Medicare Program; Proposed Changes to the Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment Systems for Acute Care Hospitals and the Long-Term Care Hospital Prospective Payment System and Proposed Fiscal Year 2011 Rates; Effective Date of Provider Agreements and Supplier Approvals; and Hospital Conditions of Participation for Rehabilitation and Respiratory Care Services Medicaid Program: Accreditation Requirements for Providers of Inpatient Psychiatric Services for Individuals Under Age 21, 23852-24322 [2010-9163]
Download as PDF
23852
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
42 CFR Parts 412, 413, 440, 441, 482,
485, and 489
[CMS–1498–P]
RIN 0938–AP80
Medicare Program; Proposed Changes
to the Hospital Inpatient Prospective
Payment Systems for Acute Care
Hospitals and the Long-Term Care
Hospital Prospective Payment System
and Proposed Fiscal Year 2011 Rates;
Effective Date of Provider Agreements
and Supplier Approvals; and Hospital
Conditions of Participation for
Rehabilitation and Respiratory Care
Services Medicaid Program:
Accreditation Requirements for
Providers of Inpatient Psychiatric
Services for Individuals Under Age 21
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
SUMMARY: We are proposing to revise the
Medicare hospital inpatient prospective
payment systems (IPPS) for operating
and capital-related costs of acute care
hospitals to implement changes arising
from our continuing experience with
these systems. In addition, in the
Addendum to this proposed rule, we
describe the proposed changes to the
amounts and factors used to determine
the rates for Medicare acute care
hospital inpatient services for operating
costs and capital-related costs. These
proposed changes would be applicable
to discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 2010. We also are setting
forth the proposed update to the rate-ofincrease limits for certain hospitals
excluded from the IPPS that are paid on
a reasonable cost basis subject to these
limits. The proposed updated rate-ofincrease limits would be effective for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 2010.
We are proposing to update the
payment policy and the annual payment
rates for the Medicare prospective
payment system (PPS) for inpatient
hospital services provided by long-term
care hospitals (LTCHs). In the
Addendum to this proposed rule, we
also set forth the proposed changes to
the payment rates, factors, and other
payment rate policies under the LTCH
PPS. These proposed changes would be
applicable to discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2010.
We are proposing changes affecting
the Medicare conditions of participation
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
for hospitals relating to the types of
practitioners who may provide
rehabilitation services and respiratory
care services.
We are proposing changes affecting
the determination of the effective date of
provider agreements and supplier
approvals under Medicare.
Finally, we are proposing to offer
psychiatric hospitals, hospitals with
inpatient psychiatric programs, and
psychiatric facilities that are not
hospitals increased flexibility in
obtaining accreditation to participate in
the Medicaid program. Psychiatric
hospitals would have the choice of
meeting the existing regulatory
requirements to participate in Medicare
as a psychiatric hospital or to obtaining
accreditation from a national accrediting
organization whose psychiatric hospital
accrediting program has been approved
by CMS. Hospitals with inpatient
psychiatric programs would have the
choice of meeting the existing regulatory
requirements for participation in
Medicare as a hospital or obtaining
accreditation from a national accrediting
organization whose hospital
accreditation program has been
approved by CMS. In addition,
psychiatric facilities that are not
hospitals would be afforded the
flexibility in obtaining accreditation by
a national accrediting organization
whose program has been approved by
CMS, or by any other accrediting
organization with comparable standards
that is recognized by the State.
DATES: To be assured consideration,
comments on this proposed rule must
be received at one of the addresses
provided below, no later than 5 p.m.
Eastern Daylight Time (E.D.T.) on June
18, 2010.
ADDRESSES: When commenting on
issues presented in this proposed rule,
please refer to file code CMS–1498–P.
Because of staff and resource
limitations, we cannot accept comments
by facsimile (FAX) transmission.
You may submit comments in one of
four ways (please choose only one of the
ways listed):
1. Electronically. You may submit
electronic comments on this regulation
at https://www.regulations.gov. Follow
the instructions for ‘‘Comment or
Submission’’ and enter the file code
CMS–1498–P to submit comments on
this proposed rule.
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–1498–
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
P, P.O. Box 8011, Baltimore, MD 21244–
1850.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed
comments to be received before the
close of the comment period.
3. By express or overnight mail. You
may send written comments (one
original and two copies) to the following
address only: Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, Department of
Health and Human Services, Attention:
CMS–1498–P, Mail Stop C4–26–05,
7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21244–1850.
4. By hand or courier. If you prefer,
you may deliver (by hand or courier)
your written comments (one original
and two copies) before the close of the
comment period to either of the
following addresses:
a. Room 445–G, Hubert H. Humphrey
Building, 200 Independence Avenue,
SW., Washington, DC 20201.
(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.)
b. 7500 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, MD 21244–1850.
If you intend to deliver your
comments to the Baltimore address,
please call telephone number (410) 786–
7195 in advance to schedule your
arrival with one of our staff members.
Comments mailed to the addresses
indicated as appropriate for hand or
courier delivery may be delayed and
received after the comment period.
For information on viewing public
comments, see the beginning of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tzvi
Hefter, (410) 786–4487, and Ing-Jye
Cheng, (410) 786–4548, Operating
Prospective Payment, MS–DRGs,
Hospital Acquired Conditions (HAC),
Wage Index, New Medical Service and
Technology Add-On Payments, Hospital
Geographic Reclassifications, Acute
Care Transfers, Capital Prospective
Payment, Excluded Hospitals, Direct
and Indirect Graduate Medical
Education Payments, Disproportionate
Share Hospital (DSH), and Critical
Access Hospital (CAH) Issues.
Michele Hudson, (410) 786–4487, and
Judith Richter, (410) 786–2590, LongTerm Care Hospital Prospective
Payment System and MS–LTC–DRG
Relative Weights Issues.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Siddhartha Mazumdar, (410) 786–
6673, Rural Community Hospital
Demonstration Program Issues.
James Poyer, (410) 786–2261,
Reporting of Hospital Quality Data for
Annual Payment Update—Program
Administration, Validation, and
Reconsideration Issues.
Shaheen Halim, (410) 786–0641,
Reporting of Hospital Quality Data for
Annual Payment Update—Measures
Issues Except Hospital Consumer
Assessment of Healthcare Providers and
Systems.
Elizabeth Goldstein, (410) 786–6665
Reporting of Hospital Quality Data for
Annual Payment Update—Hospital
Consumer Assessment of Healthcare
Providers and Systems Measures Issues.
Marcia Newton, (410–786–5265) and
CDR Scott Cooper (U.S. Public Health
Service), (410) 786–9465, Hospital
Conditions of Participation for
Rehabilitation Services and Respiratory
Therapy Care Issues.
Marilyn Dahl, (410) 786–8665,
Provider Agreement and Supplier
Approval Issues.
Melissa Harris, (410) 786–3397 or
Adrienne Delozier, (410) 786–0278,
Accreditation of Providers of Inpatient
Psychiatric Services to Individuals
under Age 21 Issues.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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.regulations.gov. Follow the search
instructions at that Web site to view
public comments.
Comments received timely will also
be available for public inspection,
generally beginning approximately 3
weeks after publication of a document,
at the headquarters of the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services, 7500
Security Boulevard, Baltimore,
Maryland 21244, Monday through
Friday of each week from 8:30 a.m. to
4 p.m. To schedule an appointment to
view public comments, phone 1–800–
743–3951.
Electronic Access
This Federal Register document is
also available from the Federal Register
online database through GPO Access, a
service of the U.S. Government Printing
Office. Free public access is available on
a Wide Area Information Server (WAIS)
through the Internet and via
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
asynchronous dial-in. Internet users can
access the database by using the World
Wide Web (the Superintendent of
Documents’ home Web page address is
https://www.gpoaccess.gov/), by using
local WAIS client software, or by telnet
to swais.access.gpo.gov, then login as
guest (no password required). Dial-in
users should use communications
software and modem to call (202) 512–
1661; type swais, then login as guest (no
password required).
Acronyms
3M 3M Health Information System
AAHKS American Association of Hip and
Knee Surgeons
AAMC Association of American Medical
Colleges
ACGME Accreditation Council for Graduate
Medical Education
AHA American Hospital Association
AHIC American Health Information
Community
AHIMA American Health Information
Management Association
AHRQ Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality
ALOS Average length of stay
ALTHA Acute Long Term Hospital
Association
AMA American Medical Association
AMGA American Medical Group
Association
AOA American Osteopathic Association
APR DRG All Patient Refined Diagnosis
Related Group System
ARRA American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009, Public Law
111–5
ASC Ambulatory surgical center
ASCA Administrative Simplification
Compliance Act of 2002, Public Law 107–
105
ASITN American Society of Interventional
and Therapeutic Neuroradiology
BBA Balanced Budget Act of 1997, Public
Law 105–33
BBRA Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP
[State Children’s Health Insurance
Program] Balanced Budget Refinement Act
of 1999, Public Law 106–113
BIC Beneficiary Identification Code
BIPA Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP [State
Children’s Health Insurance Program]
Benefits Improvement and Protection Act
of 2000, Public Law 106–554
BLS Bureau of Labor Statistics
CAH Critical access hospital
CARE [Medicare] Continuity Assessment
Record & Evaluation [Instrument]
CART CMS Abstraction & Reporting Tool
CBSAs Core-based statistical areas
CC Complication or comorbidity
CCR Cost-to-charge ratio
CDAC [Medicare] Clinical Data Abstraction
Center
CDAD Clostridium difficile-associated
disease
CIPI Capital input price index
CMI Case-mix index
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
CMSA Consolidated Metropolitan
Statistical Area
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23853
COBRA Consolidated Omnibus
Reconciliation Act of 1985, Pub. L. 99–272
COLA Cost-of-living adjustment
CoP [Hospital] condition of participation
CPI Consumer price index
CRNA Certified Registered Nurse
Anesthetist
CY Calendar year
DPP Disproportionate patient percentage
DRA Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, Pub. L.
109–171
DRG Diagnosis-related group
DSH Disproportionate share hospital
ECI Employment cost index
EDB [Medicare] Enrollment Database
EMR Electronic medical record
FAH Federation of Hospitals
FDA Food and Drug Administration
FFY Federal fiscal year
FHA Federal Health Architecture
FIPS Federal information processing
standards
FQHC Federally qualified health center
FTE Full-time equivalent
FY Fiscal year
GAAP Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles
GAF Geographic Adjustment Factor
GME Graduate medical education
HACs Hospital-acquired conditions
HCAHPS Hospital Consumer Assessment of
Healthcare Providers and Systems
HCFA Health Care Financing
Administration
HCO High-cost outlier
HCRIS Hospital Cost Report Information
System
HHA Home health agency
HHS Department of Health and Human
Services
HICAN Health Insurance Claims Account
Number
HIPAA Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996, Pub. L. 104–
191
HIPC Health Information Policy Council
HIS Health information system
HIT Health information technology
HMO Health maintenance organization
HPMP Hospital Payment Monitoring
Program
HSA Health savings account
HSCRC [Maryland] Health Services Cost
Review Commission
HSRV Hospital-specific relative value
HSRVcc Hospital-specific relative value
cost center
HQA Hospital Quality Alliance
HQI Hospital Quality Initiative
HwH Hospital-within-a-hospital
ICD–9–CM International Classification of
Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical
Modification
ICD–10–CM International Classification of
Diseases, Tenth Revision, Clinical
Modification
ICD–10–PCS International Classification of
Diseases, Tenth Revision, Procedure
Coding System
ICR Information collection requirement
IHS Indian Health Service
IME Indirect medical education
I–O Input-Output
IOM Institute of Medicine
IPF Inpatient psychiatric facility
IPPS [Acute care hospital] inpatient
prospective payment system
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23854
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
IRF Inpatient rehabilitation facility
LAMCs Large area metropolitan counties
LOS Length of stay
LTC–DRG Long-term care diagnosis-related
group
LTCH Long-term care hospital
MA Medicare Advantage
MAC Medicare Administrative Contractor
MCC Major complication or comorbidity
MCE Medicare Code Editor
MCO Managed care organization
MCV Major cardiovascular condition
MDC Major diagnostic category
MDH Medicare-dependent, small rural
hospital
MedPAC Medicare Payment Advisory
Commission
MedPAR Medicare Provider Analysis and
Review File
MEI Medicare Economic Index
MGCRB Medicare Geographic Classification
Review Board
MIEA–TRHCA Medicare Improvements and
Extension Act, Division B of the Tax Relief
and Health Care Act of 2006, Pub. L. 109–
432
MIPPA Medicare Improvements for Patients
and Providers Act of 2008, Pub. L. 110–275
MMA Medicare Prescription Drug,
Improvement, and Modernization Act of
2003, Pub. L. 108–173
MMSEA Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP
Extension Act of 2007, Pub. L. 110–173
MPN Medicare provider number
MRHFP Medicare Rural Hospital Flexibility
Program
MRSA Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus
aureus
MSA Metropolitan Statistical Area
MS–DRG Medicare severity diagnosisrelated group
MS–LTC–DRG Medicare severity long-term
care diagnosis-related group
NAICS North American Industrial
Classification System
NALTH National Association of Long Term
Hospitals
NCD National coverage determination
NCHS National Center for Health Statistics
NCQA National Committee for Quality
Assurance
NCVHS National Committee on Vital and
Health Statistics
NECMA New England County Metropolitan
Areas
NP Nurse practitioner
NQF National Quality Forum
NTIS National Technical Information
Service
NTTAA National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act of 1991 (Pub. L. 104–
113)
NVHRI National Voluntary Hospital
Reporting Initiative
OACT [CMS’] Office of the Actuary
OBRA 86 Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act of 1996, Pub. L. 99–509
OES Occupational employment statistics
OIG Office of the Inspector General
OMB Executive Office of Management and
Budget
OPM U.S. Office of Personnel Management
O.R. Operating room
OSCAR Online Survey Certification and
Reporting [System]
PA Physician assistant
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PIP Periodic interim payment
PLI Professional liability insurance
PMSAs Primary metropolitan statistical
areas
POA Present on admission
PPACA Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act, Pub. L. 111–148
PPI Producer price index
PPS Prospective payment system
PRM Provider Reimbursement Manual
ProPAC Prospective Payment Assessment
Commission
PRRB Provider Reimbursement Review
Board
PRTFs Psychiatric residential treatment
facilities
PSF Provider-Specific File
PS&R Provider Statistical and
Reimbursement (System)
QIG Quality Improvement Group, CMS
QIO Quality Improvement Organization
RCE Reasonable compensation equivalent
RHC Rural health clinic
RHQDAPU Reporting hospital quality data
for annual payment update
RNHCI Religious nonmedical health care
institution
RPL Rehabilitation psychiatric long-term
care (hospital)
RRC Rural referral center
RTI Research Triangle Institute,
International
RUCAs Rural-urban commuting area codes
RY Rate year
SAF Standard Analytic File
SCH Sole community hospital
SFY State fiscal year
SIC Standard Industrial Classification
SNF Skilled nursing facility
SOCs Standard occupational classifications
SOM State Operations Manual
SSN Social Security number
SSO Short-stay outlier
TEFRA Tax Equity and Fiscal
Responsibility Act of 1982, Pub. L. 97–248
TEP Technical expert panel
TMA TMA [Transitional Medical
Assistance], Abstinence Education, and QI
[Qualifying Individuals] Programs
Extension Act of 2007, Pub. L. 110–90
UHDDS Uniform hospital discharge data set
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. Summary
1. Acute Care Hospital Inpatient
Prospective Payment System (IPPS)
2. Hospitals and Hospital Units Excluded
From the IPPS
3. Long-Term Care Hospital Prospective
Payment System (LTCH PPS)
4. Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
5. Payments for Graduate Medical
Education (GME)
B. Provisions of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111–148), as
Amended by the Health Care and
Education Reconciliation Act of 2010
(Pub. L. 111–152)
C. Major Content of This Proposed Rule
1. Proposed Changes to MS–DRG
Classifications and Recalibrations of
Relative Weights
2. Proposed Changes to the Hospital Wage
Index for Acute Care Hospitals
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
3. Other Decisions and Proposed Changes
to the IPPS for Operating Costs and GME
Costs
4. Proposed FY 2011 Policy Governing the
IPPS for Capital-Related Costs
5. Proposed Changes to the Payment Rates
for Certain Excluded Hospitals: Rate-ofIncrease Percentages
6. Proposed Changes to the LTCH PPS
7. Proposed Changes Relating to Effective
Date of Provider Agreements and
Supplier Approvals
8. Proposed Changes to Medicare
Conditions of Participation Affecting
Hospital Rehabilitation Services and
Respiratory Care Services
9. Proposed Changes to the Accreditation
Requirements for Medicaid Providers of
Inpatient Psychiatric Services for
Individuals under Age 21
10. Determining Proposed Prospective
Payment Operating and Capital Rates
and Rate-of-Increase Limits for Acute
Care Hospitals
11. Determining Proposed Prospective
Payments Rates for LTCHs
12. Impact Analysis
13. Recommendation of Update Factors for
Operating Cost Rates of Payment for
Hospital Inpatient Services
14. Discussion of Medicare Payment
Advisory Commission Recommendations
E. Interim Final Rule With Comment
Period That Implemented Certain
Provisions of the ARRA Relating to
Payments to LTCHs and LTCH Satellite
Facilities
II. Proposed Changes to Medicare Severity
Diagnosis-Related Group (MS–DRG)
Classifications and Relative Weights
A. Background
B. MS–DRG Reclassifications
1. General
2. Yearly Review for Making MS–DRG
Changes
C. Adoption of the MS–DRGs in FY 2008
D. Proposed FY 2011 MS–DRG
Documentation and Coding Adjustment,
Including the Applicability to the
Hospital-Specific Rates and the Puerto
Rico-Specific Standardized Amount
1. Background on the Prospective MS–DRG
Documentation and Coding Adjustments
for FY 2008 and FY 2009 Authorized by
Public Law 110–90
2. Prospective Adjustment to the Average
Standardized Amounts Required by
Section 7(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 110–90
3. Recoupment or Repayment Adjustments
in FYs 2010 Through 2012 Required by
Public Law 110–90
4. Retrospective Evaluation of FY 2008
Claims Data
5. Retrospective Analysis of FY 2009
Claims Data
6. Prospective Adjustment for FY 2010 and
Subsequent Years Authorized by Section
7(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 110–90 and
Section 1886(d)(3)(vi) of the Act
7. Recoupment or Repayment Adjustment
for FY 2010 Authorized by Section
7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110–90
8. Background on the Application of the
Documentation and Coding Adjustment
to the Hospital-Specific Rates
9. Proposed Documentation and Coding
Adjustment to the Hospital-Specific
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Rates for FY 2011 and Subsequent Fiscal
Years
10. Background on the Application of the
Documentation and Coding Adjustment
to the Puerto Rico-Specific Standardized
Amount
11. Proposed Documentation and Coding
Adjustment to the Puerto Rico-Specific
Standardized Amount
E. Refinement of the MS–DRG Relative
Weight Calculation
1. Background
a. Summary of FY 2009 Changes and
Discussion for FY 2011
b. Summary of the RAND Corporation
Study of Alternative Relative Weight
Methodologies
2. Proposals for FY 2011 and Timeline for
Changes to the Medicare Cost Report
F. Preventable Hospital-Acquired
Conditions (HACs), Including Infections
1. Background
a. Statutory Authority
b. HAC Selection
c. Collaborative Process
d. Application of HAC Payment Policy to
MS–DRG Classifications
e. Public Input Regarding Selected and
Potential Candidate HACs
f. POA Indicator Reporting
2. Proposed HAC Conditions for FY 2011
3. RTI Program Evaluation Summary
a. Background
b. Preliminary RTI Analysis on POA
Indicator Reporting Across Medicare
Discharges
c. Preliminary RTI Analysis on POA
Indicator Reporting of Current HACs
d. Preliminary RTI Analysis of Frequency
of Discharges and POA Indicator
Reporting for Current HACs
e. Preliminary RTI Analysis of
Circumstances When Application of
HAC Provisions Would Not Result in
MS–DRG Reassignment for Current
HACs
f. Preliminary RTI Analysis of Coding
Changes for HAC–Associated Secondary
Diagnoses for Current HACs
g. Preliminary RTI Analysis of Estimated
Net Savings for Current HACs
h. Previously Considered Candidate
HACs—Preliminary RTI Analysis of
Frequency of Discharges and POA
Indicator Reporting
i. Current and Previously Considered
Candidate HACs—RTI Report on
Evidence-Based Guidelines
j. Proposals Regarding Current HACs and
Previously Considered Candidate HACs
G. Proposed Changes to Specific MS–DRG
Classifications
1. Pre-Major Diagnostic Categories (MDCs
a. Postsurgical Hypoinsulinemia (MS–DRG
008 (Simultaneous Pancreas/Kidney
Transplant)
b. Bone Marrow Transplants
2. MDC 1 (Nervous System):
Administration of Tissue Plasminogen
Activator (tPA) (rtPA)
3. MDC 5 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Circulatory System): Intraoperative
Fluorescence Vascular Angiography
(IFVA) and X–Ray Coronary
Angiography in Coronary Artery Bypass
Graft Surgery
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
a. New MS–DRGs for Intraoperative
Fluorescence Vascular Angiography
(IFVA) With CABG
b. New MS–DRG for Intraoperative
Angiography, by Any Method, With
CABG
c. New Procedure Codes
d. MS–DRG Reassignment of Intraoperative
Fluorescence Vascular Angiography
(IFVA)
4. MDC 6 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Digestive System): Gastrointestinal
Stenting
5. MDC 8 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Musculoskeletal System and Connective
Tissue): Pedicle-Based Dynamic
Stabilization
6. MDC 15 (Newborns and Other Neonates
With Conditions Originating in the
Perinatal Period)
a. Discharges/Transfers of Neonates to a
Designated Cancer Center or a Children’s
Hospital
b. Vaccination of Newborns
7. Medicare Code Editor (MCE) Changes
a. Unacceptable Principal Diagnosis Edit:
Addition of Code for Gastroparesis
b. Open Biopsy Check Edit
c. Noncovered Procedure Edit
8. Surgical Hierarchies
9. Complication or Comorbidity (CC)
Exclusions List
a. Background
b. Proposed CC Exclusions List for FY 2011
10. Review of Procedure Codes in MS–
DRGs 981 Through 983, 984 Through
986, and 987 Through 989
a. Moving Procedure Codes From MS–
DRGs 981 Through 983 or MS–DRGs 987
Through 989 to MDCs
b. Reassignment of Procedures Among MS–
DRGs 981 Through 983, 984 Through
986, and 987 Through 989
c. Adding Diagnosis or Procedure Codes to
MDCs
11. Changes to the ICD–9–CM Coding
System, Including Discussion of the
Replacement of the ICD–9–CM System
With the ICD–10–CM and ICD–10–PCS
Systems in FY 2014
a. ICD–9–CM Coding System
b. Code Freeze
c. Processing of 25 Diagnosis Codes and 25
Procedure Codes on Hospital Inpatient
Claims
H. Recalibration of MS–DRG Weights
I. Proposed Add-On Payments for New
Services and Technologies
1. Background
2. Public Input Before Publication of a
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on AddOn Payments
3. FY 2011 Status of Technologies
Approved for FY 2010 Add-On Payments
a. Spiration® IBV® Valve System
b. CardioWestTM Temporary Total
Artificial Heart System (CardioWestTM
TAH-t)
4. FY 2011 Applications for New
Technology Add-On Payments
a. Auto Laser Interstitial Thermal Therapy
(AutoLITTTM) System
b. LipiScanTM Coronary Imaging System
c. LipiScanTM Coronary Imaging System
With Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS)
III. Proposed Changes to the Hospital Wage
Index for Acute Care Hospitals
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23855
A. Background
B. Wage Index Reform
1. Wage Index Study Required Under the
MIEA–TRHCA
a. Legislative Requirement
b. Interim and Final Reports on Results of
Acumen’s Study
2. FY 2009 Policy Changes in Response to
Requirements Under Section 106(b) of
the MIEA–TRHCA
a. Reclassification Average Hourly Wage
Comparison Criteria
b. Budget Neutrality Adjustment for the
Rural and Imputed Floors
C. Core-Based Statistical Areas for the
Hospital Wage Index
D. Proposed Occupational Mix Adjustment
to the Proposed FY 2011 Wage Index
1. Development of Data for the Proposed
FY 2011 Occupational Mix Adjustment
Based on the 2007–2008 Occupational
Mix Survey
2. New 2010 Occupational Mix Survey for
the FY 2013 Wage Index
3. Calculation of the Proposed
Occupational Mix Adjustment for FY
2011
E. Worksheet S–3 Wage Data for the
Proposed FY 2011 Wage Index
1. Included Categories of Costs
2. Excluded Categories of Costs
3. Use of Wage Index Data by Providers
Other Than Acute Care Hospitals Under
the IPPS
F. Verification of Worksheet S–3 Wage
Data
G. Method for Computing the Proposed FY
2011 Unadjusted Wage Index
H. Analysis and Implementation of the
Proposed Occupational Mix Adjustment
and the Proposed FY 2011 Occupational
Mix Adjusted Wage Index
I. Revisions to the Wage Index Based on
Hospital Redesignations and
Reclassifications
1. General
2. Effects of Reclassification/Redesignation
3. FY 2011 MGCRB Reclassifications
a. FY 2011 Reclassification Requirements
and Approvals
b. Applications for Reclassifications for FY
2012
c. Appeals of MGCRB Denials of
Withdrawals and Terminations
4. Redesignations of Hospitals under
Section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
5. Reclassifications Under Section
1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
6. Reclassifications Under Section 508 of
Public Law 108–173
J. Proposed FY 2011 Wage Index
Adjustment Based on Commuting
Patterns of Hospital Employees
K. Process for Requests for Wage Index
Data Corrections
L. Labor-Market Share for the Proposed FY
2011 Wage Index
IV. Other Decisions and Proposed Changes to
the IPPS for Operating Costs and GME
Costs
A. Reporting of Hospital Quality Data for
Annual Hospital Payment Update
1. Background
a. Overview
b. Hospital Quality Data Reporting Under
Section 501(b) of Public Law 108–173
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23856
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
c. Hospital Quality Data Reporting Under
Section 5001(a) of Public Law 109–171
2. Retirement of RHQDAPU Program
Measures
a. Considerations in Retiring Quality
Measures From the RHQDAPU Program
b. Proposed Retirement of Quality
Measures Under the RHQDAPU Program
for the FY 2011 Payment Determination
and Subsequent Years
3. Proposed Expansion Plan for Quality
Measures for the FY 2012, FY 2013, and
FY 2014 Payment Determinations
a. Considerations in Expanding and
Updating Quality Measures Under the
RHQDAPU Program
b. Proposed RHQDAPU Program Quality
Measures for the FY 2012 Payment
Determination
c. Proposed RHQDAPU Program Quality
Measures for the FY 2013 Payment
Determination
d. Proposed RHQDAPU Program Quality
Measures for the FY 2014 Payment
Determination
4. Possible New Quality Measures for
Future Years
5. Form, Manner, and Timing of Quality
Data Submission
a. Proposed RHQDAPU Program
Requirements for FY 2012, FY 2013, and
FY 2014
b. Additional Proposed RHQDAPU
Program Procedural Requirements for FY
2012, FY 2013, and FY 2014 Payment
Determinations
6. RHQDAPU Program Disaster Extensions
and Waivers
7. Proposed Chart Validation Requirements
for Chart-Abstracted Measures
a. Proposed Chart Validation Requirements
and Methods for the FY 2012 Payment
Determination
b. Proposed Supplements to the Chart
Validation Process for the FY 2013
Payment Determination and Subsequent
Years
8. Data Accuracy and Completeness
Acknowledgement Requirements for the
FY 2012 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
9. Proposed Public Display Requirements
for the FY 2012 Payment Determination
and Subsequent Years
10. Proposed Reconsideration and Appeal
Procedures for the FY 2011 Payment
Determination
11. Proposed RHQDAPU Program
Withdrawal Deadlines
12. Electronic Health Records (EHRs)
a. Background
b. EHR Testing of Quality Measures
Submission
c. HITECH Act EHR Provisions
13. Qualification of Registries for
RHQDAPU Data Submission
B. Payment for Transfers of Cases From
Medicare Participating Acute Care
Hospitals to Nonparticipating Hospitals
and CAHs
1. Background
2. Proposed Policy Change
C. Technical Change to Regulations
D. Medicare-Dependent, Small Rural
Hospitals (MDHs): Change to Criteria
1. Background
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
2. Medicare-Dependency: Counting
Medicare Inpatients
E. Rural Referral Centers (RRCs)
1. Case-Mix Index (CMI)
2. Discharges
F. Indirect Medical Education (IME)
Adjustment
1. Background
2. IME Adjustment Factor for FY 2011
3. IME-Related Changes in Other Sections
of this Proposed Rule
G. Payment Adjustment for Medicare
Disproportionate Share Hospitals
(DSHs): Supplemental Security Income
(SSI) Fraction
1. Background
2. CMS’ Current Data Matching Process for
the SSI Fraction
3. Baystate Medical Center v. Leavitt Court
Decision
4. CMS’ Proposed Process for Matching
Medicare and SSI Eligibility Data
a. Inclusion of Stale Records and Forced
Pay Records in the SSI Eligibility Data
Files
b. Use of SSNs in the Revised Match
Process
c. Timing of the Match
5. CMS Ruling
6. Clarification of Language on Inclusion of
Medicare Advantage Days in the SSI
Fraction of the Medicare DSH
Calculation
H. Payments for Direct Graduate Medical
Education (GME) Costs
1. Background
2. Identifying ‘‘Approved Medical
Residency Programs’’
a. Residents in Approved Medical
Residency Programs
b. Determining Whether an Individual Is a
Resident or a Physician
c. Formal Enrollment and Participation in
a Program
3. Electronic Submission of Affiliation
Agreements
I. Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist
(CRNA) Services Furnished in Rural
Hospitals and CAHs
J. Rural Community Hospital
Demonstration Program
V. Proposed Changes to the IPPS for CapitalRelated Costs
A. Overview
B. Exception Payments
C. New Hospitals
D. Hospitals Located in Puerto Rico
E. Proposed Changes for FY 2011: MS–DRG
Documentation and Coding Adjustment
1. Background on the Prospective MS–DRG
Documentation and Coding Adjustments
for FY 2008 and FY 2009
2. Retrospective Evaluation of FY 2008
Claims Data
3. Retrospective Analysis of FY 2009
Claims Data
4. Proposed Prospective MS–DRG
Documentation and Coding Adjustment
to the National Capital Federal Rate for
FY 2011 and Subsequent Years
5. Proposed Documentation and Coding
Adjustment to the Puerto Rico-Specific
Capital Rate
F. Other Proposed Changes for FY 2011
VI. Proposed Changes for Hospitals Excluded
From the IPPS
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
A. Excluded Hospitals
B. Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
1. Background
2. CAH Optional Method Election for
Payment of Outpatient Services
3. Costs of Provider Taxes as Allowable
Costs for CAHs
a. Background and Statutory Basis
b. Proposed Clarification of Payment Policy
for Provider Taxes
VII. Proposed Changes to the Long-Term Care
Hospital Prospective Payment System
(LTCH PPS) for FY 2011
A. Background of the LTCH PPS
1. Legislative and Regulatory Authority
2. Criteria for Classification as a LTCH
a. Classification as a LTCH
b. Hospitals Excluded From the LTCH PPS
3. Limitation on Charges to Beneficiaries
4. Administrative Simplification
Compliance Act (ASCA) and Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act (HIPAA) Compliance
B. Proposed Medicare Severity Long-Term
Care Diagnosis-Related Group (MS–LTC–
DRG) Classifications and Relative
Weights
1. Background
2. Patient Classifications into MS–LTC–
DRGs
a. Background
b. Proposed Changes to the MS–LTC–DRGs
for FY 2011
3. Development of the Proposed FY 2011
MS–LTC–DRG Relative Weights
a. General Overview of the Development of
the MS–LTC–DRG Relative Weights
b. Development of the Proposed MS–LTC–
DRG Relative Weights for FY 2011
c. Data
d. Hospital-Specific Relative Value (HSRV)
Methodology
e. Treatment of Severity Levels in
Developing the Proposed MS–LTC–DRG
Relative Weights
f. Low-Volume MS–LTC–DRGs
g. Steps for Determining the Proposed RY
2011 MS–LTC–DRG Relative Weights
C. Proposed Changes to the LTCH Payment
Rates and Other Proposed Changes to the
FY 2011 LTCH PPS
1. Overview of Development of the LTCH
Payment Rates
2. Market Basket for LTCHs Reimbursed
Under the LTCH PPS
a. Overview
b. Market Basket Under the LTCH PPS for
FY 2011
c. Proposed Market Basket Update for
LTCHs for FY 2011
d. Proposed Labor-Related Share Under the
LTCH PPS for FY 2011
3. Proposed Adjustment for Changes in
LTCHs’ Case-Mix Due to Changes in
Documentation and Coding Practices
That Occurred in a Prior Period
a. Background
b. Evaluation of FY 2009 Claims Data
c. Proposed FY 2011 Documentation and
Coding Adjustment
D. Proposed Change in Terminology From
‘‘Rate Year’’ to ‘‘Fiscal Year’’ and Other
Proposed Changes
VIII. Determination of Effective Date of
Provider Agreements and Supplier
Approvals
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
A. Background
B. Departmental Appeals Board Decision
C. Proposed Revisions to Regulations
IX. Proposed Changes to Medicare
Conditions of Participation Affecting
Hospital Rehabilitation Services and
Respiratory Care Services
X. Proposed Changes to the Accreditation
Requirements for Medicaid Providers of
Inpatient Psychiatric Services for
Individuals Under Age 21
A. Background
B. Proposed Revision of Policy and
Regulations
XI. MedPAC Recommendations
XII. Other Required Information
A. Requests for Data From the Public
B. Collection of Information Requirements
1. Legislative Requirement for Solicitation
of Comments
2. Requirements in Regulation Text
a. ICRs Regarding Withdrawing an
Application, Terminating an Approved 3
Year Reclassification, or Canceling a
Previous Withdrawal or Termination
(Proposed Revised § 412.273)
b. ICRs Regarding Condition of
Participation: Respiratory Care Services
(§ 482.57)
3. Additional Information Collection
Requirements
a. Present on Admission (POA) Indicator
Reporting
b. Add-On Payments for New Services and
Technologies
c. Reporting of Hospital Quality Data for
Annual Hospital Payment Update
d. Occupational Mix Adjustment to the FY
2011 Index (Hospital Wage Index
Occupational Mix Survey)
e. Hospital Applications for Geographic
Reclassifications by the MGCRB
f. Direct GME Payments: General
Requirements
C. Response to Comments
Regulation Text
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Addendum—Proposed Schedule of
Standardized Amounts, Update Factors, and
Rate-of-Increase Percentages Effective With
Cost Reporting Periods Beginning on or After
October 1, 2010
I. Summary and Background
II. Proposed Changes to the Prospective
Payment Rates for Hospital Inpatient
Operating Costs for Acute Care Hospitals
for FY 2011
A. Calculation of the Adjusted
Standardized Amount
B. Proposed Adjustments for Area Wage
Levels and Cost-of-Living
C. Proposed MS–DRG Relative Weights
D. Calculation of the Proposed Prospective
Payment Rates
III. Proposed Changes to Payment Rates for
Acute Care Hospital Inpatient CapitalRelated Costs for FY 2011
A. Determination of Federal Hospital
Inpatient Capital-Related Prospective
Payment Rate Update
B. Calculation of the Proposed Inpatient
Capital-Related Prospective Payments for
FY 2011
C. Capital Input Price Index
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
IV. Proposed Changes to Payment Rates for
Certain Excluded Hospitals: Rate-ofIncrease Percentages
V. Proposed Changes to the Payment Rates
for the LTCH PPS for FY 2011
A. Proposed LTCH PPS Standard Federal
Rate for FY 2011
B. Proposed Adjustment for Area Wage
Levels Under the LTCH PPS for FY 2011
C. Proposed Adjustment for LTCH PPS
High-Cost Outlier (HCO) Cases
D. Computing the Proposed Adjusted
LTCH PPS Federal Prospective Payments
for FY 2011
VI. Tables
Table 1A.—Proposed National Adjusted
Operating Standardized Amounts, Labor/
Nonlabor (68.8 Percent Labor Share/31.2
Percent Nonlabor Share If Wage Index Is
Greater Than 1)
Table 1B.—Proposed National Adjusted
Operating Standardized Amounts, Labor/
Nonlabor (62 Percent Labor Share/38
Percent Nonlabor Share If Wage Index Is
Less Than or Equal to 1)
Table 1C.—Proposed Adjusted Operating
Standardized Amounts for Puerto Rico,
Labor/Nonlabor
Table 1D.—Proposed Capital Standard
Federal Payment Rate
Table 1E.—Proposed LTCH Standard
Federal Prospective Payment Rate
Table 2.—Acute Care Hospitals Case-Mix
Indexes for Discharges Occurring in
Federal Fiscal Year 2009; Proposed
Hospital Wage Indexes for Federal Fiscal
Year 2011; Hospital Average Hourly
Wages for Federal Fiscal Years 2009
(2005 Wage Data), 2010 (2006 Wage
Data), and 2011 (2007 Wage Data); and
3-Year Average of Hospital Average
Hourly Wages
Table 3A.—FY 2011 and 3-Year Average
Hourly Wage for Acute Care Hospitals in
Urban Areas by CBSA
Table 3B.—FY 2011 and 3-Year Average
Hourly Wage for Acute Care Hospitals in
Rural Areas by CBSA
Table 4A.—Proposed Wage Index and
Capital Geographic Adjustment Factor
(GAF) for Acute Care Hospitals in Urban
Areas by CBSA and by State—FY 2011
Table 4B.—Proposed Wage Index and
Capital Geographic Adjustment Factor
(GAF) for Acute Care Hospitals in Rural
Areas by CBSA and by State—FY 2011
Table 4C.—Proposed Wage Index and
Capital Geographic Adjustment Factor
(GAF) for Acute Care Hospitals That Are
Reclassified by CBSA and by State—FY
2011
Table 4D–1.—Proposed Rural Floor Budget
Neutrality Factors for Acute Care
Hospitals—FY 2011
Table 4D–2.—Urban Areas with Acute Care
Hospitals Receiving the Proposed
Statewide Rural Floor or Imputed Floor
Wage Index—FY 2011
Table 4E.—Urban CBSAs and Constituent
Counties for Acute Care Hospitals—FY
2011
Table 4F.—Proposed Puerto Rico Wage
Index and Capital Geographic
Adjustment Factor (GAF) for Acute Care
Hospitals by CBSA—FY 2011
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23857
Table 4J.—Proposed Out-Migration
Adjustment for Acute Care Hospitals—
FY 2011
Table 5.—List of Medicare Severity
Diagnosis-Related Groups (MS–DRGs),
Relative Weighting Factors, and
Geometric and Arithmetic Mean Length
of Stay—FY 2011
Table 6A.—New Diagnosis Codes
Table 6B.—New Procedure Codes
Table 6C.—Invalid Diagnosis Codes
Table 6D.—Invalid Procedure Codes
Table 6E.—Revised Diagnosis Code Titles
Table 6F.—Revised Procedure Code Titles
Table 6G.—Additions to the CC Exclusions
List (Available Through the Internet on
the CMS Web site at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/)
Table 6H.—Deletions from the CC
Exclusions List (Available Through the
Internet on the CMS Web site at:
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/)
Table 6I.—Complete List of Complication
and Comorbidity (CC) Exclusions
(Available only through the Internet on
the CMS Web site at:
http:/www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/)
Table 6J.—Major Complication and
Comorbidity (MCC) List (Available
Through the Internet on the CMS Web
site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/)
Table 6K.—Complication and Comorbidity
(CC) List (Available Through the Internet
on the CMS Web site at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/)
Table 7A.—Medicare Prospective Payment
System Selected Percentile Lengths of
Stay: FY 2009 MedPAR Update—
December 2009 GROUPER V27.0 MS–
DRGs
Table 7B.—Medicare Prospective Payment
System Selected Percentile Lengths of
Stay: FY 2009 MedPAR Update—
December 2009 GROUPER V28.0 MS–
DRGs
Table 8A.—Proposed Statewide Average
Operating Cost-to-Charge Ratios (CCRs)
for Acute Care Hospitals—March 2009
Table 8B.—Proposed Statewide Average
Capital Cost-to-Charge Ratios (CCRs) for
Acute Care Hospitals—March 2009
Table 8C.—Proposed Statewide Average
Total Cost-to-Charge Ratios (CCRs) for
LTCHs—March 2009
Table 9A.—Hospital Reclassifications and
Redesignations—FY 2011
Table 9C.—Hospitals Redesignated as
Rural Under Section 1886(d)(8)(E) of the
Act—FY 2011
Table 10.—Geometric Mean Plus the Lesser
of .75 of the National Adjusted Operating
Standardized Payment Amount
(Increased To Reflect the Difference
Between Costs and Charges) or .75 of
One Standard Deviation of Mean Charges
by Medicare Severity Diagnosis-Related
Groups (MS–DRGs)—March 2009
Table 11.—Proposed MS–LTC–DRGs,
Relative Weights, Geometric Average
Length of Stay, Short-Stay Outlier
Threshold, and IPPS Comparable
Threshold for Discharges Occurring
From October 1, 2010 Through
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23858
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
September 30, 2011 Under the LTCH
PPS
Table 12A.—Proposed LTCH PPS Wage
Index for Urban Areas for Discharges
Occurring from October 1, 2010 Through
September 30, 2011
Table 12B.—Proposed LTCH PPS Wage
Index for Rural Areas for Discharges
Occurring From October 1, 2010
Through September 30, 2011
Appendix A—Regulatory Impact Analysis
I. Overall Impact
II. Objectives of the IPPS
III. Limitations of Our Analysis
IV. Hospitals Included In and Excluded From
the IPPS
V. Effects on Hospitals and Hospital Units
Excluded From the IPPS
VI. Quantitative Effects of the Proposed
Policy Changes Under the IPPS for
Operating Costs
A. Basis and Methodology of Estimates
B. Analysis of Table I
C. Effects of the Proposed Changes to the
MS–DRG Reclassifications and Relative
Cost-Based Weights (Column 1)
D. Effects of the Application of
Recalibration Budget Neutrality (Column
2)
E. Effects of Proposed Wage Index Changes
(Column 3)
F. Application of the Wage Budget
Neutrality Factor (Column 4)
G. Combined Effects of Proposed MS–DRG
and Wage Index Changes (Column 5)
H. Effects of MGCRB Reclassifications
(Column 6)
I. Effects of the Proposed Rural Floor and
Imputed Floor, Including Application of
Budget Neutrality at the State Level
(Column 7)
J. Effects of the Proposed Wage Index
Adjustment for Out-Migration (Column
8)
K. Effects of All Proposed Changes Prior to
Documentation and Coding (Or CMI)
Adjustment (Column 9)
L. Effects of All Proposed Changes With
CMI Adjustment (Column 10)
M. Effects of Proposed Policy on Payment
Adjustments for Low-Volume Hospitals
N. Impact Analysis of Table II
VII. Effects of Other Proposed Policy Changes
A. Effects of Proposed Policy on HACs,
Including Infections
B. Effects of Proposed Policy Changes
Relating to New Medical Service and
Technology Add-On Payments
C. Effects of Proposed Requirements for
Hospital Reporting of Quality Data for
Annual Hospital Payment Update
D. Effects of Proposed Policy on Payment
for Transfer Cases From Medicare
Participating Hospitals to
Nonparticipating Hospitals and CAHs
E. Effects of Proposed Change in Criteria
for MDHs
F. Effects of Proposed Change Relating to
Payment Adjustment for
Disproportionate Share Hospitals
G. Effects of Proposed Changes Relating to
Payments for IME and Direct GME
1. Identifying ‘‘Approved Medical
Residency Programs’’
2. Submission of Electronic Affiliation
Agreements
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
H. Effects of Proposed Changes Relating to
CRNA Services Furnished in Rural
Hospitals and CAHs
I. Effects of Implementation of Rural
Community Hospital Demonstration
Program
J. Effects of Proposed Changes Relating to
CAHs
1. CAH Optional Method of Payment for
Outpatient Services
2. Consideration of Costs of Provider Taxes
as Allowable Costs for CAHs
K. Effects of Proposed Policy Relating to
Effective Date of Provider Agreements
and Supplier Approvals
L. Effects of Proposed Changes Relating to
Hospital Rehabilitation Services and
Respiratory Care Services Conditions of
Participation
VIII. Effects of Proposed Changes in the
Capital IPPS
A. General Considerations
B. Results
IX. Effects of Proposed Payment Rate
Changes and Proposed Policy Changes
Under the LTCH PPS
A. Introduction and General
Considerations
B. Impact on Rural Hospitals
C. Anticipated Effects of Proposed LTCH
PPS Payment Rate Change and Proposed
Policy Changes
D. Effect on the Medicare Program
E. Effect on Medicare Beneficiaries
X. Effects of Proposed Policy Changes
Relating to Accreditation Requirements
for Medicaid Providers of Inpatient
Psychiatric Services to Individuals
Under Age 21
XI. Alternatives Considered
XII. Overall Conclusion
A. Acute Care Hospitals
B. LTCHs
XIII. Accounting Statements
A. Acute Care Hospitals
B. LTCHs
XIV. Executive Order 12866
Appendix B—Recommendation of Update
Factors for Operating Cost Rates of Payment
for Inpatient Hospital Services
I. Background
II. Inpatient Hospital Update for FY 2011
III. Secretary’s Recommendation
IV. MedPAC Recommendation for Assessing
Payment Adequacy and Updating
Payments in Traditional Medicare
I. Background
A. Summary
1. Acute Care Hospital Inpatient
Prospective Payment System (IPPS)
Section 1886(d) of the Social Security
Act (the Act) sets forth a system of
payment for the operating costs of acute
care hospital inpatient stays under
Medicare Part A (Hospital Insurance)
based on prospectively set rates. Section
1886(g) of the Act requires the Secretary
to pay for the capital-related costs of
hospital inpatient stays under a
prospective payment system (PPS).
Under these PPSs, Medicare payment
for hospital inpatient operating and
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
capital-related costs is made at
predetermined, specific rates for each
hospital discharge. Discharges are
classified according to a list of
diagnosis-related groups (DRGs).
The base payment rate is comprised of
a standardized amount that is divided
into a labor-related share and a
nonlabor-related share. The laborrelated share is adjusted by the wage
index applicable to the area where the
hospital is located. If the hospital is
located in Alaska or Hawaii, the
nonlabor-related share is adjusted by a
cost-of-living adjustment factor. This
base payment rate is multiplied by the
DRG relative weight.
If the hospital treats a high percentage
of low-income patients, it receives a
percentage add-on payment applied to
the DRG-adjusted base payment rate.
This add-on payment, known as the
disproportionate share hospital (DSH)
adjustment, provides for a percentage
increase in Medicare payments to
hospitals that qualify under either of
two statutory formulas designed to
identify hospitals that serve a
disproportionate share of low-income
patients. For qualifying hospitals, the
amount of this adjustment may vary
based on the outcome of the statutory
calculations.
If the hospital is an approved teaching
hospital, it receives a percentage add-on
payment for each case paid under the
IPPS, known as the indirect medical
education (IME) adjustment. This
percentage varies, depending on the
ratio of residents to beds.
Additional payments may be made for
cases that involve new technologies or
medical services that have been
approved for special add-on payments.
To qualify, a new technology or medical
service must demonstrate that it is a
substantial clinical improvement over
technologies or services otherwise
available, and that, absent an add-on
payment, it would be inadequately paid
under the regular DRG payment.
The costs incurred by the hospital for
a case are evaluated to determine
whether the hospital is eligible for an
additional payment as an outlier case.
This additional payment is designed to
protect the hospital from large financial
losses due to unusually expensive cases.
Any eligible outlier payment is added to
the DRG-adjusted base payment rate,
plus any DSH, IME, and new technology
or medical service add-on adjustments.
Although payments to most hospitals
under the IPPS are made on the basis of
the standardized amounts, some
categories of hospitals are paid in whole
or in part based on their hospitalspecific rate based on their costs in a
base year. For example, sole community
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
hospitals (SCHs) receive the higher of a
hospital-specific rate based on their
costs in a base year (the highest of FY
1982, FY 1987, FY 1996, or FY 2006) or
the IPPS Federal rate based on the
standardized amount. Through and
including FY 2006, a Medicaredependent, small rural hospital (MDH)
received the higher of the Federal rate
or the Federal rate plus 50 percent of the
amount by which the Federal rate is
exceeded by the higher of its FY 1982
or FY 1987 hospital-specific rate. As
discussed below, for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2007,
but before October 1, 2011, an MDH will
receive the higher of the Federal rate or
the Federal rate plus 75 percent of the
amount by which the Federal rate is
exceeded by the highest of its FY 1982,
FY 1987, or FY 2002 hospital-specific
rate. SCHs are the sole source of care in
their areas, and MDHs are a major
source of care for Medicare beneficiaries
in their areas. Specifically, section
1886(d)(5)(D)(iii) of the Act defines an
SCH as a hospital that is located more
than 35 road miles from another
hospital or that, by reason of factors
such as isolated location, weather
conditions, travel conditions, or absence
of other like hospitals (as determined by
the Secretary), is the sole source of
hospital inpatient services reasonably
available to Medicare beneficiaries. In
addition, certain rural hospitals
previously designated by the Secretary
as essential access community hospitals
are considered SCHs. Section
1886(d)(5)(G)(iv) of the Act defines an
MDH as a hospital that is located in a
rural area, has not more than 100 beds,
is not an SCH, and has a high
percentage of Medicare discharges (not
less than 60 percent of its inpatient days
or discharges in its cost reporting year
beginning in FY 1987 or in two of its
three most recently settled Medicare
cost reporting years). Both of these
categories of hospitals are afforded this
special payment protection in order to
maintain access to services for
beneficiaries.
Section 1886(g) of the Act requires the
Secretary to pay for the capital-related
costs of inpatient hospital services ‘‘in
accordance with a prospective payment
system established by the Secretary.’’
The basic methodology for determining
capital prospective payments is set forth
in our regulations at 42 CFR 412.308
and 412.312. Under the capital IPPS,
payments are adjusted by the same DRG
for the case as they are under the
operating IPPS. Capital IPPS payments
are also adjusted for IME and DSH,
similar to the adjustments made under
the operating IPPS. In addition,
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
hospitals may receive outlier payments
for those cases that have unusually high
costs.
The existing regulations governing
payments to hospitals under the IPPS
are located in 42 CFR part 412, Subparts
A through M.
2. Hospitals and Hospital Units
Excluded From the IPPS
Under section 1886(d)(1)(B) of the
Act, as amended, certain hospitals and
hospital units are excluded from the
IPPS. These hospitals and units are:
rehabilitation hospitals and units; longterm care hospitals (LTCHs); psychiatric
hospitals and units; children’s hospitals;
and cancer hospitals. Religious
nonmedical health care institutions
(RNHCIs) are also excluded from the
IPPS. Various sections of the Balanced
Budget Act of 1997 (BBA, Pub. L. 105–
33), the Medicare, Medicaid and SCHIP
[State Children’s Health Insurance
Program] Balanced Budget Refinement
Act of 1999 (BBRA, Pub. L. 106–113),
and the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP
Benefits Improvement and Protection
Act of 2000 (BIPA, Pub. L. 106–554)
provide for the implementation of PPSs
for rehabilitation hospitals and units
(referred to as inpatient rehabilitation
facilities (IRFs)), LTCHs, and psychiatric
hospitals and units (referred to as
inpatient psychiatric facilities (IPFs)).
(We note that the annual updates to the
LTCH PPS are now included as part of
the IPPS annual update document.
Updates to the IRF PPS and IPF PPS are
issued as separate documents.)
Children’s hospitals, cancer hospitals,
and RNHCIs continue to be paid solely
under a reasonable cost-based system
subject to a rate-of-increase ceiling on
inpatient operating costs per discharge.
The existing regulations governing
payments to excluded hospitals and
hospital units are located in 42 CFR
parts 412 and 413.
3. Long-Term Care Hospital Prospective
Payment System (LTCH PPS)
The Medicare prospective payment
system (PPS) for LTCHs applies to
hospitals described in section
1886(d)(1)(B)(iv) effective for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2002. The LTCH PPS was
established under the authority of
sections 123(a) and (c) of Public Law
106–113 and section 307(b)(1) of Public
Law 106–554 (as codified under section
1886(m)(1) of the Act). During the 5-year
(optional) transition period, a LTCH’s
payment under the PPS was based on an
increasing proportion of the LTCH
Federal rate with a corresponding
decreasing proportion based on
reasonable cost principles. Effective for
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23859
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 2006, all LTCHs are
paid 100 percent of the Federal rate. The
existing regulations governing payment
under the LTCH PPS are located in 42
CFR part 412, Subpart O. Beginning
October 1, 2009, we issue the annual
updates to the LTCH PPS in the same
documents that update the IPPS (73 FR
26797 through 26798).
4. Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
Under sections 1814(l), 1820, and
1834(g) of the Act, payments are made
to critical access hospitals (CAHs) (that
is, rural hospitals or facilities that meet
certain statutory requirements) for
inpatient and outpatient services are
generally based on 101 percent of
reasonable cost. Reasonable cost is
determined under the provisions of
section 1861(v)(1)(A) of the Act and
existing regulations under 42 CFR parts
413 and 415.
5. Payments for Graduate Medical
Education (GME)
Under section 1886(a)(4) of the Act,
costs of approved educational activities
are excluded from the operating costs of
inpatient hospital services. Hospitals
with approved graduate medical
education (GME) programs are paid for
the direct costs of GME in accordance
with section 1886(h) of the Act. The
amount of payment for direct GME costs
for a cost reporting period is based on
the hospital’s number of residents in
that period and the hospital’s costs per
resident in a base year. The existing
regulations governing payments to the
various types of hospitals are located in
42 CFR part 413.
B. Provisions of the Patient Protection
and Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111–
148), as Amended by the Health Care
and Education Reconciliation Act of
2010 (Pub. L. 111–152)
On March 23, 2010, the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act
(PPACA), Public Law 111–148 was
enacted. Following the enactment of
Public Law 111–148, the Health Care
and Education Reconciliation Act of
2010, Public L. 111–152 (enacted on
March 30, 2010), amended certain
provisions of Public Law 111–148. A
number of the provisions of Public Law
111–148, as amended by Public Law
111–152, affect the IPPS and the LTCH
PPS and the providers and suppliers
addressed in this proposed rule.
However, due to the timing of the
passage of the legislation, we are unable
to address those provisions in this
proposed rule. Therefore, the proposed
policies and payment rates in this
proposed rule do not reflect the new
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23860
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
conditions (HACs), including infections,
that are subject to the statutorily
required quality adjustment in MS–DRG
payments for FY 2011.
We discuss the FY 2011 status of two
new technologies approved for add-on
payments for FY 2010 and presented
our evaluation and analysis of the FY
2011 applicants for add-on payments for
high-cost new medical services and
technologies (including public input, as
directed by Pub. L. 108–173, obtained in
a town hall meeting).
C. Major Content of This Proposed Rule
In this proposed rule, we are setting
forth proposed changes to the Medicare
IPPS for operating costs and for capitalrelated costs of acute care hospitals in
FY 2011. We also are setting forth
proposed changes relating to payments
for IME costs and payments to certain
hospitals and units that continue to be
excluded from the IPPS and paid on a
reasonable cost basis.
In addition, in this proposed rule, we
are setting forth proposed changes to the
payment rates, factors, and other
payment rate policies under the LTCH
PPS for FY 2011. We note that because
the annual update of payment rates for
the LTCH PPS will now take place on
the same schedule and in the same
publication as for the IPPS, for the sake
of clarity, in section VII.D. of this
proposed rule, we are proposing to use
‘‘fiscal year (FY)’’ instead of ‘‘rate year
(RY) when referring to updates and
changes to the LTCH PPS to be effective
October 1, 2010. Therefore, throughout
this proposed rule, we are using the
phrase ‘‘fiscal year (FY)’’ in referring to
proposed updates and changes to the
LTCH PPS.
Below is a summary of the major
changes that we are proposing to make:
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
legislation. We plan to issue separate
documents in the Federal Register
addressing the provisions of Public Law
111–148, as amended, that affect our
proposed policies and payment rates for
FY 2011 under the IPPS and the LTCH
PPS. In addition, we plan to issue
further instructions implementing the
provisions of Public Law 111–148, as
amended, that affect the policies and
payment rates for FY 2010 under the
IPPS and for RY 2010 under the LTCH
PPS.
2. Proposed Changes to the Hospital
Wage Index for Acute Care Hospitals
1. Proposed Changes to MS–DRG
Classifications and Recalibrations of
Relative Weights
In section II. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we included—
• Proposed changes to MS–DRG
classifications based on our yearly
review.
• Proposed application of the
documentation and coding adjustment
to hospital-specific rates for FY 2011
resulting from implementation of the
MS–DRG system.
• A discussion of the Research
Triangle International, Inc. (RTI) and
RAND Corporation reports and
recommendations relating to charge
compression.
• Proposed recalibrations of the MS–
DRG relative weights.
We also presented a listing and
discussion of hospital-acquired
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
In section III. of the preamble to this
proposed rule, we are proposing
revisions to the wage index for acute
care hospitals and the annual update of
the wage data. Specific issues addressed
include the following:
• Budget neutrality for the rural floor
and imputed floor.
• Changes to titles and principal
cities of CBSA designations.
• The proposed FY 2011 wage index
update using wage data from cost
reporting periods beginning in FY 2007.
• Analysis and implementation of the
proposed FY 2011 occupational mix
adjustment to the wage index for acute
care hospitals, including discussion of
the 2010 occupational mix survey.
• Proposed revisions to the wage
index for acute care hospitals based on
hospital redesignations and
reclassifications.
• The proposed adjustment to the
wage index for acute care hospitals for
FY 2011 based on commuting patterns
of hospital employees who reside in a
county and work in a different area with
a higher wage index.
• The timetable for reviewing and
verifying the wage data used to compute
the proposed FY 2011 hospital wage
index.
• Determination of the labor-related
share for the proposed FY 2011 wage
index.
3. Other Decisions and Proposed
Changes to the IPPS for Operating Costs
and GME Costs
In section IV. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we discussed a number
of the provisions of the regulations in 42
CFR parts 412, 413, and 489, including
the following:
• The reporting of hospital quality
data as a condition for receiving the full
annual payment update increase.
• Payment for transfer cases from
Medicare participating hospitals to
nonparticipating hospitals and CAHs.
• A change to the definition criteria
for MDHs.
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
• The proposed updated national and
regional case-mix values and discharges
for purposes of determining RRC status.
• The statutorily required IME
adjustment factor for FY 2011.
• The proposed policy change
relating to the determination of the SSI
ratio of the Medicare fraction in the
formula for determining the payment
adjustments for disproportionate share
hospitals.
• A proposed clarification of
‘‘approved medical residency programs’’
policies relating to payment for IME and
direct GME and our proposal to accept
the electronic submission of Medicare
GME affiliation agreements.
• Proposed policy change for
payments for services furnished by
certified registered nurse anesthetists
(CRNAs) in rural hospitals and CAHs.
• Discussion of the status of the Rural
Community Hospital Demonstration
Program.
4. Proposed FY 2011 Policy Governing
the IPPS for Capital-Related Costs
In section V. of the preamble to this
proposed rule, we discussed the
proposed payment policy requirements
for capital-related costs and capital
payments to hospitals for FY 2011 and
the proposed MS–DRG documentation
and coding adjustment for FY 2011.
5. Proposed Changes to the Payment
Rates for Certain Excluded Hospitals:
Rate-of-Increase Percentages
In section VI. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we discussed—
• Proposed changes to payments to
excluded hospitals.
• Proposed changes relating to the
election by CAHs of the optional
method of payment for outpatient
services
• Proposed clarification of the
policies on costs of provider taxes as
allowable costs for CAHs.
6. Proposed Changes to the LTCH PPS
In section VII. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we set forth proposed
changes to the payment rates, factors,
and other payment rate policies under
the LTCH PPS for FY 2011, including
the annual update of the MS–LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights for
use under the LTCH PPS for FY 2011
and the proposed MS–DRG
documentation and coding adjustment
for FY 2011.
7. Proposed Changes Relating to
Effective Date of Provider Agreements
and Supplier Approvals
In section VIII. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we set forth our
proposed change in policies for
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
determining the effective date of
provider agreements and supplier
approvals and to make changes to assure
that accredited and nonaccredited
facilities are treated in the same manner
in determining this effective date.
8. Proposed Changes to Medicare
Conditions of Participation Affecting
Hospital Rehabilitation Services and
Respiratory Care Services
In section IX. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we are proposing
changes to the Medicare conditions of
participation regarding which
practitioners are allowed to order
rehabilitation and respiratory care
services in the hospital setting.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
9. Proposed Changes to the
Accreditation Requirements for
Medicaid Providers of Inpatient
Psychiatric Services for Individuals
under Age 21
In section X. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we are proposing to
remove the requirement for
accreditation by The Joint Commission
of psychiatric hospitals and hospitals
with inpatient psychiatric programs.
Hospitals with inpatient psychiatric
programs would be afforded the
flexibility in obtaining accreditation by
a national accrediting organization
whose hospital accrediting program has
been approved by CMS, and psychiatric
rehabilitation treatment facilities would
be afforded flexibility in obtaining
accreditation by a national accrediting
organization whose program has been
approved by CMS, or by any other
accrediting organization with
comparable standards that is recognized
by the State.
10. Determining Proposed Prospective
Payment Operating and Capital Rates
and Rate-of-Increase Limits for Acute
Care Hospitals
In the Addendum to this proposed
rule, we set forth proposed changes to
the amounts and factors for determining
the proposed FY 2011 prospective
payment rates for operating costs and
capital-related costs for acute care
hospitals. We also are establishing the
proposed threshold amounts for outlier
cases. In addition, we address the
proposed update factors for determining
the rate-of-increase limits for cost
reporting periods beginning in FY 2011
for certain hospitals excluded from the
IPPS.
11. Determining Proposed Prospective
Payment Rates for LTCHs
In the Addendum to this proposed
rule, we set forth proposed changes to
the amounts and factors for determining
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
the proposed FY 2011 prospective
standard Federal rate. We also are
establishing the proposed adjustments
for wage levels, the labor-related share,
the cost-of-living adjustment, and highcost outliers, including the fixed-loss
amount, and the LTCH cost-to-charge
ratios (CCRs) under the LTCH PPS.
12. Impact Analysis
In Appendix A of this proposed rule,
we set forth an analysis of the impact
that the proposed changes would have
on affected acute care hospitals and
LTCHs.
13. Recommendation of Update Factors
for Operating Cost Rates of Payment for
Hospital Inpatient Services
In Appendix B of this proposed rule,
as required by sections 1886(e)(4) and
(e)(5) of the Act, we provide our
recommendations of the appropriate
percentage changes for FY 2011 for the
following:
• A single average standardized
amount for all areas for hospital
inpatient services paid under the IPPS
for operating costs of acute care
hospitals (and hospital-specific rates
applicable to SCHs and MDHs).
