Medicare Program; Prospective Payment System for Long-Term Care Hospitals RY 2008: Proposed Annual Payment Rate Updates, and Policy Changes; and Proposed Hospital Direct and Indirect Graduate Medical Education Policy Changes, 4776-4886 [07-392]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
42 CFR Part 412 and 413
[CMS–1529–P]
RIN 0938–AO30
Medicare Program; Prospective
Payment System for Long-Term Care
Hospitals RY 2008: Proposed Annual
Payment Rate Updates, and Policy
Changes; and Proposed Hospital
Direct and Indirect Graduate Medical
Education Policy Changes
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This proposed rule would
update the annual payment rates for the
Medicare prospective payment system
(PPS) for inpatient hospital services
provided by long-term care hospitals
(LTCHs). The proposed payment
amounts and factors used to determine
the updated Federal rates that are
described in this proposed rule were
determined based on the LTCH PPS rate
year July 1, 2007 through June 30, 2008.
The annual update of the long-term care
diagnosis-related group (LTC–DRG)
classifications and relative weights
remains linked to the annual
adjustments of the acute care hospital
inpatient diagnosis-related group
system, and would continue to be
effective each October 1. The proposed
outlier threshold for July 1, 2007,
through June 30, 2008, would also be
derived from the LTCH PPS rate year
calculations. We are also proposing to
make policy changes which include
proposed revisions to the GME and IME
policies. In addition, we are adding a
technical amendment correcting the
regulations text at § 412.22.
DATES: To be assured consideration,
comments must be received at one of
the addresses provided below, no later
than 5 p.m. on April 2, 2007.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, please refer
to file code CMS–1529–P. 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/.
(Attachments should be in Microsoft
Word, WordPerfect, or Excel; however,
we prefer Microsoft Word.)
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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–1529–
P, P.O. Box 8015, Baltimore, MD 21244–
8015.
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–1529–P, Mail Stop C4–26–5, 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–
7197 in advance to schedule your
arrival with one of our staff members.
Room 445–G, Hubert H. Humphrey
Building, 200 Independence Avenue,
SW., Washington, DC 20201; or 7500
Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21244–1850.
(Because access to the interior of the
HHH Building is not readily available to
persons without Federal Government
identification, commenters are
encouraged to leave their comments in
the CMS drop slots located in the main
lobby of the building. A stamp-in clock
is available for persons wishing to retain
a proof of filing by stamping in and
retaining an extra copy of the comments
being filed.)
Comments mailed to the addresses
indicated as appropriate for hand or
courier delivery may be delayed and
received after the comment period.
Submission of comments on
paperwork requirements. You may
submit comments on this document’s
paperwork requirements by mailing
your comments to the addresses
provided at the end of the ‘‘Collection
of Information Requirements’’ section in
this document.
For information on viewing public
comments, see the beginning of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tzvi
Hefter, (410) 786–4487 (General
information).
Judy Richter, (410) 786–2590 (General
information, payment adjustments for
special cases, and onsite discharges and
readmissions, interrupted stays, co-
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located providers, and short-stay
outliers).
Michele Hudson, (410) 786–5490
(Calculation of the payment rates, LTC–
DRGs, relative weights and case-mix
index, market basket, wage index,
budget neutrality, and other payment
adjustments).
Ann Fagan, (410) 786–5662 (Patient
classification system).
Miechal Lefkowitz, (410) 786–5316
(Graduate Medical Education
payments).
Linda McKenna, (410) 786–4537
(Payment adjustments, interrupted stay,
and transition period).
Renate Rockwell, (410) 786–4645
(Graduate Medical Education
payments).
Elizabeth Truong, (410) 786–6005
(Federal rate update, budget neutrality,
other adjustments, and calculation of
the payment rates).
Michael Treitel, (410) 786–4552 (High
cost outliers and cost-to-charge ratios).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Submission of Public 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–1529–
P] and the specific ‘‘issue identifier’’
that precedes the section on which you
choose to comment.
Inspection of Public Comments: All
comments received before the close of
the comment period are available for
viewing by the public, including any
personally identifiable or confidential
business information that is included in
a comment. We post all comments
received before the close of the
comment period on the following Web
site as soon as possible after they have
been received: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
eRulemaking. Click 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.
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. Legislative and Regulatory Authority
B. Criteria for Classification as a LTCH
1. Classification as a LTCH
2. Hospitals Excluded From the LTCH PPS
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C. Transition Period for Implementation of
the LTCH PPS
D. Limitation on Charges to Beneficiaries
E. Administrative Simplification
Compliance Act (ASCA) and Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act (HIPAA) Compliance
II. Summary of Major Contents of This
Proposed Rule
III. Long-Term Care Diagnosis-Related Group
(LTC–DRG) Classifications and Relative
Weights
A. Background
B. Patient Classifications Into DRGs
C. Organization of DRGs
D. Proposed Update of LTC–DRGs
1. Background
2. Proposed Budget Neutrality (BN)
Requirement for the Annual LTC–DRG
Update
E. ICD–9–CM Coding System
1. Uniform Hospital Discharge Data Set
(UHDDS) Definitions
2. Maintenance of the ICD–9–CM Coding
System
3. Coding Rules and Use of ICD–9–CM
Codes in LTCHs
F. Method for Updating the LTC–DRG
Relative Weights
IV. Proposed Changes to the LTCH PPS
Payment Rates for the 2008 LTCH PPS
Rate Year
A. Overview of the Development of the
Payment Rates
B. LTCH PPS Market Basket
1. Overview of the RPL Market Basket
2. Proposed Market Basket Estimate for the
2008 LTCH PPS Rate Year
C. Proposed Standard Federal Rate for the
2008 LTCH PPS Rate Year
1. Background
2. Proposed Update to the Standard
Federal Rate for the 2008 LTCH PPS Rate
Year
3. Proposed Standard Federal Rate for the
2008 LTCH PPS Rate Year
D. Calculation of Proposed LTCH
Prospective Payments for the 2008 LTCH
PPS Rate Year
1. Proposed Adjustment for Area Wage
Levels
a. Background
b. Geographic Classifications/Labor Market
Area Definitions
c. Proposed Labor-Related Share
d. Proposed Wage Index Data
2. Proposed Adjustment for Cost-of-Living
in Alaska and Hawaii
3. Proposed Adjustment for High-Cost
Outliers (HCOs)
a. Background
b. Cost-to-Charge Ratios (CCRs)
c. Establishment of the Proposed FixedLoss Amount
d. Reconciliation of Outlier Payments
Upon Cost Report Settlement
e. Application of Outlier Policy to ShortStay Outlier (SSO) Cases
4. Other Payment Adjustments
5. Proposed Budget Neutrality (BN) Offset
To Account for the Transition
Methodology
6. One-Time Prospective Adjustment to the
Standard Federal Rate
V. Other Proposed Policy Changes for the
2008 LTCH PPS Rate Year
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A. Short-Stay Outlier (SSO) Cases
1. Background
2. Additional Discussion of SSO Payment
Formula (includes Technical Correction)
3. Determination of Cost-to-Charge Ratios
(CCRs)
4. Reconciliation of SSO Cases
B. Proposed expansion of special payment
provisions for LTCH hospitals within
hospitals (HwHs) and LTCH satellites:
Proposed expansion of the 25 percent
rule to certain situations not currently
covered under existing § 412.534
VI. Computing the Proposed Adjusted
Federal Prospective Payments for the
2008 LTCH PPS Rate Year
VII. Transition Period
VIII. Payments to New LTCHs
IX. Method of Payment
X. Monitoring
XI. MedPAC Recommendations: The RTI
Contract
XII. Graduate Medical Education (GME)
A. GME Background
B. Resident Training in Nonhospital
Settings
1. Background
2. Moratorium on Disallowances of
Allopathic or Osteopathic Family
Practice Residents Training Time in
Nonhospital Settings, and Questions and
Answers (Qs&As) on CMS Web Site
(Section 713 of the MMA and § 413.78)
3. Requirements for Written Agreements
for Residency Training in Nonhospital
Settings (§ 413.78(e))
4. Modification of the Definition of ‘‘All or
Substantially All of the Costs for the
Training Program in the Nonhospital
Setting’’
5. Implementation of a 90 Percent Cost
Threshold
C. Other Issues To Be Considered
XIII. Technical Amendment
XIV. Waiver of Proposed Rulemaking and
Delay in the Effective Date
XV. Collection of Information Requirements
XVI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
Addendum A: Tables
Addendum B: Executive Summary of RTI’s
Report
Acronyms
Because of the many terms to which we
refer by acronym in this proposed rule, we
are listing the acronyms used and their
corresponding terms in alphabetical order
below:
AAMC Association of American Medical
Colleges
AFMAA Academic Family Medicine
Advocacy Alliance
AHA American Hospital Association
AHIMA American Health Information
Management Association
ALOS Average length of stay
ALTHA Acute Long Term Hospital
Association
AMGA American Medical Group
Association
AMPRA American Medical Peer Review
Association
AOA American Osteopathic Association
APR All patient refined
ASCA Administrative Simplification
Compliance Act of 2002 (Pub. L. 107–105)
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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)
BN Budget neutrality
CBSA Core-based statistical area
CCR Cost-to-charge ratio
C&M Coordination and maintenance
CMI Case-mix index
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
COLA Cost of living adjustment
CS Consolidated severity-adjusted
CY Calendar year
DSH Disproportionate share of low-income
patients
DRGs Diagnosis-related groups
FI Fiscal intermediary
FMC Family Medicine Center
FTE Full-time equivalent
FY Federal fiscal year
GME Graduate medical education
HCO High-cost outlier
HCRIS Hospital cost report information
system
HHA Home health agency
HHS (Department of) Health and Human
Services
HIPAA Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (Pub. L. 104–191)
HIPC Health Information Policy Council
HwHs Hospitals within hospitals
ICD–9–CM International Classification of
Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical
Modification (codes)
IME Indirect medical education
I–O Input-Output
IPF Inpatient psychiatric facility
IPPS [Acute Care Hospital] Inpatient
Prospective Payment System
IRF Inpatient rehabilitation facility
LOS Length of stay
LTC–DRG Long-term care diagnosis-related
group
LTCH Long-term care hospital
MCE Medicare code editor
MDC Major diagnostic categories
MedPAC Medicare Payment Advisory
Commission
MedPAR Medicare provider analysis and
review
MMA Medicare Prescription Drug,
Improvement, and Modernization Act of
2003 (Pub. L. 108–173)
MSA Metropolitan statistical area
NAICS North American Industrial
Classification System
NALTH National Association of Long Term
Hospitals
NCHS National Center for Health Statistics
OACT [CMS’] Office of the Actuary
OBRA 86 Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act of 1986 (Pub. L. 99–509)
OMB Office of Management and Budget
OPM U.S. Office of Personnel Management
O.R. Operating room
OSCAR Online Survey Certification and
Reporting (System)
OTN One-Time Notification
PIP Periodic interim payment
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PLI Professional liability insurance
PMSA Primary metropolitan statistical area
PPI Producer Price Indexes
PPS Prospective payment system
PRA Per resident amount
PSF Provider specific file
QIO Quality Improvement Organization
(formerly Peer Review organization (PRO))
RIA Regulatory impact analysis
RPL Rehabilitation psychiatric long-term
care (hospital)
RTI Research Triangle Institute,
International
RY Rate year (begins July 1 and ends June
30)
SIC Standard industrial code
SNF Skilled nursing facility
SSO Short-stay outlier
TEFRA Tax Equity and Fiscal
Responsibility Act of 1982 (Pub. L. 97–248)
TEP Technical expert panel
UHDDS Uniform hospital discharge data set
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I. Background
[If you choose to comment on issues
in this section, please include the
caption ‘‘BACKGROUND’’ at the
beginning of your comments.]
A. Legislative and Regulatory Authority
Section 123 of the Medicare,
Medicaid, and SCHIP [State Children’s
Health Insurance Program] Balanced
Budget Refinement Act of 1999 (BBRA)
(Pub. L. 106–113) as amended by
section 307(b) of the Medicare,
Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits
Improvement and Protection Act of
2000 (BIPA) (Pub. L. 106–554) provides
for payment for both the operating and
capital-related costs of hospital
inpatient stays in long-term care
hospitals (LTCHs) under Medicare Part
A based on prospectively set rates. The
Medicare prospective payment system
(PPS) for LTCHs applies to hospitals
described in section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv) of
the Social Security Act (the Act),
effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2002.
Section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(I) of the Act
defines a LTCH as ‘‘a hospital which has
an average inpatient length of stay (as
determined by the Secretary) of greater
than 25 days.’’ Section
1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(II) of the Act also
provides an alternative definition of
LTCHs: specifically, a hospital that first
received payment under section 1886(d)
of the Act in 1986 and has an average
inpatient length of stay (LOS) (as
determined by the Secretary of Health
and Human Services (the Secretary)) of
greater than 20 days and has 80 percent
or more of its annual Medicare inpatient
discharges with a principal diagnosis
that reflects a finding of neoplastic
disease in the 12-month cost reporting
period ending in fiscal year (FY) 1997.
Section 123 of the BBRA requires the
PPS for LTCHs to be a ‘‘per discharge’’
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system with a diagnosis-related group
(DRG) based patient classification
system that reflects the differences in
patient resources and costs in LTCHs. It
also requires that the ‘‘per discharge’’
system maintain budget neutrality (BN).
We believe the statutory mandate for BN
applies only to the first year of the
implementation of the LTCH PPS such
that estimated payments in the first year
of the PPS were projected to equal
payments that would have been paid for
operating and capital-related costs of
LTCHs had this new payment system
not been enacted.
Section 307(b)(1) of the BIPA, among
other things, mandates that the
Secretary shall examine, and may
provide for, adjustments to payments
under the LTCH PPS, including
adjustments to DRG weights, area wage
adjustments, geographic reclassification,
outliers, updates, and a disproportionate
share adjustment.
In the August 30, 2002 Federal
Register, we issued a final rule that
implemented the LTCH PPS authorized
under BBRA and BIPA (67 FR 55954).
This system uses information from
LTCH patient records to classify
patients into distinct long-term care
diagnosis-related groups (LTC–DRGs)
based on clinical characteristics and
expected resource needs. Payments are
calculated for each LTC–DRG and
provisions are made for appropriate
payment adjustments. Payment rates
under the LTCH PPS are updated
annually and published in the Federal
Register.
The LTCH PPS replaced the
reasonable cost-based payment system
under the Tax Equity and Fiscal
Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA)
(Pub. L. 97–248) for payments for
inpatient services provided by a LTCH
with a cost reporting period beginning
on or after October 1, 2002. (The
regulations implementing the TEFRA
reasonable cost-based payment
provisions are located at 42 CFR part
413.) With the implementation of the
PPS for acute care hospitals authorized
by the Social Security Amendments of
1983 (Pub. L. 98–21), which added
section 1886(d) to the Act, certain
hospitals, including LTCHs, were
excluded from the PPS for acute care
hospitals and were paid their reasonable
costs for inpatient services subject to a
per discharge limitation or target
amount under the TEFRA system. For
each cost reporting period, a hospitalspecific ceiling on payments was
determined by multiplying the
hospital’s updated target amount by the
number of total current year Medicare
discharges. (Generally, in this document
when we refer to discharges, the intent
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is to describe Medicare discharges.) The
August 30, 2002 final rule further
details the payment policy under the
TEFRA system (67 FR 55954).
In the August 30, 2002 final rule, we
also presented an in-depth discussion of
the LTCH PPS, including the patient
classification system, relative weights,
payment rates, additional payments,
and the BN requirements mandated by
section 123 of the BBRA. The same final
rule that established regulations for the
LTCH PPS under 42 CFR part 412,
subpart O, also contained LTCH
provisions related to covered inpatient
services, limitation on charges to
beneficiaries, medical review
requirements, furnishing of inpatient
hospital services directly or under
arrangement, and reporting and
recordkeeping requirements. We refer
readers to the August 30, 2002 final rule
for a comprehensive discussion of the
research and data that supported the
establishment of the LTCH PPS (67 FR
55954).
In the June 6, 2003 Federal Register,
we published a final rule that set forth
the FY 2004 annual update of the
payment rates for the Medicare PPS for
inpatient hospital services furnished by
LTCHs (68 FR 34122). It also changed
the annual period for which the
payment rates are effective. The annual
updated rates are now effective from
July 1 through June 30 instead of from
October 1 through September 30. We
refer to the July through June time
period as a ‘‘long-term care hospital rate
year’’ (LTCH PPS RY). In addition, we
changed the publication schedule for
the annual update to allow for an
effective date of July 1. The payment
amounts and factors used to determine
the annual update of the LTCH PPS
Federal rate is based on a LTCH PPS
rate year. While the LTCH payment rate
update is effective July 1, the annual
update of the LTC–DRG classifications
and relative weights are linked to the
annual adjustments of the acute care
hospital inpatient DRGs and are
effective each October 1.
In the Prospective Payment System
for Long-Term Care Hospitals RY 2007:
Annual Payment Rate Updates, Policy
Changes, and Clarifications final rule
(71 FR 27798) (hereinafter referred to as
the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule), we
set forth the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year
annual update of the payment rates for
the Medicare PPS for inpatient hospital
services provided by LTCHs. We also
adopted the ‘‘Rehabilitation,
Psychiatric, Long-Term Care (RPL)’’
market basket under the LTCH PPS in
place of the excluded hospital with
capital market basket. In addition, we
implemented a zero percent update to
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the LTCH PPS Federal rate for RY 2007.
We also revised the existing payment
adjustment for short stay outlier (SSO)
cases by reducing part of the current
payment formula and adding a fourth
component to that payment formula.
Also, we sunsetted the surgical DRG
exception to the payment policy
established under the 3-day or less
interruption of stay policy. Finally, we
clarified the policy at § 412.534(c) for
adjusting the LTCH PPS payment so that
the LTCH PPS payment is equivalent to
what would otherwise be payable under
§ 412.1(a).
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B. Criteria for Classification as a LTCH
1. Classification as a LTCH
Under the existing regulations at
§ 412.23(e)(1) and (e)(2)(i), which
implement section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(I) of
the Act, to qualify to be paid under the
LTCH PPS, a hospital must have a
provider agreement with Medicare and
must have an average Medicare
inpatient LOS of greater than 25 days.
Alternatively, § 412.23(e)(2)(ii) states
that for cost reporting periods beginning
on or after August 5, 1997, a hospital
that was first excluded from the PPS in
1986 and can demonstrate that at least
80 percent of its annual Medicare
inpatient discharges in the 12-month
cost reporting period ending in FY 1997
have a principal diagnosis that reflects
a finding of neoplastic disease must
have an average inpatient LOS for all
patients, including both Medicare and
non-Medicare inpatients, of greater than
20 days.
Section 412.23(e)(3) provides that,
subject to the provisions of paragraphs
(e)(3)(ii) through (e)(3)(iv) of this
section, the average Medicare inpatient
LOS, specified under § 412.23(e)(2)(i) is
calculated by dividing the total number
of covered and noncovered days of stay
for Medicare inpatients (less leave or
pass days) by the number of total
Medicare discharges for the hospital’s
most recent complete cost reporting
period. Section 412.23 also provides
that subject to the provisions of
paragraphs (e)(3)(ii) through (e)(3)(iv) of
this section, the average inpatient LOS
specified under § 412.23(e)(2)(ii) is
calculated by dividing the total number
of days for all patients, including both
Medicare and non-Medicare inpatients
(less leave or pass days) by the number
of total discharges for the hospital’s
most recent complete cost reporting
period.
In the RY 2005 LTCH PPS final rule
(69 FR 25674), we specified the
procedure for calculating a hospital’s
inpatient average length of stay (ALOS)
for purposes of classification as a LTCH.
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That is, if a patient’s stay includes days
of care furnished during two or more
separate consecutive cost reporting
periods, the total days of a patient’s stay
would be reported in the cost reporting
period during which the patient is
discharged (69 FR 25705). Therefore, we
revised § 412.23(e)(3)(ii) to specify that,
effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after July 1, 2004, in
calculating a hospital’s ALOS, if the
days of an inpatient stay involve days of
care furnished during two or more
separate consecutive cost reporting
periods, the total number of days of the
stay are considered to have occurred in
the cost reporting period during which
the inpatient was discharged.
Fiscal intermediaries (FIs) verify that
LTCHs meet the ALOS requirements.
We note that the inpatient days of a
patient who is admitted to a LTCH
without any remaining Medicare days of
coverage, regardless of the fact that the
patient is a Medicare beneficiary, will
not be included in the above
calculation. Because Medicare would
not be paying for any of the patient’s
treatment, data on the patient’s stay
would not be included in the Medicare
claims processing systems. As described
in § 409.61, in order for both covered
and noncovered days of a LTCH
hospitalization to be included, a patient
admitted to the LTCH must have at least
one remaining benefit day (68 FR
34123).
The FI’s determination of whether or
not a hospital qualifies as an LTCH is
based on the hospital’s discharge data
from the hospital’s most recent
complete cost reporting period as
specified in § 412.23(e)(3) and is
effective at the start of the hospital’s
next cost reporting period as specified
in § 412.22(d). However, if the hospital
does not meet the ALOS requirement as
specified in § 412.23(e)(2)(i) and (ii), the
hospital may provide the FI with data
indicating a change in the ALOS by the
same method for the period of at least
5 months of the immediately preceding
6-month period (69 FR 25676). Our
interpretation of § 412.23(e)(3) was to
allow hospitals to submit data using a
period of at least 5 months of the most
recent data from the immediately
preceding 6-month period.
As we stated in the FY 2004 Inpatient
Prospective Payment System (IPPS)
final rule, published in the August 1,
2003 Federal Register, prior to the
implementation of the LTCH PPS, we
did rely on data from the most recently
submitted cost report for purposes of
calculating the ALOS (68 FR 45464).
The calculation to determine whether
an acute care hospital qualifies for
LTCH status was based on total days
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and discharges for LTCH inpatients.
However, with the implementation of
the LTCH PPS, for the ALOS specified
under § 412.23(e)(2)(i), we revised
§ 412.23(e)(3)(i) to only count total days
and discharges for Medicare inpatients
(67 FR 55970 through 55974). In
addition, the ALOS specified under
§ 412.23(e)(2)(ii) is calculated by
dividing the total number of days for all
patients, including both Medicare and
non-Medicare inpatients (less leave or
pass days) by the number of total
discharges for the hospital’s most recent
complete cost reporting period. As we
discussed in the FY 2004 IPPS final
rule, we are unable to capture the
necessary data from our present cost
reporting forms (68 FR 45464).
Therefore, we have notified FIs and
LTCHs that until the cost reporting
forms are revised, for purposes of
calculating the ALOS, we will be relying
upon census data extracted from
Medicare Provider Analysis and Review
(MedPAR) files that reflect each LTCH’s
cost reporting period (68 FR 45464).
Requirements for hospitals seeking
classification as LTCHs that have
undergone a change in ownership, as
described in § 489.18, are set forth in
§ 412.23(e)(3)(iv).
2. Hospitals Excluded From the LTCH
PPS
The following hospitals are paid
under special payment provisions, as
described in § 412.22(c) and, therefore,
are not subject to the LTCH PPS rules:
• Veterans Administration hospitals.
• Hospitals that are reimbursed under
State cost control systems approved
under 42 CFR part 403.
• Hospitals that are reimbursed in
accordance with demonstration projects
authorized under section 402(a) of the
Social Security Amendments of 1967
(Pub. L. 90–248) (42 U.S.C. 1395b–1) or
section 222(a) of the Social Security
Amendments of 1972 (Pub. L. 92–603)
(42 U.S.C. 1395b–1 (note)) (Statewide
all-payer systems, subject to the rate-ofincrease test at section 1814(b) of the
Act).
• Nonparticipating hospitals
furnishing emergency services to
Medicare beneficiaries.
C. Transition Period for Implementation
of the LTCH PPS
In the August 30, 2002 final rule (67
FR 55954), we provided for a 5-year
transition period. During this 5-year
transition period, a LTCH’s total
payment under the PPS was based on an
increasing percentage of the Federal rate
with a corresponding decrease in the
percentage of the LTCH PPS payment
that is based on reasonable cost
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concepts. However, effective for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2006, total LTCH PPS
payments are based on 100 percent of
the Federal rate.
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D. Limitation on Charges to
Beneficiaries
In the August 30, 2002 final rule, we
presented an in-depth discussion of
beneficiary liability under the LTCH
PPS (67 FR 55974 through 55975). In the
RY 2005 LTCH PPS final rule (69 FR
25676), we clarified that the discussion
of beneficiary liability in the August 30,
2002 final rule was not meant to
establish rates or payments for, or define
Medicare-eligible expenses. Under
§ 412.507, if the Medicare payment to
the LTCH is the full LTC–DRG payment
amount, as consistent with other
established hospital prospective
payment systems, a LTCH may not bill
a Medicare beneficiary for more than the
deductible and coinsurance amounts as
specified under § 409.82, § 409.83, and
§ 409.87 and for items and services as
specified under § 489.30(a). However,
under the LTCH PPS, Medicare will
only pay for days for which the
beneficiary has coverage until the SSO
threshold is exceeded. (See section
V.A.1.a. of this preamble.) Therefore, if
the Medicare payment was for a SSO
case (§ 412.529) that was less than the
full LTC–DRG payment amount because
the beneficiary had insufficient
remaining Medicare days, the LTCH
could also charge the beneficiary for
services delivered on those uncovered
days (§ 412.507).
E. Administrative Simplification
Compliance Act (ASCA) and Health
Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (HIPAA) Compliance
Claims submitted to Medicare must
comply with both the Administrative
Simplification Compliance Act (ASCA)
(Pub. L. 107–105), and Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act
(HIPAA) (Pub. L. 104–191). Section 3 of
the ASCA requires that the Medicare
Program deny payment under Part A or
Part B for any expenses incurred for
items or services ‘‘for which a claim is
submitted other than in an electronic
form specified by the Secretary.’’
Section 1862(h) of the Act (as added by
section 3(a) of the ASCA) provides that
the Secretary shall waive such denial in
two specific types of cases and may also
waive such denial ‘‘in such unusual
cases as the Secretary finds appropriate’’
(68 FR 48805). Section 3 of the ASCA
operates in the context of the ASCA
provisions of HIPAA, which include,
among other provisions, the transactions
and code sets standards requirements
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codified as 45 CFR parts 160 and 162,
subparts A and I through R (generally
known as the Transactions Rule). The
Transactions Rule requires covered
entities, including covered health care
providers, to conduct the covered
electronic transactions according to the
applicable transactions and code sets
standards.
II. Summary of the Major Contents of
This Proposed Rule
In this proposed rule, we are setting
forth the proposed annual update to the
payment rates for the Medicare LTCH
PPS, as well as, proposing other policy
changes. The following is a summary of
the major areas that we are addressing
in this proposed rule.
In section III. of this preamble, we
discuss the LTCH PPS patient
classification and the relative weights
which remain linked to the annual
adjustments of the acute care hospital
inpatient DRG system, and are based on
the annual revisions to the International
Classification of Diseases, Ninth
Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD–9–
CM) codes effective each October 1.
Also, in section III. of this preamble,
we are proposing to establish a BN
requirement for when the LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights are
updated annually to reflect changes in
relative LTCH resource use. This
requirement would ensure that
estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments would not decrease or
increase as a result of the annual update
to the LTC–DRG classifications and
relative weights.
As discussed in section IV.C. of this
preamble, we are proposing a 0.71
percent update to the LTCH PPS Federal
rate for the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year
based on an adjustment to the most
recent estimate of the LTCH PPS market
basket to account for changes in coding
practices. Also in section IV. of this
preamble, we discuss the proposed
prospective payment rate for RY 2008,
and in section VI. we discuss the
applicable adjustments to the proposed
payment rates, including the proposed
revisions to the wage index, proposed
labor-related share, the proposed costof-living adjustment (COLA) factors, and
the proposed outlier threshold, for the
2008 LTCH PPS rate year.
In section V.A.1.b. of this preamble,
we discuss an approach being
considered to make a change to our
present payment methodology for
certain SSO cases. Under this approach,
payment for SSO cases would be subject
to a further adjustment where the
patient’s LOS at the LTCH is less than
or equal to an IPPS LOS threshold for
the DRG.
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In section V.B. of this preamble, we
discuss the proposed expansion of the
present 25 percent admission policy at
existing § 412.534(c) to those certain
situations not already affected by that
existing policy. We are proposing to
specify that for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after July 1, 2007, that
‘‘grandfathered’’ LTCH HwHs and LTCH
satellites, at § 412.22(f) and
§ 412.22(h)(3)(i) respectively, would
also be included in the policy set forth
at existing § 412.534. We are also
proposing that if the percentage of
LTCH’s or LTCH satellite facility’s
discharges that were admitted from any
non-co-located referring hospital
exceeds 25 percent (or the applicable
percentage) for a particular cost
reporting period, an adjusted amount
would be made for those Medicare
discharges that were admitted from that
referring hospital beyond the 25 percent
(or the applicable percentage) threshold.
In section X. of this preamble, we will
discuss our on-going monitoring
protocols under the LTCH PPS.
In section XI. of this preamble, we
will discuss the recommendations made
by the Research Triangle Institute,
International’s (RTI) evaluation of the
feasibility of adopting recommendations
made in the June 2004 Medicare
Payment Advisory Commission
(MedPAC) Report. (Addendum B will
include the executive summary of the
RTI report.)
In section XII. of this preamble, we
discuss our proposal to redefine the
statutory term ‘‘all or substantially all of
the costs for the training program in the
nonhospital setting.’’ The statute
requires that hospitals must pay all of
substantially all of the costs for training
in a nonhospital site in order to count
FTE residents training in the
nonhospital setting for Medicare
graduate medical education (GME)
payment purposes. We are proposing to
revise § 413.75(b) to introduce a new
definition of ‘‘all or substantially all of
the costs for the training program in the
nonhospital setting’’ to mean, at least 90
percent of the residents’ salaries and
fringe benefits (including travel and
lodging where applicable) and the
portion of the cost of teaching
physicians’ salaries attributable to direct
GME. In addition, we are proposing to
revise § 412.105(f)(1)(ii)(C) for IME and
§ 413.78 to reflect this new definition of
‘‘all or substantially all’’ of the GME
costs in a nonhospital setting, effective
for cost reporting periods beginning on
or after July 1, 2007.
In section XVI. of this preamble, we
analyze the impact of the proposed
changes presented in this proposed rule
on Medicare expenditures, Medicare-
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participating LTCHs, and Medicare
beneficiaries.
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III. Long-Term Care Diagnosis-Related
Group (LTC–DRG) Classifications and
Relative Weights
[If you choose to comment on issues
in this section, please include the
caption ‘‘LTC–DRG CLASSIFICATIONS
AND RELATIVE WEIGHTS’’ at the
beginning of your comments.]
A. Background
Section 123 of the BBRA requires that
the Secretary 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. Section
307(b)(1) of the BIPA modified the
requirements of section 123 of the BBRA
by 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 DRGs that have been
modified to account for different
resource use of LTCH patients, as well
as the use of the most recently available
hospital discharge data.’’
In accordance with section 123 of the
BBRA as amended by section 307(b)(1)
of the BIPA and § 412.515, we use
information derived from LTCH PPS
patient records to classify these cases
into distinct LTC–DRGs based on
clinical characteristics and estimated
resource needs. The LTC–DRGs used as
the patient classification component of
the LTCH PPS correspond to the
hospital inpatient DRGs in the IPPS. We
assign an appropriate weight to the
LTC–DRGs to account for the difference
in resource use by patients exhibiting
the case complexity and multiple
medical problems characteristic of
LTCHs.
In a departure from the IPPS, we use
low volume LTC–DRGs (less than 25
LTCH cases) in determining the LTC–
DRG weights, since LTCHs do not
typically treat the full range of
diagnoses as do acute care hospitals. To
manage the large number of low volume
DRGs (all DRGs with fewer than 25
cases), we group low volume DRGs into
5 quintiles based on average charge per
discharge. (A listing of the current
composition of low volume quintiles
used in determining the FY 2007 LTC–
DRG relative weights appears in the FY
2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 47974
through 47978).) We also account for
adjustments to payments for cases in
which the stay at the LTCH is less than
or equal to five-sixths of the geometric
ALOS and classify these cases as SSO
cases. (A detailed discussion of the
application of the Lewin Group model
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that was used to develop the LTC–DRGs
appears in the August 30, 2002 LTCH
PPS final rule (67 FR 55978).)
B. Patient Classifications Into DRGs
Generally, under the LTCH PPS, a
Medicare payment is made at a
predetermined specific rate for each
discharge; that payment varies by the
LTC–DRG to which a beneficiary’s stay
is assigned. Cases are classified into
LTC–DRGs for payment based on the
following six data elements:
(1) Principal diagnosis.
(2) Up to eight additional diagnoses.
(3) Up to six procedures performed.
(4) Age.
(5) Sex.
(6) Discharge status of the patient.
As indicated in the August 30, 2002
LTCH PPS final rule, upon the discharge
of the patient from a LTCH, the LTCH
must assign appropriate diagnosis and
procedure codes from the most current
version of the International
Classification of Diseases, Ninth
Revision, Clinical Modification (codes)
(ICD–9–CM). HIPAA Transactions and
Code Sets Standards regulations at 45
CFR parts 160 and 162 require that no
later than October 16, 2003, all covered
entities must comply with the
applicable requirements of subparts A
and I through R of part 162. Among
other requirements, those provisions
direct covered entities to use the ASC
X12N 837 Health Care Claim:
Institutional, Volumes 1 and 2, version
4010, and the applicable standard
medical data code sets for the
institutional health care claim or
equivalent encounter information
transaction (see 45 CFR 162.1002 and 45
CFR 162.1102).
Medicare FIs 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
DRG can be made. During this process,
the following types of cases are selected
for further development:
• Cases that are improperly coded.
(For example, diagnoses are shown that
are inappropriate, given the sex of the
patient. Code 68.6, Radical abdominal
hysterectomy, would be an
inappropriate code for a male.)
• Cases including surgical procedures
not covered under Medicare. (For
example, organ transplant in a nonapproved transplant center.)
• Cases requiring more information.
(For example, ICD–9–CM codes are
required to be entered at their highest
level of specificity. There are valid 3-
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digit, 4-digit, and 5-digit codes. That is,
code 262, Other severe protein-calorie
malnutrition, contains all appropriate
digits, but if it is reported with either
fewer or more than 3 digits, the claim
will be rejected by the MCE as invalid.)
• Cases with principal diagnoses that
do not usually justify admission to the
hospital. (For example, code 437.9,
unspecified cerebrovascular disease.
While this code is valid according to the
ICD–9–CM coding scheme, a more
precise code should be used for the
principal diagnosis.)
After screening through the MCE,
each claim will be classified into the
appropriate LTC–DRG by the Medicare
LTCH GROUPER software. As indicated
in the August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS final
rule, the Medicare GROUPER software,
which is used under the LTCH PPS, is
specialized computer software, and is
the same GROUPER software program
used under the IPPS. The GROUPER
software was developed as a means of
classifying each case into a DRG on the
basis of diagnosis and procedure codes
and other demographic information
(age, sex, and discharge status).
Following the LTC–DRG assignment,
the Medicare FI determines the
prospective payment by using the
Medicare PRICER program, which
accounts for hospital-specific
adjustments. Under the LTCH PPS, we
provide an opportunity for the LTCH to
review the LTC–DRG assignments made
by the FI and to submit additional
information within a specified
timeframe as specified in § 412.513(c).
The GROUPER software is used both
to classify past cases to measure relative
hospital resource consumption to
establish the 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 under both the IPPS (§ 412.60(e))
and the LTCH PPS (§ 412.517). As
discussed in greater detail in sections
III.D. and E. of this preamble, with the
implementation of section 503(a) of the
Medicare Prescription Drug,
Improvement, and Modernization Act of
2003 (MMA) (Pub. L. 108–173), there is
the possibility that one feature of the
GROUPER software program may be
updated twice during a Federal FY
(October 1 and April 1) as required by
the statute for the IPPS (69 FR 48954
through 48957). Specifically, as we
discussed in the FY 2007 IPPS final
rule, diagnosis and procedure codes for
new medical technology may be created
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and added to existing DRGs in the
middle of the Federal FY on April 1 (71
FR 47959 and 47971). However, this
policy change will have no effect on the
LTC–DRG relative weights (during the
FY), 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 during
the FY as result of this policy. 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, published in
accordance with HIPAA.
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C. Organization of DRGs
The 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. Surgical DRGs are
assigned based on a surgical hierarchy
that orders operating room (O.R.)
procedures or groups of O.R. procedures
by resource intensity. The GROUPER
software program does not recognize all
ICD–9–CM procedure codes as
procedures that affect DRG assignment,
that is, procedures which are not
surgical (for example, EKG), or minor
surgical procedures (for example, 86.11,
Biopsy of skin and subcutaneous tissue).
The medical DRGs are generally
differentiated on the basis of diagnosis.
Both medical and surgical DRGs may be
further differentiated based on age, sex,
discharge status, and presence or
absence of complications or
comorbidities (CC). We note that CCs
are defined by certain secondary
diagnoses not related to, or not
inherently a part of, the disease process
identified by the principal diagnosis.
(For example, the GROUPER software
would not recognize a code from the
800.0x series, Skull fracture, as a CC
when combined with principal
diagnosis 850.4, Concussion with
prolonged loss of consciousness,
without return to preexisting conscious
level.) In addition, we note that the
presence of additional diagnoses does
not automatically generate a CC, as not
all DRGs recognize a comorbid or
complicating condition in their
definition. (For example, DRG 466,
Aftercare without History of Malignancy
as Secondary Diagnosis, is based solely
on the principal diagnosis, without
consideration of additional diagnoses
for DRG determination.)
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As discussed in greater detail in the
FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 47898
through 47912 and 47973), in its March
2005 Report to Congress, ‘‘PhysicianOwned Specialty Hospitals,’’ MedPAC
recommended that the Secretary
improve payment accuracy in the
hospital IPPS by, among other things,
‘‘refining the current DRGs to more fully
capture differences in severity of illness
among patients.’’ (Recommendation 1,
p. 93.) As we discussed in that same
final rule (71 FR 47973), although we
did not adopt a new severity-adjusted
patient classification system under the
IPPS, for FY 2007, we refined the
current CMS–DRG patient classification
system by creating 20 new CMS–DRGs
and modifying 32 others across 13
different clinical areas for Version 24.0
of the GROUPER software that we
expect will improve the CMS–DRG
system’s recognition of severity of
illness for FY 2007. As noted previously
in this section, the LTCH PPS patient
classification system (that is, LTC–
DRGs) is the same patient classification
system used under the IPPS (that is,
CMS DRGs). As such, the updates to the
CMS DRG patient classification system
used under the IPPS for FY 2007
(GROUPER Version 24.0), are the
updates that apply to the LTC–DRGs
used under the LTCH PPS for FY 2007.
In the FY 2007 IPPS final rule, we
present the changes to the DRG patient
classification system for FY 2007 (71 FR
47939 through 47962). In that rule, we
adopted 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 (71 FR 47973). As
noted above in this section and as we
also discussed in the FY 2007 IPPS final
rule, in its March 1, 2005 Report to
Congress on Medicare Payment Policy
(page 64) and Recommendation 1 in the
2005 Report to Congress on PhysicianOwned Specialty Hospitals, MedPAC
recommended that CMS, among other
things, refine the current DRGs under
the IPPS to more fully capture
differences in severity of illness among
patients. In evaluating this MedPAC
recommendation for the IPPS, we
evaluated the APR–DRG Grouper used
by MedPAC in its analysis. Based on
that 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 clarified in the FY 2007
IPPS proposed rule and reiterated in
section II.C.6. of the FY 2007 IPPS final
rule, there are still further changes that
are important to make to the
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consolidated severity-adjusted (CS) DRG
system before it is ready for adoption.
Therefore, in the FY 2007 IPPS final
rule, we did not adopt a new CS DRG
system, such as the APR DRGs or a
modified version of the APR DRGs,
under the IPPS. However, we refined
the current CMS–DRG patient
classification system by creating 20 new
CMS–DRGs and modifying 32 others
across 13 different clinical areas for
Version 24.0 of the GROUPER software
that we expect will improve the CMS
DRG system’s recognition of severity of
illness for FY 2007. As noted previously
in this section, the LTCH PPS patient
classification system (that is, LTC–
DRGs) is the same patient classification
system used under the IPPS (that is,
CMS DRGs). As such, the updates to the
CMS DRG patient classification system
used under the IPPS for FY 2007
(GROUPER Version 24.0), are the
updates that apply under the LTCH PPS
for FY 2007.
As discussed in the FY 2007 IPPS
final rule (71 FR 47906), we have
engaged a contractor to assist us with
completing an evaluation of alternative
DRG systems for use under the IPPS 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 as part of moving forward on
adopting a revised DRG system that
better recognizes severity in the IPPS
rulemaking for FY 2008.
As we also stated in that same FY
2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 47990), 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
current patient classification system
under the LTCH PPS. Any proposed
changes to the patient classification
system would be done through notice
and comment rulemaking. 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 patient
classification system used under 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 to the patient classification
system used under the IPPS are
proposed and subsequently finalized, an
analysis could then be performed to
determine whether it is appropriate to
propose the same patient classification
for LTCHs. As noted above in this
section, at that time, we would need to
consider whether to propose revisions
to the patient classification system
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under the LTCH PPS, which, if
proposed would be done through notice
and comment rulemaking.
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D. Proposed Update of LTC–DRGs
1. Background
As discussed in greater detail in the
FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 47974),
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 (that is, LTC–DRGs). To ensure
that Medicare patients classified to each
LTC–DRG have access to an appropriate
level of services and to encourage
efficiency, each year based on the best
available data, 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 relative weight of 1.
Under § 412.517, the LTC–DRG
classifications and weighting factors
(that is, relative weights) are adjusted
annually to reflect changes in factors
affecting the relative use of LTCH
resources, including treatment patterns,
technology and number of discharges.
For FY 2007, the LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights were
updated based on LTCH data from the
FY 2005 MedPAR file, which contained
hospital bills data from the March 2006
update. The LTC–DRG patient
classification system consists of 538
DRGs that formed the basis of the FY
2007 LTCH PPS GROUPER program.
The 538 LTC–DRGs included two ‘‘error
DRGs.’’ As in the IPPS, we included two
error DRGs in which cases that cannot
be assigned to valid DRGs will be
grouped. These two error DRGs are DRG
469 (Principal Diagnosis Invalid as a
Discharge Diagnosis) and DRG 470
(Ungroupable). The other 536 LTC–
DRGs are the same DRGs used in the
IPPS GROUPER program for FY 2007
(Version 24.0).
In the past, the annual update to the
CMS–DRGs was based on the annual
revisions to the ICD–9–CM codes and
was effective each October 1. The ICD–
9–CM coding update process was
revised as discussed in greater detail in
the FY 2005 IPPS final rule (69 FR
48953 through 48957). Specifically,
section 503(a) of the MMA includes a
requirement for updating diagnosis and
procedure codes for twice a year instead
of the current process of annual updates
on October 1 of each year. This
requirement is included as part of the
amendments to the Act relating to
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recognition of new medical technology
under the IPPS. (For additional
information on this provision, including
its implementation and its impact on
the LTCH PPS, refer to the FY 2005 IPPS
final rule (69 FR 48953 through 48957)
and the RY 2006 LTCH PPS final rule
(70 FR 24172 through 24177).)
As noted above in this section, with
the implementation of section 503(a) of
the MMA, there is the possibility that
one feature of the GROUPER software
program may be updated twice during a
Federal FY (October 1 and April 1) as
required by the statute for the IPPS.
Specifically, diagnosis and procedure
codes for new medical technology may
be created and added to existing DRGs
in the middle of the Federal FY on April
1. No new LTC–DRGs will be created or
deleted. Consistent with our current
practice, any changes to the DRGs or
relative weights will be made at the
beginning of the next Federal FY
(October 1). Therefore, there will not be
any impact on LTC–DRG payments
under the LTCH PPS until the following
October 1 (although the new ICD–9–CM
diagnosis and procedure codes would
be recognized April 1). 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,
issued under HIPAA.
As we explained in the FY 2007 IPPS
final rule, annual changes to the ICD–9–
CM codes historically were effective for
discharges occurring on or after October
1 each year (71 FR 47971). 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. The patient classification system
used under the LTCH PPS (LTC–DRGs)
is the same DRG patient classification
system used under the IPPS, which
historically had been updated annually
and was effective for discharges
occurring on or after October 1 through
September 30 each year. As we
mentioned previously in this section,
the ICD–9–CM coding update process
was revised as a result of the
implementation of section 503(a) of the
MMA, 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
FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 47957
through 47960)). We currently use the
ICD–9–CM codes as the code set for
diagnoses and procedures. Therefore,
the ICD–9–CM codes currently used
under both the IPPS and LTCH PPS may
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be updated as often as twice a year. As
described above in this section, 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, 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
(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.
Updates to the GROUPER software for
both the IPPS and the LTCH PPS (for
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
have also explained that since we do not
publish a mid-year IPPS rule, we will
assign any new diagnosis or procedure
codes implemented on April 1 to the
same DRG in which its predecessor code
was assigned, so that there will be no
impact on the DRG assignments until
the following October 1. Any coding
updates will be available through the
Web sites provided in section III.E. of
this preamble and through the Coding
Clinic for ICD–9–CM. Publishers and
software vendors currently obtain code
changes through these sources 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 the
MMA, there will only be an April 1
update if diagnosis and procedure 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 (C&M) 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
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ICD–9–CM codes through an April 1
update.
At the September 2006 ICD–9–CM
C&M Committee meeting, there were no
requests for an April 1, 2007
implementation of ICD–9–CM codes,
and therefore, the next update to the
ICD–9–CM coding system will not occur
until October 1, 2007 (FY 2008).
Presently, as there were no coding
changes suggested for an April 1, 2007
update, the ICD–9–CM coding set
implemented on October 1, 2006, will
continue through September 30, 2007
(FY 2007). The next update to the LTC–
DRGs and relative weights for FY 2008
will be presented in the FY 2008 IPPS
proposed and final rules. Furthermore,
we would notify LTCHs of any revisions
to the GROUPER software used under
the IPPS and LTCH PPS that would be
implemented April 1, 2008. As noted
previously in this section, in the FY
2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 47973), we
used Version 24.0 of the CMS
GROUPER, which was used under the
IPPS for FY 2007, to classify cases for
LTCH PPS discharges that would occur
on or after October 1, 2006 and on or
before September 30, 2007.
2. Proposed Budget Neutrality (BN)
Requirement for the Annual LTC–DRG
Update
As noted above in this section,
currently under § 412.517, the LTC–
DRG classifications and relative weights
are adjusted annually to reflect changes
in factors affecting the relative use of
LTCH resources, such as treatment
patterns, technology and number of
discharges. Currently, there are no
statutory or regulatory requirements that
the annual update to the LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights be
done in a budget neutral manner.
Historically, since the initial
implementation of the LTCH PPS in FY
2003, we have updated the LTC–DRG
relative weights each year without a BN
adjustment based on the most recent
available LTCH claims data, which
reflect current LTCH patient mix and
coding practices, and appropriately
reflected more or less resource use than
the previous year’s LTC–DRG relative
weights (71 FR 47991). When we
proposed changes to the LTC–DRGs for
FY 2007 in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule, we estimated that those proposed
changes to the LTC–DRG classifications
and relative weights would result in
about an estimated 1.4 percent decrease
in estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments (71 FR 24413). As we
discussed in the FY 2007 IPPS final rule
(71 FR 47991), several commenters,
including MedPAC, urged us to
establish a BN requirement for the
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annual reclassification and recalibration
of the LTC–DRGs so that, in future
years, the LTCH PPS could avoid an
estimated decrease in estimated
aggregate payments, such as the
estimated 1.4 percent decrease that
resulted from the proposed update to
the LTC–DRGs and relative weights for
FY 2007. In response to previous
proposed annual updates to the LTC–
DRG relative weights, we also received
comments recommending that a BN
adjustment be applied in determining
the LTC–DRG relative weights to
mitigate LTCH PPS payment
fluctuations. (See the FY 2005 IPPS final
rule (69 FR 48999 through 49000), and
the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47333 through 47334).)
In response to those comments, we
explained that we understood the
commenters’ concern 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 we discussed in
the FY 2007 IPPS final rule, we did not
postpone the proposed FY 2007
reclassification and recalibration of the
LTC–DRGs, nor did we implement those
changes in a budget neutral manner. We
noted several reasons for the annual
fluctuations in LTC–DRG relative
weights that have resulted in both
estimated increases and decreases in
estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments in the 4 years since the
implementation of the LTCH PPS in FY
2003. Specifically, we reiterated our
belief that several factors have affected
the changes to the LTC–DRG relative
weights over the past 4 years, including
actual improvements in coding so that
cases are appropriately assigned to
LTC–DRGs. We also explained that, as
noted above in this section, historically
we recalibrated the LTC–DRG relative
weights each year based on the most
recent available LTCH claims data,
which reflect current LTCH patient mix
and coding practices, and appropriately
reflects more or less resource use than
the previous year’s LTC–DRG relative
weights. The intended purpose of the
annual recalibration of the LTC–DRG
relative weights is to reflect any
variation in coding practices and
charges from the previous year and to
help ensure that the LTC–DRG relative
weights in the upcoming fiscal year will
result in appropriate and accurate
payments to LTCHs for the resources
they expend to treat their Medicare
patients. (71 FR 47984 through 47989)
We also reminded the commenters
that under the IPPS, there is a statutory
requirement that the annual DRG
reclassification and recalibration
changes be made in a manner that
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assures that the estimated aggregate
payments are neither greater than nor
less than the estimated aggregate
payments that would have been made
without the changes, but there is no
corresponding statutory requirement
under the LTCH PPS. However, we
noted that, given the considerable
discretion granted to the Secretary
under section 123 of the BBRA and
section 307(b) of the BIPA of 2000 to
develop the LTCH PPS, it is possible
that, at some point, the Secretary would
consider using this broad authority to
establish a BN policy for the annual
update of the LTC–DRG classifications
and relative weights. We further stated
that if 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 would have the opportunity to
submit comments on any proposed
change during the rulemaking process.
As we explained in the FY 2007 IPPS
final rule (71 FR 47985 through 47986),
a LTCH’s case-mix index (CMI) is
defined as its case weighted average
LTC–DRG relative weight for all its
discharges in a given period. Changes in
CMI consist of two components: ‘‘real’’
CMI changes and ‘‘apparent’’ CMI
changes. Real CMI 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 CMI
increase is defined as the increase in
CMI due to changes in coding practices.
The computed (or observed) CMI
increase is defined as real CMI increase
(due to an increase in patient severity)
plus the increase 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). 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, including the LTC–DRG
relative weights, should accurately
reflect changes in LTCHs’ true cost of
treating patients (real CMI increase), and
should not be influenced by changes in
coding practices (apparent CMI
increase).
As stated above in this section,
apparent CMI increase results from
cases being grouped to a LTC–DRG with
a higher weight than it would be
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without such changes in coding
practices. As we discussed in the FY
2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 48343
through 48344), in discussing the
impact of the changes to the LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights
established for FY 2007 that were
estimated to result in an aggregate
decrease in LTCH PPS payments of
approximately 1.3 percent, we
explained that changes in coding
practices (rather than patient severity)
primarily resulted in fluctuations in the
LTC–DRG relative weights in the past.
Specifically, based on an analysis of FY
2005 LTCH claims data, we continued
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 cases
with relatively lower charges into LTC–
DRGs that had a relatively higher
relative weight in the previous version
of the GROUPER software is a decrease
in the average relative weight for those
LTC–DRGs in the updated version of the
GROUPER software.
We note that this same phenomenon
of relatively lower charge cases being
assigned to LTC–DRGs with higher
relative weights in the prior year was
also observed when we analyzed the
LTCH claims data from FY 2003 and FY
2004 to update the LTC–DRG relative
weights for FY 2005 and FY 2006,
respectively (see the FY 2005 IPPS final
rule (69 FR 48999) and the FY 2006
IPPS final rule (70 FR 47701 through
47702).) However, this phenomenon
was more notable based on the FY 2004
LTCH claims data that were used to
update the LTC–DRG relative weights
for FY 2006, where the changes to the
LTC–DRG weights established were
estimated to result in a decrease in
aggregate LTCH PPS payments of 4.2
percent (as compared to the estimated
1.3 percent decrease in aggregate LTCH
PPS payments based on the FY 2005
LTCH claims data used to determine the
FY 2007 LTC–DRG relative weights).
Because the estimated decrease in
aggregate LTCH PPS payments due to
the update to the LTC–DRG relative
weights based on more recent (FY 2005)
LTCH claims data was significantly
lower (1.3 percent estimated based on
the LTC–DRG changes for FY 2007) than
it was based on FY 2004 LTCH claims
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data (4.2 percent estimated based on the
LTC–DRG changes for FY 2006), we
believe that, as LTCHs have become
more familiar with the ICD–9–CM
coding principles and guidelines used
under a DRG-based system, annual
changes in LTCH CMI are approaching
the point where the observed CMI
increase is primarily due to changes in
real CMI (that is, increased patient
severity) rather than apparent CMI (that
is, changes in coding practices). In other
words, because we have observed that,
over time as LTCHs have gained more
experience with ICD–9–CM coding,
estimated changes in LTCH PPS
payments due to recalibration of the
LTC–DRG relative weights based on
more recent claims data (for example,
the FY 2007 LTC–DRG relative weights
calculated from FY 2005 LTCH claims
data as compared to the FY 2006 LTC–
DRG relative weights calculated from
FY 2004 LTCH claims data) have
diminished over time. That is, we have
estimated smaller fluctuations in
aggregate LTCH PPS payments as a
result of the annual recalibration of the
LTC–DRG relative weights based on
more recent LTCH claims data generated
after the implementation of the LTCH
PPS (for example, the 1.3 percent
estimated decrease in aggregate LTCH
PPS payments for FY 2007 based on FY
2004 LTCH claims data as compared to
the 4.2 percent estimated decrease in
aggregate LTCH PPS payments for FY
2007 based on FY 2005 LTCH claims
data). For these reasons, we believe that
LTCH coding practices have stabilized
such that the most recent available
LTCH claims data now primarily reflect
changes in the resources used by the
average LTCH patient in a particular
LTC–DRG (and not changes in coding
practices). Thus, we believe that the
most recent available data (as described
below in this section) mainly reflect the
true costs of treating LTCH patients, and
as discussed above, we believe changes
in payment rates, including the LTC–
DRGs, should reflect such costs.
Furthermore, a LTCH CMI analysis
based on the most recent available
LTCH claims data, which is discussed
in section IV.C. of this preamble, also
supports our belief that observed CMI
increase is primarily due to changes in
real CMI (that is, increased patient
severity) rather than apparent CMI (that
is, changes in coding practices).
Specifically, this CMI analysis indicates
that changes in LTCH coding practices,
which resulted in fluctuations in the
LTC–DRG relative weights in the past,
appear to be stabilizing as LTCHs have
become more familiar with a DRG-based
system. As discussed in section IV.C.2.
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of this preamble, the overall observed
change in LTCH CMI from FY 2003
compared to FY 2004 was an increase of
approximately 6.75 percent while the
overall observed change in LTCH CMI
from FY 2004 compared to FY 2005 was
an increase of approximately 3.49
percent, which is only about half of the
LTCH CMI growth measured from the
prior period (that is, the 6.75 percent
from FY 2003 to FY 2004). Furthermore,
preliminary analysis of FY 2006 LTCH
claims data, which reflects over 3 full
years of experience under the LTCH PPS
for most LTCHs, shows an even smaller
overall observed CMI increase of about
1.9 percent from FY 2005 compared to
FY 2006. Again, the observed CMI
increase from FY 2005 to FY 2006 is
only about half of the LTCH CMI growth
measured from the prior period (that is,
the 3.49 percent from FY 2004 to FY
2005). Because this LTCH CMI analysis
shows that observed CMI is declining,
we believe that LTCH coding practices
have stabilized such that changes in
LTCH CMI are now primarily due to
changes in real CMI (that is, increased
patient severity) rather than apparent
CMI (that is, changes in coding
practices). In other words, because we
believe that the observed annual CMI
increase is primarily ‘‘real’’ and not
‘‘apparent,’’ it is no longer necessary to
update the LTC–DRGs in a non-budget
neutral manner (as discussed in greater
detail below in this section). As stated
above in this section, we believe that
changes in payment rates, including the
LTC–DRG relative weights, should
accurately reflect changes in LTCHs’
true cost of treating patients (real CMI
increase) and should not be influenced
by changes in coding practices
(apparent CMI increase).
In light of these facts, in order to
mitigate estimated fluctuations in
estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments, as urged by past commenters,
we have given further consideration to
the issue of establishing a BN
requirement for annual LTC–DRG
reclassification and recalibration.
Therefore, in this proposed rule, under
the broad authority conferred upon the
Secretary under section 123 of the
BBRA as amended by section 307(b) of
the BIPA to develop the LTCH PPS, we
are proposing that, beginning with the
LTC–DRG update for FY 2008, the
annual update to the LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights
would be done in a budget neutral
manner such that estimated aggregate
LTCH PPS payments would be
unaffected, that is, would be neither
greater than nor less than the estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments that
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would have been made without the
proposed LTC–DRG classification and
relative weight changes. Accordingly,
we are proposing to revise § 412.517 to
specify that annual changes to the LTC–
DRG classifications and the
recalibration of the LTC–DRG relative
weights are made in a budget neutral
manner such that estimated aggregate
LTCH PPS payments are not affected.
We believe that it would be appropriate
to update the LTC–DRG classifications
and relative weights in a budget neutral
manner at this time for the reasons
discussed below.
As noted above in this section, the
relative weight for each LTC–DRG
represents the resources needed by an
average inpatient LTCH case in that
LTC–DRG, such that LTCH 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 relative
weight of 1. As also noted above in this
section, in the past when we
recalibrated the LTC–DRG relative
weights each year without a BN
adjustment based on the most recent
available LTCH claims data, we believe
that the resulting LTC–DRG relative
weights appropriately reflected more or
less resource use than the previous
year’s LTC–DRG relative weights, and
that the estimated aggregate payment
changes were appropriate given that the
LTCH claims data used to determine
those LTC–DRG relative weights
reflected changes in coding practices, as
well as changes in actual resource use.
Historically, we have not updated the
LTC–DRGs in a budget neutral manner
because, as discussed above in this
section, we believed that past
fluctuations in the LTC–DRG relative
weights were primarily due to changes
in LTCH coding practices, which
included both ‘‘real’’ and ‘‘apparent’’
changes in LTCHs’’ case-mix. We
believe that changes in the LTCH PPS
payment rates, including the LTC–DRG
relative weights, should accurately
reflect changes in LTCHs’ true cost of
treating patients (real CMI increase), and
should not be influenced by changes in
coding practices (apparent CMI
increase). Therefore, in the past we did
not update the LTC–DRGs in a budget
neutral manner so that ‘‘apparent’’ CMI
changes were not permanently built into
the LTCH PPS payment rates. Because
LTCH 2006 claims data does not appear
to significantly reflect changes in LTCH
coding practices in response to the
implementation of the LTCH PPS (as
explained above in this section), we
believe that it may be appropriate to
update the LTC–DRGs so that estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments would
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neither increase or decrease since we
believe that changes in the LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights
should accurately reflect changes in
LTCHs’ resource use (that is, true cost
of treating patients) and should not be
influenced by changes in coding
practices, and that the most recent such
LTCH claims data primarily reflects
changes in the resources needed by an
average LTCH case in a particular LTC–
DRG (and not changes in coding
practices). Thus, we now believe it
would be reasonable and appropriate to
update the LTC–DRGs in a budget
neutral manner, beginning in FY 2008,
so that estimated aggregate payments
under the LTCH PPS would be
unaffected (that is, estimated aggregate
LTCH PPS payments would not be
greater than or less than they would
have been without the proposed LTC–
DRG classification and relative weight
changes) by any changes resulting from
the annual reclassification and
recalibration of the LTC–DRGs.
Updating the LTC–DRGs in a budget
neutral manner would result in an
annual update to the individual LTC–
DRG classifications and relative weights
based on the most recent available data
to reflect changes in relative LTCH
resource use; however, the LTC–DRG
relative weights would be uniformly
adjusted to ensure that estimated
aggregate payments under the LTCH
PPS would not be affected (that is,
decreased or increased).
Under this proposal, we intend to
update the LTC–DRG classifications and
relative weights for FY 2008 based on
the best available data at the time to
allow for changes in factors affecting
hospital resource use, including but not
limited to, practice patterns and new
technology. This would be done in a
budget neutral manner, such that
estimated aggregate payments under the
LTCH PPS would neither decrease or
increase as a result of the changes due
to the annual reclassification and
recalibration of the LTC–DRGs. Because,
under this proposal, we would continue
to use the most recent available LTCH
data, the updated LTC–DRG relative
weights would continue to reflect
changes in LTCH resource use (as is the
case under the current (non-budget
neutral) LTC–DRG update
methodology). Thus, for example, if the
most recent LTCH claims data showed
that the resource use for hypothetical
LTC–DRG ‘‘ABC’’ is double the resource
use for hypothetical LTC–DRG ‘‘XYZ,’’
then the value of the relative weight for
LTC–DRG ‘‘ABC’’ would be about twice
the value of relative weight for LTC–
DRG ‘‘XYZ.’’
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In addition to accounting for changes
in relative resource use, to include a BN
requirement for the annual update to the
LTC–DRGs under this proposal, the
updated LTC–DRG relative weights
would need to be uniformly adjusted to
ensure that estimated aggregate LTCH
PPS payments would not be affected.
That is, a BN factor would need to be
computed to ensure that the LTC–DRG
reclassification and recalibration
process, by itself, neither increases nor
decreases estimated aggregate LTCH
PPS payments. To accomplish BN when
annually updating the LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights
under the proposed change to § 412.517,
we are proposing to use a method that
is similar to the methodology used
under the IPPS. Specifically, we are
proposing that after recalibrating the
LTC–DRG relative weights, as we do
under our existing methodology (as
described in detail in the FY 2007 IPPS
final rule (71 FR 47978 through 47981)),
we would apply a single BN adjustment
factor (which would be published
annually in the IPPS proposed and final
rules when we update the LTC–DRGs
and relative weights) to each of those
relative weights. The LTC–DRG BN
adjustment factor would ensure that
estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments (based on the most recent
available LTCH claims data) after
recalibration (the ‘‘new’’ relative
weights) would be equal to estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments (for the
same most recent available LTCH claims
data) before recalibration (the current or
‘‘old’’ relative weights). (Information on
the IPPS DRG BN adjustment can be
found in the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71
FR 47970).) As noted above in this
section, the annual update to the LTC–
DRG classifications and relative weights
provided for under the current § 412.517
is presented in the IPPS proposed and
final rules, and under the proposed
changes to § 412.517 presented in this
proposed rule, the proposed BN update
to the LTC–DRGs for FY 2008 would be
presented in the FY 2008 IPPS proposed
rule in the spring of 2007.
E. ICD–9–CM Coding System
1. Uniform Hospital Discharge Data Set
(UHDDS) Definitions
Because the assignment of a case to a
particular LTC–DRG will help
determine the amount that will be paid
for the case, it is important that the
coding is accurate. Classifications and
terminology used in the LTCH PPS are
consistent with the ICD–9–CM and the
UHDDS, as recommended to the
Secretary by the National Committee on
Vital and Health Statistics (‘‘Uniform
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Hospital Discharge Data: Minimum Data
Set, National Center for Health Statistics
(NCHS), April 1980’’) and as revised in
1984 by the Health Information Policy
Council (HIPC) of the Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS).
We note 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 HIPAA
Administrative Simplification Act of
1996 (45 CFR part 162). Furthermore,
the UHDDS was used as a standard for
the development of policies and
programs related to hospital discharge
statistics by both governmental and
nongovernmental sectors for over 30
years. In addition, the following
definitions (as described in the 1984
Revision of the UHDDS, approved by
the Secretary for use starting January
1986) are requirements of the ICD–9–
CM coding system, and have been used
as a standard for the development of the
CMS-DRGs:
• Diagnoses are defined to include all
diagnoses that affect the current hospital
stay.
• Principal diagnosis is defined as the
condition established after study to be
chiefly responsible for occasioning the
admission of the patient to the hospital
for care.
• Other diagnoses (also called
secondary diagnoses or additional
diagnoses) are defined as all conditions
that coexist at the time of admission,
that develop subsequently, or that affect
the treatment received or the LOS or
both. Diagnoses that relate to an earlier
episode of care that have no bearing on
the current hospital stay are excluded.
• All procedures performed will be
reported. This includes those that are
surgical in nature, carry a procedural
risk, carry an anesthetic risk, or require
specialized training.
We provide LTCHs with a 60-day
window after the date of the notice of
the initial LTC–DRG assignment to
request review of that assignment of the
discharge to a LTC–DRG. Additional
information may be provided by the
LTCH to the FI as part of that review.
2. Maintenance of the ICD–9–CM
Coding System
The ICD–9–CM C&M Committee is a
Federal interdepartmental committee,
co-chaired by the National Center for
Health Statistics (NCHS) and CMS, that
is charged with maintaining and
updating the ICD–9–CM system. The
C&M 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
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technologies and newly identified
diseases. The C&M 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 NCHS has lead responsibility for
the ICD–9–CM diagnosis codes included
in the Tabular List and Alphabetic
Index for Diseases, while we have the
lead responsibility for the ICD–9–CM
procedure codes included in the
Tabular List and Alphabetic Index for
Procedures. The C&M Committee
encourages participation by healthrelated organizations in this process and
holds public meetings for discussion of
educational issues and proposed coding
changes twice a year at the CMS Central
Office located in Baltimore, Maryland.
The agenda and dates of the meetings
can be accessed on our Web site at
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
ICD9ProviderDiagnosticCodes.
As discussed previously in this
section, for the IPPS, section 503(a) of
the MMA includes a requirement for
updating diagnosis and procedure codes
twice a year instead of annual updates
on October 1 of each year. This
requirement will improve the
recognition of new technologies under
the IPPS by accounting for them in the
GROUPER software at an earlier date.
Because this statutory requirement
could have a significant impact on
health care providers, coding staff,
publishers, system maintainers, and
software systems, among others, we
solicited comments on our proposed
provisions to implement this
requirement as part of the FY 2005 IPPS
proposed rule (69 FR 28220 through
28221). We responded to comments and
published our new policy regarding the
updating of diagnosis and procedure
codes (currently the ICD–9–CM) in the
FY 2005 IPPS final rule (69 FR 48953
through 48957). In addition, we
established a policy for the possibility of
an April 1 ICD–9–CM diagnosis and
procedure code update in the RY 2006
LTCH PPS final rule (70 FR 24176) since
LTCH systems would be expected to
recognize and report those new codes
through the channels described in this
section even though no DRG additions
or deletions or changes to relative
weights will occur prior to the usual
October 1 update. (For more detailed
information on the affect of the statutory
mandates directed at the IPPS as
amended by section 503(a) of the MMA,
refer to the FY 2005 IPPS final rule (69
FR 48954 through 48957) and the RY
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2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27806
through 27808)).
Current addendum and code title
information is published on the CMS
Web site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
ICD9ProviderDiagnosticCodes/
04_addendum.asp. Summary tables
showing new, revised, and deleted code
titles are also posted on the CMS Web
site at https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
ICD9ProviderDiagnosticCodes/
07_summarytables.asp. Information on
ICD–9–CM diagnosis codes can be
found at https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
ICD9ProviderDiagnosticCodes/.
Information on new, revised, and
deleted ICD–9–CM codes is also
available in the American Hospital
Association (AHA) publication, the
Coding Clinic for ICD–9–CM. AHA also
distributes information to publishers
and software vendors. We also send
copies of all ICD–9–CM coding changes
to our contractors for use in updating
their systems and providing education
to providers. In addition, of particular
note to LTCHs are the invalid diagnosis
codes (Table 6C) and the invalid
procedure codes (Table 6D) located in
the annual proposed and final rules for
the IPPS. Claims with invalid codes are
not processed by the Medicare claims
processing system.
3. Coding Rules and Use of ICD–9–CM
Codes in LTCHs
We continue to urge LTCHs to focus
on improved coding practices.
Inappropriate coding of cases can
adversely affect the uniformity of cases
in each LTC–DRG and produce
inappropriate weighting factors at
recalibration. Because of concerns
raised by LTCHs concerning correct
coding, we have asked the AHA to
provide additional clarification and
instruction on proper coding in the
LTCH setting. The AHA will provide
this instruction via their established
process of addressing questions through
their publication, the Coding Clinic for
ICD–9–CM. Written questions or
requests for clarification may be
addressed to the Central Office on ICD–
9–CM, American Hospital Association,
One North Franklin, Chicago, IL 60606.
A form for question(s) is available for
download and can be mailed on AHA’s
Web site at: www.ahacentraloffice.org.
In addition, current coding guidelines
are available at the NCHS Web site:
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/datawh/
ftpserv/ftpicd9/ftpicd9.htm#conv.
In conjunction with the cooperating
parties (AHA, the American Health
Information Management Association
(AHIMA), and NCHS), we reviewed
actual medical records and continue to
emphasize the importance of the quality
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of the documentation under the LTCH
PPS. Based on the LTCH claims data
analysis described above in section
III.D.2. of this preamble, we fully
believe that with some experience under
a PPS, the quality of the documentation
and coding of LTCHs has improved, as
it did for the IPPS. However, because of
the need for proper coding by LTCHs,
the cooperating parties have plans to
assist their members with continued
improvement in documentation and
coding issues for the LTCHs through
specific questions and coding
guidelines. The importance of
consistent and complete documentation
is emphasized in the revised ICD–9–CM
Official Guidelines for Coding and
Reporting: ‘‘A joint effort between the
attending physician and coder is
essential to achieve complete and
accurate documentation, code
assignment, and reporting of diagnoses
and procedures. The importance of
consistent, complete documentation in
the medical record cannot be
overemphasized. Without this
documentation, the application of all
coding guidelines is a difficult, if not
impossible task’’ (Coding Clinic for
ICD–9–CM, Fourth Quarter 2002, page
115).
To improve medical record
documentation, LTCHs should be aware
that if the patient is being admitted for
continuation of treatment of an acute or
chronic condition, guidelines at Section
I.B.10 of the Coding Clinic for ICD–9CM, Fourth Quarter 2002 (page 129) are
applicable for the selection of principal
diagnosis. To clarify coding advice
issued in the August 30, 2002 LTCH
PPS final rule (67 FR 55979), at
Guideline I.B.12, Late Effects, we state
that a late effect is considered to be the
residual effect (condition produced)
after the acute phase of an illness or
injury has terminated (Coding Clinic for
ICD–9–CM, Fourth Quarter 2002, page
129). Regarding whether a LTCH should
report the ICD–9–CM code(s) for an
unresolved acute condition instead of
the code(s) for late effects of
rehabilitation, we emphasize that each
case must be evaluated on its unique
circumstances and coded appropriately.
Depending on the documentation in the
medical record, either a code reflecting
the acute condition or rehabilitation
could be appropriate in a LTCH.
Since implementation of the LTCH
PPS, our Medicare FIs have conducted
training and provided assistance to
LTCHs in correct coding. We have also
issued manuals containing procedures,
as well as coding instructions to LTCHs
and FIs. We will continue to conduct
training and provide guidance on an ‘‘as
needed’’ basis. We also refer readers to
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the detailed discussion on correct
coding practices in the August 30, 2002
LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR 55981
through 55983). Additional coding
instructions and examples will be
published in the Coding Clinic for ICD–
9–CM.
F. Method for Updating the LTC–DRG
Relative Weights
As discussed in the August 30, 2002
LTCH PPS final rule that implemented
the LTCH PPS, under the LTCH PPS,
each LTCH will receive a payment that
represents an appropriate amount for
the efficient delivery of care to Medicare
patients (67 FR 55984). The system must
be able to account adequately for each
LTCH’s case-mix to ensure both a fair
distribution of Medicare payments and
access to care for those Medicare
patients whose care is more costly.
Therefore, in § 412.523(c), we adjust the
standard Federal PPS rate by the LTC–
DRG relative weights in determining
payment to LTCHs for each case.
Under this payment system, 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 as described in § 412.515. To
ensure that Medicare patients who are
classified to each LTC–DRG have access
to 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.
As we discussed in the FY 2007 IPPS
final rule, the LTC–DRG relative weights
effective under the LTCH PPS for
Federal FY 2007 were calculated using
the March 2006 update of FY 2005
MedPAR data and Version 24.0 of the
GROUPER software (71 FR 47973). We
use total days and total charges in the
calculation of the LTC–DRG relative
weights.
LTCHs often specialize in certain
areas, such as ventilator-dependent
patients and rehabilitation or 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.
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 method
to calculate relative weights. We believe
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this method removes this hospitalspecific source of bias in measuring
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. (See the FY 2007 IPPS final rule
for further information on the
application of the hospital-specific
relative value methodology under the
LTCH PPS (71 FR 47974 through
47975).)
To account for LTC–DRGs with low
volume (that is, with fewer than 25
LTCH cases), we grouped those low
volume LTC–DRGs into 1 of 5 categories
(quintiles) based on average charges, for
the purposes of determining relative
weights. For FY 2007 based on the FY
2005 MedPAR data, we identified 180
LTC–DRGs that contained between 1
and 24 cases. This list of low volume
LTC–DRGs was then divided into 1 of
the 5 low volume quintiles, each
containing 36 LTC–DRGs (180 / 5 = 36).
Each of the low volume LTC–DRGs
grouped to a specific quintile received
the same relative weight and ALOS
using the formula applied to the regular
LTC–DRGs (25 or more cases). (See the
FY 2007 IPPS final rule for further
explanation of the development and
composition of each of the 5 low
volume quintiles for FY 2007 (71 FR
47975 through 47978).)
After grouping the cases in the
appropriate LTC–DRG, we calculated
the relative weights by first removing
statistical outliers and cases with a LOS
of 7 days or less. Next, we adjusted the
number of cases remaining in each
LTC–DRG for the effect of SSO cases
under § 412.529. The short-stay adjusted
discharges and corresponding charges
were used to calculate ‘‘relative adjusted
weights’’ in each LTC–DRG using the
hospital-specific relative value method.
We also adjusted the LTC–DRG relative
weights to account for
nonmonotonically increasing relative
weights. That is, we made an
adjustment if 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’’ by assigning the
same weight to both LTC–DRGs in the
‘‘with CC’’/‘‘without CC’’ pair. (See the
FY 2007 IPPS final rule for further
details on the steps for calculating the
LTC–DRG relative weights (71 FR 47978
through 47984).)
In addition, of the 538 LTC–DRGs in
the LTCH PPS for FY 2007, based on
LTCH cases in the FY 2005 MedPAR
files, we identified 183 LTC–DRGs for
which there were no LTCH cases in the
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database. That is, no patients who
would have been classified to those
DRGs were treated in LTCHs during FY
2005 and, therefore, no charge data were
reported for those DRGs. Thus, in the
process of determining the relative
weights of LTC–DRGs, we were unable
to determine weights for these 183 LTC–
DRGs using the method described in
this section of the preamble. However,
since patients with a number of the
diagnoses under these LTC–DRGs may
be treated at LTCHs beginning in FY
2007, 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 were able to determine relative
weights, based on the FY 2005 claims
data. (A list of the current no-volume
LTC–DRGs and further explanation of
their FY 2007 relative weight
assignment can be found in the FY 2007
IPPS final rule (71 FR 47980 through
47984).)
Furthermore, for FY 2007, we
established LTC–DRG relative weights
of 0.0000 for heart, kidney, liver/
intestinal, lung, simultaneous pancreas/
kidney, and pancreas transplants (LTC–
DRGs 103, 302, 480, 495, 512 and 513,
respectively) because presently no
LTCH meets the applicable
requirements to perform Medicare
covered transplant procedures.
