes of this
payment system are reasonable and equitable
while avoiding or minimizing unintended
adverse consequences.
III. Limitations of Our Analysis
The following quantitative analysis
presents the projected effects of our policy
changes, as well as statutory changes
effective for FY 2007, on various hospital
groups. We estimate the effects of individual
policy changes by estimating payments per
case while holding all other payment policies
constant. We use the best data available, but,
generally, we do not attempt to predict
behavioral responses to our policy changes,
and we do not make adjustments for future
changes in such variables as admissions,
lengths of stay, or case-mix. As we have done
in the previous rules, we solicited comments
and information about the anticipated effects
of these changes on hospitals and our
methodology for estimating them. Any timely
comments we have received in response to
the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule are
addressed below under the appropriate
subject heading in this final rule.
IV. Hospitals Included In and Excluded
From the IPPS
The prospective payment systems for
hospital inpatient operating and capitalrelated costs encompass nearly all general
short-term, acute care hospitals that
participate in the Medicare program. There
were 36 Indian Health Service hospitals in
our database, which we excluded from the
analysis due to the special characteristics of
the prospective payment methodology for
these hospitals. Among other short-term,
acute care hospitals, only the 46 such
hospitals in Maryland remain excluded from
the IPPS under the waiver at section
1814(b)(3) of the Act.
As of July 2006, there are 3,595 IPPS
hospitals to be included in our analysis. This
represents about 60 percent of all Medicareparticipating hospitals. The majority of this
impact analysis focuses on this set of
hospitals. There are also approximately 1,282
critical access hospitals (CAHs). These small,
limited service hospitals are paid on the basis
of reasonable costs rather than under the
IPPS. There are also 1,254 excluded hospitals
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48332
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
and 2,305 excluded units that are excluded
from the IPPS. These excluded hospitals
include psychiatric hospitals and units (now
referred to as IPFs), rehabilitation hospitals
and units (now referred to as IRFs), long-term
care hospitals (now referred to as LTCHs),
children’s hospitals, and cancer hospitals.
Religious Non-Medical Health Care
Institutions (RNHCIs) are also included. The
impacts of our policy changes on these
hospitals and institutions are discussed
below.
V. Effects on Excluded Hospitals and
Hospital Units
As of July 2006, there were 1,254 hospitals
excluded from the IPPS. Of these 1,254
hospitals, 482 IPFs, 81 children’s hospitals,
11 cancer hospitals, and 17 RNHCIs are being
paid, in whole or in part, on a reasonable cost
basis subject to the rate-of-increase ceiling
under § 413.40. The remaining providers, 271
IRFs and 392 LTCHs, are paid 100 percent of
the Federal prospective rate under the IRF
PPS and the LTCH PPS, respectively. We
note that, currently, there are 16 LTCHs that
are being paid under the LTCH PPS
transition blend methodology, which is based
in part on a reasonable cost that is subject to
a rate-of-increase ceiling under § 413.40.
Effective for cost reporting periods beginning
on or after October 1, 2006 (FY 2007), these
LTCHs will no longer receive a portion of
their payment that is based, in part, on a
reasonable cost subject to a rate-of-increase
ceiling. Rather, in accordance with § 412.533,
for FY 2007, all LTCHs are to be paid 100
percent of the adjusted Federal prospective
payment amount. In addition, there are 1,293
IPFs (paid on a blend of the IPF PPS per diem
payment and the TEFRA reasonable costbased payment) and 1,012 IRFs (paid under
the IRF PPS) co-located in hospitals
otherwise subject to the IPPS. Under
§ 413.40(a)(2)(i)(A), the rate-of-increase
ceiling is not applicable to the 93 IPPS
excluded hospitals and units in Maryland
that are paid in accordance with the waiver
at section 1814(b)(3) of the Act.
In the past, hospitals and units excluded
from the IPPS have been paid based on their
reasonable costs subject to limits as
established by the Tax Equity and Fiscal
Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA).
Hospitals that continue to be paid fully on a
reasonable cost basis are subject to TEFRA
limits for FY 2007. For these hospitals
(cancer and children’s hospitals), consistent
with section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ii) of the Act, as
was proposed the final update will be the
percentage increase in the FY 2007 IPPS
operating market basket, currently estimated
to be 3.4 percent. In addition, in accordance
with § 403.752(a) of the regulations, RNHCIs
are paid under § 413.40, which also uses
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ii) of the Act to update
the percentage increase in the rate-of-increase
limits. For RNHCIs, the update will be the
percentage increase in the FY 2007 IPPS
operating market basket increase, currently
estimated to be 3.4 percent.
IRFs are paid under a prospective payment
system (IRF PPS) for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after January 1, 2002. For
cost reporting periods beginning during FY
2007, the IRF PPS is based on 100 percent
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
of the adjusted Federal IRF prospective
payment amount, updated annually.
Therefore, these hospitals are not affected by
this final rule.
Effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2002, LTCHs
are paid under a LTCH PPS, based on a
Federal prospective payment amount that is
updated annually. Existing LTCHs receive a
blended payment that consists of the Federal
prospective payment rate and a reasonable
cost-based payment rate over a 5-year
transition period, unless the LTCH elects to
be paid at 100 percent of the Federal
prospective rate at the beginning of any of its
cost reporting periods during the 5-year
transition period. Under § 412.533, the 5-year
transition period for all existing LTCHs
subject to the LTCH PPS began with the
LTCH’s first cost reporting period beginning
on or after October 1, 2002, and is extended
through the LTCH’s cost reporting period
beginning on or after October 1, 2006. In
accordance with § 412.533, for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2006, the LTCH PPS transition blend
percentages are 100 percent of the Federal
prospective payment amount and zero
percent of the amount calculated under
reasonable cost principles. Therefore, even
though FY 2007 is the fifth year of the 5-year
transition period established under
§ 412.533, because the reasonable cost
principles amount is zero percent for cost
reporting periods beginning during FY 2007,
LTCHs will no longer receive a portion of
their payment that is based in part on a
reasonable cost subject to the rate-of-increase
ceiling. Thus, there is no longer a need for
an update factor for LTCH’s TEFRA target
amount for FY 2007 and beyond.
Section 124 of the Medicare, Medicaid, and
SCHIP Balanced Budget Refinement Act of
1999 (BBRA) required the development of a
per diem prospective payment system (PPS)
for payment of inpatient hospital services
furnished in IPFs. The final rule
implementing the IPF PPS (69 FR 66922)
established a 3-year transition to the IPF PPS
during which some providers will receive a
blend of the IPF PPS per diem payment and
the TEFRA reasonable cost-based payment.
For purposes of determining what the TEFRA
payment to the IPF will be, we updated the
IPF’s TEFRA target amount by the excluded
hospital market basket percentage increase of
3.4 percent.
The impact on excluded hospitals and
hospital units of the update in the rate-ofincrease limit depends on the cumulative
cost increases experienced by each excluded
hospital or unit since its applicable base
period. For excluded hospitals and units that
have maintained their cost increases at a
level below the rate-of-increase limits since
their base period, the major effect is on the
level of incentive payments these hospitals
and hospital units receive. Conversely, for
excluded hospitals and hospital units with
per-case cost increases above the cumulative
update in their rate-of-increase limits, the
major effect is the amount of excess costs that
will not be reimbursed.
We note that, under § 413.40(d)(3), an
excluded hospital or unit whose costs exceed
110 percent of its rate-of-increase limit
PO 00000
Frm 00464
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
receives its rate-of-increase limit plus 50
percent of the difference between its
reasonable costs and 110 percent of the limit,
not to exceed 110 percent of its limit. In
addition, under the various provisions set
forth in § 413.40, certain excluded hospitals
and hospital units can obtain payment
adjustments for justifiable increases in
operating costs that exceed the limit.
However, at the same time, by generally
limiting payment increases, we continue to
provide an incentive for excluded hospitals
and hospital units to restrain the
inappropriate spending for patient services.
VI. Quantitative Effects of the Policy
Changes Under the IPPS for Operating Costs
A. Basis and Methodology of Estimates
In this final rule, we are announcing policy
changes and payment rate updates for the
IPPS for operating costs. Changes to the
capital payments are discussed in section
VIII. of this Appendix. We note that due to
the decision in Bellevue Hosp. Center v.
Leavitt, in which the Court of Appeals for the
Second Circuit (the Court) ordered CMS to
apply the occupational mix adjustment to
100 percent of the wage index effective for
FY 2007 (see section III.C. of this final rule
for more details of this Court decision), we
are unable to finalize the FY 2007 wage index
data at this time. Therefore, we are also
unable to finalize the relative weights, budget
neutrality calculations, the outlier threshold,
the outlier offsets and the standardized
payment amounts. We have calculated
tentative amounts for all of these factors and
have based the impacts shown in the
following pages on these tentative amounts.
When the final 100 percent occupational mix
adjusted wage data is available, we will
recalculate impacts and publish them in a
separate Federal Register notice prior to
October 1, 2006.
Based on the overall percentage change in
payments per case estimated using our
payment simulation model, we estimate that
total FY 2007 operating payments will
increase 3.5 percent compared to FY 2006
largely due to the statutorily mandated
update to the IPPS rates. This amount does
not reflect changes in hospital admissions or
case-mix intensity, which would also affect
overall payment changes.
We have prepared separate impact analyses
of the changes to each system. This section
deals with changes to the operating
prospective payment system. Our payment
simulation model relies on the most recent
available data to enable us to estimate the
impacts on payments per case of certain
changes in this rule. However, there are other
changes for which we do not have data
available that would allow us to estimate the
payment impacts using this model. For those
changes, we have attempted to predict the
payment impacts based upon our experience
and other more limited data.
The data used in developing the
quantitative analyses of changes in payments
per case presented below are taken from the
FY 2005 MedPAR file and the most current
Provider-Specific File that is used for
payment purposes. Although the analyses of
the changes to the operating PPS do not
incorporate cost data, data from the most
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
recently available hospital cost report were
used to categorize hospitals. Our analysis has
several qualifications. First, in this analysis,
we do not make adjustments for behavioral
changes that hospitals may adopt in response
to the policy changes, and we do not adjust
for future changes in such variables as
admissions, lengths of stay, or case-mix.
Second, due to the interdependent nature of
the IPPS payment components, it is very
difficult to precisely quantify the impact
associated with each change. Third, we use
various sources for the data used to
categorize hospitals in the tables. In some
cases, particularly the number of beds, there
is a fair degree of variation in the data from
different sources. We have attempted to
construct these variables with the best
available source overall. However, for
individual hospitals, some
miscategorizations are possible.
Using cases from the FY 2005 MedPAR
file, we simulated payments under the
operating IPPS given various combinations of
payment parameters. Any short-term, acute
care hospitals not paid under the IPPS
(Indian Health Service hospitals and
hospitals in Maryland) were excluded from
the simulations. The impact of payments
under the capital IPPS, or the impact of
payments for costs other than inpatient
operating costs, are not analyzed in this
section. Estimated payment impacts of FY
2007 changes to the capital IPPS are
discussed in section VIII. of this Appendix.
The changes discussed separately below
are the following:
• The effect of a reduced update to the
standardized amount for hospitals that do not
comply with section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the
Act by submitting quality data in accordance
with our requirements.
• The effects of the MDH payment changes
set forth in section 5003 of Pub. L. 109–171.
• The effects of the revisions we are
adopting to our methodology for calculating
DRG relative weights.
• The effects of the annual reclassification
of diagnoses and procedures and the
recalibration of the DRG relative weights
required by section 1886(d)(4)(C) of the Act.
The relative weights used in estimating this
impact are not yet final as the wage data used
in the relative weight computation is not
available at this time.
• The effects of the changes in hospitals’
wage index values reflecting wage data from
hospitals’ cost reporting periods beginning
during FY 2003, compared to the FY 2002
wage data are shown in this impact but are
not yet final because the occupational mix
wage data that will be used to calculate the
FY 2007 wage indices are not available at this
time.
• The effects of the wage and recalibration
budget neutrality factors are shown in this
impact but are not yet final because
occupational mix adjusted wage indices are
yet to be calculated.
• The effects of the remaining labor market
area transition for those hospitals that were
urban under the old labor market area
designations and are now considered rural
hospitals are shown in this impact but are
not yet final pending calculation of the final
occupational mix adjusted wage indices.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
• The effects of geographic
reclassifications by the MGCRB that will be
effective in FY 2007 are shown in this impact
but are not yet final because we will be
making reclassification decisions for
hospitals subsequent to this final rule prior
to October 1, 2006, based on the final
occupational mix adjusted wage indices.
• The effects of section 505 of Pub. L. 108–
173, which provides for an increase in a
hospital’s wage index if the hospital qualifies
by meeting a threshold percentage of
residents of the county where the hospital is
located who commute to work at hospitals in
counties with higher wage indexes, are
shown in this impact but are not yet final
because the final occupational mix adjusted
wage data are not available at this time.
• The total estimated change in payments
based on FY 2007 policies and MMA and
DRA-imposed changes relative to payments
based on FY 2006 policies.
To illustrate the impacts of the FY 2007
changes, our analysis begins with a FY 2006
baseline simulation model using: the FY
2007 market basket update of 3.4 percent; the
FY 2006 DRG GROUPER (version 23.0); the
CBSA designations for hospitals based on
OMB’s June 2003 MSA definitions; the FY
2006 wage index; and no MGCRB
reclassifications. Outlier payments are set at
5.1 percent of total operating DRG and outlier
payments.
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(vii) of the Act, as
added by section 501(b) of Pub. L. 108–173,
and amended by section 5001(a) of Pub. L.
109–171, provides that, for FYs 2005 through
2006, the update factors will be reduced by
0.4 percentage points for any hospital that
does not submit quality data. Section 5001(a)
of Pub. L. 109–171 provides that for FY 2007
and subsequent years, the update factor will
be reduced by 2.0 percentage points for any
hospital that does not submit quality data or
that fails the quality data validation process.
At the time this impact was prepared, 117
providers did not receive the full market
basket rate-of-increate for FY 2006 because
they failed the quality data submission
process. For purposes of the simulations
shown below, we modeled the payment
changes for FY 2007 using a reduced update
for these 117 hospitals. However, we do not
have enough information to determine which
hospitals will not receive the full market
basket rate-of-increase for FY 2007 at this
time.
Each final and statutory policy change is
then added incrementally to this baseline,
finally arriving at an FY 2007 model
incorporating all of the changes. This
simulation allows us to isolate the effects of
each change.
Our final comparison illustrates the
percent change in payments per case from FY
2006 to FY 2007. Three factors not discussed
separately have significant impacts here. The
first is the update to the standardized
amount. In accordance with section
1886(b)(3)(B)(i) of the Act, we have updated
standardized amounts for FY 2007 using the
most recently forecasted hospital market
basket increase for FY 2007 of 3.4 percent.
(Hospitals that fail to comply with the quality
data submission requirement to receive the
full update will receive an update reduced by
PO 00000
Frm 00465
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48333
2.0 percentage points to 1.4 percent.) Under
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(iv) of the Act, the
updates to the hospital-specific amounts for
sole community hospitals (SCHs) and for
Medicare-dependent small rural hospitals
(MDHs) are also equal to the market basket
increase, or 3.4 percent.
A second significant factor that affects
changes in hospitals’ payments per case from
FY 2006 to FY 2007 is the change in MGCRB
status from one year to the next. That is,
payments may be reduced for hospitals
reclassified in FY 2006 that are no longer
reclassified in FY 2007. Conversely,
payments may increase for hospitals not
reclassified in FY 2006 that are reclassified
in FY 2007. In some cases, these impacts can
be quite substantial, so if a relatively small
number of hospitals in a particular category
lose their reclassification status, the
percentage change in payments for the
category may be below the national mean.
However, this effect is alleviated by section
1886(d)(10)(D)(v) of the Act, which provides
that reclassifications for purposes of the wage
index are for a 3-year period.
A third significant factor is that we
currently estimate that actual outlier
payments during FY 2006 will be 4.6 percent
of total DRG payments. When the FY 2006
final rule was published, we projected FY
2006 outlier payments would be 5.1 percent
of total DRG plus outlier payments; the
average standardized amounts were offset
correspondingly. The effects of the lower
than expected outlier payments during FY
2006 (as discussed in the Addendum to this
final rule) are reflected in the analyses below
comparing our current estimates of FY 2006
payments per case to estimated FY 2007
payments per case (with outlier payments
projected to equal 5.1 percent of total DRG
payments).
B. Analysis of Table I
Table I displays the results of our analysis
of changes for FY 2007. The table categorizes
hospitals by various geographic and special
payment consideration groups to illustrate
the varying impacts on different types of
hospitals. The top row of the table shows the
overall impact on the 3,595 hospitals
included in the analysis. There are 149 fewer
hospitals than were included in the impact
analysis in the FY 2006 final rule (70 FR
47690).
The next four rows of Table I contain
hospitals categorized according to their
geographic location: All urban, which is
further divided into large urban and other
urban; and rural. There are 2,590 hospitals
located in urban areas included in our
analysis. Among these, there are 1,441
hospitals located in large urban areas
(populations over 1 million), and 1,149
hospitals in other urban areas (populations of
1 million or fewer). In addition, there are
1,005 hospitals in rural areas. The next two
groupings are by bed-size categories, shown
separately for urban and rural hospitals. The
final groupings by geographic location are by
census divisions, also shown separately for
urban and rural hospitals.
The second part of Table I shows hospital
groups based on hospitals’ FY 2007 payment
classifications, including any
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48334
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
reclassifications under section 1886(d)(10) of
the Act. For example, the rows labeled urban,
large urban, other urban, and rural show that
the number of hospitals paid based on these
categorizations after consideration of
geographic reclassifications (including
reclassifications under 1886(d)(8)(B) and
1886(d)(8)(E) which have implications for
capital payments) are 2,608, 1,450, 1,158, and
987, respectively.
The next three groupings examine the
impacts of the changes on hospitals grouped
by whether or not they have GME residency
programs (teaching hospitals that receive an
IME adjustment) or receive DSH payments, or
some combination of these two adjustments.
There are 2,511 nonteaching hospitals in our
analysis, 843 teaching hospitals with fewer
than 100 residents, and 241 teaching
hospitals with 100 or more residents.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
In the DSH categories, hospitals are
grouped according to their DSH payment
status, and whether they are considered
urban or rural for DSH purposes. The next
category groups together hospitals considered
urban after geographic reclassification, in
terms of whether they receive the IME
adjustment, the DSH adjustment, both, or
neither.
The next five rows examine the impacts of
the changes on rural hospitals by special
payment groups (sole community hospitals
(SCHs), rural referral centers (RRCs), and
Medicare dependent hospitals (MDHs)), as
well as rural hospitals not receiving a special
payment designation. There were 187 RRCs,
376 SCHs, 146 MDHs, 98 hospitals that are
both SCHs and RRCs, and 8 hospitals that are
both MDHs and RRCs.
The next two groupings are based on type
of ownership and the hospital’s Medicare
PO 00000
Frm 00466
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
utilization expressed as a percent of total
patient days. These data are taken primarily
from the FY 2004 Medicare cost reports, if
available (otherwise FY 2003 data are used).
The next series of groupings concern the
geographic reclassification status of
hospitals. The first grouping displays all
urban hospitals that were reclassified by the
MGCRB for FY 2007. The next grouping
shows the MGCRB rural reclassifications.