• Target rate-of-increase limits to the
allowable operating costs of hospital
inpatient services furnished by certain
hospitals excluded from the IPPS.
• The standard Federal rate for
hospital inpatient services furnished by
LTCHs.
14. Discussion of Medicare Payment
Advisory Commission
Recommendations
Under section 1805(b) of the Act,
MedPAC is required to submit a report
to Congress, no later than March 1 of
each year, in which MedPAC reviews
and makes recommendations on
Medicare payment policies. MedPAC’s
March 2010 recommendations
concerning hospital inpatient payment
policies address the update factor for
hospital inpatient operating costs and
capital-related costs under the IPPS, for
hospitals and distinct part hospital units
excluded from the IPPS. We address
these recommendations in Appendix B
of this proposed rule. For further
information relating specifically to the
MedPAC March 2008 report or to obtain
a copy of the report, contact MedPAC at
(202) 220–3700 or visit MedPAC’s Web
site at: https://www.medpac.gov.
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23861
E. Interim Final Rule With Comment
Period That Implemented Certain
Provisions of the ARRA Relating to
Payments to LTCHs and LTCH Satellite
Facilities
Section 4302 of the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009
(ARRA, Public Law 111–5) included
several amendments to section 114 of
Public Law 110–173 (MMSEA) relating
to payments to LTCHs and LTCH
satellite facilities that were discussed
under section X. of the FY 2010 IPPS/
RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR
43976 through 43990). These
amendments are effective as if they were
enacted as part of section 114 of Public
Law 110–173 (MMSEA). We issued
instructions to the fiscal intermediaries
and Medicare administrative contractors
(MACs) to interpret these amendments
(Change Request 6444). In section XI. of
the FY 2010/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final
rule (74 FR 43990), we implemented the
provisions of section 4302 of Public Law
111–5 through an interim final rule with
comment period. We will respond to the
public comments that we received in a
timely manner on this interim final rule
with comment period and finalize the
interim final rule with any necessary
modification in the final rule for this
proposed rule.
II. Proposed Changes to Medicare
Severity Diagnosis-Related Group (MS–
DRG) Classifications and Relative
Weights
A. Background
Section 1886(d) of the Act specifies
that the Secretary shall establish a
classification system (referred to as
DRGs) for inpatient discharges and
adjust payments under the IPPS based
on appropriate weighting factors
assigned to each DRG. Therefore, under
the IPPS, we pay for inpatient hospital
services on a rate per discharge basis
that varies according to the DRG to
which a beneficiary’s stay is assigned.
The formula used to calculate payment
for a specific case multiplies an
individual hospital’s payment rate per
case by the weight of the DRG to which
the case is assigned. Each DRG weight
represents the average resources
required to care for cases in that
particular DRG, relative to the average
resources used to treat cases in all
DRGs.
Congress recognized that it would be
necessary to recalculate the DRG
relative weights periodically to account
for changes in resource consumption.
Accordingly, section 1886(d)(4)(C) of
the Act requires that the Secretary
adjust the DRG classifications and
relative weights at least annually. These
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23862
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
adjustments are made to reflect changes
in treatment patterns, technology, and
any other factors that may change the
relative use of hospital resources.
B. MS–DRG Reclassifications
1. General
As discussed in the preamble to the
FY 2008 IPPS final rule with comment
period (72 FR 47138), we focused our
efforts in FY 2008 on making significant
reforms to the IPPS consistent with the
recommendations made by MedPAC in
its ‘‘Report to the Congress, PhysicianOwned Specialty Hospitals’’ in March
2005. MedPAC recommended that the
Secretary refine the entire DRG system
by taking severity of illness into account
and applying hospital-specific relative
value (HSRV) weights to DRGs.1 We
began this reform process by adopting
cost-based weights over a 3-year
transition period beginning in FY 2007
and making interim changes to the DRG
system for FY 2007 by creating 20 new
CMS DRGs and modifying 32 other
DRGs across 13 different clinical areas
involving nearly 1.7 million cases. As
described in more detail below, these
refinements were intermediate steps
towards comprehensive reform of both
the relative weights and the DRG system
as we undertook further study. For FY
2008, we adopted 745 new Medicare
Severity DRGs (MS–DRGs) to replace
the CMS DRGs. We refer readers to
section II.D. of the FY 2008 IPPS final
rule with comment period for a full
detailed discussion of how the MS–DRG
system, based on severity levels of
illness, was established (72 FR 47141).
Currently, cases are classified into
MS–DRGs for payment under the IPPS
based on the following information
reported by the hospital: The principal
diagnosis, up to eight additional
diagnoses, and up to six procedures
performed during the stay. (We refer
readers to section II.G.11.c. of this
proposed rule for a discussion of our
efforts to increase our internal systems
capacity to process diagnosis and
procedures on hospital claims to 25
diagnosis codes and 25 procedure codes
prior to the use of the International
Classification of Diseases, 10th
Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD–
10–CM) for diagnosis coding and the
International Classification of Diseases,
10th Revision, Procedure Coding
System (ICD–10 PCS) for inpatient
hospital procedure coding, effective
October 1, 2013.) In a small number of
MS–DRGs, classification is also based
on the age, sex, and discharge status of
the patient. The diagnosis and
procedure information is reported by
the hospital using codes from the
International Classification of Diseases,
Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification
(ICD–9–CM) prior to October 1, 2013.
We refer readers to section II.G.11.b. of
this proposed rule for a reference to the
replacement of ICD–9–CM, Volumes 1
and 2, including the Official ICD–9–CM
Guidelines for Coding and Reporting,
Volume 3, with the ICD–10–CM and
ICD–10–PCS, including the Official
ICD–10–CM and ICM–10–PCS
Guidelines for Coding and Reporting,
effective October 1, 2013 (FY 2014).
The process of developing the MS–
DRGs was begun by dividing all
possible principal diagnoses into
mutually exclusive principal diagnosis
areas, referred to as Major Diagnostic
Categories (MDCs). The MDCs were
formulated by physician panels to
ensure that the DRGs would be
clinically coherent. The diagnoses in
each MDC correspond to a single organ
system or etiology and, in general, are
associated with a particular medical
specialty. Thus, in order to maintain the
requirement of clinical coherence, no
final MS–DRG could contain patients in
different MDCs. For example, MDC 6 is
Diseases and Disorders of the Digestive
System. This approach is used because
clinical care is generally organized in
accordance with the organ system
affected. However, some MDCs are not
constructed on this basis because they
involve multiple organ systems (for
example, MDC 22 (Burns)). For FY 2010,
cases are assigned to one of 746 MS–
DRGs in 25 MDCs. The table below lists
the 25 MDCs.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
MAJOR DIAGNOSTIC CATEGORIES (MDCS)
1 ..................
2 ..................
3 ..................
4 ..................
5 ..................
6 ..................
7 ..................
8 ..................
9 ..................
10 ................
11 ................
12 ................
13 ................
14 ................
15 ................
16 ................
17 ................
18 ................
19 ................
20 ................
21 ................
22 ................
23 ................
24 ................
25 ................
Diseases and Disorders of the Nervous System.
Diseases and Disorders of the Eye.
Diseases and Disorders of the Ear, Nose, Mouth, and Throat.
Diseases and Disorders of the Respiratory System.
Diseases and Disorders of the Circulatory System.
Diseases and Disorders of the Digestive System.
Diseases and Disorders of the Hepatobiliary System and Pancreas.
Diseases and Disorders of the Musculoskeletal System and Connective Tissue.
Diseases and Disorders of the Skin, Subcutaneous Tissue and Breast.
Endocrine, Nutritional and Metabolic Diseases and Disorders.
Diseases and Disorders of the Kidney and Urinary Tract.
Diseases and Disorders of the Male Reproductive System.
Diseases and Disorders of the Female Reproductive System.
Pregnancy, Childbirth, and the Puerperium.
Newborns and Other Neonates with Conditions Originating in the Perinatal Period.
Diseases and Disorders of the Blood and Blood Forming Organs and Immunological Disorders.
Myeloproliferative Diseases and Disorders and Poorly Differentiated Neoplasms.
Infectious and Parasitic Diseases (Systemic or Unspecified Sites).
Mental Diseases and Disorders.
Alcohol/Drug Use and Alcohol/Drug Induced Organic Mental Disorders.
Injuries, Poisonings, and Toxic Effects of Drugs.
Burns.
Factors Influencing Health Status and Other Contacts with Health Services.
Multiple Significant Trauma.
Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infections.
1 Medicare Payment Advisory Commission:
Report to the Congress, Physician-Owned Specialty
Hospitals, March 2005, page viii.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
In general, cases are assigned to an
MDC based on the patient’s principal
diagnosis before assignment to an MS–
DRG. However, under the most recent
version of the Medicare GROUPER
(Version 27.0), there are 13 MS–DRGs to
which cases are directly assigned on the
basis of ICD–9–CM procedure codes.
These MS–DRGs are for heart transplant
or implant of heart assist systems; liver
and/or intestinal transplants; bone
marrow transplants; lung transplants;
23863
simultaneous pancreas/kidney
transplants; pancreas transplants; and
tracheostomies. Cases are assigned to
these MS–DRGs before they are
classified to an MDC. The table below
lists the 13 current pre-MDCs.
PRE-MAJOR DIAGNOSTIC CATEGORIES (PRE-MDCS)
MS–DRG 001 ...
MS–DRG 002 ...
MS–DRG 003 ...
MS–DRG 004 ...
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
MS–DRG
MS–DRG
MS–DRG
MS–DRG
MS–DRG
MS–DRG
MS–DRG
MS–DRG
MS–DRG
005
006
007
008
009
010
011
012
013
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
Heart Transplant or Implant of Heart Assist System with MCC.
Heart Transplant or Implant of Heart Assist System without MCC.
ECMO or Tracheostomy with Mechanical Ventilation 96+ Hours or Principal Diagnosis Except for Face, Mouth, and Neck Diagnosis with Major O.R.
Tracheostomy with Mechanical Ventilation 96+ Hours or Principal Diagnosis Except for Face, Mouth, and Neck Diagnosis with
Major O.R.
Liver Transplant with MCC or Intestinal Transplant.
Liver Transplant without MCC.
Lung Transplant.
Simultaneous Pancreas/Kidney Transplant.
Bone Marrow Transplant.
Pancreas Transplant.
Tracheostomy for Face, Mouth, and Neck Diagnoses with MCC.
Tracheostomy for Face, Mouth, and Neck Diagnoses with CC.
Tracheostomy for Face, Mouth, and Neck Diagnoses without CC/MCC.
Once the MDCs were defined, each
MDC was evaluated to identify those
additional patient characteristics that
would have a consistent effect on
hospital resource consumption. Because
the presence of a surgical procedure that
required the use of the operating room
would have a significant effect on the
type of hospital resources used by a
patient, most MDCs were initially
divided into surgical DRGs and medical
DRGs. Surgical DRGs are based on a
hierarchy that orders operating room
(O.R.) procedures or groups of O.R.
procedures by resource intensity.
Medical DRGs generally are
differentiated on the basis of diagnosis
and age (0 to 17 years of age or greater
than 17 years of age). Some surgical and
medical DRGs are further differentiated
based on the presence or absence of a
complication or comorbidity (CC) or a
major complication or comorbidity
(MCC).
Generally, nonsurgical procedures
and minor surgical procedures that are
not usually performed in an operating
room are not treated as O.R. procedures.
However, there are a few non-O.R.
procedures that do affect MS–DRG
assignment for certain principal
diagnoses. An example is extracorporeal
shock wave lithotripsy for patients with
a principal diagnosis of urinary stones.
Lithotripsy procedures are not routinely
performed in an operating room.
Therefore, lithotripsy codes are not
classified as O.R. procedures. However,
our clinical advisors believe that
patients with urinary stones who
undergo extracorporeal shock wave
lithotripsy should be considered similar
to other patients who undergo O.R.
procedures. Therefore, we treat this
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
group of patients similar to patients
undergoing O.R. procedures.
Once the medical and surgical classes
for an MDC were formed, each diagnosis
class was evaluated to determine if
complications or comorbidities would
consistently affect hospital resource
consumption. Each diagnosis was
categorized into one of three severity
levels. These three levels include a
major complication or comorbidity
(MCC), a complication or comorbidity
(CC), or a non-CC. Physician panels
classified each diagnosis code based on
a highly iterative process involving a
combination of statistical results from
test data as well as clinical judgment. As
stated earlier, we refer readers to section
II.D. of the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with
comment period for a full detailed
discussion of how the MS–DRG system
was established based on severity levels
of illness (72 FR 47141).
A patient’s diagnosis, procedure,
discharge status, and demographic
information is entered into the Medicare
claims processing systems and subjected
to a series of automated screens called
the Medicare Code Editor (MCE). The
MCE screens are designed to identify
cases that require further review before
classification into an MS–DRG.
After patient information is screened
through the MCE and any further
development of the claim is conducted,
the cases are classified into the
appropriate MS–DRG by the Medicare
GROUPER software program. The
GROUPER program was developed as a
means of classifying each case into an
MS–DRG on the basis of the diagnosis
and procedure codes and, for a limited
number of MS–DRGs, demographic
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
information (that is, sex, age, and
discharge status).
After cases are screened through the
MCE and assigned to an MS–DRG by the
GROUPER, the PRICER software
calculates a base MS–DRG payment.
The PRICER calculates the payment for
each case covered by the IPPS based on
the MS–DRG relative weight and
additional factors associated with each
hospital, such as IME and DSH payment
adjustments. These additional factors
increase the payment amount to
hospitals above the base MS–DRG
payment.
The records for all Medicare hospital
inpatient discharges are maintained in
the Medicare Provider Analysis and
Review (MedPAR) file. The data in this
file are used to evaluate possible MS–
DRG classification changes and to
recalibrate the MS–DRG weights.
However, in the FY 2000 IPPS final rule
(64 FR 41500), we discussed a process
for considering non-MedPAR data in the
recalibration process. In order for us to
consider using particular non-MedPAR
data, we must have sufficient time to
evaluate and test the data. The time
necessary to do so depends upon the
nature and quality of the non-MedPAR
data submitted. Generally, however, a
significant sample of the non-MedPAR
data should be submitted by midOctober for consideration in
conjunction with the next year’s
proposed rule. This date allows us time
to test the data and make a preliminary
assessment as to the feasibility of using
the data. Subsequently, a complete
database should be submitted by early
December for consideration in
conjunction with the next year’s
proposed rule.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23864
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
As we indicated above, for FY 2008,
we made significant improvements in
the DRG system to recognize severity of
illness and resource usage by adopting
MS–DRGs that were reflected in the FY
2008 GROUPER, Version 25.0, and were
effective for discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2007. Our MS–DRG
analysis for the FY 2009 final rule was
based on data from the March 2008
update of the FY 2007 MedPAR file,
which contained hospital bills received
through March 31, 2008, for discharges
occurring through September 30, 2007.
For this proposed rule, for FY 2011, our
MS–DRG analysis is based on data from
the September 2009 update of the FY
2009 MedPAR file, which contains
hospital bills received through
September 30, 2009, for discharges
occurring through September 30, 2009.
2. Yearly Review for Making MS–DRG
Changes
Many of the changes to the MS–DRG
classifications we make annually are the
result of specific issues brought to our
attention by interested parties. We
encourage individuals with comments
about MS–DRG classifications to submit
these comments no later than early
December of each year so they can be
carefully considered for possible
inclusion in the annual proposed rule
and, if included, may be subjected to
public review and comment. Therefore,
similar to the timetable for interested
parties to submit non-MedPAR data for
consideration in the MS–DRG
recalibration process, comments about
MS–DRG classification issues should be
submitted no later than early December
in order to be considered and possibly
included in the next annual proposed
rule updating the IPPS.
The actual process of forming the
MS–DRGs was, and will likely continue
to be, highly iterative, involving a
combination of statistical results from
test data combined with clinical
judgment. In the FY 2008 IPPS final rule
(72 FR 47140 through 47189), we
described in detail the process we used
to develop the MS–DRGs that we
adopted for FY 2008. In addition, in
deciding whether to make further
modification to the MS–DRGs for
particular circumstances brought to our
attention, we considered whether the
resource consumption and clinical
characteristics of the patients with a
given set of conditions are significantly
different than the remaining patients in
the MS–DRG. We evaluated patient care
costs using average charges and lengths
of stay as proxies for costs and relied on
the judgment of our medical advisors to
decide whether patients are clinically
distinct or similar to other patients in
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
the MS–DRG. In evaluating resource
costs, we considered both the absolute
and percentage differences in average
charges between the cases we selected
for review and the remainder of cases in
the MS–DRG. We also considered
variation in charges within these
groups; that is, whether observed
average differences were consistent
across patients or attributable to cases
that were extreme in terms of charges or
length of stay, or both. Further, we
considered the number of patients who
will have a given set of characteristics
and generally preferred not to create a
new MS–DRG unless it would include
a substantial number of cases.
C. Adoption of the MS–DRGs in FY 2008
In the FY 2006, FY 2007, and FY 2008
IPPS final rules, we discussed a number
of recommendations made by MedPAC
regarding revisions to the DRG system
used under the IPPS (70 FR 47473
through 47482; 71 FR 47881 through
47939; and 72 FR 47140 through 47189).
As we noted in the FY 2006 IPPS final
rule, we had insufficient time to
complete a thorough evaluation of these
recommendations for full
implementation in FY 2006. However,
we did adopt severity-weighted cardiac
DRGs in FY 2006 to address public
comments on this issue and the specific
concerns of MedPAC regarding cardiac
surgery DRGs. We also indicated that we
planned to further consider all of
MedPAC’s recommendations and
thoroughly analyze options and their
impacts on the various types of
hospitals in the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule.
For FY 2007, we began this process.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule, we
proposed to adopt Consolidated
Severity DRGs (CS DRGs) for FY 2008 (if
not earlier). Based on public comments
received on the FY 2007 IPPS proposed
rule, we decided not to adopt the CS
DRGs. In the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71
FR 47906 through 47912), we discussed
several concerns raised by commenters
regarding the proposal to adopt CS
DRGs. We acknowledged the many
comments suggesting the logic of
Medicare’s DRG system should continue
to remain in the public domain as it has
since the inception of the PPS. We also
acknowledged concerns about the
impact on hospitals and software
vendors of moving to a proprietary
system. Several commenters suggested
that CMS refine the existing DRG
classification system to preserve the
many policy decisions that were made
over the last 20 years and were already
incorporated into the DRG system, such
as complexity of services and new
device technologies. Consistent with the
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
concerns expressed in the public
comments, this option had the
advantage of using the existing DRGs as
a starting point (which was already
familiar to the public) and retained the
benefit of many DRG decisions that
were made in recent years. We stated
our belief that the suggested approach of
incorporating severity measures into the
existing DRG system was a viable option
that would be evaluated.
Therefore, we decided to make
interim changes to the existing DRGs for
FY 2007 by creating 20 new DRGs
involving 13 different clinical areas that
would significantly improve the CMS
DRG system’s recognition of severity of
illness. We also modified 32 DRGs to
better capture differences in severity.
The new and revised DRGs were
selected from 40 existing CMS DRGs
that contained 1,666,476 cases and
represented a number of body systems.
In creating these 20 new DRGs, we
deleted 8 existing DRGs and modified
32 existing DRGs. We indicated that
these interim steps for FY 2007 were
being taken as a prelude to more
comprehensive changes to better
account for severity in the DRG system
by FY 2008.
In the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR
47898), we indicated our intent to
pursue further DRG reform through two
initiatives. First, we announced that we
were in the process of engaging a
contractor to assist us with evaluating
alternative DRG systems that were
raised as potential alternatives to the
CMS DRGs in the public comments.
Second, we indicated our intent to
review over 13,000 ICD–9–CM diagnosis
codes as part of making further
refinements to the current CMS DRGs to
better recognize severity of illness based
on the work that CMS (then HCFA) did
in the mid-1990’s in connection with
adopting severity DRGs. We describe
below the progress we have made on
these two initiatives and our actions for
FYs 2008, 2009, and 2010, and our
proposals for FY 2011 based on our
continued analysis of reform of the DRG
system. We note that the adoption of the
MS–DRGs to better recognize severity of
illness has implications for the outlier
threshold, the application of the
postacute care transfer policy, the
measurement of real case-mix versus
apparent case-mix, and the IME and
DSH payment adjustments. We discuss
these implications for FY 2011 in other
sections of this preamble and in the
Addendum to this proposed rule.
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule,
we discussed MedPAC’s
recommendations to move to a costbased HSRV weighting methodology
using HSRVs beginning with the FY
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
2007 IPPS proposed rule for
determining the DRG relative weights.
Although we proposed to adopt the
HSRV weighting methodology for FY
2007, we decided not to adopt the
proposed methodology in the final rule
after considering the public comments
we received on the proposal. Instead, in
the FY 2007 IPPS final rule, we adopted
a cost-based weighting methodology
without the HSRV portion of the
proposed methodology. The cost-based
weights were adopted over a 3-year
transition period in 1⁄3 increments
between FY 2007 and FY 2009. In
addition, in the FY 2007 IPPS final rule,
we indicated our intent to further study
the HSRV-based methodology as well as
other issues brought to our attention
related to the cost-based weighting
methodology adopted in the FY 2007
final rule. There was significant concern
in the public comments that our costbased weighting methodology does not
adequately account for charge
compression—the practice of applying a
higher percentage charge markup over
costs to lower cost items and services
and a lower percentage charge markup
over costs to higher cost items and
services. Further, public commenters
expressed concern about potential
inconsistencies between how costs and
charges are reported on the Medicare
cost reports and charges on the
Medicare claims. In the FY 2007 IPPS
final rule, we used costs and charges
from the cost report to determine
departmental level cost-to-charge ratios
(CCRs) which we then applied to
charges on the Medicare claims to
determine the cost-based weights. The
commenters were concerned about
potential distortions to the cost-based
weights that would result from
inconsistent reporting between the cost
reports and the Medicare claims. After
publication of the FY 2007 IPPS final
rule, we entered into a contract with RTI
International (RTI) to study both charge
compression and to what extent our
methodology for calculating DRG
relative weights is affected by
inconsistencies between how hospitals
report costs and charges on the cost
reports and how hospitals report
charges on individual claims. Further,
as part of its study of alternative DRG
systems, the RAND Corporation
analyzed the HSRV cost-weighting
methodology. We refer readers to
section II.E. of the preamble of this
proposed rule for discussion of the issue
of charge compression and the costweighting methodology for FY 2011.
We believe that revisions to the DRG
system to better recognize severity of
illness and changes to the relative
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
weights based on costs rather than
charges are improving the accuracy of
the payment rates in the IPPS. We agree
with MedPAC that these refinements
should be pursued. Although we
continue to caution that any prospective
payment system based on grouping
cases will always present some
opportunities for providers to specialize
in cases they believe have higher
margins, we believe that the changes we
have adopted and the continuing
reforms we are proposing to make in
this proposed rule for FY 2011 will
improve payment accuracy and reduce
financial incentives to create specialty
hospitals.
We refer readers to section II.D. of the
FY 2008 IPPS final rule with comment
period for a full discussion of how the
MS–DRG system was established based
on severity levels of illness (72 FR
47141).
D. Proposed FY 2011 MS–DRG
Documentation and Coding Adjustment,
Including the Applicability to the
Hospital-Specific Rates and the Puerto
Rico-Specific Standardized Amount
1. Background on the Prospective MS–
DRG Documentation and Coding
Adjustments for FY 2008 and FY 2009
Authorized by Public Law 110–90
As we discussed earlier in this
preamble, we adopted the MS–DRG
patient classification system for the
IPPS, effective October 1, 2007, to better
recognize severity of illness in Medicare
payment rates for acute care hospitals.
The adoption of the MS–DRG system
resulted in the expansion of the number
of DRGs from 538 in FY 2007 to 745 in
FY 2008. (Currently, there are 746 DRGs
for FY 2010; there would be 747 DRGs
in FY 2011, with our proposals in this
proposed rule to delete one MS–DRG
and to create two new MS–DRGs.) By
increasing the number of MS–DRGs and
more fully taking into account patients’
severity of illness in Medicare payment
rates for acute care hospitals, MS–DRGs
encourage hospitals to improve their
documentation and coding of patient
diagnoses. In the FY 2008 IPPS final
rule with comment period (72 FR 47175
through 47186), we indicated that the
adoption of the MS–DRGs had the
potential to lead to increases in
aggregate payments without a
corresponding increase in actual patient
severity of illness due to the incentives
for additional documentation and
coding. In that final rule with comment
period, we exercised our authority
under section 1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the
Act, which authorizes us to maintain
budget neutrality by adjusting the
national standardized amount, to
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23865
eliminate the estimated effect of changes
in coding or classification that do not
reflect real changes in case-mix. Our
actuaries estimated that maintaining
budget neutrality required an
adjustment of ¥4.8 percent to the
national standardized amount. We
provided for phasing in this ¥4.8
percent adjustment over 3 years.
Specifically, we established prospective
documentation and coding adjustments
of ¥1.2 percent for FY 2008, ¥1.8
percent for FY 2009, and ¥1.8 percent
for FY 2010.
On September 29, 2007, Congress
enacted the TMA [Transitional Medical
Assistance], Abstinence Education, and
QI [Qualifying Individuals] Programs
Extension Act of 2007, Public Law 110–
90. Section 7(a) of Public Law 110–90
reduced the documentation and coding
adjustment made as a result of the MS–
DRG system that we adopted in the FY
2008 IPPS final rule with comment
period to ¥0.6 percent for FY 2008 and
¥0.9 percent for FY 2009. Section 7(a)
of Public Law 110–90 did not adjust the
FY 2010 ¥1.8 percent documentation
and coding adjustment promulgated in
the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with
comment period. To comply with
section 7(a) of Public Law 110–90, we
promulgated a final rule on November
27, 2007 (72 FR 66886) that modified
the IPPS documentation and coding
adjustment for FY 2008 to ¥0.6 percent,
and revised the FY 2008 payment rates,
factors, and thresholds accordingly.
These revisions were effective on
October 1, 2007.
For FY 2009, section 7(a) of Public
Law 110–90 required a documentation
and coding adjustment of ¥0.9 percent
instead of the ¥1.8 percent adjustment
established in the FY 2008 IPPS final
rule with comment period. As discussed
in the FY 2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR
48447) and required by statute, we
applied a documentation and coding
adjustment of ¥0.9 percent to the FY
2009 IPPS national standardized
amount. The documentation and coding
adjustments established in the FY 2008
IPPS final rule with comment period, as
amended by Public Law 110–90, are
cumulative. As a result, the ¥0.9
percent documentation and coding
adjustment for FY 2009 was in addition
to the ¥0.6 percent adjustment for FY
2008, yielding a combined effect of
¥1.5 percent.
2. Prospective Adjustment to the
Average Standardized Amounts
Required by Section 7(b)(1)(A) of Public
Law 110–90
Section 7(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 110–
90 requires that, if the Secretary
determines that implementation of the
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23866
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
MS–DRG system resulted in changes in
documentation and coding that did not
reflect real changes in case-mix for
discharges occurring during FY 2008 or
FY 2009 that are different than the
prospective documentation and coding
adjustments applied under section 7(a)
of Public Law 110–90, the Secretary
shall make an appropriate adjustment
under section 1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the
Act. Section 1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act
authorizes adjustments to the average
standardized amounts for subsequent
fiscal years in order to eliminate the
effect of such coding or classification
changes. These adjustments are
intended to ensure that future annual
aggregate IPPS payments are the same as
the payments that otherwise would have
been made had the prospective
adjustments for documentation and
coding applied in FY 2008 and FY 2009
reflected the change that occurred in
those years.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
3. Recoupment or Repayment
Adjustments in FYs 2010 Through 2012
Required by Public Law 110–90
If, based on a retroactive evaluation of
claims data, the Secretary determines
that implementation of the MS–DRG
system resulted in changes in
documentation and coding that did not
reflect real changes in case-mix for
discharges occurring during FY 2008 or
FY 2009 that are different from the
prospective documentation and coding
adjustments applied under section 7(a)
of Public Law 110–90, section 7(b)(1)(B)
of Public Law 110–90 requires the
Secretary to make an additional
adjustment to the standardized amounts
under section 1886(d) of the Act. This
adjustment must offset the estimated
increase or decrease in aggregate
payments for FYs 2008 and 2009
(including interest) resulting from the
difference between the estimated actual
documentation and coding effect and
the documentation and coding
adjustment applied under section 7(a) of
Public Law 110–90. This adjustment is
in addition to making an appropriate
adjustment to the standardized amounts
under section 1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the
Act as required by section 7(b)(1)(A) of
Public Law 110–90. That is, these
adjustments are intended to recoup (or
repay) spending in excess of (or less
than) spending that would have
occurred had the prospective
adjustments for changes in
documentation and coding applied in
FY 2008 and FY 2009 precisely matched
the changes that occurred in those years.
Public Law 110–90 requires that the
Secretary make these recoupment or
repayment adjustments for discharges
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
occurring during FYs 2010, 2011, and
2012.
4. Retrospective Evaluation of FY 2008
Claims Data
In order to implement the
requirements of section 7 of Public Law
110–90, we indicated in the FY 2009
IPPS final rule (73 FR 48450) that we
planned a thorough retrospective
evaluation of our claims data. We stated
that the results of this evaluation would
be used by our actuaries to determine
any necessary payment adjustments to
the standardized amounts under section
1886(d) of the Act to ensure the budget
neutrality of the MS–DRGs
implementation for FY 2008 and FY
2009, as required by law. In the FY 2009
IPPS proposed rule (73 FR 23541
through 23542), we described our
preliminary plan for a retrospective
analysis of inpatient hospital claims
data and invited public input on our
proposed methodology.
In that proposed rule, we indicated
that we intended to measure and
corroborate the extent of the overall
national average changes in case-mix for
FY 2008 and FY 2009. We expected that
the two largest parts of this overall
national average change would be
attributable to underlying changes in
actual patient severity of illness and to
documentation and coding
improvements under the MS–DRG
system. In order to separate the two
effects, we planned to isolate the effect
of shifts in cases among base DRGs from
the effect of shifts in the types of cases
within-base DRGs.
The MS–DRGs divide the base DRGs
into three severity levels (with MCC,
with CC and without CC); the
previously used CMS DRGs had only
two severity levels (with CC and
without CC). Under the CMS DRG
system, the majority of hospital
discharges had a secondary diagnosis
which was on the CC list, which led to
the higher severity level. The MS–DRGs
significantly changed the code lists of
what was classified as an MCC or a CC.
Many codes that were previously
classified as a CC are no longer included
on the MS–DRG CC list because the data
and clinical review showed these
conditions did not lead to a significant
increase in resource use. The addition of
a new level of high severity conditions,
the MCC list, also provided a new
incentive to code more precisely in
order to increase the severity level. We
anticipated that hospitals would
examine the MS–DRG MCC and CC
code lists and then work with
physicians and coders on
documentation and coding practices so
that coders could appropriately assign
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
codes from the highest possible severity
level. We note that there have been
numerous seminars and training
sessions on this particular coding issue.
The topic of improving documentation
practices in order to code conditions on
the MCC list was also discussed
extensively by participants at the March
11–12, 2009 ICD–9–CM Coordination
and Maintenance Committee meeting.
Participants discussed their hospitals’
efforts to encourage physicians to
provide more precise documentation so
that coders could appropriately assign
codes that would lead to a higher
severity level. Because we expected
most of the documentation and coding
changes under the MS–DRG system
would occur in the secondary
diagnoses, we believed that the shifts
among base DRGs were less likely to be
the result of the MS–DRG system and
the shifts within-base DRGs were more
likely to be the result of the MS–DRG
system. We also anticipated evaluating
data to identify the specific MS–DRGs
and diagnoses that contributed
significantly to the documentation and
coding payment effect and to quantify
their impact. This step entailed analysis
of the secondary diagnoses driving the
shifts in severity within specific base
DRGs.
In that same proposed rule, we also
stated that, while we believed that the
data analysis plan described previously
would produce an appropriate estimate
of the extent of case-mix changes
resulting from documentation and
coding changes, we might decide, if
feasible, to use historical data from our
Hospital Payment Monitoring Program
(HPMP) to corroborate the within-base
DRG shift analysis. The HPMP is
supported by the Medicare Clinical Data
Abstraction Center (CDAC).
In the FY 2009 IPPS proposed rule,
we solicited public comments on the
analysis plans described above, as well
as suggestions on other possible
approaches for performing a
retrospective analysis to identify the
amount of case-mix changes that
occurred in FY 2008 and FY 2009 that
did not reflect real increases in patients’
severity of illness.
A few commenters, including
MedPAC, expressed support for the
analytic approach described in the FY
2009 IPPS proposed rule. A number of
other commenters expressed concerns
about certain aspects of the approach
and/or suggested alternate analyses or
study designs. In addition, one
commenter recommended that any
determination or retrospective
evaluation by the actuaries of the impact
of the MS–DRGs on case-mix be open to
public scrutiny prior to the
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
implementation of the payment
adjustments beginning in FY 2010.
We took these comments into
consideration as we developed our
proposed analysis plan and in the FY
2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS proposed
rule (74 FR 24092 through 24101)
solicited public comment on our
methodology and analysis. For the FY
2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS proposed
rule, we performed a retrospective
evaluation of the FY 2008 data for
claims paid through December 2008.
Based on this evaluation, our actuaries
determined that implementation of the
MS–DRG system resulted in a 2.5
percent change due to documentation
and coding that did not reflect real
changes in case-mix for discharges
occurring during FY 2008
In the analysis of data for that
proposed rule, we found that the
within-base DRG increases were almost
entirely responsible for the case-mix
change, supporting our conclusion that
the 2.5 percent estimate was an accurate
reflection of the FY 2008 effect of
changes in documentation and coding
under the MS–DRG system. In fact,
almost every base DRG that was split
into different severity levels under the
MS–DRG system experienced increases
in the within-base DRGs. We then
further analyzed the changes in the
within-base DRGs to determine which
MS–DRGs had the highest contributions
to this increase. The results of the
analysis for the proposed rule provided
additional support for our conclusion
that the proposed 2.5 percent estimate
accurately reflected the FY 2008
increases in documentation and coding
under the MS–DRG system. While we
attempted to use the CDAC data to
distinguish real increase in case-mix
growth from documentation and coding
in the overall case-mix number, we
found aberrant data and significant
variation across the FY 1999 through FY
2007 analysis period. It was not possible
to distinguish changes in
documentation and coding from
changes in real case-mix in the CDAC
data. Therefore, we concluded that the
CDAC data would not support analysis
of real case-mix growth that could be
used in our retrospective evaluation of
the FY 2008 claims data.
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS final rule (74 FR 43768 through
43772), we responded to comments on
our methodology for the retrospective
evaluation of FY 2008 claims data.
Commenters raised concerns that CMS’
estimate in the proposed rule did not
fully consider other potential causes of
increased case-mix, such as patients
requiring less complex services
receiving care in other settings and
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
‘‘healthier’’ patients enrolling in
Medicare Advantage plans in increasing
numbers. Other commenters indicated
that factors such as the changes in the
CC/MCC definitions, limitations on the
number of codes used by CMS for
payment and ratesetting, resequencing
of secondary diagnoses, the transition to
the cost-based weights, less use of ‘‘not
otherwise specified’’ codes, and
increases in real case-mix due to health
reform efforts also resulted in an
inaccurate documentation and coding
analysis. One commenter indicated that,
of the overall case-mix increase, 1.0
percent to 1.5 percent is ‘‘real’’ case-mix
increase, while 1.0 percent to 1.5
percent is due to documentation and
coding or other increases.
In considering these comments
concerning historical real case-mix, in
the FY 2010 final rule, we calculated
overall increases in case-mix for the
period from FY 2000 to FY 2007 using
the cases from each year and the
GROUPER and relative weights
applicable for each year. The results are
shown in the following chart:
OVERALL CASE-MIX INCREASES FOR
FY 2000 TO FY 2007
Overall case-mix
change from prior
year
(in percent)
Year
FY
FY
FY
FY
FY
FY
FY
FY
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
¥0.7
¥0.4
1.0
1.4
1.0
0.9
1.2
¥0.2
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
Overall case-mix growth is
predominately comprised of three
factors: Real case-mix growth; a
documentation and coding effect; and a
measurement effect. Under the
reasonable assumption that there has
been a relatively small measurement
effect in those years, the assertion that
there is a historical pattern of steady
annual increases of 1.2 to 1.3 percent in
real case-mix implies that the
documentation and coding effect in
many of those years was negative. For
example, as discussed in that rule (74
FR 43769), we estimated a recent
measurement effect of +0.3 percent. The
overall case-mix growth of ¥0.2 percent
in FY 2007 net of a measurement effect
of +0.3 percent results in growth of +0.1
percent. A real case-mix growth of +1.2
percent in FY 2007, therefore, implies a
negative documentation and coding
effect of approximately ¥1.1 percent. It
is not obvious why documentation and
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23867
coding would have had such a large
negative effect in FY 2007, or in any
other year where the overall case-mix
change is significantly less than the
commenter’s claimed average annual
trend, calling into question the assertion
that real case-mix growth is a steady 1.2
to 1.3 percent per year.
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS final rule (74 FR 43770 through
43771), we indicated that our estimate
of the overall case-mix growth for FY
2008 based on more recent data than the
data used in the FY 2010 proposed rule
was 2.0 percent, still less than our
actuaries’ estimate of a 2.5 percent
documentation and coding increase.
With respect to the concerns raised by
commenters about our finding of
negative real case-mix growth in FY
2008, a finding of negative real case-mix
growth is consistent with the fact that,
in some years, overall case-mix growth
has been negative, as shown in the chart
presented above in this response.
5. Retrospective Analysis of FY 2009
Claims Data
We performed the same analysis for
FY 2009 claims data using the same
methodology as we did for FY 2008
claims in the FY 2010 final rule. We
first divided the case-mix index (CMI)
obtained by grouping the FY 2009
claims data through the FY 2009
GROUPER (Version 26.0) by the CMI
obtained by grouping these same FY
2009 claims through the FY 2007
GROUPER (Version 24.0). This resulted
in a value of 1.056. Because these cases
are the same FY 2009 cases grouped
using the Versions 24.0 and 26.0 of the
GROUPER, we attribute this increase
primarily to two factors: (1) The effect
of changes in documentation and coding
under the MS–DRG system; and (2) the
measurement effect from the calibration
of the GROUPER. We estimated the
measurement effect from the calibration
of the GROUPER by dividing the CMI
obtained by grouping cases in the FY
2007 claims data through the FY 2009
GROUPER by the CMI obtained by
grouping cases in these same claims
through the FY 2007 GROUPER. This
resulted in a value of 1.0019. In order
to isolate the documentation and coding
effect, we then divided the combined
effect of the changes in documentation
and coding and measurement (1.056) by
the measurement effect (1.0019) to yield
1.054. Therefore, our estimate of the
documentation and coding increase that
did not reflect real changes in case-mix
for discharges was 5.4 percent.
We then sought to corroborate this 5.4
percent estimate by examining the
increases in the within-base DRGs as
compared to the increases in the across
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23868
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
change, supporting our conclusion that
the 5.4 percent estimate was an accurate
reflection of the FY 2009 effect of
changes in documentation and coding
under the MS–DRG system. We then
further analyzed the changes in the
within-base DRGs to determine which
MS–DRGs had the highest contributions
to this increase. The results of the
analysis for the proposed rule provided
additional support for our conclusion
that the proposed 5.4 percent estimate
accurately reflected the FY 2009
increases in documentation and coding
under the MS–DRG system.
As reflected in the above chart, for
short-term acute care hospitals, SCHs,
and MDHs, there is an 8 percentage
point increase in the discharge severity
with MCCs from 20 percent to 28
percent, and a corresponding decrease
of 8 percentage points in discharge
severity without CC/MCC from 57
percent to 49 percent.
Consistent with the expectations of
our medical coding experts concerning
areas with potential for documentation
and coding improvements, the top
contributors were heart failure, chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease, and
simple pneumonia and pleurisy. Heart
failure is a very common secondary
diagnosis among Medicare hospital
admissions. The heart failure codes are
assigned to all three severity levels.
Some codes are classified as non-CCs,
while other codes are on the CC and
MCC lists. By changing physician
documentation to more precisely
identify the type of heart failure, coders
are able to appropriately change the
severity level of cases from the lowest
level (non-CC) to a higher severity level
(CC or MCC). This point was stressed
repeatedly at the March 11–12, 2009
ICD–9–CM Coordination and
Maintenance Committee meeting as
coders discussed their work with
physicians on this coding issue. Many
of the participants indicated that
additional work was still needed with
their physicians in order to document
conditions in the medical record more
precisely.
The results of the analysis for the
proposed rule provided additional
support for our conclusion that the
proposed 5.4 percent estimate
accurately reflected the FY 2009
increases in documentation and coding
under the MS–DRG system.
As in prior years, the FY 2008 and FY
2009 MedPAR files are available to the
public to allow independent analysis of
the FY 2008 and FY 2009
documentation and coding effect.
Interested individuals may still order
these files through the Web site at:
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
LimitedDataSets/ by clicking on
MedPAR Limited Data Set (LDS)Hospital (National). This Web page
describes the file and provides
directions and further detailed
instructions for how to order.
Persons placing an order must send
the following: a Letter of Request, the
LDS Data Use Agreement and Research
Protocol (refer to the Web site for further
instructions), the LDS Form, and a
check for $3,655 to:
Mailing address if using the U.S.
Postal Service: Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, RDDC Account,
Accounting Division, P.O. Box 7520,
Baltimore, MD 21207–0520.
Mailing address if using express mail:
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, OFM/Division of
Accounting—RDDC, 7500 Security
Boulevard, C3–07–11, Baltimore, MD
21244–1850.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
6. Prospective Adjustment for FY 2010
and Subsequent Years Authorized by
Section 7(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 110–90
and Section 1886(d)(3)(vi) of the Act
Based on our evaluation of FY 2008
Medicare claims data that were most
current at the time of the FY 2010 IPPS/
RY 2010 LTCH PPS proposed rule, the
estimated 2.5 percent change in FY 2008
case-mix due to changes in
documentation and coding that did not
reflect real changes in case-mix for
discharges occurring during FY 2008
exceeded the ¥0.6 percent prospective
documentation and coding adjustment
applied under section 7(a) of Public Law
110–90 by 1.9 percentage points. Under
section 7(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 119–90,
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.000
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
base DRGs as described earlier in our
analysis plan. In other words, we looked
for improvements in code selection that
would lead to a secondary diagnosis
increasing the severity level to either a
CC or an MCC level. We found that the
within-base DRG increases were almost
entirely responsible for the case mix
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
the Secretary is required to make an
appropriate adjustment under section
1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act to the
average standardized amounts for
subsequent fiscal years in order to
eliminate the full effect of the
documentation and coding changes on
future payments. As we have
consistently stated since the initial
implementation of the MS–DRG system,
we do not believe it is appropriate for
expenditures to increase due to MS–
DRG-related changes in documentation
and coding that do not reflect real
changes in case-mix.
We also estimated in the FY 2010
IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS proposed rule
that the additional change in case-mix
due to changes in documentation and
coding that do not reflect real changes
in case-mix for discharges occurring
during FY 2009 was 2.3 percent, which
would exceed by 1.4 percentage points
the ¥0.9 percent prospective
documentation and coding adjustment
for FY 2009 applied under section 7(a)
of Public Law 100–90. We had the
statutory authority to adjust the FY 2010
rates for this estimated 1.4 percentage
point increase. However, given that
Public Law 100–90 requires a
retrospective claims evaluation for the
additional adjustments (as described in
section II.D.3. of this preamble), we
stated in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010
LTCH PPS proposed rule and final rule
(74 FR 24096 and 43772, respectively)
that we believed our evaluation of the
extent of the overall national average
changes in case-mix for FY 2009 should
also be based on a retrospective
evaluation of all FY 2009 claims data.
Because we did not receive all FY 2009
claims data prior to publication of the
FY 2010 final rule, we indicated we
would address any difference between
the additional increase in FY 2009 casemix due to changes in documentation
and coding that did not reflect real
changes in case-mix for discharges
occurring during FY 2009 and the ¥0.9
percent prospective documentation and
coding adjustment applied under
section 7(a) of Public Law 110–90 in the
FY 2011 rulemaking cycle.
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS proposed rule (74 FR 24096), we
solicited public comment on the
proposed ¥1.9 percent prospective
adjustment to the standardized amounts
under section 1886(d) of the Act to
address the effects of documentation
and coding changes unrelated to
changes in real case-mix in FY 2008. In
addition, we solicited public comments
on addressing in the FY 2011
rulemaking cycle any differences
between the increase in FY 2009 casemix due to changes in documentation
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
and coding changes that do not reflect
real changes in case-mix for discharges
occurring during FY 2009 and the ¥0.9
percent prospective documentation and
coding adjustment applied under
section 7(a) of Public Law 110–90. In
response to the proposed rule, MedPAC
summarized its comments on when
CMS should reduce payment rates to
prevent further overpayments and to
recover overpayments occurring in 2008
and 2009 as follows: ‘‘We support CMS’s
proposal to reduce IPPS payments in
2010 by 1.9 percent to prevent further
overpayments. While we and the CMS
actuaries believe that a 1.9 percent
reduction will not fully prevent
overpayments from continuing in 2010,
this is a reasonable first step toward
reducing overpayments.’’ Most of the
other commenters opposed the
proposed ¥1.9 percent prospective FY
2010 adjustment for FY 2008
documentation and coding increases,
but supported the proposal not to apply
a FY 2010 prospective adjustment for
estimated FY 2009 documentation and
coding increases. Many commenters
expressed concern over the financial
impact of the proposed ¥1.9 percent
adjustment and the methodology for
calculating the adjustment. Other
commenters recommended that CMS
seek to extend the timeframe beyond
2 years to phase in the estimated ¥6.6
percent adjustment to the standardized
amount.
In the final FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010
LTCH PPS rule in response to these
commenters, we indicated that we fully
understood that our proposed
adjustment of ¥1.9 percent would
reduce the increase in payments that
affected hospitals would have received
in FY 2009 in the absence of the
adjustment. We explained that, although
we are required to make an prospective
adjustment to eliminate the full effect of
coding or classification changes that did
not reflect real changes in case-mix for
discharges occurring during FY 2008,
we believed we had some discretion
regarding when to implement this
adjustment. Section 7(b)(1)(A) of Public
Law 110–90 requires that if the
Secretary determines that
implementation of the MS–DRG system
resulted in changes in documentation
and coding that did not reflect real
changes in case-mix for discharges
occurring during FY 2008 or FY 2009
that are different than the prospective
documentation and coding adjustments
applied under section 7(a) of Public Law
110–90, the Secretary shall make an
‘‘appropriate’’ adjustment under section
1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act.
Thus, we determined that it would be
appropriate to postpone adopting
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23869
documentation and coding adjustments
as authorized under section 7(a) of
Public Law 110–90 and section
1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act until a full
analysis of case-mix changes could be
completed. We indicated that while we
had the statutory authority to make this
¥1.9 percent prospective adjustment
entirely in FY 2010, we believed it
would be prudent to wait until we had
completed data on the magnitude of the
documentation and coding effect in FY
2009. Specifically, we stated that if the
documentation and coding effect were
to be less in FY 2009 than our thencurrent estimates, it could lessen the
anticipated adjustment that we had
estimated we would have had to make
for FY 2008 and FY 2009 combined. We
indicated that, in future rulemaking, we
would consider applying a prospective
adjustment based upon a complete
analysis of FY 2008 and FY 2009 claims
data, beginning in FY 2011. We
indicated that we intended to address
any difference between the increase in
FY 2009 case-mix due to changes in
documentation and coding that did not
reflect real changes in case-mix for
discharges occurring during FY 2009
and the ¥0.9 percent prospective
documentation and coding adjustment
applied under section 7(a) of Public Law
110–90 in the FY 2011 rulemaking
cycle.
After analysis of the FY 2009 claims
data, we have found a total prospective
documentation and coding effect of
1.054. After accounting for the ¥0.6
percent and the ¥0.9 percent
documentation and coding adjustments
in FYs 2008 and 2009, we find a
remaining documentation and coding
effect of 3.9 percent. As we have
discussed, an additional cumulative
adjustment of ¥3.9 percent would be
necessary to meet the requirements of
section 7(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 110–90
to make an adjustment to the average
standardized amounts in order to
eliminate the full effect of the
documentation and coding changes on
future payments. Unlike section
7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110–90, section
7(b)(1)(A) does not specify when we
must apply the prospective adjustment,
but merely requires us to make an
‘‘appropriate’’ adjustment. Therefore, we
believe we have some discretion as to
the manner in which we apply the
prospective adjustment of ¥3.9 percent.
Applying the full prospective
adjustment of ¥3.9 percent for FY 2011,
in combination with the proposed
recoupment adjustment of ¥2.9
percent, discussed below, would require
an aggregate adjustment of ¥6.8
percent. As we discuss more fully
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23870
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
below, it has been our practice to
moderate payment adjustments when
necessary to mitigate the effects of
significant downward adjustments on
hospitals, to avoid what could be
widespread, disruptive effects of such
adjustments on hospitals. As we also
discuss below, we are required to
implement the adjustment in section
7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110–90 no later
than FY 2012, and accordingly, we are
proposing an adjustment under that
section for FY 2011. Therefore, we
believe it is appropriate to not
implement any or all of the ¥3.9
percent prospective adjustment in FY
2011. Accordingly, we are not proposing
a prospective adjustment under section
7(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 110–90 for FY
2011. We note that, as a result,
payments in FY 2011 (and in each
future year until we implement the
requisite adjustment) will be 3.9 percent
higher than they would have been if we
had implemented an adjustment under
section 7(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 110–90.
We are seeking public comment on
our proposal not to apply in FY 2011
the ¥3.9 percent prospective
adjustment to the average standardized
amounts required under section
7(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 110–90 in order
to eliminate the full effect of the
documentation and coding changes on
future payments. We note that this
proposal would require us to apply the
¥3.9 percent adjustment in future
payment years, which may be applied
all at once in a single year or phased in
over more than one year. We intend to
update our analysis with FY 2009 data
on claims paid through March 2009 for
the FY 2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule.
7. Recoupment or Repayment
Adjustment for FY 2010 Authorized by
Section 7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110–90
As indicated in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY
2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR
43773), we estimated a 2.5 percent
change (estimated from analysis of more
recent data for the FY 2010 final rule
than the data used for that proposed
rule) due to documentation and coding
that did not reflect real changes in casemix for discharges occurring during FY
2008, exceeding the ¥0.6 percent
prospective documentation and coding
adjustment applied under section 7(a) of
Public Law 110–90 by 1.9 percentage
points. We stated that our actuaries had
estimated that this 1.9 percentage point
increase resulted in an increase in
aggregate payments of approximately
$2.2 billion. As described earlier,
section 7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110–90
requires an adjustment for discharges
occurring in FYs 2010, 2011, and/or
2012 to offset the estimated amount of
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
this increase in aggregate payments
(including interest). Although section
7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110–90 requires
us to make this adjustment in FYs 2010,
2011, and/or 2012, we have discretion
as to when during this 3 year period we
will apply the adjustment.
We did not propose to make an
adjustment to the FY 2010 average
standardized amounts to offset, in
whole or in part, the estimated increase
in aggregate payments for discharges
occurring in FY 2008, but stated in the
proposed rule that we intended to
address this issue in future rulemaking.
That is, we stated that we would
address recouping the additional
expenditures that occurred in FY 2008
as a result of the 1.9 percentage point
difference between the actual changes in
documentation and coding that do not
reflect real changes in case-mix (2.5
percent), and the ¥0.6 percent
adjustment applied under Public Law
110–90 in FY 2011 and/or FY 2012, as
required by law. We indicated that,
while we had the statutory authority to
make this ¥1.9 percent recoupment
adjustment entirely in FY 2010, we were
delaying the adjustment until FY 2011
and FY 2012 because we did not yet
have any data on the magnitude of the
documentation and coding effect in FY
2009. We stated that as we have the
authority to recoup the aggregate effect
of this 1.9 percentage point difference in
FY 2008 IPPS payments in FY 2011 or
FY 2012 (with interest), delaying this
adjustment would have no effect on
Federal budget outlays. We indicated
that we intended to wait until we have
a complete year of data on the FY 2009
documentation and coding effect before
applying a recoupment adjustment for
IPPS spending that occurred in FY 2008
or we estimate will occur in FY 2009.
As discussed above, section 7(b)(1)(B)
of Public Law 110–90 requires the
Secretary to make an adjustment to the
standardized amounts under section
1886(d) of the Act to offset the estimated
increase or decrease in aggregate
payments for FY 2009 (including
interest) resulting from the difference
between the estimated actual
documentation and coding effect and
the documentation and coding
adjustments applied under section 7(a)
of Public Law 110–90. This
determination must be based on a
retrospective evaluation of claims data.
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
final rule (74 FR 43774), we stated that
because we would not receive all FY
2009 claims data prior to publication of
the final rule, we would address any
increase or decrease in FY 2009
payments in future rulemaking for FY
2011 and 2012 after we perform a
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
retrospective evaluation of the FY 2009
claims data. At that time, our actuaries
estimated that this adjustment would be
approximately ¥3.3 percent. This
reflected the difference between the
estimated 4.8 percent cumulative actual
documentation and coding changes for
FY 2009 (2.5 percent for FY 2008 and
an additional 2.3 percent for FY 2009)
and the cumulative ¥1.5 percent
documentation and coding adjustments
applied under section 7(a) of Public Law
110–90 (¥0.6 percent in FY 2008 and
¥0.9 percent in FY 2009). We noted
that the actual adjustments were
multiplicative and not additive. This
estimated 4.8 percent cumulative actual
documentation and coding changes for
FY 2009 included the impact of the
changes in documentation and coding
first occurring in FY 2008 because we
believed hospitals would continue these
changes in documentation and coding
in subsequent fiscal years.
Consequently, we believed that these
documentation and coding changes
would continue to impact payments
under the IPPS absent a prospective
adjustment to account for the effect of
these changes.
We note that, unlike the adjustment to
the standardized amounts under section
7(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 110–90
described earlier, any adjustment to the
standardized amounts under section
7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110–90 would
not be cumulative, but would be
removed for subsequent fiscal years
once we have offset the increase in
aggregate payments for discharges for
FY 2008 expenditures and FY 2009
expenditures, if any.
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS proposed rule (74 FR 24096), we
did not propose to offset the 1.9 percent
increase in aggregate payments
(including interest) for discharges
occurring in FY 2008 resulting from the
adoption of the MS–DRGs, but to
instead address this issue in future
rulemaking for FYs 2011 and 2012.
In response to the FY 2010 proposed
rule, MedPAC stated in its comments on
the adjustment to the standardized
amounts under section 7(b)(1)(B) of
Public Law 110–90: ‘‘In addition, it
would be desirable for CMS to minimize
year-to-year changes in payment
adjustments it must make to recover
overpayments that were made in 2008
and 2009. To achieve this goal, CMS
should consider spreading the recovery
of 2008 overpayments over 3 years,
beginning in 2010.’’ Some commenters
recommended that CMS seek to extend
the timeframe beyond 2 years to phase
in the estimated ¥6.6 percent
adjustment to the standardized amount.
The commenters asked CMS to seek
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
necessary legislative action to
accommodate such a policy. Most
commenters expressed concern with the
significant negative financial impacts
that would be incurred by providers if
CMS adopted that proposed ¥1.9
percent documentation and coding
adjustment in FY 2010. The commenters
cited providers’ already small or
negative margins for Medicare
payments, and requested that CMS not
further reduce payments during the
current period of economic instability
and reduced State funding. Other
commenters indicated that it would be
appropriate to delay any adjustment to
the standardized amounts under section
7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110–90 until
after CMS has the opportunity to fully
examine the FY 2009 claims data.
In response to these comments in FY
2010, we indicated that we recognized
that any adjustment to account for the
documentation and coding effect
observed in the FY 2008 and FY 2009
claims data may result in significant
future payment reductions for
providers. However, we indicated that
we are required under section 7(b)(1)(B)
of Public Law 110–90 to recapture the
difference of actual documentation and
coding effect in FY 2008 and FY 2009
that is greater than the prior
adjustments. We agreed with the
commenters who requested that CMS
delay any adjustment and, for the
reasons stated above, indicated that we
expect to address this issue in this FY
2011 rulemaking.
As indicated in section II.D.4. of this
preamble, the change due to
documentation and coding that did not
reflect real changes in case mix for
discharges occurring during FY 2008
and FY 2009 exceeded the ¥0.6 and
¥0.9 percent prospective
documentation and coding adjustment
applied under section 7(a) of Public Law
110–90 for those 2 years respectively by
1.9 percentage points in FY 2008 and
3.9 percentage points in FY 2009. In
total, this change exceeded the
cumulative prospective adjustments by
5.8 percentage points. Our actuaries
currently estimate that this 5.8
percentage point increase resulted in an
increase in aggregate payments of
approximately $6.9 billion. We note that
there may be a need to actuarially adjust
the recoupment adjustment to
accurately reflect accumulated interest.
Therefore, an aggregate adjustment of
¥5.8 percent in FYs 2011 and 2012,
subject to actuarial adjustment to reflect
accumulated interest, is necessary in
order to meet the requirements of
section 7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110–90
to adjust the standardized amounts for
discharges occurring in FYs 2010, 2011,
and/or 2012 to offset the estimated
amount of the increase in aggregate
payments (including interest) in FYs
2008 and 2009. We intend to take into
account the need to reflect accumulated
interest in proposing a recoupment
adjustment under section (b)(1)(B) of
Public Law 110–90 for FY 2012. We will
invite comments on our proposal at that
time.
It is often our practice to phase in rate
adjustments over more than one year in
order to moderate the effect on rates in
any one year. Therefore, consistent with
the policies we have adopted in many
similar cases, we are proposing to make
an adjustment to the standardized
amount of ¥2.9 percent, representing
approximately half of the aggregate
adjustment required under section
7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110–90, for FY
2011. An adjustment of this magnitude
allows us to moderate the effects on
hospitals in one year while
simultaneously making it possible to
implement the entire adjustment within
the timeframe required under section
7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110–90. As we
have previously noted, unlike the
prospective adjustment to the
standardized amounts under section
7(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 110–90
described earlier, the recoupment or
repayment adjustment to the
standardized amounts under section
7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110–90 is not
cumulative, but would be removed for
23871
subsequent fiscal years once we have
offset the increase in aggregate
payments for discharges for FY 2008
expenditures and FY 2009 expenditures.
In keeping with our practice of
moderating payment adjustments
wherever possible, we can anticipate
that this proposal will have an
additional, and significant, moderating
effect on implementing the
requirements of section 7(b)(1)(B) of
Public Law 110–90 for FY 2012.
Specifically, an advantage of our
proposal for FY 2011 is that we
anticipate removing this proposed FY
2011 ¥2.9 percent adjustment from the
rates in FY 2012, when it would also be
necessary under current law to apply
the remaining approximately ¥2.9
percent adjustment required by section
7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110–90. These
two steps in FY 2012, restoring the FY
2011 ¥2.9 percent adjustment, and
applying the remaining adjustment of
approximately ¥2.9 percent, would
effectively cancel each other out. The
result would be an aggregate adjustment
of approximately 0.0 percent (subject to
the need to account for accumulated
interest, as discussed above) under
section 7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110–90
in FY 2012. However, while we are
noting this anticipated effect of our FY
2011 proposal, we are not making a
formal proposal for the further
implementation of section 7(b)(1)(B) of
Public Law 110–90 in FY 2012 in this
proposed rule.
We are seeking public comment on
our proposal to offset part of the total
5.8 percent increase in aggregate
payments (including interest) for
discharges occurring in FY 2008 and FY
2009 resulting from the adoption of the
MS–DRGs in FY 2011, noting that this
proposal would result in a ¥2.9 percent
adjustment to the standardized amount.
We intend to update our analysis with
FY 2009 data on claims paid through
March 2009 for the FY 2011 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule.
FY 2011 MS–DRG DOCUMENTATION AND CODING ADJUSTMENT
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Required prospective adjustment for FYs
2008–2009
Required
recoupment adjustment for FYs
2008–2009
Total adjustment
Proposed
recoupment adjustment for FY
2011
Remaining adjustment
¥3.9
¥5.8
¥9.7
¥2.9
¥6.8
FY 2011 Proposal Amount of Adjustment .......
8. Background on the Application of the
Documentation and Coding Adjustment
to the Hospital-Specific Rates
Under section 1886(d)(5)(D)(i) of the
Act, SCHs are paid based on whichever
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
of the following rates yields the greatest
aggregate payment: the Federal rate; the
updated hospital-specific rate based on
FY 1982 costs per discharge; the
updated hospital-specific rate based on
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
FY 1987 costs per discharge; the
updated hospital-specific rate based on
FY 1996 costs per discharge; or the
updated hospital-specific rate based on
FY 2006 costs per discharge. Under
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23872
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
section 1886(d)(5)(G) of the Act, MDHs
are paid based on the Federal national
rate or, if higher, the Federal national
rate plus 75 percent of the difference
between the Federal national rate and
the updated hospital-specific rate based
on the greatest of the FY 1982, FY 1987,
or FY 2002 costs per discharge. In the
FY 2008 IPPS final rule with comment
period (72 FR 47152 through 47188), we
established a policy of applying the
documentation and coding adjustment
to the hospital-specific rates. In that
final rule with comment period, we
indicated that because SCHs and MDHs
use the same DRG system as all other
hospitals, we believe they should be
equally subject to the budget neutrality
adjustment that we are applying for
adoption of the MS–DRGs to all other
hospitals. In establishing this policy, we
relied on section 1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the
Act, which provides us with the
authority to adjust ‘‘the standardized
amount’’ to eliminate the effect of
changes in coding or classification that
do not reflect real change in case-mix.
However, in the final rule that
appeared in the Federal Register on
November 27, 2007 (72 FR 66886), we
rescinded the application of the
documentation and coding adjustment
to the hospital-specific rates retroactive
to October 1, 2007. In that final rule, we
indicated that, while we still believe it
would be appropriate to apply the
documentation and coding adjustment
to the hospital-specific rates, upon
further review, we decided that the
application of the documentation and
coding adjustment to the hospitalspecific rates is not consistent with the
plain meaning of section
1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act, which only
mentions adjusting ‘‘the standardized
amount’’ under section 1886(d) of the
Act and does not mention adjusting the
hospital-specific rates.