However, if in the future, a LTCH seeks
to meet such requirements as a
Medicare-approved transplant center to
perform Medicare-covered transplant
procedures, we believe that the
application and approval procedure
would allow sufficient time for us to
propose appropriate weights for the
LTC–DRGs affected. At the present time,
we included these 6 transplant LTC–
DRGs in the GROUPER software
program for administrative purposes. As
the LTCH PPS uses the same GROUPER
software program for LTCHs as is used
under the IPPS, removing these DRGs
would be administratively burdensome.
As we noted previously in this
proposed rule, there were no new ICD–
9–CM code requests for an April 1, 2007
update. Therefore, Version 24.0 of the
DRG GROUPER software established in
the FY 2007 IPPS final rule will
continue to be effective until October 1,
2007. Moreover, the LTC–DRGs and
relative weights for FY 2007 established
in Table 11 of that same IPPS final rule
(71 FR 48321 through 48331) will
continue to be effective until October 1,
2007, (just as they would have been
even if there had been any new ICD–9–
CM code requests for an April 1, 2007
update). Accordingly, Table 3 in
Addendum A to this proposed rule lists
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the LTC–DRGs and their respective
relative weights, geometric ALOS, and
five-sixths of the geometric ALOS that
we will continue to use for the period
of July 1, 2007 through September 30,
2007. (This table is the same as Table 11
of the Addendum to the FY 2007 IPPS
final rule.) The next update to the ICD–
9–CM coding system will be presented
in the FY 2008 IPPS proposed rule
(since there will be no April 1, 2007
updates to the ICD–9–CM coding
system). In addition, the proposed DRGs
and GROUPER for FY 2008 that would
be used for the IPPS and the LTCH PPS,
effective October 1, 2007, will be
presented in the IPPS FY 2008 proposed
rule that will be published in the
Federal Register.
IV. Proposed Changes to the LTCH PPS
Payment Rates for the 2008 LTCH PPS
Rate Year
[If you choose to comment on issues
in this section, please include the
caption ‘‘PROPOSED CHANGES TO
LTCH PPS PAYMENT RATES FOR THE
2007 LTCH PPS RATE YEAR’’ at the
beginning of your comments.]
A. Overview of the Development of the
Payment Rates
The LTCH PPS was effective for a
LTCH’s first cost reporting period
beginning on or after October 1, 2002.
Effective with that cost reporting period,
LTCHs are paid, during a 5-year
transition period, a total LTCH
prospective payment that is comprised
of an increasing proportion of the LTCH
PPS Federal rate and a decreasing
proportion based on reasonable costbased principles, unless the hospital
makes a one-time election to receive
payment based on 100 percent of the
Federal rate as specified in § 412.533.
New LTCHs (as defined at
§ 412.23(e)(4)) are paid based on 100
percent of the Federal rate, with no
phase-in transition payments.
The basic methodology for
determining LTCH PPS Federal
prospective payment rates is set forth at
§ 412.515 through § 412.532. In this
section, we discuss the proposed factors
that would be used to update the LTCH
PPS standard Federal rate for the 2008
LTCH PPS rate year that would be
effective for LTCH discharges occurring
on or after July 1, 2007 through June 30,
2008. When we implemented the LTCH
PPS in the August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS
final rule (67 FR 56029 through 56031),
we computed the LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate for FY 2003 by
updating the best latest available (FY
1998 or FY 1999) Medicare inpatient
operating and capital cost data, using
the excluded hospital market basket.
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Section 123(a)(1) of the BBRA
requires that the PPS developed for
LTCHs be budget neutral for the initial
year of implementation. Therefore, in
calculating the standard Federal rate
under § 412.523(d)(2), we set total
estimated LTCH PPS payments equal to
estimated payments that would have
been made under the reasonable costbased payment methodology had the
PPS for LTCHs not been implemented.
Section 307(a) of the BIPA specified that
the increases to the hospital-specific
target amounts and the cap on the target
amounts for LTCHs for FY 2002
provided for by section 307(a)(1) of the
BIPA shall not be considered in the
development and implementation of the
LTCH PPS.
Furthermore, as specified at
§ 412.523(d)(1), the standard Federal
rate is reduced by an adjustment factor
to account for the estimated proportion
of outlier payments under the LTCH
PPS to total estimated LTCH PPS
payments (8 percent). For further details
on the development of the FY 2003
standard Federal rate, see the August 30,
2002 LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR 56027
through 56037), and for subsequent
updates to the LTCH PPS Federal rate,
refer to the following final rules: RY
2004 LTCH PPS final rule (68 FR 34134
through 34140), RY 2005 LTCH PPS
final rule (69 FR 25682 through 25684),
RY 2006 LTCH PPS final rule (70 FR
24179 through 24180), and RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27819
through 27827).
B. LTCH PPS Market Basket
1. Overview of the RPL Market Basket
Historically, the Medicare program
has used a market basket to account for
price increases of the services furnished
by providers. The market basket used
for the LTCH PPS includes both
operating and capital-related costs of
LTCHs because the LTCH PPS uses a
single payment rate for both operating
and capital-related costs. The
development of the LTCH PPS standard
Federal rate, using the excluded
hospital with capital market basket, is
discussed in further detail in the August
30, 2002 LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR
56027 through 56033).
In the August 30, 2002 final rule (67
FR 56016 through 56017 and 56030),
which implemented the LTCH PPS, we
established the use of the excluded
hospital with capital market basket as
the LTCH PPS market basket. The
excluded hospital with capital market
basket was also used to update the
limits on LTCHs’ operating costs for
inflation under the TEFRA reasonable
cost-based payment system. We
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explained that we believe the use of the
excluded hospital with capital market
basket to update LTCHs’ costs for
inflation was appropriate because the
excluded hospital market basket (with a
capital component) measures price
increases of the services furnished by
excluded hospitals, including LTCHs.
For further details on the development
of the excluded hospital with capital
market basket, see the RY 2004 LTCH
PPS final rule (68 FR 34134 through
34137).
In the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule
(71 FR 27810), we noted that based on
our research, we did not develop a
market basket specific to LTCH services.
We are still unable to create a separate
market basket specifically for LTCHs
due to the small number of facilities and
the limited amount of data that is
reported (for instance, only
approximately 15 percent of LTCHs
reported contract labor cost data for
2002). In that same final rule, under the
broad authority conferred upon the
Secretary by section 123 of the BBRA as
amended by section 307(b) of the BIPA,
we adopted the ‘‘Rehabilitation,
Psychiatric and Long-Term Care (RPL)
market basket’’ as the appropriate
market basket of goods and services
under the LTCH PPS for discharges
occurring on or after July 1, 2006.
Specifically, beginning with the 2007
LTCH PPS rate year, for the LTCH PPS,
we adopted the use of the RPL market
basket based on FY 2002 cost report
data as it was the best available data. We
choose to use the FY 2002 Medicare cost
reports because these are the most
recent, relatively complete cost data for
inpatient rehabilitation facilities (IRFs),
inpatient psychiatric facilities (IPF), and
LTCHs.
The RPL market basket is determined
based on the operating and capital costs
of IRFs, IPFs and LTCHs. Since all IRFs
are now paid under the IRF PPS Federal
payment rate, nearly all LTCHs are paid
100 percent of the Federal rate under
the LTCH PPS, and most IPFs are
transitioning to payment based on 100
percent of the Federal per diem
payment amount under the IPF PPS
(payments to IPFs will be based
exclusively on 100 percent of the
Federal rate for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after January 1, 2008),
the RPL market basket reflects changes
in the operating and capital costs for
these hospitals. As we explained in that
same final rule, we believe a market
basket based on the data of IRFs, IPFs
and LTCHs is appropriate to use under
the LTCH PPS since it is the best
available data that reflects the cost
structures of LTCHs.
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For further details on the
development of the RPL market basket,
including the methodology for
determining the operating and capital
portions of the RPL market basket, see
the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR
27810 through 27817).
2. Proposed Market Basket Estimate for
the 2008 LTCH PPS Rate Year
Consistent with our historical
practice, we estimate market basket
increase based on Global Insight’s
forecast using the most recent available
data. The most recent estimate of the
RPL market basket for July 1, 2007
through June 30, 2008 (the 2008 LTCH
PPS rate year), based on Global Insight’s
3rd quarter 2006 forecast with history
through the 2nd quarter of 2006, is 3.2
percent. Global Insight, Inc. is a
nationally recognized economic and
financial forecasting firm that contracts
with CMS to forecast changes in the
components of the market baskets.
Consistent with our historical practice
of using market basket estimates based
on the most recent available data, we
propose that if more recent data is
available when we develop the final
rule, we would use such data, if
appropriate.
As discussed in greater detail in this
section, for the 2008 LTCH PPS rate
year, we are proposing to update the
standard Federal rate by 0.71 percent.
The proposed update reflects an
adjustment based on the most recent
market basket estimate (currently 3.2
percent) and an adjustment to account
for the increase in case-mix in the prior
period (FY 2005) that resulted from
changes in coding practices rather than
an increase in patient severity. We are
also proposing that if more recent data
are available (for example, a more recent
estimate of the market basket), we
would use such data, if appropriate, to
determine the RY 2008 update in the
final rule and thus, the rate update
noted in regulation text could change.
C. Proposed Standard Federal Rate for
the 2008 LTCH PPS Rate Year
1. Background
At § 412.523(c)(3)(ii), for LTCH PPS
rate years beginning RY 2004 through
RY 2006, we updated the standard
Federal rate to adjust for the most recent
estimate of the projected increases in
prices for LTCH inpatient hospital
services. We established the policy of
annually updating the standard Federal
rate by the increase factor described in
the RY 2004 LTCH PPS final rule (68 FR
34138) because at that time we believed
that was the most appropriate method
for updating the LTCH PPS standard
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Federal rate annually for years after FY
2003. When we moved the date of the
annual update of the LTCH PPS from
October 1 to July 1 in the RY 2004 LTCH
PPS final rule (68 FR 34138), we revised
§ 412.523(c)(3) to specify that for LTCH
PPS rate years beginning on or after July
1, 2003, the annual update to the
standard Federal rate for the LTCH PPS
would be equal to the previous rate
year’s Federal rate updated by the most
recent estimate of increases in the
appropriate market basket of goods and
services included in covered inpatient
LTCH services. We believed that was
the most appropriate method for
updating the LTCH PPS standard
Federal rate annually for years after RY
2004. In the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final
rule (71 FR 27818), we established at
§ 412.523(c)(3)(iii) that the update to the
standard Federal rate for the 2007 LTCH
PPS rate year is zero percent. As
discussed in that same final rule, we
explained that rather than solely using
the most recent estimate of the LTCH
PPS market basket as the basis of the
update factor for the Federal rate for RY
2007, we believed it was appropriate to
adjust the rate to account for the
changes in coding practices (rather than
patient severity) as indicated by our
ongoing monitoring activities.
Accordingly, we established the
LTCH PPS standard Federal rate,
effective from July 1, 2006 through June
30, 2007 (the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year),
at $38,086.04 (71 FR 27818).
Additionally, in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
proposed rule (71 FR 4742 through
4747), we provided a description of a
preliminary model of an update
framework under the LTCH PPS. We
received few comments on that update
framework preliminary model. As
discussed in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
final rule (71 FR 27818 through 27819
and 27902 through 27906), although we
did not propose to adopt an analytical
update framework, we continued to
solicit comments on the framework
based on the preliminary model, using
the best available data and concepts,
and we may propose to adopt a
framework at some time in the future.
We continue to be interested in
comments and suggestions on the
preliminary model of an update
framework under the LTCH PPS that
was present in Appendix A of the RY
2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27902
through 27906).
In the discussion that follows, we
explain how we developed the proposed
standard Federal rate for the 2008 LTCH
PPS rate year. Specifically, we explain
our rationale, which is based on our
ongoing monitoring activities, for
proposing an annual update to the
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standard Federal rate for RY 2008 that
reflects an adjustment for the most
recent market basket estimate and an
adjustment to account for the increase
in case-mix in a prior period (FY 2005)
that resulted from changes in coding
practices rather than an increase in
patient severity.
2. Proposed Update to the Standard
Federal Rate for the 2008 LTCH PPS
Rate Year
Under § 412.523(c)(3)(ii), for RY 2004
through RY 2006, the annual update to
the LTCH PPS standard Federal rate was
equal to the most recent estimate of
increases in the prices of an appropriate
market basket of goods and services
included in covered inpatient LTCH
services. As noted above in this section,
in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule,
under the broad authority conferred
upon the Secretary by section 123 of the
BBRA as amended by section 307(b) of
BIPA to include appropriate
adjustments in the establishment of the
LTCH PPS, for discharges occurring on
or after July 1, 2006 and on or before
June 30, 2007 (RY 2007), we specified
at § 412.523(c)(3)(iii) that the standard
Federal rate from the previous year
would be updated by a factor of zero
percent. That is, the standard Federal
rate for the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year
remained the same as the standard
Federal rate in effect during the 2006
LTCH PPS rate year (July 1, 2005
through June 30, 2006) (that is,
$38,086.04).
As discussed in greater detail in the
RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR
27819 through 27827), the update to the
standard Federal rate for RY 2007 was
determined based on the estimate of the
LTCH PPS market basket and an
analysis of LTCH case-mix, in
conjunction with a review of LTCHs’
margins and our ongoing LTCH
monitoring activities. Specifically, from
our CMI analysis, we calculated the
observed CMI increase between FY 2003
and FY 2004 (6.75 percent) and
determined that a significant portion of
the 6.75 percent increase in CMI
between FY 2003 and FY 2004 is due to
changes in coding practices, which we
define as ‘‘apparent’’ increase in casemix, rather than the treatment of more
resource intensive patients. We also
noted that the large observed increase in
LTCH case-mix was not accompanied by
a corresponding increase in Medicare
costs. Finally, we noted in the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27826
through 27827) that although the most
recent update of the market basket
discussed in that final rule is 0.2
percent lower than the estimate of the
market basket discussed in the RY 2007
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LTCH PPS proposed rule, we believed
that finalizing a zero percent update to
the Federal rate for RY 2007 was
appropriate for several reasons. First, we
did not believe that there was a
significant difference between the most
recent estimates of the market basket for
RY 2007 (3.4 percent) and the estimate
used in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
proposed rule (3.6 percent).
Furthermore, there could be some
minimal variation in how much of the
observed case-mix increase represents
real case-mix changes. Finally, because
the proposed update for RY 2007 at
§ 412.523(c)(3)(iii) explicitly specified
that the RY 2007 standard Federal rate
would be the previous LTCH PPS rate
year updated by an update factor of zero
percent, we believe some commenters
may not have been aware that the final
update for RY 2007 could have been
different than (that is, greater than or
less than) zero percent. Thus, we
believed that the best approach was to
adopt an update factor of zero percent
in the final rule for RY 2007, which
reflected both the market basket
estimate and an adjustment to account
for the increase in case-mix in a prior
period (FY 2004) that resulted from
changes in coding practices rather than
an increase in patient severity. In that
same final rule (71 FR 27821), we stated
that the revision to § 412.523(c)(3) only
addressed an update to the LTCH PPS
Federal rate for the 2007 LTCH PPS rate
year (§ 412.523(c)(3)(iii)), and that we
would propose future revisions to
§ 412.523(c)(3) to address future
proposed updates to the LTCH PPS
Federal rates in future rate years based
on an analysis of the most recent
available LTCH data.
In determining the proposed update
to the standard Federal rate for the 2008
LTCH PPS rate year, we again
performed a CMI analysis using the
most recent available LTCH claims data
and found the observed CMI increase
between FY 2004 and FY 2005 to be
3.49 percent. We believe that there is
still some component of apparent CMI
increase within the observed CMI
increase of 3.49 percent that is due to
coding practices rather than the
treatment of more resource intensive
patients (real CMI increase). Therefore,
we believe it is appropriate to propose
an adjustment to the market basket
update for RY 2008 to account for the
apparent CMI increase for a subsequent
prior period (that is, CMI increase due
to changes in coding practices during
FY 2005). As discussed in detail in the
RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR
27819 through 27827), in determining
the update to the LTCH PPS Federal rate
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4791
for RY 2007, we used 2.75 percent as the
proxy for ‘‘real’’ CMI change during RY
2004. We noted in that same final rule
(71 FR 27822) that we were aware of a
well-established RAND Corporation
(RAND) study [‘‘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)].
Based upon such study, we determined
that real case-mix change for IPPS
hospitals was a fairly steady 1.0 and 1.4
percent per year. We also noted that in
updating IPPS rates, we have
consistently assumed that real case-mix
change was between 1.0 to 1.4 percent
per year, which is a more conservative
estimate of real case-mix increase than
the 2.75 percent used in determining the
update to the Federal rate for RY 2007
(71 FR 27822). However, we explained
that we believed at the time it was
appropriate to utilize the estimate of
2.75 percent as a proxy for real CMI
increase in determining the update for
RY 2007 rather than the estimates based
on the RAND study (71 FR 27819
through 27827). We believe it is
appropriate to factor the impact of
moving from a reasonable cost-based
(TEFRA) payment system to a PPS into
our CMI analysis for RY 2007. In
determining the update for RY 2007, we
measured the observed CMI increase
from FY 2003 (the year LTCHs began
transitioning to PPS payments from
reasonable cost-based payments) to FY
2004 (the first full year after
implementation of the LTCH PPS).
Under the reasonable cost-based
payment system, there was little
incentive for LTCHs to attempt to
influence payments through changes in
coding practices. Under the former
reasonable cost-based payment system,
a LTCH’s payments were limited on the
costs per discharge of its patients in a
base year updated. Since payment was
based on the resource use of a particular
mix of patients in the base year, there
may have been reluctance on the part of
LTCHs, in subsequent years, to accept
more resource-intensive patients than
those patients they treat in their base
year. In contrast, under the LTCH PPS,
payment is DRG-based. Payments are
dependent on the DRG to which a
patient is assigned as determined by the
patient’s diagnosis. Therefore, a LTCH
could treat higher severity patients with
the expectation that payment will be
determined based on the hospital case
mix in the current year and without the
concern, under the former payment
system, that its costs for those more
resource intensive patients would be
limited by the cost per discharge limits
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that were established by its patient mix
in its base year. Immediately following
the transition to the LTCH PPS, a LTCH
could receive payment for treating
patients with higher severity that
require more intensive resources, which
would have caused the LTCH to exceed
its set limit under the TEFRA system.
Therefore, we expected that in the first
full year following implementation of
the LTCH PPS, LTCHs would take
advantage of this change and treat more
severe patients. Accordingly, we believe
that it is reasonable to assume that the
real CMI increase in that first full year
after implementation of the LTCH PPS
would be somewhat higher than the 1.0
to 1.4 percent annual increase.
Thus, in the CMI analysis conducted
for RY 2007 based on case mix data
from FY 2003 to FY 2004, we used 2.75
percent as the proxy for the real CMI
increase component of the total 6.75
percent observed CMI increase. (For a
more detailed discussion on the 2.75
percent proxy for real CMI increase,
refer to the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final
rule (71 FR 27819 through 27827).)
Consequently for RY 2007, by
removing the real CMI increase
component (2.75 percent) from the
observed CMI increase (6.75 percent),
the apparent CMI increase from FY 2003
to FY 2004 was estimated to be 4.0
percent (6.75¥2.75 = 4.0). The rate for
RY 2007 was offset by 3.4 percent to
account for the changes in coding
practices that do not reflect increased
severity of LTCH patients (which
accounts for the fact that we have
already included a 0.34 percent
behavioral offset in establishing the
initial LTCH PPS Federal rate). For
further information on the update to the
Federal rate for RY 2007, see the RY
2007 final rule (71 FR 27819 through
27827).
For this proposed rule, the CMI
analysis performed in determining the
proposed Federal rate update for RY
2008 is based on the observed CMI
increase from FY 2004 to FY 2005 (the
first and second full years of the LTCH
PPS, respectively). We believe that as
the LTCH PPS matured and LTCHs have
become more familiar with the DRGbased payment system, it is more
appropriate to utilize the estimate of
real case-mix increase (1.0 percent to 1.4
percent) based on the RAND study that
is typically found in acute care hospitals
under the IPPS. Furthermore, an
analysis of the most recent available
LTCH claims data shows a steady
decrease in the observed CMI from year
to year since FY 2003 (the observed CMI
change between FY 2003 and FY 2004
is 6.75 percent, between FY 2004 and
FY 2005 is 3.49 percent, and between
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FY 2005 and FY 2006 is estimated to be
1.9 percent), which suggests that both
apparent and real components of CMI
are decreasing as the LTCH PPS
matures. Given the estimated 1.9
percent observed CMI increase for FY
2006, it appears that it is inappropriate
to assume a constant annual real case
mix of 2.75 percent.
Therefore, for periods beyond the first
full year of the LTCH PPS, we believe
it is no longer appropriate to use such
a generous estimate of real CMI. (Many
LTCHs have cost reporting periods
beginning in August and thus were not
paid under the LTCH PPS until August
2003. For those hospitals, the first full
year of the LTCH PPS was during FY
2004.) While the well-established ‘‘real’’
case-mix parameters based on the RAND
study are based on IPPS data, we believe
they are appropriate to apply under the
LTCH PPS for the reasons explained
below in this section. However, we are
soliciting comments on other data
sources that could be used to determine
a proxy for real LTCH PPS case-mix
change other than the 1.0 to 1.4 percent
per year case-mix parameters based on
the RAND study. As we have discussed
numerous times in previous LTCH PPS
proposed and final rules, acute care
hospitals paid under the IPPS and
LTCHs paid under the LTCH PPS have
much in common. Hospitals paid under
both systems are required to meet the
same certification criteria set forth in
section 1861(e) of the Act to participate
as a hospital in the Medicare program.
LTCHs are certified as acute care
hospitals but are classified as LTCHs for
payment purposes solely because such
hospitals generally have an inpatient
ALOS of greater than 25 days (as set
forth in section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(I) of
the Act). Furthermore, the LTCH PPS
uses the same patient classification
system that is used under the IPPS, and
several LTCH PPS payment policies,
such as the area wage adjustment
(§ 412.525(c)), COLA for Alaska and
Hawaii (§ 412.525(b)), and high cost
outlier (HCO) policy (§ 412.525(a)) are
modeled after the similar IPPS policies.
Therefore, we believe it is appropriate
to propose utilizing the estimate of real
CMI increase based on the RAND study
of 1.0 percent as the proxy for the
portion of the observed 3.49 percent
CMI increase from FY 2004 to FY 2005
that represents real CMI changes for use
in determining the proposed RY 2008
Federal rate update. We propose to use
the more conservative 1.0 percent
(rather than the 1.4 percent) as a proxy
for real CMI increase because it is
consistent with what is used under the
IPPS and we believe the similarities
between LTCHs and acute care hospitals
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
are significant as we explained
previously. (For a more detailed
discussion on the 1.0 percent for real
CMI increase utilized in the IPPS, see
the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR
48156 through 48158), and the FY 1994
IPPS proposed rule (58 FR 30444).)
Accordingly, since the observed CMI
change for FY 2005 is estimated at 3.49
percent (based on the most recent
available LTCH case-mix data from FY
2004 compared to FY 2005), accounting
for the real CMI change of 1.0 percent,
we believe that 2.49 percent (3.49 ¥ 1.0
= 2.49) of that increase reflects CMI
increase that is due to changes in coding
practices (rather than patient severity).
As we discussed in greater detail in
the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR
27819 through 27827), while we
continue to believe that an update to the
LTCH PPS Federal rate year should be
based on the most recent estimate of the
LTCH PPS market basket, we believe it
appropriate that the rate be offset by an
adjustment to account for changes in
coding practices that do not reflect
increased patient severity. Such an
adjustment protects the integrity of the
Medicare Trust Funds by ensuring that
the LTCH PPS payment rates better
reflect the true costs of treating LTCH
patients (71 FR 27798 through 27820).
Therefore, in determining the proposed
RY 2008 update to the LTCH PPS
Federal rate, we believe it is appropriate
to apply an adjustment to eliminate the
effect of coding or classification changes
in a prior period (FY 2005) that do not
reflect real changes in LTCHs’ case-mix.
Specifically, the proposed case-mix
adjustment in determining the proposed
RY 2008 Federal rate is meant to reduce
current payments to account for the
increase in payments in FY 2005 that
resulted from the CMI increase that was
attributable to the apparent case-mix
increase in that year. As was the case
when we determined the RY 2007
update factor, this adjustment would be
necessary to account for payments that
were made based on improved coding
(rather than increased patient severity)
in prior years. Therefore, in this
proposed rule, under the broad
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 are proposing to revise
§ 412.523(c)(3), to specify that, for
discharges occurring on or after July 1,
2007 and on or before June 30, 2008, the
standard Federal rate from the previous
year would be updated by 0.71 percent,
which is based on the most recent
market basket estimate (3.2 percent)
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adjusted by the apparent CMI (2.49
percent) due to changes in coding
practice rather than an increase in
patient severity. As explained above in
this section, the proposed update factor
for RY 2008 is based on the most recent
estimate of the LTCH PPS market basket
offset by an adjustment to account for
changes in case-mix in prior periods
due to changes in coding practices
rather than increased patient severity.
We note that the proposed update factor
of 0.71 percent is higher than the zero
percent update recommended by the
MedPAC for RY 2008 (MedPAC Public
Meeting, January 9, 2007, Meeting
Transcript pp. 225–226). We are
soliciting comments on a possible zero
percent update to the standard Federal
rate for RY 2008.
Furthermore, since we are proposing
to use the most recent estimates of the
market basket and CMI increase in the
prior period (FY 2005) for calculating
the update factor to the LTCH PPS
Federal rate, we note that at the time the
analysis must be performed for the final
rule, we will consider comments
received on this proposed rule and
would also use the most recent
estimates available at that time, if
appropriate, which may be different
from the data we are using in this
proposed rule. Therefore, the proposed
update factor applied to the standard
Federal rate may change in the final
rule. Consequently, the update factor in
the regulation text would change
accordingly.
At this time, the most recent estimate
of the LTCH PPS market basket is 3.2
percent, and the most recent estimate of
apparent CMI increase in the prior
period (FY 2005), that is, case-mix
increase due to changes in coding
practices, is 2.49 percent. Therefore, we
are proposing that the RY 2008 update
factor to the LTCH PPS Federal rate
would be an estimated 0.71 percent (3.2
¥ 2.49 = 0.71), which reflects the
proposed adjustment to the most recent
market basket estimate and accounts for
the increase in case-mix in the prior
period that resulted from changes in
coding practices rather than an increase
in patient severity. Accordingly, under
the same broad authority conferred
upon the Secretary under the BBRA and
the BIPA referenced above in this
section, we are proposing to specify
under § 412.523(c)(3)(iv), that, for
discharges occurring on or after July 1,
2007 and on or before June 30, 2008, the
standard Federal rate from the previous
year would be updated by 0.71 percent,
determined based on an adjustment to
the most recent estimate of the market
basket to account for case-mix increase
in the prior period (FY 2005) that is due
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to changes in coding practices rather
than patient severity.
3. Proposed Standard Federal Rate for
the 2008 LTCH PPS Rate Year
In the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule
(71 FR 27827), we established a
standard Federal rate of $38,086.04 for
the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year that was
based on the best available data and
policies established in that final rule. In
this proposed rule, under the broad
authority conferred upon the Secretary
by section 123 of the BBRA as amended
by section 307(b) of the BIPA, we are
proposing an annual update to the
standard Federal rate for RY 2008 that
reflects an adjustment for the most
recent market basket estimate and an
adjustment to account for the increase
in case-mix in a prior period (FY 2005)
that resulted from changes in coding
practices rather than an increase in
patient severity. Therefore, based on the
proposed update factor for RY 2008 of
0.71 percent, the proposed standard
Federal rate for RY 2008 would be
$38,356.45. Since the proposed standard
Federal rate for the 2008 LTCH PPS rate
year has already been adjusted for
differences in case-mix, wages, COLAs,
and HCO payments, we are not
proposing to make any additional
adjustments in the proposed standard
Federal rate for these factors. Finally,
we propose that if more recent data
becomes available, we would use that
data, if appropriate, to determine the
update to the standard Federal rate for
the RY 2008 final rule.
D. Calculation of Proposed LTCH
Prospective Payments for the 2008
LTCH PPS Rate Year
The basic methodology for
determining prospective payment rates
for LTCH inpatient operating and
capital-related costs is set forth in
§ 412.515 through § 412.532. In
accordance with § 412.515, we assign
appropriate weighting factors to each
LTC–DRG to reflect the estimated
relative cost of hospital resources used
for discharges within that group as
compared to discharges classified
within other groups. The amount of the
prospective payment is based on the
standard Federal rate, established under
§ 412.523, and adjusted for the LTC–
DRG relative weights, differences in area
wage levels, COLA in Alaska and
Hawaii, HCOs, and other special
payment provisions (SSOs under
§ 412.529 and interrupted stays under
§ 412.531).
In accordance with § 412.533, during
the 5-year transition period, which is
currently in its final year for LTCH cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
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4793
October 1, 2006 (FY 2007), a total LTCH
PPS payment was based on the
applicable transition blend percentage
of the adjusted Federal rate and a
percentage based on reasonable cost
principles unless the LTCH made a onetime election to receive payment based
on 100 percent of the Federal rate. In the
final year of the 5-year transition period,
which begins with LTCH cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2006, as specified at § 412.533, a total
LTCH PPS payment is based on 100
percent of the Federal rate. A LTCH
defined as ‘‘new’’ under § 412.23(e)(4) is
paid based on 100 percent of the Federal
rate with no blended transition
payments as specified in § 412.533(d).
As discussed in the August 30, 2002
LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR 56038), the
applicable transition blends are set forth
in § 412.533(a).
Accordingly, for cost reporting
periods that began during FY 2006 (that
is, on or after October 1, 2005 and on
or before September 30, 2006), blended
payments under the transition
methodology are based on 20 percent of
the LTCH’s rate based on reasonable
cost principles and 80 percent of the
adjusted LTCH PPS Federal rate. For
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 2006 (FY 2007),
Medicare payment to LTCHs are
determined entirely (100 percent) under
the LTCH PPS Federal rate.
1. Proposed Adjustment for Area Wage
Levels
a. Background
Under the authority of section 123 of
the BBRA as amended by section 307(b)
of the BIPA, we established an
adjustment to the LTCH PPS Federal
rate to account for differences in LTCH
area wage levels at § 412.525(c). The
labor-related share of the LTCH PPS
Federal rate, currently estimated by the
FY 2002-based RPL market basket (as
discussed in greater detail in section
IV.D.1.c. of this preamble), is adjusted to
account for geographic differences in
area wage levels by applying the
applicable LTCH PPS wage index. The
applicable LTCH PPS wage index is
computed using wage data from
inpatient acute care hospitals without
regard to reclassification under sections
1886(d)(8) or 1886(d)(10) of the Act.
Furthermore, as we discussed in the
August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS final rule
(67 FR 56015), we established a 5-year
transition to the full wage adjustment.
The applicable wage index phase-in
percentages are based on the start of a
LTCH’s cost reporting period as shown
in Table 1.
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TABLE 1
Cost reporting periods
beginning on or after
Phase-in percentage
of the full wage index
October
October
October
October
October
15
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
........
........
........
........
........
⁄
⁄
3⁄5
4⁄5
5⁄5
25
(20 percent).
(40 percent).
(60 percent).
(80 percent).
(100 percent).
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
For example, for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2005 and on or before September 30,
2006 (FY 2006), the applicable LTCH
wage index value is four-fifths of the
applicable full LTCH PPS wage index
value. The wage index adjustment will
be completely phased-in beginning with
cost reporting periods beginning in FY
2007, that is, for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006,
the applicable LTCH wage index value
will be the full (five-fifths) LTCH PPS
wage index value. Therefore, the
majority of LTCHs are currently
receiving either the four-fifths or full
(five-fifths) LTCH PPS wage index
value. As we established in the August
30, 2002 LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR
56018), the applicable full LTCH PPS
wage index value is calculated from
acute-care hospital inpatient wage index
data without taking into account
geographic reclassification under
sections 1886(d)(8) and (d)(10) of the
Act.
b. Geographic Classifications/Labor
Market Area Definitions
As discussed in the August 30, 2002
LTCH PPS final rule, which
implemented the LTCH PPS (67 FR
56015 through 56019), in establishing
an adjustment for area wage levels
under § 412.525(c), the labor-related
portion of a LTCH’s Federal prospective
payment is adjusted by using an
appropriate wage index based on the
labor market area in which the LTCH is
located. In the 2006 LTCH PPS rate year
final rule (70 FR 24184 through 24185),
in § 412.525(c), we revised the labor
market area definitions used under the
LTCH PPS effective for discharges
occurring on or after July 1, 2005 based
on the Office of Management and
Budget’s (OMB’s) Core Based Statistical
Area (CBSA) designations based on
2000 Census data because we believe
that those new labor market area
definitions will ensure that the LTCH
PPS wage index adjustment most
appropriately accounts for and reflects
the relative hospital wage levels in the
geographic area of the hospital as
compared to the national average
hospital wage level. As set forth in
§ 412.525(c)(2), a LTCH’s wage index is
determined based on the location of the
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LTCH in an urban or rural area as
defined in § 412.64(b)(1)(ii)(A) through
(C). An urban area under the LTCH PPS
is defined at § 412.64(b)(1)(ii)(A) and
(B). In general, an urban area is defined
as a Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA)
as defined by the OMB. (In addition, a
few counties located outside of MSAs
are considered urban as specified at
§ 412.64(b)(1)(ii)(B).) Under
§ 412.64(b)(1)(ii)(C), a rural area is
defined as any area outside of an urban
area.
We note that these are the same
CBSA-based designations implemented
for acute care inpatient hospitals under
the IPPS at § 412.64(b) effective October
1, 2004 (69 FR 49026 through 49034).
For further discussion of the labor
market area (geographic classification)
definitions used under the LTCH PPS,
see the 2006 LTCH PPS rate year final
rule (70 FR 24182 through 24191).
c. Proposed Labor-Related Share
In the August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS
final rule (67 FR 56016), we established
a labor-related share of 72.885 percent
based on the relative importance of the
labor-related share of operating costs
(wages and salaries, employee benefits,
professional fees, postal services, and all
other labor-intensive services) and
capital costs of the excluded hospital
with capital market basket based on FY
1992 data.
As we discussed in LTCH PPS final
rules subsequent to the FY 2003 LTCH
PPS final rule in which we established
the original LTCH PPS labor-related
share (68 FR 34142, 69 FR 25685
through 25686, and 70 FR 24182), once
our research into the labor-related share
methodology was complete, we would
update the IPPS and excluded hospital
labor-related shares based on that
research and the best available data if
necessary. Accordingly, we conducted
analysis of our labor share methodology,
which was completed prior to the
development of the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
proposed and final rules. In the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27829), we
updated the LTCH PPS labor-related
share based on the FY 2002-based RPL
market basket (discussed in section
IV.B. of this preamble) because we
believe that this market basket was
developed based on the best available
data that reflect the cost structures of
LTCHs.
Consistent with our historical
practice, the labor-related share
currently used under the LTCH PPS is
determined by identifying the national
average proportion of operating costs
and capital costs that are related to,
influenced by, or vary with the local
labor market. Specifically, in the RY
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2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27829
through 27832), we revised the LTCH
PPS labor-related share from 72.885
percent (as established in the August 30,
2002 final rule (67 FR 56016) based on
the FY 1997-based excluded hospital
with capital market basket) to 75.665
percent based on the relative
importance of the labor-related share of
operating costs (wages and salaries,
employee benefits, professional fees,
and all other labor-intensive services)
and capital costs of the proposed RPL
market basket based on FY 2002 data
from the first quarter of 2006.
As discussed in section IV.B.2. of this
preamble, we now have data from the
3rd quarter of 2006 (with history
through the 2nd quarter of 2006)
available for determining the laborrelated share of the FY 2002-based RPL
market basket. Based on this more
recent data, in this proposed rule, under
the broad authority conferred upon the
Secretary by section 123 of the BBRA as
amended by section 307(b) of the BIPA,
consistent with our historical practice of
determining the labor-related share by
identifying the national average
proportion of operating costs and capital
costs that are related to, influenced by,
or varies with the local labor market, we
are proposing to revise the LTCH PPS
labor-related share from 75.665 percent
to 75.511 percent based on the relative
importance of the labor-related share of
operating costs (wages and salaries,
employee benefits, professional fees,
and all other labor-intensive services)
and capital costs of the FY 2002-based
RPL market basket from the third
quarter of 2006, as shown in Table 2.
The labor-related share is the sum of the
relative importance of wages and
salaries, fringe benefits, professional
fees, labor-intensive services, and a
portion of the capital share from an
appropriate market basket. In this
proposed rule, for RY 2008, we are
proposing to use the FY 2002-based RPL
market basket costs based on data from
the 3rd quarter of 2006 to determine the
labor-related share for the LTCH PPS
effective for discharges occurring on or
after July 1, 2007, as this is the most
recent available data. The labor-related
share for the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year
would continue to be the sum of the
relative importance of each labor-related
cost category, and would reflect the
different rates of price change for these
cost categories between the base year
(FY 2002) and the 2008 LTCH PPS rate
year. Consistent with our historical
practice of using the best data available,
if more recent data are available to
determine the labor-related share of the
RPL market basket (used under the
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LTCH PPS), we propose to use it for
determining the labor-related share for
the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year in the final
rule.
Based on the most recent available
data, we are proposing that the sum of
the relative importance for 2008 LTCH
PPS rate year for operating costs (wages
and salaries, employee benefits,
professional fees, and labor-intensive
services) would be 71.484, as shown in
Table 2. The portion of capital that is
influenced by the local labor market is
still estimated to be 46 percent, which
is the same percentage used when we
established the current labor-related
share in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final
rule. Since, based on the most recent
available data, the relative importance
for capital would be 8.754 percent of the
FY 2002-based RPL market basket for
the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year, we are
proposing to multiply the estimated
portion of capital influenced by the
local labor market (46 percent) by the
relative importance for capital (8.754
percent) to determine the proposed
labor-related share of capital for the
2008 LTCH PPS rate year. The result
would be 4.027 percent (0.46 × 8.754
percent), which we would add to the
proposed 71.484 percent for the
operating cost amount to determine the
proposed total labor-related share for
the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year. Thus,
based on the latest available data, we are
proposing to use a labor-related share of
75.511 percent (71.484 percent + 4.027
4795
percent) under the LTCH PPS for the
2008 LTCH PPS rate year. As noted
above in this section, this proposed
labor-related share is determined using
the same methodology as employed in
calculating the current LTCH laborrelated share (71 FR 27830) and the
labor-related shares used under the IRF
PPS and IPF PPS, which also use the
RPL market basket.
Table 2 shows the 2007 LTCH PPS
rate year relative importance laborrelated share of the FY 2002-based RPL
market basket (established in the RY
2007 LTCH PPS final rule) and the
proposed 2008 LTCH PPS rate year
relative importance labor-related share
of the FY 2002-based RPL market
basket.
TABLE 2.—RY 2007 LABOR-RELATED SHARE RELATIVE IMPORTANCE AND PROPOSED RY 2008 LABOR-RELATED SHARE
RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF THE FY 2002-BASED RPL MARKET BASKET
RY 2007
relative
importance *
Cost category
Proposed RY
2008 relative
importance
Wages and Salaries ................................................................................................................................................
Employee Benefits ...................................................................................................................................................
Professional fees .....................................................................................................................................................
All other labor intensive services .............................................................................................................................
52.506
14.042
2.886
2.152
52.359
14.095
2.899
2.131
Subtotal .............................................................................................................................................................
Labor share of capital costs ....................................................................................................................................
71.586
4.079
71.484
4.027
Total Labor-related share .................................................................................................................................
75.665
75.511
* As
established in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27830).
labor intensive services includes landscaping services, services to buildings, detective and protective services, repair services, laundry
services, advertising, auto parking and repairs, physical fitness facilities, and other government enterprises.
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** Other
d. Proposed Wage Index Data
In the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule
(71 FR 27830 through 27831), we
established LTCH PPS wage index
values for the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year
calculated from the same data
(generated in cost reporting periods
beginning during FY 2002) used to
compute the FY 2006 acute care
hospital inpatient wage index data
without taking into account geographic
reclassification under sections
1886(d)(8) and (d)(10) of the Act
because that was the best available data
at that time. The LTCH wage index
values applicable for discharges
occurring on or after July 1, 2006
through June 30, 2007 are shown in
Table 1 (for urban areas) and Table 2
(for rural areas) in the Addendum to the
RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR
27906 through 27930). Acute care
hospital inpatient wage index data are
also used to establish the wage index
adjustment used in the IRF PPS, HHA
PPS, and SNF PPS. As we discussed in
the August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS final
rule (67 FR 56019), since hospitals that
are excluded from the IPPS are not
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required to provide wage-related
information on the Medicare cost report
and because we would need to establish
instructions for the collection of this
LTCH data to establish a geographic
reclassification adjustment under the
LTCH PPS, the wage adjustment
established under the LTCH PPS is
based on a LTCH’s actual location
without regard to the urban or rural
designation of any related or affiliated
provider.
In this proposed rule, under the broad
authority conferred upon the Secretary
by section 123 of the BBRA as amended
by section 307(b) of BIPA to determine
appropriate adjustments under the
LTCH PPS, we are proposing that, for
the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year, the same
data (generated in cost reporting periods
beginning during FY 2003) used to
compute the FY 2007 acute care
hospital inpatient wage index data
without taking into account geographic
reclassification under sections
1886(d)(8) and (d)(10) of the Act would
be used to determine the applicable
wage index values under the LTCH PPS
because these data (FY 2003) are the
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most recent complete data. We are
proposing to continue to use IPPS wage
data as a proxy to determine the
proposed LTCH wage index values for
the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year because
both LTCHs and acute-care hospitals are
required to meet the same certification
criteria set forth in section 1861(e) of the
Act to participate as a hospital in the
Medicare program and they both
compete in the same labor markets, and,
therefore, experience similar wagerelated costs. These data are the same
FY 2003 acute care hospital inpatient
wage data that were used to compute
the FY 2007 wage indices currently
used under the IPPS, skilled nursing
facility (SNF) PPS and home health
agency (HHA) PPS. The proposed LTCH
wage index values that would be
applicable for discharges occurring on
or after July 1, 2007 through June 30,
2008, are shown in Table 1 (for urban
areas) and Table 2 (for rural areas) in
Addendum A to this proposed rule.
As discussed in section IV.D.1.a. of
this preamble, the applicable wage
index phase-in percentages are based on
the start of a LTCH’s cost reporting
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period beginning on or after October 1st
of each year during the 5-year transition
period. Thus, cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2005
and before October 1, 2006 (FY 2006),
the labor-related portion of the standard
Federal rate is adjusted by four-fifths of
the applicable LTCH wage index value.
The wage index adjustment will be
completely phased-in beginning with
cost reporting periods beginning in FY
2007. That is, for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006,
the labor-related portion of the standard
Federal rate is adjusted by the full (fivefifths) applicable LTCH wage index
value.
Because the phase-in of the wage
index does not coincide with the LTCH
PPS rate year (July 1st through June
30th), most LTCHs will experience a
change in the wage index phase-in
percentages during the LTCH PPS rate
year. For example, during the 2008
LTCH PPS rate year, for a LTCH with a
September 1st fiscal year, the four-fifths
wage index will be applicable for the
first 2 months of the 2007 LTCH PPS
rate year (July 1, 2007 through August
31, 2007) and the full (five-fifths) wage
index will be applicable for the next 10
months of the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year
(September 1, 2007 through June 30,
2008). For the remainder of such a
LTCH’s FY 2006 cost reporting periods,
which coincides with the first 2 months
of RY 2008, the applicable wage index
value would be four-fifths of the full FY
2007 acute-care hospital inpatient wage
index data, without taking into account
geographic reclassification under
sections 1886(d)(8) and (d)(10) of the
Act (as shown in Tables 1 and 2 in
Addendum A to this proposed rule).
Beginning with this LTCH’s FY 2007
cost reporting period that will begin
during RY 2008, the applicable wage
index value would be the full (fivefifths) FY 2007 acute care hospital
inpatient wage index data, without
taking into account geographic
reclassification under sections
1886(d)(8) and (d)(10) of the Act (as
shown in Tables 1 and 2 in Addendum
A to this proposed rule). We note that
since there are no longer any LTCHs in
their cost reporting periods that began
during FY 2003 through FY 2005 (the
first three years of the 5-year wage index
phase-in), we are no longer showing the
1/5th, 2/5ths and 3/5ths wage index
values in Tables 1 and 2 in Addendum
A to this proposed rule.
2. Proposed Adjustment for Cost-ofLiving in Alaska and Hawaii
In the August 30, 2002 final rule (67
FR 56022), we established, under
§ 412.525(b), a COLA for LTCHs located
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in Alaska and Hawaii to account for the
higher costs incurred in those States. In
the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR
27832), for the 2007 LTCH PPS rate
year, we established a COLA to
payments for LTCHs located in Alaska
and Hawaii by multiplying the standard
Federal payment rate by the appropriate
factor listed in Table 8 of that same final
rule.
Similarly, in this proposed rule,
under the broad authority conferred
upon the Secretary by section 123 of the
BBRA as amended by section 307(b) of
BIPA to determine appropriate
adjustments under the LTCH PPS, for
the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year we are
proposing a COLA to payments to
LTCHs located in Alaska and Hawaii by
multiplying the proposed standard
Federal payment rate by the proposed
factors listed in Table 3 because these
are currently the most recent available
data. These proposed factors are
obtained from the U.S. Office of
Personnel Management (OPM) and are
currently used under the IPPS. In
addition, we propose that if OPM
releases revised COLA factors before
March 1, 2007, we would use them for
the development of the payments for the
2008 LTCH rate year and publish them
in the LTCH PPS final rule.
TABLE 3.—PROPOSED COST-OF-LIVING
ADJUSTMENT FACTORS FOR ALASKA
AND HAWAII HOSPITALS FOR THE
2008 LTCH PPS RATE YEAR
Alaska:
All areas ........................................
Hawaii:
Honolulu County ...........................
Hawaii County ...............................
Kauai County ................................
Maui County ..................................
Kalawao County ............................
1.25
1.25
1.165
1.2325
1.2375
1.2375
3. Proposed Adjustment for High-Cost
Outliers (HCOs)
a. Background
Under the broad authority conferred
upon the Secretary by section 123 of the
BBRA as amended by section 307(b) of
BIPA, in the regulations at § 412.525(a),
we established an adjustment for
additional payments for outlier cases
that have extraordinarily high costs
relative to the costs of most discharges.
Providing additional payments for
outliers strongly improves the accuracy
of the LTCH PPS in determining
resource costs at the patient and
hospital level. These additional
payments reduce the financial losses
that would otherwise be incurred when
treating patients who require more
costly care and, therefore, reduce the
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incentives to underserve these patients.
We set the outlier threshold before the
beginning of the applicable rate year so
that total estimated outlier payments are
projected to equal 8 percent of total
estimated payments under the LTCH
PPS. Outlier payments under the LTCH
PPS are determined consistent with the
IPPS outlier policy.
Under § 412.525(a), we make outlier
payments for any discharges if the
estimated cost of a case exceeds the
adjusted LTCH PPS payment for the
LTC–DRG plus a fixed-loss amount. The
fixed-loss amount is the amount used to
limit the loss that a hospital will incur
under the outlier policy for a case with
unusually high costs. This results in
Medicare and the LTCH sharing
financial risk in the treatment of
extraordinarily costly cases. Under the
LTCH PPS HCO policy, the LTCH’s loss
is limited to the fixed-loss amount and
a fixed percentage of costs above the
outlier threshold (LTCH DRG payment
plus the fixed loss amount) determined
by the marginal cost factor. We calculate
the estimated cost of a case by
multiplying the overall hospital cost-tocharge ratio (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).
Under the LTCH PPS, we determine a
fixed-loss amount, that is, the maximum
loss that a LTCH can incur under the
LTCH PPS for a case with unusually
high costs before the LTCH will receive
any additional payments. We calculate
the fixed-loss amount by estimating
aggregate payments with and without an
outlier policy. The fixed-loss amount
will result in estimated total outlier
payments being projected to be equal to
8 percent of projected total LTCH PPS
payments. Currently, MedPAR claims
data and CCRs based on data from the
most recent provider specific file (PSF)
(or to the applicable Statewide average
CCR if a LTCH’s CCR data are faulty or
unavailable) are used to establish a
fixed-loss threshold amount under the
LTCH PPS.
b. Cost-to-Charge Ratios (CCRs)
In determining outlier payments, we
calculate the estimated cost of the case
by multiplying the LTCH’s overall CCR
by the Medicare allowable charges for
the case. As we discussed in greater
detail in the June 9, 2003 IPPS HCO
final rule (68 FR 34506 through 34516),
because the LTCH PPS HCO policy at
§ 412.525 is modeled after the IPPS
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outlier policy, we believed that it and
the SSO policy at § 412.529 are
susceptible to the same payment
vulnerabilities that became evident
under the IPPS and, therefore, merited
revision. Thus, we revised the HCO
policy at § 412.525(a) and the SSO
policy at § 412.529 in that same final
rule for the determination of LTCHs’
CCRs and the reconciliation of outlier
payments.
Under the LTCH PPS, a single
prospective payment per discharge is
made for both inpatient operating and
capital-related costs, and, therefore, we
compute a single ‘‘overall’’ or ‘‘total’’
CCR for LTCHs based on the sum of
their operating and capital costs (as
described in Chapter 3, section 150.24,
of the Medicare Claims Processing
Manual (CMS Pub. 100–4)) as compared
to total charges. Specifically, a LTCH’s
CCR is calculated by dividing a LTCH’s
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 HCO final rule for
both LTCHs and IPPS hospitals can be
found in Transmittal A–03–058 (Change
Request 2785; July 3, 2003).)
As a result of the changes established
in the June 9, 2003 IPPS HCO final rule,
as we discussed in the RY 2007 LTCH
PPS final rule (71 FR 27832 through
27833) and the FY 2007 IPPS final rule
(71 FR 48119 through 48121), a LTCH
is assigned the applicable Statewide
average CCR if, among other things, a
LTCH’s CCR is found to be in excess of
the applicable maximum CCR threshold
(that is, the LTCH CCR ceiling). As we
explained in the FY 2007 IPPS final rule
(71 FR 48117), 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. Thus, under
our established policy, if a LTCH’s CCR
is above the applicable ceiling, the
applicable LTCH PPS Statewide average
CCR is assigned to the LTCH instead of
the CCR computed from its most recent
(settled or tentatively settled) cost report
data.
Under § 412.525(a)(4)(ii), for
discharges occurring on or after August
8, 2003, and before October 1, 2006, we
determined the applicable LTCH PPS
Statewide average CCRs using the
‘‘combined’’ IPPS operating and capital
Statewide average CCRs (that is, adding
the separate IPPS operating and capital
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CCRs together to determine the LTCH
PPS Statewide average CCRs).
Also, under § 412.525(a)(4)(ii), for
discharges occurring on or after August
8, 2003, and before October 1, 2006, if
a LTCH’s CCR is above the applicable
‘‘combined’’ IPPS operating and capital
ceiling (that is, adding the separate IPPS
operating and capital CCR ceiling
together), the applicable Statewide
average CCR may be assigned to the
LTCH.
As we explained in the FY 2007 IPPS
final rule (71 FR 48117 through 48121),
we revised our methodology for
determining the annual CCR ceiling and
Statewide average CCRs under the
LTCH PPS because we believe that those
changes are consistent with the LTCH
PPS single payment rate for inpatient
operating and capital costs. Therefore,
under the broad authority of section 123
of the BBRA and section 307(b)(1) of
BIPA, in that same final rule, we revised
our methodology used to determine the
LTCH CCR ceiling. For discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2006,
we established that the LTCH CCR
ceiling specified under
§ 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(C)(2) is calculated as
three standard deviations above the
corresponding national geometric mean
total CCR (established and published
annually by CMS). (The FI may use a
Statewide average CCR if, among other
things, a LTCH’s CCR is in excess of the
LTCH CCR ceiling.) The LTCH total CCR
ceiling is determined 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’’ IPPS CCR for all
IPPS hospitals. (Our rationale for using
IPPS hospital data is discussed in the
FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 48117)
and reiterated below in this section.)
The LTCH CCR ceiling is then
established at 3 standard deviations
from the corresponding national
geometric mean total CCR. (For further
detail on our methodology for annually
determining the LTCH CCR ceiling, refer
to the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR
48117 through 48119).) We also
established that the LTCH ‘‘total’’ CCR
ceiling used under the LTCH PPS will
continue to be published annually in
the IPPS proposed and final rules, and
the public should continue to consult
the annual IPPS proposed and final
rules for changes to the LTCH total CCR
ceiling that would be effective for
discharges occurring on or after October
1 each year. Accordingly, in the FY
2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 48119), we
established a FY 2007 LTCH PPS total
CCR ceiling of 1.321, effective for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2006.
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4797
In addition, under the broad authority
of section 123 of the BBRA and section
307(b)(1) of BIPA, we revised our
methodology to determine the Statewide
average CCRs under
§ 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(C) for use under the
LTCH PPS in a manner similar to the
way we compute the ‘‘total’’ CCR ceiling
using IPPS CCR data (71 FR 48120).
Specifically, under this revised
methodology we first calculate the total
(that is, operating and capital) CCR for
each IPPS hospital. We then calculate
the weighted average ‘‘total’’ CCR for all
IPPS hospitals in the rural areas of the
State and the weighted average ‘‘total’’
CCR for all IPPS hospitals in the urban
areas of the State. (For further detail on
our methodology for annually
determining the LTCH urban and rural
Statewide average CCRs, refer to the FY
2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 48119
through 48121).) We also established
that the applicable Statewide average
‘‘total’’ (operating and capital) CCRs
used under the LTCH PPS will continue
to be published annually in the IPPS
proposed and final rules, and the public
should 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 each year. Accordingly,
in the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR
48122), the FY 2007 LTCH PPS
Statewide average total CCRs for urban
and rural hospitals, effective for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2006, were presented in Table 8C of
the Addendum of that final rule (71 FR
48303).
As we explained in the FY 2007 IPPS
final rule (71 FR 48117), we continue to
believe it is appropriate to use IPPS
operating and capital CCRs to compute
the LTCH total CCR ceiling and the
Statewide average 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
ALOS is greater than 25 days as
specified in § 412.23(e). Furthermore,
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 ALOS of
greater than 25 days. In addition, since
there are less than 400 LTCHs, which
are unevenly geographically distributed
throughout the United States, there may
not be sufficient LTCH CCR data to
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determine an appropriate LTCH PPS
CCR ceiling using LTCH data.
In the FY 2007 IPPS final rule, in
addition to revising our methodology for
determining the annual CCR ceiling and
Statewide average CCRs 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, we
revised § 412.525(a)(4)(iv) for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2006, to
codify in 42 CFR part 412, subpart O the
remaining LTCH PPS outlier policy
changes that were established in the
June 9, 2003 IPPS HCO final rule (68 FR
34506 through 34513), including
modifications and editorial
clarifications to those existing policies
established in that final rule. We made
these revisions because we believe that
they more precisely describe the
application of those policies as they
relate to the determination of LTCH
CCRs because these changes are
consistent with the changes to the
calculation of the LTCH CCR ceiling.
Specifically, in the FY 2007 IPPS final
rule (71 FR 48119), under the broad
authority of section 123 of the BBRA
and section 307(b)(1) of BIPA, we
established under the LTCH PPS HCO
policy at § 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(C) that the
FI may use a Statewide average CCR,
which is 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
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 FI 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.)
Additionally, in the FY 2007 IPPS
final rule (71 FR 48121), we established
under § 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(B) and
§ 412.529(c)(3)(iv)(B) 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
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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, in that
same final rule, we also established at
§ 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(A) that, for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2006, we may specify an alternative
to the CCR computed under
§ 412.525(a)(4)(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
FI use a different (higher or lower) CCR
based on substantial evidence presented
by the hospital. In addition, under the
broad authority of section 123 of the
BBRA and section 307(b)(1) of BIPA, we
revised § 412.525(a)(3) to change the
plural reference from cost-to-charge
‘‘ratios’’ to the singular reference to a
cost-to-charge ‘‘ratio’’ in that final rule.
For a complete discussion on all these
revisions to our methodology for
determining a LTCH’s CCR, refer to the
FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 48119
through 48121). We note that in that
same FY 2007 IPPS final rule, we made
similar revisions to the SSO policy at
§ 412.529(c)(3), as discussed in V.A.1.b.
of the preamble of this proposed rule.
c. Establishment of the Proposed FixedLoss Amount
When we implemented the LTCH
PPS, as discussed in the August 30,
2002 LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR 56022
through 56026), under the broad
authority of section 123 of the BBRA as
amended by section 307(b) of BIPA, we
established a fixed-loss amount so that
total estimated outlier payments are
projected to equal 8 percent of total
estimated payments under the LTCH
PPS. To determine the fixed-loss
amount, we estimate outlier payments
and total LTCH PPS payments for each
case using claims data from the
MedPAR files. Specifically, to
determine the outlier payment for each
case, we estimate the cost of the case by
multiplying the Medicare covered
charges from the claim by the LTCH’s
hospital specific CCR. Under
§ 412.525(a)(3), if the estimated cost of
the case exceeds the outlier threshold
(the sum of the adjusted Federal
prospective payment for the LTC–DRG
and the fixed-loss amount), we pay an
outlier payment equal to 80 percent of
the difference between the estimated
cost of the case and the outlier threshold
(the sum of the adjusted Federal
prospective payment for the LTC–DRG
and the fixed-loss amount).
In the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule
(71 FR 27838), in calculating the fixed-
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loss amount that would result in
estimated outlier payments projected to
be equal to 8 percent of total estimated
payments for the 2007 LTCH PPS rate
year, we used claims data from the
December 2005 update of the FY 2005
MedPAR files and CCRs from the
December 2005 update of the PSF, as
that was the best available data at that
time. We believe that CCRs from the
PSF are the best available CCR data for
determining estimated LTCH PPS
payments for a given LTCH PPS rate
year because they are the most recently
available CCRs actually used to make
LTCH PPS payments.
As we also discussed in the RY 2007
LTCH PPS rate year final rule (71 FR
27838), we calculated a single fixed-loss
amount for the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year
based on the version 23.0 of the
GROUPER, which was the version in
effect as of the beginning of the LTCH
PPS rate year (that is, July 1, 2006 for
the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year). In
addition, we applied the outlier policy
under § 412.525(a) in determining the
fixed-loss amount for the 2007 LTCH
PPS rate year; that is, we assigned the
applicable Statewide average CCR only
to LTCHs whose CCRs exceeded the
ceiling (and not when they fell below
the floor). Accordingly, we used the FY
2006 LTCH PPS CCR ceiling of 1.423 (71
FR 27838). As noted in that same final
rule, in determining the fixed-loss
amount for the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year
using the CCRs from the PSF, there were
no LTCHs with missing CCRs or with
CCRs in excess of the current ceiling
and, therefore, there was no need for us
to independently assign the applicable
Statewide average CCR to any LTCHs in
determining the fixed-loss amount for
the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year (as this
may have already been done by the FI
in the PSF in accordance with the
established policy).
Accordingly, in 2007 LTCH PPS rate
year final rule (71 FR 27838), we
established a fixed-loss amount of
$14,887 for the 2007 LTCH PPS rate
year. Thus, we pay an outlier case 80
percent of the difference between the
estimated cost of the case and the
outlier threshold (the sum of the
adjusted Federal LTCH PPS payment for
the LTC–DRG and the fixed-loss amount
of $14,887).
In this proposed rule, for the 2008
LTCH PPS rate year, we used the March
2006 update of the FY 2005 MedPAR
claims data to determine a proposed
fixed-loss amount that would result in
estimated outlier payments projected to
be equal to 8 percent of total estimated
payments, based on the policies
described in this proposed rule, because
these data are the most recent complete
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LTCH data available. Consistent with
our historical practice of using the best
data available, if more recent LTCH
claims data become available, we
propose to use it for determining the
fixed-loss amount for the 2008 LTCH
PPS rate year in the final rule.
Furthermore, as noted previously, we
determined the proposed fixed-loss
amount based on the version of the
GROUPER that would be in effect as of
the beginning of the 2008 LTCH PPS
rate year (July 1, 2007), that is, Version
24.0 of the GROUPER (as established in
the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR
47973)).
We also used CCRs from the June
2006 update of the PSF for determining
the proposed fixed-loss amount for the
2008 LTCH PPS rate year as they are
currently the most recent complete
available data. Consistent with our
historical practice of using the best data
available, if more recent CCR data are
available, we propose to use it for
determining the fixed-loss amount for
the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year in the final
rule. As we discussed in this proposed
rule, we revised our methodology for
our annual determination of the
applicable LTCH CCR ceiling and
applicable Statewide average CCRs in
determining a LTCH’s CCR effective for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2006 in the FY 2007 IPPS final rule
(71 FR 48117 through 48122).
Accordingly, in determining the
proposed fixed-loss amount for the 2008
LTCH PPS rate year, we used the
current FY 2007 applicable LTCH
‘‘total’’ CCR ceiling of 1.321 and LTCH
Statewide average ‘‘total’’ CCRs
established under our revised
methodology in the FY 2007 IPPS final
rule (71 FR 48118 and 48121) such that
the current applicable Statewide average
CCR would be assigned if, among other
things, a LTCH’s CCR exceeded the
current ceiling (1.321). We note that in
determining the proposed fixed-loss
amount for the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year
using the CCRs from the PSF, there was
no need for us to independently assign
the applicable Statewide average CCR to
any LTCHs (as this may have already
been done by the FI in the PSF in
accordance with our established policy).
(Currently, the applicable FY 2007
LTCH Statewide average CCRs can be
found in Table 8C of the FY 2007 IPPS
final rule (71 FR 48303).)
Accordingly, based on the data and
policies described in this proposed rule,
we are proposing a fixed-loss amount of
$18,774 for the 2008 LTCH PPS rate
year. Thus, we would pay an outlier
case 80 percent of the difference
between the estimated cost of the case
and the proposed outlier threshold (the
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sum of the adjusted proposed Federal
LTCH payment for the LTC–DRG and
the proposed fixed-loss amount of
$18,774). We note that the proposed
fixed-loss amount for the 2008 LTCH
PPS rate year is higher than the current
fixed-loss amount of $14,887. In
addition to being based on the most
recent available LTCH data to estimate
the cost of each LTCH case, this
proposed change in the fixed-loss
amount is primarily due to the projected
decrease in estimated aggregate LTCH
PPS payments that is expected to result
from the approach discussed for the
SSO policy under § 412.529 (discussed
in greater detail in section V.A.2. of this
preamble), in conjunction with the
proposed changes to the area wage
adjustment (discussed in greater detail
in section IV.D.1. of this preamble) and
the changes to the LTC–DRG relative
weights for FY 2007 (as discussed in the
FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 47971
through 47994)). We note that if the
approach discussed for the SSO policy
was not considered, then the proposed
fixed-loss amount would be $18,207.
As discussed in greater detail in the
impact analysis presented in section
XVI.B.4. of this proposed rule, we are
projecting that the proposed changes,
including the approach discussed for
the SSO policy presented in section
V.A.2. of this proposed rule, would
result in a 0.7 percent decrease in
estimated payments per discharge in RY
2008 as compared to RY 2007, on
average, for all LTCHs. While we are
projecting that the proposed 0.71
percent update to the Federal rate
(discussed in section IV.C. of this
preamble) would result in an increase in
estimated payments per discharge in RY
2008 as compared to RY 2007, this
increase would be offset by the
projected decrease in estimated
payments per discharge from RY 2007 to
RY 2008 of 0.9 percent due to the
approach being considered for the SSO
policy and a projected decrease in
estimated payments per discharge from
RY 2007 to RY 2008 of 0.5 percent due
to the proposed changes to the area
wage adjustment (including the
progression of the established phase-in
of that adjustment). Without taking the
approach being considered for the SSO
policy into account, the proposed
changes to the payment rate and
policies noted above would result in a
0.3 percent increase in estimated
payments per discharge in RY 2008 as
compared to RY 2007. Furthermore, as
we discussed in the FY 2007 IPPS final
rule (71 FR 48343 through 47994), the
changes to the LTC–DRG relative
weights for FY 2007, which we used to
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determine the proposed RY 2008 fixedloss amount, were projected to result in
a 1.3 percent decrease in estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments in FY
2007.
Because of the estimated decrease in
aggregate LTCH PPS payments proposed
for the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year (as
discussed above in this section), we
believe that an increase in the proposed
fixed-loss amount is appropriate and
necessary to maintain the requirement
that estimated outlier payments would
be projected to be equal to 8 percent of
estimated total LTCH PPS payments, as
required under § 412.525(a). As we
discussed in the RY 2007 final rule (71
FR 27836), maintaining the fixed-loss
amount at the current level would result
in HCO payments that significantly
exceed the current regulatory
requirement that estimated outlier
payments would be projected to equal 8
percent of estimated total LTCH PPS
payments. Based on the regression
analysis that was performed when we
implemented the LTCH PPS (August 30,
2002 final rule (67 FR 56022 through
56027)), we established the outlier target
at 8 percent of estimated total LTCH
PPS payments to allow us to achieve a
balance between the ‘‘conflicting
considerations of the need to protect
hospitals with costly cases, while
maintaining incentives to improve
overall efficiency’’ (67 FR 56024). That
regression analysis also showed that
additional increments of outlier
payments over 8 percent (that is, raising
the outlier target to a larger percentage
than 8 percent) would reduce financial
risk, but by successively smaller
amounts. Outlier payments are budget
neutral, and therefore, outlier payments
are funded by prospectively reducing
the non-outlier PPS payment rates by
projected total outlier payments. The
higher the outlier target, the greater the
(prospective) reduction to the base
payment would need to be applied to
the Federal rate to maintain BN.
As we discussed in the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27834
through 27835) when we proposed to
increase the fixed-loss amount for RY
2007 (over the RY 2006 fixed-loss
amount), as an alternative to the
proposal to raise the RY 2007 fixed-loss
amount, we examined adjusting the
marginal cost factor (that is, the
percentage that Medicare will pay of the
estimated cost of a case that exceeds the
sum of the adjusted Federal prospective
payment for the LTC–DRG and the
fixed-loss amount for LTCH PPS outlier
cases as specified in § 412.525(a)(3)),
which is currently equal to 80 percent,
as a means of ensuring that estimated
outlier payments would be projected to
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equal 8 percent of estimated total LTCH
PPS payments. When we initially
established the 80 percent marginal cost
factor in the August 30, 2002 final rule
(67 FR 56022 through 56027), we
explained that our analysis of paymentto-cost ratios for HCO cases showed that
a marginal cost factor of 80 percent
appropriately addresses outlier cases
that are significantly more expensive
than nonoutlier cases, while
simultaneously maintaining the
integrity of the LTCH PPS.
In proposing an increase to the fixedloss amount for RY 2007 (71 FR 27834),
we also solicited comments on whether
we should revisit the regression analysis
discussed above in this section that was
used to establish the existing 8 percent
outlier target and 80 percent marginal
cost factor, using the most recent
available data to evaluate whether the
current outlier target of 8 percent or the
80 percent marginal cost factor should
be adjusted, and therefore, could have
resulted in less of an increase in the
fixed-loss amount for RY 2007. In
response to this solicitation (as
summarized in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
final rule (71 FR 27834 through 24835)),
several commenters opposed any option
that would allow us to revisit the
regression analysis that was used to
establish the existing 80 percent
marginal cost factor and existing outlier
target of 8 percent. The commenters
stated their belief that the LTCH PPS is
still in its early stages and further
changes to the 80 percent marginal cost
factor or 8 percent outlier target would
result in instability to the system. The
commenters cautioned against making
any premature changes to the factors
affecting HCO payments to LTCHs,
particularly the marginal cost factor and
outlier target established by regulation
when the LTCH PPS was implemented.
Also, the commenters agreed that
keeping the marginal cost factor at 80
percent and the outlier pool at 8 percent
better identifies LTCH patients that are
truly unusually costly cases, and that
this policy appropriately addresses
outlier cases that are significantly more
expensive than non-outlier cases.
In response to these comments, we
agreed with the commenters that, based
on the regression analysis done for the
implementation of the LTCH PPS
(August 30, 2002; 68 FR 56022 through
56026), a marginal cost factor of 80
percent and a outlier target of 8 percent
best identifies LTCH patients that are
truly unusually costly cases, and that
such a policy appropriately addresses
LTCH HCO cases that are significantly
more expensive than non-outlier cases,
which is consistent with our intent of
the LTCH HCO policy as stated when
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we implemented the LTCH PPS in the
August 30, 2002 final rule (67 FR
56025). Therefore, as supported by
many commenters, in the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27835), we
did not revisit the regression analysis
that was used to establish the existing
80 percent marginal cost factor and
existing outlier target of 8 percent, and
therefore, did not make any changes to
the marginal cost factor or outlier target
in that final rule. Furthermore, we
stated that after revisiting this issue and
an analysis of the most recent complete
available data, due to the lag time in the
availability of data, we now believe the
most appropriate time to revisit a budget
neutral policy change in the outlier
policy (among other things), which
would affect future LTCH PPS payment
rates, would be after the conclusion of
the 5-year transition period when we
expect to have several years of data
generated after the implementation of
the LTCH PPS.
Although proposing to raise the fixedloss amount from $14,887 to $18,774
(based on the policies presented in this
proposed rule) would increase the
amount of the ‘‘loss’’ that a LTCH must
incur under the LTCH PPS for a case
with unusually high costs before the
LTCH would receive any additional
Medicare payments, as we discussed
above and as we explained in greater
detail in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final
rule, based on the best available data,
we continue to believe that the existing
8 percent outlier target and 80 percent
marginal cost factor continue to
adequately maintain the LTCHs’ share
of the financial risk in treating the most
costly patients and ensure the efficient
delivery of services. Accordingly, we are
not proposing to adjust the existing 8
percent outlier target or 80 percent
marginal cost factor under the LTCH
PPS HCO policy at this time. However,
we continue to be interested in any
comments that would support revisiting
the analysis that was used to establish
the existing 8 percent outlier target and
the existing 80 percent marginal cost
factor, using the most recent available
data to evaluate whether any changes to
the current HCO policy should be made,
and therefore, may result in less of an
increase in the fixed-loss amount for RY
2008.
Furthermore, we note that the
proposed fixed-loss amount of $18,774
is lower than the FY 2003 fixed-loss
amount of $24,450 (67 FR 56023) and
the 2004 LTCH PPS rate year fixed-loss
amount of $19,590 (68 FR 34144), and
only slightly higher than the 2005 LTCH
PPS rate year fixed-loss amount of
$17,864 (69 FR 25688), all of which
were in effect during the time period
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that we estimate positive Medicare
margins (as discussed in the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27820
through 27825). Therefore, we believe
the proposed fixed-loss amount of
$18,774 would appropriately identify
unusually costly LTCH cases while
maintaining the integrity of the LTCH
PPS. Thus, under the broad authority of
section 123(a)(1) of the BBRA and
section 307(b)(1) of BIPA, we are
proposing to establish a fixed-loss
amount of $18,774 based on the best
available LTCH data and the policies
presented in this proposed rule because
we believe a proposed increase in the
fixed-loss amount is appropriate and
necessary to maintain estimated outlier
payments are projected to be equal to 8
percent of estimated total LTCH PPS
payments, as required under
§ 412.525(a).
d. Reconciliation of Outlier Payments
Upon Cost Report Settlement
In the June 9, 2003 HCO final rule (68
FR 34508 through 34512), we
established our policy for LTCHs that
provided that effective for 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 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 CMS Program Transmittal
707 (October 12, 2005; Change Request
3966). We note that we are currently
developing additional instructions on
the administration of the reconciliation
process under the LTCH PPS that would
be similar to the IPPS reconciliation
process.)
In the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR
48121 through 48122), for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2006,
we codified into the LTCH PPS section
of the regulations (42 CFR part 412,
subpart O) the provisions governing the
determination of LTCHs’ CCRs,
including modifications and editorial
clarifications to our existing
methodology for determining the annual
LTCH CCR ceiling and applicable
Statewide average CCRs under the
LTCH PPS. (We note that we also made
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the same changes under the SSO policy
at § 412.529(c)(3), as discussed in
section V.A.1.c. of this preamble).
In the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR
48122), under the broad authority of
section 123 of the BBRA and section
307(b)(1) of BIPA, we revised
§ 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(D) through (E), for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2006, to codify in subpart O of 42
CFR part 412 the provisions discussed
concerning the reconciliation of LTCH
PPS outlier payments, including
editorial clarifications discussed in
greater detail in this section, that would
more precisely describe the application
of those policies. Specifically, at
§ 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(D), we specified that
for discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 2006, any reconciliation of
outlier payments will be based on the
CCR calculated based on a ratio of coststo-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, at § 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(E), we
specified 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. We also specified that
such an adjustment will be 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. We made these
additional revisions to § 412.525(a)(4)
because we believe that these changes
are more consistent with the LTCH PPS
single payment rate for inpatient
operating and capital costs (as discussed
in greater detail previously), and
because we believe it is more
appropriate and administratively
simpler to include all of the regulatory
provisions concerning the
determination of LTCH PPS outlier
payments applicable under the LTCH
PPS regulations in subpart O of 42 CFR
part 412 of the CFR.
e. Application of Outlier Policy to
Short-Stay Outlier (SSO) Cases
As we discussed in the August 30,
2002 final rule (67 FR 56026), under
some rare circumstances, a LTCH
discharge could qualify as a SSO case
(as defined under § 412.529 and
discussed in section V.A.1.a. of this
preamble) and also as a HCO case. In
this scenario, a patient could be
hospitalized for less than five-sixths of
the geometric ALOS for the specific
LTC–DRG, and yet incur extraordinarily
high treatment costs. If the costs
exceeded the outlier threshold (that is,
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the SSO payment plus the fixed-loss
amount), the discharge would be
eligible for payment as a HCO. Thus, for
a SSO case in the 2008 LTCH PPS rate
year, the HCO payment would be 80
percent of the difference between the
estimated cost of the case and the
proposed outlier threshold (the sum of
the proposed fixed-loss amount of
$18,774 and the amount paid under the
SSO policy).
4. Other Payment Adjustments
As indicated earlier, we have broad
authority under section 123(a)(1) of the
BBRA as amended by section 307(b) of
BIPA to determine appropriate
adjustments under the LTCH PPS,
including whether (and how) to provide
for adjustments to reflect variations in
the necessary costs of treatment among
LTCHs. Thus, in the August 30, 2002
LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR 56014
through 56027), we discussed our
extensive data analysis and rationale for
not implementing an adjustment for
geographic reclassification, rural
location, treating a disproportionate
share of low-income patients (DSH), or
indirect medical education (IME) costs.
In that same final rule, we stated that we
would collect data and reevaluate the
appropriateness of these adjustments in
the future once more LTCH data become
available after the LTCH PPS is
implemented.
As we discussed in the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27839), we
now believe that after the completion of
the 5-year transition, sufficient new data
that will have been generated while
LTCHs are subject to the LTCH PPS may
be available for a comprehensive
reevaluation of payment adjustments
such as geographic reclassification, rural
location, DSH, and IME. The end of the
5-year transition occurs with cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2007. Therefore, in this
proposed rule, we are not proposing to
make any adjustments for geographic
reclassification, rural location, DSH, or
IME. However, we will continue to
collect and interpret new data as they
become available in the future to
determine if these data support
proposing any additional payment
adjustments. As we also discussed in
the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR
27839), we now believe that it is
appropriate to wait for the conclusion of
the 5-year transition to 100 percent of
the Federal rate under the LTCH PPS, to
maximize the availability of data that
are reflective of LTCH behavior in
response to the implementation of the
LTCH PPS to be used to conduct a
comprehensive evaluation of the
potential payment adjustment policies
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(such as rural location, DSH and IME)
in conjunction with our evaluation of
the possibility of making a one-time
prospective adjustment to the LTCH
PPS rates provided for at
§ 412.523(d)(3).