The final three rows in Table I contain
hospitals located in urban counties, but
deemed to be rural under section
1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act, hospitals located in
rural counties but deemed to be urban under
section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act, and
hospitals currently reclassified under section
508 of Pub. L. 108–173, which expires on
March 31, 2007.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00467
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48335
ER18AU06.075
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00468
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.076
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48336
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00469
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48337
ER18AU06.077
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
VerDate Aug<31>2005
18:49 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00470
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.078
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48338
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
C. Effects on the Hospitals That Failed the
Quality Data Submission Process (Column 2)
Column 2 of Table I shows the effect of
assigning a reduced update to the
standardized amount to hospitals that either
fail to submit quality data or fail the data
validation requirements. This column shows
the effect of paying these providers based on
an update of market basket, less 2.0
percentage points (1.4 percent) relative to a
full market basket update (3.4 percent), for
FY 2007. There are 117 hospitals in this
analysis that did not receive the full market
basket update for FY 2006. Most of these
hospitals are either small rural or small urban
hospitals. For purposes of simulation only,
we used these same hospitals to simulate the
effects on IPPS payments receiving a reduced
FY 2007 update. However, at this time,
information is not available to determine the
hospitals that do not meet the requirements
for the full hospital market increase for FY
2007. If the same hospitals were to fail to
meet the requirements for the full market
basket rate-of-increase for FY 2007 as in FY
2006, we project that hospitals in the small
urban and rural hospital categories (0–99
beds) will receive an overall decrease in
payments of 0.1 percent.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
D. Effects of the DRA Provision Related to
MDHs (Column 3)
In Column 3 of Table I, we show the effects
of implementing section 5003 of Pub. L. 109–
171 for MDHs. Section 5003(b) requires
MDHs to rebase their hospital-specific rate to
the FY 2002 cost reporting period, if doing
so increases their target amount. Section
5003(c) increases the hospital-specific
payment amount from the Federal rate plus
50 percent of the difference between the
Federal rate and the hospital-specific amount
(presuming the hospital-specific amount
exceeds the Federal amount) to the Federal
rate plus 75 percent of the difference. In
addition, MDHs are no longer subject to the
12-percent cap on their DSH payments,
effective FY 2007.
This column compares the FY 2007
payment rates under the section 5003
provisions to payments under the FY 2006
MDH provisions. (The MDH provisions were
set to expire at the end of FY 2006 but were
extended by section 5003(a)(1).) Overall,
hospitals experience a 0.1 percent increase.
This is primarily due to the substantial
increase in payments to MDH providers;
MDH providers experience a 4.7 percent
increase, while MDH/RRC combination
providers experience an 11.5 percent
increase.
E. Effects of the Changes to the DRG
Reclassifications and Relative Cost-Based
Weights (Column 4)
In Column 4 of Table I, we present the
combined effects of the DRG reclassifications
and recalibration, as discussed in section II.
of the preamble to this final rule. Section
1886(d)(4)(C)(i) of the Act requires us
annually to make appropriate classification
changes in order to reflect changes in
treatment patterns, technology, and any other
factors that may change the relative use of
hospital resources.
As discussed in the preamble of this final
rule, we are changing the relative weight
VerDate Aug<31>2005
18:47 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
calculation methodology from a charge-based
method to a cost-based method. Further, we
are implementing the new methodology
under a 3-year transition such that weights in
FY 2007 are 1⁄3 cost-based and 2⁄3 chargebased. In this column, we compare aggregate
payments using the FY 2007 blended relative
weights(GROUPER Version 24) to the FY
2006 DRG relative charge weights (GROUPER
Version 23.0) so the percentages shown here
illustrate the effect of changes to the DRGs
and relative weights. The method of
calculating the relative weights and the
reclassification changes to the GROUPER are
described in more detail in section II. of the
preamble to this final rule. We note that,
consistent with section 1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of
the Act, we have applied a budget neutrality
factor to ensure that the overall payment
impact of the DRG changes (combined with
the wage index changes) is budget neutral.
This tentative budget neutrality factor of
0.997968 is applied to payments in Column
6 and not Column 4 because it is a combined
DRG reclassification and recalibration and
wage index budget neutrality factor.
In general, surgical DRGs tend to have
charges concentrated in ancillary cost center
groups while medical DRGs tend to have
charges concentrated in routine or intensive
care unit (ICU) cost center groups. As
discussed in the preamble of this final rule,
the CCRs for ancillary cost center groups are
lower than the cost to charge ratios for
routine and ICU cost center groups,
indicating that the charge markups for
ancillary services are higher. Because the
standardized cost-based relative weight
methodology adjusts the weights to remove
differential mark-ups in charges, the FY 2007
cost-based weights are redistributed among
medical and surgical DRGs, which will result
in a redistribution of payments among
hospitals according to the types of cases they
provide. For instance, hospitals that perform
more surgical procedures are likely to
experience decreases in payments while
hospitals with heavy concentrations of
medical DRGs are expected to experience
increases in payments. Hospitals with a casemix that is equal to average will see little or
no change in payment.
Due to the fact that we significantly
modified our proposal and are adopting cost
weights without the hospital-specific portion
of the methodology, the impacts for the final
rule are much smaller than those we
proposed. The payment impacts are further
moderated because we are implementing the
change to the relative weights over a 3-year
transition period. Therefore, the impacts
shown in this column are generally smaller
than those for the proposed rule. Rural DSH
hospitals with less than 100 beds and small
rural hospitals (0–49 beds) have payment
increases of 0.6 percent and 0.7 percent,
respectively. Cardiac specialty hospitals
experience the greatest decline in payments
of 2.2 percent and rural hospitals with more
than 200 beds and urban hospitals in the East
South Central Region have the next largest
decreases of 0.1 percent.
F. Effects of Wage Index Changes (Column 5)
Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act requires
that, beginning October 1, 1993, we annually
PO 00000
Frm 00471
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48339
update the wage data used to calculate the
wage index. In accordance with this
requirement, the wage index for FY 2007 is
based on data submitted for hospital cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2002 and before October 1, 2003.
However, we note that this impact is
calculated on wage data with no
occupational mix adjustment due to the
decision in Bellevue Hosp. Center v. Leavitt,
in which the Court of Appeals for the Second
Circuit ordered CMS to apply the
occupational mix adjustment to 100 percent
of the wage index effective for FY 2007 (see
section III.C. of this final rule for more details
of this Court decision). Because the effects of
the wage index data are dependent, in part,
upon the occupational mix adjusted wage
index, and due to the short timeframe for
implementing the Court’s order, we are not
able to provide the final occupational mix
adjusted wage data impacts with this FY
2007 IPPS final rule. We will include the FY
2007 occupational mix adjusted wage index
and related impacts in a separate Federal
Register notice to be published prior to
October 1, 2006. We believe these procedures
comply with section 1886(d)(6) of the Act
because, by August 1, we will have described
our data and methods for calculating the
wage index and IPPS rates in this FY 2007
IPPS final rule, but the actual impacts
concerning the wage index will not be issued
until a later date.
The estimated impact of the new wage data
(with no occupational mix applied) on
hospital payments is isolated in Column 5 by
holding the other payment parameters
constant in this simulation. That is, Column
5 shows the percentage changes in payments
when going from a model using the FY 2006
wage index, based on FY 2002 wage data and
having a 10-percent occupational mix
adjustment applied, to a model using the FY
2007 pre-reclassification wage index, based
on FY 2003 wage data with no occupational
mix applied. The wage data collected on the
FY 2003 cost report are the same as the FY
2002 wage data that were used to calculate
the FY 2006 wage index. The impacts shown
in Column 5 are likely to change with the
application of the occupational mix
adjustment to 100 percent of the wage index.
The final impacts will be shown and
discussed in a subsequent Federal Register
notice to be published prior to October 1,
2006.
G. Combined Effects of DRG and Wage Index
Changes, Including Budget Neutrality
Adjustment (Column 6)
Section 1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act
requires that changes to DRG reclassifications
and the relative weights cannot increase or
decrease aggregate payments. In addition,
section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act specifies that
any updates or adjustments to the wage index
are to be budget neutral. As noted in the
Addendum to this final rule, in determining
the budget neutrality factor, we equated
simulated aggregate payments for FY 2006
and FY 2007 using the FY 2005 Medicare
utilization data after applying the changes to
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48340
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
the DRG relative weights and the wage index.
However, we note that the payment impact
and budget neutrality factors are calculated
by applying an occupational mix adjustment
to 10 percent of the FY 2006 wage index and
zero percent of the FY 2007 wage index due
to the decision in Bellevue Hosp. Center v.
Leavitt, as stated previously.
We computed a tentative wage and DRG
recalibration budget neutrality factor of
0.997030. The 0.0 percent impact for all
hospitals demonstrates that these changes, in
combination with the budget neutrality
factor, are budget neutral. In Table I, the
combined overall impacts of the effects of
both the DRG reclassifications and the
updated wage index are shown in Column 6.
The changes in this column are the sum of
the changes in Columns 4 and 5, combined
with the budget neutrality factor for the wage
index, including the wage index floor for
urban areas required by section 4410 of Pub.
L. 105–33. There also may be some variation
of plus or minus 0.1 percentage point due to
rounding.
Currently, we project that large urban
hospitals will show a 0.1 percent increase,
other urban hospitals will experience a 0.1
percent decrease, and rural hospitals will not
be affected. We are not able to provide the
final DRG and wage index budget neutrality
impacts with this FY 2007 IPPS final rule
due to the short timeframes for implementing
the Court’s order for implementation of the
occupational mix adjustment. However, we
will recalculate the budget neutrality factor
to include the effects of the 100 percent
occupational mix adjustment when the data
become available, and we will publish
updated payment impacts in a subsequent
Federal Register notice document prior to
October 1, 2006.
H. Effects of the 3-Year Provision Allowing
Urban Hospitals That Were Converted to
Rural as a Result of the FY 2005 Labor
Market Area Changes To Maintain the Wage
Index of the Urban Labor Market Area in
Which They Were Formerly Located (Column
7)
To help alleviate the decreased payments
for urban hospitals that became rural under
the new labor market area definitions, for
purposes of the wage index, we adopted a
policy in FY 2005 to allow them to maintain
the wage index assignment of the MSA where
they were located for the 3-year period FY
2005, FY 2006, and FY 2007. Column 7
shows the impact of the remaining labor
market area transition, for those hospitals
that were urban under the old labor market
area designations and are now considered
rural hospitals. Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the
Act specifies that any updates or adjustments
to the wage index are to be budget neutral.
Therefore, we applied a tentative adjustment
of 0.999605 to ensure that the effects of
reclassification are budget neutral as
indicated by the zero effect on payments to
hospitals overall. However, we note that this
budget neutrality factor and this impact are
both calculated using FY 2007 wage data
with no occupational mix adjustment due to
the decision in Bellevue Hosp. Center v.
Leavitt. We are not able to provide the final
urban to rural hold harmless budget
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
neutrality impacts with this FY 2007 IPPS
final rule. This information will also be
include in a separate Federal Register notice
to be published prior to October 1, 2006.
Currently, the rural hospital row shows a 0.3
percent benefit from this provision as these
hold harmless hospitals are now considered
geographically rural.
I. Effects of MGCRB Reclassifications
(Column 8)
Our impact analysis to this point has
assumed hospitals are paid on the basis of
their actual geographic location (with the
exception of ongoing policies that provide
that certain hospitals receive payments on
other bases than where they are
geographically located, such as hospitals in
rural counties that are deemed urban under
section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act). The changes
in Column 8 reflect the per case payment
impact of moving from this baseline to a
simulation incorporating the MGCRB
decisions for FY 2007 which affect hospitals’
wage index area assignments.
By February 28 of each year, the MGCRB
makes reclassification determinations that
will be effective for the next fiscal year,
which begins on October 1. The MGCRB may
approve a hospital’s reclassification request
for the purpose of using another area’s wage
index value. The FY 2007 wage index values
incorporate all of the MGCRB’s
reclassification decisions for FY 2007. The
wage index values also reflect any decisions
made by the CMS Administrator through the
appeals and review process through February
28, 2006.
For FY 2007, as stated in the FY 2006 IPPS
final rule (70 FR 47382, August 12, 2005), we
established procedural rules under section
1886(d)(10)(D)(v) of the Act to address
specific circumstances where individual and
group reclassifications involve a section 508
hospital. The rules were designed to
recognize the special circumstances of
section 508 hospital reclassifications ending
mid-year during FY 2007 and were intended
to allow previously approved
reclassifications to continue through March
31, 2007, and new section 1886(d)(10)
reclassifications to begin April 1, 2007, upon
the conclusion of the section 508
reclassifications. Under these procedural
rules, some section 1886(d)(10) hospital
reclassifications are only in effect for the
second half of the fiscal year.
The first and second half fiscal year section
1886(d)(10) reclassifications permitted under
these procedural rules have implications for
the calculation of the reclassified wage
indices and the reclassification budget
neutrality factor. Section 1886(d)(8)(c) of the
Act provides requirements for determining
the wage index values for hospitals that were
reclassified as a result of the MGCRB
decisions under 1886(d)(10) of the Act. As
provided in the statute, we are required to
calculate a separate wage index for hospitals
reclassified to an area if including the wage
data for the reclassified hospitals would
reduce the area wage index by more than 1
percent.
Because of the half-year reclassifications
permitted under the procedural rules, in this
final rule, we are issuing two separate wage
PO 00000
Frm 00472
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
indexes for affected areas (one effective from
October 1, 2006, through March 31, 2007 and
a second reclassified wage index effective
April 1, 2007, through September 30, 2007).
The FY 2007 wage index values are
calculated based on the wage data for
hospitals reclassified to the area in the
respective half of the fiscal year. The impact
of this policy is modeled in Column 8 of
Table I above.
The overall effect of geographic
reclassification is required by section
1886(d)(8)(D) of the Act to be budget neutral.
In this final rule, we are calculating one
budget neutrality adjustment that reflects the
average of the adjustments required for first
and second half fiscal year reclassifications,
respectively. Therefore, we applied a
tentative adjustment of 0.991850 to ensure
that the effects of the section 1886(d)(10)
reclassifications are budget neutral. (See
section II.A. of the Addendum to this final
rule.) However, we note that this budget
neutrality factor and this impact are both
calculated using wage adjustment applied
due to the decision in Bellevue Hosp. Center
v. Leavitt. As noted earlier, CMS will apply
a reclassification decision for FY 2007 on
behalf of hospitals to give them the highest
wage index. Hospitals will then have 30 days
from the date of public display of the
separate notice to be published prior to
October 1, 2006 at the Office of the Federal
Register to revise the decision that CMS
made on their behalf. We are unable to state
with certainty that all of the reclassified
providers shown in Table 9A in the
Addendum to this final rule will retain their
approved reclassifications for FY 2007 once
the final occupational mix adjusted wage
indices are known. We will include the FY
2007 occupational mix adjusted wage index
related impacts and our reclassification
decisions made on behalf of hospitals in a
separate Federal Register notice document to
be published prior to October 1, 2006.
J. Effects of the Wage Index Adjustment for
Out-Migration (Column 9)
Section 1886(d)(13) of the Act, as added by
section 505 of Pub. L. 108–173, provides for
an increase in the wage index for hospitals
located in certain counties that have a
relatively high percentage of hospital
employees who reside in the county, but
work in a different area with a higher wage
index. Hospitals located in counties that
qualify for the payment adjustment are to
receive an increase in the wage index that is
equal to a weighted average of the difference
between the wage index of the resident
county and the higher wage index work
area(s), weighted by the overall percentage of
workers who are employed in an area with
a higher wage index. We note that this
impact is based on the section 505 wage
index adjustments in place as of FY 2006. As
the FY 2007 adjustments must be calculated
using wage data with an occupational mix
adjustment and because we do not yet have
these data due to the decision in Bellevue
Hosp. Center v. Leavitt, we were unable to
assess whether any new counties would
qualify for section 505 adjustments for FY
2007 prior to the publication of this final
rule. In the notice that we publish in the
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Federal Register notice prior to October 1,
2006, we will show any new counties that
qualify for the section 505 adjustment for FY
2007 and any related impacts that result from
application of the out-migration adjustment
to the revised occupational mix adjusted
wage indices.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
K. Effects of All Changes (Column 10)
Column 10 compares our estimate of
payments per case between FY 2006 and FY
2007, incorporating all changes reflected in
this final rule for FY 2007 (including
statutory changes). This column includes all
of the policy changes. We note that this
impact is calculated using standardized
amounts, outlier estimates, and budget
neutrality factors based on wage data with no
occupational mix adjustment applied due to
the decision in Bellevue Hosp. Center v.
Leavitt.
Currently, Column 10 reflects the impact of
all FY 2007 changes (other than the final
occupational mix adjusted wage indices)
relative to FY 2006, including those shown
in Columns 2 through 9 as well as other
factors that are not applied until the final
rates are calculated. The average increase for
all hospitals is approximately 3.5 percent.
This increase includes the effects of the 3.4
percent market basket update. It also reflects
the 0.5 percentage point difference between
the projected outlier payments in FY 2006
(5.1 percent of total DRG payments) and the
current estimate of the percentage of actual
outlier payments in FY 2006 (4.6 percent), as
described in the introduction to this
Appendix and the Addendum to this final
rule. As a result, payments are projected to
be 0.5 percentage points lower in FY 2006
than originally estimated, resulting in a 0.5
percentage point greater increase for FY 2007
than would otherwise occur. In addition, the
impact of section 505 adjustments accounted
for a 0.1 percent increase. Indirect medical
education formula changes for teaching
hospitals under section 502 of Pub. L. 108–
173, changes in payments due to the
difference between the FY 2006 and FY 2007
wage index values assigned to providers
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
reclassified under section 508 of Pub. L. 108–
173, and changes in the incremental increase
in payments from section 505 of Pub. L. 108–
173 out-migration adjustments account for
the remaining ¥0.6 percent.
There might also be interactive effects
among the various factors comprising the
payment system that we are not able to
isolate. For these reasons, the values in
Column 10 may not equal the product of the
percentage changes described above.
The overall change in payments per case
for hospitals in FY 2007 would increase by
3.5 percent. Hospitals in urban areas would
experience a 3.4 percent increase in
payments per case compared to FY 2006.
Hospitals in large urban areas would
experience a 3.5 percent increase in
payments and hospitals in other urban areas
would experience a 3.3 percent increase in
payments. Hospitals in rural areas,
meanwhile, would experience a 3.7 percent
payment increase.
Among urban census divisions, the largest
payment increases would be 4.5 percent in
the Pacific region and 4.3 percent in the
Mountain region. The smallest urban
increase is 2.2 percent in Puerto Rico.
Among rural regions in Column 10, no
hospital category would experience overall
payment decreases. The New England and
Middle Atlantic regions would benefit the
most, with 5.6 and 5 percent increases,
respectively. The smallest increase would
occur in the Mountain region, with a 3.0
percent increases in payments.
Among special categories of rural hospitals
in Column 10, MDH/RRC providers receive
an increase in payments of 11.5 percent and
MDH providers receive an increase of 4.7
percent, primarily due to the changes to
MDH payments set forth in section 5003 of
Pub. L. 109–171.
Urban hospitals reclassified for the first
half of FY 2007 are anticipated to receive an
increase of 3.6 percent, while urban hospitals
that reclassified for the second half of FY
2007 are expected to receive an increase of
3.4 percent. The same set of rural hospitals
is reclassified for the first and second half of
PO 00000
Frm 00473
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48341
FY 2007. Rural hospitals reclassifying for the
entire year of FY 2007 are anticipated to
receive a 3.5 percent payment increase.
Those hospitals located in rural counties, but
deemed to be urban under section
1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act are expected to
receive an increase in payments of 4.4
percent. Hospitals that were reclassified
under section 508 of Pub. L. 108–173, which
is only effective through March 31, 2007, are
expected to receive an increase of 1.7
percent. This lower estimated increase in
payment is due to the expiration of the
higher section 508 wage indices in effect for
6 months of FY 2007. We caution that all of
these impacts will be revised prior to October
1, 2006 when the occupational mix wage
indices are calculated for FY 2007.