In the FY 2009 IPPS proposed rule (73
FR 23540), we indicated that we
continued to have concerns about this
issue. Because hospitals paid based on
the hospital-specific rate use the same
MS–DRG system as other hospitals, we
believe they have the potential to realize
increased payments from
documentation and coding changes that
do not reflect real increases in patients’
severity of illness. In section
1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act, Congress
stipulated that hospitals paid based on
the standardized amount should not
receive additional payments based on
the effect of documentation and coding
changes that do not reflect real changes
in case-mix. Similarly, we believe that
hospitals paid based on the hospitalspecific rates should not have the
potential to realize increased payments
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
due to documentation and coding
changes that do not reflect real increases
in patients’ severity of illness. While we
continue to believe that section
1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act does not
provide explicit authority for
application of the documentation and
coding adjustment to the hospitalspecific rates, we believe that we have
the authority to apply the
documentation and coding adjustment
to the hospital-specific rates using our
special exceptions and adjustment
authority under section 1886(d)(5)(I)(i)
of the Act. The special exceptions and
adjustment provision authorizes us to
provide ‘‘for such other exceptions and
adjustments to [IPPS] payment amounts
* * * as the Secretary deems
appropriate.’’ In the FY 2009 IPPS final
rule (73 FR 48448 through 48449), we
indicated that, for the FY 2010
rulemaking, we planned to examine our
FY 2008 claims data for hospitals paid
based on the hospital-specific rate. We
further indicated that if we found
evidence of significant increases in casemix for patients treated in these
hospitals that do not reflect real changes
in case-mix, we would consider
proposing application of the
documentation and coding adjustments
to the FY 2010 hospital-specific rates
under our authority in section
1886(d)(5)(I)(i) of the Act.
In response to public comments
received on the FY 2009 IPPS proposed
rule, we stated in the FY 2009 IPPS final
rule that we would consider whether
such a proposal is warranted for FY
2010. To gather information to evaluate
these considerations, we indicated that
we planned to perform analyses on FY
2008 claims data to examine whether
there has been a significant increase in
case-mix for hospitals paid based on the
hospital-specific rate. If we found that
application of the documentation and
coding adjustment to the hospitalspecific rates for FY 2010 is warranted,
we indicated that we would include a
proposal to do so in the FY 2010 IPPS
proposed rule.
9. Proposed Documentation and Coding
Adjustment to the Hospital-Specific
Rates for FY 2011 and Subsequent
Fiscal Years
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
proposed rule and final rule (74 FR
24098 through 24100 and 74 FR 43775
through 43776, respectively), we
discussed our performance of a
retrospective evaluation of the FY 2008
claims data for SCHs and MDHs using
the same methodology described earlier
for other IPPS hospitals. We found that,
independently for both SCHs and
MDHs, the change due to
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
documentation and coding that did not
reflect real changes in case-mix for
discharges occurring during FY 2008
slightly exceeded the proposed 2.5
percent result discussed earlier, but did
not significantly differ from that result.
Again, for the FY 2010 proposed rule,
we found that the within-base DRG
increases were almost entirely
responsible for the case-mix change. In
that proposed rule, we presented two
Figures to display our results.
Therefore, consistent with our
statements in prior IPPS rules, we
proposed to use our authority under
section 1886(d)(5)(I)(i) of the Act to
prospectively adjust the hospitalspecific rates by the proposed ¥2.5
percent in FY 2010 to account for our
estimated documentation and coding
effect in FY 2008 that does not reflect
real changes in case-mix. We proposed
to leave this adjustment in place for
subsequent fiscal years in order to
ensure that changes in documentation
and coding resulting from the adoption
of the MS–DRGs do not lead to an
increase in aggregate payments for SCHs
and MDHs not reflective of an increase
in real case-mix. The proposed ¥2.5
percent adjustment to the hospitalspecific rates exceeded the ¥1.9 percent
adjustment to the national standardized
amount under section 7(b)(1)(A) of
Public Law 110–90 because, unlike the
national standardized rates, the FY 2008
hospital-specific rates were not
previously reduced in order to account
for anticipated changes in
documentation and coding that do not
reflect real changes in case-mix
resulting from the adoption of the MS–
DRGs.
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS proposed rule (74 FR 24100), we
solicited public comment on the
proposed ¥2.5 percent prospective
adjustment to the hospital-specific rates
under section 1886(d)(5)(I)(i) of the Act
and our proposal to address in the FY
2011 rulemaking cycle any changes in
FY 2009 case-mix due to changes in
documentation and coding that do not
reflect real changes in case-mix for
discharges occurring during FY 2009.
We also indicated that we intended to
update our analysis with FY 2008 data
on claims paid through March 2008 [sic]
for the FY 2010 IPPS final rule. (We
note that the March 2008 update claims
paid data date in the proposed rule
should have been March 2009.)
Consistent with our approach for IPPS
hospitals discussed earlier, in the FY
2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final
rule, we also delayed adoption of a
documentation and coding adjustment
to the hospital-specific rate until FY
2011. Similar to our approach for IPPS
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
previously reduced in order to account
for anticipated changes in
documentation and coding that do not
reflect real changes in case-mix
resulting from the adoption of the MS–
DRGs. However, as we noted earlier
with regard to IPPS hospitals, if the
estimated documentation and coding
effect determined based on a full
analysis of FY 2009 claims data is more
or less than our current estimates, it
would change, possibly lessen, the
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
that we found after analysis of FY 2009
discharge data that the distribution of
Consistent with our analysis of IPPS
hospitals, the two charts above show
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
anticipated cumulative adjustments that
we currently estimate we would have to
make for the FY 2008 and FY 2009
combined adjustment. Therefore, we
believed that it would be more prudent
to delay implementation of the
documentation and coding adjustment
to allow for a more complete analysis of
FY 2009 claims data for hospitals
receiving hospital-specific rates.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
severity discharges for MDH and SCH
both proportionally shifted from the
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.001
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
hospitals, we indicated that we would
consider, through future rulemaking,
phasing in the documentation and
coding adjustment over an appropriate
period. We also indicated that we would
address, through future rulemaking, any
changes in documentation and coding
that do not reflect real changes in casemix for discharges occurring during FY
2009. We noted that, unlike the national
standardized rates, the FY 2009
hospital-specific rates were not
23873
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23874
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
without CC/MCC to with MCC category.
Similarly, we found using a
methodology consistent with our
analysis of IPPS hospitals that,
independently for both SCHs and
MDHs, the change due to
documentation and coding that did not
reflect real changes in case-mix for
discharges occurring during FY 2009
slightly exceeded the proposed 2.5
percent result discussed earlier, but did
not significantly differ from that result.
As we have noted above, because
SCHs and MDHs use the same MS–DRG
system as all other hospitals, we believe
they have the potential to realize
increased payments from
documentation and coding changes that
do not reflect real increases in patients’
severity of illness. Therefore, we believe
they should be equally subject to a
prospective budget neutrality
adjustment that we are applying for
adoption of the MS–DRGs to all other
hospitals. We believe the
documentation and coding estimates for
all subsection (d) hospitals should be
the same. While the findings for the
documentation and coding effect for all
IPPS hospitals are similar to the effect
for SCHs and slightly different to the
effect for MDHs, we continue to believe
that this is the appropriate policy so as
to neither advantage or disadvantage
different types of providers. As we have
also discussed above, our best estimate,
based on the most recently available
data, is that a cumulative adjustment of
¥5.4 percent is required to eliminate
the full effect of the documentation and
coding changes on future payments.
Unlike the case of standardized amounts
paid to IPPS hospitals, we have not
made any previous adjustments to the
hospital-specific rates paid to SCHs and
MDHs to account for documentation
and coding changes. Therefore, the
entire ¥5.4 percent adjustment remains
to be implemented.
As discussed above, we are proposing
to make an adjustment to the
standardized amount for IPPS hospitals
of ¥2.9 percent under section 7(b)(1)(B)
of Public Law 110–90, for FY 2011. As
we also discussed above, it has been our
practice to moderate payment
adjustments when necessary to mitigate
the effects of significant downward
adjustments on hospitals, to avoid what
could be widespread, disruptive effects
of such adjustments on hospitals.
Because payments for non-SCH and
non-MDH IPPS hospitals and SCHs and
MDHs are determined on the basis of
the same MS–DRG system, SCHs and
MDHs have the potential to realize
increased payments from
documentation and coding changes that
do not reflect real increases in patients’
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
severity of illness. Therefore, in
determining the level and pace of
adjustments to account for such
documentation and coding changes, we
believe that it is important to maintain,
as much as possible, both consistency
and equity among these classes of
hospitals. In addition, as in the case of
the documentation and coding
adjustment for non-SCH and non-MDH
IPPS hospitals, we also believe that it is
important to provide as much as
possible for moderating the effects of
adjustments on hospital payments.
Therefore we are proposing an
adjustment of ¥2.9 percent in FY 2011
to the hospital-specific rates paid to
SCHs and MDHs. This proposal is
consistent with our proposed
adjustment for IPPS hospitals in two
ways. First, as in the case of the IPPS
adjustment, we are not proposing to
implement the entire adjustment that is
warranted by our data (in this case, 5.4
percent) in one year. Second, we are
maintaining consistency by proposing
the same numerical level of adjustment
for both groups of hospitals in FY 2011.
While this proposed adjustment to the
hospital-specific rates represents
somewhat over half of the of the entire
adjustment that is appropriate for SCHs
and MDHs, it allows us to maintain
complete consistency, at least for FY
2011, in the effects on the relevant
classes of hospitals. Although the
proposed adjustment for SCHs and
MDHs is cumulative and prospective, as
opposed to the noncumulative
recoupment adjustment we are
proposing for other IPPS hospitals, we
believe that proposing equal numerical
adjustments in this first year is the most
appropriate means to maintain such
consistency and equity at this time. We
will continue, as much as possible,
consistent with sections 7(b)(1) of
Public Law 110–90 and section
1886(d)(5)(I)(i) of the Act, to take such
consistency and equity into account in
developing future proposals for
implementing documentation and
coding adjustments.
We are seeking public comment on
the proposed ¥2.9 percent prospective
adjustment to hospital-specific rates
under section 1886(d)(5)(I)(i) of the Act
and addressing in future rule making
cycles changes in FY 2008 and FY 2009
case-mix due to changes in
documentation and coding that do not
reflect real changes in case-mix for
discharges occurring during FY 2008
and FY 2009, noting that our current
estimates of the remaining adjustment is
¥2.5 percent. We intend to update our
analysis with FY 2009 data on claims
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
paid through March 2009 for the FY
2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule.
10. Background on the Application of
the Documentation and Coding
Adjustment to the Puerto Rico-Specific
Standardized Amount
Puerto Rico hospitals are paid based
on 75 percent of the national
standardized amount and 25 percent of
the Puerto Rico-specific standardized
amount. As noted previously, the
documentation and coding adjustment
we adopted in the FY 2008 IPPS final
rule with comment period relied upon
our authority under section
1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act, which
provides the Secretary the authority to
adjust ‘‘the standardized amounts
computed under this paragraph’’ to
eliminate the effect of changes in coding
or classification that do not reflect real
changes in case-mix. Section
1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act applies to
the national standardized amounts
computed under section 1886(d)(3) of
the Act, but does not apply to the Puerto
Rico-specific standardized amount
computed under section 1886(d)(9)(C) of
the Act. In calculating the FY 2008
payment rates, we made an inadvertent
error and applied the FY 2008 ¥0.6
percent documentation and coding
adjustment to the Puerto Rico-specific
standardized amount, relying on our
authority under section
1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act. However,
section 1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act
authorizes application of a
documentation and coding adjustment
to the national standardized amount and
does not apply to the Puerto Rico
specific standardized amount. In the FY
2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR 48449), we
corrected this inadvertent error by
removing the ¥0.6 percent
documentation and coding adjustment
from the FY 2008 Puerto Rico-specific
rates.
While section 1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the
Act is not applicable to the Puerto Ricospecific standardized amount, we
believe that we have the authority to
apply the documentation and coding
adjustment to the Puerto Rico-specific
standardized amount using our special
exceptions and adjustment authority
under section 1886(d)(5)(I)(i) of the Act.
Similar to SCHs and MDHs that are paid
based on the hospital-specific rate, we
believe that Puerto Rico hospitals that
are paid based on the Puerto Ricospecific standardized amount should
not have the potential to realize
increased payments due to
documentation and coding changes that
do not reflect real increases in patients’
severity of illness. Consistent with the
approach described for SCHs and
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
MDHs, in the FY 2009 IPPS final rule
(73 FR 48449), we indicated that we
planned to examine our FY 2008 claims
data for hospitals in Puerto Rico. We
indicated in the FY 2009 IPPS proposed
rule (73 FR 23541) that if we found
evidence of significant increases in casemix for patients treated in these
hospitals, we would consider proposing
application of the documentation and
coding adjustments to the FY 2010
Puerto Rico-specific standardized
amount under our authority in section
1886(d)(5)(I)(i) of the Act.
11. Proposed Documentation and
Coding Adjustment to the Puerto RicoSpecific Standardized Amount
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
For the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS proposed rule, we performed a
retrospective evaluation of the FY 2008
claims data for Puerto Rico hospitals
using the same methodology described
earlier for IPPS hospitals paid under the
national standardized amounts under
section 1886(d) of the Act. We found
that, for Puerto Rico hospitals, the
increase in payments for discharges
occurring during FY 2008 due to
documentation and coding that did not
reflect real changes in case-mix for
discharges occurring during FY 2008
was approximately 1.1 percent. When
we calculated the within-base DRG
changes and the across-base DRG
changes for Puerto Rico hospitals, we
found that responsibility for the casemix change between FY 2007 and FY
2008 is much more evenly shared.
Across-base DRG shifts accounted for 44
percent of the changes, and within-base
DRG shifts accounted for 56 percent.
Thus, the change in the percentage of
discharges with an MCC was not as
large as that for other IPPS hospitals. In
Figure 4 in the FY 2010 proposed rule,
we showed that, for Puerto Rico
hospitals, there was a 3 percentage point
increase in the discharges with an MCC
from 22 percent to 25 percent and a
corresponding decrease of 3 percentage
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
points from 58 percent to 55 percent in
discharges without a CC or an MCC.
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS proposed rule (74 FR 24101), we
solicited public comment on the
proposed ¥1.1 percent prospective
adjustment to the hospital-specific rates
under section 1886(d)(5)(I)(i) of the Act
and our intent to address in the FY 2011
rulemaking cycle any changes in FY
2009 case-mix due to changes in
documentation and coding that did not
reflect real changes in case-mix for
discharges occurring during FY 2009.
We also stated that we intended to
update our analysis with FY 2008 data
on claims paid through March 2009 for
the FY 2010 IPPS final rule.
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS final rule (74 FR 43777), we
indicated that, given these
documentation and coding increases,
consistent with our statements in prior
IPPS rules, we would use our authority
under section 1886(d)(5)(I)(i) of the Act
to adjust the Puerto Rico-specific rate.
However, in parallel to our decision to
postpone adjustments to the Federal
standardized amount, we indicated that
we were adopting a similar policy for
the Puerto Rico-specific rate for FY 2010
and would consider the phase-in of this
adjustment over an appropriate time
period through future rulemaking. The
adjustment would be applied to the
Puerto Rico-specific rate that accounts
for 25 percent of payments to Puerto
Rico hospitals, with the remaining 75
percent based on the national
standardized amount. Consequently, the
overall reduction to the payment rates
for Puerto Rico hospitals to account for
documentation and coding changes will
be slightly less than the reduction for
IPPS hospitals paid based on 100
percent of the national standardized
amount. We noted that, as with the
hospital-specific rates, the Puerto Ricospecific standardized amount had not
previously been reduced based on
estimated changes in documentation
and coding associated with the adoption
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23875
of the MS–DRGs. However, as we note
earlier for IPPS hospitals and hospitals
receiving hospital-specific rates, if the
estimated documentation and coding
effect are determined based on a full
analysis of FY 2009 claims data is more
or less than our current estimates, it
would change, possibly lessen, the
anticipated cumulative adjustments that
we currently estimate we would have to
make for the FY 2008 and FY 2009
combined adjustment. Therefore, we
believed that it would be more prudent
to delay implementation of the
documentation and coding adjustment
to allow for a more complete analysis of
FY 2009 claims data for Puerto Rico
hospitals.
Consistent with our approach for IPPS
hospitals for FY 2010, we indicated that
we would address in the FY 2011
rulemaking cycle any change in FY 2009
case-mix due to documentation and
coding that did not reflect real changes
in case-mix for discharges occurring
during FY 2009. We noted that, unlike
the national standardized rates, the FY
2009 hospital-specific rates were not
previously reduced in order to account
for anticipated changes in
documentation and coding that do not
reflect real changes in case-mix
resulting from the adoption of the MS–
DRGs.
As we have noted above, similar to
SCHs and MDHs, hospitals in Puerto
Rico use the same MS–DRG system as
all other hospitals and we believe they
have the potential to realize increased
payments from documentation and
coding changes that do not reflect real
increases in patients’ severity of illness.
Therefore, we believe they should be
equally subject to the prospective
budget neutrality adjustment that we
intend to apply to prospective payment
rates for IPPS hospitals including SCHs
and MDHs in order to eliminate the full
effect of the documentation and coding
changes associated with implementation
of the MS–DRG system.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
In the above chart, consistent with our
findings for IPPS hospitals, for Puerto
Rico hospitals, there is a 4 percentage
point increase in the discharge severity
with MCCs from 22 percent to 26
percent, and a corresponding decrease
of 4 percentage points in discharge
severity without CC/MCC from 58
percent to 54 percent.
Using the same methodology we
applied to estimate documentation and
coding changes under IPPS for nonPuerto Rico hospitals, as we have also
discussed above, our best estimate,
based on the most recently available
data, is that a cumulative adjustment of
¥2.4 percent is required to eliminate
the full effect of the documentation and
coding changes on future payments
from the Puerto Rico-specific rate.
Unlike the case of standardized amounts
paid to IPPS hospitals, we have not
made any previous adjustments to the
hospital-specific rates paid to Puerto
Rico hospitals to account for
documentation and coding changes.
Therefore, the entire ¥2.4 percent
adjustment remains to be implemented.
As we stated above, we believe it
important to maintain both consistency
and equity among all hospitals paid on
the basis of the same MS–DRG system.
At the same time, however, we
recognize that the estimated cumulative
impact on aggregate payment rates
resulting from implementation of the
MD–DRG system was smaller for Puerto
Rico hospitals as compared to IPPS
hospitals and SCHs and MDHs. We
therefore are proposing an adjustment of
¥2.4 percent in FY 2011 to Puerto Rico-
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
specific rate that accounts for 25 percent
of payments to Puerto Rico hospitals,
with the remaining 75 percent based on
the national standardized amount,
which we are proposing to adjust as
described above. Consequently, the
overall reduction to rates for Puerto Rico
hospitals to account for the
documentation and coding changes will
be slightly less than the reduction for
IPPS hospitals based on 100 percent of
the national standardized amount. We
note that this proposed ¥2.4 percent
prospective adjustment would eliminate
the full effect of the documentation and
coding changes on the portion of future
payments to Puerto Rico hospitals based
on the Puerto Rico-specific rate. We
believe that this proposed adjustment is
the most appropriate means to take into
full account the effect of documentation
and coding changes on payments, and to
maintain equity as much as possible
between hospitals paid on the basis of
different prospective rates. One reason
for proposing the full ¥2.4 percent
adjustment for the Puerto Rico-specific
rate in FY 2011 is to maintain equity as
much as possible in the documentation
and coding adjustments applied to
various hospital rates in FY 2011.
Because this proposed ¥2.4 percent
adjustment represents the full
adjustment that is warranted for the
Puerto Rico-specific rate, we do not
anticipate proposing any additional
adjustments to the rate for
documentation and coding effects.
We are seeking public comment on
the proposed ¥2.4 percent prospective
adjustment to Puerto Rico-specific
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
standardized amount under section
1886(d)(5)(I)(i) of the Act. We intend to
update our analysis with FY 2009 data
on claim paid through March 2009 for
the FY 2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule.
E. Refinement of the MS–DRG Relative
Weight Calculation
1. Background
In the FY 2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR
48450), we continued to implement
significant revisions to Medicare’s
inpatient hospital rates by completing
our 3-year transition from charge-based
relative weights to cost-based relative
weights. Beginning in FY 2007, we
implemented relative weights based on
cost report data instead of based on
charge information. We had initially
proposed to develop cost-based relative
weights using the hospital-specific
relative value cost center (HSRVcc)
methodology as recommended by
MedPAC. However, after considering
concerns expressed in the public
comments we received on the proposal,
we modified MedPAC’s methodology to
exclude the hospital-specific relative
weight feature. Instead, we developed
national CCRs based on distinct hospital
departments and engaged a contractor to
evaluate the HSRVcc methodology for
future consideration. To mitigate
payment instability due to the adoption
of cost-based relative weights, we
decided to transition cost-based weights
over 3 years by blending them with
charge-based weights beginning in FY
2007. (We refer readers to the FY 2007
IPPS final rule for details on the
HSRVcc methodology and the 3-year
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.002
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23876
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
transition blend from charge-based
relative weights to cost-based relative
weights (71 FR 47882 through 47898).)
In FY 2008, we adopted severitybased MS–DRGs, which increased the
number of DRGs from 538 to 745. Many
commenters raised concerns as to how
the transition from charge-based weights
to cost-based weights would continue
with the introduction of new MS–DRGs.
We decided to implement a 2-year
transition for the MS–DRGs to coincide
with the remainder of the transition to
cost-based relative weights. In FY 2008,
50 percent of the relative weight for
each DRG was based on the CMS DRG
relative weight and 50 percent was
based on the MS–DRG relative weight.
In FY 2009, the third and final year
of the transition from charge-based
weights to cost-based weights, we
calculated the MS–DRG relative weights
based on 100 percent of hospital costs.
We refer readers to the FY 2007 IPPS
final rule (71 FR 47882) for a more
detailed discussion of our final policy
for calculating the cost-based DRG
relative weights and to the FY 2008
IPPS final rule with comment period (72
FR 47199) for information on how we
blended relative weights based on the
CMS DRGs and MS–DRGs.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
a. Summary of the RTI Study of Charge
Compression and CCR Refinement
As we transitioned to cost-based
relative weights, some commenters
raised concerns about potential bias in
the weights due to ‘‘charge
compression,’’ which is the practice of
applying a higher percentage charge
markup over costs to lower cost items
and services, and a lower percentage
charge markup over costs to higher cost
items and services. As a result, the costbased weights would undervalue highcost items and overvalue low-cost items
if a single CCR is applied to items of
widely varying costs in the same cost
center. To address this concern, in
August 2006, we awarded a contract to
RTI to study the effects of charge
compression in calculating the relative
weights and to consider methods to
reduce the variation in the CCRs across
services within cost centers. RTI issued
an interim draft report in January 2007
with its findings on charge compression
(which was posted on the CMS Web site
at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/reports/
downloads/Dalton.pdf). In that report,
RTI found that a number of factors
contribute to charge compression and
affect the accuracy of the relative
weights. RTI’s findings demonstrated
that charge compression exists in
several CCRs, most notably in the
Medical Supplies and Equipment CCR.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
In its interim draft report, RTI offered
a number of recommendations to
mitigate the effects of charge
compression, including estimating
regression-based CCRs to disaggregate
the Medical Supplies Charged to
Patients, Drugs Charged to Patients, and
Radiology cost centers, and adding new
cost centers to the Medicare cost report,
such as adding a ‘‘Devices, Implants and
Prosthetics’’ line under ‘‘Medical
Supplies Charged to Patients’’ and a ‘‘CT
Scanning and MRI’’ subscripted line
under ‘‘Radiology-Diagnostics’’. Despite
receiving public comments in support of
the regression-based CCRs as a means to
immediately resolve the problem of
charge compression, particularly within
the Medical Supplies and Equipment
CCR, we did not adopt RTI’s
recommendation to create additional
regression-based CCRs. (For more
details on RTI’s findings and
recommendations, we refer readers to
the FY 2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR
48452).) RTI subsequently expanded its
analysis of charge compression beyond
inpatient services to include a
reassessment of the regression-based
CCR models using both outpatient and
inpatient charge data. This interim
report was made available in April 2008
during the public comment period on
the FY 2009 IPPS proposed rule and can
be found on RTI’s Web site at: https://
www.rti.org/reports/cms/HHSM-5002005-0029I/PDF/Refining_Cost_to_
Charge_Ratios_200804.pdf. The IPPSspecific chapters, which were separately
displayed in the April 2008 interim
report, as well as the more recent OPPS
chapters, were included in the July 3,
2008 RTI final report entitled, ‘‘Refining
Cost-to-Charge Ratios for Calculating
APC [Ambulatory Payment
Classification] and DRG Relative
Payment Weights,’’ that became
available at the time of the development
of the FY 2009 IPPS final rule. The RTI
final report can be found on RTI’s Web
site at: https://www.rti.org/reports/cms/
HHSM-500-2005-0029I/PDF/
Refining_Cost_to_Charge_Ratios_
200807_Final.pdf.
RTI’s final report found that, under
the IPPS and the OPPS, accounting
improvements to the cost reporting data
reduce some of the sources of
aggregation bias without having to use
regression-based adjustments. In
general, with respect to the regressionbased adjustments, RTI confirmed the
findings of its March 2007 report that
regression models are a valid approach
for diagnosing potential aggregation bias
within selected services for the IPPS
and found that regression models are
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23877
equally valid for setting payments under
the OPPS.
RTI also noted that cost-based weights
are only one component of a final
prospective payment rate. There are
other rate adjustments (wage index,
IME, and DSH) to payments derived
from the revised cost-based weights, and
the cumulative effect of these
components may not improve the ability
of final payment to reflect resource cost.
RTI endorsed short-term regressionbased adjustments, but also concluded
that more refined and accurate
accounting data are the preferred longterm solution to mitigate charge
compression and related bias in hospital
cost-based weights. For a more detailed
summary of RTI’s findings,
recommendations, and public
comments we received on the report, we
refer readers to the FY 2009 IPPS final
rule (73 FR 48452 through 48453).
b. Summary of the RAND Corporation
Study of Alternative Relative Weight
Methodologies
One of the reasons that we did not
implement regression-based CCRs at the
time of the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with
comment period was our inability to
investigate how regression-based CCRs
would interact with the implementation
of MS–DRGs. In the FY 2008 final rule
with comment period (72 FR 47197), we
stated that we engaged the RAND
Corporation as the contractor to evaluate
the HSRV methodology in conjunction
with regression-based CCRs, and that we
would consider its analysis as we
prepared for the FY 2009 IPPS
rulemaking process.
RAND evaluated six different
methods that could be used to establish
relative weights; CMS’ current relative
weight methodology of 15 national
CCRs and 5 alternatives, including a
method in which the 15 national CCRs
are disaggregated using the regressionbased methodology, and a method using
hospital-specific CCRs for the 15 cost
center groupings. In addition, RAND
analyzed our standardization
methodologies that account for
systematic cost differences across
hospitals. The purpose of
standardization is to eliminate
systematic facility-specific differences
in cost so that these cost differences do
not influence the relative weights.
Overall, RAND found that none of the
methods it studied of calculating the
relative weights represented a marked
improvement in payment accuracy over
the current method, and there was little
difference across methods in their
ability to predict cost at either the
discharge-level or the hospital-level. In
their regression analysis, RAND found
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23878
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
that, after controlling for hospital
payment factors, the relative weights are
compressed (that is, understated).
However, RAND also found that the
hospital payment factors are overstated
and increase more rapidly than cost.
Therefore, while the relative weights are
compressed, these payment factors
offset the compression such that total
payments to hospitals increase more
rapidly than hospitals’ costs.
In the FY 2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR
48453 through 48457), we provided a
summary of the RAND report and the
public comments we received in
response to the FY 2009 IPPS proposed
rule. The report may be found on
RAND’s Web site at: https://
www.rand.org/pubs/working_papers/
WR560/.
2. Proposals for FY 2011 and Timeline
for Changes to the Medicare Cost Report
In the FY 2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR
48458 through 48467), in response to
the RTI’s recommendations concerning
cost report refinements, and because of
RAND’s finding that regression-based
adjustments to the CCRs do not
significantly improve payment
accuracy, we discussed our decision to
pursue changes to the cost report to split
the cost center for Medical Supplies
Charged to Patients into one line for
‘‘Medical Supplies Charged to Patients’’
and another line for ‘‘Implantable
Devices Charged to Patients.’’ We
acknowledged, as RTI had found, that
charge compression occurs in several
cost centers that exist on the Medicare
cost report. However, as we stated in the
final rule, we focused on the CCR for
Medical Supplies and Equipment
because RTI found that the largest
impact on the MS–DRG relative weights
could result from correcting charge
compression for devices and implants.
In determining what should be reported
in these respective cost centers, we
adopted the commenters’
recommendation that hospitals should
use revenue codes established by AHA’s
National Uniform Billing Committee to
determine what should be reported in
the ‘‘Medical Supplies Charged to
Patients’’ and the ‘‘Implantable Devices
Charged to Patients’’ cost centers.
When we developed the FY 2009 IPPS
final rule, we considered all of the
public comments we received both for
and against adopting regression-based
CCRs. Also noteworthy is RAND’s belief
that regression-based CCRs may not
significantly improve payment
accuracy, and that it is equally, if not
more, important to consider revisions to
the current IPPS hospital payment factor
standardization method in order to
improve payment accuracy. For FY
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
2010, we solicited comments on
improving the standardization process,
although we did not make any changes
to the standardization process for FY
2010. We also stated that we continued
to believe that, ultimately, improved
and more precise cost reporting is the
best way to minimize charge
compression and improve the accuracy
of the cost weights. Accordingly, a new
subscripted line 55.01 for Implantable
Devices Charged to Patients was created
in July 2009 as part of CMS’ Transmittal
20 update to the existing cost report
Form CMS–2552–96. This new
subscripted cost center is available for
use for cost reporting periods beginning
on or after May 1, 2009.
With respect to the initiative to
reform, update, and streamline the
Medicare cost report, which has been
the subject of many comments and our
responses in the IPPS (and OPPS)
Federal Register notices of rulemaking
over the past several years, CMS is
continuing to work on this project. The
new draft hospital cost report Form
CMS–2552–10 was published in the
Federal Register on July 2, 2009, and
was subject to a 60-day review and
comment period, which ended August
31, 2009. CMS received numerous
comments on the draft hospital cost
report Form CMS–2552–10, specifically
regarding the creation of new cost
centers from which data would be
ultimately used in the relative weights
calculation, even though CMS had not
proposed to add these cost centers. The
public comments on the July 2, 2009
Federal Register notice will be
addressed in detail in the Federal
Register notice that will be issued to
finalize Form CMS–2525–10. We now
plan to issue the revised draft of the
hospital cost report Form CMS–2552–
10, which will include a standard cost
center for Implantable Devices Charged
to Patients, through a notice in the
Federal Register, which will allow for a
30-day comment period, in the spring or
summer of 2010. However, in part in
this IPPS proposed rule, we are
providing a summary of the public
comments received on the July 2, 2009
notice that specifically related to the
relative weights and responding to those
comments. Our responses to the
comments in this IPPS proposed rule
constitute our proposals for FY 2011
regarding the relative weights.
Several commenters asked that CMS
create cost centers to house the costs of
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI),
Computed Tomography (CT), nuclear
medicine services, cardiac
catheterization, drugs that require
detailed coding, and
magnetoencephalography (MEG). One
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
commenter indicated, that in RTI’s July
2008 report (https://www.rti.org/reports/
cms/), RTI made an argument that CMS
should create new standard cost centers
in which hospitals would report the
costs of MRI scans, CT scans, cardiac
catheterization, and drugs that require
detailed coding, in addition to the new
cost center for ‘‘Implantable Devices
Charged to Patients.’’ The commenter
stated that these additional lines are
needed to distinguish items and services
that hospitals tend to markup differently
within existing revenue centers, citing
RTI’s finding that CT scans have a
significantly higher markup than most
other radiology services. The
commenter indicated that when CMS
uses the overall radiology department
CCR to convert charges for CT scans to
costs, it overestimates the cost of these
services, resulting in overstated relative
weights for MS–DRGs under the IPPS
and for APCs under the OPPS that
incorporate CT scanning. The
commenter argued that having a
separate cost center for each of these
services would resolve the problem. The
commenter also stated that, while CMS
has done something similar with the
creation of the cost center for high cost
medical devices, making cost center
changes for some services, but not
others, where such changes are
warranted could create additional
distortion in the relative weights. The
commenter further argued that cost
center changes should be made for all
service areas with significant volume
where services with sizable differences
in markup are currently combined in a
single cost center. The commenter
asserted that creating these cost centers
should not create reporting burden for
hospitals because the RTI report
indicated that roughly one-third of the
hospitals are already reporting costs for
CT scans, MRI scans, and cardiac
catheterization under the specific
nonstandard cost centers currently
available in the cost report.
Another commenter also
recommended the creation of the cost
centers for CT scans, MRI scans, and
nuclear medicine services, but for
different reasons than the first
commenter. Specifically, this
commenter believed these new cost
centers are necessary in order for the
high capital costs to be appropriately
allocated to these services and to be
correctly reflected in the CCRs that are
used in the establishment of the MS–
DRG and APC payment rates for the
services. The commenter stated that,
under the existing cost report structure,
some providers are allocating high
capital costs for these services in a
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
single radiology line, diluting the high
capital costs associated with CT scans,
MRI scans, and nuclear medicine
services across all radiology services,
including low cost services. Therefore,
the commenter concluded that the
resulting radiology CCRs that CMS
applies to charges for CT scans, MRI
scans, and nuclear medicine services to
arrive at the relative costs used to set
payment rates for both the IPPS and
OPPS understate the cost of high cost
radiology services and overstate the cost
of low cost radiology services, resulting
in payments that are too low for the
high cost services. The commenter
indicated that CMS should not only
create these new costs centers but
should also require all hospitals to use
them, and should issue explicit
instructions on how to report the costs
of these services in the new standard
cost centers.
We agree that it is appropriate to
create standard cost centers for CT
scans, MRI scans, and cardiac
catheterization and to require that
hospitals report the costs and charges
for these services under new cost
centers on the revised Medicare cost
report Form CMS 2552–10. As we
discussed in the FY 2009 IPPS and CY
2009 OPPS proposed and final rules,
RTI found that the costs and charges of
CT scans, MRI scans, and cardiac
catheterization differ significantly from
the costs and charges of other services
included in the standard associated cost
center. RTI also concluded that both the
IPPS and OPPS relative weights would
better estimate the costs of those
services if CMS were to add standard
costs centers for CT scanning, MRIs, and
cardiac catheterization in order for
hospitals to report separately the costs
and charges for those services and in
order for CMS to calculate unique CCRs
to estimate the cost from charges on
claims data.
In its analysis, RTI concluded that the
estimated costs for CT scanning and
MRI scans would decline significantly
and that the estimated cost for cardiac
catheterization would increase modestly
if specific standard cost centers were
used. RTI found that cardiac
catheterization has very different cost
inputs from most cardiac testing (for
example, electrocardiograms or cardiac
stress testing) captured in the 5300
‘‘Electrocardiology’’ cost center and that
the accuracy of the CCR for both types
of services, cardiac catheterization and
other cardiac testing, would improve
with creation of a standard cost center
for cardiac catheterization. RTI also
found that one-third of hospitals already
report cardiac catheterization costs and
charges separately through the available
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
nonstandard cost center or through
subscripted lines to the
‘‘Electrocardiology’’ cost center.
Similarly, RTI found that approximately
one-third of hospitals already separately
report the costs for CT scanning and
MRI scans on their Medicare cost report
through subscripted lines and the
available nonstandard cost centers. We
believe the current prevalence of
reporting for the nonstandard cost
centers for these three services suggests
a modest hospital burden required to
adopt these cost centers.
We discussed the possibility of
creating standard cost centers for these
three different services in our CY 2009
OPPS proposed and final rule with
comment period (73 FR 41432 and 73
FR 68525) and solicited general
comments on RTI’s recommendations.
The commenters who objected to the
creation of the standard cost centers for
CT scanning and MRI scans largely did
so based on RTI projected lower
estimated costs for these services if CMS
created these cost centers. The
commenters suggested that the current
CCRs for advanced imaging may reflect
a misallocation of capital costs and
requested that CMS not adopt separate
cost centers or statistical adjustment
simulating lower CCRs for CT scanning
and MRI until CMS could understand
how providers are allocating the
extensive capital costs for these services
to the revenue producing cost centers.
We also received comments suggesting
that the accuracy of estimated costs
would improve with better allocation,
potentially increasing the CCR as more
capital cost would be appropriately
allocated to both CT scanning and MRI
and not spread across all services in the
radiology cost center. We noted in the
CY 2009 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (73 FR 68525) that our
recommended allocation of moveable
equipment costs in Worksheet A of the
Medicare cost report is based on dollar
value, and that it would be important to
encourage improved accuracy of capital
allocation through dollar value or direct
assignment if we were to make these
cost centers standard cost centers. At
this time, we do not know the impact on
CCRs and estimated costs of adopting
standard cost centers specific to CT
scanning and MRI. However, we believe
that, because these areas constitute
significant payment under both the IPPS
and OPPS and because these are
common imaging services already
widely reported by hospitals, we are
proposing to adopt new standard cost
centers for CT scanning and MRI. We
agree with those commenters who
asserted that creation of standard cost
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23879
centers for CT scanning and MRI would
improve the accuracy of cost estimation
for these services, in part by creating
incentives for hospitals to more
accurately allocate the capital and
equipment associated with these
services.
With regard to cardiac catheterization,
we received one comment on the CY
2009 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
suggesting that hospitals might find it
difficult to allocate costs for these
services to specific cost centers,
especially for cardiac catheterization,
and that allocated overhead costs
would, in most cases, be an estimate (73
FR 68527). However, given the number
of hospitals already reporting the
nonstandard cost center for cardiac
catheterization and the number
subscripting these costs and charges
(approximately 50 percent, according to
RTI’s July 2008 report (pages 71 and 72)
at: https://www.rti.org/reports/cms/
HHSM–500–2005–0029I/PDF/
Refining_Cost_to_Charge_
Ratios_200807_Final.pdf), we believe
that hospitals do allocate overhead costs
to a cardiac catheterization-specific cost
center. For these reasons, we are
proposing to create standard cost
centers for CT scanning, MRI, and
cardiac catheterization in Form CMS
2552–10.
We also received public comments on
the cost report notice urging us to create
standard cost centers for nuclear
medicine services, for drugs that require
detailed coding, and for MEG. We
continue to believe that it is not
appropriate to create standard cost
centers for these three services. The
Medicare cost report already contains
standard cost center 4300 (Radioisotope)
to capture the costs and charges for the
radioisotopes used in nuclear medicine
services, the items that may have
significantly different costs and hospital
markup than the supplies and
equipment used in other radiology
services. Moreover, the cost report
already contains standard cost center
4100 (Diagnostic Radiology) in which
the costs of staff, equipment, and
supplies for diagnostic nuclear
medicine services can be reported.
Therefore, we continue to believe that
creating a new standard cost center for
nuclear medicine services is not
necessary. We also continue to believe
that it is not appropriate to create a
standard cost center for drugs that
require detailed coding. We refer
readers to the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (73 FR
68655) for a detailed discussion on our
final decision not to create this cost
center. Finally, with respect to MEG
services, the extremely low volume of
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23880
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
claims for MEG services furnished to
Medicare beneficiaries in the hospital
outpatient setting and the extremely low
number of hospitals that report these
codes relative to the volumes we
typically have considered in adding
both standard and nonstandard cost
centers to the cost report lead us to
conclude that a specific cost center for
MEG is not justified at this time.
There is typically a 3-year lag between
the availability of the cost report data
that we use to calculate the relative
weights both under the IPPS and the
OPPS and a given fiscal or calendar
year. We expect the data from the
proposed standard cost centers for CT
scans, MRI, and cardiac catheterization
respectively, should they be finalized, to
be available for possible use in
calculating the relative weights not
earlier than 3 years after Form CMS–
2552–10 becomes available. At that
time, we would analyze the data and
determine if it is appropriate to use
those data to create distinct CCRs from
these cost centers for use in the relative
weights for the respective payment
systems. If we decide to finalize these
proposed new cost centers, the
upcoming Federal Register notice that
will finalize Form CMS–2552–10 will
provide more information regarding the
addition of these proposed new
standard cost centers for CT scans, MRI,
and cardiac catheterization, including
the instructions for completing these
cost centers on the new cost report.
F. Preventable Hospital-Acquired
Conditions (HACs), Including Infections
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
1. Background
a. Statutory Authority
Section 1886(d)(4)(D) of the Act
addresses certain hospital-acquired
conditions (HACs), including infections.
Section 1886(d)(4)(D) of the Act
specifies that by October 1, 2007, the
Secretary was required to select, in
consultation with the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),
at least two conditions that: (a) Are high
cost, high volume, or both; (b) are
assigned to a higher paying MS–DRG
when present as a secondary diagnosis
(that is, conditions under the MS–DRG
system that are CCs or MCCs); and (c)
could reasonably have been prevented
through the application of evidencebased guidelines. Section 1886(d)(4)(D)
of the Act also specifies that the list of
conditions may be revised, again in
consultation with CDC, from time to
time as long as the list contains at least
two conditions.
Section 1886(d)(4)(D)(iii) of the Act
requires that hospitals, effective with
discharges occurring on or after October
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
1, 2007, submit information on
Medicare claims specifying whether
diagnoses were present on admission
(POA). Section 1886(d)(4)(D)(i) of the
Act specifies that effective for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2008, Medicare no longer assigns an
inpatient hospital discharge to a higher
paying MS–DRG if a selected condition
is not POA. Thus, if a selected condition
that was not POA manifests during the
hospital stay, it is considered a HAC
and the case is paid as though the
secondary diagnosis was not present.
However, even if a HAC manifests
during the hospital stay, if any
nonselected CC/MCC appears on the
claim, the claim will be paid at the
higher MS–DRG rate. Under the HAC
payment policy, all CCs/MCCs on the
claim must be HACs in order to generate
a lower MS–DRG payment. In addition,
Medicare continues to assign a
discharge to a higher paying MS–DRG if
a selected condition is POA.
The POA indicator reporting
requirement and the HAC payment
provision apply to IPPS hospitals only.
Non-IPPS hospitals, including CAHs,
LTCHs, IRFs, IPFs, cancer hospitals,
children’s hospitals, hospitals in
Maryland operating under waivers, rural
health clinics, federally qualified health
centers, RNHCIs, and Department of
Veterans Affairs/Department of Defense
hospitals, are exempt from POA
reporting and the HAC payment
provision. Throughout this section, the
term ‘‘hospital’’ refers to an IPPS
hospital.
The HAC provision found in section
1886(d)(4)(D) of the Act is part of an
array of Medicare value-based
purchasing (VBP) tools that we are using
to promote increased quality and
efficiency of care. Those tools include
measuring performance, using payment
incentives, publicly reporting
performance results, applying national
and local coverage policy decisions,
enforcing conditions of participation,
and providing direct support for
providers through Quality Improvement
Organization (QIO) activities. The
application of VBP tools, such as this
HAC provision, is transforming
Medicare from a passive payer to an
active purchaser of higher value health
care services. We are applying these
strategies for inpatient hospital care and
across the continuum of care for
Medicare beneficiaries.
These VBP tools are highly
compatible with the underlying
purposes as well as existing structural
features of Medicare’s IPPS. Under the
IPPS, hospitals are encouraged to treat
patients efficiently because they receive
the same DRG payment for stays that
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
vary in length and in the services
provided, which gives hospitals an
incentive to avoid unnecessary costs in
the delivery of care. In some cases,
conditions acquired in the hospital do
not generate higher payments than the
hospital would otherwise receive for
cases without these conditions. To this
extent, the IPPS encourages hospitals to
avoid complications.
However, the treatment of certain
conditions can generate higher Medicare
payments in two ways. First, if a
hospital incurs exceptionally high costs
treating a patient, the hospital stay may
generate an outlier payment. Because
the outlier payment methodology
requires that hospitals experience large
losses on outlier cases before outlier
payments are made, hospitals have an
incentive to prevent outliers. Second,
under the MS–DRGs system that took
effect in FY 2008 and that has been
refined through rulemaking in
subsequent years, certain conditions can
generate higher payments even if the
outlier payment requirements are not
met. Under the MS–DRG system, there
are currently 258 sets of MS–DRGs that
are split into 2 or 3 subgroups based on
the presence or absence of a CC or an
MCC. The presence of a CC or MCC
generally results in a higher payment.
However, since we implemented the
HAC provisions, if a secondary
diagnosis acquired during a hospital
stay is a HAC and no other CCs or MCCs
are present, the hospital receives a
payment under the MS–DRGs as if the
HACs were not present. (We refer
readers to section II.D. of the FY 2008
IPPS final rule with comment period for
a discussion of DRG reforms (72 FR
47141).)
b. HAC Selection
In the FY 2007 IPPS proposed rule (71
FR 24100), we sought public input
regarding conditions with evidencebased prevention guidelines that should
be selected in implementing section
1886(d)(4)(D) of the Act. The public
comments we received were
summarized in the FY 2007 IPPS final
rule (71 FR 48051 through 48053).
In the FY 2008 IPPS proposed rule (72
FR 24716 through 24726), we sought
public comment on conditions that we
proposed to select. In the FY 2008 IPPS
final rule with comment period (72 FR
47200 through 47218), we selected 8
categories to which the HAC payment
provisions would apply.
In the FY 2009 IPPS proposed rule (73
FR 23547), we proposed several
additional candidate HACs as well as
refinements to the previously selected
HACs. In the FY 2009 IPPS final rule (73
FR 48471), we expanded and refined
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
program evaluation prior to modifying
the HAC list.
In response to the FY 2010 IPPS/RY
2010 LTCH PPS proposed rule (74 FR
24106), commenters expressed strong
support for a program evaluation prior
to modifying the HAC list. We
responded to these commenters and
expressed our appreciation for the
public’s support for our decision to
undertake a program evaluation. We
indicated that we planned to include
updates and findings from the
evaluation on CMS’ Hospital-Acquired
Conditions and Present on Admission
Indicator Web site available at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/HospitalAcqCond/.
We also responded to commenters
regarding POA indicator reporting as
well as to comments addressing other
topics related to HACs and POA
reporting (74 FR 43785).
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS proposed rule (74 FR 24104
through 24106), we did not propose to
add or remove categories of HACs.
However, as we indicated in that
proposed rule, we continue to
encourage public dialogue about
refinements to the HAC list. During and
after the December 18, 2008 Listening
Session, we received many oral and
written stakeholder comments about
both previously selected and potential
candidate HACs. In response to the
Listening Session, commenters strongly
supported using information gathered
from early experience with the HAC
payment provision to inform
maintenance of the HAC list and
consideration of future potential
candidate HACs. Commenters also
emphasized the need for a robust
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
In establishing the HAC payment
policy under section 1886(d)(4)(D) of
the Act, our experts have worked
closely with public health and
infectious disease professionals from
across the Department of Health and
Human Services, including CDC, the
Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality (AHRQ), and the Office of
Public Health and Science (OPHS), to
identify the candidate preventable
HACs, review comments, and select
HACs. CMS and CDC have also
collaborated on the process for hospitals
to submit a POA indicator for each
diagnosis listed on IPPS hospital
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Medicare claims and on the payment
implications of the various POA
reporting options. As discussed below,
we have also used rulemaking and
Listening Sessions to receive public
input.
d Application of HAC Payment Policy to
MS–DRG Classifications
As described above, in certain cases
application of the HAC payment policy
provisions can result in MS–DRG
reassignment to a lower paying MS–
DRG. The following diagram portrays
the logic of the HAC payment policy
provision as adopted in the FY 2008
IPPS final rule (72 FR 47200) and in the
FY 2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR 48471):
f. POA Indicator Reporting
Collection of POA indicator data is
necessary to identify which conditions
were acquired during hospitalization for
the HAC payment provision as well as
for broader public health uses of
Medicare data. Through Change Request
No. 5679 (released on June 20, 2007), we
issued instructions requiring IPPS
hospitals to submit POA indicator data
for all diagnosis codes on Medicare
claims. We also issued Change Request
No. 6086 (released on June 13, 2008)
regarding instructions for processing
non-IPPS claims. Specific instructions
on how to select the correct POA
indicator for each diagnosis code are
included in the ICD–9–CM Official
Guidelines for Coding and Reporting,
available on the CDC Web site at:
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/icd9/
icdguide09.pdf. Additional information
regarding POA indicator reporting and
application of the POA reporting
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.003
c. Collaborative Process
e. Public Input Regarding Selected and
Potential Candidate HACs
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
several of the previously selected HACs,
and we selected 2 additional categories
of HACs.
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS proposed rule (74 FR 24106), we
proposed the addition of ICD–9–CM
codes 813.46 (Torus fracture of ulna)
and 813.47 (Torus fracture of radius and
ulna) to more precisely define the
previously selected HAC category of
Falls and Trauma. In the FY 2010 IPPS/
RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR
43784), we finalized the addition of
these codes. A complete list of the 10
current categories of HACs is included
in section II.F.2. of this preamble.
23881
23882
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
options is available on the CMS Web
site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
HospitalAcqCond. Historically we have
not provided coding advice. Rather, we
collaborate with the American Hospital
Association (AHA) through the Coding
Clinic for ICD–9–CM. We have been
collaborating with the AHA to promote
the Coding Clinic for ICD–9–CM as the
source for coding advice about the POA
indicator.
There are five POA indicator
reporting options, as defined by the
ICD–9–CM Official Guidelines for
Coding and Reporting:
Indicator
Descriptor
Y .........................................
W ........................................
Indicates that the condition was present on admission.
Affirms that the hospital has determined that, based on data and clinical judgment, it is not possible to document
when the onset of the condition occurred.
Indicates that the condition was not present on admission.
Indicates that the documentation is insufficient to determine if the condition was present at the time of admission.
Signifies exemption from POA reporting. CMS established this code as a workaround to blank reporting on the
electronic 4010A1. A list of exempt ICD–9–CM diagnosis codes is available in the ICD–9–CM Official Guidelines
for Coding and Reporting.
N .........................................
U .........................................
1 ..........................................
In the FY 2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR
48486 through 48487), we adopted as
final our proposal to: (1) Pay the CC/
MCC MS–DRGs for those HACs coded
with ‘‘Y’’ and ‘‘W’’ indicators; and (2) not
pay the CC/MCC MS–DRGs for those
HACs coded with ‘‘N’’ and ‘‘U’’
indicators.
Beginning on or after January 1, 2011,
hospitals will begin reporting with the
5010 format. The 5010 format removes
the need to report a POA indicator of ‘‘1’’
for codes that are exempt from POA
reporting. The POA indicator of ‘‘1’’ is
being used because of reporting
restrictions from the use of the 4010
format. Therefore, hospitals that begin
reporting with the 5010 format on and
after January 1, 2011, will no longer
report a POA indicator of ‘‘1’’ for POA
exempt codes. The POA field will
instead be left blank for codes exempt
from POA reporting. We are planning to
issue CMS instructions on this reporting
change.
2. Proposed HAC Conditions for FY
2011
As changes to diagnosis codes and
new diagnosis codes are proposed and
finalized for the list of CCs and MCCs,
we will modify the list of selected HACs
to reflect these changes. In Table 6A in
the Addendum to this proposed rule, we
have listed the proposed addition of five
new ICD–9–CM diagnosis codes to
replace existing ICD–9–CM code 999.6
(ABO incompatibility reaction) for FY
2011. ICD–9–CM code 999.6 is currently
the only code identified under the
ICD–9–CM code
999.60
999.61
999.62
999.63
999.69
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
Blood Incompatibility HAC category.
We are proposing to delete code 999.6
and form a new subcategory of 999.6 to
identify new diagnoses relating to ABO
incompatibility reaction due to
transfusion of blood or blood products.
These diagnoses meet the criteria for the
Blood Incompatibility HAC category
based on the predecessor code 999.6
being a selected HAC.
As shown in Table 6C in the
Addendum to this proposed rule, we are
proposing that code 999.6 become
invalid as a diagnosis code in FY 2011
with the creation of this new ICD–9–CM
subcategory. This proposed new
subcategory would allow room for
expansion and the creation of the
following new diagnosis codes:
Proposed
CC/MCC
designation
Code descriptor
ABO incompatibility reaction, unspecified .......................................................................................
ABO incompatibility with hemolytic transfusion reaction not specified as acute or delayed .........
ABO incompatibility with acute hemolytic transfusion reaction ......................................................
ABO incompatibility with delayed hemolytic transfusion reaction ..................................................
Other ABO incompatibility reaction .................................................................................................
We are inviting public comments on
the proposed adoption of the five ICD–
9–CM diagnosis codes as CCs that are
listed above, which, if finalized, would
be added to the current HAC Blood
Incompatibility category.
The following table lists the current
HACs categories and the ICD–9–CM
codes that identify the conditions that
have been finalized through FY 2010.
For FY 2011, we are proposing that
these conditions continue to be subject
CC
CC
CC
CC
CC
to the HAC payment provision, with a
proposed refinement to the codes to
identify blood incompatibility as
described above.
CC/MCC
(ICD–9–CM code)
Foreign Object Retained After Surgery ...........................................................................................
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
HAC
998.4 (CC)
998.7 (CC)
999.1 (MCC)
999.6 (CC)
707.23 (MCC)
707.24 (MCC)
Codes within these ranges on the CC/MCC list:
800–829
830–839
850–854
Air Embolism ...................................................................................................................................
Blood Incompatibility .......................................................................................................................
Pressure Ulcer Stages III & IV ........................................................................................................
Falls and Trauma ............................................................................................................................
—Fracture ................................................................................................................................
—Dislocation ............................................................................................................................
—Intracranial Injury ..................................................................................................................
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
23883
CC/MCC
(ICD–9–CM code)
HAC
—Crushing Injury .....................................................................................................................
—Burn ......................................................................................................................................
—Electric Shock .......................................................................................................................
Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infection (UTI) ..........................................................................
Vascular Catheter-Associated Infection ..........................................................................................
Manifestations of Poor Glycemic Control ........................................................................................
925–929
940–949
991–994
996.64 (CC)
Also excludes
CC/MCC:
112.2 (CC)
590.10 (CC)
590.11 (MCC)
590.2 (MCC)
590.3 (CC)
590.80 (CC)
590.81 (CC)
595.0 (CC)
597.0 (CC)
599.0 (CC)
999.31 (CC)
250.10–250.13
250.20–250.23
251.0 (CC)
249.10–249.11
249.20–249.21
the following from acting as a
(MCC)
(MCC)
(MCC)
(MCC)
Surgical Site Infections
Surgical Site Infection, Mediastinitis, Following Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG) ...............
Surgical Site Infection Following Certain Orthopedic Procedures ..................................................
Surgical Site Infection Following Bariatric Surgery for Obesity ......................................................
Deep Vein Thrombosis and Pulmonary Embolism Following Certain Orthopedic Procedures .....
We refer readers to section II.F.6. of
the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with
comment period (72 FR 47202 through
47218) and to section II.F.7. of the FY
2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR 48474
through 48486) for detailed analyses
supporting the selection of each of these
HACs. We invite public comments on
our proposal that these conditions
continue to be subject to the HAC
payment provision, with a proposed
refinement of the codes to identify
blood incompatibility as described
above.
3. RTI Program Evaluation Summary
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
a. Background
On September 30, 2009, a contract
was awarded to Research Triangle
Incorporated (RTI) to evaluate the
impact of the Hospital-Acquired
Condition-Present on Admission (HAC–
POA) provisions on the changes in the
incidence of selected conditions, effects
on Medicare payments, impacts on
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
coding accuracy, unintended
consequences, and infection and event
rates. This is an intra-agency project
with funding and technical support
coming from CMS, OPHS, AHRQ, and
CDC. The evaluation will also examine
the implementation of the program and
evaluate additional conditions for future
selection.
RTI’s evaluation of the HAC–POA
provisions is divided into several parts,
only some of which will be complete
prior to the publication date of this
proposed rule. Below we summarize the
analyses that are complete. RTI’s
analyses of POA indicator reporting,
frequencies and net savings associated
with current HACs, and frequencies of
previously considered candidate HACs
reflect MedPAR claims from October
2008 through June 2009. In the final
rule, we intend to update our summary
of these analyses with additional data
that have become available.
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
519.2 (MCC)
And one of the following procedure codes:
36.10–36.19
996.67 (CC)
998.59 (CC)
And one of the following procedure codes:
81.01–81.08, 81.23–81.24, 81.31–81.38,
81.83, 81.85
Principal Diagnosis—278.01
998.59 (CC)
And one of the following procedure codes:
44.38, 44.39, or 44.95
415.11 (MCC)
415.19 (MCC)
453.40–453.42 (CC)
And one of the following procedure codes:
00.85–00.87, 81.51–81.52, or 81.54
b. Preliminary RTI Analysis on POA
Indicator Reporting Across Medicare
Discharges
To better understand the impact of
HACs on the Medicare program, it is
necessary to first examine the incidence
of POA indicator reporting across all
eligible Medicare discharges. As
mentioned previously, only IPPS
hospitals are required to submit POA
indicator data for all diagnosis codes on
Medicare claims. Therefore, all nonIPPS hospitals were excluded, as well as
providers in waiver States (Maryland)
and territories other than Puerto Rico.
Using MedPAR claims data from
October 2008 through June 2009, RTI
found a total of approximately 50.22
million secondary diagnoses across
approximately 7.17 million discharges.
As shown in Chart A below, the
majority of all secondary diagnoses
(83.52 percent) were reported with a
POA indicator of ‘‘Y,’’ meaning the
condition was POA.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23884
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
CHART A—POA CODE DISTRIBUTION ACROSS ALL SECONDARY DIAGNOSES
Number
Total Discharges in Final File ..................................................................................................................................
Total Number of Secondary Diagnoses Across Total Discharges ..........................................................................
POA
Y
W
N
U
Percentage
7,175,139
50,216,195
........................
100.00
41,938,234
12,547
3,440,815
110,771
83.52
0.02
6.85
0.22
4,713,828
9.39
Indicator Description
...................................................................................
..................................................................................
...................................................................................
...................................................................................
1 ....................................................................................
Condition present on admission ...................................
Status cannot be clinically determined .........................
Condition not present on admission .............................
Documentation not adequate to determine if condition
was present on admission.
Exempted ICD–9–CM code ..........................................
Source: RTI Analysis of MedPAR IPPS Claims, October 2008 through June 2009.
c. Preliminary RTI Analysis on POA
Indicator Reporting of Current HACs
Following the initial analysis of POA
indicator reporting for all secondary
diagnoses, RTI then evaluated POA
indicator reporting for specific HACassociated secondary diagnoses. The
term ‘‘HAC-associated secondary
diagnosis’’ refers to those diagnoses that
are on the selected HAC list and were
reported as a secondary diagnosis. Chart
B below shows a summary of the HAC
categories with the frequency in which
each HAC was reported as a secondary
diagnosis and the corresponding POA
indicators assigned on the claims. It is
important to note that, because more
than one HAC-associated diagnosis code
can be reported per discharge (that is,
on a single claim), the frequency of
HAC-associated diagnosis codes may be
more than the actual number of
discharges that have a HAC-associated
diagnosis code reported as a secondary
diagnosis. Below we discuss the
frequency of each HAC-associated
diagnosis code and the POA indicators
assigned to those claims.
RTI analyzed the frequency of each
reported HAC-associated secondary
diagnosis (across all 7.17 million
discharges) and the POA indicator
assigned to the claim. Chart B below
shows that the most frequently reported
conditions were in the Falls and Trauma
HAC category, with a total of 132,666
HAC-associated diagnosis codes being
reported for that HAC category. Of these
132,666 diagnoses, 4,081 reported a
POA indicator of ‘‘N’’ for not POA and
128,286 diagnoses reported a POA
indicator of ‘‘Y’’ for POA. The lowest
frequency appears in the Surgical Site
Infection (SSI) Following Bariatric
Surgery for Obesity HAC category with
only 12 HAC-associated secondary
diagnosis codes (and procedure codes)
reported.
CHART B—POA STATUS OF CURRENT HACS: OCTOBER 2008 THROUGH JUNE 2009
Frequency
as a Secondary
Diagnosis
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Selected HAC
1. Foreign Object Retained After
Surgery (CC) ............................
2. Air Embolism (MCC) ................
3. Blood Incompatibility (CC) .......
4. Pressure Ulcer Stages III & IV
(MCC) .......................................
5. Falls and Trauma (MCC & CC)
6. Catheter-Associated UTI (CC)
7. Vascular Catheter-Associated
Infection (CC) ...........................
8. Poor Glycemic Control (MCC)
9A. Surgical Site Infection Mediastinitis CABG (CC) .................
9B. Surgical Site Infection Following Bariatric Surgery for
Obesity (CC) .............................
9B. Surgical Site Infection Following Certain Orthopedic Procedures (CC) ............................
10. Pulmonary Embolism & DVT
Orthopedic (MCC) ....................
Total * ....................................
Not Present on Admission
POA = N
Number
Present on Admission
POA = U
Percent
Number
POA = Y
Percent
Number
POA = W
Percent
Number
Percent
378
29
23
172
23
8
45.5
79.3
34.8
0
0
0
0.0
0.0
0.0
206
6
15
54.5
20.7
65.2
0
0
0
0.0
0.0
0.0
80,190
132,666
11,424
944
4,081
1,887
1.2
3.1
16.5
56
232
15
0.1
0.2
0.1
79,165
128,286
9,496
98.7
96.7
83.1
25
67
26
0.0
0.1
0.2
5,470
11,070
2,091
344
38.2
3.1
19
9
0.3
0.1
3,348
10,711
61.2
96.8
12
6
0.2
0.1
29
21
72.4
0
0.0
8
27.6
0
0.0
12
10
83.3
0
0.0
2
16.7
0
0.0
202
125
61.9
1
0.5
75
37.1
1
0.5
2,706
2,029
75.0
15
0.6
647
23.9
15
0.6
244,199
................
................
347
................
................
................
152
................
* Discharges can appear in more than one row. The total figure is not adjusted for the 47 discharges with more than one HAC that appear as
secondary diagnoses (15 of these discharges resulted in MS–DRG reassignment).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
We welcome public comments on
these data that can provide insight into
the accuracy of the data, using
comparative data sets or analysis such
as how aspects of the coding system
might influence these data.
As described earlier, in the FY 2009
IPPS final rule (73 FR 48486 through
48487), we adopted as final our
proposal to: (1) Pay the CC/MCC MS–
DRGs for those HACs coded with ‘‘Y’’
and ‘‘W’’ indicators; and (2) not pay the
CC/MCC MS–DRGs for those HACs
coded with ‘‘N’’ and ‘‘U’’ indicators. We
also discussed the comments we
received urging CMS to strongly
consider changing the policy and to pay
for those HACs assigned a POA
indicator of ‘‘U’’ (documentation is
insufficient to determine if the
condition was present at the time of
admission). We stated we would
monitor the extent to which and under
what circumstances the ‘‘U’’ POA
reporting option is used. In the FY 2010
IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule, we
also discussed and responded to
comments regarding HACs coded with
the ‘‘U’’ indicator (74 FR 43784 and
43785). As shown in Chart B above,
RTI’s analysis provides some initial data
on a total of 347 HAC-associated
secondary diagnoses reported with a
POA indicator of ‘‘U’’. Of those
diagnoses, 232 (0.2 percent) were
assigned to the Falls and Trauma HAC
category.
We continue to believe that better
documentation will result in more
accurate public health data. Because the
RTI analysis is based on preliminary
data, at this time we are not proposing
to change our policy under which CMS
does not pay at the higher CC/MCC
amount when a selected HAC diagnosis
code is reported with a POA indicator
of ‘‘U.’’