5. Proposed Budget Neutrality (BN)
Offset To Account for the Transition
Methodology
Under § 412.533, we implemented a
5-year transition, during which a LTCH
is paid a total LTCH PPS payment that
is comprised of an increasing percentage
of the LTCH PPS Federal prospective
payment rate and a decreasing
percentage of its payments based on the
reasonable cost-based payment
principles for each discharge.
Furthermore, we allow a LTCH (other
than those defined as ‘‘new’’ under
§ 412.23(e)(4)) to elect to be paid based
on 100 percent of the standard Federal
rate in lieu of the blended methodology.
The standard Federal rate was
determined as if all LTCHs will be paid
based on 100 percent of the standard
Federal rate. As stated earlier, we
provide for a 5-year transition period
that allows LTCHs to receive LTCH PPS
payments in which a component
incorporates reasonable cost principles.
To maintain BN for FY 2003 as required
by section 123(a)(1) of the BBRA during
the 5-year transition period, we reduce
all LTCH Medicare payments (whether
a LTCH elects payment based on 100
percent of the Federal rate or whether a
LTCH is being paid under the transition
blend methodology) to account for the
cost of the applicable transition period
methodology in a given LTCH PPS rate
year.
Specifically, during the LTCH PPS
rate years governed under the 5-year
transition policy at § 412.533(a), we
reduce all LTCH Medicare payments
during the 5-year transition by a factor
that is equal to 1 minus the ratio of the
estimated TEFRA reasonable cost-based
payments that would be made if the
LTCH PPS was not implemented, to the
projected total Medicare program PPS
payments (that is, payments made under
the transition methodology and the
option to elect payment based on 100
percent of the Federal rate).
In the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule
(71 FR 27841), based on the best
available data at that time, we projected
that approximately 98 percent of LTCHs
will be paid based on 100 percent of the
standard Federal rate rather than receive
payment under the transition blend
methodology for the 2006 LTCH PPS
rate year. Using the same methodology
described in the August 30, 2002 LTCH
PPS final rule (67 FR 56034), this
projection, which used updated data
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and inflation factors, was based on our
estimate that either: (1) A LTCH has
already elected payment based on 100
percent of the Federal rate prior to the
start of the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year
(July 1, 2006); or (2) a LTCH would
receive higher payments based on 100
percent of the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year
standard Federal rate compared to the
payments it would receive under the
transition blend methodology.
Similarly, we projected that the
remaining 2 percent of LTCHs would
choose to be paid based on the
applicable transition blend methodology
(as set forth under § 412.533(a)) because
they would receive higher payments
than if they were paid based on 100
percent of the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year
standard Federal rate.
Also in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final
rule (71 FR 24202), based on the best
available data at that time and policy
revisions described in that same rule,
we projected that in absence of a
transition BN offset, the full effect of the
final full year of the transition period
(including the election option) as
compared to payments as if all LTCHs
would be paid based on 100 percent of
the Federal rate would result in a
negligible cost to the Medicare program
(that is, less than $1 million in RY
2007). Because the $1 million in
estimated costs to the Medicare program
was such a small percentage of the
estimated total LTCH payments for RY
2007 (over $5 billion), the formula that
we use to establish the BN offset
resulted in a factor, which we reduce all
Medicare payments by to account for
the additional costs of the transition
methodology of zero (due to rounding).
Therefore, we established a zero percent
transition period BN offset to all LTCH
PPS payments for discharge occurring
on or after July 1, 2006 through June 30,
2007, to account for the estimated cost
of the transition period methodology
(including the option to elect payment
based on 100 percent of the Federal rate)
in RY 2007. Furthermore, in that same
final rule (71 FR 27841), we explained
that we are no longer projecting a small
cost for the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year
(July 1, 2007 through June 30, 2008)
even though some LTCH’s will have a
cost reporting period for the 5th year of
the transition period which will be
concluding in the first 3 months of the
2008 LTCH PPS rate year. This is
because, based on the most available
data, we are projecting that the vast
majority of LTCHs would have made the
election to be paid based on 100 percent
of the Federal rate rather than the
transition blend which would result in
a negligible cost to the Medicare
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program. In fact, based on the most
recent available data from the July 2006
update of the PSF, we continue to
estimate that nearly all (over 98 percent)
LTCHs are currently being paid based
on 100 percent of the Federal rate
(rather than the transition blend
methodology). Even for those few
remaining LTCHs paid under the
transition blend methodology set forth
at § 412.533(a), the majority of their
LTCH PPS payments are now based on
at least 80 percent of the Federal rate
and 20 percent of the reasonable cost
amount (for cost reporting periods
beginning during FY 2006) since there
are no longer any LTCHs in their cost
reporting periods that began during FY
2003 through FY 2005 (the first three
years of the 5-year transition period).
Therefore, we continue to believe that
there would be no measurable estimated
cost to the Medicare program due to the
transition period methodology
(including the option to elect payment
based on 100 percent of the Federal rate)
in RY 2008. Accordingly, in this
proposed rule, based on updated data
and using the same methodology
established in the August 30, 2002 final
rule (67 FR 56034), we are not
proposing a transition BN offset to all
LTCH PPS payments for discharges
occurring on or after July 1, 2007
through June 30, 2008, to account for
the estimated cost of the transition
period methodology (including the
option to elect payment based on 100
percent of the Federal rate, since some
LTCHs may still be paid under the 4th
year of the transition blend
methodology, specified at § 412.533, for
the first 3 months of RY 2008) in RY
2008.
6. One-Time Prospective Adjustment to
the Standard Federal Rate
As we discussed in the August 30,
2002 LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR
56036), consistent with the statutory
requirement for BN in section 123(a)(1)
of the BBRA, we estimated aggregate
payments under the LTCH PPS for FY
2003 to be equal to the estimated
aggregate payments that would be made
if the LTCH PPS were not implemented.
Our methodology for estimating
payments for purposes of the BN
calculations used the best available data
at the time and necessarily reflected
assumptions. As the LTCH PPS
progresses, we are monitoring payment
data and will evaluate the ultimate
accuracy of the assumptions used in the
BN calculations (for example, inflation
factors, intensity of services provided,
or behavioral response to the
implementation of the LTCH PPS)
described in the August 30, 2002 LTCH
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PPS final rule (67 FR 56027 through
56037). To the extent these assumptions
significantly differ from actual
experience, the aggregate amount of
actual payments may turn out to be
significantly higher or lower than the
estimates on which the BN calculations
were based.
Section 123(a)(1) of the BBRA as
amended by section 307(b) of BIPA
provides broad authority to the
Secretary in developing the LTCH PPS,
including the authority for establishing
appropriate adjustments. Under this
broad authority to make appropriate
adjustments, as implemented in the
existing § 412.523(d)(3) (as revised in
the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule), we
have provided for the possibility of
making a one-time prospective
adjustment to the LTCH PPS rates by
July 1, 2008, so that the effect of any
significant difference between actual
payments and estimated payments for
the first year of the LTCH PPS would
not be perpetuated in the LTCH PPS
rates for future years. In the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27842),
based on the best available data at that
time, we estimated that total Medicare
program payments for LTCH services
over the next 5 LTCH PPS rate years
would be $5.27 billion for the 2007
LTCH PPS rate year; $5.43 billion for
the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year; $5.63
billion for the 2009 LTCH PPS rate year;
$5.86 billion for the 2010 LTCH PPS
rate year; and $6.13 billion for the 2011
LTCH PPS rate year.
In this proposed rule, consistent with
the methodology established in the
August 30, 2002 final rule (67 FR
56036), based on the most recent
available data, we estimate that total
Medicare program payments for LTCH
services for the next 5 LTCH PPS rate
years would be as shown in Table 4.
TABLE 4
LTCH PPS rate year
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
....................................
....................................
....................................
....................................
....................................
Estimated
payments
($ in billions)
$4.65
4.84
5.02
5.24
5.48
In accordance with the methodology
established in the August 30, 2002
LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR 56037),
these estimates are based on the most
recent available data, including the
projection that nearly all LTCHs will be
paid based on 100 percent of the LTCH
PPS standard Federal rate during the
majority of RY 2008 (in accordance with
the transition blend percentages set
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forth at § 412.533(a)). These estimates
are also based on our estimate of LTCH
PPS rate year payments to LTCHs using
CMS’ Office of the Actuary’s (OACT)
most recent estimate of the RPL market
basket of 3.2 percent for the 2008 LTCH
PPS rate year, 2.9 percent for the 2009
LTCH PPS rate year, 2.5 percent for the
2010 LTCH PPS rate year, and 2.9
percent for the 2011 and 2012 LTCH
PPS rate years. (We note that OACT
develops its spending projections based
on existing policy. Therefore, changes
that have not yet been implemented are
not reflected in the spending projections
shown in this section.) We also
considered OACT’s most recent
projections of changes in Medicare
beneficiary enrollment that estimate a
change in Medicare fee-for-service
beneficiary enrollment of 0.2 percent in
the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year, 0.5
percent in the 2009 LTCH PPS rate year,
0.1 percent in the 2010 LTCH PPS rate
year, 0.2 percent in the 2011 LTCH PPS
rate year and, 0.4 percent in the 2012
LTCH PPS rate year.
In the August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS
final rule implementing the LTCH PPS
(67 FR 55954), we set forth the
implementing regulations, based upon
the broad authority granted to the
Secretary, under section 123 of the
BBRA as amended by section 307(b) of
the BIPA. Section 123(a)(1) of the BBRA
required that the system ‘‘maintain
budget neutrality’’ for FY 2003, that is,
that estimated aggregate payments
under the LTCH PPS would be projected
to be equal to the estimated aggregate
payments that would be made if the
LTCH PPS would not be implemented
for FY 2003. The methodology for
determining the LTCH PPS standard
Federal rate for FY 2003 that would
‘‘maintain budget neutrality’’ is
described in considerable detail in the
August 30, 2002 final rule (67 FR 56027
through 56037). As we discussed in that
same final rule, our methodology for
estimating payments for the purposes of
BN calculations used the best available
data and necessarily reflects
assumptions in estimating aggregate
payments that would be made if the
LTCH PPS was not implemented. We
also stated our intentions to monitor
LTCH PPS payment data to evaluate the
ultimate accuracy of the assumptions
used in the BN calculations (for
example, inflation factors, intensity of
services provided, or behavioral
response to the implementation of the
LTCH PPS). To the extent that those
assumptions significantly differ from
actual experience, the estimated
aggregate amount of actual payments
during FY 2003 may result in
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significantly higher or lower estimated
payments than the estimates upon
which the BN calculations were based.
In that same final rule, the Secretary
exercised his broad authority in
establishing the LTCH PPS and
provided for the possibility of a onetime prospective adjustment to the
LTCH PPS rates by October 1, 2006, in
§ 412.523(d)(3) (this deadline was
revised to July 1, 2008, in the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule). The purpose of
that provision was to prevent any
significant difference between actual
payments and estimated payments for
the 1st year of the LTCH PPS, when we
established the budget neutral Federal
rate as required by the statute (discussed
previously), from being perpetuated in
the PPS rates for future years.
As we discussed in the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27842
through 27844), because the LTCH PPS
was only recently implemented,
sufficient new data had not been
generated that would enable us to
conduct a comprehensive reevaluation
of our BN calculations. Therefore, in
that same final rule, we did not
implement a one-time adjustment under
§ 412.523(d)(3) so that the effect of any
significant difference between actual
payments and estimated payments for
the 1st year of the LTCH PPS would not
be perpetuated in the PPS rates for
future years. However, we stated that we
will continue to collect and interpret
new data as it becomes available in the
future to determine if this adjustment
should be proposed. Therefore, in the
RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR
27842), we revised § 412.523(d)(3) by
changing the original October 1, 2006
deadline (established in the August 30,
2002 final rule that implemented the
LTCH PPS) to July 1, 2008, to postpone
the requirement due to the time lag in
the availability of Medicare data upon
which this adjustment would be based.
As we discussed in the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27843
through 27844), we now believe that
after the conclusion of the 5-year
transition period sufficient new data
will be generated by the LTCH PPS for
a comprehensive reevaluation of our FY
2003 BN calculations. Specifically, we
explained that the final year of the 5year transition to LTCH PPS payments
based on 100 percent of the Federal rate
for all LTCHs will begin for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2006 (FY 2007), and end with
cost reporting periods beginning before
October 1, 2007 (FY 2008). After the
conclusion of the 5-year transition
period (October 1, 2007), we expect to
have between 3 and 4 years (FY 2003
through FY 2006) of LTCH data
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4803
generated since the implementation of
the LTCH PPS. We note that there is a
lag time between the submission of
claims data and cost report data, and the
availability of that data in the MedPAR
files and HCRIS, respectively. Based on
a comprehensive analysis of that data,
we may then propose to make a onetime prospective adjustment to the
LTCH PPS rates as provided for in
§ 412.523(d)(3). As also explained in
that same final rule, we believe that
postponing the deadline of the possible
one-time prospective adjustment to the
LTCH PPS rates provided for in
§ 412.523(d)(3) to July 1, 2008, would
result in the availability of additional
data generated under the LTCH PPS
and, therefore, our decisions regarding a
possible adjustment would be based on
more complete and up-to-date data. This
data would be reflective of LTCH
behavior in response to the
implementation of the LTCH PPS.
Evaluating the appropriateness of the
possible one-time prospective
adjustment will entail a thorough
review of the actual Medicare costs
incurred by LTCHs during the 1st year
of the LTCH PPS, that is, for LTCH cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2002 through September 30,
2003. When we established the FY 2003
standard Federal rate to be budget
neutral, we used the most recent LTCH
cost data available at that time, and
trended that data forward to estimate
what Medicare would have paid to
LTCHs under the TEFRA payment
system if the PPS were not implemented
(67 FR 56033). Our methodology for
estimating payments for the purposes of
BN calculations, utilized the best
available data and necessarily reflected
assumptions in estimating aggregate
payments that would have been made
had the LTCH PPS not been
implemented. (The methodology for
determining the LTCH PPS standard
Federal rate for FY 2003 that would
‘‘maintain budget neutrality’’ is
described in considerable detail in the
August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS final rule
(67 FR 56027 through 56037).) In that
same final rule (67 FR 56036), we also
stated our intentions to monitor LTCH
PPS data to evaluate the ultimate
accuracy of the assumptions used in the
BN calculations (for example, inflation
factors, intensity of services provided,
or behavioral response to the
implementation of the LTCH PPS). To
the extent that those assumptions
significantly differed from actual
experience, the aggregate amount of
actual payments during FY 2003 could
be significantly higher or lower than the
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estimates upon which the BN
calculations were based.
At the outset of the LTCH PPS, we
provided for the possibility of a onetime prospective adjustment at
§ 412.523(d)(3). Among other things, we
wanted the opportunity to adjust the
LTCH PPS Federal payment rate once
data were available that reflected the
actual cost-based payments that would
have been made under the Medicare
program during FY 2003 if the LTCH
PPS had not been implemented, rather
than perpetuate any significant
difference between actual payments and
estimated payments in the 1st year of
the LTCH PPS used in determining the
Federal rate into future years. Therefore,
in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule, we
revised § 412.523(d)(3) to postpone the
adjustment until July 1, 2008, because
by that time, given the lag time typically
involved in the entire cost report
settlement procedure, we believe we
will be able to utilize the most accurate
data reflecting the actual costs incurred
by LTCHs for cost reporting periods
beginning during FY 2003.
We continue to believe that collecting
and evaluating new data as it becomes
available will allow us to have the best
data from the 1st year of the LTCH PPS
upon which to base an adjustment such
as this. As we explained in the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27844),
there are many LTCHs with cost
reporting periods from September 1
through August 30 which first became
subject to the LTCH PPS on September
1, 2003. Given the lag time required for
typical cost report settlement involving
submission, desk review, and in some
cases an audit, which can take
approximately 2 additional years to
complete (and we expect to audit a
number of LTCH cost reports for the
purpose of this analysis), we believe
that the October 1, 2006 deadline
established § 412.523(d)(3) is no longer
reasonable or realistic. In fact, we
believe that for cost reports for
providers on August 2004 fiscal year
ending date, we would be in possession
of the most reliable cost report data,
indicating the actual costs of the
Medicare program of the LTCH PPS
during the year in which we established
the Federal payment rate by July 2007.
Any proposed adjustment under
§ 412.523(d)(3), if finalized could then
be implemented on July 1, 2008.
Therefore, at this time, for the reasons
discussed in this section, we believe
that we still do not have sufficient new
data to enable us to conduct a
comprehensive reevaluation of our FY
2003 BN calculations. Accordingly, in
this proposed rule, we are not proposing
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to make a one-time adjustment under
§ 412.523(d)(3) at this time.
V. Other Proposed Policy Changes for
the 2008 LTCH PPS Rate Year
[If you choose to comment on issues
in this section, please include the
caption ‘‘OTHER PROPOSED POLICY
CHANGES FOR THE 2008 LTCH PPS
RATE YEAR’’ at the beginning of your
comments.]
A. Short Stay Outlier (SSO) Cases
1. Background
In the August 30, 2002 rule for the
LTCH PPS, under § 412.529, we
established a special payment policy for
SSO cases, that is, cases with a covered
LOS that is less than or equal to fivesixths of the geometric average LOS for
each LTC–DRG. When we established
the SSO policy, we explained that ‘‘[a]
short-stay outlier case may occur when
a beneficiary receives less than the full
course of treatment at the LTCH before
being discharged (67 FR 55995). Also in
the August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS final
rule, we stated that when we first
described the policy, in the March 27,
2002 proposed rule, ‘‘* * * we based
the proposed policy on the belief that
many of these patients could have been
treated more appropriately in an acute
hospital subject to the acute care
hospital inpatient prospective payment
system’’ (67 FR 55995). Therefore, under
the LTCH PPS, we implemented a
special payment adjustment for SSO
cases. Under the original SSO policy, for
LTCH PPS discharges with a covered
LOS of up to and including five-sixths
the geometric average LOS for the LTC–
DRG, we adjusted 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 multiplied by
the covered LOS of that discharge, or
the full LTC–DRG payment 67 FR 55995
through 56000).
As noted previously, generally LTCHs
are defined by statute as having an
ALOS of greater than 25 days. We stated
that we believed that the SSO payment
adjustment results in more appropriate
payments, since these cases most likely
did not receive a full course of a LTCHlevel of treatment in such a short period
of time and the full LTC–DRG payment
would generally not be appropriate.
Payment-to-cost ratio analyses indicated
that if LTCHs received a full LTC–DRG
payment for those cases, they would
have been significantly ‘‘overpaid’’ for
the resources they have actually
expended in treating those patients (67
FR 55995 through 56000).
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Furthermore, in establishing the SSO
policy, we stated that we believed that
providing a reduced payment for SSO
cases would discourage hospitals from
admitting these patients. We also
believed that the policy did not severely
penalize providers that, in good faith,
had admitted a patient and provided
some services before realizing that the
beneficiary could receive more
appropriate treatment at another site of
care. As we explained in the FY 2003
LTCH PPS final rule, establishing a SSO
payment for these types of cases
addresses the incentives inherent in a
discharge-based PPS for LTCHs for
treating patients with a short LOS (67
FR 55995 through 56000).
2. Additional Discussion of the SSO
Payment Formula
In the August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS
final rule, when we first presented our
rationale for establishing the SSO
policy, we had proposed an adjustment
to ensure appropriate payment for cases
that we believed may have been
transferred from an acute hospital
prematurely. Even if a patient was an
appropriate admission to the LTCH, we
also believed that a short stay case at a
LTCH most likely did not receive a full
course of medical treatment during the
short stay and that a full LTC–DRG
payment would therefore, be
inappropriate (67 FR 55995 through
56000).
In keeping with these concerns, and
based on an evaluation of data from
more than 3 years of the LTCH PPS,
which revealed that a large percentage
of SSOs had a covered LOS of 14 days
or less, we revised our payment policy
for SSO cases in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
final rule for subclause (I) LTCHs (71 FR
27845 through 27870).
Consistent with the Secretary’s broad
authority ‘‘to provide for appropriate
adjustments to the long-term hospital
payment system * * *’’ established
under section 123 of the BBRA as
amended by section 307(b)(1) of BIPA,
for RY 2007, we reduced the cost-based
option of the SSO policy adjustment to
100 percent of the estimated costs of the
case for discharges occurring on or after
July 1, 2006. We believed that by
reducing the Medicare payment to a
LTCH for a specific SSO case so that it
would not exceed the estimated costs
incurred for that case, we would be
removing what we believed could be a
financial incentive to admit and treat
SSO cases that the then existing policy
had established for LTCHs. We did not
change the payment option of 120
percent of the per diem for a specific
LTC–DRG multiplied by the covered
LOS for that case because as described
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in detail in the FY 2003 final rule LTCH
PPS, when we first established the SSO
policy, we found that by adjusting the
per discharge payment by paying at 120
percent of the per diem LTC–DRG
payment, once a stay reaches five-sixths
of the geometric average LOS for the
LTC–DRG, the full LTC–DRG payment
will have been made (67 FR 55999). We
continue to believe that this specific
methodology, which results in a gradual
increase in payment as the LOS
increases without producing a
significant payment ‘‘cliff’’ at any one
point, provides a reasonable payment
option under the SSO policy.
However, an analysis of the FY 2004
MedPAR data indicated that even under
the existing SSO policy, LTCHs were
admitting short stay patients that we
believe could have continued treatment
at the acute care hospitals (paid for
under the IPPS) but could have been
actually being prematurely discharged
to LTCHs. Therefore, in the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule, we added a fourth
payment option. This fourth payment
alternative, a blend of an LTCH PPS
amount that is comparable to the IPPS
per diem payment amount, and 120
percent of the LTC–DRG per diem
payment amount, as described below in
this section, reflects our belief that as
the length of a SSO stay increases, the
case begins to resemble a more ‘‘typical’’
LTCH stay and, therefore, it is
appropriate that incrementally, payment
should be based more on what would
otherwise be payable under the LTCH
PPS and less on the IPPS-comparable
amount. (Specifics of calculating the
IPPS-comparable amount are set forth in
considerable detail in the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27852
through 27853).
We noted at the outset of the LTCH
PPS for FY 2003, that the LTCH
standard rate was calibrated based on
LTCH resources expended in treating a
patient population requiring long stays.
Therefore, in establishing the SSO
policy at the beginning of the LTCH
PPS, we determined that it was
appropriate that we not pay a full LTC–
DRG payment for a patient stay not
requiring those resources (67 FR 55995
through 56000). Our revision of the
payment formula for SSOs for RY 2007
reflected our belief that where a case
met our definition of a SSO at
§ 412.529(a), as the covered LOS
increased, the case began to more
closely resemble a characteristic LTCH
case (and less like a short term acute
care hospital case). Therefore, it was
appropriate to base an increasing
percentage of payment for SSOs on the
LTC–DRG payment amount and a
decreasing percentage of the LTCH PPS
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payment amount based upon the IPPScomparable amount.
We continue to believe that in
defining a LTCH as a hospital with an
inpatient ALOS of greater than 25 days
in section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(I) of the Act,
that the Congress was focusing on LOS
as the essential characteristic of this
provider category. Furthermore, we
believe that the statutory change
requiring the establishment of the LTCH
PPS emphasized that the payment
system should reflect the different
resource use related to inpatient
hospital services provided by hospitals
specified by section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv) of
the Act, that is, by LTCHs (71 FR
27865). Specifically, we believe that the
language of the statute indicates that the
Congress believed that LTCHs treat or
should be treating patients with
different medical needs which results in
those patients having a significantly
longer LOS than those acute care
hospital patients that we pay for under
the IPPS.
In section 4422 of the BBA of 1997,
which required that the Secretary
develop a legislative proposal for the
establishment of a PPS for LTCHs, the
Congress specified that the system
‘‘shall include an adequate patient
classification system that reflects the
differences in patient resource use and
costs among such hospitals.’’ Section
123 of the BBRA of 1999, which
required implementation of a PPS for
LTCHs for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2002,
specified, among other things, that the
system be a per discharge payment
system, based on diagnosis-related
groups (DRGs), and ‘‘reflects the
differences in patient resource use and
costs’’ of long-term care hospital
patients. Section 307(b) of the BIPA of
2000 required the Secretary ‘‘to examine
the feasibility and the impact of basing
payment under such a system on the use
of existing (or refined) hospital DRGs
that have been modified to account for
different resource use of LTCH
patients.’’
When we developed the LTCH PPS
for FY 2003, the most recently available
MedPAR data (generally, for FYs 1998
and 1999) revealed that 52 percent of
the Medicare patients at LTCHs
nationwide had a LOS of less than twothirds of the ALOS for the LTC–DRG to
which they were grouped. Of these
cases, 20 percent had stays of less than
8 days. Since payments under the LTCH
PPS were based on the resources
necessary for treatment requiring long
term hospital-level stays, beginning
with the start of the LTCH PPS, we
established the SSO policy, to provide
appropriate payment for stays that were
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4805
significantly shorter than the ALOS for
each specific LTC–DRG.
The original SSO policy focused on
our concerns that a SSO patient would
generally receive less than the full
course of treatment at the LTCH before
being discharged and a full LTC–DRG
payment would not be appropriate (67
FR 55943, 55995 through 55996). As we
noted in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final
rule, when we revised the SSO policy
based on our analysis of the nearly 3
years of data since we designed the
LTCH PPS, we believed that our SSO
policy should reflect our conviction that
many SSO patients could otherwise
have continued to receive appropriate
care in the acute care hospital from
which they were admitted. Had these
patients not been discharged from the
acute care hospital, the additional days
of treatment would have continued to
have been paid for under the IPPS (71
FR 27845 through 27865).
Section 123 of the BBRA, as amended
by section 307(b) of the BIPA, confers
broad authority on the Secretary to
implement a PPS for LTCHs, including
provisions for appropriate adjustments
to the payment system. This broad
authority gives the Secretary flexibility
to fashion a LTCH PPS based on both
original policies, as well as concepts
borrowed from other payment systems
that are adapted, where appropriate to
the LTCH context. In the RY 2007 LTCH
PPS final rule, we formulated a payment
adjustment under the LTCH PPS that we
believed would result in an appropriate
payment adjustment for those inpatient
stays that we believe are not
characteristic of LTCHS but could be
more appropriately treated in another
setting.
Subsequent to the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
final rule, we have performed additional
analysis of more recent data FY 2005
MedPAR data, and have determined that
42 percent of LTCH SSO discharges, or
approximately 19,750 cases, had lengths
of stay that were less than or equal to
the average LOS plus one standard
deviation of an IPPS discharge that is
the same DRG as the LTC–DRG to which
the case was assigned. (One standard
deviation is a statistical test which
measures the certainty of the average of
a set of measurements for the purpose
of data analysis. The standard deviation
is the quantity commonly used by
statisticians to measure the variation in
a data set.) We believe that it is
appropriate to compare the covered LOS
of a LTCH case grouped to a particular
LTC–DRG to the ALOS plus one
standard deviation for the
corresponding DRG under the IPPS. At
one standard deviation, we have
identified approximately 68 percent of
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the IPPS cases within that DRG that
were discharged from acute care
hospitals and paid for under the IPPS.
Using the statistical test of one standard
deviation of the ALOS for each DRG
under the IPPS, identifies the majority
of IPPS discharges in any DRG.
We believe that the 42 percent of
LTCH SSO cases in the RY 2005
MedPAR files with lengths of stay that
are equal to or less than the IPPS ALOS
plus one standard deviation for the
same DRGs under the IPPS appear to be
comparable to typical stays at acute care
hospitals.
Although LTCHs are certified by
Medicare as acute care hospitals, we
believe that the Congress intended for
the higher LTCH PPS payments to be
made to LTCHs that treat patients
requiring prolonged hospital-level care.
Payments under the LTCH PPS, in
compliance with the statutory
mandates, have been calibrated based
on ‘‘the different resource use’’ of
LTCHs as compared to acute care
hospitals paid under the IPPS. We
believe that we are ‘‘overpaying,’’ under
the LTCH PPS, for those SSO cases in
LTCHs with covered lengths of stay that
are equal to or less than the typical IPPS
ALOS (that is, a LOS that is less than
or equal to the average IPPS LOS plus
one standard deviation for the same
DRG under the IPPS).
We further believe that in excluding
LTCHs from being paid under the IPPS,
the Congress also recognized several
types of hospital-level providers that
offered a different type of treatment than
could reasonably be paid for under the
IPPS. Specifically, in the FY 2002 LTCH
PPS final rule, we reviewed the history
of LTCHs as hospitals excluded from the
IPPS. At that time we quoted the
legislative history of the 1983 Social
Security Amendments which stated,
with regard to LTCHs, that the ‘‘DRG
system was developed for short-term
acute care general hospitals and as
currently constructed does not
adequately account for special
circumstances of diagnoses requiring
long stays’’ (Report of the Committee on
Ways and Means, U.S. House of
Representatives, to Accompany HR
1900, H.R. Rept. No. 98025, at 141
(1983) (67 FR 55957)). Therefore, from
the very outset of the IPPS, the Congress
distinguished LTCHs from short term
acute care hospitals by patients’ lengths
of stay. The PPS for LTCHs that we
implemented in FY 2003, complied
with the statutory mandate, cited above
in this section, that payments under the
LTCH PPS be calibrated based on ‘‘the
different resource use’’ of these longstay LTCH patients as distinct from the
resources used to treat short stay
patients at acute care hospitals and paid
under the IPPS. Consequently, as we
stated in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final
rule, we believe that ‘‘LTCHs that admit
SSO patients with lengths of stay more
typical of an acute care hospital may be,
in fact, behaving like acute care
hospitals’’ (71 FR 27847), and we also
believe that it is reasonable for
payments under the LTCH PPS for such
cases to reflect this behavior.
Our data indicates that for the
approximately 350 LTCHs in existence
during FY 2005 that discharged
approximately 130,000 cases, 46,600
discharges were SSO patients. During
that same period, the approximately
3,600 acute care hospitals throughout
the United States discharged
approximately 12.7 million Medicare
beneficiaries. At the approximately
3,600 acute care hospitals, treatment for
Medicare patients is paid for under the
IPPS, including those cases with a LOS
that is the same as the LOS for SSO
treated at a LTCH. However at a LTCH,
even under the blend payment option of
the SSO policy that we established for
RY 2007, a percentage of the payment
for those short stay patients at LTCHs
may be based on a payment rate that
was calculated to reflect the ‘‘different
resource use’’ at LTCHs as compared to
payment based on DRGs at acute care
hospitals paid for under the IPPS. We
believe that based on this analysis under
the existing SSO policy for short stay
patients where the patient’s LOS is less
than or equal to the average LOS plus
one standard deviation for the same
DRG at an acute care hospital, paid for
under the IPPS, our blended payment
methodology could result in an
excessive payment.
Our data further indicates that
typically LTCHs admit approximately
80 percent of their patients from acute
care hospitals where their urgent
conditions have been diagnosed,
treated, and stabilized. We believe that
when these patients are admitted to a
LTCH for an extremely short stay, the
LTCH appears to be serving as a stepdown unit of the acute care hospital (71
FR 27857 through 27858). (Section
1886(d)(1)(B) of the Act, provides for the
establishment of rehabilitation and
psychiatric units of section 1886(d)
hospitals (that is, acute care hospitals
paid for under the IPPS) but not LTCH
units.)
As we stated in the RY 2007 LTCH
PPS final rule, ‘‘* * * an analysis of the
CY 2004 MedPAR files revealed that for
specified DRGs for acute care cases
following ICU/CCU days, there were
significantly fewer ‘recuperative’ days
(nearly 50 percent) for acute care outlier
patients that were discharged from the
acute care hospital and then admitted to
a LTCH than for those patients that were
discharged from the acute care hospital
and not subsequently admitted to a
LTCH. For example, under the IPPS for
DRG 475 (Respiratory system diagnosis
with ventilator support) and DRG 483
(Trach with mechanical vent 96+ hours
or PDX except face, mouth and neck
diagnosis), the number of
‘‘recuperative’’ days were considerably
shorter at the acute care hospital if there
was a discharge at the acute care
hospital followed by an admission to a
LTCH. The data in Table 5 is consistent
with our belief that many LTCHs appear
to be admitting some SSO patients that
could have received the care at the acute
care hospital. (71 FR 27857)
TABLE 5.—HCO LOS, ICU/CCU LOS, AND POST-ICU/CCU LOS FOR SELECTED INPATIENT DRGS BY POST-DISCHARGE
STATUS
[Live discharges only]
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DRG
475
475
483
483
Cases
(no LTCH) .............................................................................................................
(with LTCH) ..........................................................................................................
(no LTCH) .............................................................................................................
(with LTCH) ..........................................................................................................
In our analysis of what we believe are
excessive payments under the existing
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3,887
515
3,257
2,353
LTCH PPS for the shortest SSOs, we are
focusing on those SSO cases where a
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LOS
32.5
29.6
73.6
45.7
Outlier ICU/
CCU days
20.5
22.6
53.6
41
Post ICU/
CCU days
12
7
20
4.7
LTCH patient’s covered LOS at the
LTCH is less than or equal to the ALOS
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plus one standard deviation for the
same DRG at acute care hospitals (the
‘‘IPPS comparable threshold’’) and
distinguishing between those SSO cases
with lengths of stay that are less than or
equal to the ‘‘IPPS comparable
threshold’’ from those that exceed that
threshold.
For the purposes of this discussion,
whether the LTCH SSO case is within
the ‘‘IPPS comparable threshold’’ is
determined by comparing the covered
LOS of that SSO case which has been
assigned to a particular LTC–DRG to the
ALOS for the same DRG under the IPPS.
For example, if the covered LOS of the
LTCH SSO case is equal to or less than
the average LOS plus one standard
deviation for the same DRG under the
IPPS, the LTCH SSO case would be
within the ‘‘IPPS comparable
threshold’’. We believe an alternative
payment option would be appropriate
for such a case. We are considering an
approach where if the covered LOS was
equal to or less than the ‘‘IPPS
comparable threshold’’ (defined above
in this section) of the same DRG under
the IPPS, the SSO payment
methodology could be revised so that
payment would be based upon the least
of 100 percent of estimated costs of the
case as determined under
§ 412.529(d)(2); 120 percent of the LTC–
DRG per diem multiplied by the covered
LOS of the case as determined under
§ 412.529(d)(1); the Federal prospective
payment for the LTC–DRG as
determined under § 412.529(d)(3); or an
LTCH PPS amount comparable to the
IPPS per diem amount as defined at
§ 412.529(d)(4), not to exceed the full
IPPS comparable amount.
We would note that the RTI Report,
discussed in Section XI. of this
proposed rule, includes an RTI
recommendation that ‘‘* * * for LTCH
cases whose LOS is within 1 standard
deviation of the IPPS average LOS,
LTCHs should be paid the IPPS rate.
When this occurs, it suggests that LTCH
is providing general acute care for these
patients. This will allow LTCHs to treat
these cases but be paid on an equitable
basis with other acute hospitals since
the shorter length stay would suggest
general acute treatment is being
provided.’’ (Recommendation 11, p.
139) (We discuss the RTI report in
Section XI. and have included the
Executive Summary of the RTI Report as
Addendum B of this proposed rule.)
Under this approach, SSO cases with
covered lengths of stay that exceed the
‘‘IPPS comparable threshold’’ would
continue to be paid under the existing
SSO payment policy at § 412.529(c)(2)
which is the least of: 100 percent of the
estimate cost of the case as determined
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under § 412.529 (d)(2); 120 percent of
the per diem of the LTC–DRG
multiplied by the covered LOS of the
case as determined under
§ 412.529(d)(1); the Federal prospective
payment for the LTC–DRG as
determined under § 412.529(d)(3); or a
blend of the 120 percent of the LTC–
DRG specific per diem amount and an
amount comparable to the IPPS per
diem amount as set forth in § 412.529
(c)(2)(iv). (The methodology for the
calculation of these amounts is specified
at § 412.529(d).)
We believe this approach is
appropriate because we believe that we
should continue to ensure that the
LTCH PPS payments are appropriate for
all cases; including those with a LOS
that resemble cases typically treated at
acute care hospitals. Therefore, as noted
in the above discussion in this section,
for the shortest SSO cases (that is, if the
LTCH patient’s covered LOS is less than
or equal to the ‘‘IPPS-comparable
threshold’’), the IPPS comparable per
diem amount, capped at the full IPPS
comparable amount that is used under
the blend option of the current SSO
policy, under this approach could be the
fourth payment option in the SSO
payment formula, replacing the blend
option in the adjusted LTCH PPS
payment formula at existing
§ 412.529(c)(2)(iv). We are considering
this policy because we believe that
based on our analysis for this particular
type of case, it is inappropriate for
Medicare to pay a LTCH a LTCH PPS
payment that results in a per discharge
payment amount that is greater than a
hospital paid under the IPPS. Consistent
with this approach, those SSO cases
where the covered LOS exceeded the
‘‘IPPS-comparable threshold,’’ payment
(that is, cases that more closely resemble
a characteristic LTCH case and less a
short term acute care hospital case)
would continue to be made under the
existing SSO policy at § 412.529(c)(2).
In considering this policy direction, at
the present time, we do not believe that
this approach for SSOs would be
appropriate for the specific situation of
a subsection (II) LTCH (that is, a LTCH
meeting the definition specified in
section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(II) of the Act).
We have addressed the uniqueness of
this type of LTCH in several notices ((62
FR 45966, 46016, and 46026), (67 FR
55954 and 55974), (68 FR 34147 through
34148) (71 FR 27863)). We believe that
subclause (II) LTCHs operate under a
unique Congressional mandate which,
as set forth in section
1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(II) of the Act,
circumscribes such a LTCHs’ admission
policies to the extent that it is being
identified as a LTCH in order to provide
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4807
a particular type of service (for which
the ALOS is greater than 20 days) to a
particular population (at least 80
percent have a principal diagnosis of
neoplastic disease) (68 FR 34147).
Exempting subsection (II) LTCHs under
this approach is consistent with
positions regarding the application of
SSO policies to subclause (II) LTCHs.
For example, in RY 2004, we provided
a distinctive phase-in formula for
subclause (II) LTCHs (§ 412.529(e)), and
in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule, we
did not apply SSO policy revisions for
subclause (I) LTCHs (§ 412.529(c)(2)) to
subclause (II) LTCHs ((68 FR 34122,
34147 through 34148) (71 FR
27798,27863)).
To encourage a thorough and accurate
evaluation of this approach, we have
included a column in Table 3 of
Addendum A of this proposed rule,
which sets forth what would be the
IPPS-comparable threshold for each
LTC–DRG. We note that to determine
the ‘‘IPPS Comparable Threshold’’ for
some DRGs it may be necessary to
supplement IPPS hospital statistical
data due to a low volume of IPPS cases
grouped to those DRGs. In addition,
although IPPS hospital statistical data
for the six transplant DRGs (103, 302,
480, 495, 512 and 513) and two error
DRGs (469 and 470) may be available,
we could assign a value of zero for the
‘‘IPPS Comparable Threshold’’ for these
LTC–DRGs. This is consistent with our
on-going policy under the LTCH PPS to
assign a value of 0.0000 to the relative
weights for these LTC–DRGs, as
discussed in section III.D.
As we have stated in this section, we
continue to be concerned about
appropriate payment for SSO cases
under the LTCH PPS, and therefore, we
are considering a policy change for the
purpose of differentiating between those
SSO cases that we believe are more
appropriately admitted and treated at
LTCHs as distinguished from those with
a LOS that resemble cases typically
treated at acute care hospitals. As
described in this section, for the shortest
SSO cases (that is, if the LTCH patient’s
covered LOS is less than or equal to the
‘‘IPPS-comparable threshold’’), the IPPS
comparable per diem amount, capped at
the full IPPS-comparable amount that is
used under the blend option of the
current SSO policy, could be the fourth
payment option in the SSO payment
formula, replacing the blend option in
the adjusted LTCH PPS SSO payment
formula at existing § 412.529(c)(2)(iv).
Consistent with this approach, those
SSO cases where the covered LOS
exceeded the ‘‘IPPS-comparable
threshold,’’ payment (that is, cases that
more closely resemble a characteristic
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LTCH case and less a short term acute
care hospital case) would continue to be
made under the existing SSO policy at
§ 412.529(c)(2).
As we detailed in this discussion, we
are concerned as to whether it is
appropriate to pay cases that have a
covered LOS in the LTCH that is less
than or equal to the IPPS ALOS plus one
standard deviation for the same DRG
more than would be paid under the
IPPS for a similar case. We are
interested in soliciting comments on
this approach as well as suggestions as
to alternative ways in which to address
our concerns.
Technical Correction.
We are proposing a technical
correction to existing § 412.529(a) which
would add the term ‘‘covered’’
immediately before the phrase ‘‘length
of stay’’ in the initial definition of a SSO
case. This technical correction is not a
substantive policy change but rather
corrects the regulatory definition of a
SSO case so that it is consistent with
policy determinations that we have
made since the FY 2003 implementation
of the LTCH PPS. We would note that
utilizing only Medicare covered days for
payment purposes has been our policy
from the outset of the LTCH PPS, as is
specified at § 412.503 where we defined
‘‘discharge’’ for purposes of payment, as
‘‘* * * when the patient stops receiving
Medicare-covered long-term care
services * * *’’ Furthermore, in
subsequent revisions of our SSO policy,
we included the term ‘‘covered’’ in new
regulation text, that is,
§ 412.529(c)(2)(iv)(A) and proposed
§ 412.529(c)(3)(i)(B) and (c)(3)(ii)(B). We
are proposing this technical correction
to conform all references in the
regulation text at § 412.529 to our
existing policy regarding a SSO
discharge which is determined based on
the number of ‘‘covered’’ days in the
patient stay.
3. Determination of Cost-to-Charge
Ratios (CCRs)
In the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR
48117 through 48121), similar to the
revisions to the HCO policy as
discussed in IV.D.3.d. of the preamble of
this proposed rule, we revised our
methodology for determining the annual
CCR ceiling and Statewide average CCRs
under the LTCH PPS because we believe
that those changes are more consistent
with the LTCH PPS single payment rate
for inpatient operating and capital costs.
Under the broad authority of section 123
of the BBRA and section 307(b)(1) of
BIPA, for discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2006, the LTCH CCR
ceiling specified under
§ 412.529(c)(3)(iv)(C)(2) is calculated as
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three standard deviations above the
corresponding national geometric mean
total CCR (established and published
annually by CMS). (As discussed in
greater detail in this section, the FI may
use a Statewide average CCR if, among
other things, a LTCH’s CCR is in excess
of the LTCH CCR ceiling.) The LTCH
total CCR ceiling is determined based on
IPPS CCR data, by first calculating the
‘‘total’’ (that is, operating and capital)
IPPS CCR for each IPPS hospital and
then determining the average ‘‘total’’
IPPS CCR for all hospitals. The LTCH
CCR ceiling is then established at 3
standard deviations from the
corresponding national geometric mean
total CCR. (For further detail on our
methodology for annually determining
the LTCH CCR ceiling, refer to the FY
2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 48117
through 48119).) We also established
that the LTCH ‘‘total’’ CCR ceiling used
under the LTCH PPS will continue to be
published annually in the IPPS
proposed and final rules, and the public
should continue to consult the annual
IPPS proposed and final rules for
changes to the LTCH total CCR ceiling
that would be effective for discharges
occurring on or after October 1 each
year. Accordingly, in the FY 2007 IPPS
final rule (71 FR 48119), we established
a FY 2007 LTCH total CCR ceiling of
1.321, effective for discharges occurring
on or after October 1, 2006.
In addition, under the broad authority
of section 123 of the BBRA and section
307(b)(1) of BIPA, for discharges on or
after October 1, 2006, we revised our
methodology to determine the Statewide
average CCRs under
§ 412.529(c)(3)(iv)(C) for use under the
LTCH PPS in a manner similar to the
way we compute the ‘‘total’’ LTCH CCR
ceiling using IPPS CCR data (71 FR
48120). Specifically, under this revised
methodology, we first calculate the total
(that is, operating and capital) CCR for
each IPPS hospital. We would then
calculate a weighted average ‘‘total’’
CCR for all IPPS hospitals in the rural
areas of the State and weighted average
‘‘total’’ CCR for all IPPS hospitals in the
urban areas of the State. (For further
detail on our methodology for annually
determining the LTCH urban and rural
Statewide average CCRs, refer to the FY
2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 48119
through 48121).) We also established
that the applicable Statewide average
‘‘total’’ (operating and capital) CCRs
used under the LTCH PPS will continue
to be published annually in the IPPS
proposed and final rules, and the public
should continue to consult the annual
IPPS proposed and final rules for
changes to the applicable Statewide
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Sfmt 4702
average total CCRs that would be
effective for discharges occurring on or
after October 1 each year. Accordingly,
in the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR
48122), the FY 2007 LTCH PPS
Statewide average total CCRs for urban
and rural hospitals, effective for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2006, were presented in Table 8C of
the Addendum of that final rule (71 FR
48303).
Additionally, in the FY 2007 IPPS
final rule (71 FR 48119), under the
broad authority of section 123 of the
BBRA and section 307(b)(1) of BIPA, we
established under the LTCH PPS SSO
policy at § 412.529(c)(3)(iv)(C) that the
FI may use a Statewide average CCR,
which is 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,
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 FI 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.
Furthermore, in the FY 2007 IPPS
final rule (71 FR 48121), we established
under § 412.529(c)(3)(iv)(B) 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, in
that same final rule, we also established
at § 412.529(c)(3)(iv)(A) that, for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2006, we may specify an alternative
to the CCR computed under
§ 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
FI use a different (higher or lower) CCR
based on substantial evidence presented
by the hospital. A complete discussion
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of these revisions to our methodology
for determining a LTCH’s CCR is
discussed in the FY 2007 IPPS final rule
(71 FR 48119 through 48121).
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4. Reconciliation of SSO Cases
In the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR
48121 through 48122), under the broad
authority of section 123 of the BBRA
and section 307(b)(1) of BIPA, we
revised § 412.529(c)(3)(iv)(D) through
(E), for discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 2006, to codify in subpart O
of 42 CFR part 412 the provisions
concerning the reconciliation of LTCH
PPS outlier payments, including
editorial clarifications discussed in
greater detail below in this section, that
would more precisely describe the
application of those policies.
Specifically, at § 412.529(c)(3)(iv)(D),
similar to our current policy, we
specified that for discharges occurring
on or after October 1, 2006, any
reconciliation of outlier payments will
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, at
§ 412.529(c)(3)(iv)(E), we specified 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.
Such an adjustment will be 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. We made these
additional revisions to § 412.529(c)(3)
because we believe that these changes
would be more consistent with the
LTCH PPS single payment rate, 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 outlier
payments applicable under the LTCH
PPS regulations at subpart O of 42 CFR
part 412. (For a complete discussion on
the revisions made to the SSO
reconciliation policy, refer to the FY
2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 48121
through 48122).)
B. Proposed Expansion of Special
Payment Provisions for LTCH Hospitals
Within Hospitals (HwHs) and LTCH
Satellites: Proposed Expansion of the 25
Percent Rule to Certain Situations Not
Currently Covered Under Existing
§ 412.534
In the FY 2005 IPPS final rule we
established the special payment
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provisions at § 412.534 for LTCHs that
are HwHs and for satellites of LTCHs
that are co-located with host hospitals.
In developing that policy, we were
particularly concerned with patient
shifting between the host acute care
hospitals and the co-located LTCH HwH
or satellite for financial rather than for
medical reasons, a scenario that we
believed was encouraged by physical
proximity, and that resulted in
inappropriate increased cost to the
Medicare program (69 FR 49191). We
specified in the FY 2005 IPPS final rule
that the payment adjustment for colocated LTCHs at § 412.534 was also
applicable to hospitals other than acute
care hospitals that served as hosts to
both LTCH HwHs and satellites of
LTCHs and that we had similar
concerns to those stated above regarding
patient shifting between such hosts and
their co-located LTCHs. However, the
vast majority of host hospitals continue
to be acute care hospitals (69 FR 49198).
In the FY 2005 IPPS final rule, we
quoted the FY 1995 IPPS final rule
where we first discussed the concern
that LTCH HwHs were, in effect,
operating as step-down units of acute
care hospitals. We explained that this
was inconsistent with the statutory
framework and that such a configuration
could lead to two Medicare bills being
submitted (one from the acute care
hospital and the other from the LTCH)
for what was essentially one episode of
care (69 FR 49191 through 49192, 59 FR
45389).
When we first established the
separateness and control criteria for
LTCH HwHs at § 412.22(e) in the FY
1995 IPPS final rule, our main objective
was to address the shifting of costly,
long-stay patients from the host to the
on-site LTCH, resulting in two hospital
stays which would result in a financial
windfall for both providers. We sought
to protect the integrity of the IPPS by
ensuring that those costly, long-stay
patients who could reasonably continue
treatment in an acute care hospital
would not be unnecessarily discharged
to an onsite LTCH, a behavior that
would undermine the Medicare IPPS
DRG payment system for acute care
hospitals. We explained that the Federal
standardized payment amount for the
IPPS was based on the average cost of
an acute care patient across all acute
care hospitals. This is premised on the
assumption that, on average, both highcost and low-cost patients are treated at
hospitals. Although we might pay a
hospital less than was expended for a
particular costly case, the hospital
would also receive more than was
expended for other less costly cases.
However, an acute care hospital that
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consistently discharges higher cost
patients to a post-acute care setting for
the purpose of lowering its costs,
undercuts the foundation of the IPPS
DRG payment system which is based on
averages, as noted above. In this
circumstance, the hospital
inappropriately would have incurred
lower costs under the IPPS because the
course of acute treatment had not been
completed and the hospital did not
incur those additional costs for what
would have been the remainder of the
patient’s stay at the IPPS acute care
hospital. We were concerned that once
that patient was discharged from the
IPPS acute care hospital, the patient,
still under active treatment for the same
condition, would be admitted to a
LTCH, thereby generating a second
admission and Medicare payment that
would not have taken place but for the
availability of the LTCH (59 FR 45389
through 45393).
With the growth of satellite entities,
another category of co-located facility,
we established ‘‘separateness and
control’’ policies applicable to satellites
of excluded hospitals, which we defined
at § 412.22(h) 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.’’ In
the FY 2003 IPPS final rule at
§ 412.22(h), we finalized additional
regulations governing the satellites of
hospitals (64 FR 41532 through 41535
and 67 FR 50105 through 50106).
As detailed in the FY 2005 proposed
rule and final rule for the IPPS (69 FR
28323 through 28327, 69 FR 49191
through 49214), with the explosive
growth in the number of LTCH HwHs
and concomitant cost to the Medicare
program, we reevaluated the
effectiveness of existing policies
regarding HwHs. (OSCAR data showed
that there were 105 LTCHs in 1993 of
which 10 were HwHs. By October 2005,
there were 373 LTCHs of which most
were HwHs.) We reconsidered whether
our regulations sufficiently protected
the Medicare program from the
problems that we envisioned in the FY
1995 IPPS final rule, as discussed in this
section. We also questioned the
effectiveness of the ‘‘performance of
basic hospital functions’’ aspect of the
‘‘separateness and control’’
requirements alone because we were
aware that some co-located providers
had been establishing complex
arrangements among corporate affiliates,
and had obtained services from those
affiliates, masking true corporate
identities and therein diluting or
impairing the effectiveness of the
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separateness criteria in determining
whether both hospitals were
interrelated. While technically
remaining within the parameters of the
rule, these arrangements intermingled
corporate interests so that the corporate
distinctness was lost, thus side-stepping
the intent of our regulations. (Although
we have had similar concerns regarding
patient movement between host
hospitals and their satellites, there had
never been any ‘‘performance of basic
hospital functions’’ criteria established
in § 412.22(h) because satellites are part
of another hospital, and therefore, share
a Medicare provider number with ‘‘the
hospital of which they are a part’’ thus
making it administratively burdensome
to distinguish between the inpatient
operating costs of the main hospital and
its satellite(s).)
In the FY 2005 IPPS final rule,
following serious consideration of the
public comments that we received on
our proposed policy revisions for LTCH
HwHs and satellites (69 FR 28323
through 28327) and further evaluation
of the issues, regulatory changes were
finalized for HwH separateness and
control policies at § 412.22(e) and a new
payment adjustment was established for
LTCH HwHs and for satellites of LTCHs
at § 412.534. (We wish to note that the
term ‘‘satellite facility’’ in this section
refers to satellites of excluded hospitals,
in particular, LTCHs, and does not
include satellites of excluded units at
§ 412.25.)
Specifically, in the FY 2005 IPPS final
rule (69 FR 49091 through 49214),
effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2004,
for LTCHs we eliminated the
performance of basic hospital functions
test under § 412.22(e)(5)(i), the 15
percent test under existing
§ 412.22(e)(5)(ii), and the 75 percent of
admissions from other than the host
criteria at § 412.22(e)(5)(iii). A LTCH
that met administrative separateness
and control requirements at
§ 412.22(e)(1)(i) through (e)(1)(iv), under
our finalized policy, satisfied the LTCH
HwH requirements. (As noted above in
this section, the performance of basic
hospital functions test does not exist for
satellites. Therefore, we did not
similarly revise § 412.22(h).) However,
we established a payment adjustment
based upon an annual threshold criteria
for LTCH HwHs or LTCH satellites at
§ 412.534 of 25 percent (or an applicable
percentage) for LTCH discharges who
were admitted from their host hospitals.
Section 412.534, Special payment
provisions for long-term care hospitals
within hospitals and satellites of longterm care hospitals, provides that if a
LTCH HwH or LTCH satellite’s
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discharges that were admitted from its
host hospital exceed 25 percent (or the
applicable percentage) of its total
Medicare discharges for the LTCH HwH
or LTCH satellite’s cost reporting
period, an adjusted payment would be
made at the lesser of the otherwise
payable amount under the LTCH PPS or
the amount payable under the LTCH
PPS that would be equivalent to what
Medicare would otherwise pay under
the IPPS. In determining whether a
hospital met the 25 percent (or
applicable percentage) criterion,
patients transferred from the host
hospital that had already qualified for
outlier payments at the host would not
count as a discharge that had been
admitted from the host. (We commonly
refer to this throughout the preamble
and regulations text as the discharge not
being counted towards the applicable
threshold.)
It is important to note that if the
hospital exceeds its threshold, LTCH
discharges admitted from the host
before the LTCH exceeds the 25 percent
threshold, would be paid an otherwise
unadjusted payment under the LTCH
PPS. That is, not adjusted by § 412.534.
We also finalized additional
adjustments to the 25 percent policy for
specific circumstances. For LTCH HwHs
or LTCH satellites located in a rural
area, there is no payment adjustment
applied under § 412.534 if no more than
50 percent rather than 25 percent of the
Medicare patients discharged were
admitted from the host. In addition, in
determining the percentage of patients
admitted from the host, any patients
that had been Medicare outliers at the
host and then discharged to the rural
LTCH HwH or LTCH satellite would be
considered as if they were admitted to
the LTCH or satellite from a non-host
hospital. In addition, in the case of a
LTCH or LTCH satellite facility that was
co-located with the only other hospital
in the MSA or with an MSA-dominant
hospital, as defined at § 412.534(e)(4),
we provided a payment threshold that
we believed responded to ‘‘the unique
needs of these communities’’ (69 FR
49207). Under § 412.534(e)(2), we do not
adjust payments to those LTCH HwHs
or LTCH satellite facilities as long as the
percentage of Medicare patients
discharged from the LTCH HwH or
LTCH satellite that were admitted from
the urban single or MSA dominant host
hospital, did not exceed the percentage
of the total Medicare discharges in the
MSA in which the hospital is located
that were discharged from the host
hospital, for the cost reporting period
for which the adjustment would be
made, but in no case is the percentage
less than 25 percent or more than 50
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percent. In addition, in determining the
percentage of patients admitted to the
LTCH from the urban single or MSA
dominant host hospital, any patients
that had been Medicare outliers at the
host and then transferred to the LTCH
HwH or LTCH satellite would be
considered as if they were admitted to
the LTCH from a non-host hospital.
(When we refer to ‘‘the 25 percent (or
applicable percentage)’’ patient
threshold throughout this proposed
rule, the ‘‘applicable percentage’’ refers
to these special adjustments that we
have provided for the special
circumstances of rural, urban single, or
MSA-dominant hospital or to the
percentage associated with the
transition policy, discussed below in
this section.)
When implementing this policy, we
also provided for a 4-year transition for
existing LTCH HwHs or LTCH satellites
that met the applicable criteria outlined
in the regulations to allow a reasonable
period during which hosts and colocated LTCH HwH or LTCH satellites
and specific ‘‘LTCHs under formation’’
would be able to adapt to the
requirements of the new policy. For cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2004 through September 30,
2005, these transitioned hospitals were
to be grandfathered, with the 1st year as
a ‘‘hold harmless’’ year. However, we
required that even for these facilities
that were being phased-in to the full
payment adjustment, in the first cost
reporting period, the hold harmless
year, the percentage of discharges
admitted from the host hospital to the
LTCH could not exceed the percentage
of discharges admitted from the host
hospital to the LTCH HwH or LTCH
satellite in its FY 2004 cost reporting
period. (For the purposes of § 412.534,
we established the hospital’s cost
reporting period during FY 2004, the
last cost reporting period prior to the
implementation of § 412.534, as a ‘‘base
period’’ for purposes of establishing the
gradual phase-in of the full payment
threshold adjustment (69 FR 49196).
Therefore, while we allowed for a 4year transition for those above specified
LTCH HwHs and satellites for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2004 and before October 1,
2005 (FY 2005), payments to the LTCH
hospital or LTCH satellite facility would
be limited based on the percentage that
it had admitted during its FY 2004 cost
reporting period. After the first
grandfathered cost reporting period,
these LTCH HwHs and LTCH satellite
facilities were required to meet a
percentage transition over the 3-year
period beginning in FY 2006. For the
second year (cost reporting periods
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beginning on or after October 1, 2005
but before October 1, 2006), the
percentage of Medicare discharges that
may be admitted from the host with no
adjustment may not exceed the lesser of
the percentage of their discharges
admitted from their host during its FY
2004 cost reporting period or 75
percent. For the third year (cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2006 but before October 1,
2007), the percentage of Medicare
discharges that may be admitted from
the host with no adjustment may not
exceed the lesser of the percentage of its
Medicare discharges admitted from its
host during its FY 2004 cost reporting
period beginning or 50 percent, and
finally, 25 percent (or other applicable
percentage) beginning with the fourth
year (cost reporting periods beginning
on or after October 1, 2007).
Additionally, the 25 percent policy for
co-located LTCHs is currently
implemented in a location-specific
manner, which means that the
computation of the percentage of LTCH
HwH or LTCH satellite discharges
admitted from a host is based solely on
the admissions from the physically colocated host and not from other
campuses or remote locations which
may share a common Medicare provider
number with the host.
Although the payment adjustment at
§ 412.534 focused on LTCH HwHs and
satellites of LTCHs and its host
hospitals, the relationship between a
receiving provider and any referring
hospital has been an issue of concern for
the Medicare program, even in the
absence of co-location. Under section
1886(d)(5)(J) of the Act, added by
section 4407 of the BBA of 1997, the
Congress provided for a post-acute
transfer policy which addressed certain
patient discharges from acute care
hospitals that subsequently received
additional treatment delivered by a
second Medicare provider. We believe
that the Congress enacted this
legislation to discourage acute care
hospitals from prematurely discharging
patients to another treatment setting in
order to increase Medicare payment.
The Congress’ enactment of the
legislation authorizing the post-acute
transfer policy is indicative of its
serious concerns about patient shifting
between acute and post-acute providers.
In the case of the post-acute transfer
policy, described above in this section,
we focused on overpayment, under the
IPPS, to the transferring hospital when
a patient is prematurely discharged to
another provider during the same
episode of illness.
The payment adjustment for colocated LTCHs at § 412.534 was based
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on concerns similar to those underlying
the post-acute transfer policy at § 412.4,
that is, an inappropriately truncated
hospitalization at a host facility and an
admission to another provider,
specifically a LTCH, for which an
additional Medicare payment would be
generated. However, the payment
adjustment at § 412.534 is not applied to
the transferring hospital but rather, to
discharges from the co-located LTCH to
which the presumably prematurely
discharged patient has been admitted.
Moreover, although the referring
hospital under the post-acute transfer
policy must be an acute care hospital,
for the purposes of the payment
adjustment at § 412.534, any hospital is
a potential host if it is co-located with
a LTCH HwH or LTCH satellite.
The payment adjustment under
§ 412.534 applies only to determining
payments under the LTCH PPS for
patients discharged from the LTCH or
LTCH satellite which had been admitted
to the LTCH or LTCH satellite from the
onsite host hospital. For example, if an
IRF was co-located with an LTCH HwH
and upon discharge from the IRF, the
patient was admitted to the onsite
LTCH, upon discharge from the LTCH,
Medicare payment for that LTCH
discharge, would be governed by
§ 412.534 (69 FR 49198). This would
also be the case for a patient shifted to
a LTCH from a co-located host acute
care hospital following complications
from a surgical procedure; a patient
requiring rehabilitation who has been
discharged from a host IRF to a LTCH;
or a patient who had been an inpatient
at an IPF and was discharged to an onsite LTCH for care that could otherwise
have been continued at the host hospital
(that a significant number of LTCHs
specialize in rehabilitation and
psychiatric cases further supports this
point (71 FR 4704 through 4719)). We
believe that it is appropriate to pay the
LTCH HwH or LTCH satellite that is colocated with an IRF or IPF and exceeds
the applicable threshold at the IPPS
equivalent rate and not a LTCH PPS rate
that would be equivalent to the amount
otherwise paid under the IRF or IPF PPS
rate, since the HwH and the satellite
LTCH are, as we explained earlier in
this section, facilities that in many ways
are comparable to an acute care
hospital.
When we proposed the 25 percent (or
applicable percentage) payment
adjustment for co-located LTCHs in the
FY 2005 IPPS proposed rule, MedPAC
expressed concern that the 25 percent
patient threshold policy would have a
significant impact and could possibly
lead to an inequitable situation for colocated LTCHs, as compared to
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freestanding LTCHs. Among their
concerns were the following:
freestanding LTCHs also have strong
relationships with acute care hospitals,
and that where on average LTCH HwHs
receive 61 percent of their patients from
their hosts, on average freestanding
LTCHs receive 42 percent of their
patients from their primary referring
hospital; a 25 percent rule that only
applied to LTCH HwHs and not to
freestanding LTCHs could therefore be
inequitable; and this approach could be
circumvented by an increase in the
number of freestanding LTCHs instead
of LTCH HwHs (69 FR 49211).
In the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule,
we also stated that according to a
commenter, the data indicated ‘‘* * *
that it is common practice for LTCHs
* * * to admit patients from a singlesource acute care hospitals’’ and that
71.2 percent of free-standing LTCHs
admit more than 25 percent of their
patients from a single source acute-care
hospital (71 FR 27878).
Additionally, in comments received
on a proposed policy to preclude
common ownership of a host and a
HwH (which was not finalized), two
commenters asserted that the financial
incentive to accept inappropriate
patients from an acute care hospital
could exist only when the acute care
hospital and the LTCH were commonly
owned and when there was common
governance, a situation that ‘‘can exist
even without co-location, that is, a
freestanding LTCH, exempt from the
requirements of § 412.22(e) could be
owned and governed by the hospital
from which it receives the majority of its
referrals’’ (69 FR 49202). Despite the
commenters’ assertions, we do not
believe that either common ownership
or co-location are the only
circumstances under which financial
incentives exist for acute care hospitals
to prematurely discharge Medicare
patients to LTCHs for additional
treatment during the same episode of
patient care. In fact, we are aware
anecdotally of the existence of
‘‘arrangements’’ between Medicare acute
and post-acute hospital-level providers
that may not have any ties of ownership
or governance relating to patient shifting
that appear to be based on mutual
financial gain rather than on significant
medical benefits for the patient. This
could be the case if an acute care
hospital discharges a Medicare
beneficiary who continues to require
hospital-level care, to preclude that
patient’s case from reaching outlier
status at the acute care hospital, to an
LTCH for additional treatment. Under
this scenario, Medicare would pay the
acute care hospital under the IPPS for
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the beneficiary’s care but the hospital
would be able to avoid both the ‘‘fixed
loss’’ amount and absorbing 20 percent
of the remaining costs of patient care, as
established under the IPPS outlier
policy at subpart F of part 412.
However, Medicare would be
responsible for an additional payment,
to the LTCH, under the LTCH PPS upon
the patient’s discharge from the LTCH.
Accordingly, we believe that additional
regulation in this area is both necessary
and appropriate in order to protect the
Medicare Trust Fund when generating
two payments under two different
payment systems for what was
essentially one episode of beneficiary
care.
When we finalized the payment
adjustment at § 412.534 which focused
solely on co-located LTCHs, that is,
LTCH HwHs and satellites of LTCHs,
and as we subsequently noted in the RY
2007 final rule for the LTCH PPS, we
took considerable note of these
comments and we have continued since
that time to monitor the relationships
between referring hospitals and LTCHs
(71 FR 27878). Specifically, we have
analyzed patient claims data from the
2004 MedPAR files for acute care
patients who are admitted to freestanding LTCHs. We have analyzed the
discharge and LOS information from
this data to evaluate whether there is a
significant difference in patient shifting
behavior between co-located LTCHs and
their host acute care hospitals and those
free-standing LTCHs that admit a
majority of their patients from particular
referring acute care hospitals. (As stated
previously, in fact for the purposes of
the payment adjustment at existing
§ 412.534, any inpatient hospital-level
provider is a potential host if it is colocated with a LTCH HwH or LTCH
satellite (69 FR 49198). Similarly, freestanding LTCHs also admit patients
from sources other than acute care
hospitals. However, our data reveals
that approximately 80 percent of all
LTCH admissions are from acute care
hospitals. Therefore, our data analysis
discussed below in this section, focuses
on the relationship between a referring
acute care hospital and a LTCH.)
We also analyzed data on
relationships between LTCHs and acute
care hospitals from which they received
a significant percentage of referrals. The
RY 2005 MedPAR files indicate that
only 12.0 percent of the then 174 freestanding LTCHs admitted 25 percent or
less of their Medicare discharges from
an individual acute care hospital; for
36.8 percent of those freestanding
LTCHs, the percentage was between 25
and 50 percent; for 34.5 percent it is
between 50 and 75 percent, and for
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16.66 percent of those free-standing
LTCHs it was between 75 and 100
percent of their Medicare discharges
that were admitted from one acute care
hospital. Thus, the data indicates that
for over 50 percent of all freestanding
LTCHs, at least 50 percent of their
discharges were for patients admitted
from an individual acute care hospital.
Generally, the data reveals minimal
differences for cases grouped to the
same DRG between the ALOS at the
acute care hospital prior to an
admission to a co-located LTCH and the
ALOS at a referring acute hospital prior
to admission to a free-standing LTCH.
For example, we evaluated data from CY
2004 MedPAR files regarding LTC–DRG
475, Respiratory System Diagnosis with
Ventilator Support, for both LTCH
HwHs with more than 25 percent of
their discharges admitted from their
host hospital and free-standing LTCHs
with more than 25 percent of their
discharges admitted from an individual
referring hospital. The ALOS for
patients stays that have not reached
outlier status at the host prior to being
discharged to the co-located LTCH was
12.7 days and for free-standing LTCHs,
the average LOS at their individual
referring hospital was 12.9 days.
Similarly, for LTC–DRG 416,
Septicemia, the ALOS at the host acute
care hospital was 9.8 days prior to
admission to the co-located LTCH and
the prior ALOS at the individual
referring acute care hospital was 9.6
days prior to admission to the freestanding LTCH. We believe that this
data indicates considerable similarity
between the patient shifting behavior at
acute care hospitals and co-located
LTCHs and acute care hospitals and
LTCHs that are not co-located. We
would have expected the LOS at the
acute care hospital that discharged
patients to non-co-located LTCHs to be
longer.
Furthermore, as noted above in this
section, we have concentrated on the
relationships between acute care
hospitals and non-co-located LTCHs in
this discussion, because approximately
80 percent of Medicare patients in
LTCHs are admitted from acute care
hospitals. However, we believe that the
same concerns, articulated above, would
also exist when the patient source is not
an acute care hospital. There could still
be a financial incentive on the part of
the referring hospital (for example, an
IRF, to prematurely discharge a
beneficiary to a LTCH for additional
post-acute treatment in order to avoid
absorbing high treatment costs under
the IRF outlier policy at § 412.624(e)(5))
that would result in two Medicare
payments, one to the initial provider
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and the other to the LTCH for a single
episode of beneficiary care. (We
recognize that a patient could
experience a medical crisis while an
inpatient at an IRF, but typically, the
most appropriate setting for such urgent
care would be a general acute care
hospital, rather than a LTCH.)
We believe that this data gives further
credence to concerns articulated by
MedPAC and the assertions made by the
Lewin Group in its comments on our FY
2005 IPPS proposed rule regarding the
‘‘strong relationships’’ for referral
purposes that exist between many acute
care hospitals and free-standing LTCHs.
Although our decade-old concerns,
about LTCHs functioning as long-stay or
step-down ‘‘units’’ of acute care
hospitals, focused on co-located LTCHs
(HwHs and LTCH satellites), we believe
that this data indicates that many freestanding LTCHs may also be serving the
same purpose as those that are colocated, that is, as functional step-down
units of their primary referring acute
care hospital.
We are also concerned about other
attempts to evade our regulations at
§ 412.534. In implementing the HwH
regulations at § 412.22(e) and the
satellite regulations at § 412.22(h), we
have consistently utilized the definition
of ‘‘campus’’ that was established in the
provider-based regulations at
§ 413.65(a)(2) which specifies that a
campus is ‘‘the physical area
immediately adjacent to the provider’s
main buildings, other areas and
structures that are not strictly
contiguous to the main buildings but are
located within 250 yards of the main
buildings, and any other areas
determined on an individual basis, by
the CMS regional office, to be part of the
provider’s campus.’’ We have become
aware of certain LTCH companies that
have both established new LTCHs and/
or are considering relocating existing
HwHs or LTCH satellites so that they are
at least 300 yards from the acute care
hospital, thus side-stepping the intent of
existing § 412.534. We believe that our
proposals to extend the existing
payment policy will address the type of
‘‘gaming,’’ described above in this
section, as well as dealing with our
concern that LTCHs appear to be
admitting patients from referring
hospitals prior to the delivery of a full
episode of care so that we are making
two payments, one to the referring
hospital and another much higher
payment under the LTCH PPS to the
LTCH for what is essentially one
episode of care. While reviewing the
following proposals, we would also be
interested in receiving suggestions as to
other ways in which we could
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effectively address attempts to evade the
intent of our regulations governing
patient-shifting between referring
hospitals and LTCHs.
We first noted in the RY 2006 LTCH
PPS final rule (71 FR 27878), our
concern that in many cases the line of
‘‘functional separateness’’ between freestanding LTCHs and their major referral
sources appears to have been erased. We
believe that our analysis of patient
movement between these facilities
supports these concerns.
Therefore, under the broad authority
conferred on the Secretary by section
123 of the BBRA, as amended by section
307(b) of the BIPA to implement a
prospective payment system for LTCHs,
including authority to provide for
appropriate adjustments to the payment
system, we are proposing to extend the
payment adjustment at § 412.534,
presently applicable to co-located
subclause (I) LTCHs, to all subclause (I)
LTCHs (section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(I) of
the Act), as explained below in this
section. (For the purposes of the
discussion of this proposed policy,
‘‘subclause (I) LTCH’’ is also intended to
include satellites of these LTCHs. Our
proposal regarding subclause (II)
LTCHs, that is those LTCHs that meet
the definition at section
1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(II) of the Act, is
discussed below in this section.)
Specifically, at proposed § 412.536, we
are setting forth proposed regulations
that govern payments under the LTCH
PPS for LTCH and LTCH satellite
Medicare discharges admitted from nonco-located hospitals. We are proposing
that the policy provisions of the existing
25 percent (or applicable percentage)
payment adjustment would apply to any
subclause (I) LTCH or LTCH satellite
regardless of the physical proximity to
the hospital from which it is accepting
admissions. In order to apply this policy
at all subclause (I) LTCHs and LTCH
satellites, we are additionally proposing
to revise existing § 412.534 to include a
new provision at proposed § 412.534(h)
that would extend the 25 percent (or
applicable percentage) payment
threshold to those grandfathered colocated subclause (I) LTCH HwHs and
LTCH satellites at § 412.22(f) and
§ 412.22(h)(3)(i), respectively, for
Medicare discharges that had been
admitted from the grandfathered LTCH
of LTCH satellite facility’s host for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
July 1, 2007. (We address the issue of
satellites of subclause (II) LTCHs below
in this section.
We are proposing to add new
§ 412.536 that will specify a comparable
payment adjustment governing
Medicare discharges from subclause (I)
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LTCHs and LTCH satellites that were
admitted from non-co-located hospitals.
We note that under this proposal, the
payment adjustment at § 412.536 would
also apply to those Medicare discharges
from co-located subclause (I) LTCHs
(HwHs and LTCH satellite facilities) that
have been admitted from hospitals other
than those with which they are colocated. We believe that this proposed
policy will address our concerns with
LTCHs and LTCH satellites that in many
cases appear to be functioning like stepdown units of acute care hospitals.
Furthermore, we believe it is
appropriate that the same analytical
standards and payment policies be
applied by Medicare to all subclause (I)
LTCHs. Therefore, we are proposing to
amend existing § 412.534 to include
subclause (I) grandfathered LTCH HwHs
and LTCH satellite facilities, as well as
proposing to use the same thresholds
applicable to co-located LTCH HwHs
and LTCH satellite facilities for
subclause (I) LTCHs and LTCH satellite
facilities that admit Medicare patients
from non-co-located hospitals under
§ 412.536. Specifically, we are
proposing that for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after July 1, 2007, as we
specify in proposed revised
§ 412.534(h), this payment adjustment
would include those subclause (I) LTCH
HwHs and satellites that have been
‘‘grandfathered’’ under § 412.22(f) and
§ 412.22(h)(3)(i) respectively and that
are presently exempted from the
existing payment adjustment for colocated LTCHs. As noted previously,
both grandfathered HwHs at § 412.22(f)
and satellite facilities at § 412.22(h)(3)(i)
are permitted to retain their exclusions
from the IPPS despite not meeting
‘‘separateness and control’’ policies
with regard to their relationships with
their host hospitals, as long as they
continue to comply with applicable
Medicare requirements. This proposed
inclusion of grandfathered LTCH HwHs
and LTCH satellites in the 25 percent (or
applicable percentage) threshold policy
would not affect their ability to continue
to be ‘‘grandfathered’’ and excluded
from the IPPS. Moreover, as noted
above, the proposed 25 percent (or the
applicable percentage) threshold policy
governing discharges from subclause (I)
LTCHs that had been admitted from any
individual non-co-located hospital, at
new proposed § 412.536, would also
apply in determining payments under
the LTCH PPS for Medicare discharges
from LTCH HwHs and LTCH satellites
that had been admitted from non-colocated hospitals other than their hosts,
including grandfathered HwHs and
LTCH satellites. Under the proposed
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4813
policies applicable to grandfathered
subclause (I) LTCH HwHs and LTCH
satellites, we would pay an adjusted
amount for those discharged Medicare
patients that were admitted from their
co-located host, under proposed
§ 412.534(h) or from any other referring
hospital under proposed § 412.536, in
excess of the applicable percentage
threshold. The grandfathered LTCHs
and LTCH satellite facility’s Medicare
discharges that reached outlier status at
the host, at proposed § 412.534(b), or at
the non-co-located referring hospital, as
proposed at § 412.536, would not count
towards the applicable threshold.