L. Effects of Policy on Payment Adjustments
for Low-Volume Hospitals
For FY 2007, we are continuing to apply
the volume adjustment criteria we specified
in the FY 2005 IPPS final rule (69 FR 49099).
We expect that two providers would receive
the low-volume adjustment for FY 2007. We
included these additional payments to
providers in the impact table shown above
and we estimate the impact of these
providers receiving the additional 25-percent
payment increase to be approximately
$89,000.
M. Impact Analysis of Table II
Table II presents the projected impact of
the changes for FY 2007 for urban and rural
hospitals and for the different categories of
hospitals shown in Table I. It compares the
estimated payments per case for FY 2006
with the average estimated per case payments
for FY 2007, as calculated under our models.
Thus, this table presents, in terms of the
average dollar amounts paid per discharge,
the combined effects of the changes
presented in Table I. The percentage changes
shown in the last column of Table II equal
the percentage changes in average payments
from Column 10 of Table I.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00474
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.079
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48342
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
VII. Effects of Other Policy Changes
In addition to those policy changes
discussed above that we are able to model
using our IPPS payment simulation model,
we are making various other changes in this
final rule. Generally, we have limited or no
specific data available with which to estimate
the impacts of these changes. Our estimates
of the likely impacts associated with these
other changes are discussed below.
A. Effects of LTC–DRG Reclassifications and
Relative Weights for LTCHs
In section II.F. of the preamble to this final
rule, we discuss the changes in the LTC–DRG
relative weights for FY 2007, which are based
on the Version 24.0 of the CMS GROUPER
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
(including the changes in the classifications,
relative weights and geometric mean length
of stay for each LTC–DRG). As also discussed
in that same section of this final rule,
currently, there is no statutory or regulatory
requirement that the annual update to the
LTC–DRG classifications and relative weights
be done in a budget neutral manner. As
discussed above in section II.F. of the
preamble of this final rule, the LTCH PPS is
still in the midst of a transition from a
reasonable cost-based payment system to
fully Federal PPS payments, during which
time LTCH treatment patterns and coding
practices, which are reflected in the LTCH
claims data, appear to continue to change as
LTCHs adapt to this new payment system.
PO 00000
Frm 00475
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48343
The LTCH PPS was implemented for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2002 (FY 2003). Therefore, the FY
2005 MedPAR data used to compute the FY
2007 LTC–DRG relative weights in this final
rule are based on LTCH claims data taken
from only the second full year of the LTCH
PPS. Based on LTCH cases in the March 2006
update of the FY 2005 MedPAR files, we
estimate that the changes to the LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights for FY
2007 would result in an aggregate decrease in
LTCH PPS payments of approximately 1.3
percent based on the data from the 369
LTCHs in our database. (We note that this
estimated aggregate decrease in LTCH PPS
payments of approximately 1.3 percent was
determined based on the current payment
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
ER18AU06.080
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48344
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
rates and policies established in the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27798 through
27939) and the revised LTC–DRG
classifications, relative weights and average
lengths of stay established for FY 2007 in this
final rule).
When we compared the GROUPER Version
23.0 (FY 2006) LTC–DRG relative weights to
the GROUPER Version 24.0 (FY 2007) LTC–
DRG relative weights, we found that
approximately 68 percent of the LTC–DRGs
would have a higher relative weight under
Version 23.0, while the remaining
approximately 32 percent of the LTC–DRGs
would have a higher relative weight under
Version 24.0. We also found that, based on
FY 2005 LTCH cases, the GROUPER Version
23.0 LTC–DRG relative weights were, on
average, approximately 3.3 percent higher
than the GROUPER Version 24.0 LTC–DRG
relative weights. In addition, based on an
analysis of the most recent available LTCH
claims data from the FY 2005 MedPAR file,
we continue to observe that the average LTC–
DRG relative weight decreases due to an
increase of relatively lower charge cases
being assigned to LTC–DRGs with higher
relative weights in the prior year.
Contributing to this increase in these
relatively lower charge cases being assigned
to LTC–DRGs with higher relative weights in
the prior year are improvements in coding
practices, which are typical when moving
from a reasonable cost-based payment system
to a PPS. The impact of including additional
cases with relatively lower charges into LTC–
DRGs that had a relatively higher relative
weight in the GROUPER Version 23.0 (FY
2006) is a decrease in the average relative
weight for those LTC–DRGs in the GROUPER
Version 24.0. As noted above in section II.F.
of the preamble to this final rule, LTCHs are
a specialized provider type that typically do
not treat a broad spectrum of patients in their
facilities with many different diagnoses.
While there are 538 valid GROUPER Version
24.0 LTC–DRGs, 183 LTC–DRGs have no
LTCH cases. In addition, another 180 LTC–
DRGs are categorized as ‘‘low volume’’ (that
is, have less than 25 cases annually).
Consequently, only about 175 LTC–DRGs are
used by most LTCHs on a ‘‘regular basis’’
(that is, nationally LTCHs discharge, in total,
an average of 25 or more of these cases
annually).
Of these 175 LTC–DRGs that are used on
a ‘‘regular basis,’’ we found that
approximately 65 percent of the LTC–DRGs
would have higher relative weights under
GROUPER Version 23.0 in comparison to
GROUPER Version 24.0, and the remaining
35 percent of the 175 LTC–DRGs that are
used on a ‘‘regular basis’’ would have higher
relative weights under GROUPER Version
24.0 in comparison to GROUPER Version
23.0. In addition, about 30 percent of the 175
LTC–DRGs that are used on a ‘‘regular basis’’
would experience a decrease in the average
charge per case as compared to the average
charge per case in that DRG based on FY
2004 data, which generally results in a lower
relative weight. Moreover, of the 175 LTC–
DRGs that are used on a ‘‘regular basis,’’
approximately 62 percent of those LTC–DRGs
would experience a change in the average
charge per case from FY 2004 LTCH data as
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
compared to FY 2005 LTCH data that is less
than the increase in overall average LTCH
charges across all LTC–DRGs from FY 2004
to FY 2005 of about 8.3 percent. Accordingly,
those LTC–DRGs would also have a
reduction in their relative weight as
compared to the relative weight in FY 2006.
For those LTC–DRGs in which the average
charge within the LTC–DRG increase is less
than 8.3 percent, the relative weights for
those LTC–DRGs would decrease because the
average charge for each of those LTC–DRGs
is being divided by a larger number (that is,
the average charge across all LTC–DRGs). For
the reasons discussed above, we believe that
the changes in the LTC–DRG relative weights
for FY 2007, which include a significant
number of LTC–DRGs with lower relative
weights, would result in approximately a 1.3
percent decrease in estimated aggregate
LTCH PPS payments.
B. Effects of New Technology Add-On
Payments
In section II.G. of the preamble to this final
rule, we discuss add-on payments for new
medical services and technologies. As
explained in that section, we are no longer
required to ensure that any add-on payments
for new technology under section
1886(d)(5)(K) of the Act are budget neutral.
However, we are still providing an estimate
of the payment increases here, as they will
have an impact on total payments made in
FY 2007. New technology add-on payments
are limited to the lesser of 50 percent of the
costs of the technology, or 50 percent of the
costs in excess of the DRG payment for the
case. Because it is difficult to predict the
actual new technology add-on payment for
each case, we are estimating the increase in
payment for FY 2007 as if every claim with
these add-on payments will receive the
maximum add-on payment. As discussed in
section II.G. of the preamble to this final rule,
we are approving the X STOP Interspinous
Process Decompression System for new
technology add-on payments. As stated in the
proposed rule, the applicant estimated that
there would be a total of 2,124 patients (424
in DRG 499 and 1,700 in DRG 500) eligible
to receive the device in FY 2007. Therefore,
we estimate that payments for this
technology will increase overall FY 2007
payments by $9.35 million.
In addition, we are continuing to make
add-on payments in FY 2007 for two
technologies that were approved for FY 2006
new technology add-on payments: Restore
Rechargeable Implantable Neurostimulator
and GORE TAG. We estimate these payments
for these technologies will increase overall
FY 2007 payments by $6.01 million and
$16.61 million, respectively.
The total increase in payments for these
three new technologies, approximately
$31.97 million, is not reflected in the tables.
C. Effects of Requirements for Hospital
Reporting of Quality Data for Annual
Hospital Payment Update
In section IV.A. of the preamble to this
final rule, we discuss new requirements for
hospital reporting of quality data based on
our continuing experience with this program
and recent legislation. Section 5001(a) of
PO 00000
Frm 00476
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Pub. L. 109–171 (DRA) sets out extensive
new requirements for the Reporting Hospital
Quality Data for Annual Payment Update
(RHQDAPU) program. The RHQDAPU
program was established to implement
section 501(b) of Pub. L. 108–173 (MMA).
Section 5001(a) of Pub. L. 109–171 revised
the mechanism used to update the
standardized amount for payment for
hospital inpatient operating costs. New
sections 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(I) and (II) of the
Act provide that the payment update for FY
2007 and each subsequent fiscal year will be
reduced by 2.0 percentage points for any
‘‘subsection (d) hospital’’ that does not
submit certain quality data in a form and
manner, and at a time, specified by the
Secretary.
We have modeled the payment impact of
this change in Table 1 of this Appendix, and
discussed it in section VI. of this Appendix.
We discuss other policy changes we are
making to the RHQDAPU program in section
IV.A. of the preamble to this final rule.
We also note that, for the FY 2007 payment
update, hospitals must pass our validation
requirement of a minimum of 80 percent
reliability, based upon our chart-audit
validation process, for the first three quarters
of data from CY 2005. These data were due
to the QIO Clinical Warehouse by July 15,
2005 (first quarter CY 2005 discharges),
November 15, 2005 (second quarter CY 2005
discharges), and February 15, 2005 (third
quarter CY 2005 discharges). We have
continued our efforts to ensure that QIOs
provide assistance to all hospitals that wish
to submit data. In the preamble of this final
rule, we are providing additional validation
criteria to ensure that the quality data being
sent to CMS are accurate. The requirement of
5 charts per hospital will result in
approximately 19,000 charts per quarter total
submitted to the agency. We reimburse
hospitals for the cost of sending charts to the
Clinical Data Abstraction Center (CDAC) at
the rate of 12 cents per page for copying and
approximately $4.00 per chart for postage.
Our experience shows that the average chart
received at the CDAC is approximately 140
pages. Thus, the agency will have
expenditures of approximately $380,000 per
quarter to collect the charts. Given that we
reimburse for the data collection effort, we
believe that a requirement for five charts per
hospital per quarter represents a minimal
burden to the participating hospital.
D. Effects of Other Policy Changes Affecting
Sole Community Hospitals (SCHs) and
Medicare-Dependent, Small Rural Hospitals
(MDHs)
In section IV.C. of the preamble to this
final rule, we discuss the payment changes
for MDHs made by section 5003 of Pub. L.
109–171. We modeled the payment impact of
these changes in Table 1 of this Appendix
and discussed them in section VI. of this
Appendix.
In addition, in section IV.C.2. of the
preamble to this final rule, we discussed
changes to the data source and methodology
that we will use to compute the volume
decrease adjustment for MDHs and SCHs. If
certain requirements are met, this adjustment
may be made if the hospital’s total discharges
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
decrease by more than 5 percent from one
cost reporting period to the next. We do not
believe that these changes will have any
significant impact on Medicare payment to
these hospitals.
E. Effects of Policy on Payment for Direct
Costs of Graduate Medical Education
1. Determination of Weighted Average GME
PRAs for Merged Teaching Hospitals
In section IV.H.2. of the preamble to this
final rule, we discuss our changes related to
determining the weighted average GME PRA
for a merged teaching hospital. Our current
policy is that when two or more teaching
hospitals merge, we determine a weighted
PRA for the surviving merged hospital using
GME costs and resident data from the base
year cost report for each teaching hospital in
the merger. We are revising our policy to
determine a merged teaching hospital’s PRA
by using PRA data and FTE resident data
from the most recent settled cost reports of
the merging hospitals, rather than using the
direct GME cost data from the hospitals’ base
year cost report. This policy revision is
administrative in nature, and we do not
foresee that the revision will result in
payment increases to merged teaching
hospitals.
2. Determination of PRAs for New Teaching
Hospitals
In section IV.H.3. of the preamble to this
final rule, we discuss the methodology for
determining the hospital-specific PRA for
new teaching hospitals and we make a
change to the existing regulations at
§ 413.77(e) in order to specify a base period
for certain situations, that is, for new
teaching hospitals that did not have residents
on duty during the first month of the cost
reporting period in which the hospital
became a new teaching hospital. The base
period for these hospitals would be the next
cost reporting period following the cost
reporting period where any residents were on
duty at the new teaching hospital. Because
this change is administrative in nature, we do
not foresee that it will result in a financial
impact for FY 2007.
3. Requirements for Counting and
Appropriate Documentation of FTE Residents
In section IV.H.4. of the preamble to this
final rule, we are clarifying the policies that
apply in determining hospitals’ FTE resident
counts for Medicare GME payment purposes.
Because this is a clarification of existing
policy, there is no financial impact for FY
2007.
4. Resident Time Spent in Nonpatient Care
Activities as Part of an Approved Residency
Program
In section IV.H.5. of the preamble to this
final rule, we are clarifying our policy that,
with respect to residency training in
nonhospital settings, only the time residents
spend in patient care activities may be
counted for purposes of direct GME and IME
payments; and with respect to training in the
hospital, residents training in all areas of the
hospital complex may be counted for direct
GME purposes, but may only be counted for
IME purposes if the residents are furnishing
patient care. Because we are clarifying
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
existing policy, there is no financial impact
of this clarification for FY 2007.
F. Effects of Policy Changes Relating to
Emergency Services Under EMTALA
In section IV.J. of the preamble to this final
rule, we discuss several policy changes under
the EMTALA requirements. We are clarifying
that any participating hospital with
specialized capabilities or facilities, even if it
does not have a dedicated emergency
department, may not refuse to accept an
appropriate transfer if the hospital has the
capacity to treat the individual. We note that
this proposed revision does not reflect any
change in current CMS policy. We further
note that the revision will not require
hospitals without dedicated emergency
departments to open dedicated emergency
departments nor will it impose any EMTALA
obligation on these hospitals with respect to
individuals who come to the hospital as their
initial point of entry into the medical system
seeking a medical screening examination or
treatment for a medical condition. Thus,
there will be no impact on Medicare payment
policies or practices.
In addition, we are modifying the
definition of ‘‘labor’’ to state that a woman
experiencing contractions is in true labor
unless a physician, certified nurse-midwife,
or other qualified medical person acting
within his or her scope of practice as defined
in hospital medical staff bylaws and State
law, certifies that, after a reasonable time of
observation, the woman is in false labor. The
effect of this change will be to have a single,
uniform policy on the personnel who are
authorized to make a determination as to
whether an individual has an emergency
medical condition. This change will have a
Medicare payment effect, if any, only on
payments to physicians and nonphysician
practitioners under the physician fee
schedule. The amount of any impact will be
negligible because only a very small number
of Medicare beneficiaries are women of
childbearing age.
G. Effects of Policy on Rural Community
Hospital Demonstration Program
In section IV.L. of the preamble to this final
rule, we discuss our implementation of
section 410A of Pub. L. 108–173 that
required the Secretary to establish a
demonstration that will modify
reimbursement for inpatient services for up
to 15 small rural hospitals. Section
410A(c)(2) requires that ‘‘in conducting the
demonstration program under this section,
the Secretary shall ensure that the aggregate
payments made by the Secretary do not
exceed the amount which the Secretary
would have paid if the demonstration
program under this section was not
implemented.’’ As discussed in section IV.L.
of the preamble to this final rule, we are
satisfying this requirement by adjusting
national IPPS rates by a factor that is
sufficient to account for the added costs of
this demonstration. We estimate that the
average additional annual payment for FY
2007 that will be made to each participating
hospital under the demonstration will be
approximately $1,021,985. We based this
estimate on the recent historical experience
PO 00000
Frm 00477
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48345
of the difference between inpatient cost and
payment for hospitals that are participating
in the demonstration. For the 9 participating
hospitals, the total annual impact of the
demonstration program is estimated to be
$9,197,870. The adjustment factor to the
Federal rate used in calculating Medicare
inpatient prospective payments as a result of
the demonstration is 0.999905.
H. Effects of Policy on Hospitals-WithinHospitals and Satellite Facilities
In section VI.A.5. of the preamble to this
final rule, we discuss our revision of the
regulations for grandfathered HwHs,
grandfathered hospital satellites and
grandfathered satellite units at §§ 412.22(f),
412.22(h), and 412.25(e), respectively, to
allow these facilities to increase or decrease
their square footage or decrease the number
of beds without jeopardizing their
grandfathered status.
We estimate that there will be no net effect
on the treatment of such hospitals as a result
of this final rule. Payments to most HwHs
and satellites are made on a prospective rate
basis. For these facilities, our policy of
allowing either increases or decreases in
square footage would have no cost impact,
since the prospective rates are not affected by
a facility’s changes in square footage.
However, if grandfathered HwHs and
satellites facilities were to decrease their
number of beds, as provided by the policy
revision that we are finalizing, the effect of
this change will likely be a reduction in
Medicare payments to such hospitals and
satellite facilities because they will probably
have fewer discharges.
A small number of grandfathered HwHs
and satellite facilities, specifically children’s
and cancer hospitals and satellites of these
facilities, are paid on a cost-related basis
under the TEFRA system. Under that system,
increases or decreases in square footage may
cause corresponding increases or decreases
in the costs on which payments to the
facilities are based. However, any increases
in costs caused by increased square footage
may be offset by other factors. For example,
under our policy a grandfathered HwH or
satellite facility could reduce its number of
beds and the decreased utilization flowing
from this change may offset any added costs
resulting from an increase in the square
footage of a grandfathered hospital or satellite
facility paid under the TEFRA system.
Moreover, an increase in facility square
footage to modernize a physical facility or to
accommodate new equipment or technology
may also result in improved efficiency,
leading to reduced operating costs. The cost
savings resulting from these increases in
efficiency could also partially or entirely
offset any cost increases. Because we cannot
predict which grandfathered HwHs or
satellite facilities will opt to increase or
decrease their size or to decrease their bed
numbers, we are unable to quantify the
impact of these changes. (We are only aware
of one cancer hospital and three children’s
hospitals that are HwHs.) However, overall
we expect that there will be offsetting cost
increases and reductions, with no net change
in costs.
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
48346
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
I. Effects of Policy Changes to the
Methodology for Determining LTCH CCRs
and the Reconciliation of LTCH PPS Outlier
Payments
In section VI.A.6. of the preamble to this
final rule, we discuss our revision and
clarification of the existing policies
governing the determination of LTCHs’ CCRs
and the reconciliation of high-cost and shortstay outlier payments under the LTCH PPS.
Under the LTCH PPS high-cost outlier and
short-stay outlier policies, CCRs are used to
determine the estimated cost of the case by
multiplying the LTCH’s overall CCR by the
Medicare allowable charges for the case.