We encourage readers to further
review the RTI detailed report which
demonstrates the frequency of each
individual HAC-associated diagnosis
code within the HAC categories. For
example, in the Foreign Object Retained
After Surgery HAC category, there are
two unique ICD–9–CM diagnosis codes
to identify that condition: code 998.4
(Foreign body accidentally left during a
procedure) and code 998.7 (Acute
reaction to foreign substance
accidentally left during a procedure). In
the detailed RTI report, readers can
view that code 998.4 was reported 368
times and code 998.7 was reported 10
times, for a total of 378 times, as shown
in Chart B above. The RTI detailed
report is available at the following Web
site: https://www.rti.org/reports/cms/.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
d. Preliminary RTI Analysis of
Frequency of Discharges and POA
Indicator Reporting for Current HACs
RTI further analyzed the effect of the
HAC provision by studying the
frequency in which a HAC-associated
diagnosis was reported as a secondary
diagnosis with a POA indicator of ‘‘N’’
or ‘‘U’’ and, of that number, how many
resulted in MS–DRG reassignment. In
Chart C below, Column A shows the
number of discharges for each HAC
category where the HAC-associated
diagnosis was reported as a secondary
diagnosis. For example, there were 29
discharges that reported Air Embolism
as a secondary diagnosis. Column C
shows the number of discharges for each
HAC reported with a POA indicator of
‘‘N’’ or ‘‘U.’’ Continuing with the example
of Air Embolism, the chart shows that,
of the 29 reported discharges, 23
discharges (79.31 percent) had a POA
indicator of ‘‘N’’ or ‘‘U’’ and was
identified as a HAC discharge. There
were a total of 23 discharges to which
the HAC policy applies and that could,
therefore, have had an MS–DRG
reassignment. Column E shows the
number of discharges where an actual
MS–DRG reassignment occurred. As
shown in Column E, the number of
discharges with an Air Embolism that
resulted in actual MS–DRG
reassignments is 12 (52.17 percent of the
23 discharges with a POA indicator of
‘‘N’’ or ‘‘U’’). Thus, while there were 23
discharges (79.31 percent of the original
29) with an Air Embolism reported with
a POA indicator of ‘‘N’’ or ‘‘U’’ identified
as a HAC discharge that could have
caused MS–DRG reassignment, the end
result was 12 (52.17 percent) actual MS–
DRG reassignments. There are a number
of reasons why a selected HAC reported
with a POA indicator of ‘‘N’’ or ‘‘U’’ will
not result in MS–DRG reassignment.
These reasons were illustrated with the
diagram in section II.F.1.c. of this
preamble and will be discussed in
further detail in section II.F.3.e. of this
preamble.
Chart C below also shows that, of the
216,764 discharges with a HACassociated diagnosis as a secondary
diagnosis, 3,038 discharges ultimately
resulted in MS–DRG reassignment. As
will be discussed below, there were 15
claims that resulted in MS–DRG
reassignment where two HACs were
reported on the same admission. The
four HAC categories that had the most
discharges resulting in MS–DRG
reassignment were: (1) Falls and
Trauma; (2) Pressure Ulcer Stages III &
IV; (3) Pulmonary Embolism and DVT
Orthopedic (Orthopedic PE/DVT); and
(4) Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23885
Infection (UTI). Codes falling under the
Falls and Trauma HAC category were
the most frequently reported secondary
diagnoses with 109,728 discharges. Of
these 109,728 discharges, 3,852 (3.51
percent) were coded as not POA and
identified as HAC discharges. This
category also contained the greatest
number of discharges that resulted in an
MS–DRG reassignment. Of the 3,852
discharges within this HAC category
that were not POA, 1,476 (38.32
percent) resulted in an MS–DRG
reassignment.
Of the 216,764 total discharges
reporting HAC-associated diagnoses as a
secondary diagnosis, 2,494 discharges
were coded with a secondary diagnosis
of Orthopedic PE/DVT. Of these 2,494
discharges, 1,892 (75.86 percent) were
coded as not POA and identified as
HAC discharges. This category
contained the second greatest number of
discharges resulting in an MS–DRG
reassignment. Of the 1,892 discharges in
this HAC category that were not POA,
845 discharges (44.66 percent) resulted
in an MS–DRG reassignment.
The Pressure Ulcer Stages III & IV
category had the second most frequently
coded secondary diagnoses, with 76,014
discharges. Of these discharges, 960
(1.26 percent) were coded as not POA
and identified as HAC discharges. This
category contained the third greatest
number of discharges resulting in an
MS–DRG reassignment. Of the 960
discharges in this HAC category that
were not POA, 337 discharges (35.10
percent) resulted in an MS–DRG
reassignment.
The Catheter-Associated UTI category
had the third most frequently coded
secondary diagnoses, with 11,434
discharges. Of these discharges, 1,896
(16.60 percent) were coded as not POA
and identified as HAC discharges. This
category contained the fourth greatest
number of discharges resulting in an
MS–DRG reassignment. Of the 1,896
discharges in this HAC category that
were not POA, 197 discharges (10.39
percent) resulted in a MS–DRG
reassignment.
The remaining 6 HAC categories only
had 183 discharges that ultimately
resulted in MS–DRG reassignment. We
note that, even in cases where a large
number of HAC-associated secondary
diagnoses were coded as not POA, this
finding did not necessarily translate into
a large number of discharges that
resulted in MS–DRG reassignment. For
example, only 23 of the 2,107 Vascular
Catheter-Associated Infection secondary
diagnoses that were coded as not POA
and identified as HAC discharges
resulted in a MS–DRG reassignment.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23886
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
There were a total of 277 discharges
with a HAC-associated secondary
diagnosis reporting a POA indicator of
‘‘N’’ or ‘‘U’’ that were excluded from
acting as a HAC discharge (subject to
MS–DRG reassignment) due to the CC
Exclusion List logic within the
GROUPER. The CC Exclusion List
identifies secondary diagnosis codes
designated as a CC or MCC that are
disregarded by the GROUPER logic
when reported with certain principal
diagnoses. For example, a claim with
the principal diagnosis code of 250.83
(Diabetes with other specified
manifestations, type 1 [juvenile type],
uncontrolled) and a secondary diagnosis
code of 250.13 (Diabetes with
ketoacidosis, type 1, [juvenile type],
uncontrolled) with a POA indicator of
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
‘‘N’’ would result in the HAC-associated
secondary diagnosis code 250.13 being
ignored as a CC. According to the CC
Exclusion List, code 250.13 is excluded
from acting as a CC when code 250.83
is the principal diagnosis. As a result,
the HAC logic would not be applicable
to that case. For a detailed discussion on
the CC Exclusion List, we refer readers
to section II.G.9. of this preamble.
Discharges where the HAC logic was
not applicable due to the CC Exclusion
List occurred among the following 4
HAC categories: Pressure Ulcer Stages
III and IV (29 cases), Falls and Trauma
(206 cases), Catheter-Associated UTI (6
cases), Vascular Catheter-Associated
Infection (3 cases), and Manifestations
of Poor Glycemic Control (33 cases).
Further information regarding the
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
specific number of cases that were
excluded for each HAC-associated
secondary diagnosis code within each of
the above mentioned HAC categories is
also available. We refer readers to the
RTI detailed report at the following Web
site: https://www.rti.org/reports/cms/.
In summary, Chart C below
demonstrates that there were a total of
216,764 discharges with a reported
HAC-associated secondary diagnosis. Of
the total 216,764 discharges, 11,383
(5.25 percent) discharges were HACs
reported with a POA indicator of ‘‘N’’ or
‘‘U’’ that were identified as a HAC
discharge. Of these 11,383 discharges,
the number of discharges resulting in
MS–DRG reassignments was 3,038
(26.69 percent).
BILLING CODE 4310–10–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23887
EP04MY10.004
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
23888
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
An extremely small number of
discharges had multiple HACs reported
during the same stay. In reviewing the
7.17 million claims, RTI found 47 cases
in which two HACs were reported on
the same discharge. Chart D below
summarizes these cases. There were
eight cases in which a Falls and Trauma
HAC was reported in addition to a
Pressure Ulcer Stages III & IV HAC.
Eighteen of the cases with two HACs
involved Pressure Ulcer Stages III & IV
and 15 cases involved Falls or Trauma.
Other multiple HAC cases included 9
Catheter-Associated UTI cases and 5
Vascular Catheter-Associated Infection
cases.
Some of these cases with multiple
HACs reported had both HAC codes
ignored in the MS–DRG assignment. Of
these 47 claims, 32 did not receive
higher payments based on the presence
of one or both of these reported HACs
and we describe these claims below in
section II.F.3.f.(2) of this preamble.
Depending on the MS–DRG to which
the cases were originally assigned,
ignoring the HAC codes would have led
to a MS–DRG reassignment if there were
no other MCCs or CCs reported, if the
MS–DRG was subdivided into severity
levels, and if the case were not already
in the lowest severity level prior to
ignoring the HAC codes.
CHART D—CLAIMS WITH MORE THAN ONE HAC SECONDARY DIAGNOSIS OCTOBER 2008 THROUGH JUNE 2009
5. Falls and
trauma—
MCC & CC
6. Catheterassociated
UTI—CC
7. Vascular
catheterassociated
infection—CC
2. Air embolism—MCC ....................................................................
5. Falls and Trauma—MCC & CC ...................................................
6. Catheter-Associated UTI—CC ....................................................
7. Vascular Catheter-Associated Infection—CC ..............................
8. Poor Glycemic Control—MCC .....................................................
9C. Surgical Site Infection Following Bariatric Surgery for Obesity—CC .......................................................................................
10. Pulmonary Embolism & DVT Orthopedic—MCC ......................
............................
8
2
5
1
1
............................
3
4
............................
............................
............................
............................
6
............................
............................
............................
............................
............................
1
............................
2
............................
7
2
1
1
3
Total ..........................................................................................
18
15
9
5
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
e. Preliminary RTI Analysis of
Circumstances When Application of
HAC Provisions Would Not Result in
MS–DRG Reassignment for Current
HACs
As discussed in section II.F.1. and
illustrated in the diagram in section
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
II.F.1.c. of this preamble, there are
instances when the MS–DRG
assignment does not change even when
a HAC-associated secondary diagnosis
has a POA indicator of either ‘‘N’’ or ‘‘U.’’
In analyzing our claims data, RTI
identified four main reasons why a MS–
DRG assignment would not change
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
despite the presence of a HAC. Those
four reasons are described below and
are shown in Chart E below. Column A
shows the frequency of discharges that
included a HAC-associated secondary
diagnosis. Column B shows the
frequency of discharges where the HACassociated secondary diagnosis was
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.005
4. Pressure ulcer
stages III & IV—
MCC
HAC
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
coded as not POA and identified as a
HAC discharge. Column C shows the
frequency of discharges in which the
HAC-associated secondary diagnosis
coded as not POA resulted in a change
in MS–DRG. Columns D, E, F, and G
show the frequency of discharges in
which the HAC-associated secondary
diagnosis coded as not POA did not
result in a change in MS–DRG
assignment. Columns D, E, F, and G are
explained in more detail below.
(1) Other MCCs/CCs Prevent
Reassignment
Column D (Other MCC/CCs that
Prevent Reassignment) in Chart E below
indicates the number of cases reporting
a HAC-associated secondary diagnosis
code that did not have a MS–DRG
reassignment because of the presence of
other secondary diagnoses on the MCC
or CC list. A claim that is coded with
a HAC-associated secondary diagnoses
and a POA status of either ‘‘N’’ or ‘‘U’’
may have other secondary diagnoses
that are classified as an MCC or a CC.
In such cases, the presence of these
other MCC and CC diagnoses will still
lead to the assignment of a higher
severity level, despite the fact that the
GROUPER software is disregarding the
ICD–9–CM code that identifies the
selected HAC in making the MS–DRG
assignment for that claim. For example,
there were 83 cases in which the ICD–
9–CM codes for the Foreign Object
Retained After Surgery HAC category
were present, but the presence of other
secondary diagnoses that were MCCs or
CCs resulted in no change to the MS–
DRG assignment. Chart E shows that a
total of 6,074 cases did not have a
change in the MS–DRG assignment
because of the presence of other
reported MCCs and CCs.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
(2) Two Severity Levels Where HAC
Does Not Impact MS–DRG Assignment
Column E (Number of MS–DRGs with
Two Severity Levels Where HAC Does
Not Impact MS–DRG Assignment)
shows the frequency with which
discharges with a HAC as a secondary
diagnosis coded as not POA did not
result in an MS–DRG change because
the MS–DRG is subdivided solely by the
presence or absence of an MCC. A claim
with a HAC and a POA indicator of
either ‘‘N’’ or ‘‘U’’ may be assigned to an
MS–DRG that is subdivided solely by
the presence or absence of an MCC. In
such cases, removing a HAC ICD–9–CM
CC code will not lead to further changes
in the MS–DRG assignment. Examples
of these MS–DRG subdivisions are
shown in the footnotes to the chart and
include the following examples:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
• MS–DRGs 100 and 101 (Seizures
with or without MCC, respectively)
• MS–DRGs 102 and 103 (Headaches
with or without MCC, respectively)
The codes that fall under the HAC
category of Foreign Object Retained
After Surgery are CCs. If this case were
assigned to a MS–DRG with an MCC
subdivision such as MS–DRGs 100 and
101, the presence of the HAC code
would not affect the MS–DRG severity
level assignment. In other words, if the
Foreign Object Retained After Surgery
code were the only secondary diagnosis
reported, then the case would be
assigned to MS–DRG 101. If the POA
indicator was ‘‘N,’’ the HAC Foreign
Object Retained After Surgery code
would be ignored in the MS–DRG
assignment logic. Despite the fact that
the code was ignored, the case would
still be assigned to the same, lower
severity level MS–DRG. Therefore, there
would be no impact on the MS–DRG
assignment.
Column E in Chart E below shows
that there were 1,446 cases where the
HAC code was ‘‘N’’ or ‘‘U’’ and the MS–
DRG assignment did not change because
the case was already assigned to the
lowest severity level.
(3) No Severity Levels
Column F (Number of MS–DRGs with
No Severity Levels) shows the frequency
with which discharges with an HAC as
a secondary diagnosis coded as not POA
did not result in an MS–DRG change
because the MS–DRG is not subdivided
by severity levels. A claim with a HAC
and a POA of ‘‘N’’ or ‘‘U’’ may be
assigned to a MS–DRG with no severity
levels. For instance, MS–DRG 311
(Angina Pectoris) has no severity level
subdivisions; this MS–DRG is not split
based on the presence of an MCC or a
CC. If a patient assigned to this MS–
DRG develops a secondary diagnosis
such as a Stage III pressure ulcer after
admission, the condition would be
considered to be a HAC. The code for
the Stage III pressure ulcer would be
ignored in the MS–DRG assignment
because the condition developed after
the admission (the POA indicator was
‘‘N’’). Despite the fact that the ICD–9–CM
code for the HAC Stage III pressure
ulcer was ignored, the MS–DRG
assignment would not change. The case
would still be assigned to MS–DRG 311.
Chart E below shows that 818 cases
reporting a HAC-associated secondary
diagnosis did not undergo a change in
the MS–DRG assignment based on the
fact that the case was assigned to a MS–
DRG that had no severity subdivisions
(that is, the MS–DRG is not subdivided
based on the presence or absence of an
MCC or a CC, rendering the presence of
PO 00000
Frm 00039
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23889
the HAC irrelevant for payment
purposes).
(4) MS–DRG Logic
Column G (MS–DRG Logic Issues)
shows the frequency with which a HAC
as a secondary diagnosis coded as not
POA did not result in an MS–DRG
change because of MS–DRG assignment
logic. There were seven discharges
where the HAC criteria were met and
the HAC logic was applied, however,
due to the structure of the MS–DRG
logic, these cases did not result in MS–
DRG reassignment. These cases may
appear similar to those discharges
where the MS–DRG is subdivided into
two severity levels by the presence or
absence of an MCC and did not result
in MS–DRG reassignment; however,
these discharges differ slightly in that
the MS–DRG logic also considers
specific procedures that were reported
on the claim. In other words, for certain
MS–DRGs, a procedure may be
considered the equivalent of an MCC or
CC. The presence of the procedure code
dictates the MS–DRG assignment
despite the presence of the HACassociated secondary diagnosis code
with a POA indicator of ‘‘N’’ or ‘‘U’’.
For example, a claim with the
principal diagnosis code of 441.1
(Thoracic aneurysm, ruptured) with
HAC-associated secondary diagnosis
code of 996.64 (Infection and
inflammatory reaction due to indwelling
urinary catheter) and diagnosis code
599.0 (Urinary tract infection, site not
specified), having POA indicators of
‘‘Y’’, ‘‘N’’, ‘‘N’’, respectively, and
procedure code 39.73 (Endovascular
implantation of graft in thoracic aorta)
results in an assignment to MS–DRG
237 (Major Cardiovascular Procedures
with MCC or Thoracic Aortic Aneurysm
Repair). In this case, the thoracic aortic
aneurysm repair is what dictated the
MS–DRG assignment and the presence
of the HAC-associated secondary
diagnosis code, 996.64, did not affect
the MS–DRG assigned. Other examples
of MS–DRGs that are subdivided in this
same manner are as follows:
• MS–DRG 029 (Spinal procedures
with CC or Spinal Neurostimulators)
• MS–DRG 129 (Major Head & Neck
Procedures with CC/MCC or Major
Device)
• MS–DRG 246 (Percutaneous
Cardiovascular Procedure with DrugEluting Stent with MCC or 4+ Vessels/
Stents)
Column G in the chart below shows
that four of the seven cases that did not
result in MS–DRG reassignment due to
the MS–DRG logic were in the Catheter
Associated UTI HAC category, one case
was in the Foreign Body Retained after
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Surgery HAC Category, one case was in
the Falls and Trauma HAC category, and
one case was in the Vascular CatheterAssociated Infection HAC Category.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
In conclusion, a total of 8,345 cases
(6,074 + 1,446 + 818 + 7) did not have
a change in MS–DRG assignment,
regardless of the presence of a HAC. The
reasons described above explain why
PO 00000
Frm 00040
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
only 3,038 cases had a change in MS–
DRG assignment despite the fact that
there were 11,383 HAC cases with a
POA of ‘‘N’’ or ‘‘U.’’
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.006
23890
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
23891
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00041
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.007
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
23892
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
f. Preliminary RTI Analysis of Coding
Changes for HAC-Associated Secondary
Diagnoses for Current HACs
In addition to studying claims from
October 2008 through June 2009, RTI
evaluated claims data from 2 years prior
to determine if there were significant
changes in the number of discharges
with a HAC being reported as a
secondary diagnosis. To provide
consistency with the FY 2009 data
studied, RTI examined claims using
discharge dates from October 2006
through June 2007 (for FY 2007) and
October 2007 through June 2008 (for FY
2008) and compared these data to the
FY 2009 data.
RTI’s analysis found that there was an
increase in the reporting of secondary
diagnoses that are currently designated
as HACs from FY 2007 to FY 2008. The
most significant increase was in the
Falls and Trauma HAC category, with
108,397 discharges being reported in FY
2007, while 116,832 discharges were
reported in FY 2008, an increase of
8,435 cases.
However, the analysis found that
there was a decrease in reported HACassociated secondary diagnoses from FY
2008 to FY 2009. The most significant
decrease was in the Falls and Trauma
HAC category, with 116,832 discharges
being reported in FY 2008, while
109,246 discharges were reported in FY
2009, a decrease of 7,586 cases. We
point out that because diagnosis codes
for the Pressure Ulcer Stages III & IV
HAC did not become effective until
October 1, 2008, there are no data
available for FY 2007 or FY 2008.
We refer readers to the RTI detailed
report for all the conditions in each
fiscal year (FY 2007 through FY 2009)
as described above at the following Web
site: https://www.rti.org/reports/cms/.
g. Preliminary RTI Analysis of
Estimated Net Savings for Current HACs
RTI determined preliminary estimates
of the net savings generated by the HAC
payment policy based on MedPAR
claims from October 2008 through June
2009 for the 9-month period.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
(1) Net Savings Estimation Methodology
The payment impact of a HAC is the
difference between the IPPS payment
amount under the initially assigned
MS–DRG and the amount under the
reassigned MS–DRG. The amount for
the reassigned MS–DRG appears on the
MedPAR files. To construct this, RTI
modeled the IPPS payments for each
MS–DRG following the same approach
that we use to model the impact of IPPS
annual rule changes. Specifically, RTI
replicated the payment computations
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
carried out in the IPPS PRICER program
using payment factors for IPPS
providers as identified in various CMS
downloaded files. The files used are as
follows:
• Version 26 of the Medicare Severity
GROUPER software (applicable to
discharges between October 1, 2008 and
September 30, 2009). IPPS MedPAR
claims were run through this file to
obtain needed HAC–POA output
variables.
• The FY 2009 MS–DRG payment
weight file. This file includes the
weights, geometric mean length of stay
(GLOS), and the postacute transfer
payment indicators.
• CMS standardized operating and
capital rates. Tables 1A through 1C, as
downloaded from the Web site at:
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/IPPS2009, include
the full update and reduced update
amounts, as well as the information
needed to compute the blended amount
for providers located in Puerto Rico.
• The IPPS impact files for FY 2009,
also as downloaded from the Web site
at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/IPPS2009/. This file
includes the wage index and geographic
adjustment factors, plus the provider
type variable to identify providers
qualifying for alternative hospitalspecific amounts and their respective
HSP rates.
• The IPPS impact files for FY 2010,
as downloaded from the Web site at:
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/10FR/. This file
includes indirect medical education
(IME) and disproportionate share (DSH)
percent adjustments that were in effect
as of March 2009.
• CMS historical provider-specific
files (PSF). This includes the indicator
to identify providers subject to the full
or reduced standardized rates and the
applicable operating and capital cost-tocharge ratios. An SAS version was
downloaded from the Web site at:
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
ProspMedicareFeeSvcPmtGen/
04_psf_SAS.asp.
There were 50 providers with
discharges in the final HAC analysis file
that did not appear in the FY 2009
impact file, of which 11 also did not
appear in the FY 2010 impact file. For
these providers, we identified the
geographic CBSA from the historical
PSF and assigned the wage index using
values from Tables 4A and 4C as
downloaded from the Web site at:
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/IPPS2009/. For
providers in the FY 2010 file but not the
FY 2009 file, we used IME and DSH
PO 00000
Frm 00042
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
rates from FY 2010. The 11 providers in
neither impact file were identified as
non-IME and non-DSH providers in the
historical PSF file.
The steps for estimating the HAC
payment impact are as follows:
Step 1: Re-run the Medicare Severity
GROUPER on all records in the analysis
file. This is needed to obtain
information on actual HAC-related MS–
DRG reassignments in the file, and to
identify the CCs and MCCs that
contribute to each MS–DRG assignment.
Step 2: Model the base payment and
outlier amounts associated with the
initial MS–DRG if the HAC were
excluded using the computations laid
out in the CMS file ‘‘Outlier Example
FY2007 new.xls,’’ as downloaded from
the Web site at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/
04_outlier.asp#TopOfPage, and
modified to accommodate FY 2009
factors. RTI’s first round of
computations treated all claims as
though paid under standard IPPS rules
without adjusting for short-stay transfers
or HSP amounts.
Step 3: Model the base payment and
outlier amounts associated with the
final MS–DRG where the HAC was
excluded using the computations laid
out in the CMS file ‘‘Outlier Example
FY2007 new.xls,’’ as downloaded from
the Web site at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/
04_outlier.asp#TopOfPage and modified
to accommodate FY 2009 factors. RTI’s
first round of computations treated all
claims as though paid under standard
IPPS rules without adjusting for shortstay transfers or HSP amounts.
Step 4: Compute MS–DRG base
savings as the difference between the
nonoutlier payments for the initial and
final MS–DRGs. Compute outlier
amounts as the difference in outlier
amounts due under the initial and final
reassigned MS–DRG. Compute net
savings due to HAC reassignment as the
sum of base savings plus outlier
amounts.
Step 5: Adjust the model to
incorporate short-stay transfer payment
adjustments.
Step 6: Adjust the model to
incorporate hospital-specific payments
for qualifying rural providers receiving
the hospital-specific payment rates.
It is important to mention that using
the methods described above, the MS–
DRG and outlier payments amounts that
are modeled for the final assigned MS–
DRG do not always match the DRG price
and outlier amounts that appear in the
MedPAR record. There are several
reasons for this. Some discrepancies are
caused by using single wage index, IME
and DSH factors for the full period
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
covered by the discharges, when in
practice these payment factors can be
adjusted for individual providers during
the course of the fiscal year. In addition,
RTI’s approach disregards any Part A
coinsurance amounts owed by
individual beneficiaries with greater
than sixty covered days in a spell of
illness. Five percent of all HAC
discharges showed at least some Part A
coinsurance amount due from the
beneficiary, although less than two
percent of reassigned discharges (55
cases in the analysis file) showed Part
A coinsurance amounts due. Any Part A
coinsurance payments would reduce the
actual savings incurred by the Medicare
program.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
There are also a number of less
common special IPPS payment
situations that are not factored into
RTI’s modeling. These could include
new technology add-on payments,
payments for blood clotting factors,
reductions for replacement medical
devices, adjustments to the capital rate
for new providers, and adjustments to
the capital rate for certain classes of
providers who are subject to a minimum
payment level relative to capital cost.
(2) Net Savings Estimate
Chart F below summarizes the
estimated net savings of current HACs
based on MedPAR claims from October
2008 through 2009, based on the
methodology described above. Column
PO 00000
Frm 00043
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23893
A shows the number of discharges
where an MS–DRG reassignment for
each HAC category occurred. For
example, there were 12 discharges with
an Air Embolism that resulted in an
actual MS–DRG reassignment. Column
B shows the total net savings caused by
MS–DRG reassignments for each HAC
category. Continuing with the example
of Air Embolism, the chart shows that
the 12 discharges with an MS–DRG
reassignment resulted in a total net
savings of $148,394. Column C shows
the net savings per discharge for each
HAC category. For the Air Embolism
HAC category, the net savings per
discharge is $12,366.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
BILLING CODE 4120–10–C
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00044
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.008
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23894
23895
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
As shown in Chart F above, the total
net savings calculated for the 9-month
period from October 2008 through June
2009 was roughly $16.44 million. The
three HACs with the largest number of
discharges resulting in MS–DRG
reassignment, Falls and Trauma,
Orthopedic PE/DVT, and Pressure Ulcer
Stages III & IV, generated $15.10 million
of net savings for the 9-month period.
Estimated net savings for the 9-month
period associated with the Falls and
Trauma category were $7.58 million.
Estimated net savings associated with
Orthopedic PE/DVT for the 9-month
period were $5.61 million. Estimated
net savings for the 9-month period
associated with Pressure Ulcer Stages III
& IV were $1.87 million.
The mean net savings per discharge
calculated for the 9-month period from
October 2008 through June 2009 was
roughly $5,456. The HAC categories of
Air Embolism; SSI, Mediastinitis,
Following Coronary Artery Bypass Graft
(CABG); and SSI Following Certain
Orthopedic Procedures had the highest
net savings per discharge, but
represented a small proportion of total
net savings because the number of
discharges that resulted in MS–DRG
reassignment for these HACs was low.
With the exception of Blood
Incompatibility, where no savings
occurred because no discharges resulted
in MS–DRG reassignment, SSI
Following Bariatric Surgery for Obesity
and Catheter-Associated UTI had the
lowest net savings per discharge.
We refer readers to the RTI detailed
report available at the following Web
site: https://www.rti.org/reports/cms/.
As mentioned previously, an
extremely small number of cases in the
9-month period of FY 2009 analyzed by
RTI had multiple HACs during the same
stay. In reviewing our 7.17 million
claims, RTI found 47 cases where two
HACs were reported on the same
admission as noted in section II.F.3.g.(2)
of this preamble. Of these 47 claims, 15
resulted in MS–DRG reassignment.
Chart G below summarizes these cases.
There were 15 cases that had two HACs
not POA that resulted in an MS–DRG
reassignment. Of these, 5 discharges
involved Pressure Ulcer Stages III & IV
and Falls and Trauma and 4 discharges
involved Orthopedic PE/DVT and Falls
and Trauma.
CHART G—CLAIMS WITH MORE THAN ONE HAC SECONDARY DIAGNOSIS WHERE MS–DRG REASSIGNMENT OCCURRED
OCTOBER 2008 THROUGH JUNE 2009
4. Pressure
ulcer stages III
& IV—MCC
5. Falls and
trauma—MCC
& CC
6. Catheterassociated
UTI—CC
3. Blood Incompatibility—CC .......................................................................................................
5. Falls and Trauma—MCC & CC ...............................................................................................
6. Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infection (UTI)—CC .........................................................
7. Vascular Catheter-Associated Infection—CC .........................................................................
10. Pulmonary Embolism & DVT Orthopedic—MCC ..................................................................
........................
5
1
........................
1
1
........................
1
1
4
........................
........................
........................
1
........................
Total ......................................................................................................................................
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Selected HAC
7
7
1
As we discuss in section II.F.1.b. of
this preamble, implementation of this
policy is the part of an array of Medicare
VBP tools that we are using to promote
increased quality and efficiency of care.
We point out that a decrease over time
in the number of discharges where these
conditions are not POA is a desired
consequence. We recognize that
estimated net savings would likely
decline as the number of such
discharges decline. However, we believe
that the sentinel effect resulting from
CMS identifying these conditions is
critical. (We refer readers to section
IV.A. of this preamble for a discussion
of the inclusion of the incidence of
these conditions in the RHQDAPU
program.) It is our intention to continue
to monitor trends associated with the
frequency of these HACs and the
estimated net payment impact through
RTI’s program evaluation and possibly
beyond.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
h. Previously Considered Candidate
HACs—Preliminary RTI Analysis of
Frequency of Discharges and POA
Indicator Reporting
RTI evaluated the frequency of
conditions previously considered, but
not adopted as HACs in prior
rulemaking, that were reported as
secondary diagnoses (across all 7.17
million discharges) as well as the POA
indicator assignments for these
conditions. Chart H below indicates that
the three previously considered
candidate conditions most frequently
reported as a secondary diagnosis were:
(1) Clostridium Difficile-Associated
Disease (CDAD), which demonstrated
the highest frequency, with a total of
66,502 secondary diagnoses codes being
reported for that condition, of which
23,323 reported a POA indicator of ‘‘N’’;
(2) Staphylococcus aureus Septicemia,
with a total of 17,662 secondary
diagnoses codes being reported for that
condition, with 3,949 of those reporting
PO 00000
Frm 00045
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
a POA indicator of ‘‘N’’; and (3)
Iatrogenic Pneumothorax, with a total of
16,765 secondary diagnoses codes being
reported for that condition, with 14,604
of those reporting a POA indicator of
‘‘N.’’ As these three conditions had the
most significant impact for reporting a
POA indicator of ‘‘N,’’ it is reasonable to
believe that these same three conditions
would have the greatest number of
potential MS–DRG reassignments. The
frequency of discharges for the
previously considered HACs that could
lead to potential changes in MS–DRG
assignment is discussed in the next
section. We take this opportunity to
remind readers that because more than
one previously considered HAC
diagnosis code can be reported per
discharge (on a single claim) that the
frequency of these diagnosis codes may
be more than the actual number of
discharges with a previously considered
candidate condition reported as a
secondary diagnosis.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
In Chart I below, Column A shows the
number of discharges for each
previously considered candidate HAC
category when the condition was
reported as a secondary diagnosis. For
example, there were 66,502 discharges
that reported CDAD as a secondary
diagnosis. Previously considered
candidate HACs reported with a POA
indicator of ‘‘N’’ or ‘‘U’’ may cause MS–
DRG reassignment (which would result
in reduced payment to the facility).
Column C shows the discharges for each
previously considered candidate HAC
reported with a POA indicator of ‘‘N’’ or
‘‘U.’’ Continuing with the example of
CDAD, Chart I shows that, of the 66,502
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
discharges, 23,702 discharges (35.64
percent) had a POA indicator of ‘‘N’’ or
‘‘U.’’ Therefore, there were a total of
23,702 discharges that could potentially
have had an MS–DRG reassignment.
Column E shows the number of
discharges where an actual MS–DRG
reassignment could have occurred; the
number of discharges with CDAD that
could have resulted in actual MS–DRG
reassignments is 739 (3.12 percent).
Thus, while there were 23,702
discharges with CDAD reported with a
POA indicator of ‘‘N’’ or ‘‘U’’ that could
potentially have had an MS–DRG
reassignment, the result was 739 (3.12
percent) potential MS–DRG
PO 00000
Frm 00046
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
reassignments. As discussed above,
there are a number of reasons why a
condition reported with a POA indicator
of ‘‘N’’ or ‘‘U’’ would not result in a MS–
DRG reassignment.
In summary, Chart I below
demonstrates there were a total of
159,485 discharges with a previously
considered candidate HAC reported as a
secondary diagnosis. Of those, 47,010
discharges were reported with a POA
indicator of ‘‘N’’ or ‘‘U.’’ The total
number of discharges that could have
resulted in MS–DRG reassignments is
2,932.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.010
23896
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
i. Current and Previously Considered
Candidate HACs—RTI Report on
Evidence-Based Guidelines
The RTI program evaluation includes
a report that provides references for all
evidence-based guidelines available for
each of the selected and previously
considered candidate HACs that provide
recommendations for the prevention of
the corresponding conditions.
Guidelines were primarily identified
using the AHRQ National Guidelines
Clearing House (NGCH) and the CDC,
along with relevant professional
societies. Guidelines published in the
United States were used, if available. In
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
the absence of U.S. guidelines for a
specific condition, international
guidelines were included.
Evidence-based guidelines that
included specific recommendations for
the prevention of the condition were
identified for each of the 10 selected
conditions. In addition, evidence-based
guidelines were also found for the
previously considered candidate
conditions.
RTI prepared a final report to
summarize its findings regarding
evidence-based guidelines, which can
be found on the Web site at: https://
www.rti.org/reports/cms.
PO 00000
Frm 00047
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23897
j. Proposals Regarding Current HACs
and Previously Considered Candidate
HACs
We believe that the RTI analysis
summarized above does not provide
additional information that would
require us to change our previous
determinations regarding either current
HACs (as described in section II.F.2. of
this preamble) or previously considered
candidate HACs in the FY 2008 IPPS
final rule with comment period and FY
2009 IPPS final rule (72 FR 47200
through 47218 and 73 FR 48471 through
48491, respectively). Accordingly, we
are not proposing to add or remove
categories of HACs at this time,
although we note that we are proposing
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.011
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
23898
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
to revise the Blood Incompatibility HAC
category as discussed in section II.F.2.
of this preamble. (We also note that, as
discussed in section II.F.3.b. of this
preamble, we are not proposing to
change our current policy regarding the
treatment of the ‘‘U’’ POA indicator.)
However, we continue to encourage
public dialogue about refinements to the
HAC list.
We refer readers to section II.F.6. of
the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with
comment period (72 FR 47202 through
47218) and to section II.F.7. of the FY
2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR 48474
through 48491) for detailed discussion
supporting our determination regarding
each of these conditions.
G. Proposed Changes to Specific MS–
DRG Classifications
We are inviting public comment on
each of the MS–DRG classification
proposed changes described below, as
well as our proposals to maintain
certain existing MS–DRG classifications,
which are also discussed below. In some
cases, we are proposing changes to the
MS–DRG classifications based on our
analysis of claims data. In other cases,
we are proposing to maintain the
existing MS–DRG classification based
on our analysis of claims data.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
1. Pre-Major Diagnostic Categories
(MDCs)
a. Postsurgical Hypoinsulinemia (MS–
DRG 008 (Simultaneous Pancreas/
Kidney Transplant)
Diabetes mellitus is a pancreatic
disorder in which the pancreas fails to
produce sufficient insulin, or in which
the body cannot process insulin. Many
patients with diabetes will eventually
experience complications of the disease,
including poor kidney function. When
these patients show signs of advanced
kidney disease, they are usually referred
for transplant evaluation. Currently,
many doctors recommend that
individuals with diabetes being
evaluated for kidney transplantation
also be considered for pancreas
transplantation. A successful pancreas
transplant may prevent, stop, or reverse
the complications of diabetes.
Occasionally, secondary diabetes may
be surgically induced following a
pancreas transplant. This condition
would be identified by using ICD–9–CM
diagnosis code 251.3 (Postsurgical
hypoinsulinemia). However, currently
the list of principal diagnosis codes
assigned to surgical MS–DRG 008
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
(Simultaneous Pancreas/Kidney
Transplant) does not include diagnosis
code 251.3. Therefore, when diagnosis
code 251.3 is assigned to a case as a
principal diagnosis, the case is not
assigned to MS–DRG 008. Instead, these
cases are grouped to MS–DRG 652
(Kidney Transplant) under MDC 11
(Diseases and Disorders of the Kidney
and Urinary Tract). In addition, the use
of diagnosis code 251.3 as a principal
diagnosis without a secondary diagnosis
of diabetes mellitus and with a
procedure code for pancreas transplant
only during that admission results in
assignment of the case to MS–DRG 628,
629, or 630 (Other Endocrine,
Nutritional & Metabolic Operating Room
Procedures with MCC, with CC, and
without CC/MCC, respectively) under
MDC 10 (Endocrine, Nutritional and
Metabolic Diseases and Disorders).
We believe that the exclusion of
diagnosis code 251.3 from the list of
principal diagnosis codes assigned to
surgical MS–DRG 008 is an error of
omission. Therefore, we are proposing
to add diagnosis code 251.3 to the list
of principal or secondary diagnosis
codes assigned to MS–DRG 008. As a
conforming change, we also are
proposing to add diagnosis code 251.3
to the list of principal or secondary
diagnosis codes assigned to MS–DRG
010 (Pancreas Transplant).
b. Bone Marrow Transplants
We received two requests to review
whether cost differences between an
autologous bone marrow transplant
(where the patient’s own bone marrow
or stem cells are used) and an allogeneic
bone marrow transplant (where bone
marrow or stem cells come from either
a related or unrelated donor) necessitate
the creation of separate MS DRGs to
more appropriately account for the
clinical nature of the services being
rendered as well as the costs. One of the
requestors stated that there are dramatic
differences in the costs between the two
types of transplants where allogeneic
cases are significantly more costly.
Bone marrow transplantation and
peripheral blood stem cell
transplantation are used in the
treatment of certain cancers and bone
marrow diseases. These procedures
restore stem cells that have destroyed by
high doses of chemotherapy and/or
radiation treatment. Currently, all bone
marrow transplants are assigned to MS–
DRG 009 (Bone Marrow Transplant).
PO 00000
Frm 00048
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
We performed an analysis of the FY
2009 MedPAR data and found 1,664
total cases assigned to MS–DRG 009
with average costs of approximately
$43,877 and an average length of stay of
approximately 21 days. Of these MS–
DRG 009 cases, 395 of them were
allogeneic bone marrow transplant cases
reported with one of the following ICD–
9–CM procedure codes: 41.02
(Allogeneic bone marrow transplant
with purging); 41.03 (Allogeneic bone
marrow transplant without purging);
41.05 (Allogeneic hematopoietic stem
cell transplant without purging); 41.06
(Cord blood stem cell transplant); or
41.08 (Allogeneic hematopoietic stem
cell transplant). The average costs of
these allogeneic cases, approximately
$64,845, were higher than the overall
average costs of all cases in MS–DRG
009, approximately $43,877. The
average length of stay for the allogeneic
cases, approximately 28 days, was
slightly higher than the average length
of stay for all cases assigned to MS–DRG
009, approximately 21 days.
We found 1,269 autologous bone
marrow transplant cases reported with
one of the following ICD–9–CM
procedure codes: 41.00 (Bone marrow
transplant, not otherwise specified);
41.01 (Autologous bone marrow
transplant without purging); 41.04
(Autologous hematopoietic stem cell
transplant without purging); 41.07
(Autologous hematopoietic stem cell
transplant with purging); or 41.09
(Autologous bone marrow transplant
with purging). The average costs of
these cases, approximately $37, 350,
was less than the overall average costs
of all cases in MS–DRG 009 and the
average costs associated with the
allogeneic bone marrow transplant
cases. The average length of stay, of
approximately 19 days, was less than
the average lengths of stay for all the
cases assigned to MS–DRG 009 and for
the allogeneic bone marrow transplant
cases. We included in our analysis of
the autologous bone marrow transplants
cases, 5 cases that were reported with
procedure code 41.00 (Bone marrow
transplant, not otherwise specified).
These 5 cases had average costs of
approximately $41,084 and an average
length of stay of approximately 12 days,
which was similar to the other
autologous bone marrow transplant
cases.
The table below illustrates our
findings:
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23899
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Number of
cases
MS–DRG
009—All cases ...........................................................................................................................
009—Cases with allogeneic bone marrow transplants .............................................................
009—Cases with autologous bone marrow transplants ............................................................
As a result of our analysis, the data
support the requestor’s suggestion that
there are cost differences associated
with the autologous bone marrow
transplants and allogeneic bone marrow
transplants and warrants a separate MS–
DRG for these procedures. Therefore, we
are proposing to delete MS–DRG 009
and create two new MS–DRGs: MS–DRG
014 (Allogeneic Bone Marrow
Transplant) and MS–DRG 015
(Autologous Bone Marrow Transplant).
Proposed MS–DRG 014 would
include cases reported with one of the
following ICD–9–CM procedure codes:
• 41.02, Allogeneic bone marrow
transplant with purging
• 41.03, Allogeneic bone marrow
transplant without purging
• 41.05, Allogeneic hematopoietic
stem cell transplant without purging
• 41.06, Cord blood stem cell
transplant
• 41.08, Allogeneic hematopoietic
stem cell transplant
Proposed MS–DRG 015 would
include cases reported with one of the
following ICD–9–CM procedure codes:
• 41.00 (Bone marrow transplant, not
otherwise specified)
• 41.01 (Autologous bone marrow
transplant without purging)
• 41.04 (Autologous hematopoietic
stem cell transplant without purging)
• 41.07 (Autologous hematopoietic
stem cell transplant with purging)
• 41.09 (Autologous bone marrow
transplant with purging)
2. MDC 1 (Nervous System):
Administration of Tissue Plasminogen
Activator (tPA) (rtPA)
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
During the comment period for the FY
2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS proposed
rule, we received a public comment that
had not been the subject of a proposal
in that proposed rule. The commenter
had requested that CMS conduct an
analysis of diagnosis code V45.88
(Status post administration of tPA (rtPA)
in a different facility within the last 24
hours prior to admission to current
facility) under MDC 1 (Diseases and
Disorders of the Nervous System).
Diagnosis code V45.88 was created for
use beginning October 1, 2008, to
identify patients who are given tissue
plasminogen activator (tPA) at one
institution and then transferred and
admitted to a comprehensive stroke
center for further care. This situation is
referred to as the ‘‘drip-and-ship’’ issue
that was discussed at detail in the FY
2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR 48493).
According to the commenter, the
concern at the receiving facilities is that
the costs associated with [caring for]
more complex stroke patients that
receive tPA are much higher than the
cost of the drug, presumably because
stroke patients initially needing tPA
have more complicated strokes and
outcomes. However, because these
patients do not receive the tPA at the
second or transfer hospital, the
receiving hospital will not be assigned
to one of the higher weighted tPA stroke
MS–DRGs when it admits these patients
whose care requires the use of intensive
resources. The MS–DRGs that currently
include codes for the use of tPA are: 061
(Acute Ischemic Stroke with Use of
Thrombolytic Agent with MCC); 062
(Acute Ischemic Stroke with Use of
Thrombolytic Agent with CC); and 063
(Acute Ischemic Stroke with Use of
Thrombolytic Agent without CC/MCC).
These MS–DRGs have higher relative
weights than the next six MS–DRGs
relating to brain injury in the hierarchy.
The commenter requested an analysis of
the use of diagnosis code V45.88
reflected in the MedPAR data for FY
2009 and FY 2010. The commenter
believed that the data would show that
the use of this code could potentially
result in a new MS–DRG or a new set
of MS–DRGs in FY 2011.
In addressing this public comment in
the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
064—All Cases ...........................................................................................................
064—Cases with secondary diagnosis code V45.88 .................................................
065—All Cases ...........................................................................................................
065—Cases with secondary diagnosis code V45.88 .................................................
066—All Cases ...........................................................................................................
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00049
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
21.22
27.7
19.1
Average cost
$43,877
64,845
37,350
final rule (74 FR 43798), we noted that
the comment was out of scope for the
FY 2010 proposed rule and reiterated
that the deadline for requesting data
review and potential MS–DRG changes
had been the previous December. We
are now able to address the commenter’s
concern because we have been able to
conduct an analysis of MedPAR claims
data for this diagnosis code for this
proposed rule.
For this proposed rule, we undertook
an analysis of MedPAR claims data for
FY 2009. For our analysis, we did not
include claims for patient cases
assigned to MS–DRGs 061, 062, or 063
because patients whose cases were
assigned to these MS–DRGs would have
been given the tPA at the initial
hospital, with assignment of procedure
code 99.10 (Injection or infusion of
thrombolytic agent), prior to their
transfer to a comprehensive stroke
center. The tPA should not have been
given at the receiving hospital;
therefore, inclusion of code 99.10 on
their claims would constitute erroneous
coding. Likewise, we did not include
MS–DRGs 067 and 068 (Nonspecific
CVA & Precerebral Occlusion without
Infarction with MCC, and without MCC,
respectively), or MS–DRG 069
(Transient Ischemia). Claims assigned to
MS–DRGs 067, 068, and 069 are
unlikely to contain cases in which tPA
had been administered.
Our data analysis included MS–DRGs
064, 065, and 066 (Intracranial
Hemorrhage or Cerebral Infarction with
MCC, with CC, and without CC/MCC,
respectively) because claims involving
diagnosis code V45.88 would be
properly reported in the data for these
MS–DRGs for FY 2009. The following
table reflects the results of our analysis
of the MedPAR data in which diagnosis
code V45.88 was reported as a
secondary diagnosis for FY 2009.
Number of
cases
MS–DRG
MS–DRG
MS–DRG
MS–DRG
MS–DRG
MS–DRG
1,664
395
1,269
Average
length of
stay
65,884
249
96,274
448
62,337
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Average
length of
stay
6.80
7.00
4.75
5.06
3.29
Average cost
$11,305
12,285
7,264
8,732
5,291
23900
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Number of
cases
MS–DRG
MS–DRG 066—Cases with secondary diagnosis code V45.88 .................................................
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Based on our review of the data for all
of the cases in MS–DRGs 064, 065, and
066, compared to the subset of cases
containing the V45.88 secondary
diagnosis code, we concluded that the
movement of cases with diagnosis code
V45.88 as a secondary diagnosis from
MS–DRGs 064, 065, and 066 into MS–
DRGs 061, 062, and 063 is not
warranted. We determined that the
differences in the average lengths of stay
and the average costs are too small to
warrant an assignment to the higher
weighted MS–DRGs. Likewise, neither
the lengths of stay nor the average costs
are substantial enough to justify the
creation of an additional MS–DRG for
transferred tPA cases, or to create
separate MS–DRGs that would mirror
the MCC, CC or without CC/MCC
severity levels.
Therefore, for FY 2011, we are not
proposing any change to MS–DRGs 061,
062, 063, 064, 065, or 066, or any
change involving the assignment of
diagnosis code V45.88.
3. MDC 5 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Circulatory System): Intraoperative
Fluorescence Vascular Angiography
(IFVA) and X–Ray Coronary
Angiography in Coronary Artery Bypass
Graft Surgery
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS final rule (74 FR43785 through
43787), we discussed a request we
received to reassign cases reporting the
use of intraoperative fluorescence
vascular angiography (IFVA) with
coronary artery bypass graft (CABG)
procedures from MS–DRGs 235 and 236
(Coronary Bypass without Cardiac
Catheterization with and without MCC,
respectively) to MS–DRG 233 (Coronary
Bypass with Cardiac Catheterization
with MCC) and MS–DRG 234 (Coronary
Bypass with Cardiac Catheterization
without MCC). Effective October 1,
2007, procedure code 88.59
(Intraoperative fluorescence vascular
angiography (IFVA)) was established to
describe this technology.
In addition, we also discussed
receiving related requests (74 FR 43798
through 43799) that were outside the
scope of issues addressed for MDC 5 in
the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
proposed rule. There were three
components to these requests. The first
component involved the creation of new
MS–DRGs. One request was to create
four new MS–DRGs that would
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
differentiate the utilization of resources
between intraoperative angiography and
IFVA when utilized with CABG. A
second request was to create only one
new MS–DRG to separately identify the
use of intraoperative angiography, by
any method, in CABG surgery. The
second component involved reviewing
the ICD–9–CM procedure codes.
Currently, the ICD–9–CM procedure
codes do not distinguish between
preoperative, intraoperative, and
postoperative angiography. Procedure
code 88.59 (Intraoperative fluorescence
vascular angiography (IFVA)) is one
intraoperative angiography technique
that allows visualization of the coronary
vasculature. The third component
involved reassigning cases with
procedure code 88.59 to the ‘‘Other
Cardiovascular MS–DRG’’s: MS–DRGs
228, 229, and 230 (Other Cardiothoracic
Procedures with MCC, CC, and without
CC/MCC, respectively). We stated our
intent to consider these requests during
the FY 2011 rulemaking process.
After publication of the FY 2010
IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule, we
were contacted by one of the requestors,
the manufacturer of the IFVA
technology. We met with the requestor
in mid-November 2009 to discuss
evaluating the data for IFVA (procedure
code 88.59) again in consideration of a
proposal to create new MS–DRGs and to
discuss a request for a new procedure
code(s).
IFVA technology consists of a mobile
device imaging system with software. It
is used to test cardiac graft patency and
technical adequacy at the time of
coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG).
While this system does not involve
fluoroscopy or cardiac catheterization, it
has been suggested that it yields results
that are similar to those achieved with
selective coronary arteriography and
cardiac catheterization. Intraoperative
coronary angiography provides
information about the quality of the
anastomosis, blood flow through the
graft, distal perfusion, and durability.
For additional information regarding
IFVA technology, we refer readers to the
September 28–29, 2006 ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee meeting handout at the
following Web site: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/
ICD9ProviderDiagnosticCodes/
03_meetings.asp#TopOfPage.
PO 00000
Frm 00050
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
210
Average
length of
stay
3.35
Average cost
6,325
a. New MS–DRGs for Intraoperative
Fluorescence Vascular Angiography
(IFVA) With CABG
As stated earlier, the manufacturer
requested that we create four new MS–
DRGs for CABG to distinguish CABG
surgeries performed with IFVA and
those performed without IFVA.
According to the requestor, these four
new MS–DRGs would correspond to the
existing MS–DRG for CABG but would
also include intraoperative angiography.
The requestor proposed the following
four new MS–DRGs:
MS–DRG XXX (Coronary Bypass with
Cardiac Catheterization with MCC
with Intraoperative Angiography)
MS–DRG XXX (Coronary Bypass with
Cardiac Catheterization without MCC
with Intraoperative Angiography)
MS–DRG XXX (Coronary Bypass
without Cardiac Catheterization with
MCC with Intraoperative
Angiography)
MS–DRG XXX (Coronary Bypass
without Cardiac Catheterization
without MCC with Intraoperative
Angiography)
Using claims data from the FY 2009
MedPAR file, we examined cases
identified by procedure code 88.59 in
MS–DRGs 233, 234, 235, and 236. As
shown in the table below, for both MS–
DRGs 235 and 236, the cases utilizing
IFVA technology (code 88.59) have a
shorter length of stay and lower average
costs compared to all cases in MS–DRGs
235 and 236. There were a total of
10,281 cases in MS–DRG 235 with an
average length of stay of 10.61 days and
average costs of $34,639. There were
114 cases identified by procedure code
88.59 with an average length of stay of
10.38 days with average costs of
$28,238. In MS–DRG 236, there were a
total of 22,410 cases with an average
length of stay of 6.37 days and average
costs of $23,402; and there were 186
cases identified by procedure code
88.59 with an average length of stay of
6.54 days and average costs of $19,305.
Similar to the data reported last year,
the data for FY 2009 clearly demonstrate
that the IFVA cases (identified by
procedure code 88.59) are assigned
appropriately to MS–DRGs 235 and 236.
We also examined cases identified by
procedure code 88.59 in MS–DRGs 233
and 234. Likewise, in MS–DRGs 233
and 234 cases identified by code 88.59
reflect shorter lengths of stay and lower
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23901
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
average costs compared to the
remainder of the cases in those MS–
DRGs; and there were a total of 16,475
cases in MS–DRG 233 with an average
length of stay of 13.47 days and average
costs of $42,662. There were 58 cases
identified by procedure code 88.59 with
an average length of stay of 12.12 days
and average costs of $35,940. In MS–
DRG 234, there were a total of 23,478
cases with an average length of stay of
8.61 days and average costs of $29,615;
and there were 67 cases identified by
procedure code 88.59 with an average
Number
of cases
MS–DRG
235—All cases .............................................................................................................................
235—Cases with procedure code 88.59 .....................................................................................
235—Cases without procedure code 88.59 ................................................................................
236—All cases .............................................................................................................................
236—Cases with code procedure 88.59 .....................................................................................
236—Cases without procedure code 88.59 ................................................................................
233—All cases .............................................................................................................................
233—Cases with procedure code 88.59 .....................................................................................
233—Cases without procedure code 88.59 ................................................................................
234—All cases .............................................................................................................................
234—Cases with procedure code 88.59 .....................................................................................
234—Cases without procedure code 88.59 ................................................................................
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
b. New MS–DRG for Intraoperative
Angiography, by Any Method, With
CABG
We also received a request to create a
single MS–DRG for any type of
intraoperative angiography utilized in
CABG surgery. The requestor suggested
the following title for the proposed new
MS–DRG: XXX Coronary Bypass with
Intraoperative Angiography, by any
Method.
Currently, the only ICD–9–CM
procedure code that identifies an
intraoperative angiography is procedure
code 88.59 (Intraoperative fluorescence
vascular angiography), as described in
the previous section. Due to the
structure of the ICD–9–CM procedure
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
classification system, it is not possible
to distinguish when other types of
angiography are performed
intraoperatively. Therefore, we are
unable to evaluate any data, other than
that for procedure code 88.59, as shown
in the tables above. We are not
proposing to create a new MS–DRG in
FY 2011 for coronary bypass with
intraoperative angiography, by any
method.
c. New Procedure Codes
In response to our invitation to submit
public comments regarding the proposal
not to make any MS–DRG modifications
for cases reporting procedure code 88.59
in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
proposed rule (74 FR 24106–24107), one
requestor presented another option
involving the creation of new ICD–9–
CM procedure codes. According to the
requestor, the purpose of these new
codes would be to separately identify
the two technologies used to perform
intraoperative coronary angiography in
CABG surgery: X-ray coronary
angiography with cardiac
catheterization and fluoroscopy versus
intraoperative fluorescence coronary
angiography (IFVA). The requestor
stated that due to the structure of the
current codes and MS–DRGs for CABG,
it is difficult to identify when x-ray
angiography is performed.
X-ray angiography is commonly
performed as a separate procedure in a
catheterization laboratory. Currently,
there are no procedure codes to
PO 00000
10,281
114
10,167
22,410
186
22,224
Number
of cases
MS–DRG
If the cases identified by procedure
code 88.59 were proposed to be
reassigned from MS–DRGs 235 and 236
to MS–DRGs 233 and 234, they would
be significantly overpaid. In addition,
because the cases in MS–DRGs 235 and
236 did not actually have a cardiac
catheterization performed, a proposal to
reassign cases identified by procedure
code 88.59 would result in lowering the
relative weights of MS–DRGs 233 and
234 where a cardiac catheterization is
truly performed.
In summary, the data do not support
moving IFVA cases (procedure code
88.59) from MS–DRGs 235 and 236 to
MS–DRGs 233 and 234. Therefore, we
are not proposing to make any MS–DRG
modifications for cases reporting
procedure code 88.59 for FY 2011.
length of stay of 8.85 days and average
costs of $25,379. The data clearly
demonstrate the IFVA cases (identified
by procedure code 88.59) are
appropriately assigned to MS–DRGs 233
and 234.
Frm 00051
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
16,475
58
16,417
23,478
67
23,411
Average
length of
stay
10.61
10.38
10.62
6.37
6.54
6.37
Average
length of
stay
13.47
12.12
13.47
8.61
8.85
8.61
Average cost
$34,639
28,238
34,711
23,402
19,305
23,436
Average cost
$42,662
35,940
42,686
29,615
25,379
29,627
distinguish if this angiography was
performed preoperatively,
intraoperatively, and/or postoperatively.
We informed the requestor that they
could submit a proposal for creating a
new procedure code(s) to the ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee for its consideration.
Therefore, this topic will be further
evaluated through the ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee meeting process.
d. MS–DRG Reassignment of
Intraoperative Fluorescence Vascular
Angiography (IFVA)
One requestor suggested reassigning
procedure code 88.59 (Intraoperative
Fluorescence Vascular Angiography), to
the ‘‘Other Cardiovascular MS–DRGs:’’
MS–DRGs 228, 229, and 230 (Other
Cardiothoracic Procedures with MCC,
CC, and without CC/MCC, respectively).
The requestor noted that these
MS–DRGs have three levels of severity
and that other procedures assigned to
these MS–DRGs (for example,
transmyocardial revascularization) are
frequently performed at the same time
as a CABG. The requestor believed that
reassigning cases that report IFVA
(procedure code 88.59) to these
MS–DRGs would not result in a
significant overpayment to hospitals.
We point out that, in the surgical
hierarchy, MS–DRGs 228, 229, and 230
rank higher than MS–DRGs 233, 234,
235, and 236, which were evaluated in
the above tables for CABG procedures
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23902
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
performed with IFVA (procedure code
88.59). The surgical hierarchy reflects
the relative resource requirements of
various surgical procedures. For
example, if a CABG surgery were
performed along with another procedure
currently assigned to MS–DRGs 228,
229, and 230, the case would be
assigned to one of the ‘‘Other
Cardiothoracic Procedures MS–DRGs’’
(228, 229, and 230) because patients
with multiple procedures are assigned
to the highest surgical hierarchy to
which one of the procedures is assigned.
Therefore, as the data shown above
did not demonstrate that IFVA utilized
an equivalent (or additional) amount of
resources as a cardiac catheterization to
warrant a proposal to reassign IFVA
cases to MS–DRGs 233 and 234 and the
fact that IFVA cases with CABG
performed with a procedure assigned to
MS–DRGs 228, 229, and 230 would
already be grouped to those same
MS–DRGs, we are not proposing to
reassign cases reporting procedure code
88.59 to MS–DRGs 228, 229, and 230 for
FY 2011.
4. MDC 6 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Digestive System): Gastrointestinal
Stenting
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS final rule (74 FR43799), we
discussed a request we received to
create new MS–DRGs in FY 2011 to
better identify patients who undergo the
insertion of a gastrointestinal stent. The
request was considered outside the
scope of issues addressed in the FY
2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS proposed
rule; therefore, we stated our intent to
consider this request during the FY
2011 rulemaking process.
Gastrointestinal stenting is performed
by inserting a tube (stent) into the
esophagus, duodenum, biliary tract or
colon to reestablish or maintain patency
of these structures and allow
swallowing, drainage, or passage of
waste. The commenter requested that
the new MS–DRGs be subdivided into
three severity levels (with MCC, with
CC, and without CC/MCC) to better
align payment rates with resource
consumption and improve the clinical
coherence of these cases.
In its own analysis using FY 2008
MedPAR data, the commenter identified
gastrointestinal stenting cases using
relevant diagnosis codes and a
combination of procedure codes with
revenue code 0278 in MS–DRGs 374,
375, and 376 (Digestive Malignancy
with MCC, with CC, and without CC/
MCC, respectively), MS–DRGs 391and
392 (Esophagitis, Gastroenteritis and
Miscellaneous Digestive Disorders with
MCC and without MCC, respectively),
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
and MS–DRGs 393, 394, and 395 (Other
Digestive System Diagnoses with MCC,
with CC, and without CC/MCC,
respectively) in MDC 6 (Diseases and
Disorders of the Digestive System); and
MS–DRGs 435, 436, and 437
(Malignancy of Hepatobiliary System or
Pancreas with MCC, with CC, and
without CC/MCC, respectively) in MDC
7 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Hepatobiliary System and Pancreas).
As stated above, the commenter
utilized a combination of procedure
codes along with revenue code 0278 for
its analysis. There were a total of six
procedure codes included, of which,
only three (procedure codes 42.81,
51.87, and 52.93) actually describe the
insertion of a stent. The complete list of
procedure codes is as follows:
• 42.81 (Insertion of permanent tube
into esophagus)
• 45.13 (Other endoscopy of small
intestine)
• 45.22 (Endoscopy of large intestine
through artificial stoma)
• 46.85 (Dilation of intestine)
• 51.87 (Endoscopic insertion of stent
(tube) into bile duct)
• 52.93 (Endoscopic insertion of stent
(tube) into pancreatic duct)
The commenter aggregated the results
by the previously mentioned MS–DRG
groupings and did not present results
for individual stenting procedures.
According to the commenter, mean
standardized charges for gastrointestinal
stenting procedures were higher than
those for nonstenting procedures across
all levels of severity of illness. In
addition, the commenter believed that
the difference in charges was not simply
related to the costs of the stents, but
rather that the extent of the difference
in charges reflected the severity of
illness and resource intensity associated
with gastrointestinal stenting
procedures.
In response to the commenter’s
request, we point out that we do not
utilize revenue codes in our process to
evaluate if new MS–DRGs are
warranted. The use of revenue codes in
the MS–DRG reclassification process
would require a major structural change
from the current process that has been
utilized since the inception of the IPPS.
In addition, the commenter included
procedure codes in its analysis that do
not identify the insertion of a stent;
thereby, the data are unreliable.
Furthermore, two procedure codes
describing the insertion of a colonic
stent were recently implemented,
effective with discharges occurring on
or after October 1, 2009—procedure
code 46.86 (Endoscopic insertion of
colonic stent(s)) and procedure code
46.87 (Other insertion of colonic
PO 00000
Frm 00052
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
stent(s)). However, we do not have data
currently available on these two new
procedure codes to include them in a
comprehensive analysis. Lastly, as the
commenter indicated, the differences
between those procedures with and
without stents is a reflection on the
severity of illness and resource
consumption associated with these
types of procedures. The commenter
also acknowledged that patients
receiving a gastrointestinal stent who
are severely debilitated due to
prolonged illness are reflected by the
fact that the majority of cases are
assigned to MS–DRGs for patients with
MCCs (major complications or
comorbidities). Therefore, the medical
MS–DRGs to which these procedures
are currently assigned already account
for the severity of illness and intensity
of resources utilized.
Using FY 2009 MedPAR data, we
analyzed the three procedure codes that
truly identify and describe the insertion
of a stent (procedure codes 42.81, 51.87,
and 52.93) within the MS–DRGs
referenced above. Similar to the
commenter’s findings, our analysis
demonstrated a small volume of cases in
which insertion of a gastrointestinal
stent occurred in the specified MS–
DRGs. Of the 411,390 total cases across
the digestive system MS–DRGs the
requestor identified, there were only
2,011cases that involved the actual
insertion of a gastrointestinal stent.