When we implemented the existing
25 percent (or applicable percentage) for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 2004, we opted to do so
on a ‘‘location-specific’’ basis rather
than based on Medicare provider
numbers. That is, we applied the
percentage threshold payment
adjustment only to discharges from a
specific location of a LTCH HwH or
LTCH satellite that were admitted from
the host hospital with which they share
a building or campus. However, since
implementing this policy, we have been
contacted by numerous representatives
of LTCH chains whose questions appear
to indicate that the site-specific
implementation of the threshold
percentage had resulted in patientshifting between hospital locations that
shared a Medicare provider number and
even between separately owned LTCHs
(for their mutual advantage) that sidestepped the intent of our policy.
Specifically, we offer the following
example of a situation that was
occurring: a host hospital at Location A
was discharging patients to a LTCH
HwH or satellite at Location B while the
host hospital at Location B discharged
patients to the LTCH HwH or satellite at
Location A.
We believe that since we are
proposing to expand the 25 percent
policy to all subclause (I) LTCHs and
LTCH satellite facilities it is appropriate
to propose inclusion of LTCH HwHs
and LTCH satellites, grandfathered
respectively under § 412.22(f) and
§ 412.22(h)(3)(i), in our proposal. The
provisions at proposed § 412.534(h)
would apply for Medicare discharges
from grandfathered LTCH and LTCH
satellite facilities admitted from colocated hospitals and the provisions at
§ 412.536 would apply for discharges
admitted from any individual non-colocated referring hospital. As we noted
in our RY 2007 final rule regarding
grandfathered HwHs, ‘‘[W]e do not
believe that it is reasonable to assume
that by creating a limited exception for
these hospitals, the Congress was
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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
the Congress was establishing a separate
class of providers’’ (71 FR 48109).
Furthermore, for those co-located
LTCHs already subject to the 25 percent
(or applicable percentage) payment
adjustment at existing § 412.534, the
proposed policy expansion at proposed
§ 412.536 would apply to payments
under the LTCH PPS for patients
discharged from co-located LTCHs
(HwHs and satellites) that were
admitted from referral sources other
than their host hospital(s).
Therefore, we are proposing that, for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after July 1, 2007, that a subclause (I)
LTCH or LTCH satellite that discharges
more than 25 percent (or applicable
percentage) of Medicare patients
admitted from any non-co-located
individual hospital (that had not already
reached outlier status, as discussed
above) would be subject to the proposed
payment adjustment at proposed
§ 412.536 for Medicare discharges from
that hospital in excess of the applicable
threshold. Furthermore, we believe that
with the application of our proposed
policy at § 412.536 to Medicare
discharges from subclause (I) LTCH
HwHs and LTCH satellites that were
admitted from any individual non-colocated referring hospitals, we are
closing the ‘‘location-specific loophole’’
established by the implementation of
§ 412.534, described above. The
proposed change would affect all LTCHs
or LTCH satellite Medicare discharges
that were admitted from hospitals that
are located on a different campus.
The proposed payment adjustment at
proposed § 412.534(h) for grandfathered
LTCH HwHs and LTCH satellite
facilities will track the applicable
provisions of the existing payment
adjustment at § 412.534. Therefore, we
are proposing at § 412.534(h) that for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after July 1, 2007, the provisions of
§ 412.534 would also apply to
grandfathered subclause (I) LTCH HwHs
and LTCH satellite facilities.
Accordingly, under the proposed
changes to § 412.534, if the percentage
of the grandfathered LTCH or LTCH
satellite’s discharged Medicare inpatient
population that were admitted from its
co-located host exceeds 25 percent (or
the applicable percentage) of the LTCH’s
Medicare discharges for that cost
reporting period, an adjusted payment
would be made for those discharges that
were admitted from that hospital
beyond the 25 percent threshold (or the
applicable percent threshold), at the
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lesser of the otherwise payable amount
under subpart O of 42 CFR part 412 or
the amount payable under subpart O
that would be equivalent to what
Medicare would otherwise pay under
the rules at subpart A, § 412.1(a). (The
specifics of this payment formula are
explained in considerable detail in the
RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR
27879).) In addition, we are proposing
that for cost reporting periods beginning
on or after July 1 2007, that the existing
transition to the full 25 percent (or
applicable percentage) threshold,
specified at § 412.534(g) would apply, as
well to these grandfathered subclause (I)
LTCH HwHs and LTCH satellites. We
provide at existing § 412.534(g), that in
order to qualify for the transition, the
LTCH HwH or LTCH satellite facility
must have been paid under the
provisions of subpart O on October 1,
2004, or was a hospital paid under the
provisions of subpart O on October 1,
2005, and whose qualifying period
under § 412.23(e) began on or before
October 1, 2004. We believe that it is
appropriate to apply the same October
1, 2004 base year to all subclause (I) colocated HwHs and satellites, including
grandfathered subclause (I) LTCH HwHs
and LTCH satellites, applicable to all
other co-located LTCHs. Accordingly,
the percentage set forth in
§ 412.534(g)(3), which is the lesser of
the percentage of patients admitted from
the host during its FY 2004 cost
reporting period or the 50 percent
threshold would apply to those
grandfathered facilities with cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
July 1, 2007 and before October 1, 2007.
Those grandfathered subclause (I) LTCH
HwHs and LTCH satellites with cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2007 have the 25 percent (or
applicable percentage) payment
adjustment threshold, as specified in
§ 412.534(g)(4) applied immediately,
with no phase-in.
In proposing the expansion of the 25
percent threshold payment adjustment
policy for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after July 1, 2007, to all
subclause (I) LTCH and LTCH satellite
facilities (including LTCH HwHs) for
Medicare discharges admitted from nonco-located hospitals, we are proposing
at the new § 412.536, to generally track
the provisions of the payment formula
at existing § 412.534. For example, in
determining whether a hospital meets
the 25 percent criterion, Medicare
discharges that have already qualified
for outlier payments at the non-colocated referring hospital would not be
included in the count of Medicare
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discharges admitted from the referring
hospital.
That is, even though the case would
count as a discharge from the LTCH and
be included in the denominator of the
percentage calculation, because the
patient had been an outlier at the
referring hospital the case would not
count towards determining whether or
not the LTCH had exceeded the
applicable threshold (that is, it would
not be included in the numerator). An
example of this is as follows: If one
month prior to the end of a cost
reporting period, a LTCH discharged 98
Medicare patients, 24 of which were
admitted from an individual referring
hospital, and during that last month,
two additional patients were discharged
from the LTCH that had been admitted
from that referring hospital, at the close
of the cost reporting period, there would
have been a total of 100 discharges from
the LTCH and the relevant concern
would be to determine whether or not
those last two cases would have caused
the LTCH to exceed the 25 percent
threshold. If the cases had achieved
outlier status at the referring hospital,
they would be not included in the
percentage calculation (which would
remain, for that referring hospital, at
24⁄100) and not having caused the LTCH
to exceed the 25 percent threshold, they
would not be included in the numerator
of the calculation. If both of those LTCH
cases had been discharged from that
referring hospital prior to having
achieved outlier status, under our
proposed policy, the percentage
calculation would be 26 percent (26⁄100)
and, having exceeded the 25 percent
threshold, Medicare would apply the
payment adjustment set forth in
§ 412.536 to the last discharge.
We are also proposing, under
proposed § 412.534, that for those
patients, the LTCH or LTCH satellite
facility would be eligible for payment
under the LTCH PPS with no
adjustment even after the 25 percent (or
applicable percentage) threshold was
exceeded. (As under existing § 412.534,
proposed § 412.536 will provide that a
subclause (I) LTCH or LTCH satellite
facility’s Medicare discharges (including
HwHs) admitted from any individual
non-co-located referring hospital before
the LTCH exceeds the 25 percent
threshold or applicable threshold for
that hospital would be paid an
otherwise unadjusted payment under
the LTCH PPS.)
We are also proposing not to extend
the proposed payment adjustment in
§ 412.534(h) and § 412.536 to those
LTCHs and LTCH satellite facilities that
we refer to as subclause (II) LTCHs and
LTCH satellites, established by section
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1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(II) of the Act. The
policy that we are proposing for
subclause (I) LTCHs and LTCH satellites
is based on a calculation of the
percentage of Medicare discharges that
a LTCH admits from an individual
hospital during a cost reporting period
as compared to the LTCH’s total
Medicare discharges during that cost
reporting period. Because of a
significant policy distinction that we
made at the start of the LTCH PPS for
FY 2003, at this time we do not believe
that this proposed policy should be
applied to subclause (II) LTCHs and
LTCH satellite facilities. With the
implementation of the LTCH PPS, we
revised the § 412.23(e)(2)(i) and (e)(3)(i)
to calculate the ALOS based solely on
Medicare patients who required longstay hospitalizations at subclause (I)
LTCHs defined by section
1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(I) of the Act; however,
we did not change the formula for
calculating the ALOS for a LTCH
governed by section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(II)
of the Act, implemented at
§ 412.23(e)(2)(ii), for a ‘‘subclause (II)’’
LTCH. We believed that in establishing
a ‘‘subclause (II)’’ LTCH, the Congress
provided an exception to the general
definition of LTCHs under subclause (I).
We had no reason to believe that the
change in methodology for determining
the average inpatient LOS would better
identify the hospitals that the Congress
intended to exclude under subclause (II)
(67 FR 55974). Similarly, when we
established the existing 25 percent or
applicable percentage payment
adjustment at § 412.534, we determined
that its application to subclause (II)
LTCHs was inappropriate because the
designation of a subclause (II) LTCH
was not dependent upon Medicare
discharges (69 FR 49205). Therefore, we
are not proposing to apply the
expansion of the 25 percent policy that
we are proposing at new § 412.536 and
amended § 412.534 to LTCHs and LTCH
satellite facilities defined under section
1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(II) of the Act. The
existing and proposed amended
payment threshold adjustments at
§ 412.534 and at proposed § 412.536 for
subclause (I) LTCHs and LTCH satellites
are based solely on percentages of LTCH
Medicare discharges. As stated above,
we continue to believe that since we
include both Medicare and nonMedicare discharges in our calculations
for defining a subclause (II) LTCH at
§ 412.23(e)(2)(ii) that applying a
payment adjustment that is based solely
on Medicare discharges may not be
appropriate. Furthermore, consistent
with our policy not to include satellites
of subclause (II) LTCHs which were
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specifically grandfathered at
§ 412.22(h)(3)(ii) in proposed § 412.536,
we have excluded subclause (II) LTCH
satellites in the proposed application of
the 25 percent payment adjustment for
co-located grandfathered LTCHs at
proposed § 412.534(h).
In summary, we are proposing a new
provision at § 412.534(h) that would
apply the policies established under
existing § 412.534 to grandfathered
subclause (I) LTCH HwHs and LTCH
satellites for Medicare discharges that
were admitted from co-located host
hospitals. We are also proposing to
apply those policies at § 412.534 to
Medicare discharges admitted from any
individual non-co-located referring
hospitals to all subclause (I)LTCHs and
LTCH satellites at proposed § 412.536,
generally tracking the existing
regulation at § 412.534, where
applicable.
We are also proposing additional
adjustments to the 25 percent policy at
§ 412.536 for specific circumstances in
order to be consistent with the policy
for co-located LTCHs under § 412.534.
At proposed § 412.536(c) for Medicare
discharges from subclause (I) LTCHs or
LTCH satellites located in rural areas,
we are proposing that Medicare
discharges in excess of 50 percent,
rather that 25 percent of the LTCH’s
total Medicare discharges for a cost
reporting period from an individual
non-co-located referring hospital would
be subject to the payment adjustment
specified at proposed § 412.536(c). In
addition, in the case of a rural subclause
(I) LTCH or LTCH satellite facility, in
determining the percentage of Medicare
discharges admitted from a non-colocated referring hospital, any patients
that had been Medicare outliers at the
referring hospital and then discharged
to the LTCH or LTCH satellite are not
counted towards the threshold
percentage (as described above).
In proposed § 412.536, we are also
providing that if the non-co-located
referring hospital is the only other
hospital in the MSA or an MSAdominant hospital as defined at
proposed § 412.536(e)(4), we proposed
to allow the subclause (I) LTCH or
LTCH satellite facility a threshold
percentage equal to the non-co-located
referring hospital’s percentage of total
Medicare discharges for like hospitals in
the MSA for the most recent fiscal year
that data is available. Consistent with
our policy at existing § 412.534(e), we
also propose to apply a floor of 25
percent and a ceiling of 50 percent to
this threshold for those hospitals
described in proposed § 412.536(d)(4).
As with the existing policy for colocated LTCHs, we believe that this
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4815
adjusted payment threshold responds to
‘‘the unique needs of these
communities’’ (69 FR 49207). Similar to
the existing provisions at
§ 412.534(e)(2),we would not adjust
payments to these hospitals as long as
the percentage of Medicare patients
discharged from the LTCH or LTCH
satellite that were admitted from the
non-co-located referring urban single or
MSA-dominant hospital, did not exceed
this threshold. In addition, in
determining the percentage of Medicare
discharges admitted to the LTCH or
LTCH satellite facility from the urban
single or MSA dominant hospital, any
patients that had been Medicare outliers
at the referring hospital before being
admitted to the LTCH or LTCH satellite
would not count towards the applicable
threshold, as discussed above.
The proposed payment adjustment at
§ 412.536 would be synchronized with
the phase-in of the current policy
adjustment for LTCH HwHs and LTCH
satellites at existing § 412.534(g).
Therefore, for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after July 1, 2007, and
before October 1, 2007, the percentage
of Medicare discharges that may be
admitted from the non-co-located
referring hospital with no payment
adjustment is the lesser of the
percentage of Medicare discharges
admitted from the host during its FY
2005 cost reporting period or the 50
percent threshold. We note that under
our proposed provision, at § 412.536,
subclause (I) LTCHs and LTCH satellite
facilities with cost reporting periods
beginning on or after July 1, 2007, and
before October 1, 2007, would be
limited by the percentage of total
Medicare discharges admitted from the
referring non-co-located hospital during
the FY 2005 cost reporting period,
rather than utilizing the FY 2004 ‘‘base
year’’ which is applicable under
§ 412.534. We are also proposing that in
determining the percentage of Medicare
discharges admitted from any referring
hospital, patients who reached HCO
status at the referring hospital before
being admitted to the LTCH or LTCH
satellite would not count towards the
applicable threshold, as discussed
above.
Subclause (I) LTCHs and LTCH
satellite facilities with a cost reporting
period beginning on or after October 1,
2007, would have the 25 percent (or
applicable percentage) payment
threshold applied. The percentage of
Medicare discharges that a subclause (I)
LTCH or satellite facility may admit
from any individual non-co-located
referring hospital with no payment
adjustment for Medicare discharges
admitted from that hospital may not
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exceed 25 percent or the applicable
percentage (the additional adjustments
for rural, urban-single, or MSAdominant hospitals).
It is important to note that we are also
proposing that co-located subclause (I)
LTCHs (HwHs and LTCH satellite
facilities) would also be subject to the
applicable payment adjustment
threshold at § 412.536 for those
Medicare discharges admitted from any
individual hospital with which they are
not co-located.
Finally, in proposing this payment
adjustment, we believe that we are
addressing policy concerns that are
consistent with those that we originally
expressed when we implemented the
payment adjustment for LTCHs
discharging patients that were admitted
from co-located hospitals.
VI. Computing the Proposed Adjusted
Federal Prospective Payments for the
2008 LTCH PPS Rate Year
In accordance with § 412.525 and as
discussed in section IV.C. of this
proposed rule, the standard Federal rate
is adjusted to account for differences in
area wages by multiplying the laborrelated share of the standard Federal
rate by the appropriate LTCH PPS wage
index (as shown in Tables 1 and 2 of
Addendum A to this proposed rule).
The standard Federal rate is also
adjusted to account for the higher costs
of hospitals in Alaska and Hawaii by
multiplying the nonlabor-related share
of the standard Federal rate by the
appropriate cost-of-living factor (shown
in Table 3 in section IV.D.2 of this
preamble). In the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
final rule (71 FR 27827), we established
a standard Federal rate of $38,086.04 for
the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year. In this
proposed rule, based on the best
available data and the proposed policies
described in this proposed rule, we are
proposing that the standard Federal rate
for the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year would
be $38,356.45 as discussed in section
IV.C.3. of this preamble. We illustrate
the methodology that would be used to
adjust the proposed Federal prospective
payments for the 2008 LTCH PPS rate
year in the following examples:
Example:
During the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year,
a Medicare patient is in a LTCH located
in Chicago, Illinois (CBSA 16974). This
LTCH is in the final year of the wage
index phase-in, thus, the proposed full
(that is, five-fifths) wage index values
are applicable. The proposed full LTCH
PPS wage index value for CBSA 16974
is 1.0751 (see Table 1 in Addendum A
to this proposed rule). The Medicare
patient is classified into LTC–DRG 9
(Spinal Disorders and Injuries), which
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has a current relative weight of 1.0424
(see Table 3 of Addendum A to this
proposed rule).
To calculate the LTCH’s proposed
total adjusted Federal prospective
payment for this Medicare patient, we
compute the proposed wage-adjusted
Federal prospective payment amount by
multiplying the proposed unadjusted
standard Federal rate ($38,356.45) by
the proposed labor-related share (75.511
percent) and the proposed wage index
value (1.0751). This proposed wageadjusted amount is then added to the
nonlabor-related portion of the
proposed unadjusted standard Federal
rate (24.489 percent; adjusted for cost of
living, if applicable) to determine the
proposed adjusted Federal rate, which is
then multiplied by the LTC–DRG
relative weight (1.0424) to calculate the
proposed total adjusted Federal
prospective payment for the 2008 LTCH
PPS rate year ($42,250.14). (As
discussed in section IV.C.5. of this
preamble, for the 2008 LTCH PPS rate
year, we are no longer proposing to
apply a transition period BN offset (to
account for the costs of the transition
methodology) in determining the
proposed total adjusted Federal
prospective payment.) Table 6
illustrates the components of the
calculations in this example.
VII. Transition Period
To provide a stable fiscal base for
LTCHs, under § 412.533, we
implemented a 5-year transition period
whereby a LTCH (except those defined
as ‘‘new’’ under § 412.23(e)(4)) received
a LTCH PPS payment consisting of a
portion based on reasonable cost-based
reimbursement principles under the
TEFRA system and a portion based on
the Federal prospective payment rate
(unless the LTCH elected payment
based on 100 percent of the Federal
rate). As discussed in the August 30,
2002 final rule (67 FR 56038), we
believed that a 5-year phase-in provided
LTCHs time to adjust their operations
and capital financing to the LTCH PPS,
which is based on prospectively
determined Federal payment rates.
Furthermore, we believed that the 5year phase-in under the LTCH PPS also
allowed LTCH personnel to develop
proficiency with the LTC–DRG coding
system, which will result in
improvement in the quality of the data
used for generating our annual
determination of relative weights and
payment rates.
Under § 412.533, the 5-year transition
period for all hospitals subject to the
LTCH PPS began with the hospital’s
first cost reporting period beginning on
or after October 1, 2002 and extends
through the hospital’s last cost reporting
period beginning before October 1,
TABLE 6
2007. During the 5-year transition
period, a LTCH’s total PPS payment
Unadjusted Proposed
under the LTCH PPS was based on two
Standard Federal Prospective Payment Rate
$38,356.45 payment percentages—one based on
reasonable cost-based principles and the
Proposed Labor-Related
Share ...........................
× 0.75511 other based on the standard Federal
prospective payment rate. The
Proposed Labor-Related
percentage of the LTCH PPS payment
Portion of the Federal
based on the LTCH PPS Federal rate
Rate .............................
= $28,963.34 increased by 20 percentage points each
Proposed Full Wage
year, while the reasonable portion of the
Index (CBSA 16974) ...
× 1.0751 LTCH PPS payment based on cost-based
principles decreased by 20 percentage
Proposed Wage-Adjusted
points each year, for the next 4 fiscal
Labor Share of Federal
Rate .............................
= $31,138.49 years. For cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006,
Proposed Nonlabor-ReMedicare payment to LTCHs will be
lated Portion of the
determined entirely under the Federal
Federal Rate
($38,356.45 × 0.24489)
+ $9,393.11 rate.
In implementing the LTCH PPS, one
Proposed Adjusted Fedof our goals was to transition hospitals
eral Rate Amount ........
= $40,531.60 to prospective payments based on 100
LTC–DRG 9 Relative
percent of the adjusted Federal
Weight .........................
× 1.0424
prospective payment rate as soon as
appropriate. Therefore, under
Proposed Total Adjusted
§ 412.533(c), we allowed a LTCH (other
Federal Prospective
Payment* .....................
= $42,250.14 than new LTCHs defined at
§ 412.23(e)(4)), which was subject to a
* We are no longer proposing to apply a blended rate, to elect payment based on
transition period BN offset to account for the
costs of the transition methodology in deter- 100 percent of the Federal rate at the
mining the proposed total adjusted Federal start of any of its cost reporting periods
prospective payment for RY 2008.)
during the 5-year transition period.
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on 100 percent of the Federal rate, it
could not revert back to the transition
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VIII. Payments to New LTCHs
Under § 412.23(e)(4), for purposes of
Medicare payment under the LTCH PPS,
we define a new LTCH as a provider of
inpatient hospital services that meets
the qualifying criteria for LTCHs, set
forth in § 412.23(e)(1) and (e)(2), and
under present or previous ownership (or
both), has its first cost reporting period
as a LTCH beginning on or after October
1, 2002. As we discussed in the August
30, 2002 final rule (67 FR 56040), this
definition of new LTCHs should not be
confused with those LTCHs first paid
under the TEFRA payment system for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 1997, described in section
1886(b)(7)(A) of the Act, as added by
section 4416 of the Balanced Budget Act
of 1997 (BBA) (Pub. L. 105–33). As
stated in § 413.40(f)(2)(ii), for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 1997, the payment amount
for a ‘‘new’’ (post-FY 1998) LTCH is the
lower of the hospital’s net inpatient
operating cost per case or 110 percent of
the national median target amount
payment limit for hospitals in the same
class for cost reporting periods ending
during FY 1996, updated to the
applicable cost reporting period (see 62
FR 46019, August 29, 1997).
Under § 412.533(d), new LTCHs, as
defined in § 412.23(e)(4), will be paid
based on 100 percent of the standard
Federal rate. As we discussed in the
August 30, 2002 final rule (67 FR
56040), the transition period was
intended to provide existing LTCHs
time to adjust to payment under the new
system. Since these new LTCHs with
their first cost reporting periods as
LTCHs beginning on or after October 1,
2002, would not have received payment
under reasonable cost-based
reimbursement for the delivery of LTCH
services prior to the effective date of the
LTCH PPS, we did not believe that those
new LTCHs required a transition period
in order to make adjustments to their
operations and capital financing, as will
LTCHs that have been paid under the
reasonable cost-based methodology.
IX. Method of Payment
Under § 412.513, a Medicare LTCH
patient is classified into a LTC–DRG
based on the principal diagnosis, up to
eight additional (secondary) diagnoses,
and up to six procedures performed
during the stay, as well as age, sex, and
discharge status of the patient. The
LTC–DRG is used to determine the
Federal prospective payment that the
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LTCH will receive for the Medicarecovered Part A services the LTCH
furnished during the Medicare patient’s
stay. Under § 412.541(a), the payment is
based on the submission of the
discharge bill. The discharge bill also
provides data to allow for reclassifying
the stay from payment at the full LTC–
DRG rate to payment for a case as a SSO
(under § 412.529) or as an interrupted
stay (under § 412.531), or to determine
if the case will qualify for a HCO
payment (under § 412.525(a)).
Accordingly, the ICD–9–CM codes
and other information used to determine
if an adjustment to the full LTC–DRG
payment is necessary (for example, LOS
or interrupted stay status) are recorded
by the LTCH on the Medicare patient’s
discharge bill and submitted to the
Medicare FI for processing. The
payment represents payment in full,
under § 412.521(b), for inpatient
operating and capital-related costs, but
not for the costs of an approved medical
education program, bad debts, blood
clotting factors, anesthesia services by
hospital-employed nonphysician
anesthetists or the costs of photocopying
and mailing medical records requested
by a Quality Improvement Organization
(QIO), which are costs paid outside the
LTCH PPS.
As under the previous reasonable
cost-based payment system, under
§ 412.541(b), a LTCH may elect to be
paid using the periodic interim payment
(PIP) method described in § 413.64(h)
and may be eligible to receive
accelerated payments as described in
§ 413.64(g).
For those LTCHs that are being paid
under the transition methodology set
forth at § 412.533, for cost reporting
periods that began on or after October 1,
2002, and before October 1, 2006, the
PIP amount is based on the transition
blend. For those LTCHs that are paid
based on 100 percent of the standard
Federal rate, the PIP amount is based on
the estimated prospective payment for
the year rather than on the estimated
reasonable cost-based reimbursement.
We exclude HCO payments that are paid
upon submission of a discharge bill
from the PIP amounts. In addition, Part
A costs that are not paid for under the
LTCH PPS, including Medicare costs of
an approved medical education
program, bad debts, blood clotting
factors, anesthesia services by hospitalemployed nonphysician anesthetists
and the costs of photocopying and
mailing medical records requested by a
QIO, are subject to the interim payment
provisions as specified in § 412.541(c).
Under § 412.541(d), LTCHs with
unusually long lengths of stay that are
not receiving payment under the PIP
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method may bill on an interim basis (60
days after an admission and at intervals
of at least 60 days after the date of the
first interim bill) and this should
include any HCO payment determined
as of the last day for which the services
have been billed.
X. Monitoring
In the August 30, 2002 final rule (67
FR 56014), we described an on-going
monitoring component to the new LTCH
PPS. Specifically, we discussed ongoing analysis of the various policies
that we believe would provide equitable
payment for stays that reflect less than
the full course of treatment and reduce
the incentives for inappropriate
admissions, transfers, or premature
discharges of patients that are present in
a discharge-based PPS. As a result of our
data analysis, we have revisited a
number of our original and even preLTCH PPS policies in order to address
what we believe are behaviors by certain
LTCHs that lead to inappropriate
Medicare payments. In recent Federal
Register publications, we have proposed
and subsequently finalized revisions to
the interruption of stay policy in the RY
2005 LTCH PPS final rule (69 FR
25692), and we established a payment
adjustment for LTCH HwHs and
satellites in the FY 2005 IPPS final rule
(69 FR 49191 through 49214).
In section V.A.2., we are revisiting the
payment adjustment methodology
established for SSOs (71 FR 27845) as a
consequence of recent data analysis and
discuss an approach being considered
that would revise one of the existing
four alternatives under the existing SSO
payment methodology for certain SSO
cases to an amount that would
otherwise be paid under the IPPS.
As we discuss in section X., our
monitoring of discharges between acute
care hospitals and LTCHs reveals that a
significant number of LTCHs that are
‘‘free-standing’’, that is, not co-located
with other hospital-level providers (as
defined in § 412.22(e) and § 412.22(h)),
admit their patients from one specific
acute care hospital. When we
established the payment adjustment for
LTCH HwHs and satellites of LTCHs at
§ 412.534, we stated our concern that
these on-site LTCHs could be
functioning as units of their host
(generally, an acute care hospital), a
configuration that is not permitted in
section 1886(d)(1)(B) of the Act. (The
statute specifically allows only for IRF
and IPF units in acute care hospitals,
but not for LTCH units.) As a result of
our data monitoring and analysis, which
is detailed in section V.B. of this
proposed rule, we propose to expand
the existing payment adjustment at
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§ 412.534 to apply to certain situations
not currently covered by the existing
policy for LTCHs co-located with other
hospitals.
As we discussed in the RY 2004
LTCH PPS final rule (68 FR 34157), the
Medicare Payment Advisory
Commission (MedPAC) endorsed our
monitoring activity as a primary aspect
of the design of the LTCH PPS.
Furthermore, the Commission pursued
an independent research initiative that
led to a section in MedPAC’s June 2004
Report to Congress entitled ‘‘Defining
long-term care hospitals’’. This study
included recommendations that we
develop facility and patient criteria for
LTCH admission and treatment and that
we require a review by QIOs to evaluate
whether LTCH admissions meet criteria
for medical necessity once the
recommended facility and patient
criteria are established (70 FR 24209). In
response to the recommendation in
MedPAC’s June 2004 Report, we
awarded a contract to Research Triangle
Institute, International (RTI), on
September 27, 2004, to conduct a
thorough examination of the feasibility
of implementing MedPAC’s
recommendations.
We are continuing to pursue our ongoing program, existing QIO monitoring
and studies described in the RY 2006
LTCH PPS final rule (70 FR 24211), and
our considerations of expanding the
QIO role in the LTCH PPS. Furthermore,
RTI has completed its examination of
the feasibility of implementing
MedPAC’s recommendations in the June
2004 Report to Congress. However, we
note that we do not anticipate
expanding QIO activities during the
current scope of work.
The Executive Summary of RTI’s final
report is included in Addendum B of
this proposed rule and is available on
our Web site at
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
LongTermCareHospitalPPS/02a_
RTIReports.asp#TopOfPage.
XI. MedPAC Recommendations: The
RTI Contract
With the recommendations of
MedPAC’s June 2004 Report to Congress
as a point of departure, RTI evaluated
the feasibility of developing patient and
facility level characteristics for LTCHs
to identify and distinguish the role of
these hospitals as a Medicare provider.
RTI completed this project in two
phases. In Phase I, RTI prepared a
background report summarizing existing
information regarding LTCHs’ current
role in the Medicare system: Their
history as Medicare participating
providers; the types of patients they
treat; the criteria QIOs currently use to
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review appropriateness of care in these
settings; and the types of regulations
they face as Medicare participating
providers. This work reviewed prior
analyses of these issues and included
discussions with MedPAC, other
researchers, CMS, the QIOs, and the
hospital associations.
In Phase II, RTI collected additional
information on tools currently used by
the QIOs and the industry to assess
patient appropriateness for admission;
analyzed claims to understand
differences between hospital patients
with outlier stays in non-LTCHs and
those treated in LTCHs; and visited
different types of hospitals to observe
first-hand how LTCH patients differ
from those in other settings and how
this pattern varies in different parts of
the country. RTI worked with different
associations, including the National
Association of Long Term Hospitals
(NALTH), the Acute Long Term
Hospital Association (ALTHA), the
AHA, and the American Medical Peer
Review Association (AMPRA), as well
as several of the larger LTCH chains.
The final report submitted by RTI
summarizes these efforts and makes
numerous recommendations to CMS
regarding LTCHs.
The reports on both Phase I and Phase
II of RTI’s research have been posted on
our Web site at
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
LongTermCareHospitalPPS/
02a_RTIReports.asp#TopOfPage. Please
note that this report does not represent
our position or policy. We are currently
evaluating RTI’s recommendations
regarding the feasibility of developing
patient and facility level criteria from
several standpoints. Most significantly,
we are concerned that several of RTI’s
recommendations may require statutory
changes. Furthermore, even among
those recommendations for action that
would be accomplished on a regulatory
level, there are many significant issues
that require further analysis. We have
consistently encouraged meaningful
contact between RTI and industry
stakeholders throughout this research
phase of the contract. Furthermore, RTI
has solicited on-going involvement and
will continue to seek such input from
physicians who treat LTCH type
patients both in LTCHs and as
inpatients in other provider settings in
forming a technical expert panel (TEP)
to further develop some of its
recommendations. RTI is currently
determining the appropriate
composition of this group, preparing a
time table, and preparing an agenda for
the TEP.
While the reports from both Phase I
and Phase II of RTI’s research are posted
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in their entirety on the CMS Web site at
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
LongTermCareHospitalPPS/
02a_RTIReports.asp#TopOfPage, we are
including The Executive Summary of
RTI’s Phase II report in Addendum B to
this proposed rule. This material is
being reproduced as received from the
contractors and does not represent our
position or policy.
XII. Payment for Direct Graduate
Medical Education (GME) (§ 413.79)
[If you choose to comment on issues
in this section, please include the
caption ‘‘PAYMENT FOR DIRECT
GRADUATE MEDICAL EDUCATION’’
at the beginning of your comments.]
A. GME 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 direct costs of
approved graduate medical education
(GME) programs. Section 1886(h)(2) of
the Act, as added by COBRA, sets forth
a payment methodology for direct GME
costs involving 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). Generally,
for cost reporting periods beginning on
or after July 1, 1985, Medicare direct
GME payments are calculated by
multiplying the hospital’s PRA by the
weighted number of full-time equivalent
(FTE) residents working in all areas of
the hospital (and nonhospital sites,
when applicable), and by the hospital’s
Medicare percentage of total inpatient
days. In addition, as specified in section
1886(h)(2)(D)(ii) of the Act, for cost
reporting periods beginning between
October 1, 1993, through September 30,
1995, each hospital-specific 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
trained 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.
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The Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP
[State Children’s Health Insurance
Program] Balanced Budget Refinement
Act of 1999 (Pub. L. 106–113) (BBRA)
amended section 1886(h)(2) of the Act
to establish a methodology for the use
of a national average PRA in computing
direct GME payments for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2000, and on or before September 30,
2005. The BBRA established a ‘‘floor’’
for hospital-specific PRAs that is equal
to 70 percent of the locality-adjusted
national average PRA. In addition, the
BBRA established a ‘‘ceiling’’ that
limited the annual inflation update to a
hospital-specific PRA if the hospital’s
PRA exceeded 140 percent of the
locality-adjusted national average PRA.
Section 511 of the Benefits
Improvement and Protection Act of
2000 (Pub. L. 106–554) (BIPA) increased
the floor established by the BBRA to
equal 85 percent of the locality-adjusted
national average PRA. For purposes of
calculating direct GME payments, each
hospital-specific PRA is compared to
the floor and the ceiling to determine
whether a hospital-specific PRA should
be revised.
Section 1886(h)(4)(F) of the Act
established limits on the number of
allopathic and osteopathic residents that
a hospital may count for purposes of
calculating direct GME payments. For
most hospitals, the limits are 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.
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B. Residents Training in Nonhospital
Settings
1. Background
For purposes of direct GME payments,
since July 1, 1987, the statute allows
hospitals to count the time residents
spend training in sites that are not part
of the hospital (referred to as
‘‘nonprovider’’ or ‘‘nonhospital sites’’)
under certain conditions. Section
1886(h)(4)(E) of the Act requires that the
Secretary’s rules concerning
computation of FTE residents for
purposes of direct GME payments
‘‘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.’’ (Section 1886(h)(4)(E) of
the Act, as added by section of 9314 of
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the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act
of 1986 (Pub. L. 99–509) (OBRA 86).)
Regulations regarding the treatment of
time spent by residents training in
nonhospital sites for purposes of direct
GME payments were first implemented
in the September 29, 1989 final rule (54
FR 40286). In regulations adopted in
that same rule at § 413.86(f)(3) (now
§ 413.78(c)), we stated that a hospital
may count the time residents spend in
nonprovider settings for purposes of
direct GME payment if the residents
spend their time in patient care
activities and there is a written
agreement between the hospital and the
nonprovider entity stating that the
hospital will incur all or substantially
all of the costs of the program. The
regulations at that time defined ‘‘all or
substantially all’’ of the costs to include
the residents’ compensation for the time
spent at the nonprovider setting. Before
October 1, 1997, for IME payment
purposes, hospitals were not permitted
to count the time residents spent
training in nonhospital settings. Section
4621(b)(2) of the BBA revised section
1886(d)(5)(B) of the Act to allow
providers to count time residents spend
training in nonprovider sites for IME
purposes, effective for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 1997.
Specifically, section 1886(d)(5)(B)(iv) of
the Act was amended 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.’’ In the July 31, 1998
final rule (63 FR 41004 through 41005)
at § 412.105(f)(1)(ii)(C) and § 413.78(d)
(formerly designated § 413.86(f)(4)), we
specified the requirements a hospital
must meet to include the time spent by
residents training in a nonhospital site
in its FTE count for portions of cost
reporting periods occurring on or after
January 1, 1999 for purposes of both
direct GME and IME payments. Section
413.75(b) redefined ‘‘all or substantially
all of the costs for the training program
in the nonhospital setting’’ as the
residents’ salaries and fringe benefits
(including travel and lodging where
applicable), and the portion of the cost
of teaching physicians’ salaries and
fringe benefits attributable to direct
GME. Section 413.78(e) provides that, in
order for a hospital to be permitted to
count FTE residents training in a
nonhospital setting, a written agreement
must be in place between the hospital
and the nonhospital site providing that
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4819
the hospital will incur the costs of the
resident’s salary and fringe benefits
while the resident is training in the
nonhospital site. The hospital must also
provide reasonable compensation to the
nonhospital site for supervisory
teaching activities, and the written
agreement must specify that
compensation amount.
2. Moratorium on Disallowances of
Allopathic or Osteopathic Family
Practice Residents Training Time in
Nonhospital Settings, and Questions
and Answers (Qs&As) on CMS Web Site
(Section 713 of the MMA and § 413.78)
In order for the hospital to incur ‘‘all
or substantially all’’ of the costs in
accordance with the regulations, the
actual cost of the time spent by teaching
physicians in supervising residents in
the nonhospital setting must be
compensated by the hospital. The
amount of supervisory GME costs is
dependent upon the teaching
physician’s salary and the percentage of
time that he or she devotes to activities
related to the residency program at the
nonhospital site. (We note that the
teaching physician’s involvement in the
provision of patient care is not
considered attributable to direct GME.)
As long as there are supervisory GME
costs associated with the nonhospital
training, the hospital must reimburse
the nonhospital setting for those costs in
order to count FTE resident time spent
in the nonhospital site for purposes of
IME and direct GME payments.
Many hospitals have entered into
written agreements with nonhospital
sites that state that the teaching
physician is ‘‘volunteering’’ his or her
time in the nonhospital site, and,
therefore, the hospital is not providing
any compensation to the teaching
physician. Other hospitals have paid
only a nominal amount of compensation
for the supervisory teaching physicians’
time in the nonhospital setting. Because
§ 413.78(d) requires that the hospital
must incur ‘‘all or substantially all’’ of
the direct GME costs, including those
costs associated with the teaching
physician, regardless of whether the
written agreement states that the
teaching physician is ‘‘volunteering,’’
we have required that the hospital pay
these costs in order to count FTE
residents training in the nonhospital
site, as long as these teaching physician
costs exist.
Section 713 of the MMA imposed a 1year moratorium relating to certain
nonhospital site teaching physician
costs for the period from January 1,
2004, through December 31, 2004.
During this 1-year period, we were
required to allow hospitals to count FTE
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allopathic or osteopathic family practice
residents training in nonhospital
settings for IME and direct GME
payment purposes without regard to the
financial arrangement between the
hospital and the teaching physician
practicing in the nonhospital setting to
which the resident was assigned.
We instructed our contractors
(formerly called ‘‘fiscal intermediaries’’
or ‘‘FIs’’) regarding the effect of section
713 of the MMA in the One-Time
Notification (OTN), ‘‘Changes to the FY
2004 Graduate Medical Education
(GME) Payments as Required by the
Medicare Modernization Act of 2003
(MMA)’’ (CR 3071, Transmittal 61,
issued on March 12, 2004). Generally,
we stated in the OTN that, when settling
prior year cost reports during this 1-year
period, or for family practice residents
actually training in nonhospital settings
during this 1-year period, contractors
should allow hospitals to count
allopathic and osteopathic family
practice residents training in a
nonhospital setting for direct GME and
IME payment purposes without regard
to the financial arrangement between
the hospital and the nonhospital site
pertaining to the teaching physicians’
costs associated with the residency
program. For further information on this
provision and for a summary of
comments and responses related to this
provision, please refer to the FY 2005
IPPS final rule (69 FR 49176).
Furthermore, in response to questions
and concerns raised by the industry and
Medicare contractors as to how to
determine the costs associated with
residency training at the nonhospital
setting, as well as how and when to pay
the nonhospital setting for these costs,
we posted Qs&As on the CMS Web site
on April 8, 2005 at https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/
Downloads/nonhospQA.pdf. In the
Qs&As, in response to the question of
whether there are situations where it is
acceptable for the teaching physician to
‘‘volunteer’’ his or her time supervising
residents at the nonhospital site, we
stated that ‘‘* * * the relevant question
is not whether volunteerism is
permissible, but whether there is a cost
to the nonhospital site for supervising
the resident training. If there is a cost,
the hospital must reimburse the
nonhospital site for those costs.’’ We
further stated that we believe in
situations where the teaching physician
receives a predetermined compensation
amount for his or her time at the
nonhospital site that does not vary with
the number of patients he or she treats,
there is a cost for the teaching physician
time spent in GME activities. In
contrast, if the physician’s
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compensation at the nonhospital site is
based solely on his or her billings, there
is no cost for teaching physician time
spent in GME activities. Accordingly,
the statute continues to require that a
hospital must pay ‘‘all or substantially
all’’ the costs of training residents at the
nonhospital site in order to count FTE
residents training at that site, including
teaching physician costs, as long as
those costs exist.
3. Requirements for Written Agreements
for Residency Training in Nonhospital
Settings (§ 413.78(e))
In implementing section 1886(h)(4)(E)
of the Act, in order to assist contractors
in determining whether a hospital
incurred ‘‘all or substantially all’’ of the
costs of the program in the nonhospital
setting, we required in § 413.78(c) and
(d) (formerly § 413.86(f)(3) and (4)) that
there must be a written agreement
between the hospital and the
nonhospital site stating that the hospital
will incur ‘‘all or substantially all’’ of
the costs of training in the nonhospital
setting. We later specified at
§ 413.78(d)(2) that the written agreement
must indicate the amount of
compensation provided by the hospital
to the nonhospital site for supervisory
teaching activities.
In an effort to respond to concerns
expressed by hospitals about the
administrative burden associated with
meeting the written agreement
requirements, in the FY 2005 IPPS final
rule (69 FR 49179), at § 413.78(e), we
revised our regulations to allow
hospitals to choose to either enter into
a written agreement with the
nonhospital site before the hospital may
begin to count residents training at the
nonhospital site, or to pay concurrently
for the cost of training at the
nonhospital setting. That is, in the
absence of a written agreement,
hospitals are required to pay ‘‘all or
substantially all’’ of the costs of the
training program in the nonhospital
setting by the end of the third month
following the month in which the
training occurs.
4. Modification of the Definition of ‘‘All
or Substantially All of the Costs for the
Training Program in the Nonhospital
Setting’’
We have met numerous times with
industry representatives with the goal of
developing a proposal which would
respond to the concerns expressed by
the teaching hospital community about
the administrative burden associated
with determining and documenting that
hospitals are paying for ‘‘all or
substantially all’’ of the costs for the
training in the nonhospital setting.
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Some industry representatives recently
suggested that we could ease
administrative burdens by modifying
the requirements hospitals must satisfy
to meet the statutory requirement to
incur ‘‘all or substantially all’’ of the
costs by allowing a teaching physician
to attest that at least 90 percent of the
teaching physician’s GME time is spent
in patient care activities. However, we
explained in response that the statutory
test is tied to whether the hospital has
incurred ‘‘all or substantially all’’ of the
costs of the training at that site, not to
how the teaching physician’s GME time
is spent. Therefore, we do not believe
the attestation proposed by the industry
adequately addresses the statutory
requirement that the hospital incur ‘‘all
or substantially all’’ of the costs of the
training program at that site. We
continue to believe that any Medicare
policy approach to allowing hospitals to
count FTE residents training in
nonhospital settings for IME and direct
GME payment purposes must be
consistent with the statutory
requirement that hospitals incur ‘‘all, or
substantially all’’ of the costs of a
training program in a nonhospital
setting. The statute is clearly concerned
about the cost to the nonhospital site,
and we believe the statute has set a
priority to move resources, in terms of
both residents and funding, out into
community settings. Therefore, where
there is a cost to the nonhospital setting
for training residents, we believe that
the Medicare program is obligated to
ensure that the nonhospital settings
receive the funding they are entitled to
receive from hospitals under the statute.
Accordingly, we continue to believe
that our current definition of ‘‘all or
substantially all’’ of the costs, which is
based on the costs of the training
program at the nonhospital site, is true
to the intent of the statute. However, to
address the industry’s concerns related
to burdensome documentation
requirements, we propose to establish
an alternative methodology that
hospitals may choose to use in
determining and paying for the teaching
physician costs attributable to direct
GME in the nonhospital sites. As we
explain below in this section, we are
proposing to revise the current
definition of ‘‘all or substantially all’’ of
the costs to require hospitals to incur a
percentage of the costs of the training
program at the nonhospital site. Our
proposal also generally incorporates the
industry representatives’ concept of a 90
percent threshold, but does not
specifically relate it to the percentage of
time spent by the teaching physician on
GME activities, as suggested by industry
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representatives. Furthermore, as
explained in more detail below in this
section, in determining whether a
hospital has met the 90 percent cost
threshold, we are proposing to allow
hospitals to use certain shortcuts or
proxies in the place of actual cost data
specific to each teaching physician at
each nonhospital site. However,
hospitals would always still have the
option of calculating the actual teaching
physician costs and the 90 percent
threshold using actual cost data specific
to all, or some of their applicable
teaching physicians. That is, even if a
hospital chooses to calculate the direct
GME costs of a program using actual
teaching physician time and cost data
(as under existing regulations) rather
than using the proxies, under this
proposal, a hospital would only be
required to pay at least 90 percent of the
total of the residents’ salaries and fringe
benefits (including travel and lodging
where applicable) and the portion of the
teaching physicians’ costs attributable to
direct GME for a program at the
nonhospital site. That is, we are
proposing that a hospital would no
longer be required to pay 100 percent of
the residents’ salaries and fringe
benefits (including travel and lodging
where applicable), plus the portion of
the teaching physicians’ costs
attributable to direct GME at the
nonhospital site. Instead, we are
proposing that a hospital would be
required to pay for 90 percent of the
GME costs of a training program in a
nonhospital site, and would have a
choice between two approaches for
calculating teaching physician’s costs.
Currently, ‘‘all or substantially all of
the costs for the training program in the
nonhospital setting’’ is defined at
§ 413.75(b) as the residents’ salaries and
fringe benefits (including travel and
lodging where applicable) and the
portion of the cost of teaching
physicians’ salaries and fringe benefits
attributable to direct GME. We are
proposing to define ‘‘all or substantially
all of the costs for the training program
in the nonhospital setting’’ under
§ 413.75(b) (prospectively for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
July 1, 2007) to mean at least 90 percent
of the total of the costs of the residents’
salaries and fringe benefits (including
travel and lodging where applicable)
and the portion of the cost of teaching
physicians’ salaries attributable to direct
GME. We believe this standard is
consistent with the statute, in that
hospitals would still be required to
incur substantially all of the costs of
training programs in nonhospital
settings, and we would expect this
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standard to further encourage hospitals
to shift training to nonhospital settings
as intended by the statute. Under this
revised definition of ‘‘all or
substantially all’’ of the costs for the
training program in the nonhospital
setting, we would create a 90 percent
threshold that hospitals must meet in
order to count FTE resident time spent
training at the nonhospital setting for
IME and direct GME payment purposes.
Additionally, under the new definition,
hospitals would only have to incur a
minimum of 90 percent of the costs of
the program at a nonhospital site to
count FTE resident time spent training
at the site. Furthermore, as is the case
with the current definition of ‘‘all or
substantially all,’’ the new definition
would not include overhead costs.
We are also soliciting comments on
our proposed effective date for purposes
of both direct GME and IME as to
whether this proposal should be
effective immediately for portions of
cost reporting periods occurring on or
after July 1, 2007, or alternatively, for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after July 1, 2007. Although an effective
date of ‘‘portions of cost reporting
periods occurring on or after July 1,
2007,’’ would provide a more immediate
response to concerns raised by teaching
hospitals, we are concerned that
establishing new policies in the middle
of hospitals’ cost reporting periods
presents some logistical challenges, both
from an implementation and an audit
perspective. Therefore, we are
proposing that the new definition of ‘‘all
or substantially all’’ of the costs would
be effective for both direct GME and
IME for cost reporting periods beginning
on or after July 1, 2007, although, as
stated above in this section, we are
specifically soliciting comments on this
effective date.
As we explained, rather than adopt
the industry’s suggested standard of 90
percent of the teaching physicians’ time
spent in patient care activities, which
we do not believe would be sufficiently
true to the requirements of the statute,
as a compromise, we propose to accept
that hospitals have incurred ‘‘all or
substantially all’’ of the costs of the
program at the nonhospital site (and are
therefore permitted to count the FTE
residents training at the nonhospital site
for IME and direct GME Medicare
payment purposes) if the hospital incurs
at least 90 percent of the costs of
training at that site. Under this proposal,
a hospital would not have to
demonstrate that it has incurred the
costs of the teaching physician’s time if
it has otherwise incurred at least 90
percent of the nonhospital site training
costs by paying the residents’ salaries
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and fringe benefits (including travel and
lodging where applicable) during the
time spent training at the site. However,
if the residents’ salaries and fringe
benefits (including travel and lodging
where applicable) account for less than
90 percent of the costs of training at the
nonhospital site, we propose the
hospital would have to compensate the
nonhospital site for its teaching
physician costs so that the hospital is
incurring at least 90 percent of the
training program costs at the
nonhospital site. If the hospital does not
meet the 90 percent threshold by only
paying for the cost of the residents’
salaries and fringe benefits (including
travel and lodging where applicable),
we propose the hospital would have to
meet the threshold by incurring some
portion of the teaching physicians’
salaries that is attributable to direct
GME.
As previously stated in the Qs&As on
the CMS Web site on April 8, 2005 at
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/Downloads/
nonhospQA.pdf (Answer #4), we
believe there are typically no costs for
teaching physician time if the
physician’s compensation at the
nonhospital site is based solely and
directly on the number of patients
treated and for which he or she bills,
which is the case with a solo
practitioner. When the solo practitioner
is not treating patients, he or she is not
receiving payment for any other duties
at the nonhospital site. Therefore, in
this instance, there is no cost to the
nonhospital site for the teaching
physician’s time. However, in the case
of a group practice or clinic setting, the
physician often receives a
predetermined payment amount, such
as a salary, for his or her work at the
nonhospital site. This predetermined
payment amount reflects all of his or her
responsibilities at the nonhospital site,
including treating patients, training
residents, and other administrative
activities (as applicable), and he or she
may receive that predetermined
payment from the nonhospital site
regardless of how many patients he or
she actually treats. The predetermined
amount implicitly also compensates the
physician for supervising residents. A
portion of this implicit compensation is
the cost attributable to teaching
activities, and, in order to count the
residents training at that site, the
hospital must pay the nonhospital site
this amount. However, there may be
instances in a group practice, where a
teaching physician is not receiving a
form of predetermined compensation for
his or her work at the nonhospital site.
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For example, three physicians may work
in the same office and share overhead
expenses such as electricity and rent,
but otherwise, there is no sharing of
revenues from patient care activities,
and the physicians operate as solo
practitioners and are not compensated
according to some predetermined
arrangement. In cases such as these, we
assume that the teaching physician is
functioning as a solo practitioner and
that teaching physician costs for GME
training at the nonhospital site are zero.
Accordingly, this proposal affects
members of group practices where the
teaching physician receives a salary or
other form of predetermined
compensation for his or her work at the
nonhospital site. However, we note that
under our proposal, in the case of solo
practitioners, hospitals must continue to
pay for at least 90 percent of the total
cost of the residents’ salaries and fringe
benefits, including travel and lodging
where applicable.
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5. Implementation of a 90 Percent Cost
Threshold
In proposing a new revised definition
of ‘‘all or substantially all’’ of the costs
of the program at a nonhospital site, and
in establishing a 90 percent threshold,
there are several variables that are
important in the methodology for
determining the minimum amount that
a hospital must pay in order to count
FTE residents training in a nonhospital
site. These variables are: teaching
physicians’ salaries, residents’ salaries
and fringe benefits (including travel and
lodging where applicable), the number
of hours per week that the teaching
physician spends in direct GME (not
billable patient care) activities in the
nonhospital site, and the number of
hours that a nonhospital site is open
each week. To provide the reader with
a context for the new methodology that
we are proposing, we will first explain
the methodology briefly, provide two
examples, and then proceed to an indepth discussion of each variable (see
section XII.B.5.b. of the preamble of this
proposed rule).
a. Methodology
One of the primary complaints voiced
by the hospital industry over the past
several years is that our policy requiring
hospitals to determine the portion of the
teaching physician cost attributable to
direct GME in the nonhospital site
results in an untenable documentation
burden since many physicians are
reluctant to disclose their salary
information to the hospitals. One
solution to this problem suggested by
the hospital industry is to use national
average physician salary information as
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a proxy for teaching physician-specific
salaries in the determination of the total
cost of the program at a nonhospital site.
In addition, since the cost of the
teaching physician time that the
hospital must incur is based on the
amount of time the teaching physician
spends in nonpatient care GME
activities, the hospital industry has been
concerned that determining this GME
time could require burdensome time
studies. Therefore, we are proposing to
adopt an alternative methodology that
hospitals may choose to use, instead of
actual costs, to calculate teaching
physician costs in nonhospital sites.
Using this alternative methodology, to
facilitate a less burdensome way for a
hospital to calculate the teaching
physician costs associated with GME
training at the nonhospital site, we
propose to allow hospitals to use 3
hours per week as a presumptive
standard number of hours that a
teaching physician spends in nonpatient
care GME activities at a particular
nonhospital site. To determine the
percentage of the average salary
associated with the 3 hours the teaching
physician is presumed to spend in
nonpatient care GME activities, we
propose that a hospital would divide 3
hours by the number of hours the
nonhospital site is open each week.
Next, we propose that the hospital
would multiply this percentage of time
spent in nonpatient care GME activities
by the national average salary of that
teaching physician’s specialty to
calculate the cost of the teaching
physician’s direct GME time. The cost of
the teaching physician’s direct GME
time would then be added to the costs
of the salaries and fringe benefits
(including travel and lodging expenses,
where applicable) of the FTE resident(s)
rotating in that program to that
nonhospital site to determine the GME
costs for that program at that site. (If
FTE resident(s) are not rotating to a
particular nonhospital site throughout a
whole year, then the national average
salary of the teaching physician would
be prorated accordingly. The cost of the
residents’ salaries and fringe benefits
(including travel and lodging where
applicable) would already be reflective
of an FTE count). We propose that the
hospital must pay at least 90 percent of
these total GME costs for the program at
that nonhospital site in order to count
the resident(s) training there for direct
GME and IME purposes. If the hospital
is already paying all, or even a portion
of the residents’ salaries and fringe
benefits (including travel and lodging
where applicable), and if the amount
that the hospital is paying for the
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residents’ salaries and fringe benefits
(including travel and lodging where
applicable) is equal to at least 90
percent of the GME costs at the
nonhospital site (that is, the 90 percent
threshold), then the hospital would be
considered to be incurring ‘‘all or
substantially all’’ of the costs, and need
not incur an additional amount for
teaching physician compensation to be
permitted to include the FTE residents
training in the nonhospital site in its
FTE count for purposes of direct GME
and IME payments. However, if the
costs of the residents’ salaries and fringe
benefits (including travel and lodging
where applicable) does not equal at least
90 percent of the GME costs of the
training program at the nonhospital site,
then the hospital must incur an
additional amount for teaching
physician costs based on the national
average salary information until it is
incurring at least 90 percent of the GME
costs for that nonhospital site program.
That is, under the proposed alternative
definition of ‘‘all or substantially all’’ of
the costs, a hospital is required to incur
at least 90 percent of the total GME costs
for a particular program at a particular
nonhospital site. The GME costs of a
particular program at a particular
nonhospital site consist of FTE
residents’ salaries and fringe benefits
(including travel and lodging costs
where applicable), and the portion of
teaching physician compensation
(which may be based on national
average survey data) attributable to
direct GME. As will be explained in
more detail below in this section, the
hospital always has the option of
documenting the actual teaching
physician’s cost using actual time or
salary information to pay at least 90
percent of the total costs of the program
at the nonhospital site. In summary, the
formula for determining the 90 percent
threshold, or the minimum amount that
a hospital must pay for the GME costs
of a particular program at a particular
nonhospital site is:
0.90 × [(sum of each FTE resident’s
salary + fringe benefits (including
travel and lodging where
applicable)) plus the portion of the
teaching physician’s compensation
attributable to direct GME
activities.]
The portion of the teaching
physician’s compensation attributable to
direct GME activities may be calculated
as follows:
(3/number of hours nonhospital site is
open per week) × (national average
salary for each teaching physician*)
* The number of teaching physicians
included in this formula is subject to a 1:1
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resident to teaching physician limit, as
explained below in this section.
The following are two examples of the
proposed alternative methodology:
Example 1: Assume one teaching physician
is supervising one FTE resident in a
nonhospital site for 1 residency year. The
national average published salary amount for
that teaching physician’s specialty is
$120,000, and he works in a clinic that is
open 60 hours per week. Using the standard
of 3 hours spent in GME activities per week,
the teaching physician spends 5 percent of
his time in GME activities (that is, 3/60 =
0.05 or 5 percent). To determine the cost of
the teaching physician’s time, the hospital
may make the following calculation:
$120,000 × 0.05 = $6,000. This teaching
physician’s cost is added to the resident’s
salary and fringe benefits to calculate the cost
of the training at the nonhospital site in the
following manner: $6,000 [cost of one
teaching physician] + $60,000 [actual cost of
the FTE residents’ salary & fringe benefits] =
$66,000. To meet the proposed new
definition of ‘‘all or substantially all,’’ the
hospital would be required to pay at least 90
percent of the costs of the training program
at the nonhospital site, which in this
example equals $59,400 (that is, 0.90 ×
$66,000). Since in this case the cost of one
FTE resident’s salary and fringe benefits is
$60,000, the hospital could reach the 90
percent cost threshold by simply incurring
the resident’s salary and fringe benefits
during training at the nonhospital site.
Example 2: Assume one teaching physician
is supervising one FTE resident in a
nonhospital site for an entire residency year.
The national average published salary
amount for that teaching physician’s
specialty is $200,000, and she works in a
clinic that is open 40 hours per week. Using
the standard of 3 hours spent in GME
activities per week, the teaching physician
spends 7.5 percent of her time in GME
activities (that is, 3/40 = 0.075 or 7.5
percent). To determine the cost of the
teaching physician’s time, the hospital may
make the following calculation: $200,000 ×
0.075 = $15,000. This teaching physician’s
cost is added to the resident’s salary and
fringe benefits to calculate the cost of the
training at the nonhospital site in the
following manner: $15,000 [cost of one
teaching physician] + $60,000 [actual cost of
the FTE residents’ salary and fringe benefits]
= $75,000. To meet the proposed new
definition of ‘‘all or substantially all,’’ the
hospital would be required to incur at least
90 percent of the costs of the training at the
nonhospital site, which in this example
equals $67,500 (that is, 0.90 × $75,000). Since
in this case the cost of one FTE resident’s
salary and fringe benefits is $60,000, the
hospital has not met the 90 percent threshold
by only incurring the resident’s salary and
fringe benefits. The hospital would have to
incur at least an additional $7,500 of the cost
(that is, $67,500 ¥ $60,000) to reach the 90
percent threshold to be permitted to count
the FTE resident for IME and direct GME
purposes. Alternatively, the hospital could
document the actual teaching physician cost
using time or salary information specific to
that teaching physician at that site, and use
that amount to calculate 90 percent of the
actual training program costs.
b. Explanation of Variables
In the following section, we discuss
each variable in the proposed
methodology for determining the cost
that a hospital must incur in order to
count FTE residents training in
nonhospital sites, and explain our
rationale for proposing to employ each
of these variables. As stated previously,
the proposed variables are: teaching
physicians’ salaries; residents’ salaries
and fringe benefits (including travel and
lodging where applicable); the number
of hours per week that the teaching
physician spends in nonpatient care
GME activities in a nonhospital site; and
the number of hours that a nonhospital
site is open each week.
(1) National Average Physician Salary
Data by Specialty
One of the foremost objections voiced
by the hospital industry to our current
policy is the documentation burden
associated with requesting salary
information from individual teaching
physicians in nonhospital sites.
Hospitals believe that many teaching
physicians in nonhospital sites are
reluctant to disclose their personal
salary information, yet this disclosure is
necessary to enable the hospital to
determine and pay the nonhospital site
for the actual costs of the GME program
in accordance with our current
regulations. One suggestion mentioned
by the hospital industry as an
alternative to obtaining individual
teaching physician-specific salary
information is to allow hospitals to use
national average salary survey data by
specialty. We understand that there are
a number of organizations that conduct
annual national surveys on physician
compensation. We are proposing to
4823
allow hospitals to use physician
compensation survey data as a proxy to
determine the teaching physician costs
associated with GME in a program at a
particular nonhospital site. For
example, one such national organization
that collects data on physician
compensation that we are considering
using is the American Medical Group
Association (AMGA). AMGA’s 2006
Medical Group Compensation and
Financial Survey was performed under
contract by RSM McGladrey. Founded
in 1950, AMGA (formerly the American
Association of Medical Clinics) is a
trade association which dedicates itself
to making the ‘‘* * * multi-specialty
medical group model the preferred
delivery system for patient-centered,
affordable, quality medical care in
America,’’ and represents 283 medical
groups that include an average of 272
physicians. AMGA’s use of the term
‘‘medical group’’ is based on the
American Medical Association’s
definition of ‘‘group practice,’’ which is
defined as a group that ‘‘includes the
provision of health care services by
three or more physicians who are
formally organized as a legal entity
governed by physicians in which
business, clinical, and administrative
facilities, records and personnel are
shared and the practice goals,
objectives, and values are commonly
defined. Income from medical services
provided by the group is treated as
receipts of the group and is distributed
according to some prearranged plan.’’
AMGA has been performing surveys like
the 2006 Medical Group Compensation
and Financial Survey since 1986. The
2006 survey was sent to over 2,600
medical groups, including medical
groups that are not members of AMGA.
To give readers an idea of the average
compensation amounts in the survey,
we have randomly selected 10
specialties included in the 2006 survey
and listed their compensation
information in Table 7. If we adopt the
AMGA survey for use to determine the
cost of teaching physicians’ time
attributable to GME, we would make the
salary information for all specialties
accessible to hospitals on our Web site
and would provide it in a manner
similar to Table 7.
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TABLE 7.—PHYSICIAN SALARY INFORMATION
Mean salary
(in dollars)
*Specialty
Cardiology ................................................................................................................................................................
Dermatology .............................................................................................................................................................
Family Medicine .......................................................................................................................................................
Gynecology and Obstetrics .....................................................................................................................................
Internal Medicine .....................................................................................................................................................
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$411,916
336,531
187,891
286,418
192,264
Median salary
(in dollars)
$363,081
306,935
178,366
271,273
183,840
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TABLE 7.—PHYSICIAN SALARY INFORMATION—Continued
Mean salary
(in dollars)
*Specialty
Ophthalmology .........................................................................................................................................................
Pediatrics & Adolescent: General ............................................................................................................................
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation ......................................................................................................................
Diagnostic Radiology: Non-Interventional ...............................................................................................................
General Surgery ......................................................................................................................................................
307,044
191,122
208,442
415,521
331,970
Median salary
(in dollars)
281,112
182,186
207,004
400,000
310,736
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*This information was obtained from the 2006 Medical Group Compensation and Financial Survey published by the American Medical Group
Association (AMGA). For further information, visit AMGA’s Web site at https://www.amga.org/.
We are soliciting comments as to
whether we should use the mean or
median compensation amounts for
purposes of determining the teaching
physicians’ cost. In addition, although
we recognize that there are generally
geographic variations in salary amounts
within each specialty (and, although not
included in Table 7, AMGA does
provide some detail of salaries by
geographic area), we are proposing to
use the single national average or
median salary amount for each
specialty, rather than consider
geographic variations, because we
would like to simplify and streamline
the proposed methodology for
determining the GME costs in
nonhospital sites as much as possible.
We are specifically soliciting comments
about whether AMGA’s salary
information should be used, and if not,
which other physician compensation
survey (or possible mix of surveys)
would be more appropriate for this
purpose, and whether we should
consider additional factors such as
geographic variation in physician
salaries within each specialty. We note
that we believe it is important for the
organization providing specialtyspecific physician compensation
information for this purpose to be one
that is nationally recognized as an
authoritative source. Additionally, we
believe the data should contain
compensation amounts for the fullest
range possible of specialties and
subspecialties, and should be issued
annually so that hospitals will always
have the most current data to use in
determining the teaching physician
costs in nonhospital sites. In addition,
we would prefer a survey that is
available to the public at no cost. (We
understand that a number of these
surveys are proprietary.) We are also
soliciting comments as to how to make
the survey data available in the most
efficient possible manner.
Regardless of the survey source that
we ultimately use, we are proposing that
hospitals would use the most recent
survey data available as of the beginning
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of the hospital’s particular cost
reporting year. For example—
• If residents are rotating to a
particular nonhospital site to receive
training in family practice in a
hospital’s cost reporting year beginning
January 1, 2008, then the hospital would
use the family practice average salary
from the most recently issued survey (in
the case of AMGA, 2007) as the salary
cost of that teaching physician, even
though that teaching physician may in
fact earn more or less than that national
average salary amount.
• If the teaching physician is a
neurologist providing residents with
neurology training in a nonhospital site
in a hospital’s cost reporting year
beginning July 1, 2007, then the hospital
would use the neurology average salary
from most recently issued survey (in the
case of AMGA, 2006, since AMGA’s
surveys are typically released in August)
as the salary cost of that teaching
physician.
Determining Teaching Physicians’ Cost
In determining the teaching
physicians’ cost, the specialty of the
teaching physician is the relevant
criterion, not the specialty of the
residents that the teaching physician is
training in the nonhospital site.
Generally, we believe the specialty of
the teaching physician will be selfevident, and the hospital can easily
locate the national average salary
information for that teaching
physician’s specialty on the survey (for
example, if family practice residents are
rotating to a dermatology practice to
receive training in dermatology, then
the national average salary for
dermatologists would be used from the
survey). However, it is possible that the
teaching physician is highly specialized
and the average compensation for his or
her subspecialty is not listed in the
survey we decide to use. In such a case,
we are proposing that the hospital
should use the immediately lessspecialized form of that specialty
applicable to that teaching physician (or
the hospital may use the physician’s
actual salary information). For example,
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if residents are receiving training from
a forensic pathologist, and the national
average salary for the subspecialty of
forensic pathology is not included in the
physician compensation survey, then
we are proposing that the hospital
should instead use the national average
salary for the specialty of pathology to
determine the cost of that teaching
physician. We believe this is the
simplest method of assigning a national
average physician compensation
amount in the instance where the
teaching physician’s actual subspecialty
is not included in the survey. However,
we are soliciting comments as to
whether it is possible or appropriate to
use survey data from other sources in
the event that data is not available from
the particular survey source.
In addition, although it may not be a
common occurrence, it is possible that
residents could be receiving training in
a nonhospital site from a teaching
physician that is board certified in more
than one specialty, but the residents are
only receiving training in one of the
specialties in which the physician is
board certified. In this case, we are
proposing that the national average
salary that should be used to determine
the teaching physician’s cost should be
the one for the specialty in which the
teaching physician is training the
residents. For example, if residents are
being supervised by a cardiologist who
is board certified in internal medicine
and cardiology, but the residents are
training with him or her specifically to
learn internal medicine, then we are
proposing that the hospital should use
the national average salary for internal
medicine, and not cardiology, to
determine the teaching cost of that
physician. That is, in instances where
the residents are receiving training at a
nonhospital site from a teaching
physician that is board certified in more
than one specialty, and it is unclear
which specialty to use for purposes of
assigning a national average salary to
that physician, we are proposing that
the question for the hospital to ask is,
why are the residents training with that
physician? If the answer is, ‘‘to receive
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training in Specialty X,’’ then the
national average salary amount for
Specialty X should be used to determine
the teaching physician’s cost. If the
answer is, ‘‘to receive training in
Specialty Y,’’ then the national average
salary amount for Specialty Y should be
used to determine the teaching
physician’s cost, regardless of the
specific board certification that the
teaching physician has actually
received. In general, the hospital, with
assistance from the GME Program
Director as necessary, should be able to
document for the Medicare contractor
the specialty in which the residents are
receiving training at the nonhospital
site, and the national average physician
compensation amount for that specialty
used in paying ‘‘all or substantially all’’
of the costs, as defined in this proposed
rule.
Multiple Teaching Physicians and
Residents: 1:1 Resident to Teaching
Physician Ratio
We understand that it is not unusual
for several residents in the same
program to rotate to a particular
nonhospital site at the same time, and
be supervised by one teaching
physician, or for residents to be
supervised by several teaching
physicians during their time at that
nonhospital site. In determining the
total costs of the training program at the
nonhospital site, it is necessary to
consider all of the residents’ salaries
and fringe benefits (including travel and
lodging where applicable), and the
teaching physicians’ national average
salaries. However, to maintain
administrative simplicity, we are
proposing to allow hospitals to apply a
maximum of a 1:1 resident-to-teaching
physician ratio ‘‘limit’’ in determining
the total GME costs applicable to a
program at a nonhospital site. For
example, if at the nonhospital site there
are two teaching physicians and one
FTE resident, the hospital may
determine 90 percent of the total costs
of the program using a 1:1 resident-toteaching physician ratio, not a 1:2
resident-to-teaching physician ratio. The
90 percent threshold would be based on
the total cost of the one FTE resident
(salary and fringe benefits, and travel
and lodging where applicable) and one
teaching physician (national average
salary for the specialty multiplied by the
percentage of time spent in nonpatient
care GME activities). Similarly, if a
hospital rotated 3 FTE residents in the
same program to a particular
nonhospital site with 7 physicians,
unless the hospital documents
otherwise, we would assume that all 7
physicians supervise the residents at
some point during the training, but, for
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purposes of determining the 90 percent
threshold, we propose to assume that
there are only 3 FTE residents being
supervised by 3 teaching physicians.
Accordingly, the 90 percent threshold
would be based on the total cost of the
3 FTE residents’ salaries and fringe
benefits (including travel and lodging
where applicable) and 3 teaching
physicians (national average salaries for
the specialties multiplied by the
percentage of time spent in nonpatient
care GME activities). (In addition, we
note that the 1:1 limit may be applied
to FTE fractions, as well. That is, if in
the preceding example, 3.5 FTE
residents were being supervised by 7
physicians, the 90 percent threshold
would be determined based on the costs
associated with a resident-to-teaching
physician ratio of 3.5:3.5.)
In the case of multiple teaching
physicians, we must also consider that
a particular nonhospital site may be
staffed by physicians in different
specialties. For example, an orthopedics
practice may include orthopedists and
radiologists. In this case, we would still
maintain the 1:1 resident-to-teaching
physician limit, even if the teaching
physicians are in different specialties,
unless the hospital can document that
the number of physicians actually
teaching the residents is less than the
number of FTE residents training at that
nonhospital site. Once the number of
teaching physicians is established, we
are proposing that the hospital would
determine the national average salary
for each of those teaching physicians
from the national survey data, and then
calculate the average national salary of
the mix of physician specialties in the
practice to be used in computing the 90
percent threshold. For example, assume
that 3 FTE residents are rotating to an
orthopedic surgery practice staffed by a
total of 7 physicians; 4 are orthopedic
surgeons, and 3 are diagnostic
radiologists. Again, unless the hospital
documents otherwise, we would assume
that all 7 physicians supervise the
residents at some point during their
rotation to this practice. First, the
hospital would access the national
average salary for orthopedic surgeons
(assume $400,000), and the national
average salaries for diagnostic
radiologists (assume $412,000). Then,
the hospital would calculate the average
salary for these physicians as follows:
[($400,000 × 4) + ($412,000 × 3)]/7 =
$405,143. Next, the 1:1 resident-toteaching physician ratio would be
applied, such that for purposes of
determining the 90 percent threshold,
there would be 3 FTE residents and 3
teaching physicians. Since the 3
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teaching physicians are not in the same
specialty, the hospital would multiply
the average salary cost of $405,143 by 3
to get the total teaching physician
salaries for the training program at that
site ($405,143 × 3 = $1,215,429). The
hospital would then multiply
$1,215,429 by the percentage of time
spent by the teaching physicians in
nonpatient care GME activities (that
percentage is 3 hours divided by the
number of hours the practice is open
during a week) to determine the
teaching physician GME cost for the
training program at that site. This
teaching physician cost is then added to
the salaries and fringe benefits
(including travel and lodging where
applicable) of the 3 FTE residents to
determine the GME cost of the program
at that practice, and the hospital must
ensure that it incurs at least 90 percent
of that GME cost to count the 3 FTE
residents training at the nonhospital
site.
We note that, as we indicated above
in this section, if there are several
physicians in a nonhospital site, we
would assume that they all supervise
the residents at some point during the
residents’ training. However, it may be
that in fact only some of the physicians
actually supervise the residents, while
other physicians are not involved in the
training program at all. The hospital
may wish to document that only certain
physicians are involved in the training
program (in order to more accurately
represent the structure and costs of the
training program in a particular
nonhospital site). Such documentation
would increase the number of residents
relative to teaching physicians that is
used to calculate the teaching physician
costs. That is, using the example above
where the resident-to-teaching
physician limit was presumed to be 3:3,
since there were actually 3 FTE
residents and 7 physicians, if the
hospital can document that only 2
physicians supervised the residents
(and the other 5 physicians were not
involved in the GME program at all),
then the resident-to-teaching physician
ratio would be 3:2. As a result, the
hospital might be required to incur less
teaching physician costs, if any, to meet
the 90 percent threshold.
(2) Residents’ Salaries and Fringe
Benefits
The second variable in our proposed
methodology for determining the costs
of a program at a nonhospital site is the
salaries and fringe benefits (including
travel and lodging where applicable) of
the FTE residents that are rotating to a
particular nonhospital site. We
understand that since the salaries and
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fringe benefits (including travel and
lodging where applicable) of most
residents are already paid by hospitals
(either directly, or by reimbursing
another entity such as a medical
school), the portion of the actual cost of
the residents attributable to training in
the nonhospital setting can be easily
identified and documented by a
hospital. Therefore, as under existing
regulations, in determining the 90
percent threshold for a particular
program at a specific nonhospital site,
the hospital must use the actual cost of
each FTE resident’s salary and fringe
benefits (including travel and lodging
where applicable). In addition, the cost
of the residents will vary by specialty
and by program year. Furthermore, as
with current policy, the total residents’
costs will be based on the FTE number
rotating to a particular nonhospital site
in a cost reporting period, not the
number of individuals actually training
in a nonhospital site.
(3) The Number of Hours Spent in
Nonpatient Care GME Activities in a
Week and the Number of Hours That the
Nonhospital Site Is Open in a Week
The third variable used in the
determination of the costs of a training
program at a nonhospital site is the
amount of time that the teaching
physician(s) spends on direct GME
(nonpatient care) activities in a week.
As we first explained in the July 31,
1998 Federal Register (63 FR 40987),
and more recently in the August 8, 2005
Qs&As posted on the CMS Web site at
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/Downloads/
nonhospQA.pdf, determination of the
teaching physician costs to the
nonhospital site is dependent upon the
teaching physician’s salary and the
percentage of time he or she devotes to
activities related to non-billable GME
activities at the nonhospital site (such as
conferences, practice management,
lectures, and administrative activities
like resident evaluations). Hospitals and
teaching physicians have protested that
documenting the percentage of time that
teaching physicians spend on activities
relating to nonpatient care GME
activities at the nonhospital site is an
onerous and impractical task. In an
effort to eliminate the documentation
burden on physicians of keeping track
of the amount of time they spend in
nonpatient care GME activities in the
nonhospital site, rather than require
teaching physicians to estimate the
number of hours per week that they
spend in such activities with or on
behalf of the residents, we are proposing
an alternative option that hospitals may
choose to use to determine the
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percentage of the teaching physician’s
time that is spent in nonpatient care
GME activities. This option is an
administrative shortcut or a proxy that
we are proposing, rather than
continuing to require in all cases that
the hospital must document and pay for
the actual costs of a training program at
a nonhospital site. However, a hospital
always has the option of documenting
and paying for at least 90 percent of the
costs of a program at a nonhospital site
using the teaching physician’s actual
salary and information on the time
spent in nonpatient care GME activities.