In that section, specifically, we present a
revision of our methodology for determining
the annual LTCH CCR ceiling. Based on the
most recent complete IPPS total CCR data, we
are establishing a total CCR ceiling of 1.321
under the LTCH PPS effective October 1,
2006. This ceiling was determined based on
the same data used to determine the separate
IPPS operating CCR ceiling (1.26) and IPPS
capital CCR ceiling (0.154). The LTCH CCR
ceiling determined under our current
‘‘combined’’ methodology will result in a
slightly higher LTCH CCR ceiling (that is,
1.26 + 0.154 = 1.414) for FY 2007 compared
to the ‘‘total’’ CCR ceiling of 1.321 for FY
2007. However, we note that, based on the
most recent complete IPPS and LTCH CCR
data, there are no LTCHs that currently have
a CCR that is greater than the ceiling of 1.321
(the highest LTCH CCR in the database of 392
LTCHs is 1.1277). Therefore, based on these
data, because no LTCHs currently have a CCR
that is in excess of the LTCH CCR ceiling we
are establishing for FY 2007 in this final rule,
we believe that there will be no significant
impact on LTCH PPS payments based on this
policy.
Also in section VI.A.6. of the preamble to
this final rule, we discuss our revision of our
methodology for determining the applicable
statewide average LTCH CCRs. Based on the
most recent complete IPPS total CCR data,
the LTCH PPS statewide average CCRs that
would be effective October 1, 2006, are
presented in Table 8C of the Addendum to
this final rule. A comparison of the statewide
average total CCRs in Table 8C of the
Addendum to this final rule to the
‘‘combined’’ statewide average CCRs that
would be calculated under our existing
methodology from the operating PPS
statewide average CCRs in Table 8A of the
Addendum to this final rule and the capital
PPS statewide average CCRs in Table 8B of
the Addendum to this final rule shows that
the changes to our methodology for
determining LTCH statewide average CCRs
will result in minor changes in the average
CCR for each state. In particular, the largest
decrease in a statewide average CCR (with
the exception of Maryland, which will be
assigned the national average total CCR as
discussed in section VI.A.6 of the preamble
of this final rule) will be in urban Wyoming
(-0.7 percent), and there is currently only one
LTCH located in Wyoming. The largest
increase in a statewide average CCR will be
in urban District of Columbia (0.7 percent),
and there are currently only two LTCHs
located in the District of Columbia. Thus, we
believe that the change in the methodology
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
for determining the applicable statewide
average LTCH CCRs established in this final
rule will result in no significant impact on
LTCH PPS payments.
In addition, in section VI.A.6 of the
preamble of this final rule we discussed our
codification in Subpart O of 42 CFR Part 412
the provisions governing the determination
of LTCHs’ CCRs and the reconciliation of
high cost and short-stay outlier payments
under the LTCH PPS, including
modifications and editorial clarifications to
our existing methodology. These changes are
similar or almost identical (except for the
minor clarifications and modifications) to our
current policy governing the determination of
LTCHs’ CCRs and the reconciliation of high
cost and short-stay outlier payments under
the LTCH PPS, and therefore, there will be
no expected impact if such policies were
codified.
J. Effects of Policy on Payment for Services
Furnished Outside the United States
In section VII. of the preamble to this final
rule, we discuss our clarification of our
regulations regarding payment for Medicare
services furnished outside the United States.
The clarification revises references in our
regulations that could be read to limit
Medicare payment for certain services
furnished outside the United States to
services furnished in Canada or Mexico,
contrary to the provisions of the Act. Only a
small fraction of Medicare claims are paid as
a result of services furnished outside of the
United States. Moreover, we are unaware of
any claims for payment that would otherwise
satisfy the requirements under the Act that
have not been paid due to the language in our
current regulations. Therefore, because we
are clarifying existing policy, this
clarification has little or no financial impact
for FY 2007.
K. Effects of Policy on Limitation on
Payments to SNFs
In section IX. of the preamble to this final
rule, we discuss the implementation of
section 5004 of Pub. L. 109–171, which
mandated that, for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2005,
Medicare payments to SNFs for certain
otherwise allowable debt amounts
attributable to the coinsurance amounts for
patients who are not certain specified dual
eligible individuals be reduced by 30
percent. We anticipate that the provisions of
section 5004 of Pub. L. 109–171 will result
in a savings to the Medicare program of $490
million over the 5-year period from FY 2006
to FY 2010.
L. Effects of Policy on CAP for Outpatient
Drugs and Biologicals Under Part B for the
Purpose of Calculating the Average Sales
Price
We have reviewed the effects of the
provisions of XII. of this final rule as required
by Executive Order 12866, the RFA, section
1102(b) of the Social Security Act, the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995, and
Executive Order 13132. We believe the
change to the definition of ‘‘unit’’ will be
beneficial to CAP drug vendors, as they will
be able to exclude from the ASP calculation,
for the initial 3-year contract period under
PO 00000
Frm 00478
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
the CAP, units of CAP drugs sold to an
approved CAP vendor for use under the CAP
drug program.
VIII. Impact of Changes in the Capital PPS
A. General Considerations
Fiscal year (FY) 2001 was the last year of
the 10-year transition period established to
phase in the PPS for hospital capital-related
costs. During the transition period, hospitals
were paid under one of two payment
methodologies: fully prospective or hold
harmless. Under the fully prospective
methodology, hospitals were paid a blend of
the capital Federal rate and their hospitalspecific rate (see § 412.340). Under the holdharmless methodology, unless a hospital
elected payment based on 100 percent of the
capital Federal rate, hospitals were paid 85
percent of reasonable costs for old capital
costs (100 percent for SCHs) plus an amount
for new capital costs based on a proportion
of the capital Federal rate (see § 412.344). As
we state in section V. of the preamble of this
final rule, with the 10-year transition period
ending with hospital cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2001 (FY
2002), beginning in FY 2002 capital
prospective payment system payments for
most hospitals are based solely on the capital
Federal rate. Therefore, we no longer include
information on obligated capital costs or
projections of old capital costs and new
capital costs, which were factors needed to
calculate payments during the transition
period, for our impact analysis.
In accordance with § 412.312, the basic
methodology for determining a capital PPS
payment is:
(Standard Federal Rate) × (DRG weight) ×
(Geographic Adjustment Factor (GAF)) ×
(Large Urban Add-on, if applicable) × (COLA
for hospitals located in Alaska and Hawaii)
× (1 + Disproportionate Share (DSH)
Adjustment Factor + Indirect Medical
Education (IME) Adjustment Factor, if
applicable).
In addition, hospitals may also receive
outlier payments for those cases that qualify
under the threshold established for each
fiscal year.
The data used in developing the impact
analysis presented below are taken from the
March 2006 update of the FY 2005 MedPAR
file and the March 2006 update of the
Provider-Specific File that is used for
payment purposes. Although the analyses of
the changes to the capital prospective
payment system do not incorporate cost data,
we used the March 2006 update of the most
recently available hospital cost report data
(FYs 2003 and 2004) to categorize hospitals.
Our analysis has several qualifications. First,
we do not make adjustments for behavioral
changes that hospitals may adopt in response
to policy changes. Second, due to the
interdependent nature of the IPPS, it is very
difficult to precisely quantify the impact
associated with each change. Third, we draw
upon various sources for the data used to
categorize hospitals in the tables. In some
cases (for instance, the number of beds), there
is a fair degree of variation in the data from
different sources. We have attempted to
construct these variables with the best
available sources overall. However, for
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
individual hospitals, some
miscategorizations are possible.
Using cases from the March 2006 update of
the FY 2005 MedPAR file, we simulated
payments under the capital PPS for FY 2006
and FY 2007 for a comparison of total
payments per case. Any short-term, acute
care hospitals not paid under the general
IPPS (Indian Health Service hospitals and
hospitals in Maryland) are excluded from the
simulations.
As we explain in section III.A. of the
Addendum to this final rule, payments are no
longer made under the regular exceptions
provision under §§ 412.348(b) through (e).
Therefore, we no longer use the actuarial
capital cost model (described in Appendix B
of the August 1, 2001 proposed rule (66 FR
40099)). We modeled payments for each
hospital by multiplying the capital Federal
rate by the GAF and the hospital’s case-mix.
We then added estimated payments for
indirect medical education, disproportionate
share, large urban add-on, and outliers, if
applicable. For purposes of this impact
analysis, the model includes the following
assumptions:
• We estimate that the Medicare case-mix
index will increase by 1.0 percent in both
FYs 2006 and 2007.
• We estimate that the Medicare
discharges will be 13.5 million in FY 2006
and 13.1 million in FY 2007 for a 3.0 percent
decrease from FY 2006 to FY 2007.
• The capital Federal rate was updated
beginning in FY 1996 by an analytical
framework that considers changes in the
prices associated with capital-related costs
and adjustments to account for forecast error,
changes in the case-mix index, allowable
changes in intensity, and other factors. The
FY 2007 update is 1.1 percent (see section
III.A.1.of the Addendum to this final rule).
• In addition to the FY 2007 update factor,
the tentative FY 2007 capital Federal rate was
calculated based on a tentative GAF/DRG
budget neutrality factor of 0.9994, a tentative
outlier adjustment factor of 0.9568, and an
exceptions adjustment factor of 0.9997.
B. Results
We used the actuarial model described
above to estimate the potential impact of our
changes for FY 2007 on total capital
payments per case, using a universe of 3,595
hospitals. As described above, the individual
hospital payment parameters are taken from
the best available data, including the March
2006 update of the FY 2005 MedPAR file, the
March 2006 update to the Provider-Specific
File, and the most recent cost report data
from the March 2006 update of HCRIS. In
Table III, we present a comparison of total
payments per case for FY 2006 compared to
FY 2007 based on the FY 2007 payment
policies. Column 2 shows estimates of
payments per case under our model for FY
2006. Column 3 shows estimates of payments
per case under our model for FY 2007.
Column 4 shows the total percentage change
in payments from FY 2006 to FY 2007. The
change represented in Column 4 includes the
1.1 percent update to the capital Federal rate,
a 0.0 percent increase in case-mix, changes
in the adjustments to the capital Federal rate
(for example, the effect of the hospital wage
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
index on the GAF), and reclassifications by
the MGCRB. The comparisons are provided
by: (1) Geographic location; (2) region; and
(3) payment classification.
The simulation results show that, on
average, capital payments per case can be
expected to increase 2.3 percent in FY 2007.
In addition to the 1.1 percent increase due to
the capital market basket update, this
projected increase in capital payments per
case is largely attributable to the change in
the DRG recalibration process methodology
for FY 2007 as discussed in section II.C. of
the preamble. The tentative GAF and
tentative outlier factor impose equal but
opposite effects on capital payments (¥0.2
percent and 0.2 percent, respectively), and
therefore have a zero net effect on capital
payments per case.
The results of our comparisons by
geographic location and by region are
consistent with the results we expected after
applying the changes to the DRG
recalibration methodology. The geographic
comparison shows that urban hospitals are
expected to experience a 2.3 percent increase
in IPPS capital payments per case, while
rural hospitals are expected to experience a
2.1 percent increase in capital payments per
case. This difference is mostly due to the
changes to the methodology used to
recalibrate DRGs discussed in section II.C. of
the preamble of this final rule. As discussed
in greater detail in that section of this final
rule, analysis of our current methodology for
setting DRG weights (using gross charges)
indicates that bias is introduced into the
weighting process. Specifically, we have also
observed that ancillary service cost centers,
in general, have higher charge markups than
routine and ICU service cost centers, and
therefore, higher weights for DRGs that use
more ancillary services as opposed to DRGs
that use more routine services. Surgical DRGs
tend to have charges concentrated in
ancillary cost center groups while medical
DRGs tend to have charges concentrated in
routine or ICU cost center groups. The bias
in our current methodology results in
artificially higher DRG relative weights for
hospitals that are generally more expensive,
such as teaching hospitals and specialty
hospitals. Hospitals with these characteristics
are generally found in urban locations.
The redistributive impact of our proposals
to reform the current DRG system was
evident in the capital impact analysis as
discussed in the proposed rule.
Consequently, the proposed rule impact
analysis showed greater capital increases per
case for rural hospitals, as expected, than for
hospitals in urban locations. In response to
comments on the proposed rule, significant
modifications were made to our DRG
proposals. The modifications made in this
final rule to our proposed changes to the DRG
system are intended to moderate the payment
redistribution, and the capital impact
analysis reflects those modifications
accordingly. Further mitigating the effects of
the changes is moving to a 3-year transition
period to apply the new methodology. The
capital impact was also somewhat affected by
the wage-index changes from the proposed
rule to the final rule because the GAF values
are derived from the wage index. The wage
PO 00000
Frm 00479
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48347
index used in the proposed rule included an
occupational mix component. Due to
circumstances as described in section III.C. of
the preamble to this final rule, the wage
index used in these calculations is tentative,
and will be updated in a future Federal
Register document, as well as on the CMS
Web site.
All regions are estimated to receive an
increase in total capital payments per case
from FY 2006 to FY 2007. Changes vary by
region from a minimum increase of 0.4
percent (Puerto Rico) urban to a maximum
increase of 3.2 percent (Pacific) urban. The
change in payments per case for all hospitals
is 2.3 percent and is similar to the change
indicated in the proposed rule. However, the
differences between urban and rural
hospitals in this final rule are noticeably less
than the differences observed in the proposed
rule. As previously discussed, the increases
in payments are largely attributable to
changes in the DRG recalibration
methodology, and the lesser degree of
difference between rural and urban
hospitals’’ capital payment increases from
the proposed rule and this final rule is due
to the modifications made to the proposed
DRG reforms. By type of ownership, the
increases in payment are similar among all
three types. Government hospitals and
proprietary hospitals are both projected to
have a 2.4 percent increase in total payments,
while payments to voluntary hospitals are
expected to increase 2.3 percent.
Section 1886(d)(10) of the Act established
the MGCRB. Before FY 2005, hospitals could
apply to the MGCRB for reclassification for
purposes of the standardized amount, wage
index, or both. Section 401(c) of Pub. L. 108–
173 equalized the standardized amounts
under the operating IPPS. Therefore,
beginning in FY 2005, there is no longer
reclassification for the purposes of the
standardized amounts; however, hospitals
still may apply for reclassification for
purposes of the wage index for FY 2007.
Reclassification for wage index purposes also
affects the GAF because that factor is
constructed from the hospital wage index.
As discussed in section III.H.5. of the
preamble of this final rule, procedural rules
were established in the FY 2006 final rule (70
FR 47382) to recognize the special
circumstances of section 508 hospital
reclassifications ending mid-year during FY
2007. Under these procedural rules, some
section 1886(d)(10) hospital reclassifications
are only in effect for the second half of the
fiscal year. These half fiscal year
reclassifications have implications for the
calculation of reclassified wage indices and
therefore, affect capital payments because
GAF values are calculated from the hospital
wage index.
To present the effects of the hospitals being
reclassified for FY 2007, we show the average
payments per case for reclassified hospitals
for each half of FY 2007 compared to the
average payments per case for the same time
period in FY 2006. The reclassified groups
are compared to all other nonreclassified
hospitals for the same time period. These
categories are further identified by urban and
rural designation. In general, the average
payments per case in the first half of FY 2007
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48348
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
is the same as the average payments per case
in the second half of FY 2007 with the
exception of urban reclassifications, which
decreases by 0.1 percent (2.5 percent to 2.4
percent) for the second half of FY 2007. Rural
nonreclassified hospitals are expected to
have the largest increases in payments (2.5
percent in both halves), as compared to the
2.0 percent increase for rural reclassified
hospitals (for both halves of FY 2007). Falling
between the percentage increase for rural
non-reclassified hospitals and the increase
for rural reclassified hospitals are the urban
hospitals. Reclassified (urban) hospitals are
projected to have increases of 2.5 percent and
2.4 percent in the first and second halves of
FY 2007, respectively, while nonreclassified
(urban) hospitals are projected to have a
slightly lesser increase of 2.3 percent.
As discussed in section VI.B. of the
preamble of this final rule, we are making a
technical revision to § 412.316(b) and
§ 412.320 to clarify that hospitals reclassified
as rural under § 412.103 are not eligible for
the large urban add-on or for capital DSH to
reflect our historic policy that hospitals
reclassified as rural under § 412.103 also are
considered rural under capital PPS
regulations. Currently, there are 38 hospitals
that reclassified under this regulation and
only 12 of these hospitals (about 0.3 percent
of all IPPS hospitals) will be affected by the
technical revisions to sections § 412.316(b)
and § 412.320 concerning the treatment of
hospitals reclassified as rural under section
§ 412.103. Based on the most recent available
data, we estimate that the impact of these
changes will be a less than 0.00001 percent
decrease in aggregate IPPS payments.
TABLE III.—COMPARISON OF TOTAL PAYMENTS PER CASE
[FY 2006 payments compared to FY 2007 payments]
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Number of
hospitals
By Geographic Location:
All hospitals ......................................................................................................................
Large urban areas (populations over 1 million) ...............................................................
Other urban areas (populations of 1 million of fewer) .....................................................
Rural areas .......................................................................................................................
Urban hospitals .................................................................................................................
0–99 beds ..................................................................................................................
100–199 beds ............................................................................................................
200–299 beds ............................................................................................................
300–499 beds ............................................................................................................
500 or more beds ......................................................................................................
Rural hospitals ..................................................................................................................
0–49 beds ..................................................................................................................
50–99 beds ................................................................................................................
100–149 beds ............................................................................................................
150–199 beds ............................................................................................................
200 or more beds ......................................................................................................
By Region:
Urban by Region ..............................................................................................................
New England .............................................................................................................
Middle Atlantic ...........................................................................................................
South Atlantic ............................................................................................................
East North Central .....................................................................................................
East South Central ....................................................................................................
West North Central ....................................................................................................
West South Central ...................................................................................................
Mountain ....................................................................................................................
Pacific ........................................................................................................................
Puerto Rico ................................................................................................................
Rural by Region ................................................................................................................
New England .............................................................................................................
Middle Atlantic ...........................................................................................................
South Atlantic ............................................................................................................
East North Central .....................................................................................................
East South Central ....................................................................................................
West North Central ....................................................................................................
West South Central ...................................................................................................
Mountain ....................................................................................................................
Pacific ........................................................................................................................
By Payment Classification:
All hospitals ......................................................................................................................
Large urban areas (populations over 1 million) ...............................................................
Other urban areas (populations of 1 million of fewer) .....................................................
Rural areas .......................................................................................................................
Teaching Status:
Non-teaching .............................................................................................................
Fewer than 100 Residents ........................................................................................
100 or more Residents ..............................................................................................
Urban DSH:
100 or more beds ...............................................................................................
Less than 100 beds ...........................................................................................
Rural DSH:
Sole Community (SCH/EACH) ...........................................................................
Referral Center (RRC/EACH) ............................................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00480
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Average
FY 2006
payments/
case
Average
FY 2007
payments/
case
3,595
1,441
1,149
1,005
2,590
651
867
492
413
167
1,005
348
370
174
68
45
753
849
731
513
796
617
673
751
827
1,005
513
422
469
516
564
642
771
870
746
524
814
632
691
769
845
1,027
524
433
481
526
574
652
2.3
2.5
2.1
2.1
2.3
2.4
2.7
2.4
2.2
2.1
2.1
2.5
2.5
2.0
1.8
1.6
2,590
128
357
388
395
165
157
374
149
424
53
1,005
19
72
176
125
180
116
193
81
43
796
853
873
755
782
720
783
740
787
920
347
513
686
518
497
547
476
540
464
535
616
814
870
893
770
802
733
799
755
811
949
349
524
699
532
509
558
486
550
473
544
631
2.3
2.0
2.3
2.0
2.6
1.8
2.1
2.0
3.1
3.2
0.4
2.1
1.9
2.6
2.2
2.0
2.2
2.0
1.9
1.6
2.4
3,595
1,450
1,158
987
753
848
730
515
771
869
746
526
2.3
2.5
2.1
2.1
2,511
843
241
630
765
1,100
645
782
1,125
2.5
2.2
2.2
1,520
347
821
543
840
558
2.3
2.7
385
199
464
569
475
580
2.2
1.9
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Change
48349
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE III.—COMPARISON OF TOTAL PAYMENTS PER CASE—Continued
[FY 2006 payments compared to FY 2007 payments]
Number of
hospitals
Average
FY 2006
payments/
case
Average
FY 2007
payments/
case
55
183
475
423
485
433
2.0
2.5
815
201
1,052
540
902
816
667
700
922
834
684
717
2.2
2.3
2.6
2.4
288
142
339
127
83
451
577
477
433
580
461
590
487
445
588
2.4
2.2
2.2
2.7
1.3
325
2,240
375
569
385
2,180
375
569
33
53
775
800
558
450
800
796
558
450
548
516
795
819
569
462
819
815
569
462
554
527
2.5
2.3
2.0
2.5
2.4
2.3
2.0
2.5
1.1
2.2
2,102
880
603
771
679
740
789
696
757
2.3
2.4
2.4
243
1,328
1,478
462
999
855
663
597
1,030
875
679
609
3.0
2.3
2.3
2.1
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Other Rural:
100 or more beds ........................................................................................