These cases had average costs ranging
from a low of $5,846 to a high of
$17,626. Based on these findings, we do
not believe it is appropriate to assign
cases with such disparity in costs into
a single, new MS–DRG. Furthermore, in
applying the five criteria used to
establish new MS–DRGs, the data do not
support the creation of new MS–DRGs
with three severity levels (with MCC,
with CC, and without CC/MCC).
For the reasons stated above, we
invite the public to submit comments on
our proposal not to make any MS–DRG
modifications at this time to cases
involving the use of gastrointestinal
stents for FY 2011.
5. MDC 8 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Musculoskeletal System and Connective
Tissue): Pedicle-Based Dynamic
Stabilization
As we did for FY 2009 (73 FR 45820),
we received a request from a
manufacturer to reassign procedure
code 84.82 (Insertion or replacement of
pedicle-based dynamic stabilization
device(s)), effective October 1, 2007,
from MS–DRG 490 (Back and Neck
Procedures Except Spinal Fusion with
CC/MCC or Disc Device/
Neurostimulator) to MS–DRG 460
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
(Spinal Fusion Except Cervical without
MCC). According to the manufacturer,
the technology that is identified by this
procedure code, the Dynesys® Dynamic
Stabilization System, is clinically
similar to lumbar spinal fusion and
requires similar utilization of resources.
Dynamic stabilization is a concept
that utilizes a flexible system to stabilize
the spine without fusion. The primary
goals of dynamic stabilization are to
limit the amount of unnatural spinal
motion and preserve as much of the
patient’s natural anatomic structures as
possible. The Dynesys® Dynamic
Stabilization System is comprised of
three components with specific
functions: Titanium alloy pedicle
screws that anchor the system to the
spine; a polyethylene-terephthalate
(PET) cord that connects the Dynesys®
screws; and a polycarbonate-urethane
(PCU) spacer that runs over the cord
between the Dynesys® screws. The
system is placed under tension creating
a dynamic interaction between the
components.
The MS–DRGs are comprised of
clinically coherent groups of patients
who consume similar utilization of
resources and complexity of services.
The insertion of a Dynesys® Dynamic
Stabilization System is clinically not a
lumbar fusion. As stated previously,
dynamic stabilization is a concept that
utilizes a flexible system to stabilize the
spine without fusion. Therefore, it
would be clinically inappropriate to
reassign cases reporting procedure code
84.82 in the fusion MS–DRG.
In conclusion, the Dynesys® Dynamic
Stabilization System is currently FDA
approved for use only as an adjunct to
spinal fusion, there is uncertainty
regarding the coding and reporting of
procedure code 84.82, as well as offlabel use, and currently, all other
similar nonfusion devices are assigned
to MS–DRG 490.
For the reasons listed above, we are
not proposing to reassign cases
reporting procedure code 84.82 from
MS–DRG 490 to MS–DRG 460 for FY
2011.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
6. MDC 15 (Newborns and Other
Neonates With Conditions Originating
in the Perinatal Period)
a. Discharges/Transfers of Neonates to a
Designated Cancer Center or Children’s
Hospital
We received a request to add patient
discharge status code 05 (Discharged/
transferred to a designated cancer center
or children’s hospital) to the MS–DRG
GROUPER logic for MS–DRG 789
(Neonates, Died or Transferred to
Another Acute Care Facility). Currently,
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
neonate cases with the discharge status
code 05 are being assigned to MS–DRG
795 (Normal Newborn).
The definition of discharge status
code 05 was changed on April 1, 2008,
from ‘‘discharged/transferred to another
type of health care institution not
defined elsewhere in this code list’’ to
‘‘discharged/transferred to a designated
cancer center or children’s hospital.’’ We
examined cases in the FY 2009 MedPAR
file but did not find any cases with the
discharge status code 05 that were
assigned to either MS–DRG 789 or MS–
DRG 795. However, we believe that the
request has merit in identifying neonate
cases appropriately. Therefore, for FY
2011, we are proposing to add discharge
status code 05 to the MS–DRG
GROUPER logic for MS–DRG 789.
b. Vaccinations of Newborns
We received a request to examine the
assignment of code V64.05 (Vaccination
not carried out because of caregiver
refusal) to MS–DRG 794 (Neonate with
Other Significant Problems). Code
V64.05 is currently being reported when
a physician documents that a parent/
caregiver has refused immunization for
a child. The reporting of this code as a
principal or secondary diagnosis
impacts the MS–DRG assignment for
normal newborns cases being assigned
to MS–DRG 794.
We examined cases in the FY 2009
MedPAR file but did not find any cases
of code V64.05 assigned to MS–DRG
794. Our medical advisors agree that
code V64.05 should not be assigned to
MS–DRG 794. We determined that the
presence of code V64.05 does not
indicate that there is a significant
problem with the newborn and should
not be assigned to MS–DRG 794.
Therefore, we believe that assignment of
code V64.05 to MS–DRG 795 (Normal
Newborn) would be more appropriate
for this code because it does not identify
a significant problem.
The logic for MS–DRG 795 contains a
list of principal diagnosis codes for
normal newborn and no secondary
diagnosis or a list of only secondary
diagnosis codes. Therefore, in this
proposed rule, for FY 2011, we are
proposing to remove code V64.05 from
MS–DRG 794 and add this code to the
only secondary diagnosis list for MS–
DRG 795.
7. Medicare Code Editor (MCE) Changes
As explained under section II.B.1. of
the preamble of this proposed rule, the
Medicare Code Editor (MCE) is a
software program that detects and
reports errors in the coding of Medicare
claims data. Patient diagnoses,
procedure(s), and demographic
PO 00000
Frm 00053
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23903
information are entered into the
Medicare claims processing systems and
are subjected to a series of automated
screens. The MCE screens are designed
to identify cases that require further
review before classification into a MS–
DRG. For FY 2011, we intend to make
the following changes to the MCE edits
and invite public input on whether or
not we should do so:
a. Unacceptable Principal Diagnosis
Edit: Addition of Code for Gastroparesis
It has been brought to our attention
that code 536.3 (Gastroparesis) has a
‘‘code first underlying disease’’ note.
This note indicates that code 536.3
should not be used as a principal
diagnosis. Therefore, code 536.3 should
have been included on the list of
unacceptable principal diagnoses in the
MCE.
We agree that code 536.3 should have
been included on the list of
unacceptable principal diagnoses in the
MCE. Therefore, for FY 2011, we intend
to add code 536.3 to that list.
b. Open Biopsy Check Edit
The Open Biopsy Check edit in the
MCE dates back to the early years of the
IPPS when the surgical and medical
DRGs were not as expansive as they are
today. In the mid-1980s when the Open
Biopsy Check edit was created, the ICD–
9–CM codes did not have many biopsy
procedure codes that clearly showed the
approach, such as codes for open,
percutaneous, and closed biopsies.
Furthermore, under the current MS–
DRGs, the open biopsy codes do not
have as significant an impact as they did
in the early versions of the DRGs. We
believe that the Open Biopsy Check edit
no longer serves a useful purpose.
Therefore, for FY 2011, we intend to
delete the entire Open Biopsy Check
edit from the MCE, which means
removing the following 63 codes from
the edit:
• 01.11 (Closed [Percutaneous]
[Needle] biopsy of cerebral meninges)
• 01.12 (Open biopsy of cerebral
meninges)
• 01.13 (Closed [Percutaneous]
[Needle] biopsy of brain)
• 01.14 (Open biopsy of brain)
• 04.11 (Closed [Percutaneous]
[Needle] biopsy of cranial or peripheral
nerve or ganglion)
• 04.12 (Open biopsy of cranial or
peripheral nerve or ganglion)
• 06.11 (Closed [Percutaneous]
[Needle] biopsy of thyroid gland)
• 06.12 (Open biopsy of thyroid
gland)
• 07.11 (Closed [Percutaneous]
[Needle] biopsy of adrenal gland)
• 07.12 (Open biopsy of adrenal
gland)
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23904
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
• 22.11 (Closed [Endoscopic] [Needle]
biopsy of nasal sinus)
• 22.12 (Open biopsy of nasal sinus)
• 25.01 (Closed [Needle] biopsy of
tongue)
• 25.02 (Open biopsy of tongue)
• 26.11 (Closed [Needle] biopsy of
salivary gland or duct)
• 26.12 (Open biopsy of salivary
gland or duct)
• 31.43 (Closed [Endoscopic] biopsy
of larynx)
• 31.44 (Closed [Endoscopic] biopsy
of trachea)
• 31.45 (Open biopsy of larynx or
trachea)
• 33.24 (Closed [Endoscopic] biopsy
of bronchus)
• 33.25 (Open biopsy of bronchus)
• 33.26 (Closed [Percutaneous]
[Needle] biopsy of lung)
• 33.28 (Open biopsy of lung)
• 34.25 (Closed [Percutaneous]
[Needle] biopsy of mediastinum)
• 34.26 (Open mediastinal biopsy)
• 41.32 (Closed [Aspiration]
[Percutaneous] biopsy of spleen)
• 41.33 (Open biopsy of spleen)
• 42.24 (Closed [Endoscopic] biopsy
of esophagus)
• 42.25 (Open biopsy of esophagus)
• 44.14 (Closed [Endoscopic] biopsy
of stomach)
• 44.15 (Open biopsy of stomach)
• 45.14 (Closed [Endoscopic] biopsy
of small intestine)
• 45.15 (Open biopsy of small
intestine)
• 45.25 (Closed [Endoscopic] biopsy
of large intestine)
• 45.26 (Open biopsy of large
intestine)
• 48.24 (Closed [Endoscopic] biopsy
of rectum)
• 48.25 (Open biopsy of rectum)
• 50.11 (Closed (Percutaneous)
[Needle] biopsy of liver)
• 50.12 (Open biopsy of liver)
• 51.12 (Percutaneous biopsy of
gallbladder or bile ducts)
• 51.13 (Open biopsy of gallbladder
or bile ducts)
• 52.11 (Closed [Aspiration] [Needle]
[Percutaneous] biopsy of pancreas)
• 52.12 (Open biopsy of pancreas)
• 54.23 (Biopsy of peritoneum)
• 54.24 (Closed [Percutaneous]
[Needle] biopsy of intra-abdominal
mass)
• 55.23 (Closed [Percutaneous]
[Needle] biopsy of kidney)
• 55.24 (Open biopsy of kidney)
• 56.32 (Closed percutaneous biopsy
of ureter)
• 56.34 (Open biopsy of ureter)
• 57.33 (Closed [Transurethral]
biopsy of bladder)
• 57.34 (Open biopsy of bladder)
• 60.11 (Closed [Percutaneous]
[Needle] biopsy of prostate)
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
• 60.12 (Open biopsy of prostate)
• 60.13 (Closed [Percutaneous] biopsy
of seminal vesicles)
• 60.14 (Open biopsy of seminal
vesicles)
• 62.11 (Closed [Percutaneous]
[Needle] biopsy of testis)
• 62.12 (Open biopsy of testis)
• 68.13 (Open biopsy of uterus)
• 68.14 (Open biopsy of uterine
ligaments)
• 68.15 (Closed biopsy of uterine
ligaments)
• 68.16 (Closed biopsy of uterus)
• 85.11 (Closed [Percutaneous]
[Needle] biopsy of breast)
• 85.12 (Open biopsy of breast)
c. Noncovered Procedure Edit
The ICD–9–CM procedure codes 52.80
(Pancreatic transplant, not otherwise
specified) and 52.82 (Homotransplant of
pancreas) alone (that is, without
procedure code 55.69 (Other kidney
transplantation)) are considered
noncovered procedures, except when
either one is combined with at least one
specific principal or secondary
diagnosis code. These specific diagnosis
codes identify Type I diabetes mellitus,
not stated as uncontrolled, or else
identified as uncontrolled.
To conform to the proposed change to
Pre-MDC MS–DRGs 008 and 010 as
discussed in section II.G.1. of this
preamble, in which we are proposing to
add code 251.3 (Postsurgical
hypoinsulinemia) to those MS–DRGs,
we intend to add procedure code 251.3
to the list of acceptable principal or
secondary diagnosis codes in the MCE.
8. Surgical Hierarchies
Some inpatient stays entail multiple
surgical procedures, each one of which,
occurring by itself, could result in
assignment of the case to a different
MS–DRG within the MDC to which the
principal diagnosis is assigned.
Therefore, it is necessary to have a
decision rule within the GROUPER by
which these cases are assigned to a
single MS–DRG. The surgical hierarchy,
an ordering of surgical classes from
most resource-intensive to least
resource-intensive, performs that
function. Application of this hierarchy
ensures that cases involving multiple
surgical procedures are assigned to the
MS–DRG associated with the most
resource-intensive surgical class.
Because the relative resource intensity
of surgical classes can shift as a function
of MS–DRG reclassification and
recalibrations, we reviewed the surgical
hierarchy of each MDC, as we have for
previous reclassifications and
recalibrations, to determine if the
ordering of classes coincides with the
intensity of resource utilization.
PO 00000
Frm 00054
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
A surgical class can be composed of
one or more MS–DRGs. For example, in
MDC 11, the surgical class ‘‘kidney
transplant’’ consists of a single MS–DRG
(MS–DRG 652) and the class ‘‘major
bladder procedures’’ consists of three
MS–DRGs (MS–DRGs 653, 654, and
655). Consequently, in many cases, the
surgical hierarchy has an impact on
more than one MS–DRG. The
methodology for determining the most
resource-intensive surgical class
involves weighting the average
resources for each MS–DRG by
frequency to determine the weighted
average resources for each surgical class.
For example, assume surgical class A
includes MS–DRGs 1 and 2 and surgical
class B includes MS–DRGs 3, 4, and 5.
Assume also that the average costs of
MS–DRG 1 is higher than that of MS–
DRG 3, but the average costs of MS–
DRGs 4 and 5 are higher than the
average costs of MS–DRG 2. To
determine whether surgical class A
should be higher or lower than surgical
class B in the surgical hierarchy, we
would weigh the average costs of each
MS–DRG in the class by frequency (that
is, by the number of cases in the MS–
DRG) to determine average resource
consumption for the surgical class. The
surgical classes would then be ordered
from the class with the highest average
resource utilization to that with the
lowest, with the exception of ‘‘other O.R.
procedures’’ as discussed below.
This methodology may occasionally
result in assignment of a case involving
multiple procedures to the lowerweighted MS–DRG (in the highest, most
resource-intensive surgical class) of the
available alternatives. However, given
that the logic underlying the surgical
hierarchy provides that the GROUPER
search for the procedure in the most
resource-intensive surgical class, in
cases involving multiple procedures,
this result is sometimes unavoidable.
We note that, notwithstanding the
foregoing discussion, there are a few
instances when a surgical class with a
lower average cost is ordered above a
surgical class with a higher average cost.
For example, the ‘‘other O.R.
procedures’’ surgical class is uniformly
ordered last in the surgical hierarchy of
each MDC in which it occurs, regardless
of the fact that the average costs for the
MS–DRG or MS–DRGs in that surgical
class may be higher than those for other
surgical classes in the MDC. The ‘‘other
O.R. procedures’’ class is a group of
procedures that are only infrequently
related to the diagnoses in the MDC, but
are still occasionally performed on
patients in the MDC with these
diagnoses. Therefore, assignment to
these surgical classes should only occur
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
if no other surgical class more closely
related to the diagnoses in the MDC is
appropriate.
A second example occurs when the
difference between the average costs for
two surgical classes is very small. We
have found that small differences
generally do not warrant reordering of
the hierarchy because, as a result of
reassigning cases on the basis of the
hierarchy change, the average costs are
likely to shift such that the higherordered surgical class has a lower
average costs than the class ordered
below it.
Based on the changes that we are
proposing for FY 2011, as discussed in
section II.C.2 of this preamble, we are
proposing to revise the surgical
hierarchy for Pre-MDCs and MDC 10
(Endocrine, Nutritional and Metabolic
Diseases and Disorders) to reflect the
resource intensiveness of the MS–DRGs,
as follows:
In Pre-MDCs, we are proposing to
reorder proposed new MS–DRG 014
(Allogeneic Bone Marrow Transplant)
above MS–DRG 007 (Lung Transplant);
and proposed new MS–DRG 015
(Autologous Bone Marrow Transplant)
above MS–DRG 010 (Pancreas
Transplant).
In MDC 10, we are proposing to
reorder MS–DRG 614 (Adrenal and
Pituitary Procedures With CC/MCC) and
MS–DRG 615 (Adrenal and Pituitary
Procedures Without CC/MCC) above
MS–DRG 625 (Thyroid, Parathyroid and
Thyroglossal Procedures With MCC).
9. Complications or Comorbidity (CC)
Exclusions List
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
a. Background
As indicated earlier in the preamble
of this proposed rule, under the IPPS
MS–DRG classification system, we have
developed a standard list of diagnoses
that are considered CCs. Historically, we
developed this list using physician
panels that classified each diagnosis
code based on whether the diagnosis,
when present as a secondary condition,
would be considered a substantial
complication or comorbidity. A
substantial complication or comorbidity
was defined as a condition that, because
of its presence with a specific principal
diagnosis, would cause an increase in
the length of stay by at least 1 day in
at least 75 percent of the patients. We
refer readers to section II.D.2. and 3. of
the preamble of the FY 2008 IPPS final
rule with comment period for a
discussion of the refinement of CCs in
relation to the MS–DRGs we adopted for
FY 2008 (72 FR 47121 through 47152).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
b. Proposed CC Exclusions List for FY
2011
In the September 1, 1987 final notice
(52 FR 33143) concerning changes to the
DRG classification system, we modified
the GROUPER logic so that certain
diagnoses included on the standard list
of CCs would not be considered valid
CCs in combination with a particular
principal diagnosis. We created the CC
Exclusions List for the following
reasons: (1) To preclude coding of CCs
for closely related conditions; (2) to
preclude duplicative or inconsistent
coding from being treated as CCs; and
(3) to ensure that cases are appropriately
classified between the complicated and
uncomplicated DRGs in a pair. As we
indicated above, we developed a list of
diagnoses, using physician panels, to
include those diagnoses that, when
present as a secondary condition, would
be considered a substantial
complication or comorbidity. In
previous years, we have made changes
to the list of CCs, either by adding new
CCs or deleting CCs already on the list.
In the May 19, 1987 proposed notice
(52 FR 18877) and the September 1,
1987 final notice (52 FR 33154), we
explained that the excluded secondary
diagnoses were established using the
following five principles:
• Chronic and acute manifestations of
the same condition should not be
considered CCs for one another.
• Specific and nonspecific (that is,
not otherwise specified (NOS))
diagnosis codes for the same condition
should not be considered CCs for one
another.
• Codes for the same condition that
cannot coexist, such as partial/total,
unilateral/bilateral, obstructed/
unobstructed, and benign/malignant,
should not be considered CCs for one
another.
• Codes for the same condition in
anatomically proximal sites should not
be considered CCs for one another.
• Closely related conditions should
not be considered CCs for one another.
The creation of the CC Exclusions List
was a major project involving hundreds
of codes. We have continued to review
the remaining CCs to identify additional
exclusions and to remove diagnoses
from the master list that have been
shown not to meet the definition of a
CC.2
2 See the FY 1989 final rule (53 FR 38485,
September 30, 1988), for the revision made for the
discharges occurring in FY 1989; the FY 1990 final
rule (54 FR 36552, September 1, 1989), for the FY
1990 revision; the FY 1991 final rule (55 FR 36126,
September 4, 1990), for the FY 1991 revision; the
FY 1992 final rule (56 FR 43209, August 30, 1991)
for the FY 1992 revision; the FY 1993 final rule (57
FR 39753, September 1, 1992), for the FY 1993
PO 00000
Frm 00055
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23905
(1) Proposed Limited Revisions Based
on Changes to the ICD–9–CM Diagnosis
Codes
For FY 2011, we are proposing to
make limited revisions to the CC
Exclusions List for FY 2011 to take into
account the changes made in the ICD–
9–CM diagnosis coding system effective
October 1, 2009. (We refer readers to
section II.G.11. of the preamble of this
proposed rule for a discussion of ICD–
9–CM changes.) We are proposing to
make these changes in accordance with
the principles established when we
created the CC Exclusions List in 1987.
In addition, we are indicating on the CC
Exclusions List some changes as a result
of updates to the ICD–9–CM codes to
reflect the exclusion of codes from being
MCCs under the MS–DRG system that
we adopted in FY 2008.
(2) Suggested Changes to Severity Levels
for Obesity-Related and Major Osseous
Defect Diagnosis Codes
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS final rule (74 FR 43793 through
43794), we indicated that several
commenters on the FY 2010 IPPS
proposed rule recommended that CMS
consider making further adjustments to
the MS–DRG assignments based on
obesity and major osseous defects. The
commenters stated that obesity, high
Body Mass Index (BMI) ratings, and
major osseous defects add to the
complexity of care for patients such as
those patients undergoing orthopedic
procedures. The commenters
recommended the following changes to
the list of MCCs and CCs:
Several commenters recommended
that CMS add the following diagnosis
codes, which are classified as non-CCs,
to the CC or MCC list:
revision; the FY 1994 final rule (58 FR 46278,
September 1, 1993), for the FY 1994 revisions; the
FY 1995 final rule (59 FR 45334, September 1,
1994), for the FY 1995 revisions; the FY 1996 final
rule (60 FR 45782, September 1, 1995), for the FY
1996 revisions; the FY 1997 final rule (61 FR 46171,
August 30, 1996), for the FY 1997 revisions; the FY
1998 final rule (62 FR 45966, August 29, 1997) for
the FY 1998 revisions; the FY 1999 final rule (63
FR 40954, July 31, 1998), for the FY 1999 revisions;
the FY 2001 final rule (65 FR 47064, August 1,
2000), for the FY 2001 revisions; the FY 2002 final
rule (66 FR 39851, August 1, 2001), for the FY 2002
revisions; the FY 2003 final rule (67 FR 49998,
August 1, 2002), for the FY 2003 revisions; the FY
2004 final rule (68 FR 45364, August 1, 2003), for
the FY 2004 revisions; the FY 2005 final rule (69
FR 49848, August 11, 2004), for the FY 2005
revisions; the FY 2006 final rule (70 FR 47640,
August 12, 2005), for the FY 2006 revisions; the FY
2007 final rule (71 FR 47870) for the FY 2007
revisions; the FY 2008 final rule (72 FR 47130) for
the FY 2008 revisions, the FY 2009 final rule (73
FR 48510), and the FY 2010 final rule (74 FR
43799). In the FY 2000 final rule (64 FR 41490, July
30, 1999, we did not modify the CC Exclusions List
because we did not make any changes to the ICD–
9–CM codes for FY 2000.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23906
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
• 731.3 (Major osseous defects)
• V85.35 (Body mass index 35.0–35.9,
adult)
• V85.36 (Body mass index 36.0–36.9,
adult)
• V85.37 (Body mass index 37.0–37.9,
adult)
• V85.38 (Body mass index 38.0–38.9,
adult)
• V85.39 (Body mass index 39.0–39.9,
adult)
Several commenters recommended
that CMS add the following diagnosis
code, which is on the CC list, to the
MCC list:
• V85.40 (Body mass index 40 and
over, adult)
We stated that we believed these
comments were outside the scope of the
proposal in the proposed rule. We did
not propose significant revisions to the
MS–DRGs in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010
LTCH PPS proposed rule (74 FR 24091)
for these codes. We stated that we were
Code
Diagnosis
encouraging individuals with comments
about MS–DRG classifications to submit
these comments no later than early
December of each year so they can be
carefully considered for possible
inclusion in the annual proposed rule
and, if included, may be subjected to
public review and comment. Therefore,
we did not add these codes to the MCC
list or the CC list for FY 2010. We stated
that we would consider their
appropriateness for inclusion in next
year’s annual proposed rule.
In addition to the diagnosis codes
mentioned above, we also have received
requests that we consider changing the
following diagnosis codes from a nonCC to a CC:
• 278.00 (Obesity NOS)
• 278.01 (Morbid obesity)
• 278.02 (Overweight)
We analyzed claims data for the
diagnosis codes mentioned above
Cnt1
Count (Cnt) is the number of patients
in each subset. C1, C2, and C3 are a
measure of the impact on resource use
of patients in each of the subsets. The
C1, C2, and C3 values are a measure of
the ratio of average costs for patients
with these conditions to the expected
average cost across all cases. The C1
value reflects a patient with no other
secondary diagnosis or with all other
secondary diagnoses that are non-CCs.
The C2 value reflects a patient with at
C1
278.00 ....................
278.01 ....................
278.02 ....................
731.3 ......................
V85.35 ....................
V85.36 ....................
V85.37 ....................
V85.38 ....................
V85.39 ....................
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Diagnosis
Obesity NOS ........................................................
Morbid obesity .....................................................
Overweight ...........................................................
Major osseous defects ........................................
BMI 35.0–35.9, adult ...........................................
BMI 36.0–36.9, adult ...........................................
BMI 37.0–37.9, adult ...........................................
BMI 38.0–38.9, adult ...........................................
BMI 39.0–39.9, adult ...........................................
V85.4 ......................
BMI 40 and over, adult ........................................
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
C3
to consume resources more similar to an
MCC than a CC or non-CC. For
additional details on this analysis, we
refer readers to the FY 2008 IPPS final
rule at 72 FR 47158 through 47161.
The following chart shows the
analysis for each of the obesity related
and major osseous defect diagnosis
codes that are currently classified as
non-CCs.
C1
Cnt2
C2
Cnt3
C3
130,310
51,832
5,242
215
2,621
2,359
2,305
2,152
2,253
1.0755
1.2619
0.9948
1.3833
0.9759
0.9729
0.9849
0.9713
0.9857
116,304
106,169
3,594
575
1,480
1,298
1,271
1,231
1,141
1.7234
1.9630
1.7042
2.3390
1.6932
1.6536
1.7225
1.5964
1.7741
45,565
52,398
1,033
186
499
466
473
432
445
2.3843
2.6787
2.3471
2.7627
2.3664
2.3107
2.4032
2.2743
2.4919
Therefore, for FY 2011, we are not
proposing to change the CC
classification of any of the diagnosis
codes mentioned in the chart above
from a non-CC to a CC. Our clinical
advisors agree with this
recommendation.
Diagnosis
22:11 May 03, 2010
Cnt3
Cnt1
Code
VerDate Mar<15>2010
C2
least one other secondary diagnosis that
is a CC but none that is a MCC. The C3
value reflects a patient with at least one
other secondary diagnosis that is a MCC.
A value close to 1.0 in the C1 field
would suggest that the diagnosis code
produces the same expected value as a
non-CC. A value close to 2.0 suggests
the condition is more like a CC than a
non-CC but not as significant in
resource usage as an MCC. A value close
to 3.0 suggests the condition is expected
Code
The C1 findings do not support a
reclassification of any of these diagnosis
codes from a non-CC to a CC. As can be
seen by the C1 findings, the codes range
from a low of 0.9729 for code V85.35 to
a high of 1.3833 for diagnosis code
731.3. These findings are consistent
with a classification as a non-CC.
Cnt2
related to obesity and major osseous
defects. We used the same approach we
used in initially creating the MS–DRGs
and classifying secondary diagnosis
codes as non-CCs, CCs, or MCC. A
detailed discussion of the process and
criteria we used in this process is
described in the FY 2008 IPPS final rule
(72 FR 47158 through 47161). We refer
the readers to this discussion for
complete information on our approach
to developing the non-CC, CC, and MCC
lists. Each diagnosis for which Medicare
data were available was evaluated to
determine its impact on resource use
and to determine the most appropriate
CC subclass (non-CC, CC, or MCC)
assignment. In order to make this
determination, the average cost for each
subset of cases was compared to the
expected cost for cases in that subset.
The following format was used to
evaluate each diagnosis:
We also examined claims data for
diagnosis code V85.4 (Body mass index
40 and over, adult), which is classified
as a CC. We received a request to
reclassify this code as a MCC. The
following chart summaries our findings
for this diagnosis code:
Cnt1
Frm 00056
Fmt 4701
C1
Cnt2
C2
Cnt3
C3
51,871
1.2323
59,941
2.1711
57,220
3.0465
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23907
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
We note that the C1 finding of 1.2323
does not support a reclassification of
this diagnosis code from a CC to a MCC.
This finding is much more consistent
with classifying the code as a non-CC.
Our clinical advisors recommended that
CMS not reclassify this diagnosis code
from a CC to a non-CC at this time. They
recommended that CMS analyze data
associated with this diagnosis code
again in the future to determine if it
continues to act like a non-CC. We are
not recommending any change in the
severity classification of diagnosis code
V85.4. We are proposing to retain it as
a CC for FY 2011.
We welcome public comments on our
proposal not to change the severity
levels of the diagnosis codes mentioned
above.
Code
Diagnosis
331.0 ......................
Alzheimer’s disease .............................................
The C1 finding of 1.1381 for
Alzheimer’s disease supports the
current classification of this diagnosis
code as a non-CC. Our clinical advisors
agree with this classification. Therefore,
we are not proposing to change the
severity classification of diagnosis code
331.0 from a non-CC to a CC for FY
2011. We believe the code is
appropriately classified as a non-CC.
(4) Proposed Change to the Severity
Level for Acute Renal Failure,
Unspecified Diagnosis Code
We received a request to reclassify
diagnosis code 584.9 (Acute renal
failure, unspecified) from a MCC to a
CC. The commenter stated that this code
is being widely used to capture degrees
of renal failure that range from that
which is caused by mild dehydration
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
584.9 ...............
Acute kidney failure, unspecified ................................
22:11 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
C1
Cnt2
C2
Cnt3
C3
83,743
1.1381
114,445
1.8890
77,841
2.4185
with only minor laboratory
abnormalities all the way through severe
renal failure that requires dialysis. The
commenter pointed out that there are no
clinical criteria for assigning diagnosis
code 584.9 (Acute renal failure,
unspecified). The attending physician
must simply document the presence of
acute renal failure for the diagnosis code
to be assigned. The concern is that the
diagnosis code for Acute renal failure,
unspecified (diagnosis code 584.9) is
being assigned to patients with a low
clinical severity level.
We also point out that the Editorial
Advisory Board of Coding Clinic for
ICD–9–CM has received a number of
requests to clarify the use of diagnosis
code 584.9. Coders are observing the
terminology of ‘‘acute renal failure’’
being applied to patients who are
Diagnosis
VerDate Mar<15>2010
simply dehydrated. These patients do
not require renal dialysis, and they do
not appear to be severely ill. Coders
have stated that there appears to be an
increase in the use of the terminology of
acute renal failure for patients who were
previously referred to as acute renal
insufficiency. When acute renal
insufficiency is documented, the ICD–
9–CM index directs the use of code
593.9 (Unspecified disorder of kidney
and ureter). Diagnosis code 593.9
includes acute renal insufficiency and is
classified as a non-CC. The problem is
further compounded by the fact that
there is no consistent convention among
clinicians for documenting acute renal
insufficiency versus acute renal failure.
We examined claims data on
diagnosis code 584.9, and our findings
are shown in the table below:
Cnt1
C1
Cnt2
C2
Cnt3
C3
124,428
1.8364
411,667
2.6151
417,359
3.2429
Instead, we are making them available
through the Internet on the CMS Web
site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS. Each of these
principal diagnoses for which there is a
CC exclusion is shown in Tables 6G and
6H in the Addendum to this proposed
rule with an asterisk, and the conditions
that will not count as a CC, are provided
in an indented column immediately
following the affected principal
diagnosis.
A complete updated MCC, CC, and
Non-CC Exclusions List is also available
through the Internet on the CMS Web
site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS. Beginning with
discharges on or after October 1, 2010,
PO 00000
We received a request to change the
severity classification for diagnosis code
331.0 (Alzheimer’s disease). Currently,
this diagnosis code is classified as a
non-CC. We analyzed claims data for
this diagnosis code. The following chart
shows our findings:
Cnt1
Code
The C1 finding of 1.8364 is more
consistent with a classification of a CC.
Our clinical advisors agreed that cases
captured by diagnosis code 584.9 are
more appropriately classified as a CC.
This unspecified type of kidney failure
is clearly not capturing patients with a
MCC severity level. Therefore, we are
proposing to change the severity level
for diagnosis code 584.9 from a MCC to
a CC for FY 2011.
Tables 6G and 6H, Additions to and
Deletions from the CC Exclusion List,
respectively, which are effective for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2010, are not being published in the
Addendum to this proposed rule
because of the length of the two tables.
(3) Suggested Change to the Severity
Level for Alzheimer’s Disease Diagnosis
Code
Frm 00057
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
the indented diagnoses will not be
recognized by the GROUPER as valid
CCs for the asterisked principal
diagnosis.
To assist readers in identifying the
changes to the MCC and CC lists that
occurred as a result of updates to the
ICD–9–CM codes, as described in Tables
6A, 6C, and 6E of the Addendum to this
proposed rule, we are providing the
following summaries of those MCC and
CC changes.
There were no additions to the MS–
DRG MCC List for FY 2011 (Table 6I.1).
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.013
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
BILLING CODE 4120–10–C
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00058
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.012
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23908
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Alternatively, the complete
documentation of the GROUPER logic,
including the current CC Exclusions
List, is available from 3M/Health
Information Systems (HIS), which,
under contract with CMS, is responsible
for updating and maintaining the
GROUPER program. The current MS–
DRG Definitions Manual, Version 27.0,
is available for $250.00, which includes
shipping and handling. Version 27.0 of
the manual is also available on a CD for
$200.00; a combination hard copy and
CD is available for $400.00. Version 28.0
of this manual, which will include the
final FY 2011 MS–DRG changes, will be
available on CD only for $225.00. These
manuals may be obtained by writing
3M/HIS at the following address: 100
Barnes Road, Wallingford, CT 06492; or
by calling (203) 949–0303, or by
obtaining an order form at the Web site:
https://www.3MHIS.com. Please specify
the revision or revisions requested.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
10. Review of Procedure Codes in MS
DRGs 981 Through 983; 984 Through
986; and 987 Through 989
Each year, we review cases assigned
to former CMS DRG 468 (Extensive O.R.
Procedure Unrelated to Principal
Diagnosis), CMS DRG 476 (Prostatic
O.R. Procedure Unrelated to Principal
Diagnosis), and CMS DRG 477
(Nonextensive O.R. Procedure Unrelated
to Principal Diagnosis) to determine
whether it would be appropriate to
change the procedures assigned among
these CMS DRGs. Under the MS–DRGs
that we adopted for FY 2008, CMS DRG
468 was split three ways and became
MS–DRGs 981, 982, and 983 (Extensive
O.R. Procedure Unrelated to Principal
Diagnosis with MCC, with CC, and
without CC/MCC, respectively). CMS
DRG 476 became MS–DRGs 984, 985,
and 986 (Prostatic O.R. Procedure
Unrelated to Principal Diagnosis with
MCC, with CC, and without CC/MCC,
respectively). CMS DRG 477 became
MS–DRGs 987, 988, and 989
(Nonextensive O.R. Procedure Unrelated
to Principal Diagnosis with MCC, with
CC, and without CC/MCC, respectively).
MS–DRGs 981 through 983, 984
through 986, and 987 through 989
(formerly CMS DRGs 468, 476, and 477,
respectively) are reserved for those cases
in which none of the O.R. procedures
performed are related to the principal
diagnosis. These MS–DRGs are intended
to capture atypical cases, that is, those
cases not occurring with sufficient
frequency to represent a distinct,
recognizable clinical group. MS–DRGs
984 through 986 (previously CMS DRG
476) are assigned to those discharges in
which one or more of the following
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
prostatic procedures are performed and
are unrelated to the principal diagnosis:
• 60.0, Incision of prostate
• 60.12, Open biopsy of prostate
• 60.15, Biopsy of periprostatic tissue
• 60.18, Other diagnostic procedures
on prostate and periprostatic tissue
• 60.21, Transurethral prostatectomy
• 60.29, Other transurethral
prostatectomy
• 60.61, Local excision of lesion of
prostate
• 60.69, Prostatectomy, not elsewhere
classified
• 60.81, Incision of periprostatic
tissue
• 60.82, Excision of periprostatic
tissue
• 60.93, Repair of prostate
• 60.94, Control of (postoperative)
hemorrhage of prostate
• 60.95, Transurethral balloon
dilation of the prostatic urethra
• 60.96, Transurethral destruction of
prostate tissue by microwave
thermotherapy
• 60.97, Other transurethral
destruction of prostate tissue by other
thermotherapy
• 60.99, Other operations on prostate
All remaining O.R. procedures are
assigned to MS–DRGs 981 through 983
and 987 through 989, with MS–DRGs
987 through 989 assigned to those
discharges in which the only procedures
performed are nonextensive procedures
that are unrelated to the principal
diagnosis.3
Our review of MedPAR claims data
showed that there were 59 cases in
3 The original list of the ICD–9–CM procedure
codes for the procedures we consider nonextensive
procedures, if performed with an unrelated
principal diagnosis, was published in Table 6C in
section IV. of the Addendum to the FY 1989 final
rule (53 FR 38591). As part of the FY 1991 final rule
(55 FR 36135), the FY 1992 final rule (56 FR 43212),
the FY 1993 final rule (57 FR 23625), the FY 1994
final rule (58 FR 46279), the FY 1995 final rule (59
FR 45336), the FY 1996 final rule (60 FR 45783),
the FY 1997 final rule (61 FR 46173), and the FY
1998 final rule (62 FR 45981), we moved several
other procedures from DRG 468 to DRG 477, and
some procedures from DRG 477 to DRG 468. No
procedures were moved in FY 1999, as noted in the
final rule (63 FR 40962); in FY 2000 (64 FR 41496);
in FY 2001 (65 FR 47064); or in FY 2002 (66 FR
39852). In the FY 2003 final rule (67 FR 49999) we
did not move any procedures from DRG 477.
However, we did move procedure codes from DRG
468 and placed them in more clinically coherent
DRGs. In the FY 2004 final rule (68 FR 45365), we
moved several procedures from DRG 468 to DRGs
476 and 477 because the procedures are
nonextensive. In the FY 2005 final rule (69 FR
48950), we moved one procedure from DRG 468 to
477. In addition, we added several existing
procedures to DRGs 476 and 477. In the FY 2006
(70 FR 47317), we moved one procedure from DRG
468 and assigned it to DRG 477. In FY 2007, we
moved one procedure from DRG 468 and assigned
it to DRGs 479, 553, and 554. In FYs 2008, 2009,
and FY 2010, no procedures were moved, as noted
in the FY 2008 final rule with comment period (72
FR 46241), the FY 2009 final rule (73 FR 48513),
and the FY 2010 final rule (74 FR 43796).
PO 00000
Frm 00059
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23909
which procedures related to the prostate
were arrayed across 10 different MDCs.
None of the 59 cases were cases that
should logically be assigned to any of
the other MDCs. For example, there
were a total of 16 cases of other
transurethral prostate surgery that
occurred in MDC 5 (Diseases and
Disorders of the Circulatory System). In
addition, none of the cases had lengths
of stay or average charges that would
indicate that these cases were anything
other than some of the expected
irregularities of medical care. Therefore,
for FY 2011, we are not proposing to
change the procedures assigned among
these MS–DRGs.
a. Moving Procedure Codes From MS–
DRGs 981 Through 983 or MS–DRGs
987 Through 989 Into MDCs
We annually conduct a review of
procedures producing assignment to
MS–DRGs 981 through 983 (Extensive
O.R. procedure unrelated to principal
diagnosis with MCC, with CC, and
without CC/MCC, respectively) or MS–
DRGs 987 through 989 (Nonextensive
O.R. procedure unrelated to principal
diagnosis with MCC, with CC, and
without CC/MCC, respectively) on the
basis of volume, by procedure, to see if
it would be appropriate to move
procedure codes out of these MS–DRGs
into one of the surgical MS–DRGs for
the MDC into which the principal
diagnosis falls. The data are arrayed in
two ways for comparison purposes. We
look at a frequency count of each major
operative procedure code. We also
compare procedures across MDCs by
volume of procedure codes within each
MDC.
We identify those procedures
occurring in conjunction with certain
principal diagnoses with sufficient
frequency to justify adding them to one
of the surgical MS–DRGs for the MDC in
which the diagnosis falls. Our review of
claims data showed that there were
4,443 cases in MS–DRGs 981 through
983. These 4,443 cases were arrayed
across 18 MDCs. The single most
common procedure was code 00.66
(Percutaneous transluminal coronary
angioplasty [PTCA] of coronary
atherectomy), 21 cases, located in MDC
1 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Nervous System). These cases represent
a very small volume of cases that are
unlikely to indicate medical practice
trends. In addition, from a clinical
coherence standpoint, we do not believe
it benefits the GROUPER system to add
cardiac procedures to the nervous
system MDC. The same situation was
evident in MS–DRGs 987 through 989.
There were a total of 1,601 cases across
17 MDCs and, again, the cases did not
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23910
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
represent clinically coherent examples
of medical care that warranted
movement of procedure codes into
additional MS–DRGs. Examples of cases
that we reviewed included six cases of
bone biopsies in MDC 21 (Injuries,
Poisonings and Toxic Effects of Drugs)
and one case of a destruction of a lesion
of the knee in MDC 13 (Diseases and
Disorders of the Female Reproductive
System). Again, the volume of these
cases is negligible, and clinical
coherence is not demonstrated to the
degree that a change in the MS–DRGs is
warranted. Therefore, for FY 2011, we
are not proposing to remove any
procedures from MS–DRGs 981 through
983 or MS–DRGs 987 through 989 into
one of the surgical MS–DRGs for the
MDC into which the principal diagnosis
is assigned.
b. Reassignment of Procedures Among
MS–DRGs 981 Through 983, 984
Through 986, and 987 Through 989
We also annually review the list of
ICD–9–CM procedures that, when in
combination with their principal
diagnosis code, result in assignment to
MS–DRGs 981 through 983, 984 through
986 (Prostatic O.R. procedure unrelated
to principal diagnosis with MCC, with
CC, or without CC/MCC, respectively),
and 987 through 989, to ascertain
whether any of those procedures should
be reassigned from one of these three
MS–DRGs to another of the three MS–
DRGs based on average charges and the
length of stay. We look at the data for
trends such as shifts in treatment
practice or reporting practice that would
make the resulting MS–DRG assignment
illogical. If we find these shifts, we
would propose to move cases to keep
the MS–DRGs clinically similar or to
provide payment for the cases in a
similar manner. Generally, we move
only those procedures for which we
have an adequate number of discharges
to analyze the data.
To reiterate, our review of claims data
showed that 18 MDCs were represented
in MS–DRGs 981 through 983, for a total
of 4,443 cases. There were 10 MDCs
represented in MS–DRGs 984 through
986, which contained 59 cases. In
addition, our review of claims data for
MS–DRGs 987 through 989 showed
1,601 cases across 17 MDCs. However,
these cases represent such disparate
situations as one case of a large bowel
incision assigned to MDC 1 (Diseases
and Disorders of the Nervous System)
and one case of a revision of the femoral
component of a hip replacement
assigned to MDC 3 (Diseases and
Disorders of the Ear, Nose, Mouth, and
Throat). We do not believe that any of
these cases represent shifts in either
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
treatment practice or reporting practice.
As these types of cases do not represent
clinical coherence, we do not believe
that the addition of these procedure
codes identified in our review would
positively benefit the overall MS–DRG
logic. Therefore, for FY 2011, we are not
proposing to move any procedure codes
among these MS–DRGs.
c. Adding Diagnosis or Procedure Codes
to MDCs
Based on the review of cases in the
MDCs as described above in sections
G.10.a. and b., we are not proposing to
add any diagnosis or procedure codes to
MDCs for FY 2011.
11. Changes to the ICD–9–CM Coding
System, Including Discussion of the
Replacement of the ICD–9–CM Coding
System With the ICD–10–CM and ICD–
10–PCS Systems in FY 2014
a. ICD–9–CM Coding System
As described in section II.B.1. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, the ICD–
9–CM is a coding system currently used
for the reporting of diagnoses and
procedures performed on a patient. In
September 1985, the ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee was formed. This is a
Federal interdepartmental committee,
co-chaired by the National Center for
Health Statistics (NCHS), the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, and
CMS, charged with maintaining and
updating the ICD–9–CM system. The
Committee is jointly responsible for
approving coding changes, and
developing errata, addenda, and other
modifications to the ICD–9–CM to
reflect newly developed procedures and
technologies and newly identified
diseases. The Committee is also
responsible for promoting the use of
Federal and non-Federal educational
programs and other communication
techniques with a view toward
standardizing coding applications and
upgrading the quality of the
classification system.
The Official Version of the ICD–9–CM
contains the list of valid diagnosis and
procedure codes. (The Official Version
of the ICD–9–CM is available from the
Government Printing Office on CD–
ROM for $19.00 by calling (202) 512–
1800.) Complete information on
ordering the CD–ROM is also available
at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
ICD9ProviderDiagnosticCodes/
05_CDROM.asp#TopOfPage. The
Official Version of the ICD–9–CM is no
longer available in printed manual form
from the Federal Government; it is only
available on CD–ROM. Users who need
a paper version are referred to one of the
PO 00000
Frm 00060
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
many products available from
publishing houses.
The NCHS has lead responsibility for
the ICD–9–CM diagnosis codes included
in the Tabular List and Alphabetic
Index for Diseases, while CMS has lead
responsibility for the ICD–9–CM
procedure codes included in the
Tabular List and Alphabetic Index for
Procedures.
The Committee encourages
participation in the above process by
health-related organizations. In this
regard, the Committee holds public
meetings for discussion of educational
issues and proposed coding changes.
These meetings provide an opportunity
for representatives of recognized
organizations in the coding field, such
as the American Health Information
Management Association (AHIMA), the
American Hospital Association (AHA),
and various physician specialty groups,
as well as individual physicians, health
information management professionals,
and other members of the public, to
contribute ideas on coding matters.
After considering the opinions
expressed at the public meetings and in
writing, the Committee formulates
recommendations, which then must be
approved by the agencies.
The Committee presented proposals
for coding changes for implementation
in FY 2011 at a public meeting held on
September 16–17, 2009 and finalized
the coding changes after consideration
of comments received at the meetings
and in writing by November 20, 2009.
Those coding changes are announced in
Tables 6A through 6F in the Addendum
to this proposed rule. The Committee
held its 2010 meeting on March 9–10,
2010. New codes for which there was a
consensus of public support and for
which complete tabular and indexing
changes are made by May 2010 will be
included in the October 1, 2010 update
to ICD–9–CM. Code revisions that were
discussed at the March 9–10, 2010
Committee meeting but that could not
be finalized in time to include them in
the Addendum to this proposed rule
will be included in Tables 6A through
6F of the final rule and will be marked
with an asterisk (*).
Copies of the minutes of the
procedure codes discussions at the
Committee’s September 16–17, 2009
meeting and March 9–10, 2010 meeting
can be obtained from the CMS Web site
at: https://cms.hhs.gov/
ICD9ProviderDiagnosticCodes/
03_meetings.asp. The minutes of the
diagnosis codes discussions at the
September 16–17, 2009 meeting and
March 9–10, 2010 meeting are found at:
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/icd.htm.
These Web sites also provide detailed
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
information about the Committee,
including information on requesting a
new code, attending a Committee
meeting, and timeline requirements and
meeting dates.
We encourage commenters to address
suggestions on coding issues involving
diagnosis codes to: Donna Pickett, CoChairperson, ICD–9–CM Coordination
and Maintenance Committee, NCHS,
Room 2402, 3311 Toledo Road,
Hyattsville, MD 20782. Comments may
be sent by e-mail to: dfp4@cdc.gov.
Questions and comments concerning
the procedure codes should be
addressed to: Patricia E. Brooks, CoChairperson, ICD–9–CM Coordination
and Maintenance Committee, CMS,
Center for Medicare Management,
Hospital and Ambulatory Policy Group,
Division of Acute Care, C4–08–06, 7500
Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21244–1850. Comments may be sent by
e-mail to:
patricia.brooks2@cms.hhs.gov.
The ICD–9–CM code changes that
have been approved will become
effective October 1, 2010. The new ICD–
9–CM codes are listed, along with their
MS–DRG classifications, in Tables 6A
and 6B (New Diagnosis Codes and New
Procedure Codes, respectively) in the
Addendum to this proposed rule. As we
stated above, the code numbers and
their titles were presented for public
comment at the ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee meetings. Both oral and
written comments were considered
before the codes were approved.
In this proposed rule, we are
soliciting comments on the proposed
classification of these new codes, which
are shown in Tables 6A and 6B of the
Addendum to this proposed rule.
For codes that have been replaced by
new or expanded codes, the
corresponding new or expanded
diagnosis codes are included in Table
6A in the Addendum to this proposed
rule. New procedure codes are shown in
Table 6B in the Addendum to this
proposed rule. Diagnosis codes that
have been replaced by expanded codes
or other codes or have been deleted are
in Table 6C (Invalid Diagnosis Codes) in
the Addendum to this proposed rule.
These invalid diagnosis codes will not
be recognized by the GROUPER
beginning with discharges occurring on
or after October 1, 2010. Table 6D in the
Addendum to this proposed rule
contains invalid procedure codes. These
invalid procedure codes will not be
recognized by the GROUPER beginning
with discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 2010. Revisions to diagnosis
code titles are in Table 6E (Revised
Diagnosis Code Titles) in the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Addendum to this proposed rule, which
also includes the MS–DRG assignments
for these revised codes. Table 6F in the
Addendum to this proposed rule
includes revised procedure code titles
for FY 2011.
In the September 7, 2001 final rule
implementing the IPPS new technology
add-on payments (66 FR 46906), we
indicated we would attempt to include
proposals for procedure codes that
would describe new technology
discussed and approved at the Spring
meeting as part of the code revisions
effective the following October. As
stated previously, ICD–9–CM codes
discussed at the March 9–10, 2010
Committee meeting that receive
consensus and that are finalized by May
2010 will be included in Tables 6A
through 6F in the Addendum to the
final rule.
Section 503(a) of Public Law 108–173
included a requirement for updating
ICD–9–CM codes twice a year instead of
a single update on October 1 of each
year. This requirement was included as
part of the amendments to the Act
relating to recognition of new
technology under the IPPS. Section
503(a) amended section 1886(d)(5)(K) of
the Act by adding a clause (vii) which
states that the ‘‘Secretary shall provide
for the addition of new diagnosis and
procedure codes on April 1 of each year,
but the addition of such codes shall not
require the Secretary to adjust the
payment (or diagnosis-related group
classification) * * * until the fiscal
year that begins after such date.’’ This
requirement improves the recognition of
new technologies under the IPPS system
by providing information on these new
technologies at an earlier date. Data will
be available 6 months earlier than
would be possible with updates
occurring only once a year on October
1.
While section 1886(d)(5)(K)(vii) of the
Act states that the addition of new
diagnosis and procedure codes on April
1 of each year shall not require the
Secretary to adjust the payment, or DRG
classification, under section 1886(d) of
the Act until the fiscal year that begins
after such date, we have to update the
DRG software and other systems in
order to recognize and accept the new
codes. We also publicize the code
changes and the need for a mid-year
systems update by providers to identify
the new codes. Hospitals also have to
obtain the new code books and encoder
updates, and make other system changes
in order to identify and report the new
codes.
The ICD–9–CM Coordination and
Maintenance Committee holds its
meetings in the spring and fall in order
PO 00000
Frm 00061
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23911
to update the codes and the applicable
payment and reporting systems by
October 1 of each year. Items are placed
on the agenda for the ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee meeting if the request is
received at least 2 months prior to the
meeting. This requirement allows time
for staff to review and research the
coding issues and prepare material for
discussion at the meeting. It also allows
time for the topic to be publicized in
meeting announcements in the Federal
Register as well as on the CMS Web site.
The public decides whether or not to
attend the meeting based on the topics
listed on the agenda. Final decisions on
code title revisions are currently made
by March 1 so that these titles can be
included in the IPPS proposed rule. A
complete addendum describing details
of all changes to ICD–9–CM, both
tabular and index, is published on the
CMS and NCHS Web sites in May of
each year. Publishers of coding books
and software use this information to
modify their products that are used by
health care providers. This 5-month
time period has proved to be necessary
for hospitals and other providers to
update their systems.
A discussion of this timeline and the
need for changes are included in the
December 4–5, 2005 ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee minutes. The public agreed
that there was a need to hold the fall
meetings earlier, in September or
October, in order to meet the new
implementation dates. The public
provided comment that additional time
would be needed to update hospital
systems and obtain new code books and
coding software. There was considerable
concern expressed about the impact this
new April update would have on
providers.
In the FY 2005 IPPS final rule, we
implemented section 1886(d)(5)(K)(vii)
of the Act, as added by section 503(a)
of Public Law 108–173, by developing a
mechanism for approving, in time for
the April update, diagnosis and
procedure code revisions needed to
describe new technologies and medical
services for purposes of the new
technology add-on payment process. We
also established the following process
for making these determinations. Topics
considered during the Fall ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee meeting are considered for
an April 1 update if a strong and
convincing case is made by the
requester at the Committee’s public
meeting. The request must identify the
reason why a new code is needed in
April for purposes of the new
technology process. The participants at
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23912
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
the meeting and those reviewing the
Committee meeting summary report are
provided the opportunity to comment
on this expedited request. All other
topics are considered for the October 1
update. Participants at the Committee
meeting are encouraged to comment on
all such requests. There were no
requests approved for an expedited
April 1, 2010 implementation of an
ICD–9–CM code at the September 16–
17, 2009 Committee meeting. Therefore,
there were no new ICD–9–CM codes
implemented on April 1, 2010.
Current addendum and code title
information is published on the CMS
Web site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
icd9ProviderDiagnosticCodes/
01_overview.asp#TopofPage.
Information on ICD–9–CM diagnosis
codes, along with the Official ICD–9–
CM Coding Guidelines, can be found on
the Web site at: https://www.cdc.gov/
nchs/icd9.htm. Information on new,
revised, and deleted ICD–9–CM codes is
also provided to the AHA for
publication in the Coding Clinic for
ICD–9–CM. AHA also distributes
information to publishers and software
vendors.
CMS also sends copies of all ICD–9–
CM coding changes to its Medicare
contractors for use in updating their
systems and providing education to
providers.
These same means of disseminating
information on new, revised, and
deleted ICD–9–CM codes will be used to
notify providers, publishers, software
vendors, contractors, and others of any
changes to the ICD–9–CM codes that are
implemented in April. The code titles
are adopted as part of the ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee process. Thus, although we
publish the code titles in the IPPS
proposed and final rules, they are not
subject to comment in the proposed or
final rules. We will continue to publish
the October code updates in this manner
within the IPPS proposed and final
rules. For codes that are implemented in
April, we will assign the new procedure
code to the same MS–DRG in which its
predecessor code was assigned so there
will be no MS–DRG impact as far as
MS–DRG assignment. Any midyear
coding updates will be available
through the Web sites indicated above
and through the Coding Clinic for ICD–
9–CM. Publishers and software vendors
currently obtain code changes through
these sources in order to update their
code books and software systems. We
will strive to have the April 1 updates
available through these Web sites 5
months prior to implementation (that is,
early November of the previous year), as
is the case for the October 1 updates.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
b. Code Freeze
The International Classification of
Diseases, 10th Revision (ICD–10) coding
system applicable to hospital inpatient
services will be implemented on
October 1, 2013, as described in the
Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (HIPAA)
Administrative Simplification:
Modifications to Medical Data code Set
Standards to Adopt ICD–10–CM and
ICD–10–PCS final rule (74 FR 3328
through 3362, January 16, 2009). The
ICD–10 coding system includes the
International Classification of Diseases,
10th Revision, Clinical Modification
(ICD–10–CM) for diagnosis coding and
the International Classification of
Diseases, 10th Revision, Procedure
Coding System (ICD–10–PCS) for
inpatient hospital procedure coding, as
well as the Official ICD–10–CM and
ICM–10–PCS Guidelines for Coding and
Reporting. In the January 16, 2009 ICD–
10–CM and ICD–10–PCS final rule (74
FR 3328 through 3362), there was a
discussion of the need for a partial or
total freeze in the annual updates to
both ICD–9–CM and ICD–10–CM and
ICD–10–PCS codes. The public
comment addressed in this final rule
stated that the annual code set updates
should cease l year prior to the
implementation of ICD–10. The
commenters stated that this freeze of
code updates would allow for
instructional and/or coding software
programs to be designed and purchased
early, without concern that an upgrade
would take place immediately before
the compliance date, necessitating
additional updates and purchases.
We responded to comments in the
ICD–10 final rule that the ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee has jurisdiction over any
action impacting the ICD–9–CM and
ICD–10 code sets. Therefore, the issue of
consideration of a moratorium on
updates to the ICD–9–CM, ICD–10–CM,
and ICD–10–PCS code sets in
anticipation of the adoption of ICD–10–
CM and ICD–10–PCS would be
addressed through the Committee at a
future public meeting.
At the March 11–12, 2009 ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee meeting, the public was
notified that there would be a
discussion of whether there was a need
to freeze updates to ICD–9–CM and/or
ICD–10–CM and ICD–10–PCS prior to
the implementation of ICD–10. The
audience was asked to consider this
issue and be prepared to discuss the
topic at the September 16–17, 2009
ICD–9–CM Coordination and
Maintenance Committee meeting.
PO 00000
Frm 00062
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Advance written comments on this
topic were welcomed. The first part of
the meeting was devoted to this topic.
CMS received comments in advance
of the meeting. CMS staff summarized
these advanced comments at the
meeting as follows:
No ICD–9–CM or ICD–10–CM/PCS
updates beginning October 1, 2010 (36
months for implementation activities
without annual code updates). This
approach involves updating ICD–9–CM
and ICD–10 codes on October 1, 2010,
and not updating them again until after
ICD–10 implementation on October 1,
2013. The commenters mentioned the
extensive work needed to prepare for
the transition to ICD–10 which will
affect vendors, payers, providers,
trainers, clearinghouses, and all claims
handling organizations. The
commenters stated that the 36 months
between the last ICD–9–CM and ICD–10
updates on October 1, 2010 and the
implementation of ICD–10 on October 1,
2013, were necessary to prepare and
train for the transition.
No ICD–9–CM or ICD–10–CM/PCS
updates beginning October 1, 2011 (24
months for implementation activities
without annual code updates). This
approach involves updating ICD–9–CM
and ICD–10 codes on October 1, 2011,
and not updating them again until after
ICD–10 implementation on October 1,
2013. The commenters raised similar
concerns to those mentioned above. The
commenters stated that, if codes
continue to change, the changes would
make it difficult for vendors, payers,
and providers to be ready and for coder
training to be successful. One
commenter suggested that a provision
be developed to perform limited annual
updates to capture new technologies or
new diagnoses.
No ICD–10–CM/PCS updates
beginning October 1, 2012 but continue
annual updates to ICD–9–CM. This
commenter supported annual updates to
ICD–9–CM to capture advances in
medical science. However, the
commenter supported a freeze of ICD–
10 beginning October 1, 2012, to give
the industry time to update systems and
prepare for ICD–10 implementation.
No ICD–10 updates on October 1,
2012, but update ICD–9–CM without
interruption. (No period for
implementation activities without
annual code updates.) The commenter
recommended no ICD–10 updates on
October 1, 2012, but then updating ICD–
10 again on October 1, 2013. The
commenter recommended updating
ICD–9–CM continuously through a final
update on October 1, 2012. The
commenter stated that having a two or
three year gap between updating the
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
code books would lead to a loss of data.
The commenter stated that there is a
need to retain the ability to update the
code books to capture conditions such
as Swine flu.
Update both ICD–9–CM and ICD–10–
CM/PCS annually through October 1,
2013 (no period for implementation
activities without annual code updates).
The commenter stated that codes should
not be frozen prior to the
implementation of ICD–10. The
commenter stated that freezing the
updates would inhibit the recognition of
new technologies.
Many of the commenters suggested a
resumption of updates to ICD–10–CM
and ICD–10–PCS beginning on October
1, 2014. However, one commenter
suggested annual updates of ICD–10–
CM and ICD–10–PCS without
interruptions, including on October 1,
2013.
The topic was then opened for public
discussion at the Committee meeting.
CMS received a variety of comments
from the participants that mirrored the
advance written comments. These
comments ranged from those supporting
a complete freeze for both coding
systems to those who recommended that
both coding systems continue to be
updated annually prior to ICD–10
implementation. There were also many
comments that supported a more
limited update process beginning on
October 1, 2011, or October 1, 2012,
which would allow only a small number
of new codes to capture new
technologies or new diseases. A number
of commenters pointed out that section
503(a) of Public Law 108–173 included
a requirement for updating ICD–9–CM
codes twice a year to capture new
technologies. The commenters stated
that CMS must make a provision to
capture new technologies despite any
requests to freeze code updates.
Commenters voiced concerns about
the impact on vendors creating new
ICD–10 products when both ICD–9–CM
and ICD–10–CM and ICD–10–PCS codes
were extensively updated on an annual
basis. Commenters stated that vendors
and educators were reluctant to begin
ICD–10 products and training materials
until there was a period of stability
without extensive annual updates. Some
commenters stated that it was important
for physician offices to have time to
prepare for the implementation of ICD–
10. Reducing the annual ICD–9–CM and
ICD–10 annual updates would be
helpful to physician offices.
Other commenters stated that it was
important to update codes annually so
that information on new diseases and
technologies can be captured. These
commenters stated that vendors,
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
providers, system maintainers, and
coders were used to annual code
updates, and that they should continue.
One commenter requested that ICD–
10–CM codes be frozen on October 1,
2011 so that ICD–10–CM codes could be
coordinated with the Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
(DSM), Fifth Edition. The commenter
stated that the American Psychiatric
Association plans to publish the fifth
edition in 2012. Updates to ICD–10–CM
on or after October 1, 2011, would
disrupt those plans.
One commenter suggested an
approach that would greatly reduce the
number of updates and provide more
stability in the coding systems during
the implementation period. This
commenter suggested that the large,
regular code updates on ICD–9–CM be
discontinued beginning on October 1,
2011, or October 1, 2012. The
commenter suggested that CMS and
CDC raise the bar for new code requests
at that time and only consider requests
for new codes that clearly describe a
new technology or a new disease. The
commenter stated that this may lead to
the creation of some new procedure
codes which do not ultimately receive
FDA approval, as is the case now.
CMS and CDC have carefully
reviewed the comments received at the
ICD–9–CM Coordination and
Maintenance Committee meeting as well
as the written comments submitted.
Most commenters proposed a limited
freeze on code updates to both ICD–9–
CM and ICD–10–CM and ICD–10–PCS
code sets, with an exception made for
adding codes for new technologies and
diseases. Providing this exception
would comply with section 503(a) of
Public Law 108–173, which, as
previously stated, includes a
requirement for updating ICD–9–CM
codes twice a year to capture new
technologies. There was support for
making the last regular update on
October 1, 2011. The commenters
recommended that the ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee continue to discuss any new
code updates for both coding systems.