Under the proposed proxy
methodology, we would apply a
presumed standard number of hours
spent by teaching physicians in
nonpatient care GME activities in every
nonhospital site. Specifically, we are
proposing to use a standard of 3 hours
per week spent in nonpatient care GME
activities by teaching physicians. We
propose that the 3 hour standard would
be used in all cases in the formula for
determining the teaching physician
costs at all nonhospital sites, regardless
of the specialty of the residents or the
number of teaching physicians or
residents training at that nonhospital
site. Although some hospital industry
representatives have stated that the
amount of time spent by teaching
physicians in nonpatient care GME
activities in nonhospital sites is ‘‘de
minimus,’’ and, therefore, there is
typically little if any teaching cost to the
nonhospital site, we believe there is also
evidence indicating that in many cases
the teaching physician is spending a
significant amount of time with or on
behalf of the residents in nonpatient
care GME activities. We believe the
standard of 3 hours of nonpatient care
GME activities per week is a reasonable
proxy based on data collected from
surveys conducted by the Association of
American Medical Colleges (AAMC),
the American Osteopathic Association
(AOA), and the Academic Family
Medicine Advocacy Alliance (AFMAA),
in addition to information compiled
from our own informal surveys of
teaching physicians.
In September 2005, in response to a
request by CMS, the AFMAA, AOA, and
AAMC conducted informal surveys to
determine the amount of time spent in
nonpatient care activities by teaching
physicians in nonhospital sites. In the
survey results shared with CMS by these
associations, we received a range of
hours for the amount of teaching
physician time spent per week in
nonpatient care GME activities at the
nonhospital site. Such nonpatient care
GME time included time spent by the
teaching physician in training activities
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when the patient was not present and
time spent in administrative activities
related to the GME program. The
surveys showed means ranging from 1.1
to 4.0 hours per week and medians of
1.5 to 4.0 hours per week for time spent
on residency training when patients
were not present. The surveys also
showed means ranging from 1.6 to 4.7
hours per week and medians of 0 to 2
hours per week for time spent on
administrative activities related to
residency training at the nonhospital
site. Given the range of survey results,
we believe that 3 hours per week serves
as a reasonable number to use as a
shortcut or a proxy for determining
teaching physician time spent in
nonpatient care GME activities at the
nonhospital site. As previously stated,
hospitals always still have the option of
calculating teaching physician costs and
the 90 percent cost threshold using
actual data (as under current
regulations) specific to the number of
hours the teaching physician spends per
week on GME activities at the
nonhospital site. For example, if a
hospital can document that a teaching
physician actually spends 1.5 hours per
week on GME activities at the
nonhospital site, then the hospital may
use 1.5 hours per week in calculating
the teaching physician cost and the 90
percent cost threshold.
We are proposing to use the standard
of 3 hours of nonpatient care activities
per week as the proxy regardless of the
number of FTE residents the teaching
physician is supervising because we
believe that when the number of FTE
residents at a nonhospital site increases,
the teaching physician time associated
with those FTE residents in many
instances will increase by only a small
multiple. For example, a teaching
physician would provide a lecture to the
residents together, rather than
separately lecturing each FTE resident
training at the nonhospital site.
Accordingly, the time spent by the
teaching physician in nonpatient care
activities may increase only slightly
with each additional FTE resident being
supervised.
While we are proposing to use the
standard number of hours spent by
teaching physician(s) in nonpatient care
direct GME activities across all training
occurring at all nonhospital sites (that
is, 3 hours per week), we are proposing
to introduce a fourth variable in the
determination of the cost of a training
program in a nonhospital site that will
vary depending on the specific
nonhospital site. This fourth variable is
the number of hours that a nonhospital
site is open each week. Since only a
percentage of the teaching physician’s
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salary is attributable to direct GME
activities, and that percentage is based
on time he or she devotes to activities
related to non-billable GME activities at
the nonhospital site, we are proposing
to determine this percentage by dividing
the standard number of hours spent in
nonpatient care GME activities by the
number of hours the specific
nonhospital site is open each week. We
are proposing that the numerator will
always be 3 hours, and the denominator
will vary depending on the nonhospital
site. For example, if FTE residents rotate
throughout the year to a nonhospital site
that is open 40 hours per week, then the
percentage of time spent by the teaching
physician(s) in nonpatient care GME
activities throughout the year at that site
is 3/40 = 0.075 or 7.5 percent. (If FTE
residents rotate to that nonhospital site
for only a portion of a year, then the
ratio of 3/40 would be further
multiplied by the percentage of the year
that the FTE residents train there. For
example, if the FTE residents only rotate
to this nonhospital site for 3 months of
the year, then the percentage of time
that the teaching physician(s) spends on
nonpatient care GME activities at that
site equals (3/40 × 0.25 = 0.019 or 1.9
percent). Similarly, if FTE residents
rotate throughout the year to a
nonhospital site that is open 50 hours
per week, then the percentage of time
spent by the teaching physician(s) in
nonpatient care direct GME activities
throughout the year is 3/50 = 0.06 or 6
percent. We recognize that the teaching
physician(s) may not spend 100 percent
of his or her time in that nonhospital
site. In fact, many teaching physicians
spend some of their week working in a
hospital or other facilities. However, we
believe that deriving the true amount of
time spent by each teaching physician
in each nonhospital site in nonpatient
care GME activities would involve the
imposition of another form of the
documentation burden that the hospital
industry and teaching physicians have
found onerous up to this point. This
proposed methodology eliminates the
need for any time studies and it is easy
to gather the information needed.
We also acknowledge that this
proposal to use the number of hours that
a particular nonhospital site is open as
a proxy in the denominator for
determining the percentage of time
spent by the teaching physician(s) in
nonpatient care GME activities could, in
some extreme instances, result in an
unusually high percentage of teaching
time, which, in turn, would result in a
determination of unusually high
teaching costs. This is so because, since
3 hours is a constant in the numerator,
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the fewer the number of hours the clinic
is open (the denominator), the greater
the calculated percentage of time spent
by the teaching physician in nonpatient
care GME activities. To use an extreme
example, if a clinic is only open 10
hours a week, then 3/10, or 30 percent
of the national average salary for the
teaching physician’s specialty would
represent the teaching physician’s cost
that would be used to determine 90
percent of the costs of the program at
the clinic. However, we believe that, for
most nonhospital training situations,
this proposal to use the 3 hour standard
and the number of hours the
nonhospital site is open per week is a
reasonable alternative to the current
procedures for determining the actual
teaching physician’s cost because these
proxies are easily obtainable, discrete
numbers that do not necessitate any
time studies. Nevertheless, we are
soliciting comments on alternative
proxies that might be appropriate to use
in the place of the ratio of 3 hours to the
number of hours a nonhospital site is
open per week. We also note that in the
event that this proposed methodology
for calculating teaching physician costs
in a particular nonhospital site results
in an unrealistic amount, we reiterate
that a hospital always has the option of
determining and paying at least 90
percent of the GME costs using actual
physician salary and teaching time
information, for all, or some of its
training programs occurring in
nonhospital settings. In fact, we are
proposing that a hospital may choose to
use a combination of actual information
and proxy information for determining
the teaching physician cost. For
example, a hospital may choose to use
actual physician salary information
instead of the national average survey
data, but use the 3 hour standard and
the number of hours the nonhospital
site is open per week to determine the
percentage of time spent on teaching
activities, or vice versa. Furthermore,
we reiterate that under the proposed
new definition of ‘‘all or substantially
all,’’ even if a hospital chooses to
document the teaching physician cost
using actual teaching physician-specific
information, the hospital need only
incur 90 percent of the residents’
salaries and fringe benefits (including
travel and lodging where applicable),
and the portion of the teaching
physicians’ salaries attributable to direct
GME, and not 100 percent of those
costs.
Under our proposal, 90 percent of the
GME costs for a particular program at a
particular nonhospital site would be the
minimum amount that a hospital must
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pay to count the FTE resident(s) training
at that site for direct GME and IME
purposes. If the hospital is already
paying the resident’s salaries and fringe
benefits (including travel and lodging
where applicable), and if the costs of the
resident’s salaries and fringe benefits are
equal to at least 90 percent of the total
GME costs at the nonhospital site (that
is, the 90 percent threshold), then the
hospital is paying ‘‘all or substantially
all’’ of the costs in accordance with our
proposed definition, and need not pay
an additional amount for teaching
physician compensation in order to
count the FTE residents. However, if the
hospital is paying less than 90 percent
of the costs of the training program at
the nonhospital site, then the hospital
must pay an additional amount toward
the teaching physician costs until it is
paying at least 90 percent of the GME
costs for that program. We believe our
proposal is relatively simple, easy to
administer, and eliminates the
documentation burdens cited by the
industry as being associated with the
current policy. However, we note again
that even under our proposal, a hospital
is not precluded from choosing to
calculate and pay 90 percent of the
teaching costs of a program in a
nonhospital site in accordance with the
existing policy requirements. That is,
the hospital may still choose to
document the actual teaching physician
cost using actual time and salary
information from the teaching
physician(s) to determine what the true
direct GME costs are at that nonhospital
site. Once the hospital calculates the
actual direct GME costs, we propose
that it would only be required to pay at
least 90 percent of the actual direct GME
costs, consistent with our proposed
definition of ‘‘all or substantially all of
the costs for the training program in the
nonhospital setting.’’
The following is an additional
example of the application of the
proposed methodology:
Example: For the July 2008 through June
2009 academic year, a hospital with a family
practice program sends 3 FTE residents (in
different program years) to train at the Family
Medicine Center (FMC), a nonhospital site.
The hospital’s cost reporting period began on
January 1, 2008. The FMC is staffed by 5
physicians, all of whom supervise the
residents at some point during the year. Four
of the physicians are family practitioners,
and 1 physician is a psychiatrist. The FMC
is open for 50 hours per week. To determine
the cost of the teaching physicians, the
hospital refers to the most recent national
average salary amounts on the national
survey published prior to January 1, 2008,
which is the 2007 survey. Assume that the
national average published salary amount for
family practice is $180,000, and the national
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average published salary amount for
psychiatry is $187,000. Since there are
multiple physicians in different specialties
(absent specific documentation provided by
the hospital), the average salary of one FMC
physician is calculated as follows: [($180,000
× 4 family practice physicians) + ($187,000
× 1 psychiatrist)]/5 = $181,400. Since the
residents are on the payroll of the hospital,
the hospital knows that the total actual cost
of the 3 FTE residents’ salaries and fringe
benefits (including travel and lodging, if
applicable) is $182,000. After applying the
1:1 resident-to-teaching physician limit, there
are 3 FTE residents to 3 teaching physicians
(again, absent specific documentation
provided by the hospital). Thus, the GME
cost of the 3 teaching physicians is calculated
as follows: ($181,400 × 3) × (3 hours/50
hours) = $32,652. This teaching physicians’
cost of $32,652 is added to the residents’ cost
of $182,000 to arrive at the total cost of the
training program at the nonhospital site of
$214,652. To meet the proposed definition of
‘‘all or substantially all,’’ the hospital would
be required to pay at least 90 percent of the
costs of the training program at the
nonhospital site, which in this example
equals $193,187 (that is, 0.90 × $214,652).
Since in this case the cost of the 3 FTE
residents’ salaries and fringe benefits is
$182,000, the hospital would not reach the
90 percent cost threshold by simply incurring
the costs associated with the residents. The
hospital must pay at least an additional
$11,187 (that is, $193,187¥$182,000) to meet
the 90 percent threshold and satisfy the
requirement to pay ‘‘all or substantially all’’
of the costs of the family practice program at
the FMC.
C. Other Issues To Be Considered
Although we are proposing a revised
standard for a hospital to incur ‘‘all or
substantially all of the costs for the
training program in the nonhospital
setting’’ in order to count FTE residents
training in nonhospital sites, the other
existing regulations regarding
nonhospital sites would still generally
apply, but would require some
modification. Under the existing
regulations at § 413.78(e), a hospital is
permitted to count residents training in
nonhospital sites only if the residents
spend their time in patient care
activities, and the hospital must comply
with either of the following: (a) It must
pay all or substantially all of the costs
of the training program in the
nonhospital site by the end of the third
month following the month in which
the training in the nonhospital site
occurred; or (b) it must have a written
agreement with the nonhospital site that
states that the hospital will incur the
cost of the resident’s salary and fringe
benefits while the resident is training in
the nonhospital site and the hospital is
providing reasonable compensation to
the nonhospital site for supervisory
teaching activities. The written
agreement must indicate the
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compensation the hospital is providing
to the nonhospital site for supervisory
teaching activities. We are proposing to
add a new § 413.78(f) for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after July 1,
2007, to reflect the revised definition of
‘‘all or substantially all of the costs for
the training program in the nonhospital
setting.’’ First, if a hospital chooses to
make concurrent payments; that is, pay
the training costs by the end of the third
month following the month in which
the training occurred, then we propose
that the hospital must be able to
document for audit purposes that the
concurrent payments it makes reflects
‘‘all or substantially all’’ of the costs, in
accordance with the new proposed
definition at § 413.75(b).
Alternatively, if the hospital chooses
to maintain a written agreement with
the nonhospital site (which, we note,
must be in place before the hospital may
begin to count residents training at a
nonhospital site), we are proposing that
the new § 413.78(f) would state that the
written agreement must indicate that the
hospital will incur at least 90 percent of
the total of the costs of the resident’s
salary and fringe benefits (including
travel and lodging where applicable)
while the resident is training in the
nonhospital site and the portion of the
cost of the teaching physician’s salary
attributable to direct GME. We are
proposing that the written agreement
should specify the total compensation
amount the hospital will incur to the
nonhospital site to meet the 90 percent
‘‘all or substantially all’’ threshold, and
whether this amount reflects only
residents’ salaries and fringe benefits
(including travel and lodging where
applicable), or reflects an amount for
teaching physician compensation as
well. We believe the written agreement
should specify the total amount of
nonhospital site training costs the
hospital will incur and specify what
costs are included in that amount
because the hospital would need to
determine up front the amount it must
pay to the nonhospital site in order to
meet the 90 percent threshold and incur
‘‘all or substantially all’’ of the cost in
accordance with our proposed
definition. In addition, the provision of
this information in the written
agreement will simplify the audit
process when the Medicare contractor
determines whether the amount paid by
the hospital to the nonhospital site
reflects ‘‘all or substantially all’’ of the
costs of the program in the nonhospital
site in accordance with the new
proposed definition at § 413.75(b). We
note that regardless of whether a
hospital chooses to make concurrent
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payments to the nonhospital site, or to
have a written agreement, the hospital
must demonstrate that it is paying for at
least 90 percent of the costs of each
program at each nonhospital site
according to the following formula
(although actual data may be used in
place of the proxies):
0.90 × [(sum of each FTE resident’s
salary + fringe benefits (including
travel and lodging where
applicable)) plus the portion of the
teaching physician’s compensation
attributable to direct GME
activities].
The portion of the teaching
physician’s compensation attributable to
direct GME activities may be calculated
as follows:
(3/number of hours nonhospital site is
open per week) × (national average
salary for each teaching physician).
If there are no teaching costs (because,
for example, the residents are rotating to
a nonhospital site where the teaching
physician is a solo practitioner), then
the written agreement should indicate
that the specified compensation amount
reflects only residents’ salaries and
fringe benefits (including travel and
lodging where applicable) because there
are no teaching physician costs (since
the teaching physician is a solo
practitioner). Finally, we note that, as
under existing regulations, if the
hospital does choose to have a written
agreement with the nonhospital site, the
hospital must, at a minimum, liquidate
the costs identified in the written
agreement in accordance with the
regulations at § 413.100(c)(2)(i).
In addition, we note that under
current policy, a hospital may choose to
provide non-monetary, in-kind
compensation rather than provide direct
financial compensation to the
nonhospital site for supervisory
teaching activities. Under the new
proposed definition of ‘‘all or
substantially all,’’ a hospital would still
be permitted to provide in-kind
compensation to the nonhospital site,
but, as under current policy, the
hospital must be able to document that
the value of the in-kind compensation is
at least equivalent monetarily to the
portion of the actual or proxy-based
costs for that physician attributable to
nonpatient care GME activities. That is,
the hospital must show that the value of
in-kind compensation is sufficient to
meet the 90 percent threshold using the
formula stated above in this section.
We also believe it is important to
review how the written agreement
requirements apply when a hospital’s
residents rotate to nonhospital sites
such as clinics owned by a medical
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school. As we stated in response to
Question 9 on the Qs&As on our Web
site at https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/Downloads/
nonhospQA.pdf, ‘‘rather than having a
written agreement with each clinic, it
would be appropriate for the hospital to
have a written agreement with the
medical school, since the medical
school owns the clinics. If the residents
are training in various medical school
clinics, the hospital must have written
agreement(s) reflecting the
compensation arrangements for each
clinic’’ (emphasis added).
Unfortunately, we have learned of
numerous situations where a hospital
has a single agreement with the medical
school in which the hospital specifies a
lump sum dollar amount that it is
paying the medical school for GMErelated services that the medical school
is providing, but there is no breakout at
all as to the specific training costs
attributable to individual clinics, or to
the specific programs at those clinics.
Without a breakout of the residents’
salaries and fringe benefits (including
travel and lodging where applicable),
and the portion of the teaching
physicians’ salaries attributable to
nonpatient care GME activities at each
nonhospital site, the Medicare
contractor is unable to determine
whether the hospital has properly paid
the costs of each specialty program at
each nonhospital site in accordance
with the statutory and regulatory
requirements. Likewise, under the new
proposed definition of ‘‘all or
substantially all,’’ whether hospitals pay
for the costs of a program at a
nonhospital site on a concurrent basis,
or if they have a written agreement, they
must be able to document how they are
paying for ‘‘all or substantially all’’ of
the costs of a particular program at each
nonhospital site. Global agreements
with lump sum payment amounts,
either for teaching physician costs or for
nonhospital training in general, have
not been sufficient under existing policy
and would not be sufficient under the
proposed policy. Similarly, as under
current policy, if two (or more) hospitals
both train residents in the same
accredited program, and the residents
rotate to the same nonhospital site(s),
the hospitals cannot share the costs of
that program at that nonhospital site (for
example, by dividing the FTE residents
they wish to count according to some
pre-determined methodology), as this
violates the statutory requirement at
section 1886(h)(4)(E) of the Act that the
hospital incur ‘‘all, or substantially all,
of the costs for the training program in
that setting’’ (emphasis added). Finally,
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as under current policy, we note that in
the instance where a hospital is sending
residents in several different specialty
programs to train in the same
nonhospital site, and it wishes to count
all of those FTE residents for purposes
of IME and direct GME payment, the
hospital must be able to document that
it is separately meeting the ‘‘all or
substantially all’’ threshold for each
specialty program at that site. (That is,
the hospital would determine the 90
percent threshold in accordance with
the proposed methodology described
above separately for multiple teaching
physicians and residents, and would
apply the resident-to-teaching physician
ratio limit if applicable).
In summary, we are proposing to
revise § 413.75(b) to modify the
definition of ‘‘all or substantially all of
the costs for the training program in the
nonhospital setting’’ to reflect the
policies in place between January 1,
1999 and July 1, 2007, and our proposed
policy on or after July 1, 2007. We are
revising the definition of ‘‘all or
substantially all of the costs for the
training program in the nonhospital
setting’’ to mean: (a) Effective on or after
January 1, 1999 and for cost reporting
periods beginning before July 1, 2007,
the residents’ salaries and fringe
benefits (including travel and lodging
where applicable) and the portion of the
cost of teaching physicians’ salaries and
fringe benefits attributable to direct
graduate medical education (GME); and
(b) effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after July 1, 2007, at
least 90 percent of the total of the costs
of the residents’ salaries and fringe
benefits (including travel and lodging
where applicable) and the portion of the
cost of teaching physicians’ salaries
attributable to direct GME.
In addition, we are proposing to
revise § 412.105(f)(1)(ii)(C) for IME and
add a new § 413.78(f) to reflect the
revised requirement to pay ‘‘all or
substantially all’’ of the GME costs in a
nonhospital site, effective for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
July 1, 2007.
XIII. Technical Amendment
In the Revisions to Hospital Inpatient
Prospective Payment Systems—FY 2007
final rule (71 FR 47870 through 48136),
in an amendatory instruction to
§ 412.22(h)(3), we inadvertently omitted
the words ‘‘introductory text.’’
Therefore, paragraphs § 412.22(h)(3)(i)
and (ii) were removed. We are
proposing to replace § 412.22(h)(3)(i)
and (ii) in this proposed rule.
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XIV. 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 in accordance with 5
U.S.C. section 553(b) of the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
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 issues involved. This
procedure can be waived, however, if an
agency finds good cause that a noticeand-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.
In addition, we ordinarily provide a
30-day delay in the effective date of the
provisions of a proposed rule. Section
553(d) of the APA (5 U.S.C. section
553(d)) ordinarily requires a 30-day
delay in the effective date of final rules
after the date of their publication in the
Federal Register. This 30-day delay in
effective date can be waived, however,
if an agency finds for good cause that
the delay is impracticable, unnecessary,
or contrary to the public interest, and
the agency incorporates a statement of
the finding and its reasons in the rule
issued.
In the Revisions to Hospital Inpatient
Prospective Payment Systems—FY 2007
Occupational Mix Adjustment to Wage
Index; Implementation; Final rule (71
FR 47870 through 48136), in an
amendatory instruction to
§ 412.22(h)(3), we inadvertently omitted
the words ‘‘introductory text.’’
Therefore, paragraphs § 412.22(h)(3)(i)
and (ii) were removed from the CFR. We
believe that since we are merely making
a technical correction by correcting an
amendatory instruction and since these
paragraphs were subject to notice and
comment when originally added to the
CFR, we have just cause to waive
additional notice and comment
rulemaking at this time. Also, it is in the
public interest to have these paragraphs
reinstated immediately because the
entities to which these provisions apply
may believe they will no longer be
excluded from the IPPS and may be in
the process of closing their facilities
including transferring patients to other
facilities. In addition, it is in the public
interest to have these paragraphs
reinstated immediately because they are
part of current policy. The paragraphs
are being added without any changes to
the language or its intent. For these
same reasons, we believe that we have
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just cause to waive the 30-day delay in
effective date since we are correcting an
error from the previously published rule
and not implementing new policy.
For the reasons stated above in this
section, we find that both notice and
comment and the 30-day delay in
effective date for this correction are
unnecessary and impracticable, and that
it is in the public interest to make this
notice effective in conjunction with the
final rule to which the corrections apply
(and could be contrary to the public
interest to do otherwise). The technical
correction is effective as if it had been
included in the Revisions to Hospital
Inpatient Prospective Payment
Systems—FY 2007 Occupational Mix
Adjustment to Wage Index;
Implementation; Final rule.
XV. Collection of Information
Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995, we are required to provide 60day notice in the Federal Register and
solicit public comment before a
collection of information requirement is
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) for review and
approval. In order to fairly evaluate
whether an information collection
should be approved by OMB, section
3506(c)(2)(A) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 requires that we
solicit comment on the following issues:
• The need for the information
collection and its usefulness in carrying
out the proper functions of our agency.
• The accuracy of our estimate of the
information collection burden.
• The quality, utility, and clarity of
the information to be collected.
• Recommendations to minimize the
information collection burden on the
affected public, including automated
collection techniques.
We are soliciting public comment on
each of these issues for the following
sections of this document that contain
information collection requirements:
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Section 413.78 Direct GME Payments:
Determination of the Total Number of
FTE Residents
Section 413.78(f) outlines the
requirements that must be met for the
time residents spend in non-provider
settings to be included in determining
the number of FTE residents used in the
computation of a hospital’s resident
count. A resident must spend his or her
time in patient care activities; the
hospital must incur substantially all of
the costs of the training program in a
nonhospital setting.
In addition, § 413.78(f)(3) requires
that a hospital comply with one of the
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two requirements listed in
§ 413.78(f)(3)(i) and § 413.78(f)(3)(ii).
Section 413.78(f)(3)(i) states that a
hospital must document that it is paying
for all or substantially all of the costs
associated with the training program in
nonhospital settings. The costs must be
incurred between the training date and
the end of the third month after the
training date. The burden associated
with this requirement is the time and
effort associated with documenting and
maintaining records of the incurred
costs and subsequent payments made by
a hospital.
Section 413.78(f)(3)(ii) states that a
hospital must have a written agreement
with the nonhospital site. The
agreement must state that the hospital
will incur at least 90 percent of the cost
of the resident’s salary and fringe
benefits (and travel and lodging where
applicable) while the resident is training
in the nonhospital site and the portion
of the cost of the teaching physician’s
salary is attributable to GME. The
written agreement must also specify the
compensation amount the hospital is
paying the nonhospital site, and
whether this amount reflects only
residents’ salaries and fringe benefits
(and travel and lodging is applicable), or
includes an amount for teaching
physician compensation. The burden
associated with this requirement is the
time and effort associated with drafting,
signing, and maintaining the written
agreement.
The requirements listed in
§ 413.78(f)(3)(i) and § 413.78(f)(3)(ii) are
exempt from the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 in accordance with Pub. L.
99–272.
We will be submitting a copy of this
proposed rule to OMB for its review of
the information collection requirements
described above. These requirements are
not effective until they have been
approved by OMB.
If you comment on these information
collection and recordkeeping
requirements, please mail copies
directly to the following:
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, Office of Strategic
Operations and Regulatory Affairs,
Regulations Development Group,
Attn: William N. Parham, III, [CMS–
1529–P], Room C4–26–05, 7500
Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21244–1850; and
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and
Budget, Room 10235, New Executive
Office Building, Washington, DC
20503, Attn: Carolyn Lovett, CMS
Desk Officer, [CMS–1529–P],
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carolyn_lovett@omb.eop.gov. Fax
(202) 395–6974.
XVI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
[If you choose to comment on issues
in this section, please include the
caption ‘‘IMPACT’’ at the beginning of
your comments.]
A. Introduction
We have examined the impacts of this
proposed rule as required by Executive
Order 12866 (September 1993,
Regulatory Planning and Review), the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
(September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96–354),
section 1102(b) of the Act, the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(UMRA) (Pub. L. 104–4), and Executive
Order 13132.
1. Executive Order 12866
Executive Order 12866 (as amended
by Executive Order 13258, which
merely assigns 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 one year).
We are using the proposed rates, factors
and policies presented in this proposed
rule, including updated proposed wage
index values, and the best available
claims and CCR data to estimate the
change in proposed payments for the
2008 LTCH PPS rate year. Based on the
best available data for 369 LTCHs, we
estimate that the proposed expansion of
the existing payment provision for colocated LTCHs (HwHs and satellites of
LTCHs) at existing § 412.534 to certain
situations not presently covered by
existing § 412.534 for subclause (I)
LTCHs (as discussed in section V.B. of
the preamble of this proposed rule), in
conjunction with the proposed update
to the Federal rate for RY 2008
(discussed in section IV.C. of the
preamble of this proposed rule), the
proposed changes to the area wage
adjustment (discussed in section IV.D.1.
of the preamble of this proposed rule),
and the proposed increase in the outlier
fixed-loss amount (discussed in section
IV.D.3.c. of the preamble of this
proposed rule) for the 2008 LTCH PPS
rate year, would result in a decrease in
estimated payments from the 2007
LTCH PPS rate year of approximately
$80 million (or about 2.0 percent) for
the 369 LTCHs in our database.
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Regarding the approach discussed for
addressing our concerns with the
existing SSO policy presented in section
V.A.2. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we estimate that such an approach
would result in a decrease in estimated
payments in the 2008 LTCH PPS rate
year of about an additional $37 million
(for a total decrease in estimated
aggregate payments of $117 million ($80
million plus $37 million) or about 2.9
percent) for the 369 LTCHs in our
database. (An estimate of Medicare
program payments for LTCH services for
the next 5 years is shown in section
IV.D.5. of the preamble of this proposed
rule. The impact of the proposed policy
change relating to payment for Hospital
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Direct and Indirect Graduate Medical
Education Payments (GME) is discussed
in section XVI.C.2. of this regulatory
impact analysis.) The estimated impact
of the provisions presented in this
proposed rule (as detailed above) for the
369 LTCHs in our database are in
Table 8.
TABLE 8.—ESTIMATED IMPACT OF THE PROVISIONS OF THIS PROPOSED RULE 1
Estimated percent change in
estimated aggregate LTCH
PPS payments
Proposed policy
Proposed Payment Rate and Policy Changes:
Proposed Changes to the Federal Rate 2 ....................................................................................................................................
Proposed Changes to the Area Wage Adjustment ......................................................................................................................
Approach Discussed for SSO Policy ............................................................................................................................................
0.61
¥0.49
¥0.91
Subtotal 3 ...............................................................................................................................................................................
¥0.7
Expansion of the ‘‘25 Percent’’ Policy 4 ...............................................................................................................................................
¥2.2
Total 5
(¥0.7% + ¥2.2%) ............................................................................................................................................................
¥2.9
1 Percent
change in estimated aggregate LTCH PPS payments from the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year to the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year based on
the best available data for 369 LTCHs.
2 As discussed in greater detail in section XV.B.4. of this regulatory impact analysis, because about 35 percent of all LTCH cases are projected
to receive a payment under the existing SSO policy that is based either on the estimated cost of the case or the ‘‘IPPS comparable amount’’
(rather than the proposed Federal rate). Therefore, the percent change in estimated aggregate LTCH PPS payments due to the proposed
changes to the Federal rate, 0.61 percent, is slightly less than the proposed update to the Federal rate of 0.71 percent.
3 In absence of including the approach considered for the SSO policy (discussed in section V.A.2. of this proposed rule), we estimate that in
place of the 0.7 percent decrease in estimated aggregate LTCH PPS payments, on average, for all LTCHs, there would be 0.25 percent increase
in estimated aggregate LTCH PPS payments, on average, for all LTCHs for all proposed payment rate and policy changes. We also note that
the estimated percent change for all proposed payment rate and policy changes may not exactly equal the sum of the estimated percent change
for the proposed changes to the Federal rate, the proposed changes to the area wage adjustment and the approach discussed for the SSO policy due to the effect of estimated changes in aggregate HCO payments as well as other interactive effects that cannot be isolated.
4 Proposed expansion of the existing special payment provision for co-located LTCHs (HwHs and satellites of LTCHs) at existing § 412.534 to
certain situations not presently covered by existing § 412.534 for subclause (I) LTCHs (as discussed in section V.B. of the preamble of this proposed rule).
5 Total estimated impact of the provisions of this proposed rule (that is, sum of the estimated impact of the proposed payment rate and policy
change, including the approach discussed for the SSO policy, and the estimated impact of the expansion of the ‘‘25 percent’’ policy). We note
that in absence of including the approach discussed for the SSO policy, we project that the total estimated impact of the provisions of this proposed rule are projected to result in a 2.0 percent decrease in estimated aggregate LTCH PPS payments.
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Because the combined distributional
effects and estimated changes to the
Medicare program payments would be
greater than $100 million if we take into
consideration the approach discussed
for the SSO policy (in section V.A.2. of
the preamble of this proposed rule), this
proposed rule would be considered a
major economic rule, as defined in this
section. We note the $117 million (or
2.9 percent) decrease in estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments resulting
from the provisions presented in this
proposed rule does not reflect changes
in LTCH admissions or case-mix
intensity in estimated LTCH PPS
payments, which would also affect
overall payment changes.
2. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
The RFA requires agencies to analyze
options for regulatory relief of small
entities. For purposes of the RFA, small
entities include small businesses,
nonprofit organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions. Most
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hospitals and most other providers and
suppliers are small entities, either by
nonprofit status or by having revenues
of $6 million to $29 million in any 1
year. For purposes of the RFA,
proprietary hospitals are small entities if
they meet the small business size
standard described above (for further
information, see the Small Business
Administration’s regulation at 65 FR
69432, November 17, 2000). Because we
lack data on individual hospital
receipts, we cannot determine the
number of small proprietary LTCHs.
Therefore, we assume that all LTCHs are
considered small entities for the
purpose of the analysis that follows.
Medicare FIs are not considered to be
small entities. Individuals and States are
not included in the definition of a small
entity.
Currently, our database of 369 LTCHs
includes the data for 78 non-profit
(voluntary ownership control) LTCHs
and 246 proprietary LTCHs. Of the
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remaining 45 LTCHs, 13 LTCHs are
Government-owned and operated and
the ownership type of the other 32
LTCHs is unknown (as shown in Table
9). The impact of the proposed payment
rate and policy changes for the 2008
LTCH PPS rate year (including the
proposed update to the Federal rate,
proposed changes to the area wage
adjustment, and the approach discussed
for the SSO policy) is discussed in
section XVI.B.4.c. of this regulatory
impact analysis. The impact of other
proposed policy changes, such as the
effects of the proposed expansion of the
special payment provisions for LTCHs
HwHs and LTCH satellites to certain
situations not presently covered by
§ 412.534 for subclause (I) LTCHs, is
discussed in section XVI.C. of this
regulatory impact analysis.
As we discuss in detail throughout
the preamble of this proposed rule,
based on the most recent available
LTCH data, we believe that although the
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provisions of this proposed rule would
result in a decrease in estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments, we
believe the resulting LTCH PPS
payment amounts result in appropriate
Medicare payments. However, we
believe that although appropriate, the
provisions of this proposed rule could
have a significant impact on some small
entities (as defined above in this
section). As also discussed in greater
detail below in this section, we are
unable to determine how significant the
impact of some of the provisions of this
proposed rule may be on small entities
since we expect many LTCHs to adjust
their admission practices if some of
these provisions are implemented. We
note that LTCHS have been adapting
their behavior in response to the policy
changes we have implemented over the
past few years (for example, the annual
update to the LTC–DRG relative
weights, the ‘‘25 percent policy’’ at
existing § 412.534, the revision to the
SSO payment formula at existing
§ 412.529(c)(2), and the zero percent
update to the RY 2007 Federal rate).
Although those policy changes were
projected to result in decreases in
estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments, the growth in the number of
LTCHs has continued (although at a
reduced rate). Based on the most recent
available OSCAR data, the number of
LTCHs has increased over 10 percent in
the past 2 years (from October 1, 2004
and October 1, 2006). Because we
acknowledge that many of the affected
entities are small entities, the analysis
discussed throughout the preamble of
this proposed rule, in conjunction with
the discussion presented in greater
detail below in this section and
throughout the remainder of this
regulatory impact analysis, constitutes
our initial RFA. Therefore, in this
proposed rule, we are soliciting
comments on our estimates and analysis
of the impact of the provisions of this
proposed rule on small entities.
The proposed changes presented in
this proposed rule, which include the
proposed payment rate and policy
changes and the proposed expansion of
the ‘‘25 percent’’ policy (described
above in this section), are estimated to
result in approximately a 2.0 percent
($80 million) decrease in estimated
payments per discharge in the 2008
LTCH PPS rate year, on average, to all
LTCHs. As shown Table 8, taking into
consideration the approach discussed
for the SSO policy in section V.A.2. of
the preamble of this proposed rule in
addition to the proposed payment rate
and policy changes and the proposed
expansion of the ‘‘25 percent’’ policy
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(described above in this section), we
estimate that the provisions of this
proposed rule could result in
approximately a 2.9 percent (or $117
million) decrease in estimated payments
per discharge in the 2008 LTCH PPS
rate year, on average, to all LTCHs.
Table 8 shows that the proposed
payment rate and policy changes
(including the approach discussed for
the SSO policy) is projected to result in
a 0.7 percent decrease in estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments, and the
proposed expansion of the ‘‘25 percent’’
policy is projected to result in a 2.2
percent decrease in estimated aggregate
LTCH PPS payments. Thus, the majority
of the approximately 2.9 percent
decrease in estimated aggregate
payments in the 2008 LTCH PPS rate
year as compared to the 2007 LTCH PPS
rate year would be due to the proposed
expansion of the special payment
provisions for co-located LTCHs to
certain situations not presently covered
by existing § 412.534 for subclause (I)
LTCHs (as discussed in section V.B. of
this proposed rule).
As discussed in greater detail in
section XVI.C.1. of this regulatory
impact analysis, because we believe that
this proposed policy would discourage
inappropriate patient shifting to LTCHs
and would encourage all subclause (I)
LTCHs to engage in more appropriate
admission policies since, under this
proposal no payment adjustment would
be made if the patient has reached HCO
status at the co-located host (under the
proposed revision to § 412.534) or at the
referring hospital (under proposed
§ 412.536) prior to being admitted for
additional post-acute care at the LTCH
(as discussed in greater detail in section
V.B. of this proposed rule). Because we
expect that such a proposed policy
would reduce the financial incentives
that may be present currently for certain
situations not presently covered by
existing § 412.534 to admit patients
prematurely discharged from other
hospitals, we believe this proposed
policy would result in fewer admissions
to LTCHs before a complete course of
patient care is provided at the non-colocated referring hospital (under
proposed § 412.536) or co-located
referring hospital (under the proposed
revision to § 412.534). Thus, any change
in admission practices as a result of this
proposed policy would result in less of
a decrease in estimated aggregate LTCH
PPS payments than the 2.2 percent (90
million) estimated based on current
admission practices. Thus, the projected
2.2 percent (decrease in estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments resulting
from this proposed policy change would
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only occur if there were no changes in
LTCH admission practices.
Furthermore, we believe that this
proposed policy would result in
appropriate Medicare payments since,
as noted above, we expect that such a
policy would reduce the financial
incentives to admit patients prematurely
discharged from other hospitals and
would encourage all LTCHs to engage in
more appropriate admission policies.
For these reasons, although we estimate
that, if implemented, this proposed
policy would result in a decrease in
estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments, we do not believe that such
a projected decrease in estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments, although
possibly significant, would adversely
affect LTCHs’ ability to deliver efficient
care to Medicare beneficiaries nor
would there be an adverse affect on
Medicare beneficiaries’ access to care.
The impact analysis of proposed
payment rate and policy changes in
Table 9 (including the approach
discussed for the SSO policy in section
V.A.2. of the preamble of this proposed
rule) shows that estimated payments per
discharge are expected to decrease
approximately 0.7 percent, on average,
for all LTCHs from the 2007 LTCH PPS
rate year as compared to the 2008 LTCH
PPS rate year. Although we are
proposing a 0.71 percent increase to the
Federal rate for RY 2008 (as discussed
in section IV.C. of this proposed rule),
the projected percent decrease in
estimated payments per discharge from
the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year to the 2008
LTCH PPS rate year is attributable to the
proposed changes to the area wage
adjustment (discussed in section IV.D.1.
of this proposed rule), in conjunction
with the approach discussed for SSO
cases in section V.A.2. of this proposed
rule, as well as the proposed increase to
the HCO fixed-loss amount (as
discussed in section IV.D.3.c. of this
proposed rule). (As discussed in greater
detail in section XVI.B.4., the 2.2
percent decrease in estimated aggregate
LTCH PPS payments due to the
proposed expansion of the ‘‘25 percent
policy’’ to certain situations not
presently covered by existing § 412.534
for subclause (I) LTCHs is not reflected
in Table 9. However, as noted above, the
impact of that proposed policy is
discussed in greater detail in section
XVI.C.1. of this regulatory impact
analysis.)
As the impact analysis in Table 9
shows, estimated changes to the area
wage adjustment from RY 2007 to RY
2008 (resulting from both established
policy and proposed changes presented
in section IV.D.1. of this proposed rule,
as discussed in greater detail below in
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this section) contribute to the decrease
in estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments from the 2007 LTCH PPS rate
year to the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year. As
discussed in section IV.D.1. of this
proposed rule, we are proposing to
update the wage index values for RY
2008, in accordance with the
progression of the existing 5-year phasein of the area wage adjustment, based on
the most recent available wage data. We
believe that proposing to update the
LTCH PPS wage index based on the
most recent available wage data would
ensure that the LTCH PPS wage index
adjustment appropriately accounts for
and reflects the relative hospital wage
levels in the geographic area of the
hospital as compared to the national
average hospital wage level. In addition,
we are proposing to decrease the laborrelated share from 75.665 percent to
75.511 percent under the LTCH PPS for
RY 2008 based on the most recent
available data on the relative
importance of the labor-related share of
operating and capital costs of the LTCH
PPS market basket (also discussed in
section IV.D.1. of this proposed rule).
We believe that proposing to revise the
labor-related share based on the most
recent available data would
appropriately identify the portion of the
proposed LTCH PPS Federal rate that is
adjusted to account for geographic
differences in area wage levels by
applying the applicable proposed LTCH
PPS wage index value. As discussed in
greater detail in section IV.D.1. of this
proposed rule, we believe that these
proposed changes to the LTCH PPS area
wage adjustment based on the most
recent available wage data and data on
the relative importance of the laborrelated share of the LTCH PPS market
basket, respectively, would result in
appropriate and accurate LTCH PPS
payments for the resources used by
LTCHs in a given area. Such updated
data appropriately reflects national
differences in area wage levels and
identifies the portion of the proposed
Federal rate that should be adjusted to
account for such differences in area
wages.
We also note that, even though we
have not proposed to make any changes
to the existing 5-year phase-in of the
wage index adjustment that was
established when the LTCH PPS was
implemented (August 30, 2002; 67 FR
56018), the continued progression of
this phase-in also contributes to the
decrease in estimated aggregate LTCH
PPS payments for RY 2008. That is,
since under the established phase-in of
the wage-index adjustment, LTCHs
receive an increasing percentage of the
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applicable full wage index value (which
is less than 1.0 for the majority of
LTCHs), we expect that estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments would
decrease from RY 2007 to RY 2008 as a
result of the progression of the existing
5-year phase-in of the area wage
adjustment. Thus, the majority of the 0.5
percent decrease in estimated payments
per discharge, on average, for all LTCHs
(see Table 9) is due to the existing 5year phase-in of the wage index
adjustment, and is not due to proposed
policy changes presented in this
proposed rule. Because the existing 5year phase-in of the area wage
adjustment has been a feature of the
LTCH PPS since it was implemented
beginning October 1, 2002, and since a
large majority (over 70 percent) of
LTCHs are located in areas where
historically the wage index value is less
than 1.0, the decrease in estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments resulting
from this policy should be anticipated
by LTCHs, and therefore, already
accounted for in their fiscal planning. In
addition, we note that, although the
portion of the decrease in estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments that is
due to the existing 5-year phase-in of
the wage index adjustment is expected,
we believe that any change in LTCHs’
wage index values under this policy is
appropriate since LTCHs will be
receiving an increasing percentage of
the applicable full wage index value,
which, by definition, reflects the
relative hospital wage levels for the area
in which the LTCH is located as
compared to the national average
hospital wage level.
Because we cannot determine to what
extent LTCHs may have planned for the
decrease in estimated aggregate LTCH
PPS payments that is due to the existing
5-year phase-in of the area wage
adjustment, even though the impact
may be significant for some LTCHs, we
believe that most LTCHs would not be
adversely affected since, as explained
above, we believe that the proposed
changes to the area wage adjustment
(that is, the proposed use of update
wage data and the proposed change in
the labor-related share), in conjunction
with the continued progression of the 5year phase-in of the area wage
adjustment, would result in appropriate
LTCH PPS payments in RY 2008. For
these reasons, we believe that the
decrease in estimated aggregate LTCH
PPS payments resulting from proposed
changes to the area wage adjustment,
although possibly significant for some
LTCHs, is appropriate and would not
adversely affect LTCHs’ ability to
deliver efficient care to Medicare
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beneficiaries nor would there be an
adverse affect on Medicare beneficiaries’
access to care.
In addition, as also shown in Table 9,
the approach for the SSO policy
discussed in section V.A.2. of this
proposed rule would also contribute to
the estimated 0.7 percent decrease in
estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments in RY 2008, on average, for all
LTCHs. Under that approach, we believe
that the LTCH cases that appear to be
‘‘similar to’’ the same type of cases
treated in an acute care hospital and
paid for under the IPPS, as discussed in
greater detail in section V.A.2. of this
proposed rule, would receive an
appropriately adjusted LTCH PPS
payment to treat such cases. We believe
that those SSO cases that are ‘‘similar to
IPPS cases’’ most likely do not receive
a full course of an LTCH-level of
treatment in such a short period of time
since, in general, LTCHs are intended to
treat longer stay patients. Although we
project a decrease in estimated aggregate
LTCH PPS with the approach discussed
for the SSO policy in section V.A.2. of
this proposed rule, we believe that such
an approach would result in appropriate
and adequate Medicare payments for the
treatment of Medicare beneficiaries with
a LOS is ‘‘similar to’’ typical IPPS cases.
Furthermore, we believe that, if
adopted, the approach to the SSO policy
discussed in section V.A.2. of the
preamble of this proposed rule would
accomplish our stated goal of removing
the incentive for LTCHs to admit
patients for whom a long-term hospital
stay is not necessary, and therefore, for
whom the LTCH would not be
providing complete treatment. As noted
previously, the vast majority of LTCH
cases, including SSO cases, are admitted
to the LTCH directly from an acute-care
hospital, and therefore, many SSO cases
may still be in need of acute-level care
(as we discuss in greater detail in
section V.A.2. of the preamble of this
proposed rule). Therefore, we believe
that in response to the approach
discussed for the SSO policy in section
V.A.2. of this proposed rule LTCHs may
reduce the number of SSO cases that are
‘‘similar to IPPS cases’’ that they admit
(and most of those patients would
continue to receive treatment at the
acute-care hospital). To the extent that
LTCHs continue to admit SSO cases that
are ‘‘similar to IPPS cases,’’ we believe
that this approach to the SSO policy
would result in an adjusted LTCH PPS
payment that is appropriate, as
discussed above. For these reasons,
although we estimate that the approach
to the SSO policy discussed in section
V.A.2. of this proposed rule would
result in a decrease in estimated
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aggregate LTCH PPS payments, we do
not believe that such an impact on
estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments, although possibly significant,
would adversely affect LTCHs’ ability to
deliver efficient care to Medicare
beneficiaries nor would there be an
adverse affect on Medicare beneficiaries’
access to care.
For all of the reasons discussed above
in this section, although we do not
expect an estimated incremental
decrease of 2.9 percent (approximately
$117 million) in estimated aggregate
LTCH PPS payments to have a
significant adverse financial impact on
LTCHs, nor do we expect there would
be an effect on beneficiaries’ access to
care, we acknowledge that the
provisions of this proposed rule could
have a significant impact on some small
entities. However, we believe that the
provisions of this proposed rule would
result in appropriate LTCH PPS
payments in RY 2008. We also note that
LTCHs provide some services to (and
generate revenue from) patients other
than Medicare beneficiaries, and the
revenue to LTCHs from treating those
patients is not affected by this proposed
rule. The analysis presented above, in
conjunction with the remainder of this
section, demonstrates that this proposed
rule is consistent with the regulatory
philosophy and principles identified in
the RFA. We believe the provisions
presented in this proposed rule would
affect payments to LTCHs, and the
effects on some LTCHs, although they
may be significant, are appropriate (as
discussed above).
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3. Impact on Rural Hospitals
Section 1102(b) of the Act requires us
to prepare a regulatory impact analysis
if a rule may have a significant impact
on the operations of a substantial
number of small rural hospitals. This
analysis must conform to the provisions
of section 603 of the RFA. For purposes
of section 1102(b) of the Act, we define
a small rural hospital as a hospital that
is located outside of a Metropolitan
Statistical Area and has fewer than 100
beds. As shown in Table 9, we are
projecting a 2.6 percent decrease in
estimated payments per discharge for
the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year as
compared to the 2007 LTCH PPS rate
year for rural LTCHs as a result of the
proposed payment rate changes,
including the approach discussed for
addressing our concerns with the
existing SSO policy presented in section
V.A.2. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, based on the data of the 25 rural
LTCHs in our database of 369 LTCHs for
which complete data were available.
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As shown in Table 9, the majority of
the estimated decrease in estimated
LTCH PPS payments in the 2008 LTCH
PPS rate year as compared to the 2007
LTCH PPS rate year for proposed
payment rate and policy changes for
rural LTCHs is due to the proposed
change in the area wage adjustment (as
discussed in greater detail in section
V.D.1. of the preamble of this proposed
rule). Specifically, as discussed above,
although we are not making any changes
to the existing 5-year phase-in of the
wage index adjustment that was
established when the LTCH PPS was
implemented (August 30, 2002; 67 FR
56018), the continued progression of
this phase-in contributes to the decrease
in estimated payments to rural LTCHs
for RY 2008. This is because, under the
established phase-in of the wage-index
adjustment, LTCHs receive an
increasing percentage of the applicable
full wage index value (which is less
than 1.0 for all of the 25 rural LTCHs
in our database), we expect that
estimated payments per discharge for
rural LTCHs would decrease from RY
2007 to RY 2008 as a result of the
progression of the 5-year phase-in of the
wage index adjustment. Thus, the
majority of the projected 2.6 percent
decrease in estimated payments per
discharge shown in Table 9 for rural
LTCHs is due to the existing 5-year
phase-in of the wage index adjustment,
and is not due to proposed policy
changes presented in this proposed rule.
As discussed above, we believe that the
decrease in estimated aggregate LTCH
PPS payments resulting from this
existing policy should be anticipated by
LTCHs, and therefore, already
accounted for in their fiscal planning. In
addition, we note that, although the
portion of the decrease in estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments that is
due to this existing policy is expected,
we believe that any change in LTCHs’
wage index values due to the continued
progression of the phase-in of the area
wage adjustment is appropriate since
LTCHs will be receiving an increasing
percentage of the applicable full wage
index value, which, by definition,
reflects the relative hospital wage levels
for the area in which the LTCH is
located as compared to the national
average hospital wage level.
Furthermore, as also explained in
greater detail above, we believe that the
proposed changes to the area wage
adjustment presented in this proposed
rule (that is, the proposed use of update
wage data and the proposed change in
the labor-related share) would result in
accurate and appropriate LTCH PPS
payments in RY 2008 since they are
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based on the most recent available data.
Such updated data appropriately reflect
national differences in area wage levels
and identifies the portion of the
proposed Federal rate that should be
adjusted to account for such differences
in area wages, thereby, resulting in
accurate and appropriate LTCH PPS
payments. Because we cannot determine
to what extent LTCHs may have
planned for the decrease in estimated
aggregate RY 2008 LTCH PPS payments
that results from the existing 5-year
phase-in of the area wage adjustment,
we believe that although the effects of
the proposed changes to the area wage
adjustment on some rural LTCH may be
significant, most rural LTCHs should be
not adversely affected because those
proposed changes are expected to result
in appropriate LTCH PPS payments in
RY 2008.
We also believe that the proposed
expansion of the payment adjustment at
existing § 412.534 to certain situations
not presently covered by that policy for
subclause (I) LTCHs may have a
significant adverse impact on some rural
LTCHs, although we cannot determine
how significant for the reasons
explained below in this section. Even
though this proposed policy is
estimated to reduce estimated aggregate
LTCH PPS payments in RY 2008 and
may result in a significant impact on
some rural LTCHs, we also believe, that
such changes would result in
appropriately adjusted LTCH PPS
payments (as explained below in this
section). As discussed in greater detail
in section V.B. of this proposed rule, in
designing features of the original ‘‘25
percent policy’’ for co-located LTCHs
(HwHs and LTCH satellites), which we
are proposing to extend to certain
situations not presently covered by
existing § 412.534 for subclause (I)
LTCHs, we provided special treatment
for rural hospitals which would increase
the threshold from 25 percent to 50
percent. When we established the 25
percent (or applicable percentage)
payment adjustment for co-located
LTCHs at existing § 412.534, after which
this proposed payment adjustment for
situations not presently covered by that
policy has been modeled, we noted in
response to comments that ‘‘the
Congress has authorized special
treatment for rural areas under the
Medicare program because of the
particular geographic and demographic
challenges in those locations, as well as
the difference between the provision
and availability of medical services as
compared to urban areas’’ (69 FR
49206). Therefore, under our proposed
policy, we would apply the same
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rationale to certain situations not
presently covered by existing § 412.534
that would occur in subclause (I) LTCHs
that are located in rural areas.
Accordingly, rather than a 25 percent
threshold (as is being proposed for most
urban LTCHs), for rural LTCHs, the
payment adjustment would be applied
only to those LTCH’s or LTCH satellite
facility’s Medicare discharges that were
admitted from a non-co-located referring
hospital under proposed § 412.536 or
co-located host under the proposed
revision to § 412.534 that are in excess
of 50 percent of the LTCH’s total
Medicare discharges for that hospital for
any cost reporting period. Under this
proposal, consistent with the existing
policy at § 412.534, no payment
adjustment would be made if the patient
has reached HCO status at the referring
hospital (under proposed § 412.536) or
at the co-located host (under the
proposed revision to § 412.534) prior to
being admitted for additional post-acute
care at the LTCH. That is, in calculating
the proposed 50 percent threshold (for
rural LTCHs), patients who achieved
HCO status prior to admission to the
LTCH would not be counted toward the
applicable threshold under proposed
§ 412.536 or under the proposed
revision to § 412.534 (although the
admission would still be counted
toward the LTCH’s total Medicare
discharges).
Furthermore, because such a policy
would reduce the financial incentives
for all LTCHs, including rural LTCHs, to
admit patients prematurely discharged
from other hospitals, we believe this
proposed policy would result in fewer
admissions to LTCHs before a complete
course of patient care is provided at the
referring hospital. As noted above, any
changes in admission practices as a
result of this proposed policy would
result in less of a decrease in estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments than the
$90 million estimated based on current
admission practices. Thus, the decrease
in estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments to rural LTCHs resulting from
this proposed policy change would only
occur if there were no change in rural
LTCH admission practices. It is our
intention, under this proposed policy, to
discourage LTCHs from serving as
‘‘step-down’’ units after a patient has
been diagnosed and received initial
treatment at another hospital, a scenario
that results in two Medicare payments
(one to the referring hospital and one to
the LTCH) for what was essentially one
episode of patient care. Rather, it is our
intent to encourage LTCHs to admit
patients who required additional longstay hospital-level treatment following
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the provision of a full episode of care at
the referring hospital. For those
patients, under this proposed policy,
Medicare would pay an unadjusted
amount under the LTCH PPS. We
believe that this proposed policy would
result in more appropriate admission
policies by rural LTCHs. Therefore, we
believe that although the effects on
some rural LTCHs of the proposed
expansion of the payment adjustment at
existing § 412.534 to certain situations
not presently covered by that policy for
subclause (I) LTCHs may be significant,
most rural LTCHs should be not
adversely affected because this
proposed policy changes is expected to
result in changes in admission practices
and appropriate payments for such
cases, as explained above in this
section.
In addition, the approach for SSO
policy discussed in section V.A.2. of
this proposed rule would also
contribute to the projected decrease in
estimated payments to rural LTCHs for
RY 2008. As discussed below in section
XVI.B.4.a. of this regulatory impact
analysis, we project a slightly larger
than average decrease in estimated
payments per discharge (as compared to
urban LTCHs; see column 9 of Table 9)
if this approach were adopted. About 40
percent of rural LTCHs treat a larger
than average percentage of SSO cases (in
fact, based on FY 2005 data for a few
rural LTCHs, SSO cases represent over
half of their total cases). However, we
are not able to determine whether this
approach, if adopted, would result in an
adverse financial impact on rural LTCHs
because we believe that most LTCHs
(including rural LTCHs) would reduce
the number of SSO cases that they admit
that are ‘‘similar to IPPS cases’’ (as
discussed in greater detail above). (We
note that although we expect most
LTCHs (including rural LTCHs) to admit
fewer SSO cases under this approach to
the SSO policy, most of those patients
would continue to receive treatment at
the acute-care hospital from which they
are typically discharged immediately
prior to their LTCH (short-stay)
admission.) Thus, the projected 2.6
percent decrease in estimated payments
per discharge shown in Table 9 for rural
LTCHs represent an average maximum
reduction in estimated aggregate LTCH
PPS payments in RY 2008, and since we
anticipate that LTCHs (including rural
LTCHs) would admit fewer SSO
patients for whom payments would be
affected by this approach to the SSO
policy, if adopted, we believe that the
actual decrease in rural LTCHs’
payments for RY 2008 would be less
than the 2.6 percent decrease in
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4835
estimated payments for RY 2008 shown
in Table 9.
Furthermore, to the extent that rural
LTCHs would continue to admit SSO
cases with a LOS that is ‘‘similar to IPPS
cases,’’ we believe the approach
discussed for the SSO policy would
result in an appropriate adjusted LTCH
PPS payment because we believe that
many of those SSO cases most likely do
not receive a full course of a LTCH-level
of treatment in such a short period of
time since, in general, LTCHs are
intended to treat longer stay patients.
Therefore, although we estimate the
approach discussed for the SSO policy
in section V.A.2. of this proposed rule
could result in a decrease in estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payment to rural
LTCHs, we do not believe that such an
estimated impact on rural LTCHs’ LTCH
PPS payments, even though possibly
significant, would adversely affect most
rural LTCHs because this approach
would be expected to result in changes
in admission practices and in
appropriate payments for such cases.
For these reasons, we believe that
there may be a significant impact on
some rural LTCHs resulting from the
proposed changes present in this
proposed rule. However, a portion of the
decrease in rural LTCHs’ estimated
payments per discharge from RY 2007 to
RY 2008 would be less than what we
estimate based on current admission
practices (as explained above in this
section). We also believe (as discussed
previously) a significant portion of the
projected decrease in estimated
payments per discharge for RY 2008,
which is due to the established phasein of the wage index adjustment, is not
a result of a proposed policy change,
and may already be accounted for in
LTCHs’ fiscal plans. Therefore, although
we believe this proposed rule would
affect payments to rural LTCHs, and the
effects on some rural LTCHs, although
appropriate, may be significant, we are
unable to determine how significantly
the proposed changes presented in this
proposed rule, if adopted, would
adversely affect rural LTCHs. However,
because we expect changes in admission
practice and appropriate payments, if
the changes present in this proposed
rule are adopted (as discussed above),
we do not anticipate that the provisions
of this proposed rule would affect the
ability of the vast majority of rural
LTCHs to provide cost efficient services
to Medicare patients nor do we expect
there would be an adverse effect on
beneficiaries’ access to care. The
analysis presented above, in
conjunction with the remainder of this
regulatory impact analysis,
demonstrates that this proposed rule is
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consistent with the regulatory
philosophy and principles identified in
section 1102(b) of the Act. (For
additional information on the estimated
impact of the changes on rural LTCHs
presented in this proposed rule, refer to
section XVI.B.4.a. of this regulatory
impact analysis.) However, in this
proposed rule, we are soliciting
comments on our estimates and analysis
of the impact of the provisions of this
proposed rule on rural LTCHs.
4. Unfunded Mandates
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
also requires that agencies assess
anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule whose mandates
require spending in any one year of
$100 million in 1995 dollars, updated
annually for inflation. That threshold
level is currently approximately $120
million. This proposed rule would not
mandate any requirements for State,
local, or tribal governments, nor would
it result in expenditures by the private
sector of $120 million or more in any 1
year.
5. Federalism
Executive Order 13132 establishes
certain requirements that an agency
must meet when it publishes 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.
We have examined this proposed rule
under the criteria set forth in Executive
Order 13132 and have determined that
this proposed rule would not have any
significant impact on the rights, roles,
and responsibilities of State, local, or
tribal governments or preempt State
law, based on the 13 State and local
LTCHs in our database of 369 LTCHs for
which data were available.
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6. Alternatives Considered
In preamble of this proposed rule, we
are setting forth the proposed annual
update to the payment rates for the
LTCH PPS, as well as proposing other
policy changes and discussing
approaches for other areas of concern. In
this preamble, we specify the statutory
authority for the provisions that are
presented, identify those proposed
policies (and approaches discussed)
when discretion has been exercised, and
present rationale for our decisions,
alternatives that were considered and
solicit comments on suggested
alternatives from commenters (where
relevant).
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B. Anticipated Effects of Proposed
Payment Rate Changes
We discuss the impact of the
proposed changes to the payment rates,
factors, and other payment rate policies
presented in the preamble of this
proposed rule (including the approach
discussed for the SSO policy in section
IV.A.2. of this proposed rule) in terms
of their estimated fiscal impact on the
Medicare budget and on LTCHs. (We
note that the impact of other policy
changes presented in this proposed rule,
which do not directly affect the LTCH
PPS per discharge payment rates (for
example, the proposed expansion of the
existing payment provision for colocated LTCHs to certain situations not
presently covered by existing § 412.534
for subclause (I) LTCHs discussed in
section V.B. of this proposed rule and
the proposed policy change relating to
GME payments discussed in section XII.
of this proposed rule), are not included
as part of the impact analysis shown in
Table 9. However, the impact of certain
other proposed policies are discussed
separately in section XVI.C. of this
regulatory impact analysis.
1. Budgetary Impact
Section 123(a)(1) of the BBRA
requires that the PPS developed for
LTCHs ‘‘maintain budget neutrality.’’
We believe that the statute’s mandate for
budget neutrality (BN) applies only to
the first year of the implementation of
the LTCH PPS (that is, FY 2003).
Therefore, in calculating the FY 2003
standard Federal rate under
§ 412.523(d)(2), we set total estimated
payments for FY 2003 under the LTCH
PPS so that estimated aggregate
payments under the LTCH PPS are
estimated to equal the amount that
would have been paid if the LTCH PPS
had not been implemented. However, as
discussed in greater detail in the August
30, 2002 final rule (67 FR 56033 through
56036), the FY 2003 LTCH PPS standard
Federal rate ($34,956.15) was calculated
based on all LTCHs being paid 100
percent of the standard Federal rate in
FY 2003. As discussed in section IV.D.5.
of this proposed rule, during LTCH rate
years governed by the 5-year transition
period policy set forth at § 412.533(a),
we applied a BN offset to payments to
account for the monetary effect of the
applicable transition period
methodology (including the option to
elect payments based on 100 percent of
the Federal rate in lieu of the transition
blend methodology) in a given LTCH
PPS rate year. Specifically, for FY 2003
and RYs 2004 through 2007, the amount
of the transition period BN offset was
equal to 1 minus the ratio of the
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estimated payments based on 100
percent of the LTCH PPS Federal rate to
the projected total Medicare program
payments that would be made under the
transition methodology and the option
to elect payment based on 100 percent
of the Federal prospective payment rate.
However, as we discuss in greater detail
in section IV.D.5. of this proposed rule,
we are no longer projecting a small cost
for the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year (July
1, 2007 through June 30, 2008) even
though some LTCH’s will have a cost
reporting period for the 5th year of the
transition period which will be
concluding in the first 3 months of the
2008 LTCH PPS rate year. Based on the
most recent available data, we are
projecting that the vast majority of
LTCHs would have made the election to
be paid based on 100 percent of the
Federal rate rather than the transition
blend, which would result in a
negligible cost to the Medicare program.
Therefore, in this proposed rule, we did
not propose a transition BN offset to all
LTCH PPS payments for RY 2008 to
account for the estimated cost of the
transition period methodology
(including the option to elect payment
based on 100 percent of the Federal rate)
in RY 2008.
2. Impact on Providers
The basic methodology for
determining a per discharge LTCH PPS
payment is set forth in § 412.515
through § 412.525. In addition to the
basic LTC–DRG payment (standard
Federal rate multiplied by the LTC–DRG
relative weight), we make adjustments
for differences in area wage levels,
COLA for Alaska and Hawaii, and SSOs.
Furthermore, LTCHs may also receive
HCO payments for those cases that
qualify based on the threshold
established each rate year.
To understand the impact of the
proposed changes to the LTCH PPS
payment rates and payment rate policy
changes discussed in sections IV. and
V.A. of this proposed rule on different
categories of LTCHs for the 2008 LTCH
PPS rate year, it is necessary to estimate
payments per discharge under the LTCH
PPS rates, factors and policies
established for RY 2007 (established in
the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR
27798 through 27939)) and to estimate
proposed payments per discharge that
would be made under the proposed
LTCH PPS rates, factors and policies for
the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year (as
discussed in the preamble of this
proposed rule). We also evaluated the
change in estimated 2007 LTCH PPS
rate year payments to estimated
proposed 2008 LTCH PPS rate year
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payments (on a per discharge basis) for
each category of LTCHs.
Hospital groups were based on
characteristics provided in the OSCAR
data, FY 2002 through FY 2004 cost
report data in HCRIS, and PSF data.
Hospitals with incomplete
characteristics were grouped into the
‘‘unknown’’ category. Hospital groups
include:
• Location: Large Urban/Other Urban/
Rural.
• Participation date.
• Ownership control.
• Census region.
• Bed size.
To estimate the impacts of the
proposed payment rates and payment
rate policy changes among the various
categories of existing providers, we used
LTCH cases from the FY 2005 MedPAR
file to estimate payments for RY 2007
and to estimate proposed payments for
RY 2008 for 369 LTCHs. While currently
there are just under 400 LTCHs, the
most recent growth is predominantly in
for-profit LTCHs that provide
respiratory and ventilator-dependent
patient care. We believe that the
discharges from the FY 2005 MedPAR
data for the 369 LTCHs in our database,
which includes 246 proprietary LTCHs,
provide sufficient representation in the
LTC–DRGs containing discharges for
patients who received LTCH care for the
most commonly treated LTCH patients’
diagnoses.
As discussed in greater detail in
section VII. of this proposed rule, under
the 5-year transition set forth at
§ 412.533(a), a LTCH’s total payment
under the LTCH PPS was based on an
increasing percentage of the Federal rate
with a corresponding decrease in the
percentage of its LTCH PPS payment
based on reasonable cost principles.
However, effective for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2006, total LTCH PPS payments are
based entirely on the Federal rate.
Therefore, even though some LTCH’s
will have a cost reporting period for the
4th year of the transition period that
will be concluding in the first 3 months
of the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year, the
portion of those LTCHs’ LTCH PPS
payments that will be based on
reasonable cost principles during RY
2008 is negligible relative to LTCH PPS
payments based on the Federal rate.
This is because, as discussed in greater
detail in section IV.D.5. of this proposed
rule, based on the most recent available
data, we are projecting that the vast
majority of LTCHs have already made
the election to be paid based on 100
percent of the Federal rate rather than
the transition blend prior to the start of
their FY 2006 cost reporting period (that
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:26 Jan 31, 2007
Jkt 211001
is, the 4th year of the transition period
as set forth at § 412.533(a)), and even for
those few remaining LTCHs paid under
the transition blend methodology set
forth at § 412.533(a), their total LTCH
PPS payments are now based mostly on
the Federal rate (since the transition
blend percentages for cost reporting
periods beginning during FY 2006 are
80 percent of the Federal rate and 20
percent of the LTCH PPS payment based
on reasonable cost principles).
Therefore, in this proposed rule, we are
no longer providing a separate impact
table reflecting the applicable transition
blend percentages, which required cost
data to determine estimated LTCH PPS
payments based on reasonable cost
principles. Accordingly, the impact
analyses of the proposed payment rates
and payment rate policy changes
presented below reflects estimated
LTCH PPS payments to all LTCHs based
solely on the Federal rate.
These impacts reflect the estimated
‘‘losses’’ or ‘‘gains’’ among the various
classifications of LTCHs for the 2007
LTCH PPS rate year (July 1, 2006
through June 30, 2007) compared to the
2008 LTCH PPS rate year (July 1, 2007
through June 30, 2008) based on the
proposed payment rates and payment
rate policy changes presented in this
proposed rule. Prospective payments for
the 2007 LTCH rate year were based on
the standard Federal rate of $38,086.04,
the outlier fixed-loss amount of $14,887,
and the LTCHs’ estimated case-mix
based on FY 2005 LTCH claims data.
Estimated proposed prospective
payments for the 2008 LTCH PPS rate
year would be based on the proposed
standard Federal rate of $38,356.45
(based on the proposed 0.71 percent
update discussed in section IV.C.3. of
the preamble to this proposed rule), the
proposed outlier fixed-loss amount of
$18,774, and the same FY 2005 LTCH
claims data.
3. Calculation of Prospective Payments
To estimate per discharge payments
under the LTCH PPS, we simulated
payments on a case-by-case basis by
applying the established (for RY 2007)
and proposed (for RY 2008) adjustments
for area wage differences (as described
in section IV.D.1. of the preamble of this
proposed rule), and the COLA for
Alaska and Hawaii (as described in
section IV.D.2. of the preamble of this
proposed rule). As discussed above, we
also accounted for the existing payment
policy for SSOs in RY 2007 and the
approach for the SSO policy in RY 2008
discussed in section V.A.2. of this
proposed rule). Additional payments
would also be made for HCOs (as
described in section IV.D.3. of this
PO 00000
Frm 00063
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
4837
proposed rule). As noted in section
IV.D.4. of this proposed rule, we are not
proposing to make adjustments for rural
location, geographic reclassification,
indirect medical education costs, or a
DSH payment for the treatment of lowincome patients because sufficient new
data have not been generated that would
enable us to conduct a comprehensive
reevaluation of these payment
adjustments.
We adjusted for area wage differences
for estimated 2007 LTCH PPS rate year
payments by computing a weighted
average of a LTCH’s applicable wage
index during the period from July 1,
2006 through June 30, 2007 because
some providers may experience a
change in the wage index phase-in
percentage during that period. For cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2005, and before September
30, 2006 (FY 2006), the labor portion of
the Federal rate is adjusted by four-fifths
of the applicable LTCH PPS wage index.
For cost reporting periods beginning on
or after October 1, 2006, and before
September 30, 2007 (FY 2007), the labor
portion of the Federal rate is adjusted by
five-fifths (that is, the full amount) of
the applicable LTCH PPS wage index.
Therefore, during RY 2007, a provider
with a cost reporting period that began
October 1, 2006, would have 3 months
(July 2006 through September 2006) of
payments under the four-fifths wage
index value and 9 months (October 2006
through June 2007) of payment under
the (full) five-fifths wage index value.
For this provider, we computed a
blended wage index of 25 percent (3
months/12 months) of the four-fifths
wage index value and 75 percent (9
months/12 months) of the (full) fivefifths wage index value. The applicable
LTCH PPS wage index values for the
2007 LTCH PPS rate year are shown in
Tables 1 and 2 of the Addendum to the
RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR
27906 through 27930). We adjusted for
area wage differences for estimated 2007
LTCH PPS rate year payments using the
current LTCH PPS labor-related share of
75.665 percent (71 FR 27830).
Similarly, we adjusted for area wage
differences for estimated proposed 2008
LTCH PPS rate year payments by
computing a weighted average of a
LTCH’s applicable wage index during
the period from July 1, 2007, through
June 30, 2008, because, although under
the established phase-in of the wage
index adjustment for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2006, the applicable LTCH wage index
value is the full (five-fifths) LTCH PPS
wage index value, during RY 2008 some
providers will still experience a change
in the wage index phase-in percentage
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during that period. For example, during
RY 2008, a provider with a FY 2006 cost
reporting period that began September
1, 2006, (and will end on August 31,
2007,) would have 2 months (July 2007
and August 2007) of payments under
the proposed four-fifths wage index
value and 10 months (September 2007
through June 2007) of payment under
the proposed (full) five-fifths wage
index value. For this provider, we
computed a blended wage index of 16.7
percent (2 months/12 months) of the
proposed four-fifths wage index value
and 83.3 percent (10 months/12 months)
of the proposed (full) five-fifths wage
index value. The proposed applicable
LTCH PPS wage index values for the
2008 LTCH PPS rate year are shown in
Tables 1 and 2 of Addendum A to this
proposed rule. We adjusted for area
wage differences for estimated 2008
LTCH PPS rate year payments using the
proposed LTCH PPS labor-related share
of 75.511 percent (see section IV.D.1.c.
of this proposed rule).
As noted previously in this proposed
rule, under the 5-year transition set
forth at § 412.533(a), a LTCH’s total
payment under the LTCH PPS was
based on an increasing percentage of the
Federal rate with a corresponding
decrease in the percentage of the LTCH
PPS payment that is based on
reasonable cost principles. However,
effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006,
total LTCH PPS payments are based
solely on the Federal rate. Therefore,
even though some LTCH’s will have a
cost reporting period for the 4th year of
the transition period that will be
concluding in the first 3 months of the
2008 LTCH PPS rate year, the portion of
those LTCH PPS payments that will be
based on reasonable cost principles
during RY 2008 is negligible relative to
LTCH PPS payments based on the
Federal rate, and therefore, we are no
longer estimating transition payments as
we have done in past impact analyses
(for example, 71 FR 27892).
Furthermore, in estimating both RY
2007 and proposed RY 2008 LTCH PPS
payments, we did not apply a transition
period BN offset to payments to account
for the effect of the 5-year transition
methodology and election of payment
based on 100 percent of the Federal rate
on Medicare program payments
(established in the August 30, 2002 final
rule (67 FR 56034)). This is because, for
RY 2007, we established a 0.0 percent
BN offset (a BN factor of 1.0) to
payments to account for the effect of the
5-year transition methodology and
election of payment based on 100
percent of the Federal rate on Medicare
program payments in RY 2007 (71 FR
27841). As noted above and discussed
in greater detail in section IV.D.5. of this
proposed rule, we are not proposing a
transition period BN offset to all LTCH
PPS payments in RY 2008 to account for
the estimated cost of the transition
period methodology (including the
option to elect payment based on 100
percent of the Federal rate) in RY 2008
since we are projecting that such costs
would be negligible.
As noted in Table 9, we show the
impact as if all LTCHs would be paid
100 percent of the Federal rate since,
based on the most recent available data
and the transition blend percentages set
forth at § 412.533(a), nearly all LTCH
PPS payments would be based on 100
percent of the applicable LTCH PPS
standard Federal rate during the
majority of RYs 2007 and 2008. Table 9
illustrates the estimated aggregate
impact of the LTCH PPS among various
classifications of LTCHs.
• The first column, LTCH
Classification, identifies the type of
LTCH.
• The second column lists the
number of LTCHs of each classification
type.
• The third column identifies the
number of LTCH cases.
• The fourth column shows the
estimated payment per discharge for the
2007 LTCH PPS rate year.
• The fifth column shows the
estimated proposed payment per
discharge for the 2008 LTCH PPS rate
year.
• The sixth column shows the
estimated percentage change in
estimated payments per discharge from
the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year to the 2008
LTCH PPS rate year for proposed
changes to the Federal rate.
• The seventh column shows the
percentage change in estimated
payments per discharge from the 2007
LTCH PPS rate year to the 2008 LTCH
PPS rate year for proposed changes to
the area wage adjustment at § 412.525(c)
(as discussed in section IV.D.1. of the
preamble of this proposed rule).
• The eighth column shows the
percent change in estimated payments
per discharge from the 2007 LTCH PPS
rate year to the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year
for the approach discussed for
addressing our concerns with the
existing SSO policy at § 412.529 (as
discussed in section V.A.2. of the
preamble of this proposed rule).
• The ninth column shows the
estimated percentage change in
estimated payments per discharge from
the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year to the 2008
LTCH PPS rate year for all proposed
changes (and includes the estimated
impact of the approach for the SSO
policy discussed in section V.A.2. of the
preamble of this proposed rule).
TABLE 9.—PROJECTED IMPACT OF PROPOSED PAYMENT RATE AND PAYMENT RATE POLICY CHANGES TO LTCH PPS
PAYMENTS FOR RY 2008*
[Estimated 2007 LTCH PPS rate year payments compared to estimated proposed 2008 LTCH PPS rate year payments*]
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
ALL PROVIDERS ..............................................................
BY LOCATION:
RURAL .......................................................................
URBAN .......................................................................
LARGE ................................................................
OTHER ...............................................................