Less than 100 beds ....................................................................................
Urban teaching and DSH:
Both teaching and DSH ............................................................................................
Teaching and no DSH ...............................................................................................
No teaching and DSH ...............................................................................................
No teaching and no DSH ..........................................................................................
Rural Hospital Types:
Non special status hospitals ......................................................................................
RRC/EACH ................................................................................................................
SCH/EACH ................................................................................................................
Medicare-dependent hospitals (MDH) .......................................................................
SCH, RRC and EACH ...............................................................................................
Hospitals Reclassified by the Medicare Geographic Classification Review Board:
FY2007 Reclassifications:
All Urban Reclassified 1st Half ..................................................................................
All Urban Non-Reclassified 1st Half ..........................................................................
All Rural Reclassified 1st Half ...................................................................................
All Rural Non-Reclassified 1st Half ...........................................................................
All Urban Reclassified 2nd Half ................................................................................
All Urban Non-Reclassified 2nd Half .........................................................................
All Rural Reclassified 2nd Half ..................................................................................
All Rural Non-Reclassified 2nd Half ..........................................................................
All Section 401 Reclassified Hospitals ......................................................................
Other Reclassified Hospitals (Section 1886(d)(8)(B)) ...............................................
Type of Ownership:
Voluntary ...................................................................................................................
Proprietary .................................................................................................................
Government ...............................................................................................................
Medicare Utilization as a Percent of Inpatient Days:
0–25 ...........................................................................................................................
25–50 .........................................................................................................................
50–65 .........................................................................................................................
Over 65 ......................................................................................................................
IX. Impact of Changes Relating to the Loan
Program for Capital Cost Under the Health
Care Infrastructure Improvement Program
In section XI. of the preamble to this final
rule, we finalize the provisions of a
September 30, 2005 interim final rule with
comment period and the proposed changes in
a September 30, 2005 proposed rule relating
to the selection criteria and the forgiveness
of indebtedness for loans made to certain
hospitals engaged in research in the causes,
prevention, and treatment of cancer under
the Health Care Infrastructure Improvement
Program. This section of this final rule affects
qualifying hospitals as defined in section
1897 of the Act that have been selected to
receive funds under the loan program.
This provision will have little impact on
the Medicare Trust Fund. The Congress
provided $142 million for the loan program
effective July 1, 2004, through September 30,
2008, and of the $142 million, not more than
$2 million may be used for the
administration of the loan program for each
of the fiscal years (that is, 2004 through
2008).
X. Alternatives Considered
This final rule contains a range of policies,
including some changes related to specific
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
DRA and MMA provisions. The preamble of
this final rule provides descriptions of the
statutory provisions that are addressed,
identifies those policies when discretion has
been exercised, presents rationale for our
decisions and, where relevant, alternatives
that were considered.
In addition, we did not consider any
alternatives to the policies we are
implementing in this final rule relating to the
implementation of the loan program under
the Health Care Infrastructure Improvement
Program because the statute specifically
authorized the conditions under which the
Secretary may forgive a loan provided under
the program.
XI. Overall Conclusion
The changes in this final rule will affect all
classes of hospitals. Some hospitals are
expected to experience significant gains and
others less significant gains, but overall
hospitals are projected to experience positive
updates in IPPS payments in FY 2007. Table
I of section VI of this Appendix demonstrates
the estimated distributional impact of the
IPPS budget neutrality requirements for DRG
and wage index changes, for the hold
harmless transition for rural hospitals
formerly classified as urban, and for the wage
PO 00000
Frm 00481
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Change
index reclassifications under the MGCRB.
Table I also shows an overall increase of 3.4
percent in operating payments, which, in
conjunction with the estimated 2.0 percent
increase in capital payments to IPPS
providers shown in Table III of section VIII
of this Appendix, should result in a net
increase of $3.33 billion to IPPS providers.
The discussions presented in the previous
pages, in combination with the rest of this
final rule, constitute a regulatory impact
analysis.
XII. Accounting Statement
As required by OMB Circular A–4
(available at https://www.whitehousegov/omb/
circulars/a004/a-4.pdf), in Table IV below,
we have prepared an accounting statement
showing the classification of the
expenditures associated with the provisions
of this final rule. This table provides our best
estimate of the increase in Medicare
payments on providers as a result of the
changes to the IPPS, the LTCH case-mix, and
the limitation on payments to SNFs for bad
debt presented in this rule. All expenditures
are classified as transfers to Medicare
providers.
The Congress provided $142 million for
the loan program, effective July 1, 2004,
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
48350
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
through September 30, 2008. Of the $142
million, not more than $2 million may be
used for the administration of the loan
program for each of the fiscal years (that is
FY 2004 through FY 2008).
TABLE IV.—ACCOUNTING STATEMENT:
CLASSIFICATION OF ESTIMATED EXPENDITURES FROM FY 2006 TO FY
2007
Category annualized
monetized transfers
from whom to whom
Transfers $3.889
billion federal government to IPPS medicare providers,
LTCHs, and SNFs
Total ..........................
$3.889 Billion.
XIII. Executive Order 12866
In accordance with the provisions of
Executive Order 12866, the Office of
Management and Budget reviewed this final
rule.
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Appendix B: Recommendation of
Update Factors for Operating Cost
Rates of Payment for Inpatient Hospital
Services
I. Background
Section 1886(e)(4)(A) of the Act requires
that the Secretary, taking into consideration
the recommendations of the Medicare
Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC),
recommend update factors for inpatient
hospital services for each fiscal year that take
into account the amounts necessary for the
efficient and effective delivery of medically
appropriate and necessary care of high
quality. Under section 1886(e)(5)(B) of the
Act, we are required to publish factors
recommended by the Secretary in the final
IPPS rule. Accordingly, we are publishing
our final recommendations for the
appropriate update factors for the IPPS
standardized amount, the hospital-specific
rates for SCHs and MDHs, and the rate-ofincrease limits for hospitals and hospital
units excluded from the IPPS.
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(i)(XX) of the Act, as
amended by section 5001(a) of Pub. L. 109–
171, sets the FY 2007 percentage increase in
the operating cost standardized amount equal
to the rate-of-increase in the hospital market
basket for IPPS hospitals in all areas, subject
to the hospital submitting quality
information under rules established by the
Secretary under section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of
the Act. For hospitals that do not provide
these data, the update is equal to the market
basket percentage increase less 2.0
percentage points.
Consistent with current law, based on the
Office of the Actuary’s second quarter 2006
forecast of the FY 2007 market basket
increase of 3.4 percent, the FY 2007 update
to the standardized amount for hospitals
subject to the acute inpatient prospective
payment system is 3.4 percent (that is, the
market basket rate-of-increase) for hospitals
in all areas, provided the hospital submits
quality data in accordance with our rules. For
hospitals that do not submit quality data, the
update to the standardized amount is 1.4
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
percent (that is, the market basket rate-ofincrease minus 2.0 percentage points). (In the
proposed rule, the most recent estimate of the
market basket increase was also 3.4 percent.)
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(iv) of the Act sets the
FY 2007 percentage increase in the hospitalspecific rates applicable to SCHs and MDHs
equal to the rate set forth in section
1886(b)(3)(B)(i) of the Act (that is, the same
update factor as for all other hospitals subject
to the IPPS, or the rate-of-increase in the
market basket). Therefore, the update to the
hospital-specific rates applicable to SCHs
and MDHs is also 3.4 percent.
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ii) of the Act is used
for purposes of determining the percentage
increase in the rate-of-increase limits for
children’s and cancer hospitals. Section
1886(b)(3)(B)(ii) of the Act sets the
percentage increase in the rate-of-increase
limits equal to the market basket percentage
increase for years after FY 2002. In
accordance with § 403.752(a) of the
regulations, RNHCIs are paid under § 413.40,
which also uses section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ii) of
the Act to update the percentage increase in
the rate-of-increase limits. Section
1886(j)(3)(C) of the Act addresses the increase
factor for the Federal prospective payment
rate of IRFs. Section 123 of Pub. L. 106–113,
as amended by section 307(b) of Pub. L. 106–
554, provides the statutory authority for
updating payment rates under the LTCH PPS.
Some LTCHs and IPFs are transitioning to
100 percent of the Federal rate and currently
receive a blend of reasonable cost-based
payments computed under the TEFRA
methodology and their respective Federal
payment rates. As discussed below, the
transition ends for LTCHs (not defined as
new and that have not elected to be paid
under 100 percent of the Federal rate) for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2006. Therefore, because no
portion of LTCHs’ prospective payments will
be based on reasonable costs for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2006, we are not providing an FY
2007 rate-of-increase adjustment under
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ii) of the Act for LTCHs.
Currently, children’s hospitals, cancer
hospitals and RNHCIs are the remaining
three types of hospitals still reimbursed fully
under reasonable costs. As we discuss in
section IV. of the Addendum to this final
rule, we are providing the FY 2007 IPPS
operating market basket percentage increase
(3.4 percent) that is being used to update the
target limits for children’s hospitals, cancer
hospitals, and RNHCIs. (In the proposed rule,
the most recent estimate of the market basket
increase was also 3.4 percent for children’s
hospitals, cancer hospitals, and RNHCIs.)
Effective since cost reporting periods
beginning FY 2003, LTCHs have been paid
under the LTCH PPS, which was
implemented with a 5-year transition period
for LTCHs not defined as new under
§ 412.23(e)(4) (hereafter referred to as
‘‘existing’’). (Refer to 67 FR 55954, August 30,
2002.) An existing LTCH could have elected
to be paid on 100 percent of the Federal
prospective rate at the start of any of its cost
reporting periods during the 5-year transition
period. During this transition period, if an
existing LTCH did not elect to be paid 100
PO 00000
Frm 00482
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
percent of the Federal prospective payment
rate, it received a payment which consisted
of a blend of its reasonable cost-based
payment (subject to the TEFRA rate-ofincrease limits) and the Federal prospective
payment rate. Because the transition period
ends with LTCH cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006, those
LTCHs who now receive blended payments
will be paid based on 100 percent of the
Federal prospective rate.
Effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after January 1, 2005, IPFs
are paid under the IPF PPS. IPF PPS
payments are based on a Federal per diem
rate that is based on the sum of the average
routine operating, ancillary, and capital costs
for each patient day of psychiatric care in an
IPF, adjusted for budget neutrality. During a
transition period between January 1, 2005
and January 1, 2008, existing IPFs are paid
based on a blend of the reasonable cost-based
payments, subject to the TEFRA limit, and
the Federal per diem base rate. For cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
January 1, 2008, IPFs will be paid based on
100 percent of the Federal per diem rate. For
purposes of the update factor for FY 2007,
the portion of the IPF PPS transitional blend
payment based on reasonable costs would be
determined by updating the IPF’s TEFRA
limit by the current estimate of the excluded
hospital market basket, which is estimated to
be 3.4 percent. The update factor of 4.3
percent to the Federal per diem rate for July
1, 2006, through June 30, 2007, was provided
in the RY 2007 IPF final rule (71 FR 27046).
IRFs are paid under the IRF PPS for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
January 1, 2002. For cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2002 (FY
2003), and thereafter, the Federal prospective
payments to IRFs are based on 100 percent
of the adjusted Federal IRF prospective
payment amount, updated annually. (Refer to
the IRF final rule (69 FR 45721).) In the FY
2007 IRF PPS proposed rule (71 FR 28106
and 28125), we proposed an update factor of
3.4 percent to the IRF PPS for FY 2007. The
final update factor for the FY 2007 IRF PPS
will be published in the FY 2007 IRF PPS
final rule.
Comment: One commenter believed the
market basket update of 3.4 percent is
inadequate. The commenter claimed that
data for 1998 through 2006 indicate that
hospital costs increased 37.9 percent, while
Medicare payments increased 19.7 percent,
resulting in a shortfall of $4.4 billion. The
commenter noted that continual
underfunding by CMS will further threaten
the financial viability of not-for-profit
hospitals in Michigan, thus limiting their
ability to provide service to Medicare
beneficiaries and others.
Response: The current market basket
forecast update of 3.4 percent is based on
Global Insight, Inc.’s (GII) 2006 second
quarter forecast with historical data through
the first quarter of 2006. GII is a nationally
recognized economic and financial
forecasting firm that contracts with CMS to
forecast the components of the market
baskets. In the FY 2006 IPPS rule, we noted
that over the last several years, dramatic
fluctuations in the price of certain costs
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
bajohnson on PROD1PC67 with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
(mainly energy costs) have made it difficult
to forecast the IPPS market basket. With our
input and consultation, GII recently
evaluated and modified its forecasting
models to help enhance their accuracy. GII’s
latest forecast is based on these improved
models and takes into account national and
global economic trends.
We will continue to monitor both the
accuracy of our market basket updates and
the profitability of IPPS hospitals, as well as
work with GII to ensure the most accurate
updates possible.
Comment: One commenter was concerned
that GII’s methodology has a built-in bias of
under projecting during the period when the
overall economy is transitioning from a high
growth and low inflation era to a low growth
and high inflation period. The commenter
explained that, during a transition period, the
extrapolation of historical data tends to have
larger projection variances and therefore
adjustments should be made to correct these
systematic projection biases during the time
of major business cycle reversals. As a result,
the commenter recommended that CMS
include an adjustment in its projection
methodology to correct for this systematic
bias or adjust the projection error in its
subsequent years’ payments.
Response: CMS and GII recognize the
complexities associated with projecting
prices during times of major business cycle
reversals. GII includes adjustments in their
forecasts to account for these systematic
biases. GII employs a simultaneous equation
approach to solve both macro and micro
simulation models for the underlying
components of the hospital market basket.
Using this simultaneous approach facilitates
the accurate inclusion of broader economic
conditions, such as economy-wide growth
and inflationary pressures, to be more
accurately reflected in the micro level
components that comprise the market basket.
In addition, as part of these micro models,
underlying businesses cycles, seasonal
changes, and market fluctuations are
incorporated to ensure forecasts accurately
control for these market conditions during
forecast cycles.
Comment: One commenter was concerned
that it is consistently disproportionately
negatively affected by Medicare rate policies.
The commenter recommended that no
hospital receive less payments in the current
year than the previous year or optimally CMS
should provide a minimum payment increase
of 2 percent.
Response: We thank the commenter for its
comments. However, as noted above, section
1886(b)(3)(B)(i)(XX) of the Act, as amended
by section 5001(a) of Pub. L. 109–171, ties
the FY 2007 percentage increase in the
operating cost standardized amount equal to
the rate-of-increase in the hospital market
basket for IPPS hospitals in all areas.
Therefore, we do not have the statutory
authority to implement the changes to the
update factors that the commenter is
requesting.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:09 Aug 17, 2006
Jkt 208001
II. Secretary’s Final Recommendation for
Updating the Prospective Payment System
Standardized Amounts
In recommending an update, the Secretary
takes into account the factors such as the
recommendations of MedPAC, the long-term
solvency of the Medicare Trust Funds, and
the capacity of the hospital industry to
continually provide access to high quality
care to Medicare beneficiaries through
adequate payment to health care providers.
In years prior to FY 2006, in making a
recommendation, we included an update
framework that analyzed hospital
productivity, scientific and technological
advances, practice pattern changes, changes
in case-mix, the effects of reclassification on
recalibration and forecast error correction. As
we stated in the FY 2007 proposed rule, we
are no longer including this analysis in our
recommendation for the update (71 FR
24420).
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule, we
proposed to recommend an update of 2.95
percent, which reflected the CMS Office of
the Actuary’s most recent forecast of the FY
2007 market basket increase minus an
adjustment factor of 0.45 percentage points
based on the FY 2007 President’s budget. We
did not receive any public comments
regarding this issue. In this final rule, we are
also recommending an update for IPPS
hospitals based on the forecasted market
basket increase of 3.4 percent from the Office
of the Actuary’s most recent (second quarter)
2006 forecast of the FY 2007 market basket
increase minus an adjustment factor of 0.45
percentage points based on the FY 2007
President’s budget. Thus, the Secretary’s final
recommendation for the update to the IPPS
standardized amount for all hospitals is 2.95
percentage points for hospitals that provide
the required quality data.
In addition to making a recommendation
for IPPS hospitals, in accordance with
section 1886(e)(4)(A) of the Act, we are also
recommending update factors for all other
types of hospitals. Using the 2006 second
quarter forecast from the Office of the
Actuary of the FY 2007 market basket
increase and an adjustment factor based on
the FY 2007 President’s budget, for FY 2007,
for SCHs and MDHs, we are also
recommending an update of 2.95 percent.
III. Secretary’s Final Recommendation for
Updating the Rate-of-Increase Limits for
Excluded Hospitals and Hospital Units
We did not receive any public comments
concerning our proposed recommendations
for updating the rate-of-increase for FY 2007
for cancer hospitals, RNHCIs, and children’s
hospitals. Our final recommendation does
not differ from the proposed
recommendation. The second quarter forecast
from the Office of the Actuary of the FY 2007
market basket increase is also 3.4 percent for
these excluded hospitals and hospital units.
Thus, using an adjustment factor based on
the FY 2007 President’s budget, the
Secretary’s final recommendation is for a
2.95 percent increase to the target limits for
cancer hospitals, RNHCIs, and children’s
hospitals.
PO 00000
Frm 00483
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48351
Further, we did not receive any public
comments concerning our proposed
recommendations for the update factors for
IPFs. For IPFs that are currently paid a blend
of reasonable cost-based (subject to the
TEFRA limits) and Federal prospective
payment amounts, based on the estimate
from the Office of the Actuary and an
adjustment factor from the FY 2007
President’s budget, in the proposed rule, we
recommended an update factor of 3.15
percent for the portion of the payment that
is based on reasonable costs, subject to the
TEFRA limits. Based on second quarter data
from the Office of the Actuary and an
adjustment factor from the FY 2007
President’s budget, we are recommending a
final update of 2.95 percent for the portion
of the payment that is based on reasonable
costs, subject to the TEFRA limits.
Consistent with the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
proposed rule (71 FR 4648), in the FY 2007
IPPS proposed rule, we recommended that
the Federal rate remain unchanged for FY
2007. In this final rule, consistent with the
RY 2007 LTCH final rule (71 FR 27826), we
are recommending that the Federal rate to the
LTCH PPS remain unchanged for FY 2007.
In the RY 2007 IPF PPS proposed rule (71
FR 3620) and in the FY 2006 IPPS proposed
rule, we proposed an update factor of 4.5
percent to the IPF PPS for RY 2007. The
proposed update reflected an increase from
the 18-month period beginning January 1,
2005, when the IPF PPS was first adopted.