However, new codes would only be
added to ICD–9–CM or ICD–10 to
capture new technologies, as required
by section 503(a) of Public Law 108–
173. Other coding issues raised would
be held for consideration after ICD–10 is
implemented.
In this proposed rule, we are
soliciting additional input on this
subject, especially in light of the
requirements on hospitals for
meaningful use of electronic health
records. We welcome public comments
that explore whether a freeze is needed
PO 00000
Frm 00063
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23913
to help with adoption of health IT, given
other priorities such as achievement of
meaningful use and implementation of
ICD–10 by FY 2013. We welcome input
on having the last regular, annual
update to both ICD–9–CM and ICD–10
be made on October 1, 2011. On October
1, 2012, there would be only limited
code updates to both the ICD–9–CM and
ICD–10 coding systems to capture new
technologies and diseases. On October
1, 2013, there would be only limited
code updates to ICD–10 to capture new
technologies and diagnoses. Any other
issues raised would be considered for
implementation in ICD 10 on October 1,
2014, a year after ICD–10 is
implemented. We agree with
commenters that there is a need to
provide the provider, payer, and vendor
community time to prepare for the
implementation of ICD–10 and the
accompanying system and product
updates. The vendor community is
especially interested in providing a
more stable code set for ICD–10 while
they are developing new products.
We believe that this advance notice of
a partial code freeze would provide the
health care industry ample time to
request last major code updates to ICD–
9–CM and ICD–10, which could be
discussed at the September 15–16, 2010
and the March 2011 ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee meeting. Codes discussed at
these two meetings would be considered
for the final major code updates on
October 1, 2011. Any code issues raised
after that time would be addressed at
the ICD–9–CM Coordination and
Maintenance Committee meetings in
September 2011 through March 2013 to
determine if they represented new
technologies or new diseases. Any new
technologies and diseases would be
added during the regular annual
updates. Other code requests would be
held for implementation on October 1,
2014.
We welcome additional input on
having the last regular code updates to
ICD–9–CM and ICD–10 on October 1,
2011, and to only add codes for new
technologies and diseases on October 1,
2012 and 2013. We also welcome
additional input on having the next
regular update to ICD–10 occur again on
October 1, 2014.
Information on ICD–10 can be found
on the CMS Web site at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/ICD10. The final
ICD–10 version of MS–DRGs would be
adopted under the formal rulemaking
process as part of our annual IPPS
updates.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23914
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
c. Processing of 25 Diagnosis Codes and
25 Procedure Codes on Hospital
Inpatient Claims
We have received repeated requests
from the hospital community to process
all 25 diagnosis codes and 25 procedure
codes submitted on electronic hospital
inpatient claims. Hospitals can submit
up to 25 diagnoses and 25 procedures;
however, CMS’ current system
limitations allow for the processing of
only the first 9 diagnoses and 6
procedures. While CMS accepts all 25
diagnoses and 25 procedures submitted
on the claims, we do not process all of
the codes because of these system
limitations. We recognize that much
valuable information is lost by not
processing the additional diagnosis and
procedure codes that are reported by
hospitals.
We responded to hospitals’ requests
that we process up to 25 diagnosis codes
and 25 procedure codes in the FY 2010
IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74
FR 43798). In that final rule, we referred
readers to the ICD–10 final rule (74 FR
3328 through 3362) where we discuss
the updating of Medicare systems prior
to the implementation of ICD–10 on
October 1, 2013. We mentioned that part
of the system updates in preparation for
ICD–10 is the ‘‘expansion of our ability
to process more diagnosis and
procedure codes.’’ In the FY 2009 IPPS
final rule (73 FR 48433 through 48444),
we also responded to multiple requests
to increase the number of codes
processed from 9 diagnosis and 6
procedure codes to 25 diagnosis and 25
procedure codes.
CMS is currently undergoing
extensive system updates as part of the
move to 5010, which includes the
ability to accept ICD–10 codes. This
complicated transition involves
converting many internal systems prior
to October 1, 2013, when ICD–10 will be
implemented. One important step in
this planned conversion process is the
expansion of our ability to process
additional diagnosis and procedure
codes. We are currently planning to
complete the expansion of this internal
system capability so that we are able to
process up to 25 diagnoses and 25
procedures on hospital inpatient claims
as part of the HIPPA ASC X12 Technical
Reports Type 3, Version 005010
(Version 5010) standards system update.
CMS will be able to process up to 25
diagnosis codes and 25 procedure codes
when received on the 5010 format
starting on January 1, 2011. We
recognize the value of the additional
information provided by this coded data
for multiple uses such as for payment,
quality measures, outcome analysis, and
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
other important uses. We will continue
to pursue this additional processing
capacity as aggressively as possible in
response to the multiple requests from
the hospital industry. We appreciate the
support of the health care community
for this extensive system update process
that will allow us to process more of
this important data. Therefore, for
claims submitted on the 5010 format
beginning January 1, 2011, we will
increase the capacity to process
diagnosis and procedure codes on
hospital inpatient claims from the
current 9 diagnoses and 6 procedures up
to 25 diagnoses and 25 procedures.
H. Recalibration of MS–DRG Weights
In developing the proposed FY 2011
system of weights, we used two data
sources: Claims data and cost report
data. As in previous years, the claims
data source is the MedPAR file. This file
is based on fully coded diagnostic and
procedure data for all Medicare
inpatient hospital bills. The FY 2009
MedPAR data used in this proposed rule
include discharges occurring on October
1, 2008, through September 30, 2009,
based on bills received by CMS through
December 31, 2009, from all hospitals
subject to the IPPS and short-term, acute
care hospitals in Maryland (which are
under a waiver from the IPPS under
section 1814(b)(3) of the Act). The FY
2009 MedPAR file used in calculating
the proposed relative weights includes
data for approximately 11,004,046
Medicare discharges from IPPS
providers. Discharges for Medicare
beneficiaries enrolled in a Medicare
Advantage managed care plan are
excluded from this analysis. The data
exclude CAHs, including hospitals that
subsequently became CAHs after the
period from which the data were taken.
The second data source used in the costbased relative weighting methodology is
the FY 2008 Medicare cost report data
files from HCRIS (that is, cost reports
beginning on or after October 1, 2007,
and before October 1, 2008), which
represents the most recent full set of
cost report data available. We used the
December 31, 2009 update of the HCRIS
cost report files for FY 2008 in setting
the relative cost-based weights.
The methodology we used to calculate
the DRG cost-based relative weights
from the FY 2009 MedPAR claims data
and FY 2008 Medicare cost report data
is as follows:
• To the extent possible, all the
claims were regrouped using the
proposed FY 2011 MS–DRG
classifications discussed in sections II.B.
and G. of the preamble of this proposed
rule.
PO 00000
Frm 00064
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
• The transplant cases that were used
to establish the relative weights for heart
and heart-lung, liver and/or intestinal,
and lung transplants (MS–DRGs 001,
002, 005, 006, and 007, respectively)
were limited to those Medicareapproved transplant centers that have
cases in the FY 2009 MedPAR file.
(Medicare coverage for heart, heart-lung,
liver and/or intestinal, and lung
transplants is limited to those facilities
that have received approval from CMS
as transplant centers.)
• Organ acquisition costs for kidney,
heart, heart-lung, liver, lung, pancreas,
and intestinal (or multivisceral organs)
transplants continue to be paid on a
reasonable cost basis. Because these
acquisition costs are paid separately
from the prospective payment rate, it is
necessary to subtract the acquisition
charges from the total charges on each
transplant bill that showed acquisition
charges before computing the average
cost for each MS–DRG and before
eliminating statistical outliers.
• Claims with total charges or total
lengths of stay less than or equal to zero
were deleted. Claims that had an
amount in the total charge field that
differed by more than $10.00 from the
sum of the routine day charges,
intensive care charges, pharmacy
charges, special equipment charges,
therapy services charges, operating
room charges, cardiology charges,
laboratory charges, radiology charges,
other service charges, labor and delivery
charges, inhalation therapy charges,
emergency room charges, blood charges,
and anesthesia charges were also
deleted.
• At least 96.1 percent of the
providers in the MedPAR file had
charges for 10 of the 15 cost centers.
Claims for providers that did not have
charges greater than zero for at least 10
of the 15 cost centers were deleted.
• Statistical outliers were eliminated
by removing all cases that were beyond
3.0 standard deviations from the mean
of the log distribution of both the total
charges per case and the total charges
per day for each MS–DRG.
• Effective October 1, 2008, because
hospital inpatient claims include a POA
indicator field for each diagnosis
present on the claim, only for purposes
of relative weight-setting, the POA
indicator field was reset to ‘‘Y’’ for ‘‘Yes’’
for all claims that otherwise have an ‘‘N’’
(No) or a ‘‘U’’ (documentation
insufficient to determine if the
condition was present at the time of
inpatient admission) in the POA field.
Under current payment policy, the
presence of specific HAC codes, as
indicated by the POA field values, can
generate a lower payment for the claim.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Specifically, if the particular condition
is present on admission (that is, a ‘‘Y’’
indicator is associated with the
diagnosis on the claim), then it is not a
HAC, and the hospital is paid for the
higher severity (and, therefore, the
higher weighted MS–DRG). If the
particular condition is not present on
admission (that is, an ‘‘N’’ indicator is
associated with the diagnosis on the
claim) and there are no other
complicating conditions, the DRG
GROUPER assigns the claim to a lower
severity (and, therefore, the lower
weighted MS–DRG) as a penalty for
allowing a Medicare inpatient to
contract a HAC. While the POA
reporting meets policy goals of
encouraging quality care and generates
program savings, it presents an issue for
the relative weight-setting process.
Because cases identified as HACs are
likely to be more complex than similar
cases that are not identified as HACs,
the charges associated with HACs are
likely to be higher as well. Thus, if the
higher charges of these HAC claims are
grouped into lower severity MS–DRGs
prior to the relative weight-setting
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
process, the relative weights of these
particular MS–DRGs would become
artificially inflated, potentially skewing
the relative weights. In addition, we
want to protect the integrity of the
budget neutrality process by ensuring
that, in estimating payments, no
increase to the standardized amount
occurs as a result of lower overall
payments in a previous year that stem
from using weights and case-mix that
are based on lower severity MS–DRG
assignments. If this would occur, the
anticipated cost savings from the HAC
policy would be lost.
To avoid these problems, we reset the
POA indicator field to ‘‘Y’’ only for
relative weight-setting purposes for all
claims that otherwise have a ‘‘N’’ or an
‘‘U’’ in the POA field. This resetting
‘‘forced’’ the more costly HAC claims
into the higher severity MS–DRGs as
appropriate, and the relative weights
calculated for each MS–DRG more
closely reflect the true costs of those
cases.
Once the MedPAR data were trimmed
and the statistical outliers were
removed, the charges for each of the 15
PO 00000
Frm 00065
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23915
cost groups for each claim were
standardized to remove the effects of
differences in area wage levels, IME and
DSH payments, and for hospitals in
Alaska and Hawaii, the applicable costof-living adjustment. Because hospital
charges include charges for both
operating and capital costs, we
standardized total charges to remove the
effects of differences in geographic
adjustment factors, cost-of-living
adjustments, and DSH payments under
the capital IPPS as well. Charges were
then summed by MS–DRG for each of
the 15 cost groups so that each MS–DRG
had 15 standardized charge totals. These
charges were then adjusted to cost by
applying the national average CCRs
developed from the FY 2008 cost report
data.
The 15 cost centers that we used in
the relative weight calculation are
shown in the following table. The table
shows the lines on the cost report and
the corresponding revenue codes that
we used to create the 15 national cost
center CCRs.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00066
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.014
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23916
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00067
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23917
EP04MY10.015
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00068
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.016
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23918
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00069
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23919
EP04MY10.017
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00070
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.018
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23920
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00071
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23921
EP04MY10.019
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
23922
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
We developed the national average
CCRs as follows:
Taking the FY 2008 cost report data,
we removed CAHs, Indian Health
Service hospitals, all-inclusive rate
hospitals, and cost reports that
represented time periods of less than 1
year (365 days). We included hospitals
located in Maryland as we are including
their charges in our claims database. We
then created CCRs for each provider for
each cost center (see prior table for line
items used in the calculations) and
removed any CCRs that were greater
than 10 or less than 0.01. We
normalized the departmental CCRs by
dividing the CCR for each department
by the total CCR for the hospital for the
purpose of trimming the data. We then
took the logs of the normalized cost
center CCRs and removed any cost
center CCRs where the log of the cost
center CCR was greater or less than the
mean log plus/minus 3 times the
standard deviation for the log of that
cost center CCR. Once the cost report
data were trimmed, we calculated a
Medicare-specific CCR. The Medicarespecific CCR was determined by taking
the Medicare charges for each line item
from Worksheet D–4 and deriving the
Medicare-specific costs by applying the
hospital-specific departmental CCRs to
the Medicare-specific charges for each
line item from Worksheet D–4. Once
each hospital’s Medicare-specific costs
were established, we summed the total
Medicare-specific costs and divided by
the sum of the total Medicare-specific
charges to produce national average,
charge-weighted CCRs.
After we multiplied the total charges
for each MS–DRG in each of the 15 cost
centers by the corresponding national
average CCR, we summed the 15 ‘‘costs’’
across each MS–DRG to produce a total
standardized cost for the MS–DRG. The
average standardized cost for each MS–
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
DRG was then computed as the total
standardized cost for the MS–DRG
divided by the transfer-adjusted case
count for the MS–DRG. The average cost
for each MS–DRG was then divided by
the national average standardized cost
per case to determine the relative
weight.
The new cost-based relative weights
were then normalized by an adjustment
factor of 1.57461 so that the average case
weight after recalibration was equal to
the average case weight before
recalibration. The normalization
adjustment is intended to ensure that
recalibration by itself neither increases
nor decreases total payments under the
IPPS, as required by section
1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act.
The 15 proposed national average
CCRs for FY 2011 are as follows:
Group
CCR
Routine Days ................................
Intensive Days ..............................
Drugs ............................................
Supplies & Equipment ..................
Therapy Services .........................
Laboratory ....................................
Operating Room ...........................
Cardiology ....................................
Radiology ......................................
Emergency Room .........................
Blood and Blood Products ...........
Other Services ..............................
Labor & Delivery ...........................
Inhalation Therapy ........................
Anesthesia ....................................
0.553
0.480
0.200
0.348
0.415
0.163
0.282
0.181
0.161
0.278
0.424
0.426
0.462
0.201
0.136
Since FY 2009, the relative weights
have been based on 100 percent cost
weights based on our MS–DRG grouping
system.
When we recalibrated the DRG
weights for previous years, we set a
threshold of 10 cases as the minimum
number of cases required to compute a
reasonable weight. In this FY 2011
proposed rule, we are proposing to use
that same case threshold in recalibrating
PO 00000
Frm 00072
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
the MS–DRG weights for FY 2011. Using
the FY 2009 MedPAR data set, there are
8 MS–DRGs that contain fewer than 10
cases. Under the MS–DRGs, we have
fewer low-volume DRGs than under the
CMS DRGs because we no longer have
separate DRGs for patients age 0 to 17
years. With the exception of newborns,
we previously separated some DRGs
based on whether the patient was age 0
to 17 years or age 17 years and older.
Other than the age split, cases grouping
to these DRGs are identical. The DRGs
for patients age 0 to 17 years generally
have very low volumes because children
are typically ineligible for Medicare. In
the past, we have found that the low
volume of cases for the pediatric DRGs
could lead to significant year-to-year
instability in their relative weights.
Although we have always encouraged
non-Medicare payers to develop weights
applicable to their own patient
populations, we have heard frequent
complaints from providers about the use
of the Medicare relative weights in the
pediatric population. We believe that
eliminating this age split in the MS–
DRGs will provide more stable payment
for pediatric cases by determining their
payment using adult cases that are
much higher in total volume. Newborns
are unique and require separate MS–
DRGs that are not mirrored in the adult
population. Therefore, it remains
necessary to retain separate MS–DRGs
for newborns. All of the low-volume
MS–DRGs listed below are for
newborns. In FY 2011, because we do
not have sufficient MedPAR data to set
accurate and stable cost weights for
these low-volume MS–DRGs, we are
proposing to compute weights for the
low-volume MS–DRGs by adjusting
their FY 2010 weights by the percentage
change in the average weight of the
cases in other MS–DRGs. The crosswalk
table is shown below:
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.020
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Low-Volume MS–
DRG
MS–DRG title
768 .....................
Vaginal Delivery with O.R. Procedure Except Sterilization
and/or D&C.
Neonates, Died or Transferred to Another Acute Care Facility
789 .....................
790 .....................
Crosswalk to MS–DRG
791 .....................
Extreme Immaturity or Respiratory Distress Syndrome,
Neonate.
Prematurity with Major Problems .............................................
792 .....................
Prematurity without Major Problems ........................................
793 .....................
Full-Term Neonate with Major Problems .................................
794 .....................
Neonate with Other Significant Problems ................................
795 .....................
Normal Newborn ......................................................................
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
I. Proposed Add-On Payments for New
Services and Technologies
1. Background
Sections 1886(d)(5)(K) and (L) of the
Act establish a process of identifying
and ensuring adequate payment for new
medical services and technologies
(sometimes collectively referred to in
this section as ‘‘new technologies’’)
under the IPPS. Section
1886(d)(5)(K)(vi) of the Act specifies
that a medical service or technology will
be considered new if it meets criteria
established by the Secretary after notice
and opportunity for public comment.
Section 1886(d)(5)(K)(ii)(I) of the Act
specifies that a new medical service or
technology may be considered for new
technology add-on payment if, ‘‘based
on the estimated costs incurred with
respect to discharges involving such
service or technology, the DRG
prospective payment rate otherwise
applicable to such discharges under this
subsection is inadequate.’’ We note that
beginning with FY 2008, CMS
transitioned from CMS–DRGs to MS–
DRGs.
The regulations implementing these
provisions specify three criteria for a
new medical service or technology to
receive the additional payment: (1) The
medical service or technology must be
new; (2) the medical service or
technology must be costly such that the
DRG rate otherwise applicable to
discharges involving the medical service
or technology is determined to be
inadequate; and (3) the service or
technology must demonstrate a
substantial clinical improvement over
existing services or technologies. These
three criteria are explained below in the
ensuing paragraphs in further detail.
Under the first criterion, as reflected
in 42 CFR 412.87(b)(2), a specific
medical service or technology will be
considered ‘‘new’’ for purposes of new
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
FY 2010
weight
FY 2010
weight
FY 2010
weight
FY 2010
weight
FY 2010
weight
FY 2010
weight
FY 2010
weight
FY 2010
weight
FR weight (adjusted
of the cases in other
FR weight (adjusted
of the cases in other
FR weight (adjusted
of the cases in other
FR weight (adjusted
of the cases in other
FR weight (adjusted
of the cases in other
FR weight (adjusted
of the cases in other
FR weight (adjusted
of the cases in other
FR weight (adjusted
of the cases in other
medical service or technology add-on
payments until such time as Medicare
data are available to fully reflect the cost
of the technology in the MS–DRG
weights through recalibration.
Typically, there is a lag of 2 to 3 years
from the point a new medical service or
technology is first introduced on the
market (generally on the date that the
technology receives FDA approval/
clearance) and when data reflecting the
use of the medical service or technology
are used to calculate the MS–DRG
weights. For example, data from
discharges occurring during FY 2009 are
used to calculate the proposed FY 2011
MS–DRG weights in this proposed rule.
Section 412.87(b)(2) of the regulations
therefore provides that ‘‘a medical
service or technology may be considered
new within 2 or 3 years after the point
at which data begin to become available
reflecting the ICD–9–CM code assigned
to the new medical service or
technology (depending on when a new
code is assigned and data on the new
medical service or technology become
available for DRG recalibration). After
CMS has recalibrated the MS–DRGs,
based on available data to reflect the
costs of an otherwise new medical
service or technology, the medical
service or technology will no longer be
considered ‘new’ under the criterion for
this section.’’
The 2-year to 3-year period during
which a medical service or technology
can be considered new would ordinarily
begin on the date on which the medical
service or technology received FDA
approval or clearance. (We note that, for
purposes of this section of this proposed
rule, we generally refer to both FDA
approval and FDA clearance as FDA
‘‘approval.’’) However, in some cases,
there may be few to no Medicare data
available for the new service or
technology following FDA approval. For
example, the newness period could
PO 00000
Frm 00073
23923
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
by percent change
MS–DRGs).
by percent change
MS–DRGs).
by percent change
MS–DRGs).
by percent change
MS–DRGs).
by percent change
MS–DRGs).
by percent change
MS–DRGs).
by percent change
MS–DRGs).
by percent change
MS–DRGs).
in average
in average
in average
in average
in average
in average
in average
in average
extend beyond the 2-year to 3-year
period after FDA approval is received in
cases where the product initially was
generally unavailable to Medicare
patients following FDA approval, such
as in cases of a national noncoverage
determination or a documented delay in
bringing the product onto the market
after that approval (for instance,
component production or drug
production has been postponed
following FDA approval due to shelf life
concerns or manufacturing issues). After
the MS–DRGs have been recalibrated to
reflect the costs of an otherwise new
medical service or technology, the
medical service or technology is no
longer eligible for special add-on
payment for new medical services or
technologies (as specified under
§ 412.87(b)(2)). For example, an
approved new technology that received
FDA approval in October 2008 and
entered the market at that time may be
eligible to receive add-on payments as a
new technology for discharges occurring
before October 1, 2011 (the start of FY
2012). Because the FY 2012 MS–DRG
weights would be calculated using FY
2010 MedPAR data, the costs of such a
new technology would be fully reflected
in the FY 2012 MS–DRG weights.
Therefore, the new technology would no
longer be eligible to receive add-on
payments as a new technology for
discharges occurring in FY 2012 and
thereafter.
We do not consider a service or
technology to be new if it is
substantially similar to one or more
existing technologies. That is, even if a
technology receives a new FDA
approval, it may not necessarily be
considered ‘‘new’’ for purposes of new
technology add-on payments if it is
‘‘substantially similar’’ to a technology
that was approved by FDA and has been
on the market for more than 2 to 3 years.
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23924
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
47351), we explained our policy
regarding substantial similarity in detail
and its relevance for assessing if the
hospital charge data used in the
development of the relative weights for
the relevant DRGs reflect the costs of the
technology. In that final rule, we stated
that, for determining substantial
similarity, we consider (1) whether a
product uses the same or a similar
mechanism of action to achieve a
therapeutic outcome, and (2) whether a
product is assigned to the same or a
different DRG. We indicated that both of
the above criteria should be met in order
for a technology to be considered
‘‘substantially similar’’ to an existing
technology. However, in that same final
rule, we also noted that, due to the
complexity of issues regarding the
substantial similarity component of the
newness criterion, it may be necessary
to exercise flexibility when considering
whether technologies are substantially
similar to one another. Specifically, we
stated that we may consider additional
factors, depending on the circumstances
specific to each application.
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS final rule (74 FR 43813 and 43814),
we noted that the discussion of
substantial similarity in the FY 2006
IPPS final rule related to comparing two
separate technologies made by different
manufacturers. Nevertheless, we stated
that the criteria discussed in the FY
2006 IPPS final rule also are relevant
when comparing the similarity between
a new use and existing uses of the same
technology (or a very similar technology
manufactured by the same
manufacturer). In other words, we stated
that it is necessary to establish that the
new indication for which the
technology has received FDA approval
is not substantially similar to that of the
prior indication. We explained that such
a distinction is necessary to determine
the appropriate start date of the newness
period in evaluating whether the
technology would qualify for add-on
payments (that is, the date of the ‘‘new’’
FDA approval or that of the prior
approval), or whether the technology
could qualify for separate new
technology add-on payments under each
indication.
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS final rule (74 FR 43814), we added
a third factor of consideration to our
analysis of whether a new technology is
substantially similar to one or more
existing technologies. Specifically, in
making a determination of whether a
technology is substantially similar to an
existing technology, we will consider
whether the new use of the technology
involves the treatment of the same or
similar type of disease and the same or
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
similar patient population (74 FR
24130), in addition to considering the
already established factors described in
the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (that is, (1)
whether a product uses the same or a
similar mechanism of action to achieve
a therapeutic outcome; and (2) whether
a product is assigned to the same or a
different DRG). As we noted in the FY
2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final
rule, if all three components are present
and the new use is deemed substantially
similar to one or more of the existing
uses of the technology (that is beyond
the newness period), we would
conclude that the technology is not new
and, therefore, is not eligible for the new
technology add-on payment.
Under the second criterion,
§ 412.87(b)(3) further provides that, to
be eligible for the add-on payment for
new medical services or technologies,
the MS–DRG prospective payment rate
otherwise applicable to the discharge
involving the new medical services or
technologies must be assessed for
adequacy. Under the cost criterion, to
assess the adequacy of payment for a
new technology paid under the
applicable MS–DRG prospective
payment rate, we evaluate whether the
charges for cases involving the new
technology exceed certain threshold
amounts. In the FY 2004 IPPS final rule
(68 FR 45385), we established the
threshold at the geometric mean
standardized charge for all cases in the
MS–DRG plus 75 percent of 1 standard
deviation above the geometric mean
standardized charge (based on the
logarithmic values of the charges and
converted back to charges) for all cases
in the MS–DRG to which the new
medical service or technology is
assigned (or the case-weighted average
of all relevant MS–DRGs, if the new
medical service or technology occurs in
more than one MS–DRG).
However, section 503(b)(1) of Public
Law 108–173 amended section
1886(d)(5)(K)(ii)(I) of the Act to provide
that, beginning in FY 2005, CMS will
apply ‘‘a threshold * * * that is the
lesser of 75 percent of the standardized
amount (increased to reflect the
difference between cost and charges) or
75 percent of one standard deviation for
the diagnosis-related group involved.’’
(We refer readers to section IV.D. of the
preamble to the FY 2005 IPPS final rule
(69 FR 49084) for a discussion of the
revision of the regulations to
incorporate the change made by section
503(b)(1) of Pub. L. 108–173.) Table 10
that was included in the final rule
published in the Federal Register on
August 27, 2009, contains the final
thresholds that are being used to
evaluate applications for new
PO 00000
Frm 00074
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
technology add-on payments for FY
2011 (74 FR 44173). We note that we
plan to issue separate documents in the
Federal Register addressing the
provisions of Public Law 111–148, as
amended, that affect our proposed
policies and payment rates for FY 2011
under the IPPS and the LTCH PPS. In
addition, we plan to issue further
instructions addressing the provisions
of Public Law 111–148, as amended,
that affect the policies and payment
rates for FY 2010 under the IPPS and
the LTCH PPS. At the time we issue
those documents, we plan to update
Table 10 that was published in the
Federal Register on August 27, 2009
and Table 10 in the Addendum to this
proposed rule.
In the September 7, 2001 final rule
that established the new technology
add-on payment regulations (66 FR
46917), we discussed the issue of
whether the HIPAA Privacy Rule at 45
CFR Parts 160 and 164 applies to claims
information that providers submit with
applications for new technology add-on
payments. Specifically, we explained
that health plans, including Medicare,
and providers that conduct certain
transactions electronically, including
the hospitals that would be receiving
payment under the FY 2001 IPPS final
rule, are required to comply with the
HIPAA Privacy Rule. We further
explained how such entities could meet
the applicable HIPAA requirements by
discussing how the HIPAA Privacy Rule
permitted providers to share with health
plans information needed to ensure
correct payment, if they had obtained
consent from the patient to use that
patient’s data for treatment, payment, or
health care operations. We also
explained that, because the information
to be provided within applications for
new technology add-on payment would
be needed to ensure correct payment, no
additional consent would be required.
The HHS Office for Civil Rights has
since amended the HIPAA Privacy Rule,
but the results remain. The HIPAA
Privacy Rule no longer requires covered
entities to obtain consent from patients
to use or disclose protected health
information for treatment, payment, or
health care operations, and expressly
permits such entities to use or to
disclose protected health information
for any of these purposes. (We refer
readers to 45 CFR 164.502(a)(1)(ii), and
164.506(c)(1) and (c)(3), and the
Standards for Privacy of Individually
Identifiable Health Information
published in the Federal Register on
August 14, 2002, for a full discussion of
changes in consent requirements.)
Under the third criterion,
§ 412.87(b)(1) of our existing regulations
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
provides that a new technology is an
appropriate candidate for an additional
payment when it represents ‘‘an advance
that substantially improves, relative to
technologies previously available, the
diagnosis or treatment of Medicare
beneficiaries.’’ For example, a new
technology represents a substantial
clinical improvement when it reduces
mortality, decreases the number of
hospitalizations or physician visits, or
reduces recovery time compared to the
technologies previously available. (We
refer readers to the September 7, 2001
final rule for a complete discussion of
this criterion (66 FR 46902).)
The new medical service or
technology add-on payment policy
under the IPPS provides additional
payments for cases with relatively high
costs involving eligible new medical
services or technologies while
preserving some of the incentives
inherent under an average-based
prospective payment system. The
payment mechanism is based on the
cost to hospitals for the new medical
service or technology. Under § 412.88, if
the costs of the discharge (determined
by applying cost to charge ratios
(‘‘CCRs’’) as described in § 412.84(h))
exceed the full DRG payment (including
payments for IME and DSH, but
excluding outlier payments), Medicare
will make an add-on payment equal to
the lesser of: (1) 50 percent of the
estimated costs of the new technology
(if the estimated costs for the case
including the new technology exceed
Medicare’s payment); or (2) 50 percent
of the difference between the full DRG
payment and the hospital’s estimated
cost for the case. Unless the discharge
qualifies for an outlier payment,
Medicare payment is limited to the full
MS–DRG payment plus 50 percent of
the estimated costs of the new
technology.
Section 1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act
requires that the adjustments to annual
MS–DRG classifications and relative
weights must be made in a manner that
ensures that aggregate payments to
hospitals are not more or less than they
were in the prior fiscal year (i.e., they
are ‘‘budget neutral’’). Therefore, in the
past, we accounted for projected
payments under the new medical
service and technology provision during
the upcoming fiscal year, while at the
same time estimating the payment effect
of changes to the MS–DRG
classifications and recalibration. The
impact of additional payments under
this provision was then included in the
budget neutrality factor, which was
applied to the standardized amounts
and the hospital-specific amounts.
However, section 503(d)(2) of Public
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Law 108–173 provides that there shall
be no reduction or adjustment in
aggregate payments under the IPPS due
to add-on payments for new medical
services and technologies. Therefore, in
accordance with section 503(d)(2) of
Public Law 108–173, add-on payments
for new medical services or technologies
for FY 2005 and later years have not
been subjected to budget neutrality.
In the FY 2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR
48561 through 48563), we modified our
regulations at § 412.87 to codify our
current practice of how CMS evaluates
the eligibility criteria for new medical
service or technology add-on payment
applications. We also amended
§ 412.87(c) to specify that all applicants
for new technology add-on payments
must have FDA approval for their new
medical service or technology by July 1
of each year prior to the beginning of the
fiscal year that the application is being
considered.
The Council on Technology and
Innovation (CTI) at CMS oversees the
agency’s cross-cutting priority on
coordinating coverage, coding and
payment processes for Medicare with
respect to new technologies and
procedures, including new drug
therapies, as well as promoting the
exchange of information on new
technologies between CMS and other
entities. The CTI, composed of senior
CMS staff and clinicians, was
established under section 942(a) of
Public Law 108–173. The Council is cochaired by the Director of the Office of
Clinical Standards and Quality (OCSQ)
and the Director of the Center for
Medicare Management (CMM), who is
also designated as the CTI’s Executive
Coordinator.
The specific processes for coverage,
coding, and payment are implemented
by CMM, OCSQ, and the local claimspayment contractors (in the case of local
coverage and payment decisions). The
CTI supplements, rather than replaces,
these processes by working to assure
that all of these activities reflect the
agency-wide priority to promote highquality, innovative care. At the same
time, the CTI also works to streamline,
accelerate, and improve coordination of
these processes to ensure that they
remain up to date as new issues arise.
To achieve its goals, the CTI works to
streamline and create a more
transparent coding and payment
process, improve the quality of medical
decisions, and speed patient access to
effective new treatments. It is also
dedicated to supporting better decisions
by patients and doctors in using
Medicare-covered services through the
promotion of better evidence
development, which is critical for
PO 00000
Frm 00075
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23925
improving the quality of care for
Medicare beneficiaries.
CMS plans to continue its Open Door
forums with stakeholders who are
interested in CTI’s initiatives. In
addition, to improve the understanding
of CMS’ processes for coverage, coding,
and payment and how to access them,
the CTI has developed an ‘‘innovator’s
guide’’ to these processes. The intent is
to consolidate this information, much of
which is already available in a variety
of CMS documents and in various
places on the CMS Web site, in a userfriendly format. This guide was
published in August 2008 and is
available on the CMS Web site at:
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
CouncilonTechInnov/Downloads/
InnovatorsGuide8_25_08.pdf.
As we indicated in the FY 2009 IPPS
final rule (73 FR 48554), we invite any
product developers or manufacturers of
new medical technologies to contact the
agency early in the process of product
development if they have questions or
concerns about the evidence that would
be needed later in the development
process for the agency’s coverage
decisions for Medicare.
The CTI aims to provide useful
information on its activities and
initiatives to stakeholders, including
Medicare beneficiaries, advocates,
medical product manufacturers,
providers, and health policy experts.
Stakeholders with further questions
about Medicare’s coverage, coding, and
payment processes, or who want further
guidance about how they can navigate
these processes, can contact the CTI at
CTI@cms.hhs.gov or from the ‘‘Contact
Us’’ section of the CTI home page (http:
//www.cms.hhs.gov/
CouncilonTechInnov/).
We note that applicants for add-on
payments for new medical services or
technologies for FY 2012 must submit a
formal request, including a full
description of the clinical applications
of the medical service or technology and
the results of any clinical evaluations
demonstrating that the new medical
service or technology represents a
substantial clinical improvement, along
with a significant sample of data to
demonstrate that the medical service or
technology meets the high-cost
threshold. Complete application
information, along with final deadlines
for submitting a full application, will be
posted as it becomes available on our
Web site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/08_newtech.asp. To
allow interested parties to identify the
new medical services or technologies
under review before the publication of
the proposed rule for FY 2012, the Web
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23926
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
site also will list the tracking forms
completed by each applicant.
2. Public Input Before Publication of a
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on AddOn Payments
Section 1886(d)(5)(K)(viii) of the Act,
as amended by section 503(b)(2) of
Public Law 108–173, provides for a
mechanism for public input before
publication of a notice of proposed
rulemaking regarding whether a medical
service or technology represents a
substantial clinical improvement or
advancement. The process for
evaluating new medical service and
technology applications requires the
Secretary to—
• Provide, before publication of a
proposed rule, for public input
regarding whether a new service or
technology represents an advance in
medical technology that substantially
improves the diagnosis or treatment of
Medicare beneficiaries;
• Make public and periodically
update a list of the services and
technologies for which applications for
add-on payments are pending;
• Accept comments,
recommendations, and data from the
public regarding whether a service or
technology represents a substantial
clinical improvement; and
• Provide, before publication of a
proposed rule, for a meeting at which
organizations representing hospitals,
physicians, manufacturers, and any
other interested party may present
comments, recommendations, and data
regarding whether a new medical
service or technology represents a
substantial clinical improvement to the
clinical staff of CMS.
In order to provide an opportunity for
public input regarding add-on payments
for new medical services and
technologies for FY 2011 prior to
publication of this FY 2011 IPPS/RY
2011 LTCH PPS proposed rule, we
published a notice in the Federal
Register on November 27, 2009 (74 FR
62339 through 62342), and held a town
hall meeting at the CMS Headquarters
Office in Baltimore, MD, on February
19, 2010. In the announcement notice
for the meeting, we stated that the
opinions and alternatives provided
during the meeting would assist us in
our evaluations of applications by
allowing public discussion of the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion for each of the FY 2011 new
medical service and technology add-on
payment applications before the
publication of this FY 2011 proposed
rule.
Approximately 80 individuals
registered to attend the town hall
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
meeting in person, while additional
individuals listened over an open
telephone line. Each of the three FY
2011 applicants presented information
on its technology, including a
discussion of data reflecting the
substantial clinical improvement aspect
of the technology. We considered each
applicant’s presentation made at the
town hall meeting, as well as written
comments submitted on the
applications, in our evaluation of the
new technology add-on applications for
FY 2011 in this proposed rule.
In response to the published notice
and the new technology town hall
meeting, we received 11 written
comments regarding applications for FY
2011 new technology add-on payments.
We summarized these comments or, if
applicable, indicated that there were no
comments received, at the end of each
discussion of the individual
applications in this proposed rule.
Comment: One commenter, a medical
technology association, recommended
that CMS, in its consideration as to
whether a new technology meets the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion, judge a diagnostic device on
the basis of a diagnostic outcome
(improved diagnosis) rather than a
therapeutic outcome, recognizing that
earlier and improved detection of
disease often leads to improved patient
outcomes.
Response: We thank the commenter
for its comments on the substantial
clinical improvement criterion. Similar
to our statements in the FY 2010 IPPS/
RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR
43817 through 43819), section
1886(d)(5)(K)(vi) of the Act authorizes
the Secretary to establish through notice
and comment rulemaking the criteria
that a new medical service or
technology must meet in order to be
eligible for the new technology add-on
payment. Under this authority, in the
September 7, 2001 final rule, we
established three criteria through notice
and comment rulemaking—the newness
criterion, the cost criterion, and the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion (66 FR 46924). Specifically,
§ 412.87(b)(1) of the regulations
provides that a new medical service or
technology must ‘‘represent an advance
that substantially improves, relating to
technologies previously available, the
diagnosis or treatment of Medicare
beneficiaries.’’
As we explained in the September 7,
2001 final rule, we consider a diagnostic
technology to meet the substantial
clinical improvement criterion if the
technology not only ‘‘offers the ability to
diagnose a medical condition in a
patient population where that medical
PO 00000
Frm 00076
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
condition is currently undetectable or
offers the ability to diagnose a medical
condition earlier in a patient population
than allowed by currently available
methods,’’ but also if ‘‘use of the device
to make a diagnosis affects the
management of the patient’’ (66 FR
46914). We believe that this evidence is
necessary to determine whether the new
technology affords a ‘‘clear improvement
over the use of previously available
technologies.’’ We do not consider any
particular type of evidence to be
dispositive; instead, we consider all
information presented for each
application to determine whether there
is evidence to support a conclusion that
‘‘use of the device to make a diagnosis
affects the management of the patient’’
(in the case of a diagnostic technology).
Specifically, we consider whether the
peer-reviewed medical literature
supports or clinical studies indicate that
the diagnostic device should generally
be used by providers in guiding the
management of their patients. In
addition, we consider evidence
demonstrating clinically accepted use of
the device in a manner that actually
affects the management of patients.
Under the commenter’s
recommendation, a diagnostic
technology effectively would only need
to receive FDA approval and be the only
technology approved for a particular
diagnostic capability in order to be
deemed a ‘‘substantial improvement’’ for
purposes of new technology add-on
payments, regardless of its ability to
positively affect patient management.
This approach would deem a device
that led to the identification of new
information as a substantial
improvement in diagnosis even if such
detection has not been ‘‘demonstrated to
represent a substantial improvement in
caring for Medicare beneficiaries’’ and
was not linked to evidence-based,
significant, and positive changes in the
management of patients or, ultimately,
to changes in clinical outcomes. We do
not believe this rationale is consistent
with our prior statements regarding the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion of the new technology add-on
payment provision.
Comment: One commenter, a medical
device association, recommended that
CMS ‘‘deem a device to satisfy the
substantial clinical improvement
criteria if it was granted a humanitarian
device exemption or priority review
based on the fact that it represents
breakthrough technologies, which offer
significant advantages over existing
approved alternatives, for which no
alternatives exist, or the availability of
which is in the best interests of the
patients.’’ In addition, the commenter
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
remarked that this process would
simplify CMS’ evaluation of
applications for new technology add-on
payments and would promote access to
innovative treatments, as intended by
Congress. Although the commenter also
made remarks that were unrelated to
substantial clinical improvement,
because the purpose of the town hall
meeting was specifically to discuss
substantial clinical improvement of
pending new technology applications,
those comments are not summarized in
this proposed rule.
Response: We thank the commenter
for its comments. We note that we have
previously addressed the comment
concerning automatically approving
technologies that have a humanitarian
device exemption (HDE) in the FY 2008
IPPS final rule (72 FR 47302). We refer
readers to that rule for our response. A
further discussion of our evaluation of
the applications and the documentation
for new technology add-on payments
submitted for FY 2011 approval is
provided under the specified areas
under this section.
3. FY 2011 Status of Technologies
Approved for FY 2010 Add-On
Payments
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
a. Spiration® IBV® Valve System
Spiration, Inc. submitted an
application for new technology add-on
payments for the Spiration® IBV® Valve
System (Spiration® IBV®). The
Spiration® IBV® is a device that is used
to place, via bronchoscopy, small, oneway valves into selected small airways
in the lung in order to limit airflow into
selected portions of lung tissue that
have prolonged air leaks following
surgery while still allowing mucus,
fluids, and air to exit, thereby reducing
the amount of air that enters the pleural
space. The device is intended to control
prolonged air leaks following three
specific surgical procedures: lobectomy;
segmentectomy; or lung volume
reduction surgery (LVRS). According to
the applicant, an air leak that is present
on postoperative day 7 is considered
‘‘prolonged’’ unless present only during
forced exhalation or cough. In order to
help prevent valve migration, there are
five anchors with tips that secure the
valve to the airway. The implanted
valves are intended to be removed no
later than 6 weeks after implantation.
With regard to the newness criterion,
the Spiration® IBV® received an HDE
approval from the FDA on October 24,
2008. We were unaware of any
previously FDA-approved predicate
devices, or otherwise similar devices,
that could be considered substantially
similar to the Spiration® IBV®.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
However, the applicant asserted that the
FDA had precluded the device from
being used in the treatment of any
patients until Institutional Review
Board (IRB) approvals regarding its
study sites. Therefore, the Spiration®
IBV® met the newness criterion once it
obtained at least one IRB approval
because the device would then be
available on the market to treat
Medicare beneficiaries.
After evaluation of the newness, costs,
and substantial clinical improvement
criteria for new technology payments for
the Spiration® IBV® and consideration
of the public comments we received on
the FY 2010 IPPS proposed rule,
including the additional analysis of
clinical data and supporting information
submitted by the applicant, we
approved the Spiration® IBV® for new
technology add-on payments for FY
2010. The Spiration® IBV® is the only
device currently approved for the
purpose of treating prolonged air leaks
following lobectomy, segmentectomy,
and LVRS patients in the United States.
We stated that without the availability
of this device, patients with prolonged
air leaks (following lobectomy,
segmentectomy, and LVRS) might
otherwise remain inpatients in the
hospital (and have a longer length of
stay than they might otherwise have
without the Spiration® IBV®) or might
even require additional invasive
surgeries to resolve the air leak. We also
noted that use of the Spiration® IBV®
may lead to more rapid beneficial
resolution of prolonged air leaks and
reduce recovery time following the three
lung surgeries mentioned above.
However, in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY
2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR
43823), we indicated that we remained
interested in seeing whether the clinical
evidence continues to find it to be
effective. This approval was on the basis
of using the Spiration® IBV® consistent
with the FDA approval (HDE), and we
emphasized the need for appropriate
patient selection accordingly. Therefore,
we limited the add-on payment to cases
involving prolonged air leaks following
lobectomy, segmentectomy and LVRS in
MS–DRGs 163, 164, and 165. Cases
involving the Spiration® IBV® that are
eligible for the new technology add-on
payment are identified by assignment to
MS–DRGs 163, 164, and 165 with
procedure code 33.71 or 33.73 in
combination with one of the following
procedure codes: 32.22, 32.30, 32.39,
32.41, or 32.49.
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS final rule, we stated that the
average cost of the Spiration® IBV® is
reported as $2,750. Based on data from
the FY 2010 application, the average
PO 00000
Frm 00077
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23927
amount of valves per case is 2.5.
Therefore, the total maximum cost for
the Spiration® IBV® was expected to be
$6,875 per case ($2,750 × 2.5). Under
§ 412.88(a)(2) of our regulations, new
technology add-on payments are limited
to the lesser of 50 percent of the average
cost of the device or 50 percent of the
costs in excess of the MS–DRG payment
for the case. As a result, we finalized a
maximum add-on payment for a case
involving the Spiration® IBV® as
$3,437.50.
b. CardioWestTM Temporary Total
Artificial Heart System (CardioWestTM
TAH-t)
SynCardia Systems, Inc. submitted an
application for approval of the
CardioWestTM temporary Total Artificial
Heart system (TAH-t) in FY 2009. The
TAH-t is a technology that is used as a
bridge to heart transplant device for
heart transplant-eligible patients with
end-stage biventricular failure. The
TAH-t pumps up to 9.5 liters of blood
per minute. This high level of perfusion
helps improve hemodynamic function
in patients, thus making them better
heart transplant candidates.
The TAH-t was approved by the FDA
on October 15, 2004, for use as a bridge
to transplant device in cardiac
transplant-eligible candidates at risk of
imminent death from biventricular
failure. The TAH-t is intended to be
used in hospital inpatients. One of the
FDA’s post-approval requirements is
that the manufacturer agrees to provide
a post-approval study demonstrating
that success of the device at one center
can be reproduced at other centers. The
study was to include at least 50 patients
who would be followed up to 1 year,
including (but not limited to) the
following endpoints: survival to
transplant; adverse events; and device
malfunction.
In the past, Medicare did not cover
artificial heart devices, including the
TAH-t. However, on May 1, 2008, CMS
issued a final national coverage
determination (NCD) expanding
Medicare coverage of artificial hearts
when they are implanted as part of a
study that is approved by the FDA and
is determined by CMS to meet CMS’
Coverage with Evidence Development
(CED) clinical research criteria. (The
final NCD is available on the CMS Web
site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/mcd/
viewdecisionmemo.asp?id=211.)
We indicated in the FY 2009 IPPS/RY
2009 LTCH PPS final rule (73 FR 48555)
that, because Medicare’s previous
coverage policy with respect to this
device had precluded payment from
Medicare, we did not expect the costs
associated with this technology to be
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23928
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
currently reflected in the data used to
determine the relative weights of MS–
DRGs. As we have indicated in the past,
and as we discussed in the FY 2009
IPPS/RY 2009 LTCH PPS final rule,
although we generally believe that the
newness period would begin on the date
that FDA approval was granted, in cases
where the applicant can demonstrate a
documented delay in market availability
subsequent to FDA approval, we would
consider delaying the start of the
newness period. This technology’s
situation represented such a case. We
also noted that section
1886(d)(5)(K)(ii)(II) of the Act requires
that we provide for the collection of cost
data for a new medical service or
technology for a period of at least 2
years and no more than 3 years
‘‘beginning on the date on which an
inpatient hospital code is issued with
respect to the service or technology.’’
Furthermore, the statute specifies that
the term ‘‘inpatient hospital code’’
means any code that is used with
respect to inpatient hospital services for
which payment may be made under the
IPPS and includes ICD–9–CM codes and
any subsequent revisions. Although the
TAH-t has been described by the ICD–
9–CM code(s) since the time of its FDA
approval, because the TAH-t had not
been covered under the Medicare
program (and, therefore, no Medicare
payment had been made for this
technology), this code could not be
‘‘used with respect to inpatient hospital
services for which payment’’ is made
under the IPPS, and thus we assumed
that none of the costs associated with
this technology would be reflected in
the Medicare claims data used to
recalibrate the MS–DRG relative weights
for FY 2009. For this reason, as
discussed in the FY 2009 IPPS/RY 2009
LTCH PPS final rule, despite the FDA
approval date of the technology, we
determined that TAH-t would still be
eligible to be considered ‘‘new’’ for
purposes of the new technology add-on
payment because the TAH-t met the
newness criterion on the date that
Medicare coverage began, consistent
with issuance of the final NCD, effective
on May 1, 2008.
After evaluation of the newness, costs,
and substantial clinical improvement
criteria for new technology add-on
payments for the TAH-t and
consideration of the public comments
we received in response to the FY 2009
IPPS/RY 2009 LTCH PPS proposed rule,
we approved the TAH-t for new
technology add-on payments for FY
2009 (73 FR 48557). We indicated that
we believed the TAH-t offered a new
treatment option that previously did not
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
exist for patients with end-stage
biventricular failure. However, we
indicated that we recognized that
Medicare coverage of the TAH-t is
limited to approved clinical trial
settings. The new technology add-on
payment status does not negate the
restrictions under the NCD nor does it
obviate the need for continued
monitoring of clinical evidence for the
TAH-t. We remain interested in seeing
whether the clinical evidence
demonstrates that the TAH-t continues
to be effective. If evidence is found that
the TAH-t may no longer offer a
substantial clinical improvement, we
reserve the right to discontinue new
technology add-on payments, even
within the 2- to 3-year period that the
device may still be considered to be
new. We also continued to make new
technology add-on payments for the
TAH-t in FY 2010. We welcome public
comment regarding whether there is
new evidence that demonstrates that the
TAH–t continues to be effective and
whether it should still be considered to
be a substantial clinical improvement
for FY 2011.
The new technology add-on payment
for the TAH-t for FY 2010 is triggered
by the presence of ICD–9–CM procedure
code 37.52 (Implantation of total heart
replacement system), condition code 30,
and the diagnosis code reflecting
clinical trial—V70.7 (Examination of
participant in clinical trial). For FY
2010, we finalized a maximum add-on
payment of $53,000 (that is, 50 percent
of the estimated operating costs of the
device of $106,000) for cases that
involve this technology.
Our practice has been to begin and
end new technology add-on payments
on the basis of a fiscal year. In general,
we extend add-on payments for an
additional year only if the 3-year
anniversary date of the product’s entry
on the market occurs in the latter half
of the fiscal year (70 FR 47362). The
TAH-t is still eligible to be considered
‘‘new’’ for purposes of the new
technology add-on payment because the
3-year anniversary date of the TAH-t
entry on the market was in the second
half of the fiscal year and the TAH-t met
the newness criterion on the date that
Medicare coverage began, consistent
with issuance of the final NCD, effective
on May 1, 2008. Therefore, for FY 2011,
we are proposing to continue new
technology add-on payments for cases
involving the TAH-t in FY 2011 with a
maximum add-on payment of $53,000.
4. FY 2011 Applications for New
Technology Add-On Payments
We received five applications to be
considered for new technology add-on
PO 00000
Frm 00078
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
payment for FY 2011. However, two
applicants withdrew their applications:
Nycomed Austria GmbH, which
submitted an application for new
technology add-on payments for FY
2011 for TachoSil®; and Zimmer, which
submitted an application for new
technology add-on payments for FY
2011 for the Dynesys Dynamic
Stabilization System. Nycomed Austria
GmbH withdrew its application from
further review in January 2010, and
Zimmer withdrew its application in
February 2010. Because both
applications were withdrawn prior to
the town hall meeting and publication
of this proposed rule, we are not
discussing these two applications in this
proposed rule.
A discussion of the remaining three
applications is presented below. At the
time this proposed rule was developed,
one of the technologies had not yet
received FDA approval. Consequently,
our discussion below of this application
may be limited.
a. Auto Laser Interstitial Thermal
Therapy (AutoLITTTM) System
Monteris Medical submitted an
application for new technology add-on
payments for FY 2011 for the
AutoLITTTM. We note that the applicant
submitted an application for new
technology add-on payments for FY
2010 but withdrew its application prior
to the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
final rule. AutoLITTTM is a minimally
invasive, MRI-guided catheter tipped
laser designed to destroy malignant
brain tumors with interstitial thermal
energy causing immediate coagulation
and necrosis of diseased tissue. The
applicant asserts that the AutoLITTTM
delivers laser energy to the lesion with
a proprietary 3mm diameter probe that
directs the energy radially (that is, at
right angle to the axis of the probe, or
side-firing) toward the targeted tumor
tissue in a narrow beam profile and at
the same time, a proprietary probe
cooling system removes heat from tissue
not directly in the path of the laser
beam, ostensibly protecting it from
thermal damage and enabling the
physician to selectively ablate only
targeted tissue. The AutoLITTTM
received a 510K FDA clearance in May
2009. The AutoLITTTM is indicated for
use to necrotize or coagulate soft tissue
through interstitial irradiation or
thermal therapy in medicine and
surgery in the discipline of
neurosurgery with 1064 nm lasers. The
AutoLITTTM may be used in patients
with glioblastoma multiforme brain
tumors. The applicant stated in its
application and through supplemental
information that, due to required
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
updates, the technology was actually
introduced to the market in December
2009. The applicant explained that it
was necessary to reduce the thermal
damage lines from three to one and
complete International Electrotechnical
Commission/Underwriter Laboratory
testing, which led to the introduction of
the technology to the market in
December 2009, although the
technology was approved by FDA in
May 2009. The applicant also stated
through supplementary information to
its application that the first sale of the
product took place on March 19, 2010.
However, because the product was
already available for use in December
2009, it appears that the newness date
would begin in December 2009. We
welcome public comments on this issue.
With regard to the newness criterion,
we are concerned that the AutoLITTTM
may be substantially similar to the
device that it listed as its predicate
device in its application to the FDA for
approval. Specifically, in making a
determination of substantial similarity,
we consider the following: (1) Whether
a product uses the same or similar
mechanism of action to achieve a
therapeutic action; and (2) whether a
product is assigned to the same of
different MS–DRG; and (3) whether the
new use of a technology involves the
treatment of the same or similar type of
disease and the same or similar patient
population. The applicant identified
Visual-ase as its predicate device (which
was approved by the FDA in 2006),
which is also used to treat tumors of the
brain. The applicant maintains that
AutoLITTTM; can be distinguished from
the Visual-ase by its mechanism of
action (that is, side-firing laser versus
elliptical firing). Additionally, as
mentioned above, the technology
contains a proprietary probe cooling
system that removes heat from tissue
not directly in the path of the laser
beam. We welcome comments from the
public regarding whether or not the
AutoLITTTM is substantially similar to
the Visual-ase and if it meets the
newness criteria.
The technology can be identified by
ICD–9–CM procedure codes 17.61 (Laser
interstitial thermal therapy [LITT] of
lesion or tissue of brain under
guidance), and 17.62 (Laser interstitial
thermal therapy [LITT] of lesion or
tissue of head and neck under
guidance), which were effective on
October 1, 2009.
In an effort to demonstrate that
AutoLITTTM meets the cost criterion,
the applicant used 2007 Medicare data
from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization
Project (HCUP). We first note that the
applicant believes that cases eligible for
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
the AutoLITTTM will map to MS–DRG
25 (Craniotomy and Endovascular
Intracranial Procedures with MCC), MS–
DRG 26 (Craniotomy and Endovascular
Intracranial Procedures with CC), and
MS–DRG 27 (Craniotomy and
Endovascular Intracranial Procedures
without CC or MCC). The applicant
explained through supplemental
information to its application that most
cases of the AutoLITTTM would map to
MS–DRG 25 in the near-term. As the
technology becomes more widely
available, clinicians will use the
technology instead of performing a
craniotomy for brain cancer and on
other different types of brain cancers
including metastases, which would map
to other MS–DRGs aside from MS–DRG
25. The applicant further stated that life
expectancy with brain cancer is
predicated on the removal of as much of
the cancer as possible and asserted that
over time the AutoLITTTM will do a
better job of removing the majority of
the cancer that is present within the
brain tissue compared to other
procedures. The applicant believes that
physicians with the AutoLITTTM have a
better tool at removing more cancer and
killing it more precisely and accessing
parts of the brain that surgical resection
cannot access. Lastly, the applicant
believes that the minimally invasive
nature of the procedure will also result
in broader usage to other less
complicated procedures (as clinical and
patient awareness expands).
The applicant searched HCUP
hospital data for cases potentially
eligible for the AutoLITTTM that was
assigned one of the following ICD–9–
CM diagnosis codes: a diagnosis code
that begins with a prefix of 191
(Malignant neoplasm of brain);
diagnosis code 225.0 (Benign neoplasm
of brain and other parts of nervous
system); or diagnosis code 239.6
(Neoplasm of the brain of unspecified
nature). The applicant found 41,021
cases and weighted the standardized
charge per case based on the number of
cases found within each of the diagnosis
codes listed above rather than the
percentage of cases that would group to
different MS–DRGs. Based on this
analysis, the applicant calculated an
average standardized charge per case
was $57,511. While the applicant’s
analysis established a case-weighted
average charge per case in the aggregate,
it did not provide a case-weighted
average standardized charge per case by
MS–DRG (as required by the
application).
The applicant also noted that their
estimate of the case-weighted average
standardized charge per case of $57,511
did not include charges related to the
PO 00000
Frm 00079
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23929
AutoLITTTM. Therefore, it is necessary
to add the charges related to the device
to the case-weighted average
standardized charge per case in
evaluating the cost threshold criterion.
Although the applicant submitted data
related to the estimated cost of the
AutoLITTTM per case, the applicant
stated that the cost of the device was
proprietary information. Based on a
study of charge compression data by
RTI 4 and charge master data from
Stanford University and University of
California, San Francisco, the applicant
estimates $38,886 in charges related to
the AutoLITTTM (we note that some of
the data used a markup of 294 percent
of the costs). Adding the estimated
charges related to the device to the
average standardized charge per case
resulted in a total average standardized
charge per case of $96,397 ($57,511 plus
$38,886). We note, in the applicant’s
discussion of substantial clinical
improvement below, the applicant
maintains that improved clinical
outcomes using nonfocused LITT
included reduced recovery time and a
reduced rate of complications.
Therefore, we are seeking comment on
how reduced recovery time and a
reduced rate of complications would
affect the total case-weighted average
standardized charge per case and the
average length of stay (for cases eligible
for the AutoLITTTM).
As noted above, the applicant’s
analysis established a case-weighted
average charge per case in the aggregate,
but it did not provide a case-weighted
average standardized charge per case by
MS–DRG. However, the applicant
explained through supplemental
information to its application that the
total average standardized charge per
case significantly exceeds the cost
threshold established by CMS for FY
2011 in Table 10 (74 FR 44173) of
$84,185 for MS–DRG 25. Additionally,
the applicant further explained that the
total average standardized charge per
case would also exceed the cost
thresholds established by CMS of
$58,612 for MS–DRGs 26 and $47,053
for MS–DRG 27. Because the total
average standardized charge per case
exceeds the threshold amount for each
individual MS–DRG to which the
technology would map (MS–DRGs 25,
26, and 27), the applicant maintains that
the AutoLITTTM would meet the cost
criterion. We invite public comment on
whether or not the AutoLITTTM meets
the cost criterion for a new technology
add-on payment for FY 2011.
4 RTI International, A Study of Charge
Compression in Calculating DRG Relative Weights,
RTI Project No. 0207964.012.008; January 2007.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23930
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
With respect to the substantial
clinical improvement criterion, the
applicant maintains that it meets this
criterion in its application. Specifically,
the applicant stated that several nonAutoLITTTM clinical trials have
demonstrated that nonfocused LITT
(and more recently, the use of LITT plus
MRI) improved survival, quality of life,
and recovery in patients with advanced
glioblastoma multiforme tumors and
advanced metastatic brain tumors that
cannot be effectively treated with
surgery, radiosurgery, radiation,
chemotherapy, or any currently
available clinical procedure. In a
number of these patients, nonfocused
LITT was the treatment of last resort,
due to either the unresponsiveness or
inability of these therapies to treat the
brain tumor (due to tumor location,
type, or size, among others). The
applicant also maintains that when
compared to craniotomy, it offers
improved clinical outcomes using
nonfocused LITT, including reduced
recovery time and a reduced rate of
complications (that is, infection, brain
edema). The applicant stated that these
factors, as discussed in the FY 2001
final rule (66 FR 46914 through 46915)
demonstrate that the AutoLITTTM meets
the new technology criterion for
substantial clinical improvement.
The applicant further asserts that
AutoLITTTM would represent a
substantial clinical improvement over
existing standards of care for a number
of reasons and should build upon less
sophisticated, nonfocused LITT
therapies. These clinical improvements
cited by the applicant include: A less
invasive method of tumor ablation,
potentially leading to lower
complication rates post procedure
(infection, edema); an ability to employ
multiple interventions over shorter
periods of time and an ability to be used
as a treatment of last resort
(radiosurgery is limited due to radiation
dosing and craniotomy is limited to 1 to
2 procedures); an ability to be used in
hard-to-reach brain tumors (the
AutoLITTTM may be used as a treatment
of last resort); and a shorter recovery
time (the possibility for same day
surgery, which has been demonstrated
above with nonfocused LITT).
We appreciate the applicant’s
summary of why this technology
represents a substantial clinical
improvement. While we recognize the
future potential of this interesting
therapy, we have concerns that to date
the AutoLITTTM has been used for the
treatment of only a few patients as part
of a safety evaluation with no
comparative efficacy data and, therefore,
there may not be sufficient objective
clinical evidence to determine if the
AutoLITTTM meets the substantial
clinical improvement criteria. The
applicant did note in its presentation at
the new technology town hall meeting
that it is currently conducting a clinical
trial with a summary report expected in
the near future. We welcome additional
clinical data to demonstrate whether the
AutoLITTTM meets the substantial
clinical improvement criterion and
invite public comment on whether or
not the AutoLITTTM meets the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion.
We did not receive any written public
comments regarding this application for
new technology add-on payments
concerning the new technology town
hall meeting.
b. LipiScanTM Coronary Imaging System
InfraReDx, Inc. submitted an
application for new technology add-on
payments for FY 2011 for the
LipiScanTM Coronary Imaging System
(LipiScanTM). We note that an
application was also submitted for FY
2010, but the application was denied on
the grounds that it did not meet the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion at that time. The application
for FY 2011 contains some additional
clinical and charge data that were not
available at the time that the FY 2010
new technology add-on payment
decisions were made.
The LipiScanTM device is a diagnostic
tool that uses Intravascular Near
Infrared Spectroscopy (INIRS) during an
invasive coronary catheterization to
scan the artery wall in order to
determine coronary plaque composition.
The purpose of the device is to identify
lipid-rich areas in the artery because
such areas have been shown to be more
prone to rupture. The procedure does
not require flushing or occlusion of the
artery. INIRS identifies the chemical
content of plaque by focusing near
infrared light at the vessel wall and
measuring reflected light at different
wavelengths (that is, spectroscopy). The
LipiScanTM system collects
approximately 1,000 measurements per
12.5 mm of pullback, with each
measurement interrogating an area of 1
to 2 mm2 of lumen surface
perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of
the catheter. When the catheter is in
position, the physician activates the
pullback and rotation device and the
scan is initiated providing 360 degree
images of the length of the artery. The
rapid acquisition speed for the image
freezes the motion of the heart and
permits scanning of the inside of the
arterial wall in less than 2 minutes.
When the catheter pullback is
completed, the console displays the
scan results, which are referred to as a
‘‘chemogram’’ image. The chemogram
image requires reading by a trained user,
but, according to the applicant was
designed to be simple to interpret.
With regard to the newness criterion,
the LipiScanTM received a 510K FDA
clearance for a new indication on April
25, 2008, and was available on the
market immediately thereafter. On June
23, 2006, InfraReDx, Inc. was granted a
510K FDA clearance for the ‘‘InfraReDx
Near Infrared (NIR) Imaging System.’’