17:26 Jan 31, 2007
Jkt 211001
Percent
decrease 3
in estimated payments per
discharge
from RY
2007 to
RY 2008
for proposed
changes to
the area
wage adjustment 5
Percent
decrease 3
in estimated payments per
discharge
from RY
2007 to
RY 2008
for approach discussed for
the SSO
policy 6*
Percent
decrease 3
in estimated payments per
discharge
from RY
2007 to
RY 2008
for all proposed
changes 7*
Number of
LTCHs
LTCH Classification
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Average
estimated
proposed
RY 2008
LTCH PPS
rate year
payment
per case 2
Percent increase in
estimated
payments
per discharge
from RY
2007 to
(proposed)
RY 2008
for proposed
changes to
the Federal rate 4
PO 00000
Number of
LTCH PPS
cases
Average
estimated
RY 2007
LTCH PPS
rate year
payment
per case 1
369
129,584
$31,486
$31,278
0.6
0.5
0.9
0.7
25
344
181
163
5,044
124,540
77,511
47,029
25,100
31,744
32,819
29,974
24,447
31,555
32,768
29,555
0.7
0.6
0.6
0.6
2.2
0.5
0.1
1.1
1.0
0.9
0.9
1.0
2.6
0.6
0.2
1.4
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TABLE 9.—PROJECTED IMPACT OF PROPOSED PAYMENT RATE AND PAYMENT RATE POLICY CHANGES TO LTCH PPS
PAYMENTS FOR RY 2008*—Continued
[Estimated 2007 LTCH PPS rate year payments compared to estimated proposed 2008 LTCH PPS rate year payments*]
Average
estimated
proposed
RY 2008
LTCH PPS
rate year
payment
per case 2
Percent increase in
estimated
payments
per discharge
from RY
2007 to
(proposed)
RY 2008
for proposed
changes to
the Federal rate 4
Percent
decrease 3
in estimated payments per
discharge
from RY
2007 to
RY 2008
for proposed
changes to
the area
wage adjustment 5
Percent
decrease 3
in estimated payments per
discharge
from RY
2007 to
RY 2008
for approach discussed for
the SSO
policy 6*
Percent
decrease 3
in estimated payments per
discharge
from RY
2007 to
RY 2008
for all proposed
changes 7*
Number of
LTCHs
LTCH Classification
BY PARTICIPATION DATE:
BEFORE OCT. 1983 .................................................
OCT. 1983–SEPT. 1993 ............................................
OCT. 1993–SEPT. 2002 ............................................
AFTER OCT. 2002 ....................................................
UNKNOWN ................................................................
BY OWNERSHIP CONTROL:
VOLUNTARY .............................................................
PROPRIETARY .........................................................
GOVERNMENT .........................................................
UNKNOWN ................................................................
BY CENSUS REGION:
NEW ENGLAND ........................................................
MIDDLE ATLANTIC ...................................................
SOUTH ATLANTIC ....................................................
EAST NORTH CENTRAL ..........................................
EAST SOUTH CENTRAL ..........................................
WEST NORTH CENTRAL .........................................
WEST SOUTH CENTRAL .........................................
MOUNTAIN ................................................................
PACIFIC .....................................................................
BY BED SIZE:
BEDS: 0–24 ...............................................................
BEDS: 25–49 .............................................................
BEDS: 50–74 .............................................................
BEDS: 75–124 ...........................................................
BEDS: 125–199 .........................................................
BEDS: 200 + ..............................................................
UNKNOWN ................................................................
Number of
LTCH PPS
cases
Average
estimated
RY 2007
LTCH PPS
rate year
payment
per case 1
15
44
207
101
2
7,966
22,661
75,380
23,163
414
26,999
33,171
31,382
31,709
31,888
27,157
33,050
31,169
31,303
32,068
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
¥0.1
0.3
0.6
1.0
¥0.4
0.4
1.0
0.9
1.0
0.8
¥0.6
0.4
0.7
1.3
¥0.6
78
246
13
32
26,725
96,236
3,087
3,536
30,329
31,715
32,116
33,437
30,069
31,532
31,763
33,072
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.5
0.9
0.8
1.0
0.9
0.9
1.0
0.9
0.6
1.1
1.1
14
28
43
66
28
18
134
22
16
9,858
7,697
13,684
18,555
7,525
5,173
52,681
6,378
8,033
26,775
32,405
35,178
35,545
31,242
34,383
27,848
33,642
41,224
26,984
32,063
34,834
35,508
30,611
34,057
27,454
33,894
41,801
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
¥0.4
1.0
0.9
0.1
1.6
0.7
1.2
¥1.0
¥1.3
0.5
0.9
1.0
0.9
1.2
1.0
0.9
1.1
0.8
¥0.8
1.1
1.0
0.1
2.0
0.9
1.4
¥0.7
¥1.4
25
174
57
45
23
13
32
4,120
43,374
22,539
21,862
21,724
12,429
3,536
29,754
31,469
31,860
32,641
30,395
30,756
33,437
29,266
31,133
31,664
32,473
30,286
30,869
33,072
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.6
1.1
0.9
0.4
0.5
0.3
¥0.2
0.8
1.1
0.9
1.0
0.9
0.9
0.7
1.0
1.6
1.1
0.6
0.5
0.4
¥0.4
1.1
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
* As discussed above in section XVI.A.1. of this regulatory impact analysis, we estimate that the approach discussed for addressing our concerns with the existing
SSO policy presented in section V.A.2. of the preamble of this proposed rule would result in the decrease in estimated payments in the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year
(approximately an additional $37 million, on average, for all LTCHs as shown in column 8). However, we note that in absence of including such an approach, we estimate that in place of the 0.7 percent decrease in estimated payments per discharge, on average, for all LTCHs (shown in column 9), there would be 0.3 percent increase in estimated payments per discharge, on average, for all LTCHs from the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year to the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year for all proposed payment rate and policy changes presented in the preamble of this proposed rule. We also note that, as discussed above in section XVI.B.4. of this regulatory impact
analysis, the 2.2 percent decrease in estimated aggregate LTCH PPS payments due to the proposed expansion of the special payment provision for co-located
LTCHs to certain situations not presently covered by existing § 412.534 for subclause (I) LTCHs (as discussed in section V.B. of this proposed rule) is not reflected in
this impact table. However, the impact of the proposed expansion of the ‘‘25 percent’’ policy is discussed in greater detail below in section XVI.C.1. of this regulatory
impact analysis.
1 Estimated average estimated payment per case for the 12-month period of July 1, 2006 through June 30, 2007.
2 Estimated proposed average estimated payment per case for the 12-month period of July 1, 2007 through June 30, 2008.
3 As the percent change shown in this column represents a percent decrease in estimated payments per discharge, a negative (that is, minus) sign indicates a percent increase in estimated payments per discharge and the absence of a sign (that is, a positive sign) indicates a percent decrease in estimated payments per discharge.
4 Percent change in estimated payments per discharge from the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year to the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year for the proposed changes to the Federal rate. (Note, as discussed in section XVI.B.4. of this regulatory impact analysis, because about 35 percent of all LTCH cases are projected to receive a payment
under the existing SSO policy that is based either on the estimated cost of the case or the ‘‘IPPS comparable amount’’ (rather than the proposed Federal rate), the
percent change in estimated payments per discharge due to the proposed changes to the Federal rate for most of the categories of LTCHs, 0.6 percent, is slightly
less than the proposed update to the Federal rate of 0.71 percent.)
5 Percent change in estimated payments per discharge from the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year to the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year for proposed changes to the area
wage adjustment policy at § 412.525(c) (as discussed in section V.D.1. of the preamble of this proposed rule).
6 Percent change in estimated payments per discharge from the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year to the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year for the approach discussed to address
our concerns with the existing SSO policy at § 412.529 (presented in section V.A.1.a. of the preamble of this proposed rule).
7 Percent change in estimated payments per discharge from the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year (as established in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27798
through 27939)) to the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year (as discussed in the preamble of this proposed rule, including the approach to the SSO policy discussed in section
V.A.2. of this proposed rule) for all of the payment rate and policy provisions presented in the preamble of this proposed rule. Note, this column, which shows the percent change in estimated payments per discharge for all proposed changes, may not exactly equal the sum of the percent changes in estimated payments per discharge for proposed changes to the Federal rate (column 7), for proposed area wage adjustment changes (column 8) and the approach discussed for the SSO policy
(column 9) due to the effect of estimated changes in aggregate HCO payments, as well as other interactive effects that cannot be isolated.
4. Results
Based on the most recent available
data (as described previously for 369
LTCHs), we have prepared the following
summary of the impact (as shown in
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:26 Jan 31, 2007
Jkt 211001
Table 9) of the proposed LTCH PPS
payment rate and payment rate policy
changes presented in this proposed rule
(including the approach to the SSO
policy discussed in section V.A.2. of
this proposed rule). (As noted above, the
PO 00000
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
impact of other policy changes
presented in this proposed rule, which
do not directly affect the LTCH PPS per
discharge payment rate, such as the
proposed expansion of the existing
payment provision for co-located LTCHs
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
to certain situations not presently
covered by existing § 412.534 for
subclause (I) LTCHs, are not included as
part of the impact analysis shown in
Table 9. However, the impact of those
other proposed policies are discussed
separately in section XVI.C. of this
regulatory impact analysis.)
The impact analysis in Table 9 shows
that estimated payments per discharge
are expected to decrease approximately
0.7 percent, on average, for all LTCHs
from the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year as
compared to the 2008 LTCH PPS rate
year as a result of the proposed payment
rate and policy changes presented in
this proposed rule. We note that
although we are proposing a 0.71
percent increase to the Federal rate for
RY 2008, the impact analysis shown in
Table 9 (column 6), only shows a 0.6
percent increase in estimated payments
per discharge from RY 2007 to RY 2008,
for most categories of LTCHs, as a result
of the proposed changes to the Federal
rate. The reason that this column shows
an estimated 0.6 percent increase rather
than an estimated 0.7 percent increase
(based on the proposed 0.71 percent
update to the Federal rate) is because
about 35 percent of all LTCH cases are
projected to receive a payment under
the existing SSO policy. Under either
the existing SSO policy or the approach
for the SSO policy discussed in section
V.A.2. of this proposed rule, the
majority of SSO cases would receive an
adjusted LTCH PPS payment in RY 2008
that would be based either on the
estimated cost of the case or the ‘‘IPPS
comparable amount’’ (that is, either
under the ‘‘blend amount’’ at existing
§ 412.529(c)(2)(iv) or the amount
discussed in our approach to address
our concerns with the existing SSO
policy) rather than a LTCH PPS
payment based on the proposed Federal
rate. Therefore, because over 30 percent
of all LTCH PPS cases would receive a
payment that is not based on the
proposed Federal rate, the percent
change in estimated payments per
discharge due to the proposed changes
to the Federal rate for most categories of
LTCHs shown in Table 9 is projected to
be slightly less (0.6 percent) than the
proposed 0.71 percent update to the
Federal rate. Although, we are
proposing a 0.71 percent increase to the
Federal rate for RY 2008, the projected
percent decrease in estimated payments
per discharge from the 2007 LTCH PPS
rate year to the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year
shown in Table 9 is due the proposed
changes to the area wage adjustment
(discussed in section IV.D.1. of this
proposed rule), in conjunction with the
approach to the SSO policy (discussed
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in section V.A.2. of this proposed rule)
and the proposed increase to the HCO
fixed-loss amount (as discussed in
section IV.D.3.c. of this proposed rule).
Specifically, as we discussed in
greater detail in section IV.D.1. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing to update the wage index
values for RY 2008 in accordance with
the progression of the 5-year phase-in of
the wage index adjustment. We are also
proposing to decrease the labor-related
share from 75.665 percent to 75.511
percent under the LTCH PPS beginning
in RY 2008. Because this proposed
change to the labor-related share would
lower the portion of the Federal rate that
is adjusted by the wage index to account
for differences in local cost variation (in
accordance with § 412.525(c)), LTCHs
located in areas with a proposed RY
2008 wage index value that is greater
than 1.0 would experience a slight
decrease in estimated payments per
discharge as a result of the proposed
decrease in the labor-related share.
Conversely, LTCHs located in areas with
a proposed RY 2008 wage index value
that is less than 1.0 are expected to
experience an increase in estimated
payments per discharge as a result of the
proposed decrease in the labor-related
share since a smaller portion of the
Federal rate would be adjusted by the
proposed wage index to account for
differences in local cost variation (in
accordance with § 412.525(c)). However,
the effect of the progression of the 5year phase-in of the wage index
adjustment, which results in a relatively
more significant decrease in estimated
payments for LTCHs located in areas
with a proposed RY 2008 wage index
value that is less than 1.0, would likely
offset the effect on payments due to the
decrease in the labor-related share.
Consequently, the proposed changes to
the wage index adjustment presented in
this proposed rule for LTCHs located in
areas with a proposed RY 2008 wage
index value that is less than 1.0 are
expected to also contribute to the
projected decrease in estimated
payments per discharge from RY 2007
as compared to RY 2008.
In addition, under the approach
discussed to address our concerns with
the existing SSO policy (discussed in
section V.A.2. of this proposed rule),
those LTCH SSO cases with a covered
LOS that is less than or equal to the
IPPS ALOS plus one standard deviation
for the same DRG would receive a lower
adjusted LTCH PPS payment than under
the current SSO policy. We believe that
the LTCH cases meeting the criteria
stated above appear to be similar to the
same type of cases treated in an acute
care hospital and paid for under the
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IPPS since one standard deviation is a
statistical test which measures the
certainty of the average of a set of
measurements for the purpose of this
data analysis. Accordingly, we believe
the approach discussed for the SSO
policy could be appropriate, given that
many of these SSO cases that are
‘‘similar to IPPS cases’’ most likely do
not receive a full course of a LTCH-level
of treatment in such a short period of
time since, in general, LTCHs are
intended to treat longer stay patients.
Furthermore, since by far the majority of
SSO cases were admitted to the LTCH
directly from an acute-care hospital,
they are likely to still be in need of
acute-level care at the time of admission
to the LTCH. We believe that this may
indicate that the LTCH admission is a
premature and inappropriate discharge
from the acute-care hospital and an
inappropriate admission to the LTCH.
We believe that the approach for the
SSO policy could result in appropriate
payments for short-stay cases treated at
LTCHs as discussed in greater detail in
section V.A.2. of this proposed rule.
Furthermore, as we discussed in
greater detail in section IV.D.3.c. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, given
the regulatory requirement at
§ 412.525(a) that estimated outlier
payments equal 8 percent of estimated
total LTCH PPS payments, this decrease
in estimated LTCH PPS payments for
RY 2008 resulting primarily from the
proposed changes to the SSO policy and
the proposed changes to the area wage
adjustment would require a proposed
increase in the HCO fixed-loss amount
to maintain estimated outlier payments
at 8 percent of the estimated total LTCH
PPS payments (resulting from the
proposed payment rate and policy
changes presented in this proposed
rule). Thus, the proposed increase in the
outlier fixed-loss amount also
contributes to the projected decrease in
estimated payments per discharge from
the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year to the 2008
LTCH PPS rate year. For example, many
LTCHs are expected to receive a
decrease in HCO payments. As a result
of the proposed increase to the fixedloss amount from the 2007 LTCH PPS
rate year ($14,887) to the 2008 LTCH
PPS rate year ($18,774), fewer cases
would qualify as outlier cases (that is,
the estimated cost of the case exceeds
the outlier threshold). Since many
LTCHs are expected to receive fewer
outlier payments, total estimated
payments per discharge are expected to
decrease slightly from RY 2007 to RY
2008.
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a. Location
Based on the most recent available
data, the majority of LTCHs are in urban
areas. Approximately 7 percent of the
LTCHs are identified as being located in
a rural area, and approximately 4
percent of all LTCH cases are treated in
these rural hospitals. The impact
analysis presented in Table 9 shows that
the percent decrease in estimated
payments per discharge for the 2007
LTCH PPS rate year compared to the
2008 LTCH PPS rate year for rural
LTCHs would be 2.6 percent for all
proposed changes, and would be 0.6
percent for urban LTCHs for all
proposed changes.
The primary reasons that the
projected percent decrease in estimated
payments to rural LTCHs is greater than
that for urban LTCHs is that rural
LTCHs are expected to experience a
larger decrease in estimated payments
due to the approach discussed for the
SSO policy because, based on the most
recent available data, many rural LTCHs
treat a larger than average percentage of
SSO cases (in fact, for a few rural
LTCHs, SSO cases represent over half of
their total cases based on FY 2005 data).
Furthermore, rural LTCHs are projected
to experience a higher than average
decrease in estimated payments per
discharge as a result of the proposed
changes to the area wage adjustment
because the proposed wage index for all
rural LTCHs is less than 1.0, as
explained above in this section.
Large urban LTCHs are projected to
experience a 0.2 percent decrease in
estimated payments per discharge from
the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year compared
to the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year, while
other urban LTCHs are projected to
experience a 1.4 percent decrease in
estimated payments per discharge from
the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year compared
to the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year, as
shown in Table 9. Other urban LTCHs
are projected to experience a higher
than average decrease in estimated
payments per discharge primarily
because of the proposed changes to the
area wage adjustment. This is because
the majority of other urban LTCHs (over
80 percent) are located in urban areas
that have a proposed wage index value
of less than 1.0, and therefore, would
experience a higher than average
decrease in estimated payments per
discharge as a result of the proposed
changes to the wage index adjustment,
as explained above. In addition, other
urban LTCHs have a slightly higher
percentage of SSO cases and therefore,
are projected to experience a slightly
higher than average decrease in
estimated payments per discharge as a
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result of the approach discussed for the
SSO policy (as also discussed in greater
detail above in this section).
Large urban LTCHs are projected to
experience a lower than average
decrease in estimated payments per
discharge for all changes primarily
because of the proposed changes to the
area wage adjustment because the
majority of large urban LTCHs are
located in urban areas that have a
proposed wage index value of greater
than 1.0, as explained above in this
section.
b. Participation Date
LTCHs are grouped by participation
date into four categories: (1) Before
October 1983; (2) between October 1983
and September 1993; (3) between
October 1993 and September 2002; and
(4) after October 2002. Based on the
most recent available data, the majority
(approximately 56 percent) of the LTCH
cases are in hospitals that began
participating between October 1993 and
September 2002, and are projected to
experience a 0.7 percent decrease in
estimated payments per discharge from
the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year compared
to the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year, as
shown in Table 9.
Approximately 12 percent of LTCH
PPS cases are in LTCHs that began
participating in Medicare between
October 1983 and September 1993, and
those LTCHs are projected to experience
a 0.4 percent decrease in estimated
payments per discharge from the 2007
LTCH PPS rate year compared to the
2008 LTCH PPS rate year, as shown in
Table 9. We are projecting that LTCHs
that began participating in Medicare
between October 1983 and September
1993 would experience a lower than
average decrease in estimated payments
for RY 2008 primarily because we are
projecting that these LTCHs are
expected to experience a lower than
average decrease (0.3 percent) in
estimated payments per discharge due
to the proposed changes to the area
wage adjustment. This is because many
of the LTCHs that began participating in
Medicare between October 1983 and
September 1993 are located in areas
where the proposed RY 2008 wage
index value would be greater than the
RY 2007 wage index value, and because
several of these LTCHs are located in
areas that have a proposed wage index
value of greater than 1.0, (as explained
above).
LTCHs that began participating before
October 1983 are projected to
experience a 0.6 percent increase in
estimated payments per discharge from
the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year compared
to the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year (see
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4841
Table 9). We are projecting that LTCHs
that began participating in Medicare
before October 1983 would experience
an increase in estimated payments for
RY 2008 as compared to RY 2007
primarily because we are projecting that
LTCHs in this participation date
category would experience a slight
increase in estimated payments in RY
2008 as compared to RY 2007 due to the
proposed changes to the area wage
adjustment. This is because many of the
LTCHs that began participating in
Medicare before October 1983 are
located in areas where the proposed RY
2008 wage index value would be greater
than the proposed RY 2007 wage index
value, and because several of these
LTCHs are located in areas that would
have a proposed RY 2008 wage index
value of greater than 1.0, (as discussed
in section XVI.B.4. of this regulatory
impact analysis). In addition, LTCHs
that began participating in Medicare
before October 1983 are expected to
experience a lower than average
decrease in estimated payments due to
the approach discussed for the SSO
policy (discussed in section V.A.2. of
this proposed rule). Specifically, based
on the FY 2005 LTCH claims data, the
majority of LTCHs in this participation
date category treat a smaller than
average percentage of SSO cases.
Approximately 27 percent of LTCHs
began participating in Medicare after
October 2002 (that is, the beginning of
the LTCH PPS, which was implemented
for cost reporting periods beginning on
or after October 1, 2002), and those
LTCHs are projected to experience a 1.3
percent decrease in estimated payments
per discharge from the 2007 LTCH PPS
rate year compared to the 2008 LTCH
PPS rate year (see Table 9). We are
projecting that LTCHs that began
participating in Medicare after October
2002 will experience a higher than
average decrease in estimated payments
for RY 2008 primarily because we are
projecting that these LTCHs would
experience a larger than average
decrease (1.0 percent) in estimated
payments per discharge due to the
proposed changes to the area wage
adjustment. This is because the majority
of the LTCHs that began participating in
Medicare after October 2002 are located
in areas where the proposed RY 2008
wage index value would be less than the
RY 2007 wage index value, and because
the majority (over 80 percent) of these
LTCHs are located in areas that would
have a proposed RY 2008 wage index
value of less than 1.0, (as discussed
above in this section).
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c. Ownership Control
Other than LTCHs whose ownership
control type is unknown, LTCHs are
grouped into three categories based on
ownership control type: Voluntary;
proprietary; and government. Based on
the most recent available data,
approximately 4 percent of LTCHs are
identified as government-owned and
operated. We expect that for these
government-owned and operated
LTCHs, estimated 2008 LTCH PPS rate
year payments per discharge would
decrease 1.1 percent in comparison to
the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year, as shown
in Table 9. We are projecting that
government-run LTCHs would
experience a higher than average
decrease in estimated payments in RY
2008 as compared to RY 2007 primarily
due to the effect of the proposed
changes to the area wage adjustment.
This is because all but 3 of the 13
government-run LTCHs in our database
are located in areas where the proposed
wage index value for RY 2008 is less
than 1.0, as explained above.
Similarly, we project that estimated
2008 LTCH PPS rate year payments per
discharge for voluntary LTCHs, which
account for approximately 21 percent of
LTCHs, would decrease 0.9 percent in
comparison to estimated 2007 LTCH
PPS rate year payments (see Table 9).
We are projecting that voluntary LTCHs
would experience a slightly higher than
average decrease in estimated payments
in RY 2008 as compared to RY 2007 due
to the proposed changes to the wage
index adjustment, as well as the
approach discussed for the SSO policy.
Specifically, we expect voluntary
LTCHs would experience a slightly
higher than average decrease in
estimated payments in RY 2008 as
compared to RY 2007 due to the
approach discussed for the SSO policy
since over half (48 LTCHs) of the
voluntary LTCHs have a higher than
average percentage of SSO cases. We
expect voluntary LTCHs would
experience a slightly higher than
average decrease in estimated payments
in RY 2008 as compared to RY 2007 due
to the proposed changes to the wage
index adjustment since over threequarters (61 LTCHs) of the voluntary
LTCHs are located in areas where the
proposed wage index value is less than
1.0 (as discussed above).
The majority (approximately 67
percent) of LTCHs are identified as
proprietary. We project that 2008 LTCH
PPS rate year estimated payments per
discharge for these proprietary LTCHs
would decrease 0.6 percent in
comparison to the 2007 LTCH PPS rate
year (see Table 9).
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d. Census Region
Estimated payments per discharge for
the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year are
projected to decrease for LTCHs located
in most regions (with the exception of
New England, Mountain, and Pacific
regions) in comparison to the 2007
LTCH PPS rate year. The percent
decrease in estimated payments per
discharge from the 2007 LTCH PPS rate
year to the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year for
most regions is largely attributable to
the approach discussed for the SSO
policy, the proposed changes in the area
wage adjustment, and the increase in
the HCO fixed-loss amount (as
explained above).
Of the 9 census regions, we project
that the decrease in proposed 2008
LTCH PPS rate year estimated payments
per discharge in comparison to the 2007
LTCH PPS rate year would have the
largest impact on LTCHs in the East
South Central and West South Central
regions (2.0 percent and 0.5 percent,
respectively; see Table 9). LTCHs
located in both the East South Central
and West South Central regions are
expected to experience a higher than
average decrease in estimated payments
due to the proposed changes in the area
wage adjustment (1.6 percent for the
East South Central region, and 1.2
percent for the West South Central
region, as shown in Table 9). This is
because nearly all LTCHs located in the
East South Central region and the West
South Central regions are located in
areas with a wage index value that is
less than 1.0 (as described above). In
addition, LTCHs are also expected to
experience a higher than average
decrease in estimated payments per
discharge due to the approach discussed
for the SSO policy since many of the
LTCHs in these two regions have a
larger than average percentage of SSO
cases (based on FY 2005 LTCH claims
data).
We project that proposed 2008 LTCH
PPS rate year estimated payments per
discharge would increase for LTCHs in
the New England, Mountain and Pacific
region in comparison to the 2007 LTCH
PPS rate year (0.8 percent, 0.7 percent
and 1.4 percent, respectively; see Table
9). We estimate that for LTCHs located
in these three regions, the projected
increases in estimated payments per
discharge for the 2008 LTCH PPS rate
year compared to the 2007 LTCH PPS
rate year are largely a result of the
proposed changes to the area wage
adjustment. Specifically, we are
projecting an increase in estimated
LTCH PPS payments due to the changes
to the area wage adjustment because all
LTCHs in the New England and Pacific
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regions and the majority (over 68
percent) of LTCHs in the Mountain
region are located in areas where the
proposed wage index value for RY 2008
is greater than 1.0, and because many of
the LTCHs in these three regions are
located in areas where the proposed RY
2008 wage index value is greater than
the RY 2007 wage index value (as
described above).
e. Bed Size
LTCHs were grouped into seven
categories based on bed size: 0–24 beds;
25–49 beds; 50–74 beds; 75–124 beds;
125–199 beds; greater than 200 beds;
and unknown bed size.
We are projecting a decrease in
estimated 2008 LTCH PPS rate year
payments per discharge in comparison
to the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year for all
bed size categories except for the
category with greater than 200 beds.
Most LTCHs are in bed size categories
where estimated 2008 LTCH PPS rate
year payments per discharge are
projected to decrease between 1.1
percent and 1.6 percent in comparison
to the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year (that is,
LTCHs with less than 49 beds). As noted
above, the projected percent increase in
estimated payments per discharge from
the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year to the 2008
LTCH PPS rate year is largely
attributable to the approach discussed
for the SSO policy, the proposed
changes in the area wage adjustment,
and the proposed increase in the outlier
fixed-loss amount (as explained above).
Estimated payments per discharge for
the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year for LTCHs
with 0–24 beds are projected to decrease
the most in comparison to the 2007
LTCH PPS rate year (1.6 percent; see
Table 9), followed by LTCHs with 25–
49 beds (1.1 percent; see Table 9). This
higher than average decrease in
estimated payments per discharge for
LTCHs with less than 49 beds (that is,
LTCHs in the 0–24 bed size category
and LTCHs in the 25–49 bed size
category) is largely due to the proposed
changes to the area wage adjustment
and the approach discussed for the SSO
policy. Specifically, the majority of
LTCHs with 49 beds or less are located
in areas where the proposed RY 2008
wage index value is less than the RY
2007 wage index value. In addition, the
majority (over 80 percent) of LTCHs
with 49 beds or less are located in areas
where the proposed RY 2008 wage
index is less than 1.0. Furthermore,
many of the LTCHs with less than 25
beds have a larger than average
percentage of SSO cases, and therefore,
are expected to experience a larger than
average decrease in estimated payments
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per discharge due to the approach
discussed for the SSO policy.
We project that LTCHs with greater
than 200 beds would have a slight
increase in estimated 2008 LTCH PPS
rate year payments per discharge in
comparison to the 2007 LTCH PPS rate
year (0.4 percent; see Table 9). This
slight increase in estimated payments
per discharge for LTCHs with greater
than 200 beds is primarily due to the
proposed changes to the area wage
adjustment. This is because the majority
of these LTCHs are located in areas
where the proposed RY 2008 wage
index value is greater than the RY 2007
wage index value, and because 12 of the
13 LTCHs with greater than 200 beds are
located in an area where the proposed
RY 2008 wage index value is greater
than 1.0 (as described above).
5. Effect on the Medicare Program
Based on actuarial projections, an
estimate of Medicare spending (total
estimated Medicare program payments)
for LTCH services over the next 5 years
based on current LTCH PPS policy (as
established in previous LTCH PPS final
rules) is shown in Table 4 in section
IV.D.5. of the preamble of this proposed
rule. As noted we project that the
provisions of this proposed rule
(including the approach discussed for
the SSO policy), would result in a
decrease in estimated aggregate LTCH
PPS payments in RY 2008 of about $117
million (or about 2.9 percent) for the
369 LTCHs in our database, as
explained in greater detail above in
section XVI.A. of this regulatory impact
analysis.
Consistent with the statutory
requirement for BN, as we discussed in
the August 30, 2002 final rule that
implemented the LTCH PPS, in
developing the LTCH PPS, we intended
estimated aggregate payments under the
LTCH PPS in FY 2003 be projected to
equal the estimated aggregate payments
that would have been made if the LTCH
PPS were not implemented. Our
methodology for estimating payments
for purposes of the BN calculations for
determining the FY 2003 standard
Federal rate uses the best available data
and necessarily reflects assumptions. As
we collect data from LTCHs, we will
monitor payments and evaluate the
ultimate accuracy of the assumptions
used in the BN calculations (that is,
inflation factors, intensity of services
provided, or behavioral response to the
implementation of the LTCH PPS). As
discussed in section IV.D.6. of this
proposed rule, we still do not have
sufficient new cost report and claims
data generated under the LTCH PPS to
enable us to conduct a comprehensive
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reevaluation of our FY 2003 BN
calculation at this time.
Section 123 of the BBRA and section
307 of the BIPA provide the Secretary
with extremely broad authority in
developing the LTCH PPS, including the
authority for appropriate adjustments.
In accordance with this broad authority,
we may discuss in a future proposed
rule a possible one-time prospective
adjustment to the LTCH PPS rates under
§ 412.523(d)(3) on or before July 1, 2008,
so that the effect of any significant
differences between actual payments
and estimated payments for the first
year of the LTCH PPS is not perpetuated
in the LTCH PPS payment rates for
future years.
6. Effect on Medicare Beneficiaries
Under the LTCH PPS, hospitals
receive payment based on the average
resources consumed by patients for each
diagnosis. We do not expect any
changes in the quality of care or access
to services for Medicare beneficiaries
under the LTCH PPS, but we expect that
paying prospectively for LTCH services
would enhance the efficiency of the
Medicare program.
C. Impact of Other Proposed Policy
Changes
1. Effects of Proposed Policy Expansion
of the Special Payment Provisions for
LTCH HwHs and LTCH Satellites to
Certain Situations Not Presently
Covered by Existing § 412.534 for
Subclause (I) LTCHs
In section V.B. of the preamble to this
proposed rule, we are proposing to
revise § 412.534 and add a § 412.536 to
expand the existing payment provision
for co-located LTCHs (HwHs and
satellites of LTCHs) to certain situations
not presently covered by existing
§ 412.534 for subclause (I) LTCHs.
Under the existing policy, which was
finalized for FY 2004, a payment
adjustment is applied to those
discharges from co-located LTCHs that
were admitted from host hospitals that
are in excess of a specified threshold
unless those patients had reached HCO
status at the referring hospital.
Following a 4-year phase-in of this
payment adjustment, for cost reporting
periods beginning during FY 2008, the
threshold is 25 percent or an applicable
percentage established under the
regulation that takes into account the
particular circumstances of rural, urban
single, or MSA dominant hospitals.
Specifically, at existing § 412.534, we
have provided that under the LTCH
PPS, Medicare will pay the lesser of an
amount otherwise payable under
subpart O of 42 CFR part 412 or a LTCH
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PPS payment amount equivalent to
what would have been paid under the
IPPS for those discharges that were not
HCOs from the referring hospital and
that exceed 25 percent (or the applicable
percentage) of the LTCH or LTCH
satellite’s Medicare discharges for any
cost reporting period (69 FR 49191
through 49213). We originally
established this payment adjustment
because our data suggested that in many
cases, hospitals were prematurely
shifting patients to co-located LTCHs,
and therefore, that we were generating
a Medicare payment to the first hospital
(generally an acute care hospital paid
under the IPPS) and also an additional
Medicare payment under the LTCH PPS
to an LTCH for what was, in essence,
one episode of care. Consequently, we
believed that in such circumstances colocated LTCHs were functioning as stepdown units of their host hospitals, a
configuration which is not permitted
under section 1886(d)(1)(B) of the Act,
which provides for the establishment of
rehabilitation and psychiatric units of
acute care hospitals but does not allow
LTCH units.
As detailed in section V.B. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, our data
suggests that many of our concerns
regarding patient shifting between colocated providers also pertain to those
LTCHs that are not co-located with
other hospitals. The RY 2005 LTCH
discharges from the MedPAR files
indicate that only about 12 percent of
the then 174 free-standing LTCHs
admitted 25 percent or less of their
Medicare discharges from an individual
acute care hospital; for about 37 percent
of those freestanding LTCHs, the
percentage was between 25 and 50
percent; for about 34 percent, it was
between 50 and 75 percent; and for
about 17 percent of those free-standing
LTCHs, it was between 75 and 100
percent of their Medicare discharges
were admitted from one acute care
hospital. In addition, the RY 2005 LTCH
discharges from the MedPAR files
indicate that for over 50 percent of all
LTCHs, at least 50 percent of their
discharges are for patients admitted
from an individual acute care hospital.
Based on this data, as discussed in
section V.B. of this proposed rule, we
have proposed to expand this described
payment adjustment at existing
§ 412.534 to apply equally to certain
situations not presently covered by
existing § 412.534 for subclause (I)
LTCHs beginning with cost reporting
periods starting in RY 2008. Under this
proposed policy, if any subclause (I)
LTCH’s or satellite facility’s discharges
that had been admitted from any non-
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co-located referring hospital (under
proposed § 412.536) or from a co-located
host (under the proposed revision to
§ 412.534) exceed 25 percent (or the
applicable percentage) for the LTCH’s
cost reporting period, an adjusted
payment would be made at the lesser of
the otherwise payable amount under the
LTCH PPS or the LTCH PPS payment
amount that would be equivalent to
what Medicare would otherwise pay
under the IPPS.
It is our intent that the proposed
revisions would discourage
inappropriate patient shifting to LTCHs
before the referring hospital delivers a
full episode of patient care. To the
extent that LTCHs change their
behaviors because this proposed policy
reduces the financial incentives for
certain situations not presently covered
by existing § 412.534 to admit patients
prematurely discharged from other
hospitals, we believe that there would
be savings to the Medicare program.
Specifically, as under the existing
policy for co-located LTCHs at existing
§ 412.534, the proposed payment
adjustment would not apply to either
those subclause (I) LTCH discharges
admitted from non-co-located referring
hospitals (under proposed § 412.536) or
those subclause (I)LTCH HwH or
satellite discharges admitted from colocated host hospitals (under the
proposed revision to § 412.534) that
have already reached HCO status.
At this time, based on the most recent
LTCH claims data available and
assuming no change in LTCH behavior
if this proposed policy were
implemented, we estimate that the
proposed extension of the 25 percent (or
applicable percentage) threshold at
existing § 412.534 to certain situations
not presently covered by existing
§ 412.534 subclause (I) LTCHs would
result in savings of $90 million to the
Medicare program (or 2.2 percent
decrease in estimated aggregate LTCH
PPS payments) in RY 2008. (As noted
above, this estimated $90 million
impact is in addition to the estimated
impact of the proposed payment rate
and policy changes discussed in section
XVI.B.4. of this regulatory impact
analysis. Thus, the projected 2.2 percent
decrease in estimated aggregate LTCH
PPS payments due to this proposed
policy is included in the 2.9 percent
decrease in estimated aggregate LTCH
PPS payments projected for all of the
provisions of this proposed rule, as
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explained in greater detail above in
section XVI.A. of this regulatory impact
analysis.) As discussed above in this
section, because we believe that this
proposed policy would discourage
inappropriate patient shifting to LTCHs
before the non-co-located referring
hospital or co-located host delivered a
full episode of patient care and because
we believe that this proposed policy
would result in appropriate Medicare
payments under the LTCH PPS, we do
not believe that there would be an
adverse financial impact on LTCHs, nor
would there be an adverse impact on
Medicare beneficiaries’ access to care.
2. Effects of Proposed Policy Change
Relating to Payment for Direct Graduate
Medical Education (GME)
In section XII. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, with respect to the rules
that hospitals must meet to count
residents training in nonhospital
settings for indirect medical education
(IME) and direct GME payment
purposes, we are proposing to revise
§ 413.75(b) to revise the definition of
‘‘all or substantially all of the costs for
the training program in the nonhospital
setting.’’ The revised definition would
be at least 90 percent of the total cost
of the residents’ salaries and fringe
benefits (including travel and lodging
where applicable) and the portion of the
cost of teaching physicians’ salaries
attributable to direct GME. This differs
from the current definition of ‘‘all or
substantially all of the costs for the
training program in the nonhospital
setting’’ which requires that, to count
FTE residents training in nonhospital
setting, hospitals must pay for 100
percent of the residents’ salaries and
fringe benefits, as well as the portion of
the actual cost of the teaching
physicians’ salary and fringe benefits
attributable to GME activities during the
time the residents are training in the
nonhospital site. In addition, under the
proposed definition of ‘‘all or
substantially all’’ of the costs, in
response to hospitals’ concerns
regarding the difficulty of acquiring
actual salary data from teaching
physicians to document the actual cost
of the teaching physicians’ time spent
on GME activities, we are proposing to
allow hospitals to use certain proxy
information, such as national average
physician compensation amounts, to
calculate the cost of the teaching
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physicians’ time spent in GME activities
in nonhospital sites.
We believe that the administrative
burden on hospitals related to
calculating and documenting that they
are paying for all or substantially all of
the costs of residency training in
nonhospital sites would be significantly
reduced, if not eliminated, under our
proposal. If the proposed changes are
not made, and we continue to require
that hospitals provide extensive
documentation that they are paying for
‘‘all’’ of the costs of the training program
in the nonhospital setting, we
understand that there is industry
concern that hospitals may significantly
reduce the amount of training occurring
in nonhospital settings, and may
transfer that residency training back to
hospitals. We further note that the
Congress intended to encourage the shift
of training to nonhospital settings and
we believe this proposed policy change
could facilitate further shifts to
nonhospital settings. Since we are not
proposing a change that would impact
the aggregate amount of residency
training that will occur, and Medicare
would continue to pay for residency
training occurring in hospitals, overall
Medicare payments for residency
training as a result of this proposal will
remain constant.
D. Accounting Statement
As discussed in section XVI.A.1. of
this regulatory impact analysis,
including the approach discussed for
addressing our concerns with the
existing SSO policy (presented in
section V.A.2. of the preamble of this
proposed rule) in the impact analysis of
this proposed rule results in a decrease
in estimated aggregate payments of $117
million (or about 2.9 percent) for the
369 LTCHs in our database. Therefore,
as required by OMB Circular A–4
(available at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars/
a004/a-4.pdf), in Table 10, we have
prepared an accounting statement
showing the classification of the
expenditures associated with the
provisions of this proposed rule. Table
10 provides our best estimate of the
proposed decrease in Medicare
payments under the LTCH PPS as a
result of the provisions presented in this
proposed rule based on the data for the
369 LTCHs in our database. All
expenditures are classified as transfers
to Medicare providers (that is, LTCHs).
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TABLE 10.—ACCOUNTING STATEMENT: CLASSIFICATION OF ESTIMATED EXPENDITURES, FROM THE 2007 LTCH PPS RATE
YEAR TO THE 2008 LTCH PPS RATE YEAR
[In millions]
Category
Transfers
Annualized Monetized Transfers ..............................................................
From Whom To Whom? ...........................................................................
Negative transfer—Estimated decrease in expenditures: $117.*
Federal Government To LTCH Medicare Providers.
* As noted above and as discussed in greater detail above in section XVI.A.1. of this regulatory impact analysis, we have included the approach discussed for addressing our concerns with the existing SSO policy in the impact analysis of this proposed rule, which is projected to result in a $117 million decrease in estimated aggregate LTCH PPS payments from RY 2007 to RY 2008. However, we note that in absence of including such an approach, we estimate that the estimated impact of the provisions of this proposed rule are projected to result in an $80 million
decrease in estimated aggregate LTCH PPS payments from RY 2007 to RY 2008.
In accordance with the provisions of
Executive Order 12866, this proposed
rule was reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget.
List of Subjects
42 CFR Part 412
Administrative practice and
procedure, Health facilities, Medicare,
Puerto Rico, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 413
Health facilities, Kidney diseases,
Medicare, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services would amend 42 CFR
chapter IV as set forth below:
PART 412—PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT
SYSTEMS FOR INPATIENT HOSPITAL
SERVICES
1. The authority citation for part 412
continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the
Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302 and
1395hh) and section 124 of Pub. L. 106–113
(113 Stat. 1501A–332).
Subpart B—Hospital Services Subject
to and Excluded From the Prospective
Payment Systems for Inpatient
Operating Costs and Inpatient CapitalRelated Costs
2. Section 412.22 is amended by
adding paragraphs (h)(3)(i) and (ii) to
read as follows:
§ 412.22 Excluded hospitals and hospital
units: General rules.
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*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) Any hospital structured as a
satellite facility on September 30, 1999,
and excluded from the prospective
payment systems on that date, to the
extent the hospital continues operating
under the same terms and conditions,
including the number of beds and
square footage considered, for the
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purposes of Medicare participation and
payment, to be part of the hospital, in
effect on September 30, 1999; or
(ii) Any hospital excluded from the
prospective payment systems under
§ 412.23(e)(2)(ii).
*
*
*
*
*
Subpart G—Special Treatment of
Certain Facilities Under the
Prospective Payment System for
Inpatient Operating Costs
3. Section 412.105 is amended by
revising paragraph (f)(1)(ii)(C) to read as
follows:
§ 412.105 Special treatment: Hospitals that
incur indirect costs for graduate medical
education programs.
*
*
*
*
*
(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), (d), (e), or (f) of this
subchapter, as applicable, are met.
*
*
*
*
*
Subpart O—Prospective Payment
System for Long-Term Care Hospitals
4. Section 412.517 is amended by —
A. Redesignating the introductory text
and paragraphs (a), (b), (c), and (d) as
paragraphs (a) introductory text, (a)(1),
(a)(2), (a)(3), and (a)(4), respectively.
B. Adding new paragraph (b).
The addition reads as follows:
§ 412.517 Revision of LTC–DRG group
classifications and weighting factors.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Beginning in FY 2008, the annual
changes to the LTC–DRG classifications
and recalibration of the weighting
factors described in paragraph (a) are
made in a budget neutral manner such
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that estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments are not affected.
5. Section 412.523 is amended by
adding new paragraph (c)(3)(iv) to read
as follows:
§ 412.523 Methodology for calculating the
Federal prospective payment rates.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(3) * * *
(iv) For long-term care hospital
prospective payment system rate year
beginning July 1, 2007 and ending June
30, 2008. The standard Federal rate for
long-term care hospital prospective
payment system rate year beginning July
1, 2007 and ending June 30, 2008 is the
standard Federal rate for the previous
long-term care hospital prospective
payment system rate year updated by
0.71 percent. The standard Federal rate
is adjusted, as appropriate, as described
in paragraph (d) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
6. Section 412.534 is amended by—
A. Revising paragraph (b).
B. Adding paragraph (h).
The revision and addition read as
follows:
§ 412.534 Special payment provisions for
long-term care hospitals within hospitals
and satellites of long-term care hospitals.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Patients admitted from hospitals
not located in the same building or on
the same campus as the long-term care
hospital or long-term care hospital
satellite. Payments to the long-term care
hospital for patients admitted to the
long-term care hospital to a satellite of
the long-term care hospital from another
hospital that is not the co-located
hospital are made under the rules in this
subpart with no adjustment under this
section. For cost reporting periods
beginning on or after July 1, 2007,
payments to the long-term care hospital
or long-term care hospital satellite
facility for patients admitted to the
LTCH hospital or LTCH satellite facility
of the long-term care hospital from
another hospital that is not the co-
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located hospital are subject to the
provisions in § 412.536.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) Effective date of policies in this
section. The policies set forth in this
section apply to discharges occurring in
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after July 1, 2007 from long-term care
hospitals as described in
§ 412.23(e)(2)(i) that meet criteria in
§ 412.22(f)and satellite facilities of longterm care hospitals as described at
§ 412.22(h)(3)(i).
7. Section 412.536 is added to read as
follows:
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§ 412.536 Special payment provisions for
long-term care hospitals and satellites not
co-located with other hospitals.
(a) Scope. For cost reporting periods
beginning on or after July 1, 2007, the
policies set forth in this section apply to
discharges from long-term care hospitals
as described in § 412.23(e)(2)(i) and
satellite facilities of long-term care
hospitals described in § 412.22(h),
including satellite facilities of long-term
care hospitals described in (h)(3)(i) but
excluding satellite facilities described in
(h)(3)(ii).
(b) For cost reporting periods
beginning on or after July 1, 2007,
payments for discharged patients
admitted from a hospital not located in
the same building or on the same
campus as the long-term care hospital or
long-term care hospital satellite facility
will be made under either paragraph
(b)(1) or paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
(1) Except as provided in paragraphs
(c), (d) or (f) of this section, for any cost
reporting period beginning on or after
July 1, 2007 in which a long-term care
hospital or a long-term care hospital
satellite facility has a discharged
Medicare inpatient population of whom
no more than 25 percent were admitted
to the hospital or the satellite facility
from any individual hospital, payments
for the Medicare discharges admitted
from that hospital are made under the
rules at § 412.500 through § 412.541 in
this subpart with no adjustment under
this section.
(2) Except as provided in paragraph
(c), (d), or (f) of this section, for any cost
reporting period beginning on or after
July 1, 2007 in which a long-term care
hospital or long-term care hospital
satellite facility has a discharged
Medicare inpatient population of whom
more than 25 percent were admitted to
the hospital or satellite facility from any
individual hospital, payment for the
Medicare discharges who are admitted
from that hospital and who cause the
long-term care hospital or satellite
facility to exceed the 25 percent
threshold for discharged patients who
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have been admitted from that referring
hospital, are determined at the lesser of
the amount otherwise payable under
this subpart or the amount payable
under this subpart that is equivalent, as
set forth in paragraph (e) of this section,
to the amount that would be determined
under the rules at Subpart A, § 412.1(a).
Payments for the remainder of the longterm care hospital’s or satellite facility’s
patients admitted from that referring
hospital are made under the rules in this
subpart at § 412.500 through § 412.541
with no adjustment under this section.
(3) In determining the percentage of
Medicare discharges admitted to the
long-term care hospital or long-term
care hospital satellite facility from any
referring hospital under paragraphs
(b)(1) and (b)(2) of this section, patients
on whose behalf a Medicare outlier
payment was made to the referring
hospital are not counted towards the 25
percent threshold from that referring
hospital.
(c) Special treatment of rural
hospitals. (1) Subject to paragraph (f) of
this section, in the case of a long-term
care hospital or long-term care hospital
satellite facility that is located in a rural
area as defined in § 412.64(b)(1)(ii)(C)
that has a discharged Medicare inpatient
population of whom more than 50
percent were admitted to the long-term
care hospital or long-term care hospital
satellite facility from a hospital,
payment for the Medicare discharges
who are admitted from that hospital and
who cause the long-term care hospital or
satellite facility to exceed the 50 percent
threshold for Medicare discharges is
determined at the lesser of the amount
otherwise payable under this subpart or
the amount payable under this subpart
that is equivalent, as set forth in
paragraph (e) of this section, to the
amount that is otherwise payable under
subpart A, § 412.1(a). Payments for the
remainder of the long-term care
hospital’s or long-term care hospital
satellite facility’s Medicare discharges
admitted from the referring hospital are
made under the rules in this subpart at
§ 412.500 through § 412.541 with no
adjustment under this section.
(2) In determining the percentage of
Medicare discharges admitted from the
referring hospital under paragraph (c)(1)
of this section, patients on whose behalf
a Medicare outlier payment was made at
the referring hospital are not counted
toward the 50 percent threshold.
(d) Special treatment of urban single
or MSA dominant hospitals. (1) Subject
to paragraph (f) of this section, in the
case of a long-term care hospital or longterm care hospital satellite facility that
admits Medicare patients from the only
other hospital in the MSA or from a
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MSA dominant hospital as defined in
paragraph (d)(4) of this section, for any
cost reporting period beginning on or
after July 1, 2007, in which the longterm care hospital or satellite facility
has a discharged Medicare inpatient
population of whom more than the
percentage calculated under paragraph
(d)(2) of this section were admitted to
the hospital from the urban single or
MSA-dominant referring hospital,
payment for the Medicare discharges
who are admitted from the referring
hospital and who cause the long-term
care hospital or long-term care hospital
satellite facility to exceed the applicable
threshold for Medicare discharges who
have been admitted from the referring
hospital is the lesser of the amount
otherwise payable under this subpart or
the amount under this subpart that is
equivalent, as set forth in paragraph (e)
of this section, to the amount that
otherwise would be determined under
Subpart A, § 412.1(a). Payments for the
remainder of the long-term care
hospital’s or satellite facility’s Medicare
discharges admitted from that referring
hospital are made under the rules in this
subpart at § 412.500 through § 412.541
with no adjustment under this section.
(2) For purposes of paragraph (d)(1) of
this section, the percentage used is the
percentage of total Medicare discharges
in the Metropolitan Statistical Area
(MSA) in which the hospital is located
that are from the referring hospital for
the cost reporting period for which the
adjustment was made, but in no case is
less than 25 percent or more than 50
percent.
(3) In determining the percentage of
patients admitted from the referring
hospital under paragraph (d)(1) of this
section, patients on whose behalf a
Medicare outlier payment was made at
the referring hospital are not counted
toward the applicable threshold.
(4) For purposes of this paragraph, an
‘‘MSA-dominant hospital’’ is a hospital
that has discharged more than 25
percent of the total hospital Medicare
discharges in the MSA in which the
hospital is located.
(e) Calculation of rates. (1)
Calculation of long-term care hospital
prospective payment system amount.
CMS calculates an amount payable
under subpart O equivalent to an
amount that would otherwise be paid
under the hospital inpatient prospective
payment system. The amount is based
on the sum of the applicable hospital
inpatient prospective payment system
operating standardized amount and
capital Federal rate in effect at the time
of the long-term care hospital discharge.
(2) Operating inpatient prospective
payment system standardized amount.
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The hospital inpatient prospective
payment system operating standardized
amount—
(i) Is adjusted for the applicable
hospital inpatient prospective payment
system DRG weighting factors;
(ii) Is adjusted for different area wage
levels based on the geographic
classifications set forth at
§ 412.64(b)(1)(ii)(A) through (C) and the
applicable hospital inpatient
prospective payment system laborrelated share, using the applicable
hospital inpatient prospective payment
system wage index value for nonreclassified hospitals. For long-term care
hospitals located in Alaska and Hawaii,
this amount is also adjusted by the
applicable hospital inpatient
prospective payment system cost of
living adjustment factors;
(iii) Includes, where applicable,
adjustments for indirect medical
education costs and for the costs of
serving a disproportionate share of lowincome patients.
(3) Hospital inpatient prospective
payment system capital Federal rate.
The hospital inpatient prospective
payment system capital Federal rate—
(i) Is adjusted for the applicable
hospital inpatient prospective payment
system DRG weighting factors;
(ii) Is adjusted by the applicable
geographic adjustment factors,
including local cost variation based on
the applicable geographic classifications
set forth at § 412.64(b)(1)(ii)(A) through
(C) and the applicable full hospital
inpatient prospective payment system
wage index value for non-reclassified
hospitals, applicable large urban
location and cost of living adjustment
factors for long-term care hospitals for
Alaska and Hawaii, if applicable;
(iii) Includes, where applicable,
capital inpatient prospective payment
system adjustments for indirect medical
education costs and the costs of serving
a disproportionate share of low-income
patients.
(4) High cost outlier. An additional
payment for high cost outlier cases is
based on the fixed loss amount
established for the hospital inpatient
prospective payment system.
(f) Transition period for long-term
care hospitals and long-term care
hospital satellite facilities paid under
this subpart. (1) In the case of a longterm care hospital or a long-term care
hospital satellite facility that is paid
under the provisions of this subpart, for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after July 1, 2007, the amount paid is
based on the following:
(2) For long term care hospitals or
long term care hospital satellite facilities
with cost reporting period beginning on
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or after July 1, 2007, and before October
1, 2007, the percentage of Medicare
discharges admitted from the referring
hospital with no payment adjustment,
may not exceed the lesser of the
percentage of the long term care hospital
or long-term care hospital satellite’s
Medicare discharges that were admitted
from the referring hospital during the
FY 2005 cost reporting period or 50
percent. In determining the percentage
of Medicare discharges admitted from
the referring hospital under this
paragraph, patients on whose behalf a
Medicare outlier payment was made at
the referring hospital are not counted
toward this threshold.
(3) For long term care hospitals or
long term care hospital satellites with
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 2007, the percentage of
Medicare discharges admitted from any
referring hospital with no payment
adjustment, may not exceed 25 percent
or the applicable percentage determined
under paragraph (c) or (d) of this
section.
PART 413—PRINCIPLES OF
REASONABLE COST
REIMBURSEMENT; PAYMENT FOR
END-STAGE RENAL DISEASE
SERVICES; PROSPECTIVELY
DETERMINED PAYMENT RATES FOR
SKILLED NURSING FACILITIES
8. The authority citation for part 413
continues to read as follows:
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).
Subpart F—Specific Categories of
Costs
9. Section 413.75(b) is amended by
revising the definition ‘‘all or
substantially all of the costs for the
training program in the nonhospital
setting’’ to read as follows:
§ 413.75 Direct GME payments: General
requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
*
*
*
*
*
All or substantially all of the costs for
the training program in the nonhospital
setting means—(1) Effective on or after
January 1, 1999 and for cost reporting
periods beginning before July 1, 2007,
the residents’ salaries and fringe
benefits (including travel and lodging
where applicable) and the portion of the
cost of teaching physicians’ salaries and
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4847
fringe benefits attributable to direct
graduate medical education (GME); and
(2) Effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after July 1, 2007, at
least 90 percent of the total of the costs
of the residents’ salaries and fringe
benefits (including travel and lodging
where applicable) and the portion of the
cost of teaching physicians’ salaries
attributable to direct GME.
*
*
*
*
*
10. Section 413.78 is amended by
adding new paragraph (f) to read as
follows:
§ 413.78 Direct GME payments:
Determination of the total number of FTE
residents
*
*
*
*
*
(f) For cost reporting periods
beginning on or after July 1, 2007, the
time residents spend in non-provider
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 the calculation
of a hospital’s resident count if the
following conditions are met—
(1) The resident spends his or her
time in patient care activities.
(2) The hospital must incur all or
substantially all of the costs for the
training program in the nonhospital
setting(s) (in accordance with the
definition under § 413.75(b)).
(3) The hospital must comply with
one of the following:
(i) The hospital must document that it
is paying for all or substantially all of
the costs for the training program in a
nonhospital setting(s) attributable to
training that occurs during a month by
the end of the third month following the
month in which the training in the
nonhospital site occurred; or
(ii) There is a written agreement
between the hospital and the
nonhospital site that states that the
hospital will incur at least 90 percent of
the total of the costs of the resident’s
salary and fringe benefits (and travel
and lodging where applicable) while the
resident is training in the nonhospital
site and the portion of the cost of the
teaching physician’s salary attributable
to direct GME. The written agreement
must specify the total amount the
hospital will incur, and must indicate
the portion of this amount that reflects
residents’ salaries and fringe benefits
(and travel and lodging where
applicable), and the portion of this
amount that reflects teaching physician
compensation.
(4) The hospital is subject to the
principles of community support and
redistribution of costs as specified in
§ 413.81.
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(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program No. 93.773, Medicare—Hospital
Insurance; and Program No. 93.774,
Medicare—Supplementary Medical
Insurance Program)
Dated: December 14, 2006.
Leslie V. Norwalk,
Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services.
Approved: January 24, 2007.
Michael O. Leavitt,
Secretary.
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4849
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
Note: The following addenda will not
appear in the Code of Federal Regulations.
Addendum A
Addendum A contains the tables referred
to throughout the preamble to this proposed
rule. The tables presented below are as
follows:
Table 1: Proposed Long-Term Care
Hospital Wage Index for Urban Areas for
Discharges Occurring from July 1, 2007
through June 30, 2008.
Table 2: Proposed Long-Term Care
Hospital Wage Index for Rural Areas for
Discharges Occurring from July 1, 2007
through June 30, 2008.
Table 3: FY 2007 LTC–DRG Relative
Weights, Geometric Average Length of Stay,
and five-sixths of the Geometric Average
Length of Stay (for Short-Stay Outlier Cases)
(effective for discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 2006 through September 30,
2007), and the IPPS Average Length of Stay
plus one Standard Deviation (that could be
used under the approach discussed for ShortStay Outlier policy). (Note: The first four
columns of this table are the same
information provided in Table 11 of the FY
2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 48321 through
48320), which has been reprinted here for
convenience. The fifth column of this table
was added to provide information on the
approach discussed for the short-stay outlier
policy, discussed in section VI.A.2. of the
preamble of this proposed rule.)
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1
Full wage
index 2
CBSA code
Urban area (constituent counties)
10180 .......
Abilene, TX .......................................................................................................................................................
Callahan County, TX.
Jones County, TX.
Taylor County, TX.
´
Aguadilla-Isabela-San Sebastian, PR ...............................................................................................................
Aguada Municipio, PR.
Aguadilla Municipio, PR.
˜
Anasco Municipio, PR.
Isabela Municipio, PR.
Lares Municipio, PR.
Moca Municipio, PR.
´
Rincon Municipio, PR.
´
San Sebastian Municipio, PR.
Akron, OH .........................................................................................................................................................
Portage County, OH.
Summit County, OH.
Albany, GA ........................................................................................................................................................
Baker County, GA.
Dougherty County, GA.
Lee County, GA.
Terrell County, GA.
Worth County, GA.
Albany-Schenectady-Troy, NY ..........................................................................................................................
Albany County, NY.
Rensselaer County, NY.
Saratoga County, NY.
Schenectady County, NY.
Schoharie County, NY.
Albuquerque, NM ..............................................................................................................................................
Bernalillo County, NM.
Sandoval County, NM.
Torrance County, NM.
Valencia County, NM.
Alexandria, LA ...................................................................................................................................................
Grant Parish, LA.
Rapides Parish, LA.
Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, PA-NJ ...............................................................................................................
Warren County, NJ.
Carbon County, PA.
Lehigh County, PA.
Northampton County, PA.
Altoona, PA .......................................................................................................................................................
Blair County, PA.
Amarillo, TX ......................................................................................................................................................
Armstrong County, TX.
Carson County, TX.
Potter County, TX.
Randall County, TX.
Ames, IA ...........................................................................................................................................................
Story County, IA.
Anchorage, AK ..................................................................................................................................................
Anchorage Municipality, AK.
Matanuska-Susitna Borough, AK.
Anderson, IN .....................................................................................................................................................
Madison County, IN.
Anderson, SC ....................................................................................................................................................
10380 .......
10420 .......
10500 .......
10580 .......
10740 .......
10780 .......
10900 .......
11020 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
11100 .......
11180 .......
11260 .......
11300 .......
11340 .......
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index 3
0.8000
0.8400
0.3915
0.5132
0.8654
0.8923
0.8991
0.9193
0.8720
0.8976
0.9458
0.9566
0.8006
0.8405
0.9947
0.9958
0.8812
0.9050
0.9169
0.9335
0.9760
0.9808
1.2023
1.1618
0.8681
0.8945
0.9017
0.9214
4850
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
11460 .......
11500 .......
11540 .......
11700 .......
12020 .......
12060 .......
12100 .......
12220 .......
12260 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
12420 .......
12540 .......
12580 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
Anderson County, SC.
Ann Arbor, MI ....................................................................................................................................................
Washtenaw County, MI.
Anniston-Oxford, AL ..........................................................................................................................................
Calhoun County, AL.
Appleton, WI .....................................................................................................................................................
Calumet County, WI.
Outagamie County, WI.
Asheville, NC ....................................................................................................................................................
Buncombe County, NC.
Haywood County, NC.
Henderson County, NC.
Madison County, NC.
Athens-Clarke County, GA ................................................................................................................................
Clarke County, GA.
Madison County, GA.
Oconee County, GA.
Oglethorpe County, GA.
Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, GA .................................................................................................................
Barrow County, GA.
Bartow County, GA.
Butts County, GA.
Carroll County, GA.
Cherokee County, GA.
Clayton County, GA.
Cobb County, GA.
Coweta County, GA.
Dawson County, GA.
DeKalb County, GA.
Douglas County, GA.
Fayette County, GA.
Forsyth County, GA.
Fulton County, GA.
Gwinnett County, GA.
Haralson County, GA.
Heard County, GA.
Henry County, GA.
Jasper County, GA.
Lamar County, GA.
Meriwether County, GA.
Newton County, GA.
Paulding County, GA.
Pickens County, GA.
Pike County, GA.
Rockdale County, GA.
Spalding County, GA.
Walton County, GA.
Atlantic City, NJ ................................................................................................................................................
Atlantic County, NJ.
Auburn-Opelika, AL ...........................................................................................................................................
Lee County, AL.
Augusta-Richmond County, GA-SC ..................................................................................................................
Burke County, GA.
Columbia County, GA.
McDuffie County, GA.
Richmond County, GA.
Aiken County, SC.
Edgefield County, SC.
Austin-Round Rock, TX ....................................................................................................................................
Bastrop County, TX.
Caldwell County, TX.
Hays County, TX.
Travis County, TX.
Williamson County, TX.
Bakersfield, CA .................................................................................................................................................
Kern County, CA.
Baltimore-Towson, MD ......................................................................................................................................
Anne Arundel County, MD.
Baltimore County, MD.
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1.0826
1.0661
0.7770
0.8216
0.9455
0.9564
0.9216
0.9373
0.9856
0.9885
0.9762
0.9810
1.1831
1.1465
0.8096
0.8477
0.9667
0.9734
0.9344
0.9475
1.0725
1.0580
1.0088
1.0070
4851
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
12620 .......
12700 .......
12940 .......
12980 .......
13020 .......
13140 .......
13380 .......
13460 .......
13644 .......
13740 .......
13780 .......
13820 .......
13900 .......
13980 .......
14020 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
14060 .......
14260 .......
14484 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
Carroll County, MD.
Harford County, MD.
Howard County, MD.
Queen Anne’s County, MD.
Baltimore City, MD.
Bangor, ME .......................................................................................................................................................
Penobscot County, ME.
Barnstable Town, MA ........................................................................................................................................
Barnstable County, MA.
Baton Rouge, LA ..............................................................................................................................................
Ascension Parish, LA.
East Baton Rouge Parish, LA.
East Feliciana Parish, LA.
Iberville Parish, LA.
Livingston Parish, LA.
Pointe Coupee Parish, LA.
St. Helena Parish, LA.
West Baton Rouge Parish, LA.
West Feliciana Parish, LA.
Battle Creek, MI ................................................................................................................................................
Calhoun County, MI.
Bay City, MI ......................................................................................................................................................
Bay County, MI.
Beaumont-Port Arthur, TX ................................................................................................................................
Hardin County, TX.
Jefferson County, TX.
Orange County, TX.
Bellingham, WA ................................................................................................................................................
Whatcom County, WA.
Bend, OR ..........................................................................................................................................................
Deschutes County, OR.
Bethesda-Gaithersburg-Frederick, MD .............................................................................................................
Frederick County, MD.
Montgomery County, MD.
Billings, MT .......................................................................................................................................................
Carbon County, MT.
Yellowstone County, MT.
Binghamton, NY ................................................................................................................................................
Broome County, NY.
Tioga County, NY.
Birmingham-Hoover, AL ....................................................................................................................................
Bibb County, AL.
Blount County, AL.
Chilton County, AL.
Jefferson County, AL.
St. Clair County, AL.
Shelby County, AL.
Walker County, AL.
Bismarck, ND ....................................................................................................................................................
Burleigh County, ND.
Morton County, ND.
Blacksburg-Christiansburg-Radford, VA ...........................................................................................................
Giles County, VA.
Montgomery County, VA.
Pulaski County, VA.
Radford City, VA.
Bloomington, IN ................................................................................................................................................
Greene County, IN.
Monroe County, IN.
Owen County, IN.
Bloomington-Normal, IL ....................................................................................................................................
McLean County, IL.
Boise City-Nampa, ID .......................................................................................................................................
Ada County, ID.
Boise County, ID.
Canyon County, ID.
Gem County, ID.
Owyhee County, ID.
Boston-Quincy, MA ...........................................................................................................................................
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0.9711
0.9769
1.2539
1.2031
0.8084
0.8467
0.9762
0.9810
0.9251
0.9401
0.8595
0.8876
1.1104
1.0883
1.0743
1.0594
1.0903
1.0722
0.8712
0.8970
0.8786
0.9029
0.8894
0.9115
0.7240
0.7792
0.8213
0.8570
0.8533
0.8826
0.8944
0.9155
0.9401
0.9521
1.1679
1.1343
4852
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
14500 .......
14540 .......
14740 .......
14860 .......
15180 .......
15260 .......
15380 .......
15500 .......
15540 .......
15764 .......
15804 .......
15940 .......
15980 .......
16180 .......
16220 .......
16300 .......
16580 .......
16620 .......
16700 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
16740 .......
16820 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
Norfolk County, MA.
Plymouth County, MA.
Suffolk County, MA.
Boulder, CO ......................................................................................................................................................
Boulder County, CO.
Bowling Green, KY ...........................................................................................................................................
Edmonson County, KY.
Warren County, KY.
Bremerton-Silverdale, WA .................................................................................................................................
Kitsap County, WA.
Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk, CT .....................................................................................................................
Fairfield County, CT.
Brownsville-Harlingen, TX .................................................................................................................................
Cameron County, TX.
Brunswick, GA ..................................................................................................................................................
Brantley County, GA.
Glynn County, GA.
McIntosh County, GA.
Buffalo-Niagara Falls, NY .................................................................................................................................
Erie County, NY.
Niagara County, NY.
Burlington, NC ...................................................................................................................................................
Alamance County, NC.
Burlington-South Burlington, VT .......................................................................................................................
Chittenden County, VT.
Franklin County, VT.
Grand Isle County, VT.
Cambridge-Newton-Framingham, MA ..............................................................................................................
Middlesex County, MA.
Camden, NJ ......................................................................................................................................................
Burlington County, NJ.
Camden County, NJ.
Gloucester County, NJ.
Canton-Massillon, OH .......................................................................................................................................
Carroll County, OH.
Stark County, OH.
Cape Coral-Fort Myers, FL ...............................................................................................................................
Lee County, FL.
Carson City, NV ................................................................................................................................................
Carson City, NV.
Casper, WY .......................................................................................................................................................
Natrona County, WY.
Cedar Rapids, IA ..............................................................................................................................................
Benton County, IA.
Jones County, IA.
Linn County, IA.
Champaign-Urbana, IL ......................................................................................................................................
Champaign County, IL.
Ford County, IL.
Piatt County, IL.
Charleston, WV .................................................................................................................................................
Boone County, WV.
Clay County, WV.
Kanawha County, WV.
Lincoln County, WV.
Putnam County, WV.
Charleston-North Charleston, SC .....................................................................................................................
Berkeley County, SC.
Charleston County, SC.
Dorchester County, SC.
Charlotte-Gastonia-Concord, NC-SC ................................................................................................................
Anson County, NC.
Cabarrus County, NC.
Gaston County, NC.
Mecklenburg County, NC.
Union County, NC.
York County, SC.
Charlottesville, VA .............................................................................................................................................
Albemarle County, VA.
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1.0350
1.0280
0.8148
0.8518
1.0913
1.0730
1.2659
1.2127
0.9430
0.9544
1.0164
1.0131
0.9424
0.9539
0.8674
0.8939
0.9474
0.9579
1.0970
1.0776
1.0392
1.0314
0.9031
0.9225
0.9342
0.9474
1.0025
1.0020
0.9145
0.9316
0.8888
0.9110
0.9644
0.9715
0.8542
0.8834
0.9145
0.9316
0.9554
0.9643
1.0125
1.0100
4853
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
16860 .......
16940 .......
16974 .......
17020 .......
17140 .......
17300 .......
17420 .......
17460 .......
17660 .......
17780 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
17820 .......
17860 .......
17900 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
Fluvanna County, VA.
Greene County, VA.
Nelson County, VA.
Charlottesville City, VA.
Chattanooga, TN-GA ........................................................................................................................................
Catoosa County, GA.
Dade County, GA.
Walker County, GA.
Hamilton County, TN.
Marion County, TN.
Sequatchie County, TN.
Cheyenne, WY ..................................................................................................................................................
Laramie County, WY.
Chicago-Naperville-Joliet, IL .............................................................................................................................
Cook County, IL.
DeKalb County, IL.
DuPage County, IL.
Grundy County, IL.
Kane County, IL.
Kendall County, IL.
McHenry County, IL.
Will County, IL.
Chico, CA ..........................................................................................................................................................
Butte County, CA.
Cincinnati-Middletown, OH-KY-IN .....................................................................................................................
Dearborn County, IN.
Franklin County, IN.
Ohio County, IN.
Boone County, KY.
Bracken County, KY.
Campbell County, KY.
Gallatin County, KY.
Grant County, KY.
Kenton County, KY.
Pendleton County, KY.
Brown County, OH.
Butler County, OH.
Clermont County, OH.
Hamilton County, OH.
Warren County, OH.
Clarksville, TN-KY .............................................................................................................................................
Christian County, KY.
Trigg County, KY.
Montgomery County, TN.
Stewart County, TN.
Cleveland, TN ...................................................................................................................................................
Bradley County, TN.
Polk County, TN.
Cleveland-Elyria-Mentor, OH ............................................................................................................................
Cuyahoga County, OH.
Geauga County, OH.
Lake County, OH.
Lorain County, OH.
Medina County, OH.
Coeur d’Alene, ID .............................................................................................................................................
Kootenai County, ID.
College Station-Bryan, TX ................................................................................................................................
Brazos County, TX.
Burleson County, TX.
Robertson County, TX.
Colorado Springs, CO .......................................................................................................................................
El Paso County, CO.
Teller County, CO.
Columbia, MO ...................................................................................................................................................
Boone County, MO.
Howard County, MO.
Columbia, SC ....................................................................................................................................................
Calhoun County, SC.
Fairfield County, SC.
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0.8948
0.9158
0.9060
0.9248
1.0751
1.0601
1.1053
1.0842
0.9601
0.9681
0.8436
0.8749
0.8109
0.8487
0.9400
0.9520
0.9344
0.9475
0.9045
0.9236
0.9701
0.9761
0.8542
0.8834
0.8933
0.9146
4854
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
17980 .......
18020 .......
18140 .......
18580 .......
18700 .......
19060 .......
19124 .......
19140 .......
19180 .......
19260 .......
19340 .......
19380 .......
19460 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
19500 .......
19660 .......
19740 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
Kershaw County, SC.
Lexington County, SC.
Richland County, SC.
Saluda County, SC.
Columbus, GA-AL .............................................................................................................................................
Russell County, AL.
Chattahoochee County, GA.
Harris County, GA.
Marion County, GA.
Muscogee County, GA.
Columbus, IN ....................................................................................................................................................
Bartholomew County, IN.
Columbus, OH ..................................................................................................................................................
Delaware County, OH.
Fairfield County, OH.
Franklin County, OH.
Licking County, OH.
Madison County, OH.
Morrow County, OH.
Pickaway County, OH.
Union County, OH.
Corpus Christi, TX .............................................................................................................................................
Aransas County, TX.
Nueces County, TX.
San Patricio County, TX.
Corvallis, OR .....................................................................................................................................................
Benton County, OR.
Cumberland, MD-WV ........................................................................................................................................
Allegany County, MD.
Mineral County, WV.
Dallas-Plano-Irving, TX .....................................................................................................................................
Collin County, TX.
Dallas County, TX.
Delta County, TX.
Denton County, TX.
Ellis County, TX.
Hunt County, TX.
Kaufman County, TX.
Rockwall County, TX.
Dalton, GA ........................................................................................................................................................
Murray County, GA.
Whitfield County, GA.
Danville, IL ........................................................................................................................................................
Vermilion County, IL.
Danville, VA ......................................................................................................................................................
Pittsylvania County, VA.
Danville City, VA.
Davenport-Moline-Rock Island, IA-IL ................................................................................................................
Henry County, IL.
Mercer County, IL.
Rock Island County, IL.
Scott County, IA.
Dayton, OH .......................................................................................................................................................
Greene County, OH.
Miami County, OH.
Montgomery County, OH.
Preble County, OH.
Decatur, AL .......................................................................................................................................................
Lawrence County, AL.
Morgan County, AL.
Decatur, IL ........................................................................................................................................................
Macon County, IL.
Deltona-Daytona Beach-Ormond Beach, FL ....................................................................................................
Volusia County, FL.
Denver-Aurora, CO ...........................................................................................................................................
Adams County, CO.
Arapahoe County, CO.
Broomfield County, CO.
Clear Creek County, CO.
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0.8239
0.8591
0.9318
0.9454
1.0107
1.0086
0.8564
0.8851
1.1546
1.1237
0.8446
0.8757
1.0075
1.0060
0.9093
0.9274
0.9266
0.9413
0.8451
0.8761
0.8846
0.9077
0.9037
0.9230
0.8159
0.8527
0.8172
0.8538
0.9263
0.9410
1.0930
1.0744
4855
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
19780 .......
19804 .......
20020 .......
20100 .......
20220 .......
20260 .......
20500 .......
20740 .......
20764 .......
20940 .......
21060 .......
21140 .......
21300 .......
21340 .......
21500 .......
21604 .......
21660 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
21780 .......
21820 .......
21940 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
Denver County, CO.
Douglas County, CO.
Elbert County, CO.
Gilpin County, CO.
Jefferson County, CO.
Park County, CO.
Des Moines,-West Des Moines, IA ...................................................................................................................
Dallas County, IA.
Guthrie County, IA.
Madison County, IA.
Polk County, IA.
Warren County, IA.
Detroit-Livonia-Dearborn, MI .............................................................................................................................
Wayne County, MI.
Dothan, AL ........................................................................................................................................................
Geneva County, AL.
Henry County, AL.
Houston County, AL.
Dover, DE .........................................................................................................................................................
Kent County, DE.
Dubuque, IA ......................................................................................................................................................
Dubuque County, IA.
Duluth, MN-WI ..................................................................................................................................................
Carlton County, MN.
St. Louis County, MN.
Douglas County, WI.
Durham, NC ......................................................................................................................................................
Chatham County, NC.
Durham County, NC.
Orange County, NC.
Person County, NC.
Eau Claire, WI ...................................................................................................................................................
Chippewa County, WI.
Eau Claire County, WI.
Edison, NJ .........................................................................................................................................................
Middlesex County, NJ.
Monmouth County, NJ.
Ocean County, NJ.
Somerset County, NJ.
El Centro, CA ....................................................................................................................................................
Imperial County, CA.
Elizabethtown, KY .............................................................................................................................................
Hardin County, KY.
Larue County, KY.
Elkhart-Goshen, IN ...........................................................................................................................................
Elkhart County, IN.
Elmira, NY .........................................................................................................................................................
Chemung County, NY.
El Paso, TX .......................................................................................................................................................
El Paso County, TX.
Erie, PA .............................................................................................................................................................
Erie County, PA.
Essex County, MA ............................................................................................................................................
Essex County, MA.
Eugene-Springfield, OR ....................................................................................................................................
Lane County, OR.
Evansville, IN-KY ..............................................................................................................................................
Gibson County, IN.
Posey County, IN.
Vanderburgh County, IN.
Warrick County, IN.
Henderson County, KY.
Webster County, KY.
Fairbanks, AK ...................................................................................................................................................
Fairbanks North Star Borough, AK.
Fajardo, PR .......................................................................................................................................................
Ceiba Municipio, PR.