However, in the RY 2007 IPF final rule (71
FR 27040), we recommended an update
factor of 4.3 percent. Consistent with the RY
2007 IPF final rule, in this IPPS final rule,
we are recommending an update factor of 4.3
percent for IPFs.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule,
consistent with the President’s FY 2007
budget, we recommended the Federal rate to
the IRF PPS remain unchanged for FY 2007.
We note, as mentioned above, in the FY 2007
IRF PPS proposed rule (71 FR 281206 and
28125), we proposed an update factor of 3.4
percent to the IRF PPS for FY 2007. The final
update factor for the FY 2007 IRF PPS will
be published in the FY 2007 IRF PPS final
rule. Therefore, in this final rule, consistent
with FY 2007 IRF PPS final rule, we are
recommending the update factor that will be
published in the FY 2007 IRF PPS final rule.
We refer readers to the FY 2007 IRF PPS final
rule to view the update factor.
IV. Secretary’s Recommendation for
Updating the Capital Prospective Payment
Amounts
Because the operating and capital
prospective payment systems remain
separate, we are continuing to use separate
updates for operating and capital payments.
The final update to the capital payment rates
is discussed in section III. of the Addendum
to this final rule.
[FR Doc. 06–6692 Filed 8–1–06; 4:00 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\18AUR2.SGM
18AUR2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 160 (Friday, August 18, 2006)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 47870-48351]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 06-6692]
[[Page 47869]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Part II
Department of Health and Human Services
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
42 CFR Parts 409, 410, 412, et al.
Revision to Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment Systems--2007 FY
Occupational Mix Adjustment to Wage Index; Implementation; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 160 / Friday, August 18, 2006 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 47870]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Parts 409, 410, 412, 413, 414, 424, 485, 489, and 505
[CMS-1488-F; CMS-1287-F; CMS-1320-F; and CMS-1325-IFC4]
RINs 0938-AO12; 0938-AO03; 0938-AN93; and 0938-AN58
Medicare Program; Changes to the Hospital Inpatient Prospective
Payment Systems and Fiscal Year 2007 Rates; Fiscal Year 2007
Occupational Mix Adjustment to Wage Index; Health Care Infrastructure
Improvement Program; Selection Criteria of Loan Program for Qualifying
Hospitals Engaged in Cancer-Related Health Care and Forgiveness of
Indebtedness; and Exclusion of Vendor Purchases Made Under the
Competitive Acquisition Program (CAP) for Outpatient Drugs and
Biologicals Under Part B for the Purpose of Calculating the Average
Sales Price (ASP)
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Final rules and interim final rule with comment period.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We are revising the Medicare hospital inpatient prospective
payment systems (IPPS) for operating and capital-related costs to
implement changes arising from our continuing experience with these
systems, and to implement a number of changes made by the Deficit
Reduction Act of 2005 (Pub. L. 109-171). In addition, in the Addendum
to this final rule, we describe the changes to the amounts and factors
used to determine the rates for Medicare hospital inpatient services
for operating costs and capital-related costs. We also are setting
forth rate-of-increase limits as well as policy changes for hospitals
and hospital units excluded from the IPPS that are paid in full or in
part on a reasonable cost basis subject to these limits. These changes
are applicable to discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2006.
In this final rule, we discuss public comments we received on our
proposals to refine the diagnosis-related group (DRG) system under the
IPPS to better recognize severity of illness among patients--to use a
hospital-specific relative value (HSRV) cost center weighting
methodology to adjust DRG relative weights; and to implement
consolidated severity-adjusted DRGs or alternative severity adjustment
methods.
Among the other policy changes that we are making are those changes
related to: limited revisions of the reclassification of cases to DRGs;
the long-term care (LTC)-DRGs and relative weights; the wage data,
including the occupational mix data, used to compute the wage index;
applications for new technologies and medical services add-on payments;
payments to hospitals for the direct and indirect costs of graduate
medical education; submission of hospital quality data; payments to
sole community hospitals and Medicare-dependent, small rural hospitals;
and provisions governing emergency services under the Emergency Medical
Treatment and Labor Act of 1986 (EMTALA).
We are responding to requested public comments on a number of other
issues that include performance-based hospital payments for services
and health information technology, as well as how to improve health
data transparency for consumers.
In addition, we are responding to public comments received on a
proposed rule issued in the Federal Register on May 17, 2006 that
proposed to revise the methodology for calculating the occupational mix
adjustment to the wage index for the FY 2007 hospital inpatient
prospective payment system by applying an adjustment to 100 percent of
the wage index using new 2006 occupational mix survey data collected
from hospitals.
We are finalizing two policy documents published in the Federal
Register relating to the implementation of the Health Care
Infrastructure Improvement Program, a hospital loan program for cancer
research, established under the Medicare Prescription Drug,
Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003.
This final rule also revises the definition of the term ``unit'' to
specify the exclusion of units of drugs sold to approved Medicare
Competitive Acquisition Program (CAP) vendors for use under the CAP
from average sales price (ASP) calculations for a period of up to 3
years, at which time we will reevaluate our policy.
DATES: Effective Dates: The provisions of these final rules are
effective on October 1, 2006, with the exception of the provisions in
Sec. 412.8, Sec. 414.802, and the procedures for withdrawing or
terminating reclassifications established in section III.H.4. of the
preamble. The provisions of Sec. 412.8, Sec. 414.802, and the
procedures for withdrawing or terminating reclassifications established
in section II.H.4. of the preamble are effective August 18, 2006. This
rule is a major rule as defined in 5 U.S.C. 804(2). Pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A), we are submitting a report to the Congress on this
rule on August 1, 2006.
Comment Date: We will consider comments on the exclusion of CAP
drugs from the ASP calculation (Sec. 414.802) as discussed in section
XII. of the preamble of this final rule, if we receive them at one of
the addresses provided below, no later than 5 p.m. on October 2, 2006.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, on section XII. of this rule, please refer to
file code CMS-1325-IFC4.
Because of staff and resource limitations, we cannot accept
comments by facsimile (FAX) transmission.
You may submit comments in one of four ways (no duplicates,
please):
1. Electronically. You may submit electronic comments on specific
issues in this regulation to https://www.cms.hhs.gov/eRulemaking. Click
on the link ``Submit electronic comments on CMS regulations with an
open comment period.'' (Attachments should be in Microsoft Word,
WordPerfect, or Excel; however, we prefer Microsoft Word.)
2. By regular mail. You may mail written comments (one original and
two copies) to the following address ONLY: Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, Department of Health and Human Services, Attention:
CMS-1325-IFC4, P.O. Box 8011, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed comments to be received
before the close of the comment period.
3. By express or overnight mail. You may send written comments (one
original and two copies) to the following address ONLY: Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services, Department of Health and Human Services,
Attention: CMS-1325-IFC4, Mail Stop C4-26-05, 7500 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
4. By hand or courier. If you prefer, you may deliver (by hand or
courier) your written comments (one original and two copies) before the
close of the comment period to one of the following addresses. If you
intend to deliver your comments to the Baltimore address, please call
telephone number (410) 786-7195 in advance to schedule your arrival
with one of our staff members. Room 445-G, Hubert H. Humphrey Building,
200 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20201; or 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
(Because access to the interior of the HHH Building is not readily
available to
[[Page 47871]]
persons without Federal Government identification, commenters are
encouraged to leave their comments in the CMS drop slots located in the
main lobby of the building. A stamp-in clock is available for persons
wishing to retain a proof of filing by stamping in and retaining an
extra copy of the comments being filed.)
Comments mailed to the addresses indicated as appropriate for hand
or courier delivery may be delayed and received after the comment
period.
For information on viewing public comments, see the beginning of
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Marc Hartstein, (410) 786-4548, Operating Prospective Payment,
Diagnosis-Related Groups (DRGs), Wage Index, Occupational Mix
Adjustment, New Medical Services and Technology Add-On Payments,
Hospital Geographic Reclassifications, Sole Community Hospital,
Disproportionate Share Hospital, and Medicare-Dependent, Small Rural
Hospital Issues.
Tzvi Hefter, (410) 786-4487, Capital Prospective Payment, Excluded
Hospitals, Graduate Medical Education, Critical Access Hospitals, Long-
Term Care (LTC)-DRGs, and Terms of Hospital Loans under Health Care
Infrastructure Improvement Program Issues.
Siddhartha Mazumdar, (410) 786-6673, Rural Community Hospital
Demonstration Issues.
Sheila Blackstock, (410) 786-3502, Quality Data for Annual Payment
Update Issues.
Thomas Valuck, (410) 786-7479, Hospital Value-Based Purchasing Issues.
Frederick Grabau, (410) 786-0206, Services in Foreign Hospitals Issues.
Brian Reitz, (410) 786-5001, Obsolete Paper Claims Forms Issues.
Melinda Jones, (410) 786-7069, Loan Forgiveness Criteria for Health
Care Infrastructure Improvement Program.
Corinne Axelrod, (410) 786-5620, Competitive Acquisition Program (CAP)
for Part B Drugs Issues.
Angela Mason, (410) 786-7452, Payment for Covered Outpatient Drugs and
Biologicals Issues.
Submitting Comments: We welcome comments from the public on all
issues set forth in this rule to assist us in fully considering issues
and developing policies. You can assist us by referencing the file code
CMS-1325-IFC4 and the specific ``issue identifier'' that precedes the
section on which you choose to comment.
Inspection of Public Comments: All comments received before the
close of the comment period are available for viewing by the public,
including any personally identifiable or confidential business
information that is included in a comment. We post all comments
received before the close of the comment period on a public Web site as
soon as possible after they are received: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
eRulemaking. Clink on the link ``Electronic Comments on CMS
Regulations'' on that Web site to view public comments.
Comments received timely will also be available for public
inspection as they are received, generally beginning approximately 3
weeks after publication of a document, at the headquarters of the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, 7500 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, Maryland 21244, Monday through Friday of each week from 8:30
a.m. to 4 p.m. To schedule an appointment to view public comments,
phone 1-800-743-3951.
Electronic Access
This Federal Register document is also available from the Federal
Register online database through GPO Access, a service of the U.S.
Government Printing Office. Free public access is available on a Wide
Area Information Server (WAIS) through the Internet and via
asynchronous dial-in. Internet users can access the database by using
the World Wide Web; the Superintendent of Documents' home page address
is https://www.gpoaccess.gov/, by using local WAIS client software, or
by telnet to swais.access.gpo.gov, then login as guest (no password
required). Dial-in users should use communications software and modem
to call (202) 512-1661; type swais, then login as guest (no password
required).
Acronyms
AHA American Hospital Association
AHIMA American Health Information Management Association
AHRO Agency for Health Care Research and Quality
AMI Acute myocardial infarction
AOA American Osteopathic Association
APR DRG All Patient Refined Diagnosis-Related Group System
ASC Ambulatory surgical center
ASP Average sales price
AWP Average wholesale price
BBA Balanced Budget Act of 1997, Pub. L. 105-33
BBRA Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP [State Children's Health Insurance
Program] Balanced Budget Refinement Act of 1999, Pub. L. 106-113
BIPA Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP [State Children's Health Insurance
Program] Benefits Improvement and Protection Act of 2000, Pub. L. 106-
554
BLS Bureau of Labor Statistics
AH Critical access hospital
AP Competitive Acquisition Program
CART CMS Abstraction & Reporting Tool
CBSAs Core-based statistical areas
CC Complication or comorbidity
CDAC Clinical Data Abstraction Center
CIPI Capital input price index
CPI Consumer price index
CMI Case-mix index
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
CMSA Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Area
COBRA Consolidated Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1985, Pub. L. 99-272
CPI Consumer price index
CRNA Certified registered nurse anesthetist
CY Calendar year
DRA Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, Pub. L. 109-171
DRG Diagnosis-related group
DSH Disproportionate share hospital
ECI Employment cost index
EMR Electronic medical record
EMTALA Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act of 1986, Pub. L. 99-
272
FDA Food and Drug Administration
FFY Federal fiscal year
FIPS Federal information processing standards
FQHC Federally qualified health center
FTE Full-time equivalent
FY Fiscal year
GAAP Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
GAF Geographic Adjustment Factor
GME Graduate medical education
HCAHPS Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems
HCFA Health Care Financing Administration
HCRIS Hospital Cost Report Information System
HHA Home health agency
HHS Department of Health and Human Services
HIC Health insurance card
HIPAA Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, Pub.
L. 104-191
HIPC Health Information Policy Council
HIS Health information system
HIT Health information technology
HMO Health maintenance organization
HSA Health savings account
HSCRC Maryland Health Services Cost Review Commission
[[Page 47872]]
HSRV Hospital-specific relative value
HSRVcc Hospital-specific relative value cost center
HQA Hospital Quality Alliance
HQI Hospital Quality Initiative
HwH Hospital-within-a-hospital
ICD-9-CM International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision,
Clinical Modification
ICD-10-PCS International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Edition,
Procedure Coding System
ICU Intensive care unit
IHS Indian Health Service
IME Indirect medical education
IOM Institute of Medicine
IPF Inpatient psychiatric facility
IPPS Acute care hospital inpatient prospective payment system
IRF Inpatient rehabilitation facility
IRP Initial residency period
JCAHO Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations
LAMCs Large area metropolitan counties
LTC-DRG Long-term care diagnosis-related group
LTCH Long-term care hospital
MCE Medicare Code Editor
MCO Managed care organization
MCV Major cardiovascular condition
MDC Major diagnostic category
MDH Medicare-dependent, small rural hospital
MedPAC Medicare Payment Advisory Commission
MedPAR Medicare Provider Analysis and Review File
MEI Medicare Economic Index
MGCRB Medicare Geographic Classification Review Board
MMA Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of
2003, Pub. L. 108-173
MRHFP Medicare Rural Hospital Flexibility Program
MSA Metropolitan Statistical Area
NAICS North American Industrial Classification System
NCD National coverage determination
NCHS National Center for Health Statistics
NCQA National Committee for Quality Assurance
NCVHS National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics
NECMA New England County Metropolitan Areas
NICU Neonatal intensive care unit
NQF National Quality Forum
NTIS National Technical Information Service
NVHRI National Voluntary Hospital Reporting Initiative
OES Occupational employment statistics
OIG Office of the Inspector General
OMB Executive Office of Management and Budget
O.R. Operating room
OSCAR Online Survey Certification and Reporting (System)
PRM Provider Reimbursement Manual
PPI Producer price index
PMSAs Primary metropolitan statistical areas
PPS Prospective payment system
PRA Per resident amount
ProPAC Prospective Payment Assessment Commission
PRRB Provider Reimbursement Review Board
PS&R Provider Statistical and Reimbursement (System)
QIG Quality Improvement Group, CMS
QIO Quality Improvement Organization
RHC Rural health clinic
RHQDAPU Reporting hospital quality data for annual payment update
RNHCI Religious Nonmedical Health Care Institution
RRC Rural referral center
RUCAs Rural-urban commuting area codes
RY Rate year
SAF Standard Analytic File
SCH Sole community hospital
SFY State fiscal year
SIC Standard Industrial Classification
SNF Skilled nursing facility
SOCs Standard occupational classifications
SOM State Operations Manual
SSA Social Security Administration
SSI Supplemental Security Income
TAG Technical Advisory Group
TEFRA Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982, Pub. L. 97-248
UHDDS Uniform hospital discharge data set
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. Summary
1. Acute Care Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment System
(IPPS)
2. Hospitals and Hospital Units Excluded from the IPPS
a. Inpatient Rehabilitation Facilities (IRFs)
b. Long-Term Care Hospitals (LTCHs)
c. Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities (IPFs)
3. Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
4. Payments for Graduate Medical Education (GME)
B. Provisions of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA)
C. Summary of the Provisions of the FY 2007 IPPS and FY 2007
Occupational Mix Adjustment to the Wage Index Proposed Rules
1. DRG Reclassifications and Recalibrations of Relative Weights
2. Changes to the Hospital Wage Index
3. Other Decisions and Changes to the IPPS for Operating Costs,
GME Costs, and Promoting Hospitals' Effective Use of Health
Information Technology
4. Changes to the PPS for Capital-Related Costs
5. Changes for Hospitals and Hospital Units Excluded from the
IPPS
6. Payments for Services Furnished Outside the United States
7. Payment for Blood Clotting Factor Administered to Inpatients
with Hemophilia
8. Limitation on Payments to Skilled Nursing Facilities for Bad
Debt
9. Determining Prospective Payment Operating and Capital Rates
and Rate-of-Increase Limits
10. Impact Analysis
11. Recommendation of Update Factors for Operating Cost Rates of
Payment for Inpatient Hospital Services
12. Discussion of Medicare Payment Advisory Commission
Recommendations
13. Appendix C and Appendix D
D. Public Comments Received in Response to the FY 2007 IPPS and
FY 2007 Occupational Mix Adjustment to the Wage Index Proposed Rules
E. Interim Final Rule on Selection Criteria of Loan Program for
Qualifying Hospitals Engaged in Cancer-Related Health Care
F. Proposed Rule on Forgiveness of Indebtedness under the Health
Care Infrastructure Improvement Program
G. Interim Final Rule on the Exclusion of Vendor Purchases Made
Under the Competitive Acquisition Program for Part B Outpatient
Drugs and Biologicals for the Purpose of Calculating the Average
Sales Price
II. Changes to DRG Classifications and Relative Weights
A. Background
B. DRG Reclassifications
1. General
2. Yearly Review for Making DRG Changes
C. Revisions to the DRG System Used Under the IPPS
1. MedPAC Recommendations
2. Refinement of the Relative Weight Calculation
3. Refinement of DRGs Based on Severity of Illness
a. Comparison of the CMS DRG System and the APR DRG System
b. CS DRGs for Use in the IPPS
c. Changes to CMI from a New DRG System
4. Effect of CS DRGs on the Outlier Threshold
5. Impact of Refinement of DRG System on Payments
6. Conclusions
7. Severity Refinement to CMS DRGs