Both devices are under the common
name of ‘‘Near Infrared Imaging System’’
according to the 510K summary
document from the FDA. However, the
InfraReDx NIR Imaging System device
that was approved by the FDA in 2006
was approved ‘‘for the near infrared
imaging of the coronary arteries,’’
whereas the LipiscanTM device cleared
by the FDA in 2008 is for a modified
indication. The modified indication
specified that LipiscanTM is ‘‘intended
for the near-infrared examination of
coronary arteries* * *, the detection of
lipid-core-containing plaques of
interest* * *[and] for the assessment of
coronary artery lipid core burden.’’ In
the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 201 LTCH PPS
proposed rule (74 FR 24132 through
24134), we noted that we had concerns
with whether LipiscanTM was
substantially similar to its predicate
device that was approved by the FDA in
2006. However, those concerns were
addressed by the manufacturer during
the comment period. Specifically, the
manufacturer stated that there were
technical problems with the original
device and that LipiScanTM had to be
modified in the following ways:
2006 NIRS device
Console ................................
Catheter ...............................
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Marketed 2008 lipiScan
No display of results of scan ..........................................
Saline-filled with microbubble problem obscuring many
scans.
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00080
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Results displayed immediately.
Air-filled with no microbubble problem.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
23931
2006 NIRS device
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Algorithm ..............................
Marketed 2008 lipiScan
No algorithmic processing of NIR signals—no means of
certifying that lipid core plaque is present.
Algorithm validated in over 1,000 autopsy measurements proving that NIRS can detect lipid core plaque,
and providing diagnosis of lipid core plaque to the
MD during the case.
The problems with the LipiScanTM
device that was approved in 2006 were
addressed in the second device that was
granted FDA approval in April 2008.
The LipiScanTM device was not
marketed until after its second FDA
clearance. Therefore, we no longer
needed to make a determination as to
whether the newer device was
substantially similar to the predicate
device and we determined in the FY
2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule
(74 FR 43815) that LipiscanTM would be
considered to be ‘‘new’’ to the market as
of the date of its FDA approval in April
2008. Because a technology may be
considered new for a period of up to 3
years if, during the third year, the
technology is new for more than 6
months of the fiscal year, it appears that
the technology would still be in the
newness period for FY 2011. We
welcome public comment on whether
LipiscanTM meets the newness criterion.
We note that the LipiscanTM
technology is identified by ICD–9–CM
procedure code 38.23 (Intravascular
spectroscopy), which became effective
October 1, 2008, and cases involving the
use of this device generally map to MS–
DRG 246 (Percutaneous Cardiovascular
Procedures with Drug-Eluting Stent(s)
with MCC or 4+ Vessels/Stents); MS–
DRG 247 (Percutaneous Cardiovascular
Procedures with Drug-Eluting Stent(s)
without MCC); MS–DRG 248
(Percutaneous Cardiovascular
Procedures with Non-Drug-Eluting
Stent(s) with MCC or 4+ Vessels/Stents);
MS–DRG 249 (Percutaneous
Cardiovascular Procedures with NonDrug-Eluting Stent(s) without MCC);
MS–DRG 250 (Percutaneous
Cardiovascular Procedures without
Coronary Artery Stent with MCC); and
MS–DRG 251 (Percutaneous
Cardiovascular Procedures without
Coronary Artery Stent without MCC).
In an effort to demonstrate that the
technology meets the cost criterion, the
applicant used the FY 2010 final rule
After Outliers Removed (AOR) file
(posted on the CMS Web site) to identify
cases potentially eligible for LipiscanTM.
The applicant believes that every case
within MS–DRGs 246, 247, 248, 249,
250, and 251 is eligible for LipiscanTM.
In addition, the applicant believes that
LipiscanTM will be evenly distributed
across patients in each of those six MS–
DRGs (16.7 percent within each MS–
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
DRG). Using data from the AOR file, the
applicant found the average
standardized charge per case for MS–
DRGs 246, 247, 248, 249, 250, and 251
was $67,531, $44,485, $62,936, $40,149,
$59,416, and $38,864, respectively,
equating to a case-weighted average
standardized charge per case of $52,230
(calculation performed using unrounded
numbers). The applicant indicated that
the case-weighted average standardized
charge per case does not include charges
related to LipiscanTM; therefore, it is
necessary to add the charges related to
the device to the average case-weighted
standardized charge per case to evaluate
the cost threshold criterion. Although
the applicant submitted data related to
the estimated cost per case of
LipiscanTM, the applicant stated that the
cost of the device is proprietary
information. Based on a sampling of all
10 non-VA hospitals that are actively
using the device, the applicant
determined that the average charge for
the device was $7,497. Adding the
estimated average charge related for the
device to the case-weighted
standardized charge per case (based on
the case distribution from the
applicant’s FY 2010 AOR analysis)
results in a total case-weighted average
standardized charge per case of $59,727
($52,230 plus $7,497). Using the FY
2011 thresholds published in Table 10
of the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
final rule (74 FR 44173), the caseweighted threshold for MS–DRGs 246,
247, 248, 249, 250, and 251 is $56,487
(all calculations above were performed
using unrounded numbers). Because the
applicant’s calculation of the total caseweighted average standardized charge
per case for the applicable MS–DRGs
exceeds the case-weighted threshold
amount, the applicant maintains that
LipiscanTM meets the cost criterion.
We note that in the applicant’s
analysis of the cost criterion, instead of
determining the case-weighted average
standardized charge per case and the
case-weighted threshold amount based
on the actual number of cases from the
FY 2010 AOR file in the applicable MS–
DRGs that are eligible for the
LipiscanTM, the applicant’s analysis
assumed an even distribution of patients
in the applicable MS–DRGs. However,
the data from the FY 2010 AOR file
shows a varied distribution of cases in
PO 00000
Frm 00081
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
each of the applicable MS–DRGs. We
believe the more appropriate way to
determine the case-weighted average
standardized charge per case and the
case-weighted threshold amount for
evaluating the cost criterion is to use the
actual distribution of cases in the
applicable MS–DRGs based on the
number of cases from the AOR file
because this would more accurately
reflect the number and type of Medicare
cases typically treated in the applicable
MS–DRGs. Moreover, this would better
conform with the applicant’s assertion
that the probability of use of LipiscanTM
is the same in each of those six MS–
DRGs. Using data from the FY 2010
AOR file, for MS–DRGs 246, 247, 248,
249, 250, and 251, there were 30,411,
147,952, 19,736, 67,964, 8,184, and
38,091 cases, respectively. Using this
case distribution and the average
standardized charge per case for MS–
DRGs 246, 247, 248, 249, 250, and 251
from the application (that is, $67,531,
$44,485, $62,936, $40,149, $59,416, and
$38,864, respectively, as stated above),
the case-weighted average standardized
charge per case is $46,657. As the
applicant indicated above, the caseweighted average standardized charge
per case does not include charges
related to LipiscanTM. Therefore, it is
necessary to add the average charge of
$7,497 related to the device to the caseweighted standardized charge per case
to evaluate the cost threshold criterion.
Adding the estimated charges related to
the device to the case-weighted average
standardized charge per case (based on
the case distribution from the FY 2010
AOR final rule file) results in a total
case-weighted average standardized
charge per case of $54,154 ($46,657 plus
$7,497). Using the FY 2011 thresholds
published in Table 10 of the FY 2010
IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74
FR 44173) and the actual case
distribution from the AOR file, the caseweighted threshold for MS–DRGs 246,
247, 248, 249, 250, and 251 is $52,700
(all calculations above were performed
using unrounded numbers). Because
this alternative calculation of total caseweighted average standardized charge
per case for the applicable MS–DRGs
also exceeds the case-weighted
threshold amount, it appears that
LipiscanTM would meet the cost
criterion. We invite public comment on
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23932
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
whether or not LipiscanTM meets the
cost criterion.
With regard to substantial clinical
improvement, CMS determined that the
FY 2010 new technology add-on
payment application for LipiscanTM did
not meet the substantial clinical
improvement criterion because the
evidence and information available at
the time the new technology decisions
were made did not allow CMS to
determine that the application
represented a substantial clinical
improvement over existing technologies.
Specifically, CMS found that there was
a lack of evidence that demonstrated
that LipiscanTM affected the medical
management of patients in which the
device was used.
The applicant maintains that the
device meets this criterion for the
following reasons. The applicant noted
that from November 2008 to 2009, the
number of patients in whom LipiscanTM
has been used for clinical purposes has
increased from 100 to 500 and during
the same period, the number of
hospitals using the product has
increased from 6 to 16. In addition, the
applicant asserts that ‘‘during the past
year, two LipiscanTM publications
demonstrate that dilation of a lipid core
plaque is responsible for slow or no
reflow and myocardial infarction during
the procedure.’’ The applicant noted that
this is important because ‘‘several
treatments are available that could
prevent this stenting complication.’’ The
applicant referenced the ‘‘700 patient
PROSPECT Study’’ which was presented
at Transcatheter Cardiovascular
Therapeutics Conference in September
2009 and found that 20.4 percent of
patients experience a new event in the
3.4 years following stenting. The
applicant pointed to that finding as
evidence that there is a need for
improved safety and efficacy of stenting
and maintained that LipiscanTM offers
clinicians the ability to make decisions
that result in such improvements.
The PROSPECT (Providing Regional
Observations to Study Predictors of
Events in the Coronary Tree) study is a
cohort study of patients with acute
coronary syndrome who underwent
percutaneous coronary angioplasty and
stenting (percutaneous coronary
intervention). Following the procedure,
angiography and intravascular
ultrasound (IVUS) were performed. If a
patient had a subsequent event, a new
angiogram and IVUS image were
obtained and compared to the original
results. The investigators reported that
‘‘angiographically mild lesions with
certain morphologic features on
grayscale and IVUS present with a 3
year cardiac event rate of 17%, versus
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
other morphologies (indistinguishable
by conventional angiograms) with three
year event risks of less than 1%.’’ We are
concerned that with this type of study
design, it is not possible to determine
whether the information for the IVUS
image would have altered the
angioplasty and stenting procedures
since the images were collected after the
procedure. The results are suggestive,
but a prospective study is needed to
determine the clinical utility of IVUS
and whether use of IVUS leads to
changes in clinical practice or
improvements in health outcomes. The
PROSPECT study generated a
hypothesis that use of IVUS may help
determine which plaques are vulnerable
to future events but further clinical
research is needed to confirm this
hypothesis. We note that the PROSPECT
study was presented at the
Transcatheter Cardiovascular
Therapeutics Conference in 2009, but
that the study results have yet to be
published in a peer-reviewed journal.
We also note that methods and
conclusions from a study may change
from what was verbally presented
during the peer review process that is
required to publish the study results.
As it did in its prior application, the
applicant noted that the September 1,
2001 final rule states that one facet of
the criterion for substantial clinical
improvement is ‘‘the device offers the
ability to diagnose a medical condition
in a patient population where the
medical condition is currently
undetectable or offers the ability to
diagnose a medical condition earlier in
a patient population than allowed by
currently available methods. There must
also be evidence that use of the device
to make a diagnosis affects the
management of the patient’’ (66 FR
46914). The applicant believes that
LipiscanTM meets all facets of this
criterion. The applicant asserted that the
device is able to detect a condition that
is not currently detectable. The
applicant explained that LipiScanTM is
the first device of its kind to be able to
detect lipid-core-containing plaques of
interest and to assess of coronary artery
lipid core burden. The applicant further
noted that FDA, in its approval
documentation, has indicated that ‘‘This
is the first device that can help assess
the chemical makeup of coronary artery
plaques and help doctors identify those
of particular concern.’’
In addition, the applicant stated that
the LipiScanTM chemogram permits a
clinician to detect lipid-core-containing
plaques in the coronary arteries
compared to other currently available
devices that do not have this ability.
The applicant explained that the
PO 00000
Frm 00082
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
angiogram, the conventional test for
coronary atherosclerosis, shows only
minimal coronary narrowing. However,
the applicant indicated that the
LipiScanTM chemogram has the ability
to reveal when an artery contains
extensive lipid-core-containing plaque
at an earlier stage.
The applicant also noted that the
device has the ability to make a
diagnosis that better affects the
management of the patient. Specifically,
the applicant asserted that LipiScanTM
‘‘is currently used in the management of
patients undergoing coronary stenting to
improve the safety and efficacy of the
procedure’’ and that while stenting has
steadily improved, its results are not
optimal in approximately 30 percent of
cases due to 3 problems: (1) Peristenting MI due to embolization of lipid
core contents and side branch
occlusion; (2) major adverse coronary
events (MACE) post stenting from
difficulties at the stented site; and (3)
MACE post stenting for non-stented
vulnerable sites. We note that in order
to demonstrate that the technology
represents a substantial clinical
improvement, there must be evidence
that use of the device to make a
diagnosis affects the medical
management of the patient and leads to
improved clinical outcomes.
The applicant described three case
studies where each of the above
problems was addressed by use of the
LipiScanTM. In addition, the applicant
asserts that the chemogram results are
available to the interventional
cardiologist during the PCI procedure,
and have been found to be useful in
decision-making. According to the
applicant, physicians have reported
changes in therapy based on LipiScanTM
findings in 20 to 50 percent of patients
in which the device has been used.
According to the applicant, the most
common use of LipiScanTM results has
been by physicians for selection of the
length of artery to be stented. In some
cases a longer stent has been used when
there is a lipid-core-containing plaque
adjacent to the area that is being stented
because a flow-limiting stenosis is
present. The applicant also noted that,
in some cases, physicians have chosen
to use down-stream protective devices
during stenting procedures on the basis
of information gathered by use of
LipiscanTM in several patients, and that
this has directly impacted their outcome
by capturing emboli and preventing
further cardiac damage. Therefore, the
applicant contends that the use of
LipiScanTM by clinicians to select the
length of artery to be stented and as an
aid in selection of intensity of lipidaltering therapy, demonstrates that
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
LipiScanTM affects the management of
patients.
While we recognize that the
identification of lipid-rich plaques in
the coronary vasculature holds promise
in the management of coronary artery
disease, we are concerned that
statements in the FDA approval
documents, as well as statements made
by investigators in the literature, suggest
that the clinical implications of
identifying these lipid-rich plaques are
not yet certain and that further studies
need to be done to understand the
clinical implications of obtaining this
information.
The applicant also submitted
commentary from Interventional
Cardiologists (a group of clinicians who
currently utilize the LipiScanTM device)
explaining the clinical benefits of the
device. The applicant further noted that
the device may have other potential
uses that would be of clinical benefit,
and studies are currently being
conducted to investigate these other
potential uses. The applicant explained
that LipiScanTM offers promise as a
means to enhance progress against the
two leading problems in coronary
disease management: (1) The high rate
of second events that occur even after
catheterization, revascularization, and
the institution of optimal medical
therapy; and (2) the failure to diagnose
coronary disease early, which results in
sudden death or MI being the first sign
of the disease in most patients. The
applicant further stated that the
identification of coronary lipid-corecontaining plaques, which can most
readily be done in those already
undergoing catheterization, is likely to
be of benefit in the prevention of second
events. In the longer term, the applicant
stated that the identification of lipidcore-containing plaques by LipiScanTM
may contribute to the important goal of
primary prevention of coronary events,
which, in the absence of adequate
diagnostic methods, continue to cause
extensive morbidity, mortality and
health care expenditures in Medicare
beneficiaries and the general
population.
We welcome public comment
regarding whether or not the LipiScanTM
technology represents a substantial
clinical improvement in the Medicare
population.
We received approximately nine
public comments during the town hall
meeting public comment period on the
LipiScanTM and LipiScanTM IVUS. The
comments relating to LipiScanTM IVUS
are summarized at the end of the
LipiScanTM IVUS application.
Comment: Several commenters
supported approving the LipiScanTM
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
device for new technology add-on
payments. They stated (using nearly
identical language) that LipiScanTM
provided accurate information about the
presence of lipid core plaques that was
previously unavailable. They also stated
that the device ‘‘permits the detection of
an earlier stage of coronary artery
disease.’’ The commenters also stated
that, ‘‘over the past year evidence has
been obtained documenting that the
presence of a lipid-core plaque at a
stenotic site (as detected by LipiScanTM)
is an excellent predictor or peri-stenting
myocardial infarction due to distal
embolization of the lipid core following
balloon dilation. This valuable
diagnostic information can be combined
with well-established treatments
(prophylactic administration of
vasodilators and/or direct stenting) as a
means to reduce the stenting
complication of peri-stenting MI.’’
One commenter stated that ‘‘the
knowledge that a patient possesses lipid
laden atheroma will markedly alter
medical therapy in order to prevent
thrombotic events. These heretofore
unrecognized (asymptomatic) patients
identified to be at high risk by the
Lipiscan chemogram will be treated
with intensive antihyperlipdemic
therapy and other medical strategies
that otherwise would not have been
implemented to modify risk.’’ Some
commenters indicated that other
potential uses of LipiScanTM include
‘‘determination of the length of the
artery to be stented and selection of the
intensity of lipid-altering therapy.’’
Several commenters stated that the
‘‘lack of specific reimbursement’’ for the
technology was an impediment to the
use and development of it.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their comments. We have considered
the comments concerning the town hall
meeting in this proposed rule. As stated
above, we invite additional public
comment on objective data regarding the
assertions made by the commenters.
Specifically, we welcome additional
information (including specific casedescriptions) regarding how the use of
the technology has affected the medical
management of patients and how the
changes in management have led to
improved clinical outcomes for those
patients (again, specific examples are
welcomed).
In response to the comments
concerning Medicare reimbursement for
LipiScanTM, we note that LipiScanTM is
currently covered by Medicare and
would thus be included in the MS–DRG
payment made to the hospital. In
general, the MS–DRG payment is
considered to cover all costs associated
with the case including those of new
PO 00000
Frm 00083
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23933
technologies. As noted above, typically,
there is a lag of 2 to 3 years from the
point a new medical service or
technology is first introduced on the
market (generally on the date that the
technology receives FDA approval/
clearance) and when data reflecting the
use of the medical service or technology
are used to calculate the MS–DRG
weights. In addition, Congress specified
that a new medical service or
technology may be considered for new
technology add-on payment if, ‘‘based
on the estimated costs incurred with
respect to discharges involving such
service or technology, the DRG
prospective payment rate otherwise
applicable to such discharges under this
subsection is inadequate.’’ While we
agree with the commenter that at this
time there is no specific reimbursement
for LipiscanTM within the MS–DRGs in
the form of a new technology add-on
payment, because LipiscanTM has
applied for new technology add-on
payments, we will evaluate it to
determine whether it meets the criteria
to receive new technology add-on
payments in FY 2011. If the technology
does not meet the new technology addon payment criteria, it will continue to
be paid as part of the regular MS–DRG
payment and once the lag of 2 to 3 years
is over, the costs associated of
LipiscanTM will be fully reflected in the
relative weights that are used to
recalibrate the MS–DRGs.
c. LipiScanTM Coronary Imaging
System With Intravascular Ultrasound
(IVUS)
InfraReDx, Inc. submitted an
application for new technology add-on
payments for FY 2011 for the
LipiScanTM Coronary Imaging System
with Intravascular Ultrasound
(LipiScanTM IVUS). The LipiScanTM
IVUS device is a diagnostic device that
uses Intravascular near infrared
spectroscopy (INIRS) combined with
intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) during
an invasive coronary angiography to
determine the chemical composition of
coronary plaques, which is
accomplished using near infrared
spectroscopy (INIRS) and to visualize
stents and the structural features of
coronary lesions, which is
accomplished using IVUS. This new
technology combines both capabilities
in a single catheter. The IVUS part of
the device utilizes sound to interrogate
the artery and, according to the
applicant, provides an image of the size
of the plaque, the degree of stenosis
produced by the plaque, the size of the
artery and the degree of expansion of
the stent. The device consists of a
single-use catheter, a console and a
‘‘single pullback with the artery.’’ The
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23934
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
device is intended to be used in patients
already undergoing coronary stenting.
With respect to the newness criterion,
we note that this device is not currently
approved by the FDA, but the
manufacturer anticipates that FDA
approval will be granted in the second
quarter of 2010. We also note that IVUS
has existed for over 20 years. Therefore,
IVUS, on its own, would not meet the
newness criterion. The applicant asserts
that one difference from the LipiscanTM
product, for which it has also submitted
an application for new technology addon payments, is that the catheter for the
combined product is filled with saline
(which is required for transmission of
sound). The manufacturer has also
stated that the combined device only
requires the use of one catheter, as
opposed to two separate ones. The
manufacturer asserts that the single-use
catheter for the combined technologies
is only supplied by InfraRedX (the
manufacturer of LipiScanTM). However,
we note that a physician could use
LipiScanTM and IVUS as two separate
products in the same patient (through
the use of two catheters) and still be
able to obtain the INIRS image and the
ultrasound that are achieved through
the combined product albeit separately.
We welcome public comments
regarding whether the combined
LipiScanTM IVUS device should be
considered to be ‘‘new’’ as of the date of
the existing LipiScanTM device received
FDA approval or whether it should be
considered new from the FDA approval
date for LipiScanTM IVUS (should such
an approval be granted). We also
welcome public comments regarding
whether LipiScanTM IVUS, as a
combined technology, should be
considered to be substantially similar to
each individual technology separately
as of the date that each separate
technology received FDA approval (or
the date that each technology became
available on the market, if either
technology was not available on the
market until a date after FDA approval).
As stated above, in making a
determination of substantial similarity,
we consider the following: (1) Whether
a product uses the same or similar
mechanism of action to achieve a
therapeutic action; (2) whether a
product is assigned to the same or a
different DRG; and (3) whether new use
of a technology involves treatment of
the same or similar type of disease and
the same or similar patient population.
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
final rule, we stated that ‘‘due to the
complexity of issues regarding the
substantial similarity component of the
newness criterion, it may be necessary
to exercise flexibility when considering
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
whether technologies are substantially
similar to one another (74 FR 43813).
We note that the LipiScanTM IVUS
device is identified by ICD–9–CM
procedure codes 38.23 (Intravascular
spectroscopy) and 00.24 (Intravascular
imaging of coronary vessels). Cases
involving the use of this device
generally map to MS–DRG 246
(Percutaneous Cardiovascular
Procedures with Drug-Eluting Stent(s)
with MCC or 4+ Vessels/Stents); MS–
DRG 247 (Percutaneous Cardiovascular
Procedures with Drug-Eluting Stent(s)
without MCC); MS–DRG 248
(Percutaneous Cardiovascular
Procedures with Non-Drug-Eluting
Stent(s) with MCC or 4+ Vessels/Stents);
MS–DRG 249 (Percutaneous
Cardiovascular Procedures with NonDrug-Eluting Stent(s) without MCC);
MS–DRG 250 (Percutaneous
Cardiovascular Procedures without
Coronary Artery Stent with MCC); and
MS–DRG 251 (Percutaneous
Cardiovascular Procedures without
Coronary Artery Stent without MCC).
In an effort to demonstrate that the
technology meets the cost criterion, the
applicant used the FY 2010 final rule
After Outliers Removed (AOR) file
(posted on the CMS Web site) to identify
cases potentially eligible for LipiscanTM
IVUS. The applicant believes that every
case within MS–DRGs 246, 247, 248,
249, 250, and 251 is eligible for
LipiscanTM IVUS. In addition, the
applicant believes that LipiscanTM IVUS
will be evenly distributed across
patients in each of those six MS–DRGs
(16.7 percent within each MS–DRG).
Using data from the AOR file, the
applicant found the average
standardized charge per case for MS–
DRGs 246, 247, 248, 249, 250, and 251
was $67,531, $44,485, $62,936, $40,149,
$59,416, and $38,864 respectively,
equating to a case-weighted average
standardized charge per case of $52,230
(calculation performed using unrounded
numbers). The applicant indicated that
the case-weighted average standardized
charge per case does not include charges
related to LipiscanTM IVUS. Therefore, it
is necessary to add the charges related
to the device to the average caseweighted standardized charge per case
to evaluate the cost threshold criterion.
Although the applicant submitted data
related to the estimated cost per case of
LipiscanTM IVUS, the applicant stated
that the cost of the device is proprietary
information. The applicant analyzed
Hospital Cost Report Information
System (‘‘HCRIS’’) data from 2008 to
determine the charges related to the
device. Specifically, the applicant
searched for the 100 cardiac
catheterization labs that had the highest
PO 00000
Frm 00084
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
volume of cases in the United States.
Based on the HCRIS data from these 100
labs, the applicant determined the mean
cost-to-charge ratio was 0.188 with a
mark-up of 532 percent yielding a
charge of $15,957 for LipiscanTM IVUS.
(We note that this estimate of charges
related to the LipiscanTM IVUS is
significantly higher than the estimate of
charges related to the LipiscanTM
device.) Adding the estimated average
charge related for the device to the caseweighted standardized charge per case
(based on the case distribution from the
applicant’s FY 2010 AOR analysis)
results in a total case-weighted average
standardized charge per case of $68,190
($52,230 plus $15,960). Using the FY
2011 thresholds published in Table 10
of the FY 2011 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
final rule (74 FR 44173), the caseweighted threshold for MS–DRGs 246,
247, 248, 249, 250, and 251 is $56,487
(all calculations above were performed
using unrounded numbers). Because the
applicant’s calculation of the total caseweighted average standardized charge
per case for the applicable MS–DRGs
exceeds the case-weighted threshold
amount, the applicant maintains that
LipiscanTM IVUS meets the cost
criterion.
We note that in the applicant’s
analysis of the cost criterion, instead of
determining the case-weighted average
standardized charge per case and the
case-weighted threshold amount based
on the actual number of cases from the
FY 2010 AOR file in the applicable MS–
DRGs that are eligible for the LipiscanTM
IVUS, the applicant’s analysis assumed
an even distribution of patients in the
applicable MS–DRGs. However, the data
from the FY 2010 AOR file shows a
varied distribution of cases in each of
the applicable MS–DRGs. We believe
the more appropriate way to determine
the case-weighted average standardized
charge per case and the case-weighted
threshold amount for evaluating the cost
criterion is to use the actual distribution
of cases in the applicable MS–DRGs
based on the number of cases from the
AOR file because this would more
accurately reflect the number and type
of Medicare cases typically treated in
the applicable MS–DRGs. Moreover, this
would better conform with the
applicant’s assertion that that the
probability of use of LipiscanTM is the
same in each of those six MS–DRGs.
Using data from the FY 2010 AOR file,
for MS–DRGs 246, 247, 248, 249, 250,
and 251, there were 30,411, 147,952,
19,736, 67,964, 8,184, and 38,091 cases,
respectively. Using this case
distribution and the average
standardized charge per case for MS–
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
DRGs 246, 247, 248, 249, 250, and 251
from the application (that is, $67,531,
$44,485, $62,936, $40,149, $59,416, and
$38,864, respectively, as stated above),
the case-weighted average standardized
charge per case is $46,657. As the
applicant indicated above, the caseweighted average standardized charge
per case does not include charges
related to LipiscanTM IVUS. Therefore, it
is necessary to add the average charge
of $15,960 related to the device to the
case-weighted standardized charge per
case to evaluate the cost threshold
criterion. Adding the estimated charges
related to the device to the caseweighted average standardized charge
per case (based on the case distribution
from the FY 2010 AOR final rule file)
results in a total case-weighted average
standardized charge per case of $62,617
($46,657 plus $15,960). Using the FY
2011 thresholds published in Table 10
of the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
final rule (74 FR 44173) and the actual
case distribution from the AOR file, the
case-weighted threshold for MS–DRGs
246, 247, 248, 249, 250, and 251 is
$52,700 (all calculations above were
performed using unrounded numbers).
Because this alternative calculation of
total case-weighted average
standardized charge per case for the
applicable MS–DRGs exceeds the caseweighted threshold amount, it appears
that LipiscanTM IVUS would meet the
cost criterion.
In addition to the analysis above, the
applicant searched the FY 2008
MedPAR file for cases potentially
eligible for use of the LipiscanTM IVUS.
Because the technology can potentially
be used for all cases within MS–DRGs
246 through 251, the applicant searched
the FY 2008 MedPAR file for all cases
within these MS–DRGs. The applicant
found 30,265 cases (or 9.7 percent of all
cases) in MS–DRG 246; 147,695 cases
(or 47.4 percent of all cases) in MS–DRG
247; 19,642 cases (or 6.3 percent of all
cases) in MS–DRG 248; 67,840 cases (or
21.8 percent of all cases) in MS–DRG
249; 8,120 cases (or 2.6 percent of all
cases) in MS–DRG 250; and 38,022 cases
(or 12.2 percent of all cases) in MS–DRG
251. The average standardized charge
per case was $66,958 for MS–DRG 246,
$50,192 for MS–DRG 247, $72,099 for
MS–DRG 248, $45,086 for MS–DRG 249,
$71,355 for MS–DRG 250, and $46,141
for MS–DRG 251, equating to a caseweighted average standardized charge
per case of $45,964.
Similar to above, the average
standardized charge per case does not
include charges related to the
LipiscanTM IVUS; therefore, it is
necessary to add the charges related to
the device to the average standardized
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
charge per case in evaluating the cost
threshold criterion. Although the
applicant submitted data related to the
estimated cost of LipiscanTM IVUS per
case, the applicant noted that the cost of
the device was proprietary information.
Based on 2008 HCRIS data from the
cardiac catheterization laboratories for
all IPPS hospitals, the applicant
determined a mean cost-to-charge ratio
of 0.246 with a markup of 351 percent,
yielding a charge of $10,543 for
LipiscanTM IVUS. Assuming that the
LipiscanTM IVUS device was marked up
351 percent, the total case-weighted
average standardized charge per case for
cases involving the use of LipiscanTM
IVUS would be $56,507 ($45,964 plus
$10,543) across MS–DRGs 246 through
251.
Using the FY 2011 thresholds
published in Table 10 of the FY 2010
IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74
FR 44173), the case-weighted threshold
for MS–DRGs 246, 247, 248, 249, 250,
and 251 is $52,692 (all calculations
above were performed using unrounded
numbers). Because the applicant’s
calculation of the total case-weighted
average standardized charge per case for
the applicable MS–DRGs exceeds the
case-weighted threshold amount, the
applicant maintains that LipiscanTM
IVUS meets the cost criterion. We invite
public comment on whether or not
LipiscanTM IVUS meets the cost
criterion.
With regard to substantial clinical
improvement, the applicant asserts that
LipiScanTM IVUS lends all the same
benefits of LipiScanTM by itself (see
discussion of LipiScanTM with respect
to clinical improvement in the above
application analysis) and also gives
added benefits of IVUS. Specifically, the
applicant maintains that LipiScanTM
IVUS is superior to perfusion imaging
and coronary angiography because those
procedures only provide information
about the lumen, but not the wall of the
vessel. The applicant asserts that it is
superior to IVUS (by itself) because
IVUS alone cannot identify plaque
composition. The applicant further
maintains that LipiScanTM IVUS
provides a substantial clinical benefit
over Optical Coherence Tomography
(OCT) because OCT cannot be used if
blood is present in the field of view and
identification of lipid by OCT is ‘‘timeconsuming with a requirement for
expert interpretation.’’ In contrast, ‘‘the
LipiScanTM signal is available
immediately after the coronary pullback
and does not require expert
interpretation.’’
The applicant also states that
LipiScanTM IVUS makes it possible to
find the lipid core plaques that are
PO 00000
Frm 00085
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23935
strongly associated with peri-stenting
MI and adverse events post MI that
current methods of diagnosis fail to
find.
Finally, the applicant asserts that
LipiScanTM IVUS affects the
management of the patient by improving
the safety and efficacy of stenting.
Further, the applicant states that while
stenting has steadily improved, its
results are not optimal in approximately
30% of cases due to 3 problems: (1)
Peri-stenting MI due to embolization of
lipid core contents and side branch
occlusion; (2) major adverse coronary
events (MACE) post stenting from
difficulties at the stented site; and (3)
MACE post stenting for non-stented
vulnerable sites.’’
The applicant described three case
studies where each of the above
problems were addressed by use of the
LipiScanTM IVUS. LipiScanTM IVUS
achieves its utility to differentiate lipid
core plaque from fibrotic plaque, a
differentiation that cannot be made by
angiography or grayscale IVUS.
The applicant referenced the ‘‘700
patient PROSPECT Study’’ which was
presented at Transcatheter
Cardiovascular Therapeutic Conference
in September 2009 and found that 20.4
percent of patients experience a new
event in the 3.4 years following stenting.
The applicant pointed to that finding as
evidence that there is a need for
improved safety and efficacy of stenting
and maintained that LipiscanTM offers
clinicians the ability to make decisions
that result in such improvements.
The PROSPECT (Providing Regional
Observations to Study Predictors of
Events in the Coronary Tree) study is a
cohort study of patients with acute
coronary syndrome who underwent
percutaneous coronary angioplasty and
stenting (percutaneous coronary
intervention). Following the procedure,
angiography and IVUS were performed.
If a patient had a subsequent event, a
new angiogram and IVUS image were
obtained and compared to the original
results. The investigators reported that
‘‘angiographically mild lesions with
certain morphologic features on
grayscale and IVUS present with a 3
year cardiac event rate of 17%, versus
other morphologies (indistinguishable
by conventional angiograms) with three
year event risks of less than 1%.’’ We are
concerned that with this type of study
design, it is not possible to determine
whether the information for the IVUS
image would have altered the
angioplasty and stenting procedures
since the images were collected after the
procedure. The results are suggestive,
but a prospective study is needed to
determine the clinical utility of IVUS
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23936
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
and whether use of IVUS leads to
changes in clinical practice or
improvements in health outcomes. The
PROSPECT study generated a
hypothesis that use of IVUS may help
determine which plaques are vulnerable
to future events but further clinical
research is needed to confirm this
hypothesis. We note that the PROSPECT
study was presented at the
Transcatheter Cardiovascular
Therapeutics Conference in 2009, but
that the study results have yet to be
published in a peer reviewed journal.
We also note that methods and
conclusions from a study may change
from what was verbally presented
during the peer review process that is
required to publish the study results.
We are concerned that, in the
LipiScanTM IVUS application, the
applicant has generally repeated the
statements made regarding use of
LipiScanTM alone and has not provided
information that indicates that
combined use of LipiScanTM plus IVUS
offers additional clinical benefit.
Indeed, we note that most of the studies
that were presented in an effort to
support that LipiScanTM by itself was a
substantial clinical improvement, were
also included to support the LipiScanTM
IVUS application. The applicant did not
present any published peer-reviewed
journal articles that were specifically
related to the clinical merits of the
combined LipiScanTM IVUS device.
We welcome public comments on
whether the LipiScanTM IVUS
represents a substantial clinical
improvement over existing technologies
as well as public comments on what is
the appropriate comparison for
LipiScanTM IVUS.
As we noted at the end of the
discussion of the LipiScanTM
application, we received approximately
nine public comments on both the
LipiScanTM and the LipiScanTM IVUS
applications.
Comment: Several commenters
acknowledged that LipiScanTM IVUS is
not yet approved by the FDA, but stated
that they would support the LipiScanTM
IVUS being approved for new
technology add-on payments should
FDA approval be granted. With regard to
the clinical merits of LipiScanTM IVUS,
the commenters stated that the
LipiScanTM IVUS afforded all the same
diagnostic abilities of the LipiScanTM,
but also provided the added benefit of
IVUS, which has ‘‘been used in patients
for over 20 years [and] is already
supported by the [American College of
Cardiologists and the American Hospital
Association] for usage in stenting.’’
One commenter stated that once the
LipiScanTM IVUS becomes approved by
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
the FDA, he plans to use it in all of his
patients who need IVUS imaging
‘‘because of the wealth of added
information regarding the presence of
lipid laden plaque, a harbinger of
myocardial infarction and sudden
death.’’
Response: We thank the commenters
for their comments. However, we note
that unless the technology is approved
by the FDA by July 1, 2010, it cannot be
approved for add-on payments in FY
2011 since it would not be considered
‘‘new.’’ Should the technology receive
FDA approval by July 1, 2010, we will
take these comments into consideration
in our review of the application for new
technology add-on payments for FY
2011.
III. Proposed Changes to the Hospital
Wage Index for Acute Care Hospitals
A. Background
Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act
requires that, as part of the methodology
for determining prospective payments to
hospitals, the Secretary must adjust the
standardized amounts ‘‘for area
differences in hospital wage levels by a
factor (established by the Secretary)
reflecting the relative hospital wage
level in the geographic area of the
hospital compared to the national
average hospital wage level.’’ In
accordance with the broad discretion
conferred under the Act, we currently
define hospital labor market areas based
on the definitions of statistical areas
established by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB). A discussion of the
proposed FY 2011 hospital wage index
based on the statistical areas, including
OMB’s revised definitions of
Metropolitan Areas, appears under
section III.C. of this preamble.
Beginning October 1, 1993, section
1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act requires that we
update the wage index annually.
Furthermore, this section of the Act
provides that the Secretary base the
update on a survey of wages and wagerelated costs of short-term, acute care
hospitals. The survey must exclude the
wages and wage-related costs incurred
in furnishing skilled nursing services.
This provision also requires us to make
any updates or adjustments to the wage
index in a manner that ensures that
aggregate payments to hospitals are not
affected by the change in the wage
index. The proposed adjustment for FY
2011 is discussed in section II.B. of the
Addendum to this proposed rule.
As discussed below in section III.I. of
this preamble, we also take into account
the geographic reclassification of
hospitals in accordance with sections
1886(d)(8)(B) and 1886(d)(10) of the Act
PO 00000
Frm 00086
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
when calculating IPPS payment
amounts. Under section 1886(d)(8)(D) of
the Act, the Secretary is required to
adjust the standardized amounts so as to
ensure that aggregate payments under
the IPPS after implementation of the
provisions of sections 1886(d)(8)(B) and
(C) and 1886(d)(10) of the Act are equal
to the aggregate prospective payments
that would have been made absent these
provisions. The proposed budget
neutrality adjustment for FY 2011 is
discussed in section II.A.4.b. of the
Addendum to this proposed rule.
Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act also
provides for the collection of data every
3 years on the occupational mix of
employees for short-term, acute care
hospitals participating in the Medicare
program, in order to construct an
occupational mix adjustment to the
wage index. A discussion of the
occupational mix adjustment that we
are proposing to apply beginning
October 1, 2010 (the proposed FY 2011
wage index) appears under section III.D.
of this preamble.
B. Wage Index Reform
1. Wage Index Study Required under the
MIEA–TRHCA
a. Legislative Requirement
Section 106(b)(1) of the MIEA–
TRHCA (Pub. L. 109–432) required
MedPAC to submit to Congress, not later
than June 30, 2007, a report on the
Medicare wage index classification
system applied under the Medicare
IPPS. Section 106(b) of MIEA–TRHCA
required the report to include any
alternatives that MedPAC recommends
to the method to compute the wage
index under section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the
Act.
In addition, section 106(b)(2) of the
MIEA–TRHCA instructed the Secretary
of Health and Human Services, taking
into account MedPAC’s
recommendations on the Medicare wage
index classification system, to include
in the FY 2009 IPPS proposed rule one
or more proposals to revise the wage
index adjustment applied under section
1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act for purposes of
the IPPS. The Secretary was also to
consider each of the following:
• Problems associated with the
definition of labor markets for the wage
index adjustment.
• The modification or elimination of
geographic reclassifications and other
adjustments.
• The use of Bureau of Labor of
Statistics (BLS) data or other data or
methodologies to calculate relative
wages for each geographic area.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
• Minimizing variations in wage
index adjustments between and within
MSAs and statewide rural areas.
• The feasibility of applying all
components of CMS’ proposal to other
settings.
• Methods to minimize the volatility
of wage index adjustments while
maintaining the principle of budget
neutrality.
• The effect that the implementation
of the proposal would have on health
care providers on each region of the
country.
• Methods for implementing the
proposal(s), including methods to phase
in such implementations.
• Issues relating to occupational mix
such as staffing practices and any
evidence on quality of care and patient
safety including any recommendation
for alternative calculations to the
occupational mix.
In the FY 2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR
48563 through 48567), we discussed the
MedPAC’s study and recommendations,
the CMS contract with Acumen, L.L.C.
for assistance with impact analysis and
study of wage index reform, and public
comments we received on the MedPAC
recommendations and the CMS/
Acumen study and analysis.
b. Interim and Final Reports on Results
of Acumen’s Study
(1) Interim Report on Impact Analysis of
Using MedPAC’s Recommended Wage
Index
In the FY 2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR
48566 through 48567), we discussed the
analysis conducted by Acumen
comparing use of the MedPAC
recommended wage indices to the
current CMS wage index. We refer
readers to section III.B.1.e. of that final
rule for a full discussion of the impact
analysis as well as to Acumen’s interim
report available on the Web site: http:
//www.acumenllc.com/reports/cms.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
(2) Acumen’s Final Report on Analysis
of the Wage Index Data and
Methodology
Acumen’s final report addressing the
issues in section 106(b)(2) of the MIEA–
TRHCA is divided into two parts. In the
FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final
rule (74 FR 43824), we provided a
description of Acumen’s analyses for
both parts. The first part of Acumen’s
final report analyzed the strengths and
weaknesses of the data sources used to
construct the MedPAC and CMS
indexes. The first part of the report was
published on Acumen’s Web site after
the publication of the FY 2010 IPPS/RY
2010 LTCH PPS proposed rule. In its
conclusion, Acumen suggested that
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
MedPAC’s recommended methods for
revising the wage index represented an
improvement over the existing methods,
and that the BLS data should be used so
that the MedPAC approach can be
implemented.
The second part of Acumen’s final
report focuses on the methodology of
wage index construction and covers
issues related to the definition of wage
areas and methods of adjusting for
differences among neighboring wage
areas, as well as reasons for differential
impacts of shifting to a new index.
Acumen published the second part of its
final report in March 2010 on its Web
site at: http:/www./acumenllc.com/
reports/cms. In particular, the report
analyzes MedPAC’s recommended
method of improving upon the
definition of the wage areas used in the
current wage index. MedPAC’s method
first blends MSA and county-level
wages and then implements a
‘‘smoothing’’ step that limits differences
in wage index values between adjacent
counties to no more than 10 percent.
Acumen found MedPAC’s method to be
an improvement over the current wage
index construct. However, although
MedPAC’s method diminishes the size
of differences between adjacent areas,
Acumen suggested that MedPAC’s
method does not guarantee an accurate
representation of a hospital labor market
and would not necessarily eliminate or
reduce hospitals’ desire to reclassify for
a higher wage index. Acumen
recommended further exploration of
labor market area definitions using a
wage area framework based on hospitalspecific characteristics, such as
commuting times from hospitals to
population centers, to construct a more
accurate hospital wage index. Acumen
suggested that such an approach offers
the greatest potential for replacing or
greatly reducing the need for hospital
reclassifications and exceptions.
We indicated in the FY 2009 IPPS
final rule (73 FR 48566) that, in
developing any proposal(s) for
additional wage index reform that may
be included in the FY 2010 IPPS
proposed rule, we would consider all of
the public comments on the MedPAC
recommendations that we had received
in that proposed rulemaking cycle,
along with the interim and final reports
to be submitted to us by Acumen. As
Acumen’s study was not complete at the
time of issuance of the FY 2010 IPPS/
RY 2010 LTCH PPS proposed rule, we
did not propose any additional changes
to the hospital wage index for the FY
2010 IPPS. We also are not proposing
any additional changes regarding
reforming the wage index for the FY
2011 IPPS. We welcome comments
PO 00000
Frm 00087
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23937
regarding the second part of Acumen’s
final report.
2. FY 2009 Policy Changes in Response
to Requirements Under Section 106(b)
of the MIEA–TRHCA
To implement the requirements of
section 106(b) of the MIEA–TRHCA and
respond to MedPAC’s recommendations
in its June 2007 report to Congress, in
the FY 2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR
48567 through 48574), we made the
following policy changes relating to the
hospital wage index. (We refer readers
to the FY 2009 IPPS final rule for a full
discussion of the basis for the proposals,
the public comments received, and the
FY 2009 final policy.) In the FY 2010
IPPS final rule (74 FR 43825), we
reiterated these policy changes,
especially as they related to the FY 2010
IPPS.
a. Reclassification Average Hourly Wage
Comparison Criteria
In the FY 2009 IPPS final rule, we
adopted the policy to adjust the
reclassification average hourly wage
standard, comparing a reclassifying
hospital’s (or county hospital group’s)
average hourly wage relative to the
average hourly wage of the area to
which it seeks reclassification. We
provided for a phase-in of the
adjustment over 2 years. For
applications for reclassification for the
first transitional year, FY 2010, the
average hourly wage standards were set
at 86 percent for urban hospitals and
group reclassifications and 84 percent
for rural hospitals. For applications for
reclassification for FY 2011 (for which
the application deadline was September
1, 2009) and for subsequent fiscal years,
the average hourly wage standards are
88 percent for urban and group
reclassifications and 86 percent for rural
hospitals (§§ 412.230, 412.232, and
412.234 of the regulations). As stated
above, these policies were adopted in
the FY 2009 IPPS final rule and are
reflected in the wage index in the
Addendum to this proposed rule. We
note that these criteria were recently
changed by provisions of section
3137(c) of the PPACA (Pub. L. 111–148).
We will address the changes made by
Public Law 111–148 in a separate
rulemaking document in the Federal
Register.
b. Budget Neutrality Adjustment for the
Rural and Imputed Floors
In the FY 2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR
48574 through 48575), we adopted State
level budget neutrality (rather than the
national budget neutrality adjustment)
for the rural and imputed floors,
effective beginning with the FY 2009
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23938
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
wage index. The transition from the
national budget neutrality adjustment to
the State level budget neutrality
adjustment was phased in over a 3-year
period. In FY 2009, hospitals received a
blended wage index that was 20 percent
of a wage index with the State level
rural and imputed floor budget
neutrality adjustment and 80 percent of
a wage index with the national budget
neutrality adjustment. In FY 2010, the
blended wage index reflects 50 percent
of the State level adjustment and 50
percent of the national adjustment. In
FY 2011, as reflected in the IPPS wage
index in this proposed rule, the
adjustment will be completely
transitioned to the State level
methodology.
In the FY 2009 IPPS final rule, we
incorporated this policy in our
regulation at § 412.64(e)(4). Specifically,
the regulations specify that CMS makes
an adjustment to the wage index to
ensure that aggregate payments after
implementation of the rural floor under
section 4410 of the Balanced Budget Act
of 1997 (Pub. L. 105–33) and the
imputed floor under § 412.64(h)(4) are
made in a manner that ensures that
aggregate payments to hospitals are not
affected and that, beginning October 1,
2008, CMS would transition from a
nationwide adjustment to a statewide
adjustment, with a statewide adjustment
fully in place by October 1, 2010.
As stated above, these policies for the
rural and imputed floors were adopted
in the FY 2009 IPPS final rule and are
reflected in the wage index in the
Addendum to this proposed rule.
However, these policies were recently
changed by the provisions of section
3141 of the PPACA (Pub. L. 111–148).
We will address the provisions of
section 3141 of Public Law 111–148 in
a separate rulemaking document in the
Federal Register.
C. Core-Based Statistical Areas for the
Hospital Wage Index
The wage index is calculated and
assigned to hospitals on the basis of the
labor market area in which the hospital
is located. In accordance with the broad
discretion under section 1886(d)(3)(E) of
the Act, beginning with FY 2005, we
define hospital labor market areas based
on the Core-Based Statistical Areas
(CBSAs) established by OMB and
announced in December 2003 (69 FR
49027). For a discussion of OMB’s
revised definitions of CBSAs and our
implementation of the CBSA
definitions, we refer readers to the
preamble of the FY 2005 IPPS final rule
(69 FR 49026 through 49032).
As with the FY 2010 final rule, in this
FY 2011 proposed rule, we are
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
proposing to provide that hospitals
receive 100 percent of their wage index
based upon the CBSA configurations.
Specifically, for each hospital, we are
proposing to determine a wage index for
FY 2011 employing wage index data
from hospital cost reports for cost
reporting periods beginning during FY
2007 and using the CBSA labor market
definitions. We consider CBSAs that are
MSAs to be urban, and CBSAs that are
Micropolitan Statistical Areas as well as
areas outside of CBSAs to be rural. In
addition, it has been our longstanding
policy that where an MSA has been
divided into Metropolitan Divisions, we
consider the Metropolitan Division to
comprise the labor market areas for
purposes of calculating the wage index
(69 FR 49029) (regulations at
§ 412.64(b)(1)(ii)(A)).
On December 1, 2009, OMB
announced changes to the principal
cities and, if applicable, titles of a
number of CBSAs and Metropolitan
Divisions (OMB Bulletin No. 10–2). The
changes to the principal cities and titles
are as follows:
• San Marcos, TX qualifies as a new
principal city of the Austin-Round
Rock, TX CBSA. The new title is AustinRound Rock-San Marcos, TX CBSA.
• Delano, CA qualifies as a new
principal city of the Bakersfield, CA
CBSA. The new title: BakersfieldDelano, CA CBSA.
• Conroe, TX qualifies as a new
principal city of the Houston-Sugar
Land-Baytown, TX CBSA. The CBSA
title is unchanged.
• North Port, FL qualifies as a new
principal city of the Bradenton-SarasotaVenice, FL CBSA. The new title is North
Port-Bradenton-Sarasota, FL CBSA. The
new code is CBSA 35840.
• Sanford, FL qualifies as a new
principal city of the OrlandoKissimmee, FL CBSA. The new title is
Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, FL CBSA.
• Glendale, AZ qualifies as a new
principal city of the Phoenix-MesaScottsdale, AZ CBSA. The new title is
Phoenix-Mesa-Glendale, AZ CBSA.
• Palm Desert, CA qualifies as a new
principal city of the Riverside-San
Bernardino-Ontario, CA CBSA. The
CBSA title is unchanged.
• New Braunfels, TX qualifies as a
new principal city of the San Antonio,
TX CBSA. The new title is San AntonioNew Braunfels, TX CBSA.
• Auburn, WA qualifies as a new
principal city of the Seattle-TacomaBellevue, WA CBSA. The CBSA title is
unchanged.
The changes to titles resulting from
changes to the order of principal cities
based on population are as follows:
PO 00000
Frm 00088
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
• Rockville, MD replaces Frederick,
MD as the second most populous
principal city in the Bethesda-FrederickRockville, MD Metropolitan Division.
The new title is Bethesda-RockvilleFrederick, MD Metropolitan Division.
• Rock Hill, SC replaces Concord, NC
as the third most populous principal
city in the Charlotte-Gastonia-Concord,
NC–SC CBSA. The new title is
Charlotte-Gastonia-Rock Hill, NC–SC
CBSA.
• Joliet, IL replaces Naperville, IL as
the second most populous principal city
in the Chicago-Naperville-Joliet, IL
Metropolitan Division. The new title is
Chicago-Joliet-Naperville, IL
Metropolitan Division.
• Crestview, FL replaces Fort Walton
Beach, FL as the most populous
principal city in the Fort Walton BeachCrestview-Destin, FL CBSA. The new
title is Crestview-Fort Walton BeachDestin, FL CBSA. The new code is
18880.
• Hillsboro, OR replaces Beaverton,
OR as the third most populous principal
city in the Portland-VancouverBeaverton, OR–WA CBSA. The new title
is Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro, OR–
WA CBSA.
• Steubenville, OH replaces Weirton,
WV as the most populous principal city
in the Weirton-Steubenville, WV–OH
CBSA. The new title is SteubenvilleWeirton, OH–WV CBSA. The new CBSA
code is 44600.
The OMB bulletin is available on the
OMB Web site at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/OMB—go to
‘‘Agency Information’’ and click on
‘‘Bulletins’’. CMS will apply these
changes to the IPPS beginning October
1, 2010.
D. Proposed Occupational Mix
Adjustment to the Proposed FY 2011
Wage Index
As stated earlier, section 1886(d)(3)(E)
of the Act provides for the collection of
data every 3 years on the occupational
mix of employees for each short-term,
acute care hospital participating in the
Medicare program, in order to construct
an occupational mix adjustment to the
wage index, for application beginning
October 1, 2004 (the FY 2005 wage
index). The purpose of the occupational
mix adjustment is to control for the
effect of hospitals’ employment choices
on the wage index. For example,
hospitals may choose to employ
different combinations of registered
nurses, licensed practical nurses,
nursing aides, and medical assistants for
the purpose of providing nursing care to
their patients. The varying labor costs
associated with these choices reflect
hospital management decisions rather
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
than geographic differences in the costs
of labor.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
1. Development of Data for the Proposed
FY 2011 Occupational Mix Adjustment
Based on the 2007–2008 Occupational
Mix Survey
As provided for under section
1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, we collect data
every 3 years on the occupational mix
of employees for each short-term, acute
care hospital participating in the
Medicare program.
For the FY 2010 hospital wage index,
we used occupational mix data
collected on a revised 2007–2008
Medicare Wage Index Occupational Mix
Survey (the 2007–2008 survey) to
compute the occupational mix
adjustment for FY 2010. (We refer
readers to the FY 2010 IPPS final rule
(74 FR 43827) for a detailed discussion
of the 2007–2008 survey.) Again, for the
proposed FY 2011 hospital wage index,
we used data from the 2007–2008
survey (including revised data for 45
hospitals) to compute the proposed FY
2011 adjustment.
2. New 2010 Occupational Mix Survey
for the FY 2013 Wage Index
As stated earlier, section 304(c) of
Public Law 106–554 amended section
1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act to require CMS
to collect data every 3 years on the
occupational mix of employees for each
short-term, acute care hospital
participating in the Medicare program.
We used occupational mix data
collected on the 2007–2008 survey to
compute the occupational mix
adjustment for FY 2010 and the
proposed FY 2011 wage index in this
proposed rule. We also plan to use the
2007–2008 survey data for the FY 2012
wage index. Therefore, a new
measurement of occupational mix will
be required for FY 2013.
Since we implemented the 2007–2008
survey, we received several public
comments suggesting further
improvements to the occupational mix
survey. Specifically, commenters
recommended that CMS use the
calendar year (that is, January 1 through
December 31) as the 1-year reporting
period instead of July 1 through June 30.
Commenters also requested that CMS
allow for a 6-month period after the end
of the survey reporting period for
hospitals to complete and submit their
data to their Medicare fiscal
intermediaries and MACs. The
commenters suggested that these
changes will allow hospitals more time
to develop their occupational mix data
before submitting the data to the
Medicare contractors and CMS for use
in development of the wage index.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Based on these comments, we revised
the occupational mix survey. The new
2010 survey (Form CMS–10079 (2010))
will provide for the collection of
hospital-specific wages and hours data
for calendar year 2010 (that is, payroll
periods ending between January 1, 2010
and December 31, 2010) and will be
applied beginning with the FY 2013
wage index.
On September 4, 2009, we published
in the Federal Register a notice
soliciting comments on the proposed
2010 survey (74 FR 45860). The
comment period for the notice ended on
November 3, 2009. After considering the
comments we received, we made a few
minor editorial changes and published
the final 2010 survey in the Federal
Register on January 15, 2010 (75 FR
2548). The survey was approved by
OMB on February 26, 2010 (OMB
control number 0938–0907) and is
available on the CMS Web site at:
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/WIFN/
list.asp#TopOfPage, and through the
fiscal intermediaries/MACs. Hospitals
are required to submit their completed
2010 surveys to their fiscal
intermediaries/MACs by July 1, 2011.
The preliminary, unaudited 2010 survey
data will be released in early October
2011, along with the FY 2009 Worksheet
S–3 wage data, for the FY 2013 wage
index review and correction process.
3. Calculation of the Proposed
Occupational Mix Adjustment for FY
2011
For FY 2011 (as we did for FY 2010),
we are proposing to calculate the
occupational mix adjustment factor
using the following steps:
Step 1—For each hospital, determine
the percentage of the total nursing
category attributable to a nursing
subcategory by dividing the nursing
subcategory hours by the total nursing
category’s hours. Repeat this
computation for each of the four nursing
subcategories: registered nurses;
licensed practical nurses; nursing aides,
orderlies, and attendants; and medical
assistants.
Step 2—Determine a national average
hourly rate for each nursing subcategory
by dividing a subcategory’s total salaries
for all hospitals in the occupational mix
survey database by the subcategory’s
total hours for all hospitals in the
occupational mix survey database.
Step 3—For each hospital, determine
an adjusted average hourly rate for each
nursing subcategory by multiplying the
percentage of the total nursing category
(from Step 1) by the national average
hourly rate for that nursing subcategory
PO 00000
Frm 00089
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23939
(from Step 2). Repeat this calculation for
each of the four nursing subcategories.
Step 4—For each hospital, determine
the adjusted average hourly rate for the
total nursing category by summing the
adjusted average hourly rate (from Step
3) for each of the nursing subcategories.
Step 5—Determine the national
average hourly rate for the total nursing
category by dividing total nursing
category salaries for all hospitals in the
occupational mix survey database by
total nursing category hours for all
hospitals in the occupational mix
survey database.
Step 6—For each hospital, compute
the occupational mix adjustment factor
for the total nursing category by
dividing the national average hourly
rate for the total nursing category (from
Step 5) by the hospital’s adjusted
average hourly rate for the total nursing
category (from Step 4).
If the hospital’s adjusted average
hourly rate is less than the national
average hourly rate (indicating the
hospital employs a less costly mix of
nursing employees), the occupational
mix adjustment factor is greater than
1.0000. If the hospital’s adjusted average
hourly rate is greater than the national
average hourly rate, the occupational
mix adjustment factor is less than
1.0000.
Step 7—For each hospital, calculate
the occupational mix adjusted salaries
and wage-related costs for the total
nursing category by multiplying the
hospital’s total salaries and wage-related
costs (from Step 5 of the unadjusted
wage index calculation in section III.G.
of this preamble) by the percentage of
the hospital’s total workers attributable
to the total nursing category (using the
occupational mix survey data, this
percentage is determined by dividing
the hospital’s total nursing category
salaries by the hospital’s total salaries
for ‘‘nursing and all other’’) and by the
total nursing category’s occupational
mix adjustment factor (from Step 6
above).
The remaining portion of the
hospital’s total salaries and wage-related
costs that is attributable to all other
employees of the hospital is not
adjusted by the occupational mix. A
hospital’s all other portion is
determined by subtracting the hospital’s
nursing category percentage from 100
percent.
Step 8—For each hospital, calculate
the total occupational mix adjusted
salaries and wage-related costs for a
hospital by summing the occupational
mix adjusted salaries and wage-related
costs for the total nursing category (from
Step 7) and the portion of the hospital’s
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23940
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
salaries and wage-related costs for all
other employees (from Step 7).
To compute a hospital’s occupational
mix adjusted average hourly wage,
divide the hospital’s total occupational
mix adjusted salaries and wage-related
costs by the hospital’s total hours (from
Step 4 of the unadjusted wage index
calculation in section III.G. of this
preamble).
Step 9—To compute the occupational
mix adjusted average hourly wage for an
urban or rural area, sum the total
occupational mix adjusted salaries and
wage-related costs for all hospitals in
the area, then sum the total hours for all
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
hospitals in the area. Next, divide the
area’s occupational mix adjusted
salaries and wage-related costs by the
area’s hours.
Step 10—To compute the national
occupational mix adjusted average
hourly wage, sum the total occupational
mix adjusted salaries and wage-related
costs for all hospitals in the Nation, then
sum the total hours for all hospitals in
the Nation. Next, divide the national
occupational mix adjusted salaries and
wage-related costs by the national
hours. The proposed FY 2011
occupational mix adjusted national
average hourly wage is $34.9124.
PO 00000
Frm 00090
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Step 11—To compute the
occupational mix adjusted wage index,
divide each area’s occupational mix
adjusted average hourly wage (Step 9)
by the national occupational mix
adjusted average hourly wage (Step 10).
Step 12—To compute the Puerto Rico
specific occupational mix adjusted wage
index, follow Steps 1 through 11 above.
The proposed FY 2011 occupational
mix adjusted Puerto Rico-specific
average hourly wage is $14.7567.
The table below is an illustrative
example of the occupational mix
adjustment.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00091
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23941
EP04MY10.021
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00092
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.022
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23942
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Because the occupational mix
adjustment is required by statute, all
hospitals that are subject to payments
under the IPPS, or any hospital that
would be subject to the IPPS if not
granted a waiver, must complete the
occupational mix survey, unless the
hospital has no associated cost report
wage data that are included in the
proposed FY 2011 wage index. For the
FY 2007–2008 survey, the response rate
was 90.4 percent.
In computing the proposed FY 2011
wage index, if a hospital did not
respond to the occupational mix survey,
or if we determined that a hospital’s
submitted data were too erroneous to
include in the wage index, we assigned
the hospital the average occupational
mix adjustment for the labor market
area. We believe this method had the
least impact on the wage index for other
hospitals in the area. For areas where no
hospital submitted data for purposes of
calculating the proposed occupational
mix adjustment, we applied the national
occupational mix factor of 1.0000 in
calculating the area’s proposed FY 2011
occupational mix adjusted wage index.
In addition, if a hospital submitted a
survey, but that survey data could not
be used because we determine it to be
aberrant, we also assigned the hospital
the average occupational mix
adjustment for its labor market area. For
example, if a hospital’s individual nurse
category average hourly wages were out
of range (that is, unusually high or low),
and the hospital did not provide
sufficient documentation to explain the
aberrancy, or the hospital did not
submit any registered nurse salaries or
hours data, we assigned the hospital the
average occupational mix adjustment for
the labor market area in which it is
located.
In calculating the average
occupational mix adjustment factor for
a labor market area, we replicated Steps
1 through 6 of the calculation for the
occupational mix adjustment. However,
instead of performing these steps at the
hospital level, we aggregated the data at
the labor market area level. In following
these steps, for example, for CBSAs that
contain providers that did not submit
occupational mix survey data, the
occupational mix adjustment factor
ranged from a low of 0.9252 (CBSA
17780, College Station-Bryan, TX), to a
high of 1.1199 (CBSA 40980, SaginawSaginaw Township North, MI). Also, in
computing a hospital’s occupational
mix adjusted salaries and wage-related
costs for nursing employees (Step 7 of
the calculation), in the absence of
occupational mix survey data, we
multiplied the hospital’s total salaries
and wage-related costs by the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
percentage of the area’s total workers
attributable to the area’s total nursing
category. For FY 2011, there are 5
CBSAs (that include 5 hospitals) for
which we did not have occupational
mix data for any of its hospitals. The
CBSAs are:
• CBSA 21940 Fajardo, PR (one
hospital)
• CBSA 22140 (Farmington, NM (one
hospital)
• CBSA 36140 Ocean City, NJ (one
hospital)
• CBSA 41900 San German-Cabo
Rojo, PR (two hospitals)
• CBSA 49500 Yauco, PR (one
hospital)
Since the FY 2007 IPPS final rule, we
have periodically discussed applying a
hospital-specific penalty to hospitals
that fail to submit occupational mix
survey data. (71 FR 48013 through
48014; 72 FR 47314 through 47315; 73
FR 48580; and 74 FR 43832). During the
FY 2008 rulemaking cycle, some
commenters suggested a penalty equal
to a 1- to 2-percent reduction in the
hospital’s wage index value or a set
percentage of the standardized amount.
During the FY 2009 and FY 2010
rulemaking cycles, several commenters
reiterated their view that full
participation in the occupational mix
survey is critical, and that CMS should
develop a methodology that encourages
hospitals to report occupational mix
survey data but does not unfairly
penalize neighboring hospitals. We
indicated in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010
LTCH PPS proposed rule that, while we
were not proposing a penalty at that
time, we would consider the public
comments we previously received, as
well as any public comments on the
proposed rule, as we develop the
proposed FY 2011 wage index.
To gain a better understanding of why
some hospitals are not submitting the
occupational mix data, beginning with
the new 2010 occupational mix survey
(discussed in section III.D.2. of this
preamble), we will require hospitals that
do not submit occupational mix data to
provide an explanation for not
complying with the submission
requirements. We will instruct fiscal
intermediaries/MACs to gather this
information as part of the FY 2013 wage
index desk review process. We note that
we reserve the right to apply a different
approach in future years, including
potentially penalizing nonresponsive
hospitals.
E. Worksheet S–3 Wage Data for the
Proposed FY 2011 Wage Index
The proposed FY 2011 wage index
values are based on the data collected
from the Medicare cost reports
PO 00000
Frm 00093
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23943
submitted by hospitals for cost reporting
periods beginning in FY 2007 (the FY
2010 wage index was based on data
from cost reporting periods beginning
during FY 2006).
1. Included Categories of Costs
The proposed FY 2011 wage index
includes the following categories of data
associated with costs paid under the
IPPS (as well as outpatient costs):
• Salaries and hours from short-term,
acute care hospitals (including paid
lunch hours and hours associated with
military leave and jury duty)
• Home office costs and hours
• Certain contract labor costs and
hours (which includes direct patient
care, certain top management,
pharmacy, laboratory, and nonteaching
physician Part A services, and certain
contract indirect patient care services
(as discussed in the FY 2008 final rule
with comment period (72 FR 47315))
• Wage-related costs, including
pensions and other deferred
compensation costs. We note that, for
developing pension and deferred
compensation costs for purposes of the
wage index, CMS requires hospitals to
comply with the requirements in 42
CFR 413.100, the Provider
Reimbursement Manual (PRM), Part I,
Sections 2140, 2141, and 2142, and
related Medicare program instructions,
as discussed in the cost reporting
instructions for Worksheet S–3, Part II,
Lines 13 through 20, and in the FY 2006
IPPS final rule (70 FR 47369). On March
28, 2008, CMS published Revision 436,
a technical clarification to the PRM, Part
I policies for pension and deferred
compensation costs. In addition, in
November 2009, CMS released, through
a Joint Signature Memorandum,
instructions and a spreadsheet to assist
hospitals and Medicare contractors in
determining the annual allowable
defined benefit pension cost for the FY
2011 wage index (JSM/TDL–10061, 11–
20–09, December 3, 2009). These
instructions and spreadsheet crosswalk
the current interest, liability, and
normal cost terminology found in the
Medicare reimbursement policies under
Section 2142 of the PRM, Part I to the
new terminology applicable under the
Pension Protection Act of 2006. The
spreadsheet and instructions can be
downloaded from the CMS Web site at
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/WIFN/itemdetail.
asp?filterType=none&filterBy
DID=0&sortByDID=3&
sortOrder=descending&
itemID=CMS1231035&
intNumPerPage=10.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23944
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
2. Excluded Categories of Costs
Consistent with the wage index
methodology for FY 2009, the wage
index for FY 2010 also excludes the
direct and overhead salaries and hours
for services not subject to IPPS payment,
such as SNF services, home health
services, costs related to GME (teaching
physicians and residents) and certified
registered nurse anesthetists (CRNAs),
and other subprovider components that
are not paid under the IPPS. The
proposed FY 2011 wage index also
excludes the salaries, hours, and wagerelated costs of hospital-based rural
health clinics (RHCs), and Federally
qualified health centers (FQHCs)
because Medicare pays for these costs
outside of the IPPS (68 FR 45395). In
addition, salaries, hours, and wagerelated costs of CAHs are excluded from
the wage index, for the reasons
explained in the FY 2004 IPPS final rule
(68 FR 45397).
3. Use of Wage Index Data by Providers
Other Than Acute Care Hospitals under
the IPPS
Data collected for the IPPS wage
index are also currently used to
calculate wage indices applicable to
other providers, such as SNFs, home
health agencies (HHAs), and hospices.
In addition, they are used for
prospective payments to IRFs, IPFs, and
LTCHs, and for hospital outpatient
services. We note that, in the IPPS rules,
we do not address comments pertaining
to the wage indices for non-IPPS
providers, other than for LTCHs. Such
comments should be made in response
to separate proposed rules for those
providers.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
F. Verification of Worksheet S–3 Wage
Data
The wage data for the proposed FY
2011 wage index were obtained from
Worksheet S–3, Parts II and III of the
Medicare cost report for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2006, and before October 1, 2007. For
wage index purposes, we refer to cost
reports during this period as the ‘‘FY
2007 cost report,’’ the ‘‘FY 2007 wage
data,’’ or the ‘‘FY 2007 data.’’
Instructions for completing Worksheet
S–3, Parts II and III are in the Provider
Reimbursement Manual (PRM), Part II,
sections 3605.2 and 3605.3. The data
file used to construct the wage index
includes FY 2007 data submitted to us
as of March 3, 2010. As in past years,
we performed an intensive review of the
wage data, mostly through the use of
edits designed to identify aberrant data.
We asked our fiscal intermediaries/
MACs to revise or verify data elements
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
that resulted in specific edit failures.
For the proposed FY 2011 wage index,
we identified and excluded 14 providers
with data that was too aberrant to
include in the proposed wage index,
although if data elements for some of
these providers are corrected, we intend
to include some of these providers in
the FY 2011 final wage index. We
instructed fiscal intermediaries/MACs
to complete their data verification of
questionable data elements and to
transmit any changes to the wage data
no later than April 14, 2010. We believe
all unresolved data elements will be
resolved by the date the final rule is
issued. The revised data will be
reflected in the FY 2011 IPPS final rule.
In constructing the proposed FY 2011
wage index, we included the wage data
for facilities that were IPPS hospitals in
FY 2007, inclusive of those facilities
that have since terminated their
participation in the program as
hospitals, as long as those data did not
fail any of our edits for reasonableness.
We believe that including the wage data
for these hospitals is, in general,
appropriate to reflect the economic
conditions in the various labor market
areas during the relevant past period
and to ensure that the current wage
index represents the labor market area’s
current wages as compared to the
national average of wages. However, we
excluded the wage data for CAHs as
discussed in the FY 2004 IPPS final rule
(68 FR 45397). For this proposed rule,
we removed 8 hospitals that converted
to CAH status between February 16,
2009, the cut-off date for CAH exclusion
from the FY 2010 wage index, and
February 15, 2010, the cut-off date for
CAH exclusion from the FY 2011 wage
index. After removing hospitals with
aberrant data and hospitals that
converted to CAH status, the proposed
FY 2011 wage index is calculated based
on 3,513 hospitals.
In the FY 2008 final rule with
comment period (72 FR 47317) and the
FY 2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR 48582),
we discussed our policy for allocating a
multicampus hospital’s wages and
hours data, by full-time equivalent
(FTE) staff, among the different labor
market areas where its campuses are
located. During the FY 2011 wage index
desk review process, we requested fiscal
intermediaries/MACs to contact
multicampus hospitals that had
campuses in different labor market areas
to collect the data for the allocation. The
proposed FY 2011 wage index in this
proposed rule includes separate wage
data for campuses of three multicampus
hospitals.
For FY 2011, we are again allowing
hospitals to use FTE or discharge data
PO 00000
Frm 00094
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
for the allocation of a multicampus
hospital’s wage data among the different
labor market areas where its campuses
are located. The Medicare cost report
was updated in May 2008 to provide for
the reporting of FTE data by campus for
multicampus hospitals. Because the
data from cost reporting periods that
begin in FY 2008 will not be used in
calculating the wage index until FY
2012, a multicampus hospital will still
have the option, through the FY 2011
wage index, to use either FTE or
discharge data for allocating wage data
among its campuses by providing the
information from the applicable cost
reporting period to CMS through its
fiscal intermediary/MAC. Two of the
three multicampus hospitals chose to
have their wage data allocated by their
Medicare discharge data for the FY 2011
wage index. One of the hospitals
provided FTE staff data for the
allocation. The average hourly wage
associated with each geographical
location of a multicampus hospital is
reflected in Table 2 of the Addendum to
this proposed rule.
G. Method for Computing the Proposed
FY 2011 Unadjusted Wage Index
The method used to compute the
proposed FY 2011 wage index without
an occupational mix adjustment
follows:
Step 1—As noted above, we are
basing the proposed FY 2011 wage
index on wage data reported on the FY
2007 Medicare cost reports. We gathered
data from each of the non-Federal,
short-term, acute care hospitals for
which data were reported on the
Worksheet S–3, Parts II and III of the
Medicare cost report for the hospital’s
cost reporting period beginning on or
after October 1, 2006, and before
October 1, 2007. In addition, we
included data from some hospitals that
had cost reporting periods beginning
before October 2006 and reported a cost
reporting period covering all of FY
2007. These data are included because
no other data from these hospitals
would be available for the cost reporting
period described above, and because
particular labor market areas might be
affected due to the omission of these
hospitals. However, we generally
describe these wage data as FY 2007
data. We note that, if a hospital had
more than one cost reporting period
beginning during FY 2007 (for example,
a hospital had two short cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2006, and before October 1, 2007), we
included wage data from only one of the
cost reporting periods, the longer, in the
wage index calculation. If there was
more than one cost reporting period and
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
the periods were equal in length, we
included the wage data from the later
period in the wage index calculation.
Step 2—Salaries—The method used to
compute a hospital’s average hourly
wage excludes certain costs that are not
paid under the IPPS. (We note that,
beginning with FY 2008 (72 FR 47315),
we include Lines 22.01, 26.01, and
27.01 of Worksheet S–3, Part II for
overhead services in the wage index.
However, we note that the wages and
hours on these lines are not
incorporated into Line 101, Column 1 of
Worksheet A, which, through the
electronic cost reporting software, flows
directly to Line 1 of Worksheet S–3, Part
II. Therefore, the first step in the wage
index calculation for FY 2011 is to
compute a ‘‘revised’’ Line 1, by adding
to the Line 1 on Worksheet S–3, Part II
(for wages and hours respectively) the
amounts on Lines 22.01, 26.01, and
27.01.) In calculating a hospital’s
average salaries plus wage-related costs,
we subtract from Line 1 (total salaries)
the GME and CRNA costs reported on
Lines 2, 4.01, 6, and 6.01, the Part B
salaries reported on Lines 3, 5 and 5.01,
home office salaries reported on Line 7,
and exclude salaries reported on Lines
8 and 8.01 (that is, direct salaries
attributable to SNF services, home
health services, and other subprovider
components not subject to the IPPS). We
also subtract from Line 1 the salaries for
which no hours were reported. To
determine total salaries plus wagerelated costs, we add to the net hospital
salaries the costs of contract labor for
direct patient care, certain top
management, pharmacy, laboratory, and
nonteaching physician Part A services
(Lines 9 and 10), home office salaries
and wage-related costs reported by the
hospital on Lines 11 and 12, and
nonexcluded area wage-related costs
(Lines 13, 14, and 18).
We note that contract labor and home
office salaries for which no
corresponding hours are reported are
not included. In addition, wage-related
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
costs for nonteaching physician Part A
employees (Line 18) are excluded if no
corresponding salaries are reported for
those employees on Line 4.
Step 3—Hours—With the exception of
wage-related costs, for which there are
no associated hours, we compute total
hours using the same methods as
described for salaries in Step 2.
Step 4—For each hospital reporting
both total overhead salaries and total
overhead hours greater than zero, we
then allocate overhead costs to areas of
the hospital excluded from the wage
index calculation. First, we determine
the ratio of excluded area hours (sum of
Lines 8 and 8.01 of Worksheet S–3, Part
II) to revised total hours (Line 1 minus
the sum of Part II, Lines 2, 3, 4.01, 5,
5.01, 6, 6.01, 7, and Part III, Line 13 of
Worksheet S–3). We then compute the
amounts of overhead salaries and hours
to be allocated to excluded areas by
multiplying the above ratio by the total
overhead salaries and hours reported on
Line 13 of Worksheet S–3, Part III. Next,
we compute the amounts of overhead
wage-related costs to be allocated to
excluded areas using three steps: (1) We
determine the ratio of overhead hours
(Part III, Line 13 minus the sum of lines
22.01, 26.01, and 27.01) to revised hours
excluding the sum of lines 22.01, 26.01,
and 27.01 (Line 1 minus the sum of
Lines 2, 3, 4.01, 5, 5.01, 6, 6.01, 7, 8,
8.01, 22.01, 26.01, and 27.01). (We note
that for the FY 2008 and subsequent
wage index calculations, we are
excluding the sum of lines 22.01, 26.01,
and 27.01 from the determination of the
ratio of overhead hours to revised hours
because hospitals typically do not
provide fringe benefits (wage-related
costs) to contract personnel. Therefore,
it is not necessary for the wage index
calculation to exclude overhead wagerelated costs for contract personnel.
Further, if a hospital does contribute to
wage-related costs for contracted
personnel, the instructions for Lines
22.01, 26.01, and 27.01 require that
associated wage-related costs be
PO 00000
Frm 00095
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23945
combined with wages on the respective
contract labor lines.); (2) we compute
overhead wage-related costs by
multiplying the overhead hours ratio by
wage-related costs reported on Part II,
Lines 13, 14, and 18; and (3) we
multiply the computed overhead wagerelated costs by the above excluded area
hours ratio. Finally, we subtract the
computed overhead salaries, wagerelated costs, and hours associated with
excluded areas from the total salaries
(plus wage-related costs) and hours
derived in Steps 2 and 3.
Step 5—For each hospital, we adjust
the total salaries plus wage-related costs
to a common period to determine total
adjusted salaries plus wage-related
costs. To make the wage adjustment, we
estimate the percentage change in the
employment cost index (ECI) for
compensation for each 30-day
increment from October 14, 2003,
through April 15, 2005, for private
industry hospital workers from the BLS’
Compensation and Working Conditions.
We use the ECI because it reflects the
price increase associated with total
compensation (salaries plus fringes)
rather than just the increase in salaries.
In addition, the ECI includes managers
as well as other hospital workers. This
methodology to compute the monthly
update factors uses actual quarterly ECI
data and assures that the update factors
match the actual quarterly and annual
percent changes. We also note that,
since April 2006 with the publication of
March 2006 data, the BLS’ ECI uses a
different classification system, the North
American Industrial Classification
System (NAICS), instead of the Standard
Industrial Codes (SICs), which no longer
exist. We have consistently used the ECI
as the data source for our wages and
salaries and other price proxies in the
IPPS market basket and we are not
proposing to make any changes to the
usage for FY 2011. The factors used to
adjust the hospital’s data were based on
the midpoint of the cost reporting
period, as indicated below.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
For example, the midpoint of a cost
reporting period beginning January 1,
2007, and ending December 31, 2007, is
June 30, 2007. An adjustment factor of
1.02153 would be applied to the wages
of a hospital with such a cost reporting
period. In addition, for the data for any
cost reporting period that began in FY
2007 and covered a period of less than
360 days or more than 370 days, we
annualize the data to reflect a 1-year
cost report. Dividing the data by the
number of days in the cost report and
then multiplying the results by 365
accomplishes annualization.
Step 6—Each hospital is assigned to
its appropriate urban or rural labor
market area before any reclassifications
under section 1886(d)(8)(B), section
1886(d)(8)(E), or section 1886(d)(10) of
the Act. Within each urban or rural
labor market area, we add the total
adjusted salaries plus wage-related costs
obtained in Step 5 for all hospitals in
that area to determine the total adjusted
salaries plus wage-related costs for the
labor market area.
Step 7—We divide the total adjusted
salaries plus wage-related costs obtained
under both methods in Step 6 by the
sum of the corresponding total hours
(from Step 4) for all hospitals in each
labor market area to determine an
average hourly wage for the area.
Step 8—We add the total adjusted
salaries plus wage-related costs obtained
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
in Step 5 for all hospitals in the Nation
and then divide the sum by the national
sum of total hours from Step 4 to arrive
at a national average hourly wage. Using
the data as described above, the
proposed national average hourly wage
(unadjusted for occupational mix) is
$34.9330.
Step 9—For each urban or rural labor
market area, we calculate the hospital
wage index value, unadjusted for
occupational mix, by dividing the area
average hourly wage obtained in Step 7
by the national average hourly wage
computed in Step 8.
Step 10—Following the process set
forth above, we develop a separate
Puerto Rico-specific wage index for
purposes of adjusting the Puerto Rico
standardized amounts. (The national
Puerto Rico standardized amount is
adjusted by a wage index calculated for
all Puerto Rico labor market areas based
on the national average hourly wage as
described above.) We add the total
adjusted salaries plus wage-related costs
(as calculated in Step 5) for all hospitals
in Puerto Rico and divide the sum by
the total hours for Puerto Rico (as
calculated in Step 4) to arrive at an
overall proposed average hourly wage
(unadjusted for occupational mix) of
$14.7351 for Puerto Rico. For each labor
market area in Puerto Rico, we calculate
the Puerto Rico-specific wage index
value by dividing the area average
PO 00000
Frm 00096
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
hourly wage (as calculated in Step 7) by
the overall Puerto Rico average hourly
wage.
Step 11—Section 4410 of Public Law
105–33 provides that, for discharges on
or after October 1, 1997, the area wage
index applicable to any hospital that is
located in an urban area of a State may
not be less than the area wage index
applicable to hospitals located in rural
areas in that State. The areas affected by
this provision are identified in Table
4D–2 of the Addendum to this proposed
rule.
In the FY 2005 IPPS final rule (69 FR
49109), we adopted the ‘‘imputed’’ floor
as a temporary 3-year measure to
address a concern by some individuals
that hospitals in all-urban States were
disadvantaged by the absence of rural
hospitals to set a wage index floor in
those States. The imputed floor was
originally set to expire in FY 2007, but
we extended it an additional year in the
FY 2008 IPPS final rule with comment
period (72 FR 47321). In the FY 2009
IPPS final rule (73 FR 48570 through
48574 and 48584), we extended the
imputed floor for an additional 3 years,
through FY 2011.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.023
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23946
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
H. Analysis and Implementation of the
Proposed Occupational Mix Adjustment
and the Proposed FY 2011 Occupational
Mix Adjusted Wage Index
As discussed in section III.D. of this
preamble, for FY 2011, we are proposing
to apply the occupational mix
adjustment to 100 percent of the
proposed FY 2011 wage index. We
calculated the proposed occupational
mix adjustment using data from the
2007–2008 occupational mix survey
data, using the methodology described
in section III.D.3. of this preamble.
Using the occupational mix survey
data and applying the occupational mix
adjustment to 100 percent of the
proposed FY 2011 wage index results in
a proposed national average hourly
wage of $34.9124 and a proposed
Puerto-Rico specific average hourly
wage of $14.7567. After excluding data
of hospitals that either submitted
aberrant data that failed critical edits, or
that do not have FY 2007 Worksheet
S–3 cost report data for use in
calculating the proposed FY 2011 wage
index, we calculated the proposed FY
2011 wage index using the occupational
mix survey data from 3,178 hospitals.
Using the Worksheet S–3 cost report
data of 3,513 hospitals and occupational
mix survey data from 3,178 hospitals
represents a 90.4 percent survey
response rate. The proposed FY 2011
national average hourly wages for each
occupational mix nursing subcategory
as calculated in Step 2 of the
occupational mix calculation are as
follows:
Average hourly
wage
Occupational mix nursing subcategory
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
National
National
National
National
National
RN .....................................................................................................................................................................................
LPN and Surgical Technician ............................................................................................................................................
Nurse Aide, Orderly, and Attendant ..................................................................................................................................
Medical Assistant ..............................................................................................................................................................
Nurse Category .................................................................................................................................................................
The proposed national average hourly
wage for the entire nurse category as
computed in Step 5 of the occupational
mix calculation is $30.504184147.
Hospitals with a nurse category average
hourly wage (as calculated in Step 4) of
greater than the national nurse category
average hourly wage receive an
occupational mix adjustment factor (as
calculated in Step 6) of less than 1.0.
Hospitals with a nurse category average
hourly wage (as calculated in Step 4) of
less than the national nurse category
average hourly wage receive an
occupational mix adjustment factor (as
calculated in Step 6) of greater than 1.0.
Based on the 2007–2008 occupational
mix survey data, we determined (in Step
7 of the occupational mix calculation)
that the national percentage of hospital
employees in the nurse category is 44.32
percent, and the national percentage of
hospital employees in the all other
occupations category is 55.68 percent.
At the CBSA level, the percentage of
hospital employees in the nurse
category ranged from a low of 29.08
percent in one CBSA, to a high of 70.76
percent in another CBSA.
We compared the proposed FY 2011
occupational mix adjusted wage indices
for each CBSA to the proposed
unadjusted wage indices for each CBSA.
As a result of applying the occupational
mix adjustment to the wage data, the
proposed wage index values for
203(51.9 percent) urban areas and 32
(68.1 percent) rural areas would
increase. One hundred five (26.9
percent) urban areas would increase by
1 percent or more, and 6 (1.5 percent)
urban areas would increase by 5 percent
or more. Eighteen (38.3 percent) rural
areas would increase by 1 percent or
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
more, and no rural areas would increase
by 5 percent or more. However, the
wage index values for 188 (48.1 percent)
urban areas and 15 (31.9 percent) rural
areas would decrease. Ninety (23.0
percent) urban areas would decrease by
1 percent or more, and no urban area
would decrease by 5 percent or more.
Seven (14.9 percent) rural areas would
decrease by 1 percent or more, and no
rural areas will decrease by 5 percent or
more. The largest positive impacts are
7.83 percent for an urban area and 2.87
percent for a rural area. The largest
negative impacts are 3.98 percent for an
urban area and 2.41 percent for a rural
area. No urban or rural areas are
unaffected. These results indicate that a
larger percentage of rural areas (68.1
percent) benefit from the occupational
mix adjustment than do urban areas
(51.9 percent). While these results are
more positive overall for rural areas
than under the previous occupational
mix adjustment that used survey data
from 2006, approximately one-third
(31.9 percent) of rural CBSAs will still
experience a decrease in their wage
indices as a result of the occupational
mix adjustment.
The proposed wage index values for
FY 2011 (except those for hospitals
receiving wage index adjustments under
section 1886(d)(13) of the Act) included
in Tables 4A, 4B, 4C, and 4F of the
Addendum to this proposed rule
include the proposed occupational mix
adjustment.
Tables 3A and 3B in the Addendum
to this proposed rule list the 3-year
average hourly wage for each labor
market area before the redesignation or
reclassification of hospitals based on
FYs 2009, 2010, and 2011 cost reporting
PO 00000
Frm 00097
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23947
36.100857731
20.877391755
14.632232352
16.482939594
30.504184147
periods. Table 3A lists these data for
urban areas and Table 3B lists these data
for rural areas. In addition, Table 2 in
the Addendum to this proposed rule
includes the adjusted average hourly
wage for each hospital from the FY 2005
and FY 2006 cost reporting periods, as
well as the FY 2007 period used to
calculate the proposed FY 2011 wage
index. The 3-year averages are
calculated by dividing the sum of the
dollars (adjusted to a common reporting
period using the method described
previously) across all 3 years, by the
sum of the hours. If a hospital is missing
data for any of the previous years, its
average hourly wage for the 3-year
period is calculated based on the data
available during that period. The
proposed average hourly wages in
Tables 2, 3A, and 3B in the Addendum
to this proposed rule include the
proposed occupational mix adjustment.
The proposed wage index values in
Tables 4A, 4B, 4C, and 4D–1 also
include the proposed State-specific
rural floor and imputed floor budget
neutrality adjustments.
I. Revisions to the Wage Index Based on
Hospital Redesignations and
Reclassifications
1. General
Under section 1886(d)(10) of the Act,
the MGCRB considers applications by
hospitals for geographic reclassification
for purposes of payment under the IPPS.
Hospitals must apply to the MGCRB to
reclassify 13 months prior to the start of
the fiscal year for which reclassification
is sought (generally by September 1).
Generally, hospitals must be proximate
to the labor market area to which they
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23948
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
are seeking reclassification and must
demonstrate characteristics similar to
hospitals located in that area. The
MGCRB issues its decisions by the end
of February for reclassifications that
become effective for the following fiscal
year (beginning October 1). The
regulations applicable to
reclassifications by the MGCRB are
located in 42 CFR 412.230 through
412.280.
Section 1886(d)(10)(D)(v) of the Act
provides that, beginning with FY 2001,
a MGCRB decision on a hospital
reclassification for purposes of the wage
index is effective for 3 fiscal years,
unless the hospital elects to terminate
the reclassification. Section
1886(d)(10)(D)(vi) of the Act provides
that the MGCRB must use average
hourly wage data from the 3 most
recently published hospital wage
surveys in evaluating a hospital’s
reclassification application for FY 2003
and any succeeding fiscal year.
Section 304(b) of Public Law 106–554
provides that the Secretary must
establish a mechanism under which a
statewide entity may apply to have all
of the geographic areas in the State
treated as a single geographic area for
purposes of computing and applying a
single wage index, for reclassifications
beginning in FY 2003. The
implementing regulations for this
provision are located at 42 CFR 412.235.
Section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
requires the Secretary to treat a hospital
located in a rural county adjacent to one
or more urban areas as being located in
the labor market area to which the
greatest number of workers in the
county commute, if the rural county
would otherwise be considered part of
an urban area under the standards for
designating MSAs and if the commuting
rates used in determining outlying
counties were determined on the basis
of the aggregate number of resident
workers who commute to (and, if
applicable under the standards, from)
the central county or counties of all
contiguous MSAs. In light of the CBSA
definitions and the Census 2000 data
that we implemented for FY 2005 (69
FR 49027), we undertook to identify
those counties meeting these criteria.
Eligible counties are discussed and
identified under section III.I.5. of this
preamble.
2. Effects of Reclassification/
Redesignation
Section 1886(d)(8)(C) of the Act
provides that the application of the
wage index to redesignated hospitals is
dependent on the hypothetical impact
that the wage data from these hospitals
would have on the wage index value for
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
the area to which they have been
redesignated. These requirements for
determining the wage index values for
redesignated hospitals are applicable
both to the hospitals deemed urban
under section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
and hospitals that were reclassified as a
result of the MGCRB decisions under
section 1886(d)(10) of the Act.
Therefore, as provided in section
1886(d)(8)(C) of the Act, the wage index
values were determined by considering
the following:
• If including the wage data for the
redesignated hospitals would reduce the
wage index value for the area to which
the hospitals are redesignated by 1
percentage point or less, the area wage
index value determined exclusive of the
wage data for the redesignated hospitals
applies to the redesignated hospitals.
• If including the wage data for the
redesignated hospitals reduces the wage
index value for the area to which the
hospitals are redesignated by more than
1 percentage point, the area wage index
determined inclusive of the wage data
for the redesignated hospitals (the
combined wage index value) applies to
the redesignated hospitals.
• If including the wage data for the
redesignated hospitals increases the
wage index value for the urban area to
which the hospitals are redesignated,
both the area and the redesignated
hospitals receive the combined wage
index value. Otherwise, the hospitals
located in the urban area receive a wage
index excluding the wage data of
hospitals redesignated into the area.
Rural areas whose wage index values
would be reduced by excluding the
wage data for hospitals that have been
redesignated to another area continue to
have their wage index values calculated
as if no redesignation had occurred
(otherwise, redesignated rural hospitals
are excluded from the calculation of the
rural wage index). The wage index value
for a redesignated rural hospital cannot
be reduced below the wage index value
for the rural areas of the State in which
the hospital is located.
CMS also has adopted the following
policies:
• The wage data for a reclassified
urban hospital is included in both the
wage index calculation of the urban area
to which the hospital is reclassified
(subject to the rules described above)
and the wage index calculation of the
urban area where the hospital is
physically located.
• In cases where hospitals have
reclassified to rural areas, such as urban
hospitals reclassifying to rural areas
under 42 CFR 412.103, the hospital’s
wage data are: (a) Included in the rural
wage index calculation, unless doing so
PO 00000
Frm 00098
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
would reduce the rural wage index; and
(b) included in the urban area where the
hospital is physically located. The effect
of this policy, in combination with the
statutory requirement at section
1886(d)(8)(C)(ii) of the Act, is that rural
areas may receive a wage index based
upon the highest of: (1) Wage data from
hospitals geographically located in the
rural area; (2) wage data from hospitals
geographically located in the rural area,
but excluding all data associated with
hospitals reclassifying out of the rural
area under section 1886(d)(8)(B) or
section 1886(d)(10) of the Act; or (3)
wage data associated with hospitals
geographically located in the area plus
all hospitals reclassified into the rural
area.
In addition, in accordance with the
statutory language referring to
‘‘hospitals’’ in the plural under sections
1886(d)(8)(C)(i) and 1886(d)(8)(C)(ii) of
the Act, our longstanding policy is to
consider reclassified hospitals as a
group when deciding whether to
include or exclude them from both
urban and rural wage index
calculations.
3. FY 2011 MGCRB Reclassifications
a. FY 2011 Reclassifications
Requirements and Approvals
Under section 1886(d)(10) of the Act,
the MGCRB considers applications by
hospitals for geographic reclassification
for purposes of payment under the IPPS.
The specific procedures and rules that
apply to the geographic reclassification
process are outlined in 42 CFR 412.230
through 412.280.
At the time this proposed rule was
constructed, the MGCRB had completed
its review of FY 2011 reclassification
requests. Based on such reviews, there
were 311 hospitals approved for wage
index reclassifications by the MGCRB
for FY 2011. Because MGCRB wage
index reclassifications are effective for 3
years, for FY 2011, hospitals reclassified
during FY 2009 or FY 2010 are eligible
to continue to be reclassified to a
particular labor market area based on
such prior reclassifications. There were
258 hospitals approved for wage index
reclassifications in FY 2009 and 254
hospitals approved for wage index
reclassifications in FY 2010. Of all of
the hospitals approved for
reclassification for FY 2009, FY 2010,
and FY 2011, based upon the review at
the time of this proposed rule, 832
hospitals are in a reclassification status
for FY 2011.
Under 42 CFR 412.273, hospitals that
have been reclassified by the MGCRB
are permitted to withdraw their
applications within 45 days of the
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
publication of a proposed rule.
Generally stated, the request for
withdrawal of an application for
reclassification or termination of an
existing 3-year reclassification that
would be effective in FY 2011 has to be
received by the MGCRB within 45 days
of the publication of the proposed rule.
Hospitals may also cancel prior
reclassification withdrawals or
terminations in certain circumstances.
For further information about
withdrawing, terminating, or canceling
a previous withdrawal or termination of
a 3-year reclassification for wage index
purposes, we refer the reader to 42 CFR
412.273, as well as the FY 2002 IPPS
final rule (66 FR 39887) and the FY
2003 IPPS final rule (67 FR 50065).
Additional discussion on withdrawals
and terminations, and clarifications
regarding reinstating reclassifications
and ‘‘fallback’’ reclassifications, were
included in the FY 2008 IPPS final rule
(72 FR 47333).
Changes to the wage index that result
from withdrawals of requests for
reclassification, terminations, wage
index corrections, appeals, and the
Administrator’s review process for FY
2011 will be incorporated into the wage
index values published in the FY 2011
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule. These
changes affect not only the wage index
value for specific geographic areas, but
also the wage index value redesignated/
reclassified hospitals receive; that is,
whether they receive the wage index
that includes the data for both the
hospitals already in the area and the
redesignated/reclassified hospitals.
Further, the wage index value for the
area from which the hospitals are
redesignated/reclassified may be
affected.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
b. Applications for Reclassifications for
FY 2012
Applications for FY 2012
reclassifications are due to the MGCRB
by September 1, 2010. We note that this
is also the deadline for canceling a
previous wage index reclassification
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
withdrawal or termination under 42
CFR 412.273(d). Applications and other
information about MGCRB
reclassifications may be obtained,
beginning in mid-July 2010, via the
CMS Internet Web site at: https://
cms.hhs.gov/MGCRB/
02_instructions_and_applications.asp,
or by calling the MGCRB at (410) 786–
1174. The mailing address of the
MGCRB is: 2520 Lord Baltimore Drive,
Suite L, Baltimore, MD 21244–2670.
c. Appeals of MGCRB Denials of
Withdrawals and Terminations
Section 412.278 of the regulations
permits a hospital or a group of
hospitals dissatisfied with the MGCRB’s
decision regarding its geographic
designation to request the
Administrator’s review of the decision.
Section 412.273(e) permits a hospital to
file an appeal to the Administrator
regarding the MGCRB’s denial of the
hospital’s request for withdrawal of an
application. However, currently, this
section of the regulations does not
address Administrator review of the
MGCRB’s denial of a hospital’s request
for termination; that is, ‘‘terminations’’
are not specified in the regulations at
§ 412.273(e).
We are proposing to revise the
regulations to specify the availability of
Administrator review of MGCRB
decisions regarding withdrawals and
terminations, as well as cancellations of
withdrawals or terminations. Because
reclassifications are considered budget
neutral actions, we believe these
proposed revisions would have no
impact on total IPPS payments.
In addition, during our review of
§ 412.273, we determined that some of
the existing language in the section
could be clarified to make it more easily
understood. For example, we believe it
would be helpful to clarify the
distinction between terminations and
withdrawals by defining these terms in
a new paragraph (a), which would also
include the timing provisions now
under existing paragraph (b)(1)(ii). To
PO 00000
Frm 00099
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23949
account for this new paragraph, we are
proposing to redesignate the existing
contents of paragraph (e) as paragraph
(f) and also to revise the language to
specify the ability of a hospital to appeal
an MGCRB denial of a request for
‘‘termination’’ of an approved
reclassification, as well as cancellation
of a withdrawal or termination. We also
believe it would be helpful (1) to
establish the introductory language of
existing paragraph (a) as a general rule
under new paragraph (b); (2) to establish
a new paragraph (c) that addresses the
timing provisions currently in
paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2), and (b)(1)(i); (3)
to clarify the existing language of
paragraphs (b)(2)(i), (b)(2)(ii), (b)(2)(iii),
and (d) and incorporate it under new
paragraph (d); and (4) to redesignate the
existing contents of paragraph (c) as
new paragraph (e).
4. Redesignations of Hospitals Under
Section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
Section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
requires us to treat a hospital located in
a rural county adjacent to one or more
urban areas as being located in the MSA
if certain criteria are met. Effective
beginning FY 2005, we use OMB’s 2000
CBSA standards and the Census 2000
data to identify counties in which
hospitals qualify under section
1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act to receive the
wage index of the urban area. Hospitals
located in these counties have been
known as ‘‘Lugar’’ hospitals and the
counties themselves are often referred to
as ‘‘Lugar’’ counties. We provide the FY
2011 chart below with the listing of the
rural counties containing the hospitals
designated as urban under section
1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act. For discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2010,
hospitals located in the rural county in
the first column of this chart will be
redesignated for purposes of using the
wage index of the urban area listed in
the second column.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00100
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.024
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23950
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00101
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23951
EP04MY10.025
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
23952
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
As in the past, hospitals redesignated
under section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
are also eligible to be reclassified to a
different area by the MGCRB. Affected
hospitals may compare the reclassified
wage index for the labor market area in
Table 4C in the Addendum to the
proposed rule into which they would be
reclassified by the MGCRB to the wage
index for the area to which they are
redesignated under section
1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act. Hospitals may
withdraw from an MGCRB
reclassification within 45 days of the
publication of this proposed rule.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
5. Reclassifications Under Section
1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
As discussed in the FY 2009 IPPS
final rule (73 FR 48588), Lugar hospitals
are treated like reclassified hospitals for
purposes of determining their
applicable wage index and receive the
reclassified wage index for the urban
area to which they have been
redesignated. Because Lugar hospitals
are treated like reclassified hospitals,
when they are seeking reclassification
by the MGCRB, they are subject to the
rural reclassification rules set forth at 42
CFR 412.230. The procedural rules set
forth at § 412.230 list the criteria that a
hospital must meet in order to reclassify
as a rural hospital. Lugar hospitals are
subject to the proximity criteria and
payment thresholds that apply to rural
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
hospitals. Specifically, the hospital
must be no more than 35 miles from the
area to which it seeks reclassification
(§ 412.230(b)(1)); and the hospital must
show that its average hourly wage is at
least 106 percent of the average hourly
wage of all other hospitals in the area in
which the hospital is located
(§ 412.230(d)(1)(iii)(C)). In accordance
with policy adopted in the FY 2009
IPPS final rule (73 FR 48568 and 48569),
beginning with reclassifications for the
FY 2010 wage index, a Lugar hospital
must also demonstrate that its average
hourly wage is equal to at least 84
percent (for FY 2010 reclassifications)
and 86 percent (for reclassifications for
FY 2011 and subsequent fiscal years) of
the average hourly wage of hospitals in
the area to which it seeks redesignation
(§ 412.230(d)(1)(iv)(C)).
Hospitals not located in a Lugar
county seeking reclassification to the
urban area where the Lugar hospitals
have been redesignated are not
permitted to measure to the Lugar
county to demonstrate proximity (no
more than 15 miles for an urban
hospital, and no more than 35 miles for
a rural hospital or the closest urban or
rural area for RRCs or SCHs) in order to
be reclassified to such urban area. These
hospitals must measure to the urban
area exclusive of the Lugar County to
meet the proximity or nearest urban or
rural area requirement. We treat New
England deemed counties in a manner
PO 00000
Frm 00102
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
consistent with how we treat Lugar
counties. (We refer readers to FY 2008
IPPS final rule with comment period (72
FR 47337) for a discussion of this
policy.)
6. Reclassifications Under Section 508
of Public Law 108–173
Section 508 of Public Law 108–173
allowed certain qualifying hospitals to
receive wage index reclassifications and
assignments that they otherwise would
not have been eligible to receive under
the law. Although section 508 originally
was scheduled to expire after a 3-year
period, Congress extended the provision
several times, as well as certain special
exceptions that would have otherwise
expired. For a discussion of the original
section 508 provision and its various
extensions, we refer readers to the FY
2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR 48588). The
most recent extension of the provision
was included in section 124 of Public
Law 110–275 (MIPPA). Section 124
extended, through FY 2009, section 508
reclassifications as well as certain
special exceptions. Because the section
124 extension of these provisions
expired on September 30, 2009 (and,
therefore, will not be applicable in FY
2011 unless there is intervening
legislation to extend the provisions), we
are not proposing to make any changes
related to these provisions in this
proposed rule for FY 2011.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.026
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
We note that section 508 and special
exceptions reclassifications were
recently extended again, through
September 30, 2010, under section
10317 of the PPACA (Pub. L. 111–148).
We intend to imminently issue
instructions regarding implementation
of section 10317 of Public Law 111–148.
J. Proposed FY 2011 Wage Index
Adjustment Based on Commuting
Patterns of Hospital Employees
In accordance with the broad
discretion under section 1886(d)(13) of
the Act, as added by section 505 of
Public Law 108–173, beginning with FY
2005, we established a process to make
adjustments to the hospital wage index
based on commuting patterns of
hospital employees (the ‘‘out-migration’’
adjustment). The process, outlined in
the FY 2005 IPPS final rule (69 FR
49061), provides for an increase in the
wage index for hospitals located in
certain counties that have a relatively
high percentage of hospital employees
who reside in the county but work in a
different county (or counties) with a
higher wage index. Such adjustments to
the wage index are effective for 3 years,
unless a hospital requests to waive the
application of the adjustment. A county
will not lose its status as a qualifying
county due to wage index changes
during the 3-year period, and counties
will receive the same wage index
increase for those 3 years. However, a
county that qualifies in any given year
may no longer qualify after the 3-year
period, or it may qualify but receive a
different adjustment to the wage index
level. Hospitals that receive this
adjustment to their wage index are not
eligible for reclassification under
section 1886(d)(8) or section 1886(d)(10)
of the Act. Adjustments under this
provision are not subject to the budget
neutrality requirements under section
1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act.
Hospitals located in counties that
qualify for the wage index adjustment
are to receive an increase in the wage
index that is equal to the average of the
differences between the wage indices of
the labor market area(s) with higher
wage indices and the wage index of the
resident county, weighted by the overall
percentage of hospital workers residing
in the qualifying county who are
employed in any labor market area with
a higher wage index. Beginning with the
FY 2008 wage index, we use postreclassified wage indices when
determining the out-migration
adjustment (72 FR 47339).
For the proposed FY 2011 wage
index, we are proposing to calculate the
out-migration adjustment using the
same formula described in the FY 2005
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
IPPS final rule (69 FR 49064), with the
addition of using the post-reclassified
wage indices, to calculate the outmigration adjustment. This adjustment
is calculated as follows:
Step 1—Subtract the wage index for
the qualifying county from the wage
index of each of the higher wage area(s)
to which hospital workers commute.
Step 2—Divide the number of hospital
employees residing in the qualifying
county who are employed in such
higher wage index area by the total
number of hospital employees residing
in the qualifying county who are
employed in any higher wage index
area. For each of the higher wage index
areas, multiply this result by the result
obtained in Step 1.
Step 3—Sum the products resulting
from Step 2 (if the qualifying county has
workers commuting to more than one
higher wage index area).
Step 4—Multiply the result from Step
3 by the percentage of hospital
employees who are residing in the
qualifying county and who are
employed in any higher wage index
area.
These adjustments will be effective
for each county for a period of 3 fiscal
years. For example, hospitals that
received the adjustment for the first
time in FY 2010 will be eligible to retain
the adjustment for FY 2011. For
hospitals in newly qualified counties,
adjustments to the wage index are
effective for 3 years, beginning with
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2010.
Hospitals receiving the wage index
adjustment under section 1886(d)(13)(F)
of the Act are not eligible for
reclassification under sections
1886(d)(8) or (d)(10) of the Act unless
they waive the out-migration
adjustment. Consistent with our FYs
2005 through 2010 IPPS final rules, we
are specifying that hospitals
redesignated under section 1886(d)(8) of
the Act or reclassified under section
1886(d)(10) of the Act will be deemed
to have chosen to retain their
redesignation or reclassification. Section
1886(d)(10) hospitals that wish to
receive the out-migration adjustment,
rather than their reclassification
adjustment, should follow the
termination/withdrawal procedures
specified in 42 CFR 412.273 and section
III.I.3. of the preamble of this proposed
rule. Otherwise, they will be deemed to
have waived the out-migration
adjustment. Hospitals redesignated
under section 1886(d)(8) of the Act will
be deemed to have waived the outmigration adjustment unless they
explicitly notify CMS within 45 days
from the publication of this proposed
PO 00000
Frm 00103
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23953
rule that they elect to receive the outmigration adjustment instead. These
notifications should be sent to the
following address: Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services, Center for
Medicare Management, Attention: Wage
Index Adjustment Waivers, Division of
Acute Care, Room C4–08–06, 7500
Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21244–1850.
Table 4J in the Addendum to this
proposed rule lists the proposed outmigration wage index adjustments for
FY 2011. Hospitals that are not
otherwise reclassified or redesignated
under section 1886(d)(8) or section
1886(d)(10) of the Act will
automatically receive the listed
adjustment. In accordance with the
procedures discussed above,
redesignated/reclassified hospitals will
be deemed to have waived the outmigration adjustment unless CMS is
otherwise notified within the necessary
timeframe. In addition, hospitals
eligible to receive the out-migration
wage index adjustment and that
withdraw their application for
reclassification will automatically
receive the wage index adjustment
listed in Table 4J in the Addendum to
this proposed rule. The wage index is
updated annually and, as such,
hospitals wishing to waive their Lugar
redesignation in order to receive their
home area wage index plus the outmigration adjustment must request the
waiver annually.
K. Process for Requests for Wage Index
Data Corrections
The preliminary, unaudited
Worksheet S–3 wage data and
occupational mix survey data files for
the proposed FY 2011 wage index were
made available on October 5, 2009,
through the Internet on the CMS Web
site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/WIFN/
list.asp#TopOfPage.
In the interest of meeting the data
needs of the public, beginning with the
proposed FY 2009 wage index, we post
an additional public use file on our Web
site that reflects the actual data that are
used in computing the proposed wage
index. The release of this new file does
not alter the current wage index process
or schedule. We notified the hospital
community of the availability of these
data as we do with the current public
use wage data files through our Hospital
Open Door forum. We encouraged
hospitals to sign up for automatic
notifications of information about
hospital issues and the scheduling of
the Hospital Open Door forums at:
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
OpenDoorForums/.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23954
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
In a memorandum dated October 21,
2009, we instructed all fiscal
intermediaries/MACs to inform the IPPS
hospitals they service of the availability
of the wage index data files and the
process and timeframe for requesting
revisions (including the specific
deadlines listed below). We also
instructed the fiscal intermediaries/
MACs to advise hospitals that these data
were also made available directly
through their representative hospital
organizations.
If a hospital wished to request a
change to its data as shown in the
October 5, 2009 wage and occupational
mix data files, the hospital was to
submit corrections along with complete,
detailed supporting documentation to
its fiscal intermediary/MAC by
December 7, 2009. Hospitals were
notified of this deadline and of all other
possible deadlines and requirements,
including the requirement to review and
verify their data as posted on the
preliminary wage index data files on the
Internet, through the October 21, 2009
memorandum referenced above.
In the October 21, 2009
memorandum, we also specified that a
hospital requesting revisions to its
occupational mix survey data was to
copy its record(s) from the CY 2007–
2008 occupational mix preliminary files
posted to our Web site in October,
highlight the revised cells on its
spreadsheet, and submit its
spreadsheet(s) and complete
documentation to its fiscal
intermediary/MAC no later than
December 7, 2009.
The fiscal intermediaries/MACs
notified the hospitals by mid-February
2010 of any changes to the wage index
data as a result of the desk reviews and
the resolution of the hospitals’ earlyDecember revision requests. The fiscal
intermediaries/MACs also submitted the
revised data to CMS by mid-February
2010. CMS published the proposed
wage index public use files that
included hospitals’ revised wage index
data on February 22, 2010. Hospitals
had until March 8, 2010, to submit
requests to the fiscal intermediaries/
MACs for reconsideration of
adjustments made by the fiscal
intermediaries/MACs as a result of the
desk review, and to correct errors due to
CMS’s or the fiscal intermediary’s (or, if
applicable, the MAC’s) mishandling of
the wage index data. Hospitals also were
required to submit sufficient
documentation to support their
requests.
After reviewing requested changes
submitted by hospitals, fiscal
intermediaries/MACs are to transmit
any additional revisions resulting from
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
the hospitals’ reconsideration requests
by April 14, 2010. The deadline for a
hospital to request CMS intervention in
cases where the hospital disagrees with
the fiscal intermediary’s (or, if
applicable, the MAC’s) policy
interpretations is April 21, 2010.
Hospitals should examine Table 2 in
the Addendum to this proposed rule.
Table 2 in the Addendum to this
proposed rule contains each hospital’s
adjusted average hourly wage used to
construct the wage index values for the
past 3 years, including the FY 2007 data
used to construct the proposed FY 2011
wage index. We note that the hospital
average hourly wages shown in Table 2
only reflect changes made to a hospital’s
data and transmitted to CMS in March
2010.
We will release the final wage index
data public use files by May 7, 2010 on
the Internet at https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/WIFN/
list.asp#TopOfPage. The May 2010
public use files are made available
solely for the limited purpose of
identifying any potential errors made by
CMS or the fiscal intermediary/MAC in
the entry of the final wage index data
that resulted from the correction process
described above (revisions submitted to
CMS by the fiscal intermediaries/MACs
by April 14, 2010). If, after reviewing
the May 2010 final files, a hospital
believes that its wage or occupational
mix data are incorrect due to a fiscal
intermediary/MAC or CMS error in the
entry or tabulation of the final data, the
hospital should send a letter to both its
fiscal intermediary/MAC and CMS that
outlines why the hospital believes an
error exists and provide all supporting
information, including relevant dates
(for example, when it first became aware
of the error). CMS and the fiscal
intermediaries (or, if applicable, the
MACs) must receive these requests no
later than June 7, 2010.
Each request also must be sent to the
fiscal intermediary/MAC. The fiscal
intermediary/MAC will review requests
upon receipt and contact CMS
immediately to discuss any findings.
At this point in the process, that is,
after the release of the May 2010 wage
index data files, changes to the wage
and occupational mix data will only be
made in those very limited situations
involving an error by the fiscal
intermediary/MAC or CMS that the
hospital could not have known about
before its review of the final wage index
data files. Specifically, neither the fiscal
intermediary/MAC nor CMS will
approve the following types of requests:
• Requests for wage index data
corrections that were submitted too late
to be included in the data transmitted to
PO 00000
Frm 00104
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
CMS by fiscal intermediaries or the
MACs on or before April 21, 2010.
• Requests for correction of errors
that were not, but could have been,
identified during the hospital’s review
of the February 22, 2010 wage index
public use files.
• Requests to revisit factual
determinations or policy interpretations
made by the fiscal intermediary or the
MAC or CMS during the wage index
data correction process.
Verified corrections to the wage index
data received timely by CMS and the
fiscal intermediaries or the MACs (that
is, by June 7, 2010) will be incorporated
into the final wage index in the FY 2011
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, which will
be effective October 1, 2010.
We created the processes described
above to resolve all substantive wage
index data correction disputes before we
finalize the wage and occupational mix
data for the FY 2011 payment rates.
Accordingly, hospitals that did not meet
the procedural deadlines set forth above
will not be afforded a later opportunity
to submit wage index data corrections or
to dispute the fiscal intermediary’s (or,
if applicable, the MAC’s) decision with
respect to requested changes.
Specifically, our policy is that hospitals
that do not meet the procedural
deadlines set forth above will not be
permitted to challenge later, before the
Provider Reimbursement Review Board,
the failure of CMS to make a requested
data revision. (See W. A. Foote
Memorial Hospital v. Shalala, No. 99–
CV–75202–DT (E.D. Mich. 2001) and
Palisades General Hospital v.
Thompson, No. 99–1230 (D.D.C. 2003).)
We refer readers also to the FY 2000
IPPS final rule (64 FR 41513) for a
discussion of the parameters for
appealing to the PRRB for wage index
data corrections.
Again, we believe the wage index data
correction process described above
provides hospitals with sufficient
opportunity to bring errors in their wage
and occupational mix data to the fiscal
intermediary’s (or, if applicable, the
MAC’s) attention. Moreover, because
hospitals have access to the final wage
index data by early May 2010, they have
the opportunity to detect any data entry
or tabulation errors made by the fiscal
intermediary or the MAC or CMS before
the development and publication of the
final FY 2011 wage index by August
2010, and the implementation of the FY
2011 wage index on October 1, 2010. If
hospitals availed themselves of the
opportunities afforded to provide and
make corrections to the wage and
occupational mix data, the wage index
implemented on October 1 should be
accurate. Nevertheless, in the event that
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
errors are identified by hospitals and
brought to our attention after June 7,
2010, we retain the right to make
midyear changes to the wage index
under very limited circumstances.
Specifically, in accordance with 42
CFR 412.64(k)(1) of our existing
regulations, we make midyear
corrections to the wage index for an area
only if a hospital can show that: (1) The
fiscal intermediary or the MAC or CMS
made an error in tabulating its data; and
(2) the requesting hospital could not
have known about the error or did not
have an opportunity to correct the error,
before the beginning of the fiscal year.
For purposes of this provision, ‘‘before
the beginning of the fiscal year’’ means
by the June 7 deadline for making
corrections to the wage data for the
following fiscal year’s wage index. This
provision is not available to a hospital
seeking to revise another hospital’s data
that may be affecting the requesting
hospital’s wage index for the labor
market area. As indicated earlier,
because CMS makes the wage index
data available to hospitals on the CMS
Web site prior to publishing both the
proposed and final IPPS rules, and the
fiscal intermediaries or the MACs notify
hospitals directly of any wage index
data changes after completing their desk
reviews, we do not expect that midyear
corrections will be necessary. However,
under our current policy, if the
correction of a data error changes the
wage index value for an area, the
revised wage index value will be
effective prospectively from the date the
correction is made.
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR
47385), we revised 42 CFR 412.64(k)(2)
to specify that, effective on October 1,
2005, that is, beginning with the FY
2006 wage index, a change to the wage
index can be made retroactive to the
beginning of the Federal fiscal year only
when: (1) The fiscal intermediary (or, if
applicable, the MAC) or CMS made an
error in tabulating data used for the
wage index calculation; (2) the hospital
knew about the error and requested that
the fiscal intermediary (or, if applicable,
the MAC) and CMS correct the error
using the established process and
within the established schedule for
requesting corrections to the wage index
data, before the beginning of the fiscal
year for the applicable IPPS update (that
is, by the June 7, 2010 deadline for the
FY 2011 wage index); and (3) CMS
agreed that the fiscal intermediary (or, if
applicable, the MAC) or CMS made an
error in tabulating the hospital’s wage
index data and the wage index should
be corrected.
In those circumstances where a
hospital requested a correction to its
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
23955
time’’ the proportion of hospitals’ costs
that are ‘‘attributable to wages and wagerelated costs.’’ We believe that this
reflected Congressional intent that
hospitals receive payment based on
either a 62-percent labor-related share,
or the labor-related share estimated from
time to time by the Secretary, depending
on which labor-related share resulted in
a higher payment.
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS final rule (74 FR 43850 through
43856), we rebased and revised the
hospital market basket for operating
costs. We established a FY 2006-based
IPPS hospital market basket to replace
the FY 2002-based IPPS hospital market
basket, effective October 1, 2009. In that
final rule, we presented our analysis
and conclusions regarding the frequency
and methodology for updating the laborrelated share for FY 2010. We also
recalculated a labor-related share of 68.8
percent, using the FY 2006-based IPPS
market basket, for discharges occurring
on or after October 1, 2009. In addition,
we implemented this revised and
rebased labor-related share in a budget
neutral manner, but consistent with
section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, we did
not take into account the additional
payments that would be made as a
result of hospitals with a wage index
less than or equal to 1.0 being paid
L. Labor-Related Share for the Proposed
using a labor-related share lower than
FY 2011 Wage Index
the labor-related share of hospitals with
Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act
a wage index greater than 1.0.
directs the Secretary to adjust the
The labor-related share is used to
proportion of the national prospective
determine the proportion of the national
payment system base payment rates that IPPS base payment rate to which the
are attributable to wages and wagearea wage index is applied. In this
related costs by a factor that reflects the
proposed rule, we are not proposing to
relative differences in labor costs among make any further changes to the
geographic areas. It also directs the
national average proportion of operating
Secretary to estimate from time to time
costs that are attributable to wages and
the proportion of hospital costs that are
salaries, fringe benefits, contract labor,
labor-related: ‘‘The Secretary shall adjust the labor-related portion of professional
the proportion (as estimated by the
fees, administrative and business
Secretary from time to time) of
support services, and all other laborhospitals’ costs which are attributable to related services (previously referred to
wages and wage-related costs of the
in the FY 2002-based IPPS market
DRG prospective payment rates
basket as labor-intensive). Therefore, we
* * *’’ We refer to the portion of
are proposing to continue to use a laborhospital costs attributable to wages and
related share of 68.8 percent for
wage-related costs as the labor-related
discharges occurring on or after October
share. The labor-related share of the
1, 2010. Tables 1A and 1B in the
prospective payment rate is adjusted by Addendum to this proposed rule reflects
an index of relative labor costs, which
this proposed labor-related share. We
note that section 403 of Public Law 108–
is referred to as the wage index.
Section 403 of Public Law 108–173
173 amended sections 1886(d)(3)(E) and
amended section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the
1886(d)(9)(C)(iv) of the Act to provide
Act to provide that the Secretary must
that the Secretary must employ 62
employ 62 percent as the labor-related
percent as the labor-related share unless
share unless this ‘‘would result in lower this employment ‘‘would result in lower
payments to a hospital than would
payments to a hospital than would
otherwise be made.’’ However, this
otherwise be made.’’ Therefore, for all
IPPS hospitals whose wage indices are
provision of Public Law 108–173 did
less than 1.0000, we are applying the
not change the legal requirement that
wage index to a labor-related share of 62
the Secretary estimate ‘‘from time to
wage index data before CMS calculates
the final wage index (that is, by the June
7, 2010 deadline), and CMS
acknowledges that the error in the
hospital’s wage index data was caused
by CMS’ or the fiscal intermediary’s (or,
if applicable, the MAC’s) mishandling of
the data, we believe that the hospital
should not be penalized by our delay in
publishing or implementing the
correction. As with our current policy,
we indicated that the provision is not
available to a hospital seeking to revise
another hospital’s data. In addition, the
provision cannot be used to correct
prior years’ wage index data; and it can
only be used for the current Federal
fiscal year. In other situations where our
policies would allow midyear
corrections, we continue to believe that
it is appropriate to make prospectiveonly corrections to the wage index.
We note that, as with prospective
changes to the wage index, the final
retroactive correction will be made
irrespective of whether the change
increases or decreases a hospital’s
payment rate. In addition, we note that
the policy of retroactive adjustment will
still apply in those instances where a
judicial decision reverses a CMS denial
of a hospital’s wage index data revision
request.
PO 00000
Frm 00105
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23956
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
percent of the national standardized
amount. For all IPPS hospitals whose
wage indices are greater than 1.0000, we
are applying the wage index to a laborrelated share of 68.8 percent of the
national standardized amount.
For Puerto Rico hospitals, the national
labor-related share will always be 62
percent because the wage index for all
Puerto Rico hospitals is less than 1.0.
We are proposing to continue to use a
labor-related share for the Puerto Ricospecific standardized amounts of 62.1
percent for discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2010. This Puerto Rico
labor-related share of 62.1 percent was
also adopted in the FY 2010 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (74 FR 43857) at the time
the FY 2006-based hospital market
basket was established, effective
October 1, 2009. Consistent with our
methodology for determining the
national labor-related share, we added
the Puerto Rico-specific relative weights
for wages and salaries, fringe benefits,
contract labor, the labor-related portion
of professional fees, administrative and
business support services, and all other
labor-related services (previously
referred to in the FY 2002-based IPPS
market basket as labor-intensive) to
determine the labor-related share.
Puerto Rico hospitals are paid based on
75 percent of the national standardized
amounts and 25 percent of the Puerto
Rico-specific standardized amounts.
The labor-related share of a hospital’s
Puerto Rico-specific rate will be either
the Puerto Rico-specific labor-related
share of 62.1 percent or 62 perecent,
depending on which results in higher
payments to the hospital. If the hospital
has a Puerto Rico-specific wage index of
greater than 1.0, we will set the
hospital’s rates using a labor-related
share of 62.1 percent for the 25 percent
portion of the hospital’s payment
determined by the Puerto Rico
standardized amounts because this
amount will result in higher payments.
Conversely, a hospital with a Puerto
Rico-specific wage index of less than 1.0
will be paid using the Puerto Ricospecific labor-related share of 62 percent
of the Puerto Rico-specific rates because
the lower labor-related share will result
in higher payments. The proposed
Puerto Rico labor-related share of 62.1
percent for FY 2011 is reflected in the
Table 1C of the Addendum to this
proposed rule.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
V. Other Decisions and Proposed
Changes to the IPPS for Operating Costs
and GME Costs
A. Reporting of Hospital Quality Data
for Annual Hospital Payment Update
1. Background
a. Overview
CMS is seeking to promote higher
quality and more efficient health care
for Medicare beneficiaries. This effort is
supported by the adoption of an
increasing number of widely-agreed
upon quality measures. CMS has
worked with relevant stakeholders to
define measures of quality in almost
every setting and currently measures
some aspect of care for almost all
Medicare beneficiaries. These measures
assess structural aspects of care, clinical
processes, patient experiences with
care, and, increasingly, outcomes.
CMS has implemented quality
measure reporting programs for multiple
settings of care. To measure the quality
of hospital inpatient services, CMS
implemented the Reporting Hospital
Quality Data for Annual Payment
Update (RHQDAPU) program. In
addition, CMS has implemented quality
reporting programs for hospital
outpatient services, the Hospital
Outpatient Quality Data Reporting
Program (HOP QDRP), and for
physicians and other eligible
professionals, the Physician Quality
Reporting Initiative (PQRI). CMS has
also implemented quality reporting
programs for home health agencies and
skilled nursing facilities that are based
on conditions of participation, and an
end-stage renal disease quality reporting
program that is based on conditions for
coverage.
b. Hospital Quality Data Reporting
Under Section 501(b) of Public Law
108–173
Section 501(b) of the Medicare
Prescription Drug, Improvement, and
Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA),
Public Law 108–173, added section
1886(b)(3)(B)(vii) to the Act. This
section established the authority for the
RHQDAPU program and revised the
mechanism used to update the
standardized payment amount for
inpatient hospital operating costs.
Specifically, section 1886(b)(3)(B)(vii)(I)
of the Act, before it was amended by
section 5001(a) of Public Law 109–171,
provided for a reduction of 0.4
percentage points to the update
percentage increase (also known as the
market basket update) for FY 2005
through FY 2007 for any subsection (d)
hospital that did not submit data on a
set of 10 quality indicators established
PO 00000
Frm 00106
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
by the Secretary as of November 1, 2003.
It also provides that any reduction
would apply only to the fiscal year
involved, and would not be taken into
account in computing the applicable
percentage increase for a subsequent
fiscal year. The statute thereby
established an incentive for IPPS
hospitals to submit data on the quality
measures established by the Secretary,
and also built upon the previously
established Voluntary Hospital Quality
Data Reporting Program that we
described in the FY 2009 IPPS final rule
(73 FR 48598).
We implemented section
1886(b)(3)(B)(vii) of the Act in the FY
2005 IPPS final rule (69 FR 49078) and
codified the applicable percentage
change in § 412.64(d) of our regulations.
We adopted additional requirements
under the RHQDAPU program in the FY
2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR 47420).
c. Hospital Quality Data Reporting
Under Section 5001(a) of Public Law
109–171
Section 5001(a) of the Deficit
Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA), Public
Law 109–171, further amended section
1886(b)(3)(B) of the Act to revise the
mechanism used to update the
standardized payment amount for
hospital inpatient operating costs, in
particular, by adding new section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) to the Act.
Specifically, sections
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(I) and (II) of the Act
provide that the payment update for FY
2007 and each subsequent fiscal year be
reduced by 2.0 percentage points for any
subsection (d) hospital that does not
submit quality data in a form and
manner, and at a time, specified by the
Secretary. Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(I)
of the Act also provides that any
reduction in a hospital’s payment
update will apply only with respect to
the fiscal year involved, and will not be
taken into account for computing the
applicable percentage increase for a
subsequent fiscal year. In the FY 2007
IPPS final rule (71 FR 48045), we
amended our regulations at
§ 412.64(d)(2) to reflect the 2.0
percentage point reduction in the
payment update for FY 2007 and
subsequent fiscal years for subsection
(d) hospitals that