Fajardo Municipio, PR.
Luquillo Municipio, PR.
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index 3
0.9214
0.9371
1.0281
1.0225
0.7381
0.7905
0.9847
0.9878
0.9133
0.9306
1.0042
1.0034
0.9826
0.9861
0.9630
0.9704
1.1190
1.0952
0.9076
0.9261
0.8697
0.8958
0.9426
0.9541
0.8240
0.8592
0.9053
0.9242
0.8827
0.9062
1.0418
1.0334
1.0876
1.0701
0.9071
0.9257
1.1059
1.0847
0.4036
0.5229
4856
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
Full wage
index 2
CBSA code
Urban area (constituent counties)
22020 .......
Fargo, ND-MN ...................................................................................................................................................
Cass County, ND.
Clay County, MN.
Farmington, NM ................................................................................................................................................
San Juan County, NM.
Fayetteville, NC .................................................................................................................................................
Cumberland County, NC.
Hoke County, NC.
Fayetteville-Springdale-Rogers, AR-MO ...........................................................................................................
Benton County, AR.
Madison County, AR.
Washington County, AR.
McDonald County, MO.
Flagstaff, AZ ......................................................................................................................................................
Coconino County, AZ.
Flint, MI .............................................................................................................................................................
Genesee County, MI.
Florence, SC .....................................................................................................................................................
Darlington County, SC.
Florence County, SC.
Florence-Muscle Shoals, AL .............................................................................................................................
Colbert County, AL.
Lauderdale County, AL.
Fond du Lac, WI ...............................................................................................................................................
Fond du Lac County, WI.
Fort Collins-Loveland, CO .................................................................................................................................
Larimer County, CO.
Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach-Deerfield Beach, FL ...................................................................................
Broward County, FL.
Fort Smith, AR-OK ............................................................................................................................................
Crawford County, AR.
Franklin County, AR.
Sebastian County, AR.
Le Flore County, OK.
Sequoyah County, OK.
Fort Walton Beach-Crestview-Destin, FL .........................................................................................................
Okaloosa County, FL.
Fort Wayne, IN ..................................................................................................................................................
Allen County, IN.
Wells County, IN.
Whitley County, IN.
Fort Worth-Arlington, TX ...................................................................................................................................
Johnson County, TX.
Parker County, TX.
Tarrant County, TX.
Wise County, TX.
Fresno, CA ........................................................................................................................................................
Fresno County, CA.
Gadsden, AL .....................................................................................................................................................
Etowah County, AL.
Gainesville, FL ..................................................................................................................................................
Alachua County, FL.
Gilchrist County, FL.
Gainesville, GA .................................................................................................................................................
Hall County, GA.
Gary, IN .............................................................................................................................................................
Jasper County, IN.
Lake County, IN.
Newton County, IN.
Porter County, IN.
Glens Falls, NY .................................................................................................................................................
Warren County, NY.
Washington County, NY.
Goldsboro, NC ..................................................................................................................................................
Wayne County, NC.
Grand Forks, ND-MN ........................................................................................................................................
Polk County, MN.
Grand Forks County, ND.
Grand Junction, CO ..........................................................................................................................................
22140 .......
22180 .......
22220 .......
22380 .......
22420 .......
22500 .......
22520 .......
22540 .......
22660 .......
22744 .......
22900 .......
23020 .......
23060 .......
23104 .......
23420 .......
23460 .......
23540 .......
23580 .......
23844 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
24020 .......
24140 .......
24220 .......
24300 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
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wage
index 3
0.8250
0.8600
0.8589
0.8871
0.8945
0.9156
0.8865
0.9092
1.1601
1.1281
1.0969
1.0775
0.8388
0.8710
0.7843
0.8274
1.0063
1.0050
0.9544
0.9635
1.0133
1.0106
0.7731
0.8185
0.8643
0.8914
0.9517
0.9614
0.9569
0.9655
1.0943
1.0754
0.8066
0.8453
0.9277
0.9422
0.8958
0.9166
0.9334
0.9467
0.8324
0.8659
0.9171
0.9337
0.7949
0.8359
0.9668
0.9734
4857
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
24340 .......
24500 .......
24540 .......
24580 .......
24660 .......
24780 .......
24860 .......
25020 .......
25060 .......
25180 .......
25260 .......
25420 .......
25500 .......
25540 .......
25620 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
25860 .......
26100 .......
26180 .......
26300 .......
26380 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
Mesa County, CO.
Grand Rapids-Wyoming, MI ..............................................................................................................................
Barry County, MI.
Ionia County, MI.
Kent County, MI.
Newaygo County, MI.
Great Falls, MT .................................................................................................................................................
Cascade County, MT.
Greeley, CO ......................................................................................................................................................
Weld County, CO.
Green Bay, WI ..................................................................................................................................................
Brown County, WI.
Kewaunee County, WI.
Oconto County, WI.
Greensboro-High Point, NC ..............................................................................................................................
Guilford County, NC.
Randolph County, NC.
Rockingham County, NC.
Greenville, NC ...................................................................................................................................................
Greene County, NC.
Pitt County, NC.
Greenville, SC ...................................................................................................................................................
Greenville County, SC.
Laurens County, SC.
Pickens County, SC.
Guayama, PR ...................................................................................................................................................
Arroyo Municipio, PR.
Guayama Municipio, PR.
Patillas Municipio, PR.
Gulfport-Biloxi, MS ............................................................................................................................................
Hancock County, MS.
Harrison County, MS.
Stone County, MS.
Hagerstown-Martinsburg, MD-WV ....................................................................................................................
Washington County, MD.
Berkeley County, WV.
Morgan County, WV.
Hanford-Corcoran, CA ......................................................................................................................................
Kings County, CA.
Harrisburg-Carlisle, PA .....................................................................................................................................
Cumberland County, PA.
Dauphin County, PA.
Perry County, PA.
Harrisonburg, VA ..............................................................................................................................................
Rockingham County, VA.
Harrisonburg City, VA.
Hartford-West Hartford-East .............................................................................................................................
Hartford, CT.
Hartford County, CT.
Litchfield County, CT.
Middlesex County, CT.
Tolland County, CT.
Hattiesburg, MS ................................................................................................................................................
Forrest County, MS.
Lamar County, MS.
Perry County, MS.
Hickory-Lenoir-Morganton, NC .........................................................................................................................
Alexander County, NC.
Burke County, NC.
Caldwell County, NC.
Catawba County, NC.
Holland-Grand Haven, MI .................................................................................................................................
Ottawa County, MI.
Honolulu, HI ......................................................................................................................................................
Honolulu County, HI.
Hot Springs, AR ................................................................................................................................................
Garland County, AR.
Houma-Bayou Cane-Thibodaux, LA .................................................................................................................
Lafourche Parish, LA.
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wage
index 3
0.9455
0.9564
0.8598
0.8878
0.9602
0.9682
0.9787
0.9830
0.8866
0.9093
0.9432
0.9546
0.9804
0.9843
0.3235
0.4588
0.8915
0.9132
0.9038
0.9230
1.0282
1.0226
0.9402
0.9522
0.9073
0.9258
1.0894
1.0715
0.7430
0.7944
0.9010
0.9208
0.9163
0.9330
1.1096
1.0877
0.8782
0.9026
0.8082
0.8466
4858
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
26420 .......
26580 .......
26620 .......
26820 .......
26900 .......
26980 .......
27060 .......
27100 .......
27140 .......
27180 .......
27260 .......
27340 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
27500 .......
27620 .......
27740 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
Terrebonne Parish, LA.
Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown, TX ...................................................................................................................
Austin County, TX.
Brazoria County, TX.
Chambers County, TX.
Fort Bend County, TX.
Galveston County, TX.
Harris County, TX.
Liberty County, TX.
Montgomery County, TX.
San Jacinto County, TX.
Waller County, TX.
Huntington-Ashland, WV-KY-OH ......................................................................................................................
Boyd County, KY.
Greenup County, KY.
Lawrence County, OH.
Cabell County, WV.
Wayne County, WV.
Huntsville, AL ....................................................................................................................................................
Limestone County, AL.
Madison County, AL.
Idaho Falls, ID ...................................................................................................................................................
Bonneville County, ID.
Jefferson County, ID.
Indianapolis-Carmel, IN .....................................................................................................................................
Boone County, IN.
Brown County, IN.
Hamilton County, IN.
Hancock County, IN.
Hendricks County, IN.
Johnson County, IN.
Marion County, IN.
Morgan County, IN.
Putnam County, IN.
Shelby County, IN.
Iowa City, IA ......................................................................................................................................................
Johnson County, IA.
Washington County, IA.
Ithaca, NY .........................................................................................................................................................
Tompkins County, NY.
Jackson, MI .......................................................................................................................................................
Jackson County, MI.
Jackson, MS .....................................................................................................................................................
Copiah County, MS.
Hinds County, MS.
Madison County, MS.
Rankin County, MS.
Simpson County, MS.
Jackson, TN ......................................................................................................................................................
Chester County, TN.
Madison County, TN.
Jacksonville, FL ................................................................................................................................................
Baker County, FL.
Clay County, FL.
Duval County, FL.
Nassau County, FL.
St. Johns County, FL.
Jacksonville, NC ...............................................................................................................................................
Onslow County, NC.
Janesville, WI ....................................................................................................................................................
Rock County, WI.
Jefferson City, MO ............................................................................................................................................
Callaway County, MO.
Cole County, MO.
Moniteau County, MO.
Osage County, MO.
Johnson City, TN ..............................................................................................................................................
Carter County, TN.
Unicoi County, TN.
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index 3
1.0008
1.0006
0.8997
0.9198
0.9007
0.9206
0.9088
0.9270
0.9895
0.9916
0.9714
0.9771
0.9928
0.9942
0.9560
0.9648
0.8271
0.8617
0.8853
0.9082
0.9165
0.9332
0.8231
0.8585
0.9655
0.9724
0.8332
0.8666
0.8043
0.8434
4859
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
27780 .......
27860 .......
27900 .......
28020 .......
28100 .......
28140 .......
28420 .......
28660 .......
28700 .......
28740 .......
28940 .......
29020 .......
29100 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
29140 .......
29180 .......
29340 .......
29404 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
Washington County, TN.
Johnstown, PA ..................................................................................................................................................
Cambria County, PA.
Jonesboro, AR ..................................................................................................................................................
Craighead County, AR.
Poinsett County, AR.
Joplin, MO .........................................................................................................................................................
Jasper County, MO.
Newton County, MO.
Kalamazoo-Portage, MI ....................................................................................................................................
Kalamazoo County, MI.
Van Buren County, MI.
Kankakee-Bradley, IL ........................................................................................................................................
Kankakee County, IL.
Kansas City, MO-KS .........................................................................................................................................
Franklin County, KS.
Johnson County, KS.
Leavenworth County, KS.
Linn County, KS.
Miami County, KS.
Wyandotte County, KS.
Bates County, MO.
Caldwell County, MO.
Cass County, MO.
Clay County, MO.
Clinton County, MO.
Jackson County, MO.
Lafayette County, MO.
Platte County, MO.
Ray County, MO.
Kennewick-Richland-Pasco, WA .......................................................................................................................
Benton County, WA.
Franklin County, WA.
Killeen-Temple-Fort Hood, TX ..........................................................................................................................
Bell County, TX.
Coryell County, TX.
Lampasas County, TX.
Kingsport-Bristol-Bristol, TN-VA ........................................................................................................................
Hawkins County, TN.
Sullivan County, TN.
Bristol City, VA.
Scott County, VA.
Washington County, VA.
Kingston, NY .....................................................................................................................................................
Ulster County, NY.
Knoxville, TN .....................................................................................................................................................
Anderson County, TN.
Blount County, TN.
Knox County, TN.
Loudon County, TN.
Union County, TN.
Kokomo, IN .......................................................................................................................................................
Howard County, IN.
Tipton County, IN.
La Crosse, WI-MN ............................................................................................................................................
Houston County, MN.
La Crosse County, WI.
Lafayette, IN ......................................................................................................................................................
Benton County, IN.
Carroll County, IN.
Tippecanoe County, IN.
Lafayette, LA .....................................................................................................................................................
Lafayette Parish, LA.
St. Martin Parish, LA.
Lake Charles, LA ..............................................................................................................................................
Calcasieu Parish, LA.
Cameron Parish, LA.
Lake County-Kenosha County, IL-WI ...............................................................................................................
Lake County, IL.
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index 3
0.8620
0.8896
0.7662
0.8130
0.8605
0.8884
1.0704
1.0563
1.0083
1.0066
0.9495
0.9596
1.0343
1.0274
0.8901
0.9121
0.7985
0.8388
0.9367
0.9494
0.8249
0.8599
0.9669
0.9735
0.9426
0.9541
0.8931
0.9145
0.8289
0.8631
0.7914
0.8331
1.0570
1.0456
4860
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
29460 .......
29540 .......
29620 .......
29700 .......
29740 .......
29820 .......
29940 .......
30020 .......
30140 .......
30300 .......
30340 .......
30460 .......
30620 .......
30700 .......
30780 .......
30860 .......
30980 .......
31020 .......
31084 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
31140 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
Kenosha County, WI.
Lakeland, FL .....................................................................................................................................................
Polk County, FL.
Lancaster, PA ...................................................................................................................................................
Lancaster County, PA.
Lansing-East Lansing, MI .................................................................................................................................
Clinton County, MI.
Eaton County, MI.
Ingham County, MI.
Laredo, TX ........................................................................................................................................................
Webb County, TX.
Las Cruces, NM ................................................................................................................................................
Dona Ana County, NM.
Las Vegas-Paradise, NV ...................................................................................................................................
Clark County, NV.
Lawrence, KS ....................................................................................................................................................
Douglas County, KS.
Lawton, OK .......................................................................................................................................................
Comanche County, OK.
Lebanon, PA .....................................................................................................................................................
Lebanon County, PA.
Lewiston, ID-WA ...............................................................................................................................................
Nez Perce County, ID.
Asotin County, WA.
Lewiston-Auburn, ME ........................................................................................................................................
Androscoggin County, ME.
Lexington-Fayette, KY ......................................................................................................................................
Bourbon County, KY.
Clark County, KY.
Fayette County, KY.
Jessamine County, KY.
Scott County, KY.
Woodford County, KY.
Lima, OH ...........................................................................................................................................................
Allen County, OH.
Lincoln, NE ........................................................................................................................................................
Lancaster County, NE.
Seward County, NE.
Little Rock-North Little Rock, AR ......................................................................................................................
Faulkner County, AR.
Grant County, AR.
Lonoke County, AR.
Perry County, AR.
Pulaski County, AR.
Saline County, AR.
Logan, UT-ID ....................................................................................................................................................
Franklin County, ID.
Cache County, UT.
Longview, TX ....................................................................................................................................................
Gregg County, TX.
Rusk County, TX.
Upshur County, TX.
Longview, WA ...................................................................................................................................................
Cowlitz County, WA.
Los Angeles-Long Beach-Glendale, CA ...........................................................................................................
Los Angeles County, CA.
Louisville-Jefferson County, KY-IN ...................................................................................................................
Clark County, IN.
Floyd County, IN.
Harrison County, IN.
Washington County, IN.
Bullitt County, KY.
Henry County, KY.
Jefferson County, KY.
Meade County, KY.
Nelson County, KY.
Oldham County, KY.
Shelby County, KY.
Spencer County, KY.
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index 3
0.8879
0.9103
0.9589
0.9671
1.0088
1.0070
0.7811
0.8249
0.9273
0.9418
1.1430
1.1144
0.8365
0.8692
0.8065
0.8452
0.8679
0.8943
0.9853
0.9882
0.9126
0.9301
0.9181
0.9345
0.9042
0.9234
1.0092
1.0074
0.8890
0.9112
0.9022
0.9218
0.8788
0.9030
1.0011
1.0009
1.1760
1.1408
0.9118
0.9294
4861
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
31180 .......
31340 .......
31420 .......
31460 .......
31540 .......
31700 .......
31900 .......
32420 .......
32580 .......
32780 .......
32820 .......
32900 .......
33124 .......
33140 .......
33260 .......
33340 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
33460 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
Trimble County, KY.
Lubbock, TX ......................................................................................................................................................
Crosby County, TX.
Lubbock County, TX.
Lynchburg, VA ..................................................................................................................................................
Amherst County, VA.
Appomattox County, VA.
Bedford County, VA.
Campbell County, VA.
Bedford City, VA.
Lynchburg City, VA.
Macon, GA ........................................................................................................................................................
Bibb County, GA.
Crawford County, GA.
Jones County, GA.
Monroe County, GA.
Twiggs County, GA.
Madera, CA .......................................................................................................................................................
Madera County, CA.
Madison, WI ......................................................................................................................................................
Columbia County, WI.
Dane County, WI.
Iowa County, WI.
Manchester-Nashua, NH ...................................................................................................................................
Hillsborough County, NH.
Merrimack County, NH.
Mansfield, OH ...................................................................................................................................................
Richland County, OH.
¨
Mayaguez, PR ..................................................................................................................................................
Hormigueros Municipio, PR.
¨
Mayaguez Municipio, PR.
McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, TX ..........................................................................................................................
Hidalgo County, TX.
Medford, OR .....................................................................................................................................................
Jackson County, OR.
Memphis, TN-MS-AR ........................................................................................................................................
Crittenden County, AR.
DeSoto County, MS.
Marshall County, MS.
Tate County, MS.
Tunica County, MS.
Fayette County, TN.
Shelby County, TN.
Tipton County, TN.
Merced, CA .......................................................................................................................................................
Merced County, CA.
Miami-Miami Beach-Kendall, FL .......................................................................................................................
Miami-Dade County, FL.
Michigan City-La Porte, IN ................................................................................................................................
LaPorte County, IN.
Midland, TX .......................................................................................................................................................
Midland County, TX.
Milwaukee-Waukesha-West Allis, WI ...............................................................................................................
Milwaukee County, WI.
Ozaukee County, WI.
Washington County, WI.
Waukesha County, WI.
Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington, MN-WI .......................................................................................................
Anoka County, MN.
Carver County, MN.
Chisago County, MN.
Dakota County, MN.
Hennepin County, MN.
Isanti County, MN.
Ramsey County, MN.
Scott County, MN.
Sherburne County, MN.
Washington County, MN.
Wright County, MN.
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index 3
0.8613
0.8890
0.8694
0.8955
0.9519
0.9615
0.8154
0.8523
1.0840
1.0672
1.0243
1.0194
0.9271
0.9417
0.3848
0.5078
0.8773
0.9018
1.0818
1.0654
0.9373
0.9498
1.1471
1.1177
0.9812
0.9850
0.9118
0.9294
0.9786
0.9829
1.0218
1.0174
1.0946
1.0757
4862
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
33540 .......
33660 .......
33700 .......
33740 .......
33780 .......
33860 .......
34060 .......
34100 .......
34580 .......
34620 .......
34740 .......
34820 .......
34900 .......
34940 .......
34980 .......
35004 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
35084 .......
35300 .......
35380 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
Pierce County, WI.
St. Croix County, WI.
Missoula, MT .....................................................................................................................................................
Missoula County, MT.
Mobile, AL .........................................................................................................................................................
Mobile County, AL.
Modesto, CA .....................................................................................................................................................
Stanislaus County, CA.
Monroe, LA .......................................................................................................................................................
Ouachita Parish, LA.
Union Parish, LA.
Monroe, MI ........................................................................................................................................................
Monroe County, MI.
Montgomery, AL ................................................................................................................................................
Autauga County, AL.
Elmore County, AL.
Lowndes County, AL.
Montgomery County, AL.
Morgantown, WV ..............................................................................................................................................
Monongalia County, WV.
Preston County, WV.
Morristown, TN ..................................................................................................................................................
Grainger County, TN.
Hamblen County, TN.
Jefferson County, TN.
Mount Vernon-Anacortes, WA ..........................................................................................................................
Skagit County, WA.
Muncie, IN .........................................................................................................................................................
Delaware County, IN.
Muskegon-Norton Shores, MI ...........................................................................................................................
Muskegon County, MI.
Myrtle Beach-Conway-North Myrtle Beach, SC ...............................................................................................
Horry County, SC.
Napa, CA ..........................................................................................................................................................
Napa County, CA.
Naples-Marco Island, FL ...................................................................................................................................
Collier County, FL.
Nashville-Davidson—Murfreesboro, TN ............................................................................................................
Cannon County, TN.
Cheatham County, TN.
Davidson County, TN.
Dickson County, TN.
Hickman County, TN.
Macon County, TN.
Robertson County, TN.
Rutherford County, TN.
Smith County, TN.
Sumner County, TN.
Trousdale County, TN.
Williamson County, TN.
Wilson County, TN.
Nassau-Suffolk, NY ...........................................................................................................................................
Nassau County, NY.
Suffolk County, NY.
Newark-Union, NJ-PA .......................................................................................................................................
Essex County, NJ.
Hunterdon County, NJ.
Morris County, NJ.
Sussex County, NJ.
Union County, NJ.
Pike County, PA.
New Haven-Milford, CT .....................................................................................................................................
New Haven County, CT.
New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, LA ....................................................................................................................
Jefferson Parish, LA.
Orleans Parish, LA.
Plaquemines Parish, LA.
St. Bernard Parish, LA.
St. Charles Parish, LA.
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wage
index 3
0.8928
0.9142
0.7913
0.8330
1.1729
1.1383
0.7997
0.8398
0.9707
0.9766
0.8009
0.8407
0.8423
0.8738
0.7933
0.8346
1.0517
1.0414
0.8562
0.8850
0.9941
0.9953
0.8810
0.9048
1.3374
1.2699
0.9941
0.9953
0.9847
0.9878
1.2662
1.2130
1.1892
1.1514
1.1953
1.1562
0.8831
0.9065
4863
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
35644 .......
35660 .......
35980 .......
36084 .......
36100 .......
36140 .......
36220 .......
36260 .......
36420 .......
36500 .......
36540 .......
36740 .......
36780 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
36980 .......
37100 .......
37340 .......
37460 .......
37620 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
St. John the Baptist Parish, LA.
St. Tammany Parish, LA.
New York-White Plains-Wayne, NY-NJ ............................................................................................................
Bergen County, NJ.
Hudson County, NJ.
Passaic County, NJ.
Bronx County, NY.
Kings County, NY.
New York County, NY.
Putnam County, NY.
Queens County, NY.
Richmond County, NY.
Rockland County, NY.
Westchester County, NY.
Niles-Benton Harbor, MI ...................................................................................................................................
Berrien County, MI.
Norwich-New London, CT .................................................................................................................................
New London County, CT.
Oakland-Fremont-Hayward, CA ........................................................................................................................
Alameda County, CA.
Contra Costa County, CA.
Ocala, FL ..........................................................................................................................................................
Marion County, FL.
Ocean City, NJ ..................................................................................................................................................
Cape May County, NJ.
Odessa, TX .......................................................................................................................................................
Ector County, TX.
Ogden-Clearfield, UT ........................................................................................................................................
Davis County, UT.
Morgan County, UT.
Weber County, UT.
Oklahoma City, OK ...........................................................................................................................................
Canadian County, OK.
Cleveland County, OK.
Grady County, OK.
Lincoln County, OK.
Logan County, OK.
McClain County, OK.
Oklahoma County, OK.
Olympia, WA .....................................................................................................................................................
Thurston County, WA.
Omaha-Council Bluffs, NE-IA ...........................................................................................................................
Harrison County, IA.
Mills County, IA.
Pottawattamie County, IA.
Cass County, NE.
Douglas County, NE.
Sarpy County, NE.
Saunders County, NE.
Washington County, NE.
Orlando-Kissimmee, FL ....................................................................................................................................
Lake County, FL.
Orange County, FL.
Osceola County, FL.
Seminole County, FL.
Oshkosh-Neenah, WI ........................................................................................................................................
Winnebago County, WI.
Owensboro, KY .................................................................................................................................................
Daviess County, KY.
Hancock County, KY.
McLean County, KY.
Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura, CA ...............................................................................................................
Ventura County, CA.
Palm Bay-Melbourne-Titusville, FL ...................................................................................................................
Brevard County, FL.
Panama City-Lynn Haven, FL ...........................................................................................................................
Bay County, FL.
Parkersburg-Marietta-Vienna, WV-OH ..............................................................................................................
Washington County, OH.
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index 3
1.3177
1.2542
0.8915
0.9132
1.1932
1.1546
1.5819
1.4655
0.8867
0.9094
1.0472
1.0378
1.0073
1.0058
0.8995
0.9196
0.8843
0.9074
1.1081
1.0865
0.9450
0.9560
0.9452
0.9562
0.9315
0.9452
0.8748
0.8998
1.1546
1.1237
0.9443
0.9554
0.8027
0.8422
0.7977
0.8382
4864
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
37700 .......
37860 .......
37900 .......
37964 .......
38060 .......
38220 .......
38300 .......
38340 .......
38540 .......
38660 .......
38860 .......
38900 .......
38940 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
39100 .......
39140 .......
39300 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
Pleasants County, WV.
Wirt County, WV.
Wood County, WV.
Pascagoula, MS ................................................................................................................................................
George County, MS.
Jackson County, MS.
Pensacola-Ferry Pass-Brent, FL .......................................................................................................................
Escambia County, FL.
Santa Rosa County, FL.
Peoria, IL ...........................................................................................................................................................
Marshall County, IL.
Peoria County, IL.
Stark County, IL.
Tazewell County, IL.
Woodford County, IL.
Philadelphia, PA ................................................................................................................................................
Bucks County, PA.
Chester County, PA.
Delaware County, PA.
Montgomery County, PA.
Philadelphia County, PA.
Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, AZ ...........................................................................................................................
Maricopa County, AZ.
Pinal County, AZ.
Pine Bluff, AR ...................................................................................................................................................
Cleveland County, AR.
Jefferson County, AR.
Lincoln County, AR.
Pittsburgh, PA ...................................................................................................................................................
Allegheny County, PA.
Armstrong County, PA.
Beaver County, PA.
Butler County, PA.
Fayette County, PA.
Washington County, PA.
Westmoreland County, PA.
Pittsfield, MA .....................................................................................................................................................
Berkshire County, MA.
Pocatello, ID ......................................................................................................................................................
Bannock County, ID.
Power County, ID.
Ponce, PR .........................................................................................................................................................
´
Juana Dıaz Municipio, PR.
Ponce Municipio, PR.
Villalba Municipio, PR.
Portland-South Portland-Biddeford, ME ............................................................................................................
Cumberland County, ME.
Sagadahoc County, ME.
York County, ME.
Portland-Vancouver-Beaverton, OR-WA ..........................................................................................................
Clackamas County, OR.
Columbia County, OR.
Multnomah County, OR.
Washington County, OR.
Yamhill County, OR.
Clark County, WA.
Skamania County, WA.
Port St. Lucie-Fort Pierce, FL ...........................................................................................................................
Martin County, FL.
St. Lucie County, FL.
Poughkeepsie-Newburgh-Middletown, NY .......................................................................................................
Dutchess County, NY.
Orange County, NY.
Prescott, AZ ......................................................................................................................................................
Yavapai County, AZ.
Providence-New Bedford-Fall River, RI-MA .....................................................................................................
Bristol County, MA.
Bristol County, RI.
Kent County, RI.
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index 3
0.8215
0.8572
0.8000
0.8400
0.8982
0.9186
1.0996
1.0797
1.0287
1.0230
0.8383
0.8706
0.8674
0.8939
1.0266
1.0213
0.9400
0.9520
0.4842
0.5874
0.9908
0.9926
1.1416
1.1133
0.9833
0.9866
1.0911
1.0729
0.9836
0.9869
1.0783
1.0626
4865
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
39340 .......
39380 .......
39460 .......
39540 .......
39580 .......
39660 .......
39740 .......
39820 .......
39900 .......
40060 .......
40140 .......
40220 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
40340 .......
40380 .......
40420 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
Newport County, RI.
Providence County, RI.
Washington County, RI.
Provo-Orem, UT ................................................................................................................................................
Juab County, UT.
Utah County, UT.
Pueblo, CO .......................................................................................................................................................
Pueblo County, CO.
Punta Gorda, FL ...............................................................................................................................................
Charlotte County, FL.
Racine, WI ........................................................................................................................................................
Racine County, WI.
Raleigh-Cary, NC ..............................................................................................................................................
Franklin County, NC.
Johnston County, NC.
Wake County, NC.
Rapid City, SD ..................................................................................................................................................
Meade County, SD.
Pennington County, SD.
Reading, PA ......................................................................................................................................................
Berks County, PA.
Redding, CA ......................................................................................................................................................
Shasta County, CA.
Reno-Sparks, NV ..............................................................................................................................................
Storey County, NV.
Washoe County, NV.
Richmond, VA ...................................................................................................................................................
Amelia County, VA.
Caroline County, VA.
Charles City County, VA.
Chesterfield County, VA.
Cumberland County, VA.
Dinwiddie County, VA.
Goochland County, VA.
Hanover County, VA.
Henrico County, VA.
King and Queen County, VA.
King William County, VA.
Louisa County, VA.
New Kent County, VA.
Powhatan County, VA.
Prince George County, VA.
Sussex County, VA.
Colonial Heights City, VA.
Hopewell City, VA.
Petersburg City, VA.
Richmond City, VA.
Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA .............................................................................................................
Riverside County, CA.
San Bernardino County, CA.
Roanoke, VA .....................................................................................................................................................
Botetourt County, VA.
Craig County, VA.
Franklin County, VA.
Roanoke County, VA.
Roanoke City, VA.
Salem City, VA.
Rochester, MN ..................................................................................................................................................
Dodge County, MN.
Olmsted County, MN.
Wabasha County, MN.
Rochester, NY ...................................................................................................................................................
Livingston County, NY.
Monroe County, NY.
Ontario County, NY.
Orleans County, NY.
Wayne County, NY.
Rockford, IL .......................................................................................................................................................
Boone County, IL.
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wage
index 3
0.9537
0.9630
0.8753
0.9002
0.9405
0.9524
0.9356
0.9485
0.9864
0.9891
0.8833
0.9066
0.9622
0.9698
1.3198
1.2558
1.1963
1.1570
0.9177
0.9342
1.0904
1.0723
0.8647
0.8918
1.1408
1.1126
0.8994
0.9195
0.9989
0.9991
4866
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
40484 .......
40580 .......
40660 .......
40900 .......
40980 .......
41060 .......
41100 .......
41140 .......
41180 .......
41420 .......
41500 .......
41540 .......
41620 .......
41660 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
41700 .......
41740 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
Winnebago County, IL.
Rockingham County-Strafford County, NH .......................................................................................................
Rockingham County, NH.
Strafford County, NH.
Rocky Mount, NC ..............................................................................................................................................
Edgecombe County, NC.
Nash County, NC.
Rome, GA .........................................................................................................................................................
Floyd County, GA.
Sacramento—Arden-Arcade—Roseville, CA ....................................................................................................
El Dorado County, CA.
Placer County, CA.
Sacramento County, CA.
Yolo County, CA.
Saginaw-Saginaw Township North, MI .............................................................................................................
Saginaw County, MI.
St. Cloud, MN ...................................................................................................................................................
Benton County, MN.
Stearns County, MN.
St. George, UT ..................................................................................................................................................
Washington County, UT.
St. Joseph, MO-KS ...........................................................................................................................................
Doniphan County, KS.
Andrew County, MO.
Buchanan County, MO.
DeKalb County, MO.
St. Louis, MO-IL ................................................................................................................................................
Bond County, IL.
Calhoun County, IL.
Clinton County, IL.
Jersey County, IL.
Macoupin County, IL.
Madison County, IL.
Monroe County, IL.
St. Clair County, IL.
Crawford County, MO.
Franklin County, MO.
Jefferson County, MO.
Lincoln County, MO.
St. Charles County, MO.
St. Louis County, MO.
Warren County, MO.
Washington County, MO.
St. Louis City, MO.
Salem, OR ........................................................................................................................................................
Marion County, OR.
Polk County, OR.
Salinas, CA .......................................................................................................................................................
Monterey County, CA.
Salisbury, MD ....................................................................................................................................................
Somerset County, MD.
Wicomico County, MD.
Salt Lake City, UT .............................................................................................................................................
Salt Lake County, UT.
Summit County, UT.
Tooele County, UT.
San Angelo, TX .................................................................................................................................................
Irion County, TX.
Tom Green County, TX.
San Antonio, TX ................................................................................................................................................
Atascosa County, TX.
Bandera County, TX.
Bexar County, TX.
Comal County, TX.
Guadalupe County, TX.
Kendall County, TX.
Medina County, TX.
Wilson County, TX.
San Diego-Carlsbad-San Marcos, CA ..............................................................................................................
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index 3
1.0159
1.0127
0.8854
0.9083
0.9193
0.9354
1.3372
1.2698
0.8874
0.9099
1.0362
1.0290
0.9265
0.9412
1.0118
1.0094
0.9005
0.9204
1.0438
1.0350
1.4337
1.3470
0.8953
0.9162
0.9402
0.9522
0.8362
0.8690
0.8844
0.9075
1.1354
1.1083
4867
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
41780 .......
41884 .......
41900 .......
41940 .......
41980 .......
42020 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
42044 .......
42060 .......
42100 .......
42140 .......
42220 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
San Diego County, CA.
Sandusky, OH ...................................................................................................................................................
Erie County, OH.
San Francisco-San Mateo-Redwood City, CA .................................................................................................
Marin County, CA.
San Francisco County, CA.
San Mateo County, CA.
´
San German-Cabo Rojo, PR ............................................................................................................................
Cabo Rojo Municipio, PR.
Lajas Municipio, PR.
Sabana Grande Municipio, PR.
´
San German Municipio, PR.
San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, CA ..............................................................................................................
San Benito County, CA.
Santa Clara County, CA.
San Juan-Caguas-Guaynabo, PR ....................................................................................................................
Aguas Buenas Municipio, PR.
Aibonito Municipio, PR.
Arecibo Municipio, PR.
Barceloneta Municipio, PR.
Barranquitas Municipio, PR.
´
Bayamon Municipio, PR.
Caguas Municipio, PR.
Camuy Municipio, PR.
´
Canovanas Municipio, PR.
Carolina Municipio, PR.
˜
Catano Municipio, PR.
Cayey Municipio, PR.
Ciales Municipio, PR.
Cidra Municipio, PR.
´
Comerıo Municipio, PR.
Corozal Municipio, PR.
Dorado Municipio, PR.
Florida Municipio, PR.
Guaynabo Municipio, PR.
Gurabo Municipio, PR.
Hatillo Municipio, PR.
Humacao Municipio, PR.
Juncos Municipio, PR.
Las Piedras Municipio, PR.
´
Loıza Municipio, PR.
´
Manatı Municipio, PR.
Maunabo Municipio, PR.
Morovis Municipio, PR.
Naguabo Municipio, PR.
Naranjito Municipio, PR.
Orocovis Municipio, PR.
Quebradillas Municipio, PR.
´
Rıo Grande Municipio, PR.
San Juan Municipio, PR.
San Lorenzo Municipio, PR.
Toa Alta Municipio, PR.
Toa Baja Municipio, PR.
Trujillo Alto Municipio, PR.
Vega Alta Municipio, PR.
Vega Baja Municipio, PR.
Yabucoa Municipio, PR.
San Luis Obispo-Paso Robles, CA ...................................................................................................................
San Luis Obispo County, CA.
Santa Ana-Anaheim-Irvine, CA .........................................................................................................................
Orange County, CA.
Santa Barbara-Santa Maria, CA .......................................................................................................................
Santa Barbara County, CA.
Santa Cruz-Watsonville, CA .............................................................................................................................
Santa Cruz County, CA.
Santa Fe, NM ....................................................................................................................................................
Santa Fe County, NM.
Santa Rosa-Petaluma, CA ................................................................................................................................
Sonoma County, CA.
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index 3
0.9302
0.9442
1.5165
1.4132
0.4885
0.5908
1.5543
1.4434
0.4452
0.5562
1.1598
1.1278
1.1473
1.1178
1.1091
1.0873
1.5457
1.4366
1.0824
1.0659
1.4464
1.3571
4868
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
Full wage
index 2
CBSA code
Urban area (constituent counties)
42260 .......
Sarasota-Bradenton-Venice, FL ........................................................................................................................
Manatee County, FL.
Sarasota County, FL.
Savannah, GA ...................................................................................................................................................
Bryan County, GA.
Chatham County, GA.
Effingham County, GA.
Scranton—Wilkes-Barre, PA .............................................................................................................................
Lackawanna County, PA.
Luzerne County, PA.
Wyoming County, PA.
Seattle-Bellevue-Everett, WA ............................................................................................................................
King County, WA.
Snohomish County, WA.
Sebastian-Vero Beach, FL ................................................................................................................................
Indian River County, FL.
Sheboygan, WI .................................................................................................................................................
Sheboygan County, WI.
Sherman-Denison, TX .......................................................................................................................................
Grayson County, TX.
Shreveport-Bossier City, LA ..............................................................................................................................
Bossier Parish, LA.
Caddo Parish, LA.
De Soto Parish, LA.
Sioux City, IA-NE-SD ........................................................................................................................................
Woodbury County, IA.
Dakota County, NE.
Dixon County, NE.
Union County, SD.
Sioux Falls, SD .................................................................................................................................................
Lincoln County, SD.
McCook County, SD.
Minnehaha County, SD.
Turner County, SD.
South Bend-Mishawaka, IN-MI .........................................................................................................................
St. Joseph County, IN.
Cass County, MI.
Spartanburg, SC ...............................................................................................................................................
Spartanburg County, SC.
Spokane, WA ....................................................................................................................................................
Spokane County, WA.
Springfield, IL ....................................................................................................................................................
Menard County, IL.
Sangamon County, IL.
Springfield, MA ..................................................................................................................................................
Franklin County, MA.
Hampden County, MA.
Hampshire County, MA.
Springfield, MO .................................................................................................................................................
Christian County, MO.
Dallas County, MO.
Greene County, MO.
Polk County, MO.
Webster County, MO.
Springfield, OH ..................................................................................................................................................
Clark County, OH.
State College, PA .............................................................................................................................................
Centre County, PA.
Stockton, CA .....................................................................................................................................................
San Joaquin County, CA.
Sumter, SC .......................................................................................................................................................
Sumter County, SC.
Syracuse, NY ....................................................................................................................................................
Madison County, NY.
Onondaga County, NY.
Oswego County, NY.
Tacoma, WA .....................................................................................................................................................
Pierce County, WA.
Tallahassee, FL ................................................................................................................................................
42340 .......
42540 .......
42644 .......
42680 .......
43100 .......
43300 .......
43340 .......
43580 .......
43620 .......
43780 .......
43900 .......
44060 .......
44100 .......
44140 .......
44180 .......
44220 .......
44300 .......
44700 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
44940 .......
45060 .......
45104 .......
45220 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
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Fmt 4701
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E:\FR\FM\01FEP2.SGM
01FEP2
4/5ths
wage
index 3
0.9868
0.9894
0.9351
0.9481
0.8347
0.8678
1.1434
1.1147
0.9573
0.9658
0.9026
0.9221
0.8502
0.8802
0.8865
0.9092
0.9200
0.9360
0.9559
0.9647
0.9842
0.9874
0.9174
0.9339
1.0447
1.0358
0.8890
0.9112
1.0079
1.0063
0.8469
0.8775
0.8593
0.8874
0.8784
0.9027
1.1442
1.1154
0.8083
0.8466
0.9691
0.9753
1.0789
1.0631
0.8942
0.9154
4869
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
45300 .......
45460 .......
45500 .......
45780 .......
45820 .......
45940 .......
46060 .......
46140 .......
46220 .......
46340 .......
46540 .......
46660 .......
46700 .......
47020 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
47220 .......
47260 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
Gadsden County, FL.
Jefferson County, FL.
Leon County, FL.
Wakulla County, FL.
Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL ..............................................................................................................
Hernando County, FL.
Hillsborough County, FL.
Pasco County, FL.
Pinellas County, FL.
Terre Haute, IN .................................................................................................................................................
Clay County, IN.
Sullivan County, IN.
Vermillion County, IN.
Vigo County, IN.
Texarkana, TX-Texarkana, AR .........................................................................................................................
Miller County, AR.
Bowie County, TX.
Toledo, OH ........................................................................................................................................................
Fulton County, OH.
Lucas County, OH.
Ottawa County, OH.
Wood County, OH.
Topeka, KS .......................................................................................................................................................
Jackson County, KS.
Jefferson County, KS.
Osage County, KS.
Shawnee County, KS.
Wabaunsee County, KS.
Trenton-Ewing, NJ ............................................................................................................................................
Mercer County, NJ.
Tucson, AZ ........................................................................................................................................................
Pima County, AZ.
Tulsa, OK ..........................................................................................................................................................
Creek County, OK.
Okmulgee County, OK.
Osage County, OK.
Pawnee County, OK.
Rogers County, OK.
Tulsa County, OK.
Wagoner County, OK.
Tuscaloosa, AL .................................................................................................................................................
Greene County, AL.
Hale County, AL.
Tuscaloosa County, AL.
Tyler, TX ...........................................................................................................................................................
Smith County, TX.
Utica-Rome, NY ................................................................................................................................................
Herkimer County, NY.
Oneida County, NY.
Valdosta, GA .....................................................................................................................................................
Brooks County, GA.
Echols County, GA.
Lanier County, GA.
Lowndes County, GA.
Vallejo-Fairfield, CA ..........................................................................................................................................
Solano County, CA.
Victoria, TX .......................................................................................................................................................
Calhoun County, TX.
Goliad County, TX.
Victoria County, TX.
Vineland-Millville-Bridgeton, NJ ........................................................................................................................
Cumberland County, NJ.
Virginia Beach-Norfolk-Newport News, VA-NC ................................................................................................
Currituck County, NC.
Gloucester County, VA.
Isle of Wight County, VA.
James City County, VA.
Mathews County, VA.
Surry County, VA.
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01FEP2
4/5ths
wage
index 3
0.9144
0.9315
0.8765
0.9012
0.8104
0.8483
0.9586
0.9669
0.8730
0.8984
1.0835
1.0668
0.9202
0.9362
0.8103
0.8482
0.8542
0.8834
0.8811
0.9049
0.8396
0.8717
0.8369
0.8695
1.5137
1.4110
0.8560
0.8848
0.9832
0.9866
0.8790
0.9032
4870
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
47300 .......
47380 .......
47580 .......
47644 .......
47894 .......
47940 .......
48140 .......
48260 .......
48300 .......
48424 .......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
48540 .......
48620 .......
48660 .......
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
York County, VA.
Chesapeake City, VA.
Hampton City, VA.
Newport News City, VA.
Norfolk City, VA.
Poquoson City, VA.
Portsmouth City, VA.
Suffolk City, VA.
Virginia Beach City, VA.
Williamsburg City, VA.
Visalia-Porterville, CA .......................................................................................................................................
Tulare County, CA.
Waco, TX ..........................................................................................................................................................
McLennan County, TX.
Warner Robins, GA ...........................................................................................................................................
Houston County, GA.
Warren-Troy-Farmington Hills, MI .....................................................................................................................
Lapeer County, MI.
Livingston County, MI.
Macomb County, MI.
Oakland County, MI.
St. Clair County, MI.
Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV ...........................................................................................
District of Columbia, DC.
Calvert County, MD.
Charles County, MD.
Prince George’s County, MD.
Arlington County, VA.
Clarke County, VA.
Fairfax County, VA.
Fauquier County, VA.
Loudoun County, VA.
Prince William County, VA.
Spotsylvania County, VA.
Stafford County, VA.
Warren County, VA.
Alexandria City, VA.
Fairfax City, VA.
Falls Church City, VA.
Fredericksburg City, VA.
Manassas City, VA.
Manassas Park City, VA.
Jefferson County, WV.
Waterloo-Cedar Falls, IA ...................................................................................................................................
Black Hawk County, IA.
Bremer County, IA.
Grundy County, IA.
Wausau, WI ......................................................................................................................................................
Marathon County, WI.
Weirton-Steubenville, WV-OH ...........................................................................................................................
Jefferson County, OH.
Brooke County, WV.
Hancock County, WV.
Wenatchee, WA ................................................................................................................................................
Chelan County, WA.
Douglas County, WA.
West Palm Beach-Boca Raton-Boynton Beach, FL .........................................................................................
Palm Beach County, FL.
Wheeling, WV-OH .............................................................................................................................................
Belmont County, OH.
Marshall County, WV.
Ohio County, WV.
Wichita, KS .......................................................................................................................................................
Butler County, KS.
Harvey County, KS.
Sedgwick County, KS.
Sumner County, KS.
Wichita Falls, TX ...............................................................................................................................................
Archer County, TX.
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01FEP2
4/5ths
wage
index 3
0.9968
0.9974
0.8633
0.8906
0.8380
0.8704
1.0054
1.0043
1.1054
1.0843
0.8408
0.8726
0.9722
0.9778
0.8063
0.8450
1.0346
1.0277
0.9649
0.9719
0.7010
0.7608
0.9063
0.9250
0.8311
0.8649
4871
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
CBSA code
48700 .......
48864 .......
48900 .......
49020 .......
49180 .......
49340 .......
49420 .......
49500 .......
49620 .......
49660 .......
49700 .......
49740 .......
Full wage
index 2
Urban area (constituent counties)
Clay County, TX.
Wichita County, TX.
Williamsport, PA ................................................................................................................................................
Lycoming County, PA.
Wilmington, DE-MD-NJ .....................................................................................................................................
New Castle County, DE.
Cecil County, MD.
Salem County, NJ.
Wilmington, NC .................................................................................................................................................
Brunswick County, NC.
New Hanover County, NC.
Pender County, NC.
Winchester, VA-WV ..........................................................................................................................................
Frederick County, VA.
Winchester City, VA.
Hampshire County, WV.
Winston-Salem, NC ...........................................................................................................................................
Davie County, NC.
Forsyth County, NC.
Stokes County, NC.
Yadkin County, NC.
Worcester, MA ..................................................................................................................................................
Worcester County, MA.
Yakima, WA ......................................................................................................................................................
Yakima County, WA.
Yauco, PR .........................................................................................................................................................
´
Guanica Municipio, PR.
Guayanilla Municipio, PR.
˜
Penuelas Municipio, PR.
Yauco Municipio, PR.
York-Hanover, PA .............................................................................................................................................
York County, PA.
Youngstown-Warren-Boardman, OH-PA ..........................................................................................................
Mahoning County, OH.
Trumbull County, OH.
Mercer County, PA.
Yuba City, CA ...................................................................................................................................................
Sutter County, CA.
Yuba County, CA.
Yuma, AZ ..........................................................................................................................................................
Yuma County, AZ.
4/5ths
wage
index 3
0.8139
0.8511
1.0684
1.0547
0.9835
0.9868
1.0091
1.0073
0.9276
0.9421
1.0722
1.0578
0.9847
0.9878
0.3854
0.5083
0.9397
0.9518
0.8802
0.9042
1.0730
1.0584
0.9109
0.9287
1 As discussed in section IV.D.1.d. of the preamble of this proposed rule, because there will no longer be any LTCHs in their cost reporting periods that began during FYs 2003, 2004 or 2005 (the first 3 years of the 5-year wage index phase-in, respectively), we are no longer showing the
1/5th, 2/5ths and 3/5ths wage index value. For further details on the 5-year phase-in of the wage index, see section IV.D.1. of this proposed rule.
2 The wage index values are calculated using the same wage data used to compute the wage index used by acute care hospitals under the
IPPS for Federal FY 2007 (that is, fiscal year 2003 audited acute care hospital inpatient wage data without regard to reclassification under section 1886(d)(8) or section 1886(d)(10) of the Act).
3 Four-fifths of the proposed full wage index value, applicable for a LTCH’s cost reporting period beginning on or after October 1, 2005 through
September 30, 2006 (Federal FY 2006). That is, for a LTCH’s cost reporting period that begins during Federal FY 2006 and located in Chicago,
Illinois (CBSA 16974), the 4/5ths wage index value is computed as ((4*1.0751) + 1))/5 = 1.0601. For further details on the 5-year phase-in of the
wage index, see section IV.D.1. of this proposed rule.
TABLE 2.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR RURAL AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
CBSA code
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
10
11
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Full
wage
index 2
Nonurban area
Alabama ............................................................................................................................................................
Alaska ...............................................................................................................................................................
Arizona ..............................................................................................................................................................
Arkansas ...........................................................................................................................................................
California ...........................................................................................................................................................
Colorado ............................................................................................................................................................
Connecticut .......................................................................................................................................................
Delaware ...........................................................................................................................................................
Florida ...............................................................................................................................................................
Georgia .............................................................................................................................................................
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E:\FR\FM\01FEP2.SGM
01FEP2
0.7591
1.0661
0.8908
0.7307
1.1454
0.9325
1.1709
0.9705
0.8594
0.7593
4/5ths
wage
index 3
0.8073
1.0529
0.9126
0.7846
1.1163
0.9460
1.1367
0.9764
0.8875
0.8074
4872
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 2.—PROPOSED LONG-TERM CARE HOSPITAL WAGE INDEX FOR RURAL AREAS FOR DISCHARGES OCCURRING
FROM JULY 1, 2007 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2008 1—Continued
Nonurban area
Full
wage
index 2
4/5ths
wage
index 3
Hawaii ...............................................................................................................................................................
Idaho .................................................................................................................................................................
Illinois ................................................................................................................................................................
Indiana ..............................................................................................................................................................
Iowa ...................................................................................................................................................................
Kansas ..............................................................................................................................................................
Kentucky ...........................................................................................................................................................
Louisiana ...........................................................................................................................................................
Maine ................................................................................................................................................................
Maryland ...........................................................................................................................................................
Massachusetts 4 ................................................................................................................................................
Michigan ............................................................................................................................................................
Minnesota ..........................................................................................................................................................
Mississippi .........................................................................................................................................................
Missouri .............................................................................................................................................................
Montana ............................................................................................................................................................
Nebraska ...........................................................................................................................................................
Nevada ..............................................................................................................................................................
New Hampshire ................................................................................................................................................
New Jersey 4 .....................................................................................................................................................
New Mexico ......................................................................................................................................................
New York ..........................................................................................................................................................
North Carolina ...................................................................................................................................................
North Dakota .....................................................................................................................................................
Ohio ...................................................................................................................................................................
Oklahoma ..........................................................................................................................................................
Oregon ..............................................................................................................................................................
Pennsylvania .....................................................................................................................................................
Puerto Rico 4 .....................................................................................................................................................
Rhode Island 4 ...................................................................................................................................................
South Carolina ..................................................................................................................................................
South Dakota ....................................................................................................................................................
Tennessee ........................................................................................................................................................
Texas ................................................................................................................................................................
Utah ...................................................................................................................................................................
Vermont .............................................................................................................................................................
Virginia ..............................................................................................................................................................
Washington .......................................................................................................................................................
West Virginia .....................................................................................................................................................
Wisconsin ..........................................................................................................................................................
Wyoming ...........................................................................................................................................................
1.0448
0.8120
0.8320
0.8538
0.8681
0.7998
0.7768
0.7438
0.8443
0.8926
................
0.9062
0.9153
0.7738
0.7927
0.8590
0.8677
0.8944
1.0853
................
0.8332
0.8232
0.8588
0.7215
0.8658
0.7629
0.9753
0.8320
................
................
0.8566
0.8480
0.7827
0.7965
0.8140
0.9744
0.7940
1.0263
0.7607
0.9553
0.9295
1.0358
0.8496
0.8656
0.8830
0.8945
0.8398
0.8214
0.7950
0.8754
0.9141
................
0.9250
0.9322
0.8190
0.8342
0.8872
0.8942
0.9155
1.0682
................
0.8666
0.8586
0.8870
0.7772
0.8926
0.8103
0.9802
0.8656
................
................
0.8853
0.8784
0.8262
0.8372
0.8512
0.9795
0.8352
1.0210
0.8086
0.9642
0.9436
CBSA code
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
49
50
51
52
53
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
1 As discussed in section IV.D.1.d. of the preamble of this proposed rule, because there are no longer any LTCHs in their cost reporting periods that began during FYs 2003, 2004 or 2005 (the first 3 years of the 5-year wage index phase-in, respectively), we are no longer showing the
1/5th, 2/5ths and 3/5ths wage index value. For further details on the 5-year phase-in of the wage index, see section IV.D.1. of this proposed rule.
2 The wage index values are calculated using the same wage data used to compute the wage index used by acute care hospitals under the
IPPS for Federal FY 2007 (that is, fiscal year 2003 audited acute care hospital inpatient wage data without regard to reclassification under section 1886(d)(8) or section 1886(d)(10) of the Act).
3 Four-fifths of the proposed full wage index value, applicable for a LTCH’s cost reporting period beginning on or after October 1, 2005 through
September 30, 2006 (Federal FY 2006). That is, for a LTCH’s cost reporting period that begins during Federal FY 2006 and located in rural Illinois, the 4/5ths wage index value is computed as ((4*0.8320) + 1))/5 = 0.8656. For further details on the 5-year phase-in of the wage index, see
section IV.D.1. of this proposed rule.
4 All counties within the State are classified as urban.
TABLE 3.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, FIVE-SIXTHS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY AND IPPS AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY PLUS ONE STANDARD DEVIATION
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
LTC–
DRG
1
2
3
6
7
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
8 ..........
Description
5 CRANIOTOMY
AGE >17 W CC ..................................................
AGE >17 W/O CC ..............................................
6 CRANIOTOMY AGE 0–17 ...........................................................
6 CARPAL TUNNEL RELEASE .....................................................
PERIPH & CRANIAL NERVE & OTHER NERV SYST PROC W
CC.
2 PERIPH & CRANIAL NERVE & OTHER NERV SYST PROC
W/O CC.
6 CRANIOTOMY
VerDate Aug<31>2005
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Geometric average length
of stay
5/6ths of the
geometric average length
of stay
IPPS average
length of stay
plus one
standard
deviation*
1.6835
1.6835
1.6835
0.4175
1.2052
37.1
37.1
37.1
17.0
36.1
30.9
30.9
30.9
14.2
30.1
16.1
7.1
20.1
4.8
15.8
0.5594
21.0
17.5
4.2
Relative
weight
Frm 00098
Fmt 4701
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E:\FR\FM\01FEP2.SGM
01FEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
4873
TABLE 3.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, FIVE-SIXTHS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY AND IPPS AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY PLUS ONE STANDARD DEVIATION—
Continued
LTC–
DRG
Description
9 ..........
10 ........
11 ........
12 ........
13 ........
14 ........
15 ........
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 CEREBRALINFARCTION
NONSPECIFIC CVA & PRECEREBRAL OCCLUSION W/O INFARCT.
NONSPECIFIC CEREBROVASCULAR DISORDERS W CC .......
2 NONSPECIFIC CEREBROVASCULAR DISORDERS W/O CC
CRANIAL & PERIPHERAL NERVE DISORDERS W CC .............
CRANIAL & PERIPHERAL NERVE DISORDERS 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 SYSTEM W/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 ADENOIDECTOMY ONLY, AGE 0–
17.
6 MYRINGOTOMY W TUBE INSERTION AGE >17 .....................
6 MYRINGOTOMY W TUBE INSERTION AGE 0–17 ...................
4 OTHER EAR, NOSE, MOUTH & THROAT O.R. PROCEDURES.
EAR, NOSE, MOUTH & THROAT MALIGNANCY ........................
1 DYSEQUILIBRIUM ......................................................................
6 EPISTAXIS ...................................................................................
3 EPIGLOTTITIS .............................................................................
OTITIS MEDIA & URI AGE >17 W CC .........................................
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 ........
58** ......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
59 ........
60 ........
61 ........
62 ........
63 ........
64
65
66
67
68
........
........
........
........
........
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:26 Jan 31, 2007
Jkt 211001
PO 00000
Geometric average length
of stay
5/6ths of the
geometric average length
of stay
IPPS average
length of stay
plus one
standard
deviation*
1.0424
0.6971
0.5594
0.6788
0.6003
0.6772
0.7705
34.0
22.1
21.0
25.1
23.1
24.9
26.1
28.3
18.4
17.5
20.9
19.3
20.8
21.8
9.7
9.6
5.7
8.4
7.4
8.6
6.4
0.6978
0.5594
0.7503
0.4512
0.7819
0.7819
1.0118
0.5594
0.9978
0.7983
0.4175
23.1
21.0
25.4
19.5
23.9
23.9
29.4
21.0
30.6
25.8
17.0
19.3
17.5
21.2
16.3
19.9
19.9
24.5
17.5
25.5
21.5
14.2
10.1
4.7
8.2
5.3
9.9
7.9
6.1
6.2
7.6
9.1
5.0
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
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
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
2.0
6.2
3.4
1.6
7.4
4.7
2.7
6.6
4.3
3.1
6.7
1.6
3.7
0.4175
0.7819
0.4175
0.5594
0.4175
0.4175
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
17.0
23.9
17.0
21.0
17.0
17.0
29.5
29.5
29.5
14.2
19.9
14.2
17.5
14.2
14.2
24.6
24.6
24.6
4.6
7.4
4.6
6.6
4.7
2.9
7.1
2.6
4.0
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
29.5
29.5
29.5
29.5
24.6
24.6
24.6
24.6
2.1
6.2
3.2
4.3
1.1625
0.4175
29.5
17.0
24.6
14.2
4.1
4.9
0.4175
17.0
14.2
1.5
0.4175
0.4175
17.0
17.0
14.2
14.2
3.6
2.7
0.4175
0.4175
1.1625
17.0
17.0
29.5
14.2
14.2
24.6
10.2
2.3
7.2
1.1797
0.4175
0.4175
0.7819
0.6211
26.2
17.0
17.0
23.9
20.3
21.8
14.2
14.2
19.9
16.9
10.2
4.2
4.8
5.8
5.9
Relative
weight
Frm 00099
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\01FEP2.SGM
01FEP2
4874
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 3.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, FIVE-SIXTHS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY AND IPPS AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY PLUS ONE STANDARD DEVIATION—
Continued
LTC–
DRG
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 ......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
118
119
120
121
......
......
......
......
122 ......
123 ......
124 ......
125 ......
Description
1 OTITIS
MEDIA & URI AGE >17 W/O CC ...................................
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.
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 & INFLAMMATIONSAGE >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.
6 OTITIS
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:26 Jan 31, 2007
Jkt 211001
PO 00000
Geometric average length
of stay
5/6ths of the
geometric average length
of stay
IPPS average
length of stay
plus one
standard
deviation*
0.4175
0.4175
0.5594
0.7819
0.7745
17.0
17.0
21.0
23.9
22.9
14.2
14.2
17.5
19.9
19.1
4.5
3.6
6.7
5.2
6.9
0.4175
17.0
14.2
3.9
1.9944
2.3982
0.5594
0.6746
0.8182
33.5
42.5
21.0
22.6
22.8
27.9
35.4
17.5
18.8
19.0
15.4
17.2
7.4
9.4
12.9
0.6485
20.9
17.4
8.3
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
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
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
10.1
11.0
8.2
4.8
9.9
5.5
10.3
7.5
8.6
5.6
5.3
9.4
5.9
9.6
5.3
6.7
5.2
4.4
4.8
3.1
6.7
3.9
0.0
1.1625
29.5
24.6
22.3
1.1625
29.5
24.6
15.0
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
16.6
17.1
13.8
4.9
20.5
1.2425
33.0
27.5
14.0
0.5594
21.0
17.5
6.7
0.7819
0.7819
1.0893
0.7451
23.9
23.9
31.4
22.4
19.9
19.9
26.2
18.7
4.6
8.8
15.5
10.1
0.5594
21.0
17.5
5.3
0.7858
1.1625
17.0
29.5
14.2
24.6
7.6
7.0
0.4175
17.0
14.2
4.1
Relative
weight
Frm 00100
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\01FEP2.SGM
01FEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
4875
TABLE 3.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, FIVE-SIXTHS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY AND IPPS AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY PLUS ONE STANDARD DEVIATION—
Continued
LTC–
DRG
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
136 ......
137** ....
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 ......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
167 ......
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
Description
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.
6CARDIAC 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 ...................................................
8 SYNCOPE & COLLAPSE W/O CC .............................................
1 CHEST PAIN ...............................................................................
OTHER CIRCULATORY SYSTEM DIAGNOSES W 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 PRINCIPALDIAG 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 ............................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:26 Jan 31, 2007
Jkt 211001
PO 00000
Geometric average length
of stay
5/6ths of the
geometric average length
of stay
IPPS average
length of stay
plus one
standard
deviation*
0.8867
0.6832
0.5594
0.4175
0.6484
0.5267
0.6621
0.5594
0.4909
0.8014
26.3
21.2
21.0
17.0
22.8
21.0
20.7
21.0
21.7
23.8
21.9
17.7
17.5
14.2
19.0
17.5
17.3
17.5
18.1
19.8
17.5
8.0
8.0
3.5
8.6
5.9
4.3
3.2
4.8
6.8
0.4175
17.0
14.2
4.1
0.4175
17.0
14.2
3.3
0.6618
0.5594
21.9
21.0
18.3
17.5
6.1
3.7
0.4175
0.5891
0.5891
0.4175
0.7715
0.4292
1.6835
0.7819
0.7819
1.6835
0.4175
1.6835
1.6835
1.6835
17.0
22.1
22.1
17.0
22.1
17.0
37.1
23.9
23.9
37.1
17.0
37.1
37.1
37.1
14.2
18.4
18.4
14.2
18.4
14.2
30.9
19.9
19.9
30.9
14.2
30.9
30.9
30.9
3.6
5.3
3.8
3.1
9.6
3.9
14.6
8.5
8.1
17.3
8.2
12.0
7.1
6.4
1.6835
37.1
30.9
12.1
0.7819
0.7819
1.6835
23.9
23.9
37.1
19.9
19.9
30.9
9.3
4.1
8.2
0.4175
17.0
14.2
4.1
0.4175
17.0
14.2
7.3
0.4175
17.0
14.2
3.1
0.4175
0.7819
17.0
23.9
14.2
19.9
4.0
11.9
0.7819
23.9
19.9
6.1
0.7819
23.9
19.9
6.8
0.7819
23.9
19.9
3.1
1.6835
0.5594
1.6163
0.7819
0.8497
0.5594
0.7149
0.5594
0.9514
0.5594
0.4175
0.8157
37.1
21.0
35.8
23.9
21.8
21.0
22.9
21.0
24.8
21.0
17.0
23.3
30.9
17.5
29.8
19.9
18.2
17.5
19.1
17.5
20.7
17.5
14.2
19.4
7.7
3.5
18.0
6.7
11.1
5.6
7.2
4.3
8.0
6.8
4.7
9.1
Relative
weight
Frm 00101
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\01FEP2.SGM
01FEP2
4876
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 3.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, FIVE-SIXTHS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY AND IPPS AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY PLUS ONE STANDARD DEVIATION—
Continued
LTC–
DRG
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 ......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
219 ......
220 ......
223 ......
224 ......
225 ......
Description
G.I. OBSTRUCTION W CC ...........................................................
OBSTRUCTION W/O CC .....................................................
ESOPHAGITIS, GASTROENT & MISC DIGESTDISORDERS
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 DIAGNOSES AGE 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.
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 ...................................................................
1 G.I.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:26 Jan 31, 2007
Jkt 211001
PO 00000
Geometric average length
of stay
5/6ths of the
geometric average length
of stay
IPPS average
length of stay
plus one
standard
deviation*
0.9126
0.4175
0.7866
22.8
17.0
21.8
19.0
14.2
18.2
8.3
5.1
6.4
0.4175
17.0
14.2
4.4
0.4175
17.0
14.2
5.6
0.6634
23.2
19.3
7.2
0.5594
21.0
17.5
5.0
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
6.8
8.5
4.6
5.1
21.1
9.3
19.7
1.1625
29.5
24.6
9.9
1.6835
1.1625
1.1625
37.1
29.5
29.5
30.9
24.6
24.6
16.2
8.3
14.0
1.1625
29.5
24.6
6.6
0.7819
23.9
19.9
15.2
1.6835
37.1
30.9
17.5
1.5802
28.8
24.0
22.6
0.6011
0.7466
0.8853
0.6933
20.2
19.6
22.1
23.1
16.8
16.3
18.4
19.3
9.9
10.6
8.5
9.4
0.6933
23.1
19.3
6.0
0.7295
0.4175
1.4826
21.5
17.0
41.9
17.9
14.2
34.9
8.4
4.6
9.5
1.6835
37.1
30.9
6.3
1.6835
37.1
30.9
3.8
1.1871
33.5
27.9
15.2
1.2147
37.6
31.3
8.8
1.2414
36.5
30.4
20.4
1.6835
37.1
30.9
8.4
1.6835
37.1
30.9
4.8
1.6835
37.1
30.9
10.5
1.1625
29.5
24.6
5.1
0.4175
17.0
14.2
2.8
0.9550
30.6
25.5
8.7
Relative
weight
Frm 00102
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\01FEP2.SGM
01FEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
4877
TABLE 3.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, FIVE-SIXTHS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY AND IPPS AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY PLUS ONE STANDARD DEVIATION—
Continued
LTC–
DRG
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 ......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
264 ......
265 ......
266 ......
267 ......
268 ......
269 ......
Description
SOFT TISSUE PROCEDURES W CC ..........................................
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 & SPECIFIC ARTHROPATHIES 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 FOR SKIN ULCER OR
CELLULITIS W CC.
3 SKIN GRAFT &/OR DEBRID EXCEPT FOR SKIN ULCER OR
CELLULITIS W/O CC.
6 PERIANAL & PILONIDAL PROCEDURES .................................
4 SKIN, SUBCUTANEOUS TISSUE & BREAST PLASTIC PROCEDURES.
OTHER SKIN, SUBCUT TISS & BREAST PROC W CC .............
3 SOFT
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:26 Jan 31, 2007
Jkt 211001
PO 00000
Geometric average length
of stay
5/6ths of the
geometric average length
of stay
IPPS average
length of stay
plus one
standard
deviation*
1.0626
0.7819
0.7819
34.3
23.9
23.9
28.6
19.9
19.9
10.6
4.0
6.7
0.4175
17.0
14.2
3.8
1.6835
37.1
30.9
8.8
1.6835
1.1724
37.1
32.4
30.9
27.0
4.1
10.8
0.4175
17.0
14.2
4.1
0.7819
0.6802
0.4175
23.9
28.9
17.0
19.9
24.1
14.2
7.4
6.8
5.9
0.8589
0.6031
28.4
20.6
23.7
17.2
12.8
9.6
0.7134
0.4175
0.7700
0.6028
0.5516
0.4463
0.5594
0.4582
22.4
17.0
26.2
22.3
22.0
19.4
21.0
17.6
18.7
14.2
21.8
18.6
18.3
16.2
17.5
14.7
10.3
5.6
10.2
7.1
7.0
4.8
5.6
5.1
0.7328
0.6370
23.2
24.0
19.3
20.0
7.5
6.2
0.4175
17.0
14.2
6.0
0.4175
17.0
14.2
4.3
0.5594
21.0
17.5
1.8
0.5609
24.0
20.0
7.0
0.4175
17.0
14.2
4.7
0.5594
21.0
17.5
2.9
0.7132
23.6
19.7
7.9
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
3.8
2.4
4.1
1.9
3.2
1.1625
29.5
24.6
7.7
1.2748
38.0
31.7
16.9
0.8507
29.9
24.9
9.9
1.1019
30.2
25.2
10.7
0.7819
23.9
19.9
4.7
0.7819
1.1625
23.9
29.5
19.9
24.6
6.8
5.4
1.2075
34.7
28.9
13.4
Relative
weight
Frm 00103
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\01FEP2.SGM
01FEP2
4878
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 3.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, FIVE-SIXTHS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY AND IPPS AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY PLUS ONE STANDARD DEVIATION—
Continued
LTC–
DRG
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
281 ......
282** ....
283 ......
284 ......
285 ......
286 ......
287 ......
288
289
290
291
292
293
......
......
......
......
......
......
294 ......
295 ......
296 ......
297 ......
298 ......
299 ......
300 ......
301 ......
302*** ..
303 ......
304 ......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
305 ......
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
Description
3 OTHER
SKIN, SUBCUT TISS & BREAST PROC 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 DISORDERSAGE >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 W CC .....................
6 KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT NEOPLASMS W/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.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:26 Jan 31, 2007
Jkt 211001
PO 00000
Geometric average length
of stay
5/6ths of the
geometric average length
of stay
IPPS average
length of stay
plus one
standard
deviation*
0.7819
0.8269
0.6584
0.4175
0.7231
0.7819
0.5594
0.6089
0.4254
0.4175
0.7148
23.9
26.9
23.0
17.0
21.8
23.9
21.0
20.9
18.0
17.0
24.1
19.9
22.4
19.2
14.2
18.2
19.9
17.5
17.4
15.0
14.2
20.1
5.7
10.7
9.3
5.9
10.1
5.2
7.3
8.4
6.1
5.8
6.3
0.5594
21.0
17.5
4.3
0.5594
0.6876
0.5594
1.2418
21.0
23.1
21.0
31.6
17.5
19.3
17.5
26.3
2.2
7.2
4.6
16.0
1.1625
1.0402
29.5
33.0
24.6
27.5
8.0
15.2
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.1625
1.1549
1.1549
29.5
29.5
29.5
29.5
32.0
32.0
24.6
24.6
24.6
24.6
26.7
26.7
5.4
3.3
2.8
2.1
16.9
7.8
0.6958
0.5594
0.7092
23.9
21.0
22.3
19.9
17.5
18.6
6.7
5.7
7.3
0.4596
19.3
16.1
4.6
0.4175
0.7819
0.7004
0.5594
0.0000
0.7819
1.1625
17.0
23.9
23.7
21.0
0.0
23.9
29.5
14.2
19.9
19.8
17.5
0.0
19.9
24.6
5.3
8.2
9.3
5.2
0.0
9.7
13.4
0.7819
23.9
19.9
4.7
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
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
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
9.1
2.9
8.6
2.4
7.2
2.7
8.0
3.6
360.4
11.1
9.9
5.4
9.8
3.9
7.7
5.4
5.2
4.8
2.7
5.8
Relative
weight
Frm 00104
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\01FEP2.SGM
01FEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
4879
TABLE 3.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, FIVE-SIXTHS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY AND IPPS AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY PLUS ONE STANDARD DEVIATION—
Continued
LTC–
DRG
326 ......
327 ......
328 ......
329 ......
330** ....
331 ......
332 ......
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 ......
......
......
......
......
......
......
366
367
368
369
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
360
361
362
363
364
365
......
......
......
......
370
371
372
373
374
375
......
......
......
......
......
......
Description
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.
6 OTHER KIDNEY & URINARY TRACT DIAGNOSES AGE 0–17
6 MAJOR MALE PELVIC PROCEDURES W CC ..........................
1 MAJOR MALE PELVIC PROCEDURES W/O CC ......................
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, WCC .........
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 NON-MALIGNANCY 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 &/ORD&C ................
6 VAGINAL DELIVERY W O.R. PROC EXCEPT STERIL &/OR
D&C.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:26 Jan 31, 2007
Jkt 211001
PO 00000
Geometric average length
of stay
5/6ths of the
geometric average length
of stay
IPPS average
length of stay
plus one
standard
deviation*
0.4175
17.0
14.2
3.9
0.4175
17.0
14.2
2.8
0.5594
0.5594
0.5594
0.7773
21.0
21.0
21.0
22.5
17.5
17.5
17.5
18.8
5.4
2.4
1.6
8.7
0.4175
17.0
14.2
4.8
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
8.4
6.1
3.7
4.9
2.6
9.7
8.4
2.4
4.4
4.6
1.7
3.9
1.1625
29.5
24.6
8.6
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
9.6
4.2
6.3
4.1
7.0
1.3
6.7
9.2
1.1625
29.5
24.6
8.2
1.1625
29.5
24.6
4.2
1.1625
29.5
24.6
2.7
1.1625
29.5
24.6
12.3
1.1625
1.1625
29.5
29.5
24.6
24.6
5.7
3.3
1.1625
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
1.1625
29.5
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
29.5
24.6
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
24.6
3.7
4.5
1.0
6.5
6.1
13.0
0.9106
0.4175
0.7846
0.7819
21.6
17.0
21.3
23.9
18.0
14.2
17.8
19.9
10.2
4.6
10.2
5.1
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
7.0
4.5
4.7
3.0
4.1
11.0
Relative
weight
Frm 00105
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\01FEP2.SGM
01FEP2
4880
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 3.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, FIVE-SIXTHS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY AND IPPS AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY PLUS ONE STANDARD DEVIATION—
Continued
LTC–
DRG
376 ......
377 ......
378
379
380
381
......
......
......
......
382 ......
383 ......
384 ......
385** ....
386** ....
387** ....
388** ....
389 ......
390** ....
391** ....
392 ......
393** ....
394 ......
395
396
397
398
399
......
......
......
......
......
401 ......
402 ......
403 ......
404 ......
405** ....
406 ......
407 ......
408 ......
409 ......
410 ......
411 ......
412 ......
413 ......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
414 ......
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
......
Description
4 POSTPARTUM
& POST ABORTION DIAGNOSES W/O O.R.
PROCEDURE.
6 POSTPARTUM & POST ABORTION DIAGNOSES WO.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.
RED BLOOD CELL DISORDERS AGE >17 .................................
6 RED 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 W OTHER 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/O CC ....................
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 AS SECONDARY
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.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:26 Jan 31, 2007
Jkt 211001
PO 00000
Geometric average length
of stay
5/6ths of the
geometric average length
of stay
IPPS average
length of stay
plus one
standard
deviation*
1.1625
29.5
24.6
5.1
0.4175
17.0
14.2
7.2
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
0.4175
17.0
17.0
17.0
17.0
14.2
14.2
14.2
14.2
3.2
4.8
2.9
3.6
0.4175
0.4175
17.0
17.0
14.2
14.2
2.1
5.6
0.4175
17.0
14.2
3.6
0.4175
17.0
14.2
1.8
0.4175
17.0
14.2
17.9
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
13.3
8.6
17.6
3.4
3.1
14.5
9.1
12.1
0.6651
0.4175
0.8276
0.6278
0.4175
21.9
17.0
20.4
20.8
17.0
18.3
14.2
17.0
17.3
14.2
6.5
4.5
8.2
8.8
5.1
1.1625
29.5
24.6
18.9
0.5594
21.0
17.5
6.3
0.8846
0.7819
0.7819
23.9
23.9
23.9
19.9
19.9
19.9
13.2
6.6
4.9
1.6835
37.1
30.9
15.5
1.1625
29.5
24.6
5.5
1.1625
29.5
24.6
14.0
0.8416
1.2527
23.2
28.7
19.3
23.9
9.5
5.8
0.5594
0.5594
0.8429
21.0
21.0
21.4
17.5
17.5
17.8
3.3
2.1
11.0
0.7819
23.9
19.9
6.4
0.7819
0.7961
0.5594
0.5594
0.7065
0.4175
1.0426
1.6835
23.9
24.1
21.0
21.0
20.4
17.0
23.2
37.1
19.9
20.1
17.5
17.5
17.0
14.2
19.3
30.9
10.5
9.6
6.8
4.9
6.2
5.6
13.2
19.7
Relative
weight
Frm 00106
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\01FEP2.SGM
01FEP2
4881
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 3.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, FIVE-SIXTHS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY AND IPPS AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY PLUS ONE STANDARD DEVIATION—
Continued
LTC–
DRG
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 ......
473 ......
476 ......
477 ......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
479 ......
480*** ..
481 ......
482 ......
484 ......
485 ......
486 ......
487
488
489
490
491
......
......
......
......
......
Description
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, LEFTAMA .......
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 HEALTH STATUS ..............
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.
ACUTE LEUKEMIA W/O MAJOR O.R. PROCEDURE AGE >17
5 PROSTATIC 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/OR INTESTINAL 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 SIGNIFICANT TRAUMA.