a. MDC 1 (Diseases and Disorders of the Nervous System)
b. MDC 4 (Diseases and Disorders of the Respiratory System):
Respiratory System Diagnosis with Ventilator Support
c. MDC 6 (Diseases and Disorders of the Digestive System)
d. MDC 11 (Diseases and Disorders of the Kidney and Urinary
Tract): Major Bladder Procedures
e. MDC 16 (Diseases and Disorders of the Blood and Blood Forming
Organs and Immunological Disorders): Major Hematological and
Immunological Diagnoses
f. MDC 18 (Infectious and Parasitic Diseases (Systemic or
Unspecified Sites)): O.R. Procedure for Patients with Infectious and
Parasitic Diseases
[[Page 47873]]
g. Severe Sepsis
D. Changes to Specific DRG Classifications
1. Pre-MDCs
a. Heart Transplant or Implant of Heart Assist System: Addition
of Procedure to DRG 103
b. Pancreas Transplants
2. MDC 1 (Diseases and Disorders of the Nervous System)
a. Implantation of Intracranial Neurostimulator System for Deep
Brain Stimulation (DBS)
b. Carotid Artery Stents
3. MDC 5 (Diseases and Disorders of the Circulatory System)
a. Insertion of Epicardial Leads for Defibrillator Devices
b. Application of Major Cardiovascular Diagnoses (MCVs) List to
Defibrillator DRGs
4. MDC 8 (Diseases and Disorders of the Musculoskeletal System
and Connective Tissue)
a. Hip and Knee Replacements
b. Spinal Fusion
c. CHARITETM Spinal Disc Replacement Device
5. MDC 18 (Infectious and Parasitic Diseases (Systemic or
Unspecified Sites)): Severe Sepsis
6. Medicare Code Editor (MCE) Changes
a. Edit: Newborn Diagnoses
b. Edit: Diagnoses for Pediatric--Age 0-17 Years Old
c. Edit: Maternity Diagnoses--Age 12 through 55
d. Edit: Diagnoses Allowed for Females Only
e. Edit: Diagnoses Allowed for Males Only
f. Edit: Procedures Allowed for Females Only
g. Edit: Manifestations Not Allowed as Principal Diagnosis
h. Edit: Nonspecific Principal Diagnosis
i. Edit: Unacceptable Principal Diagnosis
j. Edit: Nonspecific O.R. Procedures
k. Edit: Noncovered Procedures
l. Edit: Bilateral Procedure
7. Surgical Hierarchies
8. Refinement of Complications and Comorbidities (CC) List
a. Background
b. Comprehensive Review of the CC List
c. CC Exclusions List for FY 2007
9. Review of Procedure Codes in DRGs 468, 476, and 477
a. Moving Procedure Codes from DRG 468 or DRG 477 to MDCs
b. Reassignment of Procedures among DRGs 468, 476, and 477
c. Adding Diagnosis or Procedure Codes to MDCs
10. Changes to the ICD-9-CM Coding System
11. Other Issues
a. Chronic Kidney Disease
b. Bronchial Valve
c. Female Reproductive System Reconstruction Procedures
d. Devices That are Replaced Without Cost or Where Credit for a
Replaced Device is Furnished to the Hospital
E. Recalibration of DRG Weights
F. LTC-DRG Reclassifications and Relative Weights for LTCHs for
FY 2007
1. Background
2. Changes in the LTC-DRG Classifications
a. Background
b. Patient Classifications into DRGs
3. Development of the FY 2007 LTC-DRG Relative Weights
a. General Overview of Development of the LTC-DRG Relative
Weights
b. Data
c. Hospital-Specific Relative Value Methodology
d. Low-Volume LTC-DRGs
4. Steps for Determining the FY 2007 LTC-DRG Relative Weights
5. Summary of Public Comments and Departmental Responses
G. Add-On Payments for New Services and Technologies
1. Background
2. Public Input Before Publication of a Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking on Add-On Payments
3. FY 2007 Status of Technologies Approved for FY 2006 Add-On
Payments
a. Kinetra[supreg] Implantable Neurostimulator (Kinetra[supreg])
for Deep Brain Stimulation
b. Endovascular Graft Repair of the Thoracic Aorta
c. Restore[supreg] Rechargeable Implantable Neurostimulator
4. FY 2007 Applications for New Technology Add-On Payments
a. C-Port[supreg] Distal Anastomosis System
b. NovoSeven[supreg] for Intracerebral Hemorrhage
c. X STOP Interspinous Process Decompression System
5. Interim and Final Cost Threshold Tables Due to Changes to
Wage Index and Budget Neutrality Factors
III. Changes to the Hospital Wage Index
A. Background
B. Core-Based Statistical Areas for the Hospital Wage Index
C. Occupational Mix Adjustment to the FY 2007 Wage Index
1. Development of Data for the FY 2007 Occupational Mix
Adjustment
2. Timeline for the Collection, Review, and Correction of the
Occupational Mix Data
3. Calculation of the Occupational Mix Adjustment
D. Worksheet S-3 Wage Data for the FY 2007 Wage Index Update
E. Verification of Worksheet S-3 Wage Data
F. Computation of the FY 2007 Unadjusted Wage Index
G. Implementation of the FY 2007 Occupational Mix Adjustment to
the Wage Index
H. Revisions to the Wage Index Based on Hospital Redesignations
1. General
2. Effects of Reclassification/Redesignation
3. FY 2007 MGCRB Reclassifications
4. Procedures for Hospitals Applying for Reclassification
Effective in FY 2008 and Reinstating Reclassifications in FY 2008
5. FY 2007 Redesignations Under Section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
6. Reclassifications Under Section 508 of Pub. L. 108-173
7. Wage Indices for Reclassified Hospitals and Reclassification
Budget Neutrality Factor
I. FY 2007 Wage Index Adjustment Based on Commuting Patterns of
Hospital Employees
J. Process for Requests for Wage Index Data Corrections
K. Labor-Related Share for the Wage Index for FY 2007
L. Proxy for the Hospital Market Basket
IV. Other Decisions and Changes to the IPPS for Operating Costs and
GME Costs
A. Reporting of Hospital Quality Data for Annual Hospital
Payment Update
1. Background
2. New Procedures for Hospital Reporting of Quality Data
a. Two Percentage Point Reduction
b. New Procedures
c. Expanded Quality Measures
d. HCAHPS[supreg] Survey
e. Data Submission
f. RHQDAPU Program Withdrawal and Chart Validation Requirements
g. Data Validation and Attestation
h. Public Display and Reconsideration Procedures
i. Conclusion
3. Electronic Medical Records
B. Value-Based Purchasing
1. Introduction
2. Premier Hospital Quality Incentive Demonstration
3. RHQDAPU Program
a. Section 501(b) of Pub. L. 108-173 (MMA)
b. Section 5001(a) of Pub. L. 109-171 (DRA)
4. Plan for Implementing Hospital Value-Based Purchasing
Beginning with FY 2009
a. Measure Development and Refinement
b. Data Infrastructure
c. Incentive Methodology
d. Public Reporting
5. Considerations Related to Certain Conditions, Including
Hospital-Acquired Infections
6. Promoting Effective Use of Health Information Technology
C. Sole Community Hospitals (SCHs) and Medicare-Dependent, Small
Rural Hospitals (MDHs)
1. Background
2. Volume Decrease Adjustment for SCHs and MDHs
a. HAS/Monitrend Data
b. HAS/Monitrend Data Book Replacement Alternative
3. Mandatory Reporting Requirements for Any Changes in the
Circumstances Under Which a Hospital Was Designated as an SCH or MDH
4. Payment Changes for MDHs under the DRA of 2005
a. Background
b. Regulation Changes
5. Technical Change
D. Rural Referral Centers
1. Case-Mix Index
2. Discharges
E. Indirect Medical Education (IME) Adjustment
1. Background
2. IME Adjustment Factor for FY 2007
3. Technical Change to Revise Cross-Reference
F. Payment Adjustment for Disproportionate Share Hospitals
(DSHs)
[[Page 47874]]
1. Background
2. Technical Corrections
3. Reinstatement of Inadvertently Deleted Provisions on DSH
Payment Adjustment Factors
4. Enhanced DSH Adjustment for MDHs
G. Geographic Reclassifications
1. Background
2. Reclassifications under Section 508 of Pub. L. 108-173
3. Multicampus Hospitals
4. Urban Group Hospital Reclassifications
5. Effect of Change of Ownership on Urban County Group
Reclassifications
6. Requested Reclassification for Hospitals Located in a Single
Hospital MSA Surrounded by Rural Counties
7. Special Adjustment for the Hospital Group Reclassification
Denied on the Basis of Incomplete CSA Listing
H. Payment for Direct Graduate Medical Education
1. Background
2. Determination of Weighted Average Per Resident Amounts (PRAs)
for Merged Teaching Hospitals
3. Determination of Per Resident Amounts (PRAs) for New Teaching
Hospitals
4. Requirements for Counting and Appropriate Documentation of
FTE Residents: Clarification
5. Resident Time Spent in Nonpatient Care Activities as Part of
Approved Residency Programs
6. Medicare GME Affiliated Groups: Technical Changes to
Regulations
I. Payment for the Costs of Nursing and Allied Health Education
Activities: Clarification
J. Hospital Emergency Services under EMTALA
1. Background
2. Role of the EMTALA Technical Advisory Group (TAG)
3. Definition of ``Labor''
4. Application of EMTALA Requirements to Hospitals Without
Dedicated Emergency Departments
5. Clarification of Reference to ``Referral Centers''
K. Other Technical Changes
1. Cross-Reference Correction in Regulations on Limitations on
Beneficiary Charges
2. Cross-Reference Corrections in Regulations on Payment Denials
Based on Admissions and Quality Reviews
3. Cross-Reference Correction in Regulations on Outlier Payments
4. Removing References to Two Paper Claims Forms
L. Rural Community Hospital Demonstration Program
M. Health Care Information Transparency Initiative
V. Changes to the PPS for Capital-Related Costs
A. Background
B. Treatment of Certain Urban Hospitals Reclassified as Rural
Hospitals Under Sec. 412.103
C. Other Technical Corrections Relating to the Capital PPS
Geographic Adjustment Factors
VI. Changes for Hospitals and Hospital Units Excluded from the IPPS
A. Payments to Excluded Hospitals and Hospital Units
1. Payments to Existing Excluded and New Hospitals and Hospital
Units
2. Separate PPS for IRFs
3. Separate PPS for LTCHs
4. Separate PPS for IPFs
5. Grandfathering of Hospitals-Within-Hospitals (HwHs) and
Satellite Facilities
6. Changes to the Methodology for Determining LTCH Cost-to-
Charge Ratios (CCRs) and the Reconciliation of High-Cost and Short-
Stay Outlier Payments under the LTCH PPS
a. Background
b. High-Cost Outliers
c. Short-Stay Outliers
d. CCR Ceiling
e. Statewide Average CCRs
f. Data Used to Determine a CCR
g. Reconciliation of Outlier Payments Upon Cost report
Settlement
7. Technical Corrections Relating to LTCHs
8. Cross-Reference Correction in Authority Citations for 42 CFR
412 and 413
9. Report of Adjustment (Exceptions) Payments
B. Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
1. Background
2. Sunset of Designation of CAHs as Necessary Providers:
Technical Correction
VII. Payment for Services Furnished Outside the United States
A. Background
B. Proposed Clarification of Regulations
VIII. Payment for Blood Clotting Factor Administered to Inpatients
with Hemophilia
IX. Limitation on Payments to Skilled Nursing Facilities for Bad
Debt
A. Background
B. Changes Made by Section 5004 of Pub. L. 109-171
C. Proposed Regulation Changes
X. MedPAC Recommendations
XI. Health Care Infrastructure Improvement Program: Selection
Criteria for Loan Program for Qualifying Hospitals Engaged in
Cancer-Related Health Care and Forgiveness of Indebtedness
A. Background
B. Issuance of an Interim Final Rule with Comment Period and a
Proposed Regulation
C. Provisions of the Interim Final Rule With Comment Period
1. Loan Qualifying Criteria
2. Selection Criteria
3. Terms of the Loan
4. Public Comments Received on the Interim Final Rule With
Comment Period
5. Provisions of this Final Rule
D. Proposed Rule on Forgiveness of Indebtedness
1. Conditions for Loan Forgiveness
2. Plan Criteria for Meeting the Conditions for Loan Forgiveness
3. Public Comments Received on the Proposed Rule and Our
Responses
4. Provisions of the Final Rule
E. Statutory Requirements for Issuance of Regulations
XII. Exclusion of Vendor Purchases Made Under the Competitive
Acquisition Program (CAP) for Outpatient Drugs and Biologicals Under
Part B for the Purpose of Calculating the Average Sales Price (ASP)
A. Background
1. Average Sales Price (ASP)
2. Competitive Acquisition Program (CAP)
3. Regulatory History
B. Regulation Change
XIII. Other Required Information
A. Requests for Data from the Public
B. Collection of Information Requirements
C. Waiver of Proposed Rulemaking and Delay in the Effective Date
D. Response to Comments
Regulation Text
Addendum--Schedule of Tentative Standardized Amounts, Tentative
Update Factors and Rate-of-Increase Percentages Effective With Cost
Reporting Periods Beginning On or After October 1, 2006
I. Summary and Background
II. Changes to Prospective Payment Rates for Hospital Inpatient
Operating Costs
A. Calculation of the Tentative Adjusted Standardized Amount
1. Standardization of Base-Year Costs or Target Amounts
2. Computing the Tentative Average Standardized Amount
3. Updating the Tentative Average Standardized Amount
4. Other Adjustments to the Average Standardized Amount
a. Recalibration of DRG Weights and Updated Wage Index--Budget
Neutrality Adjustment
b. Reclassified Hospitals--Tentative Budget Neutrality
Adjustment
c. Outliers
d. Tentative Rural Community Hospital Demonstration Program
Adjustment (Section 410A of Pub. L. 108-173)
5. Tentative FY 2007 Standardized Amount
B. Tentative Adjustments for Area Wage Levels and Cost-of-Living
1. Tentative Adjustment for Area Wage Levels
2. Final Adjustment for Cost-of-Living in Alaska and Hawaii
C. DRG Relative Weights
D. Calculation of the Prospective Payment Rates
1. Federal Rate
2. Hospital-Specific Rate (Applicable Only to SCHs and MDHs)
a. Calculation of Hospital-Specific Rate
b. Updating the FY 1982, FY 1987, FY 1996, and FY 2002 Hospital-
Specific Rates for FY 2007
3. General Formula for Calculation of Prospective Payment Rates
for Hospitals Located in Puerto Rico Beginning On or After October
1, 2006, and Before October 1, 2007
a. Puerto Rico Rate
b. National Rate
III. Changes to Payment Rates for Acute Care Hospital Inpatient
Capital-Related Costs for FY 2007
A. Determination of Federal Hospital Inpatient Capital-Related
Prospective Payment Rate Update
1. Projected Capital Standard Federal Rate Update
[[Page 47875]]
a. Description of the Update Framework
b. Comparison of CMS and MedPAC Update Recommendation
2. Outlier Payment Adjustment Factor
3. Budget Neutrality Adjustment Factor for Changes in DRG
Classifications and Weights and the GAF
4. Exceptions Payment Adjustment Factor
5. Capital Standard Federal Rate for FY 2007
6. Special Capital Rate for Puerto Rico Hospitals
B. Calculation of the Inpatient Capital-Related Prospective
Payments for FY 2007
C. Capital Input Price Index
1. Background
2. Forecast of the CIPI for FY 2007
IV. Payment Rates for Excluded Hospitals and Hospital Units: Rate-
of-Increase Percentages
A. Payments to Existing Excluded Hospitals and Units
B. New Excluded Hospitals and Units
V. Payment for Blood Clotting Factor Administered to Inpatients with
Hemophilia
Tables
The following tables are included as part of this final rule:
Table 1A--National Adjusted Operating Standardized Amounts, Labor/
Nonlabor (69.7 Percent Labor Share/30.3 Percent Nonlabor Share If
Wage Index Is Greater Than 1) (Tentative)
Table 1B--National Adjusted Operating Standardized Amounts, Labor/
Nonlabor (62 Percent Labor Share/38 Percent Nonlabor Share If Wage
Index Is Less Than or Equal to 1) (Tentative)
Table 1C--Adjusted Operating Standardized Amounts for Puerto Rico,
Labor/Nonlabor (Tentative)
Table 1D--Capital Standard Federal Payment Rate (Tentative)
Table 4J--Out-Migration Wage Adjustment--FY 2007 (Tentative)
Table 5--List of Diagnosis-Related Groups (DRGs), Relative Weighting
Factors, and Geometric and Arithmetic Mean Length of Stay (LOS)
(Tentative)
Table 6A--New Diagnosis Codes
Table 6B--New Procedure Codes
Table 6C--Invalid Diagnosis Codes
Table 6D--Invalid Procedure Codes
Table 6E--Revised Diagnosis Code Titles
Table 6F--Revised Procedure Code Titles
Table 6G--Additions to the CC Exclusions List
Table 6H--Deletions from the CC Exclusions List
Table 7A--Medicare Prospective Payment System Selected Percentile
Lengths of Stay: FY 2005 MedPAR Update March 2006 GROUPER V23.0
Table 7B--Medicare Prospective Payment System Selected Percentile
Lengths of Stay: FY 2005 MedPAR Update March 2006 GROUPER V24.0
Table 8A--Statewide Average Operating Cost-to-Charge Ratios--July
2006
Table 8B--Statewide Average Capital Cost-to-Charge Ratios--July 2006
Table 8C-- Statewide Average Total Cost-to-Charge Ratios for LTCHs--
July 2006
Table 9A--Hospital Reclassifications and Redesignations by
Individual Hospital and CBSA for FY 2007 (Tentative)
Table 9B--Hospital Reclassifications and Redesignation by Individual
Hospital Under Section 508 of Pub. L. 108-173 for FY 2007
(Tentative)
Table 9C--Hospitals Redesignated as Rural under Section
1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act for FY 2007 (Tentative)
Table 10--Geometric Mean Plus the Lesser of .75 of the National
Adjusted Operating Standardized Payment Amount (Increased to Reflect
the Difference Between Costs and Charges) or .75 of One Standard
Deviation of Mean Charges by Diagnosis-Related Group (DRG)--July
2006 (Tentative)
Table 11--FY 2007 LTC-DRGs, Relative Weights, Geometric Average
Length of Stay, and \5/6\ths of the Geometric Average Length of Stay
Appendix A--Regulatory Impact Analysis
I. Overall Impact
II. Objectives
III. Limitations on Our Analysis
IV. Hospitals Included In and Excluded From the IPPS
V. Effects on Excluded Hospitals and Hospital Units
VI. Quantitative Effects of the Policy Changes Under the IPPS for
Operating Costs
A. Basis and Methodology of Estimates
B. Analysis of Table I
C. Effects on the Hospitals that Failed the Quality Data
Submission Process (Column 2)
D. Effects of the DRA Provision Related to MDHs (Column 3)
E. Effects of the Changes to the DRG Reclassifications and
Relative Cost-Based Weights (Column 4)
F. Effects of Wage Index Changes (Column 5)
G. Combined Effects of DRG and Wage Index Changes, Including
Budget Neutrality Adjustment (Column 6)
H. Effects of the 3-Year Provision Allowing Urban Hospitals that
Were Converted to Rural as a Result of the FY 2005 Labor Market Area
Changes to Maintain the Wage Index of the Urban Labor Market Area in
Which They Were Formerly Located (Column 7)
I. Effects of MGCRB Reclassifications (Column 8)
J. Effects of the Wage Index Adjustment for Out-Migration
(Column 9)
K. Effects of All Changes (Column 10)
L. Effects of Policy on Payment Adjustments for Low-Volume
Hospitals
M. Impact Analysis of Table II
VII. Effects of Other Policy Changes
A. Effects of LTC-DRG Reclassifications and Relative Weights for
LTCHs
B. Effects of New Technology Add-On Payments
C. Effects of Requirements for Hospital Reporting of Quality
Data for Annual Hospital Payment Update
D. Effects of Other Policy Changes Affecting Sole Community
Hospitals (SCHs) and Medicare-Dependent, Small Rural Hospitals
(MDHs)
E. Effects of Policy on Payment for Direct Costs of Graduate
Medical Education
1. Determination of Weighted Average GME PRAs for Merged
Teaching Hospitals
2. Determination of PRAs for New Teaching Hospitals
3. Requirements for Counting and Appropriate Documentation of
FTE Residents
4. Resident Time Spent in Nonpatient Care Activities as Part of
an Approved Residency Program
F. Effects of Policy Changes Relating to Emergency Services
under EMTALA
G. Effects of Policy on Rural Community Hospital Demonstration
Program
H. Effects of Policy on Hospitals-within-Hospitals and Satellite
Facilities
I. Effects of Policy Changes to the Methodology for Determining
LTCH CCRs and the Reconciliation of LTCH PPS Outlier Payments
J. Effects of Policy on Payment for Services Furnished Outside
the United States
K. Effects of Final Policy on Limitation on Payments to SNFs
L. Effects of Policy on CAP for Outpatient Drugs and Biologicals
under Part B for the Purpose of Calculating the ASP
VIII. Impact of Changes in the Capital PPS
A. General Considerations
B. Results
IX. Impact of Changes Relating to the Loan Program for Capital Cost
under the Health Care Infrastructure Improvement Program
A. Effects on Hospitals
B. Effects on the Medicare and Medicaid Programs
X. Alternatives Considered
XI. Overall Conclusion
XII. Accounting Statement
XIII. Executive Order 12866
Appendix B--Recommendation of Update Factors for Operating Cost
Rates of Payment for Inpatient Hospital Services
I. Background
II. Secretary's Final Recommendation for Updating the Prospective
Payment System Standardized Amounts
III. Secretary's Final Recommendation for Updating the Rate-of-
Increase Limits for Excluded Hospitals and Hospital Units
IV. Secretary's Recommendation for Updating the Capital Prospective
Payment Amounts
I. Background
A. Summary
1. Acute Care Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment System (IPPS)
Section 1886(d) of the Social Security Act (the Act) sets forth a
system of payment for the operating costs of acute care hospital
inpatient stays under Medicare Part A (Hospital Insurance) based on
prospectively set rates. Section 1886(g) of the Act requires the
Secretary to pay for the capital-related costs of hospital inpatient
stays under a prospective payment system (PPS). Under these PPSs,
Medicare payment for hospital inpatient operating and capital-related
costs is made at
[[Page 47876]]
predetermined, specific rates for each hospital discharge. Discharges
are classified according to a list of diagnosis-related groups (DRGs).
The base payment rate is comprised of a standardized amount that is
divided into a labor-related share and a nonlabor-related share. The
labor-related share is adjusted by the wage index applicable to the
area where the hospital is located; and if the hospital is located in
Alaska or Hawaii, the nonlabor-related share is adjusted by a cost-of-
living adjustment factor. This base payment rate is multiplied by the
DRG relative weight.
If the hospital treats a high percentage of low-income patients, it
receives a percentage add-on payment applied to the DRG-adjusted base
payment rate. This add-on payment, known as the disproportionate share
hospital (DSH) adjustment, provides for a percentage increase in
Medicare payments to hospitals that qualify under either of two
statutory formulas designed to identify hospitals that serve a
disproportionate share of low-income patients. For qualifying
hospitals, the amount of this adjustment may vary based on the outcome
of the statutory calculations.
If the hospital is an approved teaching hospital, it receives a
percentage add-on payment for each case paid under the IPPS, known as
the indirect medical education (IME) adjustment. This percentage
varies, depending on the ratio of residents to beds.
Additional payments may be made for cases that involve new
technologies or medical services that have been approved for special
add-on payments. To qualify, a new technology or medical service must
demonstrate that it is a substantial clinical improvement over
technologies or services otherwise available, and that, absent an add-
on payment, it would be inadequately paid under the regular DRG
payment.
The costs incurred by the hospital for a case are evaluated to
determine whether the hospital is eligible for an additional payment as
an outlier case. This additional payment is designed to protect the
hospital from large financial losses due to unusually expensive cases.
Any outlier payment due is added to the DRG-adjusted base payment rate,
plus any DSH, IME, and new technology or medical service add-on
adjustments.
Although payments to most hospitals under the IPPS are made on the
basis of the standardized amounts, some categories of hospitals are
paid the higher of a hospital-specific rate based on their costs in a
base year (the higher of FY 1982, FY 1987, FY 1996, or FY 2002) or the
IPPS rate based on the standardized amount. For example, sole community
hospitals (SCHs) are the sole source of care in their areas, and
Medicare-dependent, small rural hospitals (MDHs) are a major source of
care for Medicare beneficiaries in their areas. Both of these
categories of hospitals are afforded special payment protection in
order to maintain access to services for beneficiaries. (Through FY
2007, an MDH receives the IPPS rate plus 50 percent of the difference
between the IPPS rate and its hospital-specific rate if the hospital-
specific rate is higher than the IPPS rate. In addition, an MDH may not
use FY 1996 as its base year for the hospital-specific rate. As
discussed below, for discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2007,
but before October 1, 2011, an MDH will receive the IPPS rate plus 75
percent of the difference between the IPPS rate and its hospital-
specific rate, if the hospital-specific rate is higher than the IPPS
rate.)
Section 1886(g) of the Act requires the Secretary to pay for the
capital-related costs of inpatient hospital services ``in accordance
with a prospective payment system established by the Secretary.'' The
basic methodology for determining capital prospective payments is set
forth in our regulations at 42 CFR 412.308 and 412.312. Under the
capital PPS, payments are adjusted by the same DRG for the case as they
are under the operating IPPS. Capital PPS payments are also adjusted
for IME and DSH, similar to the adjustments made under the operating
IPPS. In addition, hospitals may receive outlier payments for those
cases that have unusually high costs.
The existing regulations governing payments to hospitals under the
IPPS are located in 42 CFR Part 412, Subparts A through M.
2. Hospitals and Hospital Units Excluded From the IPPS
Under section 1886(d)(1)(B) of the Act, as amended, certain
specialty hospitals and hospital units are excluded from the IPPS.
These hospitals and units are: inpatient rehabilitation hospitals and
units (commonly referred to as inpatient rehabilitation facilities
(IRFs); long-term care hospitals (LTCHs); inpatient psychiatric
hospitals and units (commonly referred to as inpatient psychiatric
facilities (IPFs); children's hospitals; and cancer hospitals.
Religious nonmedical health care institutions (RNHCIs) are also
excluded from the IPPS. Various sections of the Balanced Budget Act of
1997 (Pub. L. 105-33), the Medicare, Medicaid and SCHIP [State
Children's Health Insurance Program] Balanced Budget Refinement Act of
1999 (Pub. L. 106-113), and the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits
Improvement and Protection Act of 2000 (Pub. L. 106-554) provide for
the implementation of PPSs for IRFs, LTCHs, and IPFs, as discussed
below. Children's hospitals, cancer hospitals, and RNHCIs continue to
be paid solely under a reasonable cost-based system.
The existing regulations governing payments to excluded hospitals
and hospital units are located in 42 CFR Parts 412 and 413.
a. Inpatient Rehabilitation Facilities (IRFs)
Under section 1886(j) of the Act, IRFs have been transitioned from
payment based on a blend of reasonable cost reimbursement and the
adjusted IRF Federal prospective payment rate for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after January 1, 2002, through September 30,
2002, to payment at 100 percent of the Federal rate effective for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 2002. IRFs subject
to the blend were also permitted to elect payment based on 100 percent
of the Federal rate. The existing regulations governing payments under
the IRF PPS are located in 42 CFR Part 412, Subpart P.
b. Long-Term Care Hospitals (LTCHs)
Under the authority of sections 123(a) and (c) of Pub. L. 106-113
and section 307(b)(1) of Pub. L. 106-554, LTCHs that do not meet the
definition of ``new'' under Sec. 412.23(e)(4) are being transitioned
from being paid for inpatient hospital services based on a blend of
reasonable cost-based reimbursement under section 1886(b) of the Act to
100 percent of the Federal rate during a 5-year period with cost
reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 2002. Those LTCHs
that do not meet the definition of ``new'' may elect to be paid based
on 100 percent of the Federal prospective payment rate instead of a
blended payment in any year during the 5-year transition. For cost
reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 2006, LTCHs will be
paid 100 percent of the Federal rate. The existing regulations
governing payment under the LTCH PPS are located in 42 CFR Part 412,
Subpart O.
c. Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities (IPFs)
Under the authority of sections 124(a) and (c) of Pub. L. 106-113,
IPFs are paid under the IPF PPS. Under the IPF PPS, some IPFs are
transitioning from being paid for inpatient hospital services based on
a blend of reasonable cost-based payment to a Federal per diem
[[Page 47877]]
payment rate, effective for cost reporting periods beginning on or
after January 1, 2005 (November 15, 2004 IPF PPS final rule (69 FR
66922) and May 9, 2006 IPF PPS final rule (71 FR 27040)). For cost
reporting periods beginning on or after January 1, 2008, all IPFs will
be paid 100 percent of the Federal per diem payment amount. The
existing regulations governing payment under the IPF PPS are located in
42 CFR 412, Subpart N.
3. Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
Under sections 1814, 1820, and 1834(g) of the Act, payments are
made to critical access hospitals (CAHs) (that is, rural hospitals or
facilities that meet certain statutory requirements) for inpatient and
outpatient services based on 101 percent of reasonable cost. Reasonable
cost is determined under the provisions of section 1861(v)(1)(A) of the
Act and existing regulations under 42 CFR Parts 413 and 415.
4. Payments for Graduate Medical Education (GME)
Under section 1886(a)(4) of the Act, costs of approved educational
activities are excluded from the operating costs of inpatient hospital
services. Hospitals with approved graduate medical education (GME)
programs are paid for the direct costs of GME in accordance with
section 1886(h) of the Act; the amount of payment for direct GME costs
for a cost reporting period is based on the hospital's number of
residents in that period and the hospital's costs per resident in a
base year. The existing regulations governing payments to the various
types of hospitals are located in 42 CFR Part 413.
B. Provisions of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA)
On February 8, 2006, the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA), Pub.
L. 109-171, was enacted. Pub. L. 109-171 made a number of changes to
the Act relating to prospective payments to hospitals and other
providers for inpatient services. This final rule implements amendments
made by the following sections of Pub. L. 109-171:
Section 5001(a), which, effective for FY 2007 and
subsequent years, allows for expansion of the requirements for hospital
quality data reporting.
Section 5003, which makes several changes to the MDH
program. It extends special payment provisions, requires MDHs to use FY
2002 as their base year for determining whether use of their hospital-
specific rate enhances payment (but permits them to continue to use
either their 1982 or 1987 hospital-specific rate if using either of
those rates results in higher payments), and removes the application of
the 12-percent cap on the DSH payment adjustment factor for MDHs.
Section 5004, which reduces certain allowable SNF bad debt
payments by 30 percent. Payments for the bad debts of full-benefit,
dual eligible individuals are not reduced.
In this final rule, we also discuss the provisions of section
5001(b) of Pub. L. 109-171, which require us to develop a plan to
implement, beginning with FY 2009, a value-based purchasing plan for
section 1886(d) hospitals and summarize the public comments received in
response to our invitation for public comments. This discussion also
includes the provisions of section 5001(c) of Pub. L. 109-171, which
requires a quality adjustment in DRG payments for certain hospital-
acquired conditions, effective for FY 2008.
C. Summary of the Provisions of the FY 2007 IPPS and FY 2007
Occupational Mix Adjustment to the Wage Index Proposed Rules
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule, we set forth proposed changes to
the Medicare IPPS for operating costs and for capital-related costs in
FY 2007. We also set forth proposed changes relating to payments for
GME costs, payments to certain hospitals and units that continue to be
excluded from the IPPS and paid on a reasonable cost basis, and
payments for SCHs and MDHs. The changes were proposed to be effective
for discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2006, unless otherwise
noted.
After publication of the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule, the United
States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit issued a decision in the
Bellevue case that caused us to modify our proposals on the
implementation of the occupational mix adjustment. As a result, we
published a second proposed rule in the May 17, 2006 Federal Register
that superseded the occupational mix proposals that had been made in
the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (published April 25, 2006). The
following is a summary of the major changes that we proposed to make
and the issues that we addressed in the FY 2007 IPPS and FY 2007
Occupational Mix Adjustment to the Wage Index proposed rules:
1. DRG Reclassifications and Recalibrations of Relative Weights
As required by section 1886(d)(4)(C) of the Act, we proposed
limited annual revisions to the DRG classifications structure. In this
section, we responded to several recommendations made by MedPAC
intended to improve the DRG system. We also proposed to use, for FY
2007, hospital-specific relative values (HSRVs) for 10 cost centers to
compute DRG relative weights. In addition, we proposed to use
consolidated severity-adjusted DRGs or alternative severity adjustment
methods in FY 2008 (if not earlier).
We presented our reevaluation of certain FY 2006 applicants for
add-on payments for high-cost new medical services and technologies,
and our analysis of FY 2007 applicants (including public input, as
directed by Pub. L. 108-173, obtained in a town hall meeting).
We proposed the annual update of the long-term care diagnosis-
related group (LTC-DRG) classifications and relative weights for use
under the LTCH PPS for FY 2007.
2. Changes to the Hospital Wage Index
We proposed revisions to the wage index and the annual update of
the wage data. Specific issues addressed include the following:
The FY 2007 wage index update, using wage data from cost
reporting periods that began during FY 2003.
The FY 2007 occupational mix adjustment to the wage index
(discussed inthe May 17, 2006 proposed rule).
The revisions to the wage index based on hospital
redesignations and reclassifications.
The adjustment to the wage index for FY 2007 based on
commuting patterns of hospital employees who reside in a county and
work in a different area with a higher wage index.
The timetable for reviewing and verifying the wage data
that will be in effect for the proposed FY 2007 wage index.
The special timetable that will apply in FY 2007 in order
to allow us to make presumptive reclassification withdrawal or
termination decisions on behalf of affected hospitals which will then
become final unless reversed or modified by the affected hospitals in
accordance with CMS procedural rules.
The labor-related share for the FY 2007 wage index,
including the labor-related share for Puerto Rico.
3. Other Decisions and Changes to the IPPS for Operating Costs, GME
Costs, and Promoting Hospitals' Effective Use of Health Information
Technology
In the proposed rule, we discussed a number of provisions of the
regulations in 42 CFR Parts 412 and 413 and related proposed changes,
including the following:
The reporting of hospital quality data as a condition for
receiving the full annual payment update increase.
Changes in payments to SCHs and MDHs.
[[Page 47878]]
Updated national and regional case-mix values and
discharges for purposes of determining rural referral center status.
The statutorily-required IME adjustment factor for FY
2007.
Changes relating to hospitals' geographic classifications,
including reclassifications under section 508 of Pub. L. 108-173,
multicampus hospitals, urban group hospital reclassification and the
effect of change in ownership on urban county group reclassifications.
Changes and clarifications relating to GME that address
determining the per resident amounts (PRAs) for merged hospitals and
new teaching hospitals, counting and appropriate documentation of FTE
residents, and counting of resident time spent in nonpatient care
activities as part of approved residency programs.
Changes relating to payment for costs of nursing and
allied health education programs.
Changes relating to requirements for emergency services
for hospitals under EMTALA.
Discussion of the third year of implementation of the
Rural Community Hospital Demonstration Program.
We also invited comments on promoting hospitals' effective use of
health information technology.
4. Changes to the PPS for Capital-Related Costs
In the proposed rule, we discussed the payment policy requirements
for capital-related costs and capital payments to hospitals and
proposed several technical corrections to the regulations.
5. Changes for Hospitals and Hospital Units Excluded From the IPPS
In the proposed rule, we discussed payments made to excluded
hospitals and hospital units, proposed policy changes regarding
decreases in square footage or decreases in the number of beds of the
``grandfathering'' HwHs and satellite facilities, and proposed changes
to the methodology for determining LTCH CCRs and the reconciliation of
high-cost and short-stay outlier payments under the LTCH PPS. In
addition, we proposed a technical change relating to the designation of
CAHs as necessary providers.
6. Payments for Services Furnished Outside the United States
In the proposed rule, we set forth proposed changes to clarify what
is considered ``outside the United States'' for Medicare payment
purposes.
7. Payment for Blood Clotting Factor Administered to Inpatients With
Hemophilia
In the proposed rule, we discussed the proposed changes in payment
for blood clotting factor administered to Medicare beneficiaries with
hemophilia for FY 2007.
8. Limitation on Payments to Skilled Nursing Facilities for Bad
Debt
In the proposed rule, we proposed to implement section 5004 of Pub.
L. 109-171 relating to reduction in payments to SNFs for bad debt.
9. Determining Prospective Payment Operating and Capital Rates and
Rate-of-Increase Limits
In the Addendum to the proposed rule, we set forth proposed changes
to the amounts and factors for determining the FY 2007 prospective
payment rates for operating costs and capital-related costs. We also
proposed to establish the threshold amounts for outlier cases. In
addition, we addressed the proposed update factors for determining the
rate-of-increase limits for cost reporting periods beginning in FY 2007
for hospitals and hospital units excluded from the PPS.
10. Impact Analysis
In Appendix A of the proposed rule, we set forth an analysis of the
impact that the proposed changes would have on affected hospitals.
11. Recommendation of Update Factors for Operating Cost Rates of
Payment for Inpatient Hospital Services
In Appendix B of the proposed rule, as required by sections
1886(e)(4) and (e)(5) of the Act, we provided our recommendations of
the appropriate percentage changes for FY 2007 for the following:
A single average standardized amount for all areas for
hospital inpatient services paid under the IPPS for operating costs
(and hospital-specific rates applicable to SCHs and MDHs).
Target rate-of-increase limits to the allowable operating
costs of hospital inpatient services furnished by hospitals and
hospital units excluded from the IPPS.
12. Discussion of Medicare Payment Advisory Commission Recommendations
Under section 1805(b) of the Act, MedPAC is required to submit a
report to the Congress, no later than March 1 of each year, in which
MedPAC reviews and makes recommendations on Medicare payment policies.
MedPAC's March 2006 recommendation concerning hospital inpatient
payment policies addressed the update factor for inpatient hospital
operating costs and capital-related costs under the IPPS and for
hospitals and distinct part hospital units excluded from the IPPS. This
recommendation was addressed in Appendix B of the proposed rule. For
further information relating specifically to the MedPAC reports or to
obtain a copy of the reports, contact MedPAC at (202) 220-3700 or visit
MedPAC's Web site at: www.medpac.gov.
13. Appendix C and Appendix D
In Appendix C of the proposed rule, we listed the combinations of
the consolidated severity-adjusted DRGs that we proposed to implement
on FY 2008 (if not earlier), as discussed in section II.C. of the
preamble of the proposed rule. In Appendix D of the proposed rule, we
provided a crosswalk of the proposed consolidated severity-adjusted DRG
system to the respective All Patient Related Diagnosis-Related Group
(APR DRG) system.
D. Public Comments Received in Response to the FY 2007 IPPS and FY 2007
Occupational Mix Adjustment to the Wage Index Proposed Rules
We received over 2,300 timely items of correspondence containing
multiple comments on the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule. We also received
over 100 timely items of correspondence on the FY 2007 Occupational Mix
Adjustment to the Wage Index proposed rule. Summaries of the public
comments and our responses to those comments are set forth under the
appropriate heading.
E. Interim Final Rule on Selection Criteria of Loan Program for
Qualifying Hospitals Engaged in Cancer-Related Health Care
On September 30, 2005, we published in the Federal Register (70 FR
57368) an interim final rule with comment period (CMS-1287-IFC) that
set forth the criteria for implementing a loan program for qualifying
hospitals engaged in research in the causes, prevention, and treatment
of cancer, as specified in section 1016 of the Medicare Prescription
Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003 (Pub. L. 108-173).
Specifically, this interim final rule established a loan application
process by which qualifying hospitals, including specified entities,
may apply for a loan for the capital costs of health care
infrastructure improvement projects. The interim final rule was
effective on November 29, 2005.
We received seven timely items of correspondence on the interim
final
[[Page 47879]]
rule. In section XI. of the preamble to this final rule, we are
finalizing this interim final rule with comment period. In that
section, we discuss the provisions of the program, the public comments
received, our responses to those comments, and the final policy.
F. Proposed Rule on Forgiveness of Indebtedness under the Health Care
Infrastructure Improvement Program
On September 30, 2005, we published in the Federal Register (70 FR
57376) a proposed rule (CMS-1320-P) to establish the loan forgiveness
criteria for qualifying hospitals who receive loans under the Health
Care Infrastructure Improvement Program that was established under
section 1016 of Pub. L. 108-173.
We received one timely item of correspondence on this proposed
rule. We address the provisions of the proposed rule, a summary of the
public comments received and our responses, and the provisions of the
final rule in section XI. of the preamble of this final rule.
G. Interim Final Rule on the Exclusion of Vendor Purchases Made Under
the Competitive Acquisition Program for