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.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:26 Jan 31, 2007
Jkt 211001
PO 00000
Geometric average length
of stay
5/6ths of the
geometric average length
of stay
IPPS average
length of stay
plus one
standard
deviation*
0.4175
17.0
14.2
5.3
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
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
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
6.8
7.3
11.4
8.5
12.6
10.1
6.1
4.2
13.6
13.4
5.2
14.5
5.6
6.4
4.4
2.4
3.9
2.9
5.8
2.9
0.7819
0.9275
0.5790
0.7819
0.7819
23.9
25.7
21.6
23.9
23.9
19.9
21.4
18.0
19.9
19.9
14.4
7.8
4.2
6.5
3.4
1.1466
32.7
27.3
8.8
0.5823
0.6082
0.5831
0.6877
22.1
22.9
24.3
21.2
18.4
19.1
20.3
17.7
14.8
6.1
4.5
5.5
0.6700
21.7
18.1
7.0
0.7819
2.1478
23.9
40.5
19.9
33.8
4.0
21.4
0.0000
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0000
1.6835
0.0
37.1
0.0
30.9
0.0
6.2
0.9917
1.6835
25.3
37.1
21.1
30.9
21.4
17.7
1.5119
35.9
29.9
14.8
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
3.9
0.0
35.2
17.6
23.1
14.7
0.7819
23.9
19.9
21.8
1.1625
1.1625
0.9436
0.6456
1.6835
29.5
29.5
22.1
20.3
37.1
24.6
24.6
18.4
16.9
30.9
11.5
29.6
13.3
8.5
4.5
Relative
weight
Frm 00107
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\01FEP2.SGM
01FEP2
4882
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 3.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, FIVE-SIXTHS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY AND IPPS AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY PLUS ONE STANDARD DEVIATION—
Continued
LTC–
DRG
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 ......
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
537 ......
538 ......
539 ......
540 ......
541 ......
Description
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 W CC ............................
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 OF INFECTION .....................
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 GRAFT OR 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 GRFT OR 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/KIDNEY TRANSPLANT ............
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 CARDIAC CATH W/O AMI/HF/
SHOCK.
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.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:26 Jan 31, 2007
Jkt 211001
PO 00000
Geometric average length
of stay
5/6ths of the
geometric average length
of stay
IPPS average
length of stay
plus one
standard
deviation*
0.5594
21.0
17.5
23.1
1.1625
1.1625
0.0000
1.1625
1.6835
1.6835
1.6835
29.5
29.5
0.0
29.5
37.1
37.1
37.1
24.6
24.6
0.0
24.6
30.9
30.9
30.9
9.8
4.2
0.0
13.8
8.3
5.3
6.6
1.1625
29.5
24.6
3.3
1.2164
0.7819
1.1625
1.6835
33.3
23.9
29.5
37.1
27.8
19.9
24.6
30.9
15.4
8.7
6.1
48.4
1.6835
37.1
30.9
9.4
1.1625
29.5
24.6
26.1
0.4175
17.0
14.2
13.2
0.7588
25.6
21.3
12.1
0.4175
17.0
14.2
8.6
0.6720
0.4175
22.6
17.0
18.8
14.2
9.7
5.7
0.0000
0.0000
1.1625
0.4175
0.0
0.0
29.5
17.0
0.0
0.0
24.6
14.2
0.0
0.0
5.9
3.7
1.1625
1.6835
0.5594
0.5594
29.5
37.1
21.0
21.0
24.6
30.9
17.5
17.5
7.4
2.8
8.4
16.7
0.4175
17.0
14.2
5.8
0.5594
1.6835
1.6835
21.0
37.1
37.1
17.5
30.9
30.9
4.8
24.1
26.9
1.6835
1.6835
1.6835
0.7819
1.1625
1.1625
1.6835
37.1
37.1
37.1
23.9
29.5
29.5
37.1
30.9
30.9
30.9
19.9
24.6
24.6
30.9
11.7
4.5
15.5
5.9
5.7
2.5
15.6
1.1625
29.5
24.6
11.7
1.4672
39.9
33.3
10.8
1.1625
29.5
24.6
4.5
1.1625
29.5
24.6
18.1
0.4175
17.0
14.2
5.6
3.8893
58.1
48.4
65.8
Relative
weight
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4883
TABLE 3.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, FIVE-SIXTHS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY AND IPPS AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY PLUS ONE STANDARD DEVIATION—
Continued
LTC–
DRG
Description
542 ......
TRACH W MV 96+ HRS OR PDX EXC FACE, MOUTH & NECK
W/O MAJ O.R.
5 CRANIOTOMY W MAJOR DEVICE IMPLANT ORACUTE
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 CATH W/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-DRUGELUTING STENT W/O MAJ CV DX.
4 PERCUTANEOUS CARDIOVASCULAR PROC W DRUGELUTING STENT W MAJOR CV DX.
6 PERCUTANEOUS CARDIOVASCULAR PROC W DRUGELUTING STENT W/O MAJ CV DX.
6 ACUTE ISCHEMIC STROKE WITH USE OF THROMBOLYTIC
AGENT.
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 POSTTRAUMATIC INFECTION.
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 ......
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571 ......
572 ......
573 ......
574 ......
575
576
577
578
......
......
......
......
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PO 00000
Geometric average length
of stay
5/6ths of the
geometric average length
of stay
IPPS average
length of stay
plus one
standard
deviation*
2.8689
45.1
37.6
49.1
1.6835
37.1
30.9
20.4
1.6835
37.1
30.9
6.1
1.6835
1.6835
37.1
37.1
30.9
30.9
7.4
13.4
1.1625
1.1625
29.5
29.5
24.6
24.6
17.8
12.0
1.1625
29.5
24.6
15.0
1.1625
29.5
24.6
9.3
1.6035
29.5
24.6
10.3
1.1625
29.5
24.6
5.5
1.5837
1.2817
32.5
31.6
27.1
26.3
15.8
9.3
0.7819
23.9
19.9
7.8
0.4175
17.0
14.2
2.9
1.1625
29.5
24.6
6.5
0.4175
17.0
14.2
2.6
0.7819
23.9
19.9
10.7
0.9308
25.5
21.3
16.9
0.8145
22.3
18.6
15.5
0.6844
0.5594
0.7565
2.0557
23.2
21.0
24.1
34.7
19.3
17.5
20.1
28.9
7.6
4.9
5.3
23.3
1.5445
27.4
22.8
13.2
1.6835
37.1
30.9
25.4
1.6835
37.1
30.9
19.2
1.6835
37.1
30.9
22.5
1.6835
37.1
30.9
14.9
0.8214
0.8505
21.9
23.3
18.3
19.4
7.5
11.0
1.6835
0.8106
37.1
19.7
30.9
16.4
16.7
9.1
1.6583
0.7925
1.1625
1.4849
27.8
23.0
29.5
35.7
23.2
19.2
24.6
29.8
24.4
11.8
3.3
26.5
Relative
weight
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TABLE 3.—FY 2007 LTC–DRGS, RELATIVE WEIGHTS, GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY, FIVE-SIXTHS OF THE
GEOMETRIC AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY AND IPPS AVERAGE LENGTH OF STAY PLUS ONE STANDARD DEVIATION—
Continued
LTC–
DRG
Relative
weight
Description
579 ......
O. R. PROCEDURE W PDX OF POSTOPERATIVE OR POSTTRAUMATIC INFECTION.
Geometric average length
of stay
5/6ths of the
geometric average length
of stay
IPPS average
length of stay
plus one
standard
deviation*
35.2
29.3
18.0
1.2978
1 Relative
weights for these LTC-DRGs were determined by assigning these cases to low-volume quintile 1.
weights for these LTC-DRGs were determined by assigning these cases to low-volume quintile 2.
weights for these LTC-DRGs were determined by assigning these cases to low-volume quintile 3.
4 Relative weights for these LTC-DRGs were determined by assigning these cases to low-volume quintile 4.
5 Relative weights for these LTC-DRGs were determined by assigning these cases to low-volume quintile 5.
6 Relative weights for these LTC-DRGs were determined by assigning these cases to the appropriate low volume quintile because they had no
LTCH cases in the FY 2005 MedPAR file.
7 Relative weights for these LTC-DRGs were assigned a value of 0.0000.
8 Relative weights for these LTC-DRGs were determined after adjusting to account for nonmonotonicity (see step 5 above).
* ‘‘IPPS Comparable Threshold’’ that could be used under the approach discussed for the short-stay outlier policy, as discussed in section
V.A.2. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
** IPPS hospital statistical data for these LTC-DRGs would be supplemented due to a low volume of IPPS cases.
*** Although IPPS hospital statistical data for these DRGs may be available, a value of zero for the ‘‘IPPS Comparable Threshold’’ would be
assigned for these LTC-DRGs since the relative weights for these LTC-DRGs were assigned a value of 0.0000, as discussed in section III. of the
preamble of this proposed rule.
2 Relative
3 Relative
Addendum B: Executive Summary of
RTI’s Report (See https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/
LongTermCareHospitalPPS/
02a_RTIReports.asp#TopOfPage for
a Copy of the Entire Report)
ES.1
Overview of the Project Purpose
rwilkins on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS2
This project, ‘‘Long-Term Care Hospital
(LTCH) Payment System Refinement/
Evaluation,’’ will assist the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) in
developing criteria for assuring appropriate
and cost-effective use of LTCHs in the
Medicare program. The Medicare Payment
Advisory Commission (MedPAC)
recommended that CMS examine patient and
facility-level criteria to identify and
distinguish the role of these hospitals as a
Medicare provider. This project evaluated
these criteria and scanned the environment
to identify feasible options for implementing
these types of measures. CMS has been
particularly interested in the factors that
distinguish LTCHs from other acute care
hospitals.
ES.2 The Project Approach
RTI completed this project in two phases.
In Phase I, RTI prepared a background report
for CMS summarizing existing information
regarding LTCHs’ current role in the
Medicare system: their history as Medicare
participating providers, the types of patients
they treat, the criteria Quality Improvement
Organizations (QIO) currently use to review
appropriateness of care in these settings, and
the types of regulations they face as Medicare
participating providers. This work reviewed
prior analyses of these issues and included
discussions with MedPAC, other researchers,
CMS, the QIOs, and the hospital associations.
In Phase II, RTI collected additional
information, including:
• An examination of tools currently used
by the QIOs and the industry to assess
patient appropriateness for admission;
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• Analysis of claims to understand
variations in the LTCH populations and
differences between the LTCH populations
and those treated in other acute hospitals,
particularly those that received outlier
payments for the longer stays;
• Administration of site visits at eight
LTCHs and 1 acute hospital to interview
providers regarding the differences between
LTCH patients and those admitted to other
hospitals or treated in parts of the country
lacking LTCHs.
In recognition of the heterogeneity of
LTCHs, RTI worked with each of the different
associations, including the National
Association of Long Term Hospitals
(NALTH), the Acute Long Term Hospital
Association (ALTHA), the American Hospital
Association (AHA), and the American
Medical Rehabilitation Providers Association
(AMPRA), as well as several of the larger
LTCH chains.
This report summarizes these efforts and
makes recommendations to CMS regarding
the types of criteria needed to distinguish
LTCHs from other types of hospitals. These
criteria will help define LTCH patients on the
basis of patient care needs or different levels
of care. They include both patient and
facility-level measures. The report is
organized in six sections:
• Section 1 summarizes the importance of,
and the issues in, defining criteria for LTCH
payments.
• Section 2 provides an overview of the
industry growth in recent years and an
analysis of whether these changes are
occurring throughout all segments of the
LTCH industry. Included with these analyses
are findings from past work on these issues.
• Section 3 presents analyses of Medicare
claims directed at understanding the
differences in resources, costs, and outcomes
for LTCH patients and similar cases treated
in general acute hospitals.
• Section 4 focuses on existing level of
care definitions and summarizes the tools
currently used to make level of care
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determinations by QIOs, hospitals, and
healthcare systems, including those criteria
applied in areas with and without local
LTCHs. Included are interviews with some of
the Medicare QIOs as well as analysis of
existing tools, such as the InterQualTM level
of care determination tools.
• Section 5 presents RTI’s analysis of
hospital margins, both LTCH margins and
general acute margins for certain types of
cases. DRG-specific analysis examines the
relationship between Medicare payments and
hospital costs for certain types of cases.
• Section 6 presents RTI’s
recommendations for identifying cases that
should qualify for LTCH payments. Fifteen
recommendations are included which focus
on patient-level characteristics, facility-level
characteristics, issues related to creating
consistent standards across acute hospitals
for these medically complex patients, and
additional administrative changes that would
improve CMS’ ability to implement their
payment policies.
ES.3
Section Summaries
Section 1: Introduction
This section presents the importance of
defining LTCH criteria to distinguish cases
that qualify for the higher LTCH PPS
payments. Information is presented that
compares the LTCH and IPPS rates, case mix
weights, and expected length of stay for each
DRG. The two hospitals are very similar in
that LTCHs must meet acute hospital
certification requirements. However, LTCHs
must have average Medicare LOS of more
than 25 days to qualify for the higher PPS
payment rate. The base LTCH payment rate
is substantially higher than the IPPS rate
($38,086 compared to $5,308 in 2007). While
both types of hospitals have payment factors
to adjust for higher and lower cost cases,
such as short stay and high cost outliers, the
average cost episode is substantially higher
when LTCHs are used as part of the episode.
This section also compares the certification
requirements of LTCHs to other IPPS-
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excluded hospitals. The Medicare conditions
of participation set staffing and patient
management requirements for hospitals to
ensure that appropriate care is provided. For
the IPPS-excluded hospitals, these standards
ensure that the provider can meet the
specialized needs of the populations they are
treating, such as those required by the acute
physical rehabilitation or psychiatric
populations.
Differences in expected patient severity,
staff expertise, and case mix measurement
methods used for LTCHs, IPPS, IRFs,
Psychiatric hospitals, and SNFs are also
presented. In general, the IPPS covers the
most severely ill cases in their ICU, the
LTCHs admit cases that are medically
complex and equal to an ICU step-down unit
in terms of intensity and higher staffing
needs, IRFs admit cases that are less
medically complex but highly acute in terms
of their functional impairments. Psychiatric
hospitals and skilled nursing facilities have
the least medically complex admissions. The
lines between each group are poorly defined.
Section 2: LTCH Availability
This section presents information on the
changing supply of LTCHs. The number of
LTCHs has grown markedly since the IPPS
was established in 1983. Much of the growth
has occurred since 1993 when the number of
LTCHs exploded from 105 hospitals to the
current number of 383 hospitals as of
December 2005. The states with the highest
number of facilities are also those with the
highest number of Medicare beneficiaries,
including Texas, Louisiana, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, and Michigan to name a few.
The number of states with LTCHs has
continued growing as well. Many of the new
hospitals are for-profit organizations which
accounted for 58 percent of all hospitals in
December 2005, up from 45 percent in 1996.
The greatest growth was in the smaller
hospitals with the opening of many hospital
in hospitals, although this may be changing
in response to Medicare co-location policies.
LTCH hospitals generally specialize in
three types of populations. The majority of
cases are medically complex, many of whom
have respiratory conditions. A second, but
smaller group are those admitted for
rehabilitation services. And a smaller group
are admitted for longer stay psychiatric
services. Specialization in different cases is
notable by looking at the distributions of
cases admitted to each hospital. Respiratoryrelated, psychoses, and ventilator cases
accounted for the highest proportion of
admissions at most hospitals (averaging
around 15 percent of all admissions/facility).
However, the medians were much lower
except in the case of ventilator admissions
which accounted for 9.3 percent of
admissions at half the LTCHs in the US. Also
notable are the small proportion of hospitals
that have a very high proportion of their
cases in certain DRGs. For example, DRG
430: Psychoses accounts for 62 percent of
admissions in a few of the LTCHs.
Section 3: LTCH Populations, Potential
Substitutes, and Patient Differences Among
Hospitals
This work has been useful for answering
the questions identified in Section 1,
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specifically whether there are differences
between LTCH cases and other inpatient
cases in terms of the average program
payments, beneficiary use levels, and
individual outcomes. The first half of this
section profiled the typical LTCH admission
to examine the types of cases treated in
LTCHs, their associated program costs, and
this population’s use of other services. The
results showed that many of the types of
patients treated in LTCHs are also treated in
other acute care settings. While the most
common LTCH admission is DRG 475, the
majority of these cases, nationally are treated
in IPPS settings, both as inlier and outlier
populations. Similarly the second most
frequent LTCH admission, DRG 249 is
admitted as a non-outlier IRF patient or SNF
patient almost as often as an LTCH patient.
LTCH patients also use many services
during an episode of care. These cases are
frequently readmitted to the general acute
hospital (about 40 percent of the time) and
may have intervening stays at IRFs or SNFs
prior to readmission. Also included were
comparisons of the costs and use for patients
in the same DRG groups who were treated at
other types of inpatient settings. Average
costs per case differed by type of setting.
The second part of this section examined
the acute care admissions to identify
differences between the types of cases likely
to be admitted to an LTCH and other acute
discharges in the same diagnostic and
severity group. The multivariate analysis of
this issue suggested that severity is an
important predictor of LTCH use. This
supports past work suggesting that LTCH
cases have a higher severity level, although
a large proportion are in APR–DRG group 3,
as well as group 4. Being located in a state
with a large number of LTCHs was the most
important predictor of LTCH use, all else
equal.
Examining the acute length of stay
differences was also useful for understanding
the relative role of general acute and LTCHs
in treating these severely ill populations. The
multivariate work showed that LTCH users
have a shorter acute inpatient length stay.
Understanding whether LTCH hospitals are
substituting for services already paid to IPPS
hospitals or whether LTCHs are providing
specialized services is not well understood.
Better measures of acuity are needed to
gauge the differences in medical or
functional impairments between patients
using LTCHs and those using other settings.
Additional work in Phase 3 of this project
will examine the discharge transitions for
acute hospital discharges in areas that lack
LTCHs. Using propensity score methods to
match patients on diagnosis, severity, and
additional factors, as well as control for
differences in the availability of services will
be important for understanding the potential
overlap between acute and LTCH admissions.
Section 4: Determining Levels of Care
This section examines current standards in
the Medicare program and private sector for
determining appropriate levels of care. We
explored three areas: 1) Current Medicare
certification rules governing acute, LTCH,
IRF, and Psychiatric hospital conditions of
participation; 2) QIO and private sector
PO 00000
Frm 00111
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
4885
definitions of populations qualifying for
different hospital and PAC sites of care; and
3) QIO’s current roles in reviewing
appropriateness of hospital admissions. This
included interviewing 11 QIOs in states with
both LTCHs and other PAC providers.
The Medicare certification rules are
important because they set standards of
practice to ensure appropriate quality of care
is provided to Medicare beneficiaries. While
LTCHs must meet the acute inpatient
certification requirements, IRF and
psychiatric hospitals have additional
requirements governing the management of
their patients and the types of staff they must
employ. Both types of IPPS-excluded
hospitals are required to have a physician in
charge of an interdisciplinary team that
includes professionals of varied backgrounds,
specific to the respective types of patients.
Nursing and therapy staff are expected to
have relevant backgrounds in psychiatric or
rehabilitation services, respectively. They are
to be lead by a physician with ‘‘appropriate
training’’ in the psychiatric hospital or ‘‘at
least 2 years of rehabilitation training or
experience’’ in the IRF.
They are also limited to admitting certain
populations. All psychiatric admissions must
be admitted for psychiatric conditions and
must be actively treated or discharged. IRFs,
on the other hand, can admit a wide range
of rehabilitation populations but 50–75
percent must be treated for one of 13 groups
of conditions or the IRF can lose its
certification.
Patient level criteria were also examined.
The Medicare program, in general, does not
specify patient level criteria for LTCHs. IRF
patients must be well enough to participate
in 3 hours therapy/day, in general.
Psychiatric patients must be actively treated
and not just admitted for monitoring of a
chronic condition. Both IRF and psychiatric
patients must be improving from treatment or
be discharged.
Primary responsibility for monitoring
whether Medicare cases are admitted to
appropriate facilities rests with the Quality
Improvement Organizations (QIO). QIOs
were interviewed regarding the tools they use
to assess appropriate admissions. Their
formal charge is to assess whether the
services needed could be provided on a more
economical basis in an alternative setting.
However, they do not distinguish between
types of acute settings.
The QIOS use several tools, although most
use one developed by the private sector and
used by several other insurers, the
InterQual TM tool. This tool is a set of clinical
algorithms intended to create mutually
exclusive groups of cases for admission to
different types of hospitals (acute, LTCH,
IRF, psychiatric), as well as SNFs and
ambulatory services, such as home health
and less intensive psychiatric services. These
tools are guidelines for these decisions with
final decisions made by physicians or nurses,
depending on how complicated a case may
be. In general, the InterQual TM tool is a
complex set of conditions and treatment
needs that identify ICU cases, less intensive
hospital cases, and other types of admissions.
While this tool is widely used by QIOs, they
have not been using it to distinguish between
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LTCH and general acute admissions nor do
the criteria currently distinguish between
those two groups.
Some members of the LTCH industry have
proposed criteria for identifying their
patients. However, these criteria lacked
specificity in several areas and like the
InterQual TM tool, failed to distinguish
between general acute and LTCH admissions.
However, they suggested that all LTCH cases
should be medically complex, including any
types of rehabilitation or psychiatric cases.
Other parts of the industry suggested that
LTCH admissions be restricted to 8 types of
cases commonly admitted to LTCHs.
However, these proposals failed to
distinguish severity within these conditions
again, making no distinction between general
acute and LTCH severity.
Site visits at eight LTCHs and one acute
hospital with a respiratory ventilator unit
were conducted to understand the providers’
perceptions of appropriate admissions to
these settings. Physicians at each site were
interviewed regarding the differences
between the patients they treated and those
treated in an acute hospital ICU, medical/
surgical floor, IRF, or SNF. The LTCH
physicians perceived themselves as
specialists in treating these very complicated
patients. Many of the patients are having
acute exacerbations of chronic respiratory
conditions, multi-system organ failures, and
other complications, including wounds and
infections. The hospitals provide
interdisciplinary treatment teams with nurse
staffing levels that were lower than ICU but
higher than general units in acute hospitals.
Many had ICUs, particularly the freestanding facilities as patients often had
emergent care needs, particularly if they were
being weaned from a ventilator. The LTCHs
consistently distinguished their admissions
from ICU cases in that they only admitted
medically stable patients. They perceived the
acute hospitals’ roles to be one of diagnosis
and stabilization.
The acute hospital with a ventilator unit
was very similar in practice to an LTCH but
was paid under the IPPS system. This unit
was a special unit where respiratory cases
were admitted for higher levels of monitoring
than was available on the general floor and
interdisciplinary treatment teams cared for
the patients. However, anecdotal concerns
were also raised about the cost of caring for
these difficult patients under the IPPS
payment system.
Median facility PPS margins were highest
among for-profits and highest for those
certified in recent years. Margins were lower
for those with a higher proportion of highcost outliers. and—somewhat surprisingly—
lower for those with a higher proportion of
very short-stay outliers (stays less than one
half the geometric mean LOS).
Case-level margin analyses were conducted
for claims in FY 2003 and 2004 that were
paid under the 100% federal rate. Margins
varied substantially across DRGs, even after
stratifying to remove the effects of high-cost
or short-stay outlier prevalence. Across the
10 most common reasons for admission,
average margins were lowest for those in
Rehabilitation (¥0.1%) and highest for those
in Ventilator Support (21.3%). Across all
cases the aggregate margin was 12.4%, but it
was 17.4% for inlier cases, 13.8% for shortstay outlier cases and ¥14.3% for high-cost
outlier cases. The variation in profitability
across DRGs was even greater in multivariate
models that were able to control for fixed
hospital-specific effects, as well as outlier
status.
In fiscal 2004, the median margin for LTCH
Ventilator Support cases was 23.1%. We
found that in IPPS settings, the median for
cases in that same DRG 475 was 13.1%. The
mean 1.4%, indicating some cases had very
large losses. There is an unusually large
amount of within-DRG variation in the IPPS
setting; among the roughly half of cases
staying 10 days or less, the median margin
was 42.6%, compared to negative 27.1% for
those staying 10 days or more. IPPS margins
were slightly lower for the Ventilator Support
cases that transferred to LTCHs than for those
with other discharge dispositions. Settingspecific profit differentials require further
study using a complete episode-of-care file,
to adjust for changes in DRGs across
inpatient settings and to control adequately
for possible patient selection effects.
We conclude that underlying high LTCH
profitability stems from a generous base rate
during the first two PPS years. However,
substantial variation in profitability across
DRGs ‘‘ including the unusually high margins
that we found for Ventilator cases and other
respiratory-related DRGs ‘‘ stems from bias in
the DRG weights that causes systematic
understatement of costs for cases using
relatively more ancillary services. This is a
design problem within LTCH PPS that can
only be addressed with improved cost-based
weights.
Section 5: Medicare Margins Analysis
This section examined LTCH facility
financial performance before and after the
introduction of PPS. We found that aggregate
facility total margins rose from 4.9% in FY
2002 to 8.9% in FY 2003, and Medicare
inpatient PPS margins rose from 1.9% to
8.3% in the same period. In the first year of
implementation, the inter-quartile range on
LTCH PPS margins was ¥0.2% to +17.1%.
Facilities paid under the phased-in rates and
public LTCHs were disproportionately
represented at the lower end of the
distribution. Many facilities were able to
improve their profitability by opting for
100% federal rates in year 2, indicating that
the base rate was set at a generous level
relative to average standardized cost per case.
Section 6: Recommendations for Identifying
Appropriate LTCH Cases
Based on the findings in this report, this
Section provides recommendations and
discussions for developing patient level
criteria, facility level criteria, creating more
consistency between general acute and LTCH
payment and certification rules, and several
administrative issues related to LTCH
identification methods. Complete discussions
accompany each recommendation in Section
6.
A. Patient-Level Recommendations
Recommendation 1: Restrict LTCH
admissions to cases that meet certain medical
conditions, including having a primary
diagnosis that is medical in nature, not
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function or psychiatric, and meeting a certain
level of medical complexity that reflects
severely ill populations.
Recommendation 2: Require LTCH
Admissions to be discharged if not having
diagnostic procedures or improving with
treatment, such as those receiving long term
ventilator management.
Recommendation 3: Develop a list of
criteria to measure medical severity for
hospital admissions.
Recommendation 4: Establish a Technical
Advisory Group.
Recommendation 5: Establish a data
collection mechanism to collect this
information.
Recommendation 6: Require LTCHs to
collect functional measures as well as
physiologic measures on all patients
receiving physical, occupational, or speech
and language pathology services.
B. Facility Level Recommendations
Recommendation 7: Standardize
conditions of participation and set staffing
requirements to ensure appropriate staff for
treating medically complex cases.
Recommendation 8: Keep the 25 day
average length stay requirement in place to
limit LTCH’s incentives to unbundle and
clearly delineate between general and long
term acute patients.
C. Recommendations To Improve
Consistency Between General Acute and
Long Term Acute Hospital Payment and
Certification Policies
Recommendation 9: Allow LTCHs, like
general acute hospitals, to open certified,
distinct-part rehabilitation and psychiatric
units if CMS finds that restricting LTCH
admissions to the medically complex cases
results in access problems for IRF or
psychiatric patient populations.
Recommendation 10: Require LTCHs to
meet the same regulatory restrictions as
general acute hospitals by limiting their
allowance to only one of each type of
distinct-part unit.
Recommendation 11: Establish payment
rules that provide a disincentive for LTCHs
to transfer cases early to other post acute
settings.
Recommendation 12: Conduct additional
research to examine costs associated with
different segments of an acute episode for
medically complex patients. This should also
include an examination of the IPPS margins
for common types of LTCH cases.
D. Administrative Recommendations
Recommendation 13: Establish a provider
identification code for satellite facilities and
hospitals in hospitals (HIH).
Recommendation 14: Strengthen the
requirement for parent facilities to report
satellite locations by requiring them to be
identified on the cost report.
Recommendation 15: Clarify QIO roles in
overseeing appropriateness of admissions of
LTCHs.
[FR Doc. 07–392 Filed 1–25–07; 4:30 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\01FEP2.SGM
01FEP2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 21 (Thursday, February 1, 2007)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 4776-4886]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 07-392]
[[Page 4775]]
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Part II
Department of Health and Human Services
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Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
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42 CFR Parts 412 and 413
Medicare Program; Prospective Payment System for Long-Term Care
Hospitals RY 2008: Proposed Annual Payment Rate Updates, and Policy
Changes; and Proposed Hospital Direct and Indirect Graduate Medical
Education Policy Changes; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 21 / Thursday, February 1, 2007 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 4776]]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Part 412 and 413
[CMS-1529-P]
RIN 0938-AO30
Medicare Program; Prospective Payment System for Long-Term Care
Hospitals RY 2008: Proposed Annual Payment Rate Updates, and Policy
Changes; and Proposed Hospital Direct and Indirect Graduate Medical
Education Policy Changes
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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SUMMARY: This proposed rule would update the annual payment rates for
the Medicare prospective payment system (PPS) for inpatient hospital
services provided by long-term care hospitals (LTCHs). The proposed
payment amounts and factors used to determine the updated Federal rates
that are described in this proposed rule were determined based on the
LTCH PPS rate year July 1, 2007 through June 30, 2008. The annual
update of the long-term care diagnosis-related group (LTC-DRG)
classifications and relative weights remains linked to the annual
adjustments of the acute care hospital inpatient diagnosis-related
group system, and would continue to be effective each October 1. The
proposed outlier threshold for July 1, 2007, through June 30, 2008,
would also be derived from the LTCH PPS rate year calculations. We are
also proposing to make policy changes which include proposed revisions
to the GME and IME policies. In addition, we are adding a technical
amendment correcting the regulations text at Sec. 412.22.
DATES: To be assured consideration, comments must be received at one of
the addresses provided below, no later than 5 p.m. on April 2, 2007.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, please refer to file code CMS-1529-P. 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/.
(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-1529-P, P.O. Box 8015, Baltimore, MD 21244-8015.
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-1529-P, Mail Stop C4-26-5, 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) 786-7197 in advance to schedule your arrival
with one of our staff members. Room 445-G, Hubert H. Humphrey Building,
200 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20201; or 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
(Because access to the interior of the HHH Building is not readily
available to persons without Federal Government identification,
commenters are encouraged to leave their comments in the CMS drop slots
located in the main lobby of the building. A stamp-in clock is
available for persons wishing to retain a proof of filing by stamping
in and retaining an extra copy of the comments being filed.)
Comments mailed to the addresses indicated as appropriate for hand
or courier delivery may be delayed and received after the comment
period.
Submission of comments on paperwork requirements. You may submit
comments on this document's paperwork requirements by mailing your
comments to the addresses provided at the end of the ``Collection of
Information Requirements'' section in this document.
For information on viewing public comments, see the beginning of
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tzvi Hefter, (410) 786-4487 (General
information).
Judy Richter, (410) 786-2590 (General information, payment
adjustments for special cases, and onsite discharges and readmissions,
interrupted stays, co-located providers, and short-stay outliers).
Michele Hudson, (410) 786-5490 (Calculation of the payment rates,
LTC-DRGs, relative weights and case-mix index, market basket, wage
index, budget neutrality, and other payment adjustments).
Ann Fagan, (410) 786-5662 (Patient classification system).
Miechal Lefkowitz, (410) 786-5316 (Graduate Medical Education
payments).
Linda McKenna, (410) 786-4537 (Payment adjustments, interrupted
stay, and transition period).
Renate Rockwell, (410) 786-4645 (Graduate Medical Education
payments).
Elizabeth Truong, (410) 786-6005 (Federal rate update, budget
neutrality, other adjustments, and calculation of the payment rates).
Michael Treitel, (410) 786-4552 (High cost outliers and cost-to-
charge ratios).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Submission of Public 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-1529-P] and the specific ``issue identifier'' that
precedes the section on which you choose to comment.
Inspection of Public Comments: All comments received before the
close of the comment period are available for viewing by the public,
including any personally identifiable or confidential business
information that is included in a comment. We post all comments
received before the close of the comment period on the following Web
site as soon as possible after they have been received: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/eRulemaking. Click 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.
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. Legislative and Regulatory Authority
B. Criteria for Classification as a LTCH
1. Classification as a LTCH
2. Hospitals Excluded From the LTCH PPS
[[Page 4777]]
C. Transition Period for Implementation of the LTCH PPS
D. Limitation on Charges to Beneficiaries
E. Administrative Simplification Compliance Act (ASCA) and
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)
Compliance
II. Summary of Major Contents of This Proposed Rule
III. Long-Term Care Diagnosis-Related Group (LTC-DRG)
Classifications and Relative Weights
A. Background
B. Patient Classifications Into DRGs
C. Organization of DRGs
D. Proposed Update of LTC-DRGs
1. Background
2. Proposed Budget Neutrality (BN) Requirement for the Annual
LTC-DRG Update
E. ICD-9-CM Coding System
1. Uniform Hospital Discharge Data Set (UHDDS) Definitions
2. Maintenance of the ICD-9-CM Coding System
3. Coding Rules and Use of ICD-9-CM Codes in LTCHs
F. Method for Updating the LTC-DRG Relative Weights
IV. Proposed Changes to the LTCH PPS Payment Rates for the 2008 LTCH
PPS Rate Year
A. Overview of the Development of the Payment Rates
B. LTCH PPS Market Basket
1. Overview of the RPL Market Basket
2. Proposed Market Basket Estimate for the 2008 LTCH PPS Rate
Year
C. Proposed Standard Federal Rate for the 2008 LTCH PPS Rate
Year
1. Background
2. Proposed Update to the Standard Federal Rate for the 2008
LTCH PPS Rate Year
3. Proposed Standard Federal Rate for the 2008 LTCH PPS Rate
Year
D. Calculation of Proposed LTCH Prospective Payments for the
2008 LTCH PPS Rate Year
1. Proposed Adjustment for Area Wage Levels
a. Background
b. Geographic Classifications/Labor Market Area Definitions
c. Proposed Labor-Related Share
d. Proposed Wage Index Data
2. Proposed Adjustment for Cost-of-Living in Alaska and Hawaii
3. Proposed Adjustment for High-Cost Outliers (HCOs)
a. Background
b. Cost-to-Charge Ratios (CCRs)
c. Establishment of the Proposed Fixed-Loss Amount
d. Reconciliation of Outlier Payments Upon Cost Report
Settlement
e. Application of Outlier Policy to Short-Stay Outlier (SSO)
Cases
4. Other Payment Adjustments
5. Proposed Budget Neutrality (BN) Offset To Account for the
Transition Methodology
6. One-Time Prospective Adjustment to the Standard Federal Rate
V. Other Proposed Policy Changes for the 2008 LTCH PPS Rate Year
A. Short-Stay Outlier (SSO) Cases
1. Background
2. Additional Discussion of SSO Payment Formula (includes
Technical Correction)
3. Determination of Cost-to-Charge Ratios (CCRs)
4. Reconciliation of SSO Cases
B. Proposed expansion of special payment provisions for LTCH
hospitals within hospitals (HwHs) and LTCH satellites: Proposed
expansion of the 25 percent rule to certain situations not currently
covered under existing Sec. 412.534
VI. Computing the Proposed Adjusted Federal Prospective Payments for
the 2008 LTCH PPS Rate Year
VII. Transition Period
VIII. Payments to New LTCHs
IX. Method of Payment
X. Monitoring
XI. MedPAC Recommendations: The RTI Contract
XII. Graduate Medical Education (GME)
A. GME Background
B. Resident Training in Nonhospital Settings
1. Background
2. Moratorium on Disallowances of Allopathic or Osteopathic
Family Practice Residents Training Time in Nonhospital Settings, and
Questions and Answers (Qs&As) on CMS Web Site (Section 713 of the
MMA and Sec. 413.78)
3. Requirements for Written Agreements for Residency Training in
Nonhospital Settings (Sec. 413.78(e))
4. Modification of the Definition of ``All or Substantially All
of the Costs for the Training Program in the Nonhospital Setting''
5. Implementation of a 90 Percent Cost Threshold
C. Other Issues To Be Considered
XIII. Technical Amendment
XIV. Waiver of Proposed Rulemaking and Delay in the Effective Date
XV. Collection of Information Requirements
XVI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
Addendum A: Tables
Addendum B: Executive Summary of RTI's Report
Acronyms
Because of the many terms to which we refer by acronym in this
proposed rule, we are listing the acronyms used and their
corresponding terms in alphabetical order below:
AAMC Association of American Medical Colleges
AFMAA Academic Family Medicine Advocacy Alliance
AHA American Hospital Association
AHIMA American Health Information Management Association
ALOS Average length of stay
ALTHA Acute Long Term Hospital Association
AMGA American Medical Group Association
AMPRA American Medical Peer Review Association
AOA American Osteopathic Association
APR All patient refined
ASCA Administrative Simplification Compliance Act of 2002 (Pub. L.
107-105)
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)
BN Budget neutrality
CBSA Core-based statistical area
CCR Cost-to-charge ratio
C&M Coordination and maintenance
CMI Case-mix index
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
COLA Cost of living adjustment
CS Consolidated severity-adjusted
CY Calendar year
DSH Disproportionate share of low-income patients
DRGs Diagnosis-related groups
FI Fiscal intermediary
FMC Family Medicine Center
FTE Full-time equivalent
FY Federal fiscal year
GME Graduate medical education
HCO High-cost outlier
HCRIS Hospital cost report information system
HHA Home health agency
HHS (Department of) Health and Human Services
HIPAA Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (Pub. L.
104-191)
HIPC Health Information Policy Council
HwHs Hospitals within hospitals
ICD-9-CM International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision,
Clinical Modification (codes)
IME Indirect medical education
I-O Input-Output
IPF Inpatient psychiatric facility
IPPS [Acute Care Hospital] Inpatient Prospective Payment System
IRF Inpatient rehabilitation facility
LOS Length of stay
LTC-DRG Long-term care diagnosis-related group
LTCH Long-term care hospital
MCE Medicare code editor
MDC Major diagnostic categories
MedPAC Medicare Payment Advisory Commission
MedPAR Medicare provider analysis and review
MMA Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act
of 2003 (Pub. L. 108-173)
MSA Metropolitan statistical area
NAICS North American Industrial Classification System
NALTH National Association of Long Term Hospitals
NCHS National Center for Health Statistics
OACT [CMS'] Office of the Actuary
OBRA 86 Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1986 (Pub. L. 99-509)
OMB Office of Management and Budget
OPM U.S. Office of Personnel Management
O.R. Operating room
OSCAR Online Survey Certification and Reporting (System)
OTN One-Time Notification
PIP Periodic interim payment
[[Page 4778]]
PLI Professional liability insurance
PMSA Primary metropolitan statistical area
PPI Producer Price Indexes
PPS Prospective payment system
PRA Per resident amount
PSF Provider specific file
QIO Quality Improvement Organization (formerly Peer Review
organization (PRO))
RIA Regulatory impact analysis
RPL Rehabilitation psychiatric long-term care (hospital)
RTI Research Triangle Institute, International
RY Rate year (begins July 1 and ends June 30)
SIC Standard industrial code
SNF Skilled nursing facility
SSO Short-stay outlier
TEFRA Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 (Pub. L. 97-
248)
TEP Technical expert panel
UHDDS Uniform hospital discharge data set
I. Background
[If you choose to comment on issues in this section, please include
the caption ``BACKGROUND'' at the beginning of your comments.]
A. Legislative and Regulatory Authority
Section 123 of the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP [State Children's
Health Insurance Program] Balanced Budget Refinement Act of 1999 (BBRA)
(Pub. L. 106-113) as amended by section 307(b) of the Medicare,
Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits Improvement and Protection Act of 2000
(BIPA) (Pub. L. 106-554) provides for payment for both the operating
and capital-related costs of hospital inpatient stays in long-term care
hospitals (LTCHs) under Medicare Part A based on prospectively set
rates. The Medicare prospective payment system (PPS) for LTCHs applies
to hospitals described in section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv) of the Social
Security Act (the Act), effective for cost reporting periods beginning
on or after October 1, 2002.
Section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(I) of the Act defines a LTCH as ``a
hospital which has an average inpatient length of stay (as determined
by the Secretary) of greater than 25 days.'' Section
1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(II) of the Act also provides an alternative
definition of LTCHs: specifically, a hospital that first received
payment under section 1886(d) of the Act in 1986 and has an average
inpatient length of stay (LOS) (as determined by the Secretary of
Health and Human Services (the Secretary)) of greater than 20 days and
has 80 percent or more of its annual Medicare inpatient discharges with
a principal diagnosis that reflects a finding of neoplastic disease in
the 12-month cost reporting period ending in fiscal year (FY) 1997.
Section 123 of the BBRA requires the PPS for LTCHs to be a ``per
discharge'' system with a diagnosis-related group (DRG) based patient
classification system that reflects the differences in patient
resources and costs in LTCHs. It also requires that the ``per
discharge'' system maintain budget neutrality (BN). We believe the
statutory mandate for BN applies only to the first year of the
implementation of the LTCH PPS such that estimated payments in the
first year of the PPS were projected to equal payments that would have
been paid for operating and capital-related costs of LTCHs had this new
payment system not been enacted.
Section 307(b)(1) of the BIPA, among other things, mandates that
the Secretary shall examine, and may provide for, adjustments to
payments under the LTCH PPS, including adjustments to DRG weights, area
wage adjustments, geographic reclassification, outliers, updates, and a
disproportionate share adjustment.
In the August 30, 2002 Federal Register, we issued a final rule
that implemented the LTCH PPS authorized under BBRA and BIPA (67 FR
55954). This system uses information from LTCH patient records to
classify patients into distinct long-term care diagnosis-related groups
(LTC-DRGs) based on clinical characteristics and expected resource
needs. Payments are calculated for each LTC-DRG and provisions are made
for appropriate payment adjustments. Payment rates under the LTCH PPS
are updated annually and published in the Federal Register.
The LTCH PPS replaced the reasonable cost-based payment system
under the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA)
(Pub. L. 97-248) for payments for inpatient services provided by a LTCH
with a cost reporting period beginning on or after October 1, 2002.
(The regulations implementing the TEFRA reasonable cost-based payment
provisions are located at 42 CFR part 413.) With the implementation of
the PPS for acute care hospitals authorized by the Social Security
Amendments of 1983 (Pub. L. 98-21), which added section 1886(d) to the
Act, certain hospitals, including LTCHs, were excluded from the PPS for
acute care hospitals and were paid their reasonable costs for inpatient
services subject to a per discharge limitation or target amount under
the TEFRA system. For each cost reporting period, a hospital-specific
ceiling on payments was determined by multiplying the hospital's
updated target amount by the number of total current year Medicare
discharges. (Generally, in this document when we refer to discharges,
the intent is to describe Medicare discharges.) The August 30, 2002
final rule further details the payment policy under the TEFRA system
(67 FR 55954).
In the August 30, 2002 final rule, we also presented an in-depth
discussion of the LTCH PPS, including the patient classification
system, relative weights, payment rates, additional payments, and the
BN requirements mandated by section 123 of the BBRA. The same final
rule that established regulations for the LTCH PPS under 42 CFR part
412, subpart O, also contained LTCH provisions related to covered
inpatient services, limitation on charges to beneficiaries, medical
review requirements, furnishing of inpatient hospital services directly
or under arrangement, and reporting and recordkeeping requirements. We
refer readers to the August 30, 2002 final rule for a comprehensive
discussion of the research and data that supported the establishment of
the LTCH PPS (67 FR 55954).
In the June 6, 2003 Federal Register, we published a final rule
that set forth the FY 2004 annual update of the payment rates for the
Medicare PPS for inpatient hospital services furnished by LTCHs (68 FR
34122). It also changed the annual period for which the payment rates
are effective. The annual updated rates are now effective from July 1
through June 30 instead of from October 1 through September 30. We
refer to the July through June time period as a ``long-term care
hospital rate year'' (LTCH PPS RY). In addition, we changed the
publication schedule for the annual update to allow for an effective
date of July 1. The payment amounts and factors used to determine the
annual update of the LTCH PPS Federal rate is based on a LTCH PPS rate
year. While the LTCH payment rate update is effective July 1, the
annual update of the LTC-DRG classifications and relative weights are
linked to the annual adjustments of the acute care hospital inpatient
DRGs and are effective each October 1.
In the Prospective Payment System for Long-Term Care Hospitals RY
2007: Annual Payment Rate Updates, Policy Changes, and Clarifications
final rule (71 FR 27798) (hereinafter referred to as the RY 2007 LTCH
PPS final rule), we set forth the 2007 LTCH PPS rate year annual update
of the payment rates for the Medicare PPS for inpatient hospital
services provided by LTCHs. We also adopted the ``Rehabilitation,
Psychiatric, Long-Term Care (RPL)'' market basket under the LTCH PPS in
place of the excluded hospital with capital market basket. In addition,
we implemented a zero percent update to
[[Page 4779]]
the LTCH PPS Federal rate for RY 2007. We also revised the existing
payment adjustment for short stay outlier (SSO) cases by reducing part
of the current payment formula and adding a fourth component to that
payment formula. Also, we sunsetted the surgical DRG exception to the
payment policy established under the 3-day or less interruption of stay
policy. Finally, we clarified the policy at Sec. 412.534(c) for
adjusting the LTCH PPS payment so that the LTCH PPS payment is
equivalent to what would otherwise be payable under Sec. 412.1(a).
B. Criteria for Classification as a LTCH
1. Classification as a LTCH
Under the existing regulations at Sec. 412.23(e)(1) and (e)(2)(i),
which implement section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(I) of the Act, to qualify to
be paid under the LTCH PPS, a hospital must have a provider agreement
with Medicare and must have an average Medicare inpatient LOS of
greater than 25 days. Alternatively, Sec. 412.23(e)(2)(ii) states that
for cost reporting periods beginning on or after August 5, 1997, a
hospital that was first excluded from the PPS in 1986 and can
demonstrate that at least 80 percent of its annual Medicare inpatient
discharges in the 12-month cost reporting period ending in FY 1997 have
a principal diagnosis that reflects a finding of neoplastic disease
must have an average inpatient LOS for all patients, including both
Medicare and non-Medicare inpatients, of greater than 20 days.
Section 412.23(e)(3) provides that, subject to the provisions of
paragraphs (e)(3)(ii) through (e)(3)(iv) of this section, the average
Medicare inpatient LOS, specified under Sec. 412.23(e)(2)(i) is
calculated by dividing the total number of covered and noncovered days
of stay for Medicare inpatients (less leave or pass days) by the number
of total Medicare discharges for the hospital's most recent complete
cost reporting period. Section 412.23 also provides that subject to the
provisions of paragraphs (e)(3)(ii) through (e)(3)(iv) of this section,
the average inpatient LOS specified under Sec. 412.23(e)(2)(ii) is
calculated by dividing the total number of days for all patients,
including both Medicare and non-Medicare inpatients (less leave or pass
days) by the number of total discharges for the hospital's most recent
complete cost reporting period.
In the RY 2005 LTCH PPS final rule (69 FR 25674), we specified the
procedure for calculating a hospital's inpatient average length of stay
(ALOS) for purposes of classification as a LTCH. That is, if a
patient's stay includes days of care furnished during two or more
separate consecutive cost reporting periods, the total days of a
patient's stay would be reported in the cost reporting period during
which the patient is discharged (69 FR 25705). Therefore, we revised
Sec. 412.23(e)(3)(ii) to specify that, effective for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after July 1, 2004, in calculating a hospital's
ALOS, if the days of an inpatient stay involve days of care furnished
during two or more separate consecutive cost reporting periods, the
total number of days of the stay are considered to have occurred in the
cost reporting period during which the inpatient was discharged.
Fiscal intermediaries (FIs) verify that LTCHs meet the ALOS
requirements. We note that the inpatient days of a patient who is
admitted to a LTCH without any remaining Medicare days of coverage,
regardless of the fact that the patient is a Medicare beneficiary, will
not be included in the above calculation. Because Medicare would not be
paying for any of the patient's treatment, data on the patient's stay
would not be included in the Medicare claims processing systems. As
described in Sec. 409.61, in order for both covered and noncovered
days of a LTCH hospitalization to be included, a patient admitted to
the LTCH must have at least one remaining benefit day (68 FR 34123).
The FI's determination of whether or not a hospital qualifies as an
LTCH is based on the hospital's discharge data from the hospital's most
recent complete cost reporting period as specified in Sec.
412.23(e)(3) and is effective at the start of the hospital's next cost
reporting period as specified in Sec. 412.22(d). However, if the
hospital does not meet the ALOS requirement as specified in Sec.
412.23(e)(2)(i) and (ii), the hospital may provide the FI with data
indicating a change in the ALOS by the same method for the period of at
least 5 months of the immediately preceding 6-month period (69 FR
25676). Our interpretation of Sec. 412.23(e)(3) was to allow hospitals
to submit data using a period of at least 5 months of the most recent
data from the immediately preceding 6-month period.
As we stated in the FY 2004 Inpatient Prospective Payment System
(IPPS) final rule, published in the August 1, 2003 Federal Register,
prior to the implementation of the LTCH PPS, we did rely on data from
the most recently submitted cost report for purposes of calculating the
ALOS (68 FR 45464). The calculation to determine whether an acute care
hospital qualifies for LTCH status was based on total days and
discharges for LTCH inpatients. However, with the implementation of the
LTCH PPS, for the ALOS specified under Sec. 412.23(e)(2)(i), we
revised Sec. 412.23(e)(3)(i) to only count total days and discharges
for Medicare inpatients (67 FR 55970 through 55974). In addition, the
ALOS specified under Sec. 412.23(e)(2)(ii) is calculated by dividing
the total number of days for all patients, including both Medicare and
non-Medicare inpatients (less leave or pass days) by the number of
total discharges for the hospital's most recent complete cost reporting
period. As we discussed in the FY 2004 IPPS final rule, we are unable
to capture the necessary data from our present cost reporting forms (68
FR 45464). Therefore, we have notified FIs and LTCHs that until the
cost reporting forms are revised, for purposes of calculating the ALOS,
we will be relying upon census data extracted from Medicare Provider
Analysis and Review (MedPAR) files that reflect each LTCH's cost
reporting period (68 FR 45464). Requirements for hospitals seeking
classification as LTCHs that have undergone a change in ownership, as
described in Sec. 489.18, are set forth in Sec. 412.23(e)(3)(iv).
2. Hospitals Excluded From the LTCH PPS
The following hospitals are paid under special payment provisions,
as described in Sec. 412.22(c) and, therefore, are not subject to the
LTCH PPS rules:
Veterans Administration hospitals.
Hospitals that are reimbursed under State cost control
systems approved under 42 CFR part 403.
Hospitals that are reimbursed in accordance with
demonstration projects authorized under section 402(a) of the Social
Security Amendments of 1967 (Pub. L. 90-248) (42 U.S.C. 1395b-1) or
section 222(a) of the Social Security Amendments of 1972 (Pub. L. 92-
603) (42 U.S.C. 1395b-1 (note)) (Statewide all-payer systems, subject
to the rate-of-increase test at section 1814(b) of the Act).
Nonparticipating hospitals furnishing emergency services
to Medicare beneficiaries.
C. Transition Period for Implementation of the LTCH PPS
In the August 30, 2002 final rule (67 FR 55954), we provided for a
5-year transition period. During this 5-year transition period, a
LTCH's total payment under the PPS was based on an increasing
percentage of the Federal rate with a corresponding decrease in the
percentage of the LTCH PPS payment that is based on reasonable cost
[[Page 4780]]
concepts. However, effective for cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 2006, total LTCH PPS payments are based on 100 percent
of the Federal rate.
D. Limitation on Charges to Beneficiaries
In the August 30, 2002 final rule, we presented an in-depth
discussion of beneficiary liability under the LTCH PPS (67 FR 55974
through 55975). In the RY 2005 LTCH PPS final rule (69 FR 25676), we
clarified that the discussion of beneficiary liability in the August
30, 2002 final rule was not meant to establish rates or payments for,
or define Medicare-eligible expenses. Under Sec. 412.507, if the
Medicare payment to the LTCH is the full LTC-DRG payment amount, as
consistent with other established hospital prospective payment systems,
a LTCH may not bill a Medicare beneficiary for more than the deductible
and coinsurance amounts as specified under Sec. 409.82, Sec. 409.83,
and Sec. 409.87 and for items and services as specified under Sec.
489.30(a). However, under the LTCH PPS, Medicare will only pay for days
for which the beneficiary has coverage until the SSO threshold is
exceeded. (See section V.A.1.a. of this preamble.) Therefore, if the
Medicare payment was for a SSO case (Sec. 412.529) that was less than
the full LTC-DRG payment amount because the beneficiary had
insufficient remaining Medicare days, the LTCH could also charge the
beneficiary for services delivered on those uncovered days (Sec.
412.507).
E. Administrative Simplification Compliance Act (ASCA) and Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) Compliance
Claims submitted to Medicare must comply with both the
Administrative Simplification Compliance Act (ASCA) (Pub. L. 107-105),
and Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) (Pub.
L. 104-191). Section 3 of the ASCA requires that the Medicare Program
deny payment under Part A or Part B for any expenses incurred for items
or services ``for which a claim is submitted other than in an
electronic form specified by the Secretary.'' Section 1862(h) of the
Act (as added by section 3(a) of the ASCA) provides that the Secretary
shall waive such denial in two specific types of cases and may also
waive such denial ``in such unusual cases as the Secretary finds
appropriate'' (68 FR 48805). Section 3 of the ASCA operates in the
context of the ASCA provisions of HIPAA, which include, among other
provisions, the transactions and code sets standards requirements
codified as 45 CFR parts 160 and 162, subparts A and I through R
(generally known as the Transactions Rule). The Transactions Rule
requires covered entities, including covered health care providers, to
conduct the covered electronic transactions according to the applicable
transactions and code sets standards.
II. Summary of the Major Contents of This Proposed Rule
In this proposed rule, we are setting forth the proposed annual
update to the payment rates for the Medicare LTCH PPS, as well as,
proposing other policy changes. The following is a summary of the major
areas that we are addressing in this proposed rule.
In section III. of this preamble, we discuss the LTCH PPS patient
classification and the relative weights which remain linked to the
annual adjustments of the acute care hospital inpatient DRG system, and
are based on the annual revisions to the International Classification
of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) codes
effective each October 1.
Also, in section III. of this preamble, we are proposing to
establish a BN requirement for when the LTC-DRG classifications and
relative weights are updated annually to reflect changes in relative
LTCH resource use. This requirement would ensure that estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments would not decrease or increase as a result
of the annual update to the LTC-DRG classifications and relative
weights.
As discussed in section IV.C. of this preamble, we are proposing a
0.71 percent update to the LTCH PPS Federal rate for the 2008 LTCH PPS
rate year based on an adjustment to the most recent estimate of the
LTCH PPS market basket to account for changes in coding practices. Also
in section IV. of this preamble, we discuss the proposed prospective
payment rate for RY 2008, and in section VI. we discuss the applicable
adjustments to the proposed payment rates, including the proposed
revisions to the wage index, proposed labor-related share, the proposed
cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) factors, and the proposed outlier
threshold, for the 2008 LTCH PPS rate year.
In section V.A.1.b. of this preamble, we discuss an approach being
considered to make a change to our present payment methodology for
certain SSO cases. Under this approach, payment for SSO cases would be
subject to a further adjustment where the patient's LOS at the LTCH is
less than or equal to an IPPS LOS threshold for the DRG.
In section V.B. of this preamble, we discuss the proposed expansion
of the present 25 percent admission policy at existing Sec. 412.534(c)
to those certain situations not already affected by that existing
policy. We are proposing to specify that for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after July 1, 2007, that ``grandfathered'' LTCH HwHs
and LTCH satellites, at Sec. 412.22(f) and Sec. 412.22(h)(3)(i)
respectively, would also be included in the policy set forth at
existing Sec. 412.534. We are also proposing that if the percentage of
LTCH's or LTCH satellite facility's discharges that were admitted from
any non-co-located referring hospital exceeds 25 percent (or the
applicable percentage) for a particular cost reporting period, an
adjusted amount would be made for those Medicare discharges that were
admitted from that referring hospital beyond the 25 percent (or the
applicable percentage) threshold.
In section X. of this preamble, we will discuss our on-going
monitoring protocols under the LTCH PPS.
In section XI. of this preamble, we will discuss the
recommendations made by the Research Triangle Institute,
International's (RTI) evaluation of the feasibility of adopting
recommendations made in the June 2004 Medicare Payment Advisory
Commission (MedPAC) Report. (Addendum B will include the executive
summary of the RTI report.)
In section XII. of this preamble, we discuss our proposal to
redefine the statutory term ``all or substantially all of the costs for
the training program in the nonhospital setting.'' The statute requires
that hospitals must pay all of substantially all of the costs for
training in a nonhospital site in order to count FTE residents training
in the nonhospital setting for Medicare graduate medical education
(GME) payment purposes. We are proposing to revise Sec. 413.75(b) to
introduce a new definition of ``all or substantially all of the costs
for the training program in the nonhospital setting'' to mean, at least
90 percent of the residents' salaries and fringe benefits (including
travel and lodging where applicable) and the portion of the cost of
teaching physicians' salaries attributable to direct GME. In addition,
we are proposing to revise Sec. 412.105(f)(1)(ii)(C) for IME and Sec.
413.78 to reflect this new definition of ``all or substantially all''
of the GME costs in a nonhospital setting, effective for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after July 1, 2007.
In section XVI. of this preamble, we analyze the impact of the
proposed changes presented in this proposed rule on Medicare
expenditures, Medicare-
[[Page 4781]]
participating LTCHs, and Medicare beneficiaries.
III. Long-Term Care Diagnosis-Related Group (LTC-DRG) Classifications
and Relative Weights
[If you choose to comment on issues in this section, please include
the caption ``LTC-DRG CLASSIFICATIONS AND RELATIVE WEIGHTS'' at the
beginning of your comments.]
A. Background
Section 123 of the BBRA requires that the Secretary 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. Section 307(b)(1) of the BIPA modified the requirements of
section 123 of the BBRA by 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 DRGs that have
been modified to account for different resource use of LTCH patients,
as well as the use of the most recently available hospital discharge
data.''
In accordance with section 123 of the BBRA as amended by section
307(b)(1) of the BIPA and Sec. 412.515, we use information derived
from LTCH PPS patient records to classify these cases into distinct
LTC-DRGs based on clinical characteristics and estimated resource
needs. The LTC-DRGs used as the patient classification component of the
LTCH PPS correspond to the hospital inpatient DRGs in the IPPS. We
assign an appropriate weight to the LTC-DRGs to account for the
difference in resource use by patients exhibiting the case complexity
and multiple medical problems characteristic of LTCHs.
In a departure from the IPPS, we use low volume LTC-DRGs (less than
25 LTCH cases) in determining the LTC-DRG weights, since LTCHs do not
typically treat the full range of diagnoses as do acute care hospitals.
To manage the large number of low volume DRGs (all DRGs with fewer than
25 cases), we group low volume DRGs into 5 quintiles based on average
charge per discharge. (A listing of the current composition of low
volume quintiles used in determining the FY 2007 LTC-DRG relative
weights appears in the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 47974 through
47978).) We also account for adjustments to payments for cases in which
the stay at the LTCH is less than or equal to five-sixths of the
geometric ALOS and classify these cases as SSO cases. (A detailed
discussion of the application of the Lewin Group model that was used to
develop the LTC-DRGs appears in the August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS final rule
(67 FR 55978).)
B. Patient Classifications Into DRGs
Generally, under the LTCH PPS, a Medicare payment is made at a
predetermined specific rate for each discharge; that payment varies by
the LTC-DRG to which a beneficiary's stay is assigned. Cases are
classified into LTC-DRGs for payment based on the following six data
elements:
(1) Principal diagnosis.
(2) Up to eight additional diagnoses.
(3) Up to six procedures performed.
(4) Age.
(5) Sex.
(6) Discharge status of the patient.
As indicated in the August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS final rule, upon the
discharge of the patient from a LTCH, the LTCH must assign appropriate
diagnosis and procedure codes from the most current version of the
International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical
Modification (codes) (ICD-9-CM). HIPAA Transactions and Code Sets
Standards regulations at 45 CFR parts 160 and 162 require that no later
than October 16, 2003, all covered entities must comply with the
applicable requirements of subparts A and I through R of part 162.
Among other requirements, those provisions direct covered entities to
use the ASC X12N 837 Health Care Claim: Institutional, Volumes 1 and 2,
version 4010, and the applicable standard medical data code sets for
the institutional health care claim or equivalent encounter information
transaction (see 45 CFR 162.1002 and 45 CFR 162.1102).
Medicare FIs 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 DRG can be made. During this
process, the following types of cases are selected for further
development:
Cases that are improperly coded. (For example, diagnoses
are shown that are inappropriate, given the sex of the patient. Code
68.6, Radical abdominal hysterectomy, would be an inappropriate code
for a male.)
Cases including surgical procedures not covered under
Medicare. (For example, organ transplant in a non-approved transplant
center.)
Cases requiring more information. (For example, ICD-9-CM
codes are required to be entered at their highest level of specificity.
There are valid 3-digit, 4-digit, and 5-digit codes. That is, code 262,
Other severe protein-calorie malnutrition, contains all appropriate
digits, but if it is reported with either fewer or more than 3 digits,
the claim will be rejected by the MCE as invalid.)
Cases with principal diagnoses that do not usually justify
admission to the hospital. (For example, code 437.9, unspecified
cerebrovascular disease. While this code is valid according to the ICD-
9-CM coding scheme, a more precise code should be used for the
principal diagnosis.)
After screening through the MCE, each claim will be classified into
the appropriate LTC-DRG by the Medicare LTCH GROUPER software. As
indicated in the August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS final rule, the Medicare
GROUPER software, which is used under the LTCH PPS, is specialized
computer software, and is the same GROUPER software program used under
the IPPS. The GROUPER software was developed as a means of classifying
each case into a DRG on the basis of diagnosis and procedure codes and
other demographic information (age, sex, and discharge status).
Following the LTC-DRG assignment, the Medicare FI determines the
prospective payment by using the Medicare PRICER program, which
accounts for hospital-specific adjustments. Under the LTCH PPS, we
provide an opportunity for the LTCH to review the LTC-DRG assignments
made by the FI and to submit additional information within a specified
timeframe as specified in Sec. 412.513(c).
The GROUPER software is used both to classify past cases to measure
relative hospital resource consumption to establish the 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 under both the IPPS (Sec. 412.60(e)) and the LTCH
PPS (Sec. 412.517). As discussed in greater detail in sections III.D.
and E. of this preamble, with the implementation of section 503(a) of
the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of
2003 (MMA) (Pub. L. 108-173), there is the possibility that one feature
of the GROUPER software program may be updated twice during a Federal
FY (October 1 and April 1) as required by the statute for the IPPS (69
FR 48954 through 48957). Specifically, as we discussed in the FY 2007
IPPS final rule, diagnosis and procedure codes for new medical
technology may be created
[[Page 4782]]
and added to existing DRGs in the middle of the Federal FY on April 1
(71 FR 47959 and 47971). However, this policy change will have no
effect on the LTC-DRG relative weights (during the FY), 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 during the FY as
result of this policy. 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, published in
accordance with HIPAA.
C. Organization of DRGs
The 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.
Surgical DRGs are assigned based on a surgical hierarchy that orders
operating room (O.R.) procedures or groups of O.R. procedures by
resource intensity. The GROUPER software program does not recognize all
ICD-9-CM procedure codes as procedures that affect DRG assignment, that
is, procedures which are not surgical (for example, EKG), or minor
surgical procedures (for example, 86.11, Biopsy of skin and
subcutaneous tissue).
The medical DRGs are generally differentiated on the basis of
diagnosis. Both medical and surgical DRGs may be further differentiated
based on age, sex, discharge status, and presence or absence of
complications or comorbidities (CC). We note that CCs are defined by
certain secondary diagnoses not related to, or not inherently a part
of, the disease process identified by the principal diagnosis. (For
example, the GROUPER software would not recognize a code from the
800.0x series, Skull fracture, as a CC when combined with principal
diagnosis 850.4, Concussion with prolonged loss of consciousness,
without return to preexisting conscious level.) In addition, we note
that the presence of additional diagnoses does not automatically
generate a CC, as not all DRGs recognize a comorbid or complicating
condition in their definition. (For example, DRG 466, Aftercare without
History of Malignancy as Secondary Diagnosis, is based solely on the
principal diagnosis, without consideration of additional diagnoses for
DRG determination.)
As discussed in greater detail in the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71
FR 47898 through 47912 and 47973), in its March 2005 Report to
Congress, ``Physician-Owned Specialty Hospitals,'' MedPAC recommended
that the Secretary improve payment accuracy in the hospital IPPS by,
among other things, ``refining the current DRGs to more fully capture
differences in severity of illness among patients.'' (Recommendation 1,
p. 93.) As we discussed in that same final rule (71 FR 47973), although
we did not adopt a new severity-adjusted patient classification system
under the IPPS, for FY 2007, we refined the current CMS-DRG patient
classification system by creating 20 new CMS-DRGs and modifying 32
others across 13 different clinical areas for Version 24.0 of the
GROUPER software that we expect will improve the CMS-DRG system's
recognition of severity of illness for FY 2007. As noted previously in
this section, the LTCH PPS patient classification system (that is, LTC-
DRGs) is the same patient classification system used under the IPPS
(that is, CMS DRGs). As such, the updates to the CMS DRG patient
classification system used under the IPPS for FY 2007 (GROUPER Version
24.0), are the updates that apply to the LTC-DRGs used under the LTCH
PPS for FY 2007.
In the FY 2007 IPPS final rule, we present the changes to the DRG
patient classification system for FY 2007 (71 FR 47939 through 47962).
In that rule, we adopted 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 (71 FR 47973). As noted above in this
section and as we also discussed in the FY 2007 IPPS final rule, in its
March 1, 2005 Report to Congress on Medicare Payment Policy (page 64)
and Recommendation 1 in the 2005 Report to Congress on Physician-Owned
Specialty Hospitals, MedPAC recommended that CMS, among other things,
refine the current DRGs under the IPPS to more fully capture
differences in severity of illness among patients. In evaluating this
MedPAC recommendation for the IPPS, we evaluated the APR-DRG Grouper
used by MedPAC in its analysis. Based on that 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 clarified in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule and reiterated in section II.C.6. of the FY 2007 IPPS final rule,
there are still further changes that are important to make to the
consolidated severity-adjusted (CS) DRG system before it is ready for
adoption. Therefore, in the FY 2007 IPPS final rule, we did not adopt a
new CS DRG system, such as the APR DRGs or a modified version of the
APR DRGs, under the IPPS. However, we refined the current CMS-DRG
patient classification system by creating 20 new CMS-DRGs and modifying
32 others across 13 different clinical areas for Version 24.0 of the
GROUPER software that we expect will improve the CMS DRG system's
recognition of severity of illness for FY 2007. As noted previously in
this section, the LTCH PPS patient classification system (that is, LTC-
DRGs) is the same patient classification system used under the IPPS
(that is, CMS DRGs). As such, the updates to the CMS DRG patient
classification system used under the IPPS for FY 2007 (GROUPER Version
24.0), are the updates that apply under the LTCH PPS for FY 2007.
As discussed in the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 47906), we have
engaged a contractor to assist us with completing an evaluation of
alternative DRG systems for use under the IPPS 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 as part of moving forward on adopting a revised DRG
system that better recognizes severity in the IPPS rulemaking for FY
2008.
As we also stated in that same FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR
47990), 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 current patient classification system under the LTCH
PPS. Any proposed changes to the patient classification system would be
done through notice and comment rulemaking. 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 patient
classification system used under 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 to the patient classification system used under the
IPPS are proposed and subsequently finalized, an analysis could then be
performed to determine whether it is appropriate to propose the same
patient classification for LTCHs. As noted above in this section, at
that time, we would need to consider whether to propose revisions to
the patient classification system
[[Page 4783]]
under the LTCH PPS, which, if proposed would be done through notice and
comment rulemaking.
D. Proposed Update of LTC-DRGs
1. Background
As discussed in greater detail in the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71
FR 47974), 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 (that is,
LTC-DRGs). To ensure that Medicare patients classified to each LTC-DRG
have access to an appropriate level of services and to encourage
efficiency, each year based on the best available data, 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 relative weight of 1. Under Sec.
412.517, the LTC-DRG classifications and weighting factors (that is,
relative weights) are adjusted annually to reflect changes in factors
affecting the relative use of LTCH resources, including treatment
patterns, technology and number of discharges. For FY 2007, the LTC-DRG
classifications and relative weights were updated based on LTCH data
from the FY 2005 MedPAR file, which contained hospital bills data from
the March 2006 update. The LTC-DRG patient classification system
consists of 538 DRGs that formed the basis of the FY 2007 LTCH PPS
GROUPER program. The 538 LTC-DRGs included two ``error DRGs.'' As in
the IPPS, we included two error DRGs in which cases that cannot be
assigned to valid DRGs will be grouped. These two error DRGs are DRG
469 (Principal Diagnosis Invalid as a Discharge Diagnosis) and DRG 470
(Ungroupable). The other 536 LTC-DRGs are the same DRGs used in the
IPPS GROUPER program for FY 2007 (Version 24.0).
In the past, the annual update to the CMS-DRGs was based on the
annual revisions to the ICD-9-CM codes and was effective each October
1. The ICD-9-CM coding update process was revised as discussed in
greater detail in the FY 2005 IPPS final rule (69 FR 48953 through
48957). Specifically, section 503(a) of the MMA includes a requirement
for updating diagnosis and procedure codes for twice a year instead of
the current process of annual updates on October 1 of each year. This
requirement is included as part of the amendments to the Act relating
to recognition of new medical technology under the IPPS. (For
additional information on this provision, including its implementation
and its impact on the LTCH PPS, refer to the FY 2005 IPPS final rule
(69 FR 48953 through 48957) and the RY 2006 LTCH PPS final rule (70 FR
24172 through 24177).)
As noted above in this section, with the implementation of section
503(a) of the MMA, there is the possibility that one feature of the
GROUPER software program may be updated twice during a Federal FY
(October 1 and April 1) as required by the statute for the IPPS.
Specifically, diagnosis and procedure codes for new medical technology
may be created and added to existing DRGs in the middle of the Federal
FY on April 1. No new LTC-DRGs will be created or deleted. Consistent
with our current practice, any changes to the DRGs or relative weights
will be made at the beginning of the next Federal FY (October 1).
Therefore, there will not be any impact on LTC-DRG payments under the
LTCH PPS until the following October 1 (although the new ICD-9-CM
diagnosis and procedure codes would be recognized April 1). 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, issued under HIPAA.
As we explained in the FY 2007 IPPS final rule, annual changes to
the ICD-9-CM codes historically were effective for discharges occurring
on or after October 1 each year (71 FR 47971). 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. The patient classification
system used under the LTCH PPS (LTC-DRGs) is the same DRG patient
classification system used under the IPPS, which historically had been
updated annually and was effective for discharges occurring on or after
October 1 through September 30 each year. As we mentioned previously in
this section, the ICD-9-CM coding update process was revised as a
result of the implementation of section 503(a) of the MMA, 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 FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 47957 through 47960)).
We currently use the ICD-9-CM codes as the 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. As described
above in this section, 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, 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 (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. Updates
to the GROUPER software for both the IPPS and the LTCH PPS (for
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 have also explained that since we do not publish a mid-year IPPS
rule, we will assign any new diagnosis or procedure codes implemented
on April 1 to the same DRG in which its predecessor code was assigned,
so that there will be no impact on the DRG assignments until the
following October 1. Any coding updates will be available through the
Web sites provided in section III.E. of this preamble and through the
Coding Clinic for ICD-9-CM. Publishers and software vendors currently
obtain code changes through these sources 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 the MMA, there will only be an
April 1 update if diagnosis and procedure 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 (C&M) 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
[[Page 4784]]
ICD-9-CM codes through an April 1 update.
At the September 2006 ICD-9-CM C&M Committee meeting, there were no
requests for an April 1, 2007 implementation of ICD-9-CM codes, and
therefore, the next update to the ICD-9-CM coding system will not occur
until October 1, 2007 (FY 2008). Presently, as there were no coding
changes suggested for an April 1, 2007 update, the ICD-9-CM coding set
implemented on October 1, 2006, will continue through September 30,
2007 (FY 2007). The next update to the LTC-DRGs and relative weights
for FY 2008 will be presented in the FY 2008 IPPS proposed and final
rules. Furthermore, we would notify LTCHs of any revisions to the
GROUPER software used under the IPPS and LTCH PPS that would be
implemented April 1, 2008. As noted previously in this section, in the
FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 47973), we used Version 24.0 of the CMS
GROUPER, which was used under the IPPS for FY 2007, to classify cases
for LTCH PPS discharges that would occur on or after October 1, 2006
and on or before September 30, 2007.
2. Proposed Budget Neutrality (BN) Requirement for the Annual LTC-DRG
Update
As noted above in this section, currently under Sec. 412.517, the
LTC-DRG classifications and relative weights are adjusted annually to
reflect changes in factors affecting the relative use of LTCH
resources, such as treatment patterns, technology and number of
discharges. Currently, there are no statutory or regulatory
requirements that the annual update to the LTC-DRG classifications and
relative weights be done in a budget neutral manner. Historically,
since the initial implementation of the LTCH PPS in FY 2003, we have
updated the LTC-DRG relative weights each year without a BN adjustment
based on the most recent available LTCH claims data, which reflect
current LTCH patient mix and coding practices, and appropriately
reflected more or less resource use than the previous year's LTC-DRG
relative weights (71 FR 47991). When we proposed changes to the LTC-
DRGs for FY 2007 in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule, we estimated that
those proposed changes to the LTC-DRG classifications and relative
weights would result in about an estimated 1.4 percent decrease in
estimated aggregate LTCH PPS payments (71 FR 24413). As we discussed in
the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 47991), several commenters,
including MedPAC, urged us to establish a BN requirement for the annual
reclassification and recalibration of the LTC-DRGs so that, in future
years, the LTCH PPS could avoid an estimated decrease in estimated
aggregate payments, such as the estimated 1.4 percent decrease that
resulted from the proposed update to the LTC-DRGs and relative weights
for FY 2007. In response to previous proposed annual updates to the
LTC-DRG relative weights, we also received comments recommending that a
BN adjustment be applied in determining the LTC-DRG relative weights to
mitigate LTCH PPS payment fluctuations. (See the FY 2005 IPPS final
rule (69 FR 48999 through 49000), and the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70
FR 47333 through 47334).)
In response to those comments, we explained that we understood the
commenters' concern 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 we discussed in the FY 2007 IPPS
final rule, we did not postpone the proposed FY 2007 reclassification
and recalibration of the LTC-DRGs, nor did we implement those changes
in a budget neutral manner. We noted several reasons for the annual
fluctuations in LTC-DRG relative weights that have resulted in both
estimated increases and decreases in estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments in the 4 years since the implementation of the LTCH PPS in FY
2003. Specifically, we reiterated our belief that several factors have
affected the changes to the LTC-DRG relative weights over the past 4
years, including actual improvements in coding so that cases are
appropriately assigned to LTC-DRGs. We also explained that, as noted
above in this section, historically we recalibrated the LTC-DRG
relative weights each year based on the most recent available LTCH
claims data, which reflect current LTCH patient mix and coding
practices, and appropriately reflects more or less resource use than
the previous year's LTC-DRG relative weights. The intended purpose of
the annual recalibration of the LTC-DRG relative weights is to reflect
any variation in coding practices and charges from the previous year
and to help ensure that the LTC-DRG relative weights in the upcoming
fiscal year will result in appropriate and accurate payments to LTCHs
for the resources they expend to treat their Medicare patients. (71 FR
47984 through 47989)
We also reminded the commenters that under the IPPS, there is a
statutory requirement that the annual DRG reclassification and
recalibration changes be made in a manner that assures that the
estimated aggregate payments are neither greater than nor less than the
estimated aggregate payments that would have been made without the
changes, but there is no corresponding statutory requirement under the
LTCH PPS. However, we noted that, given the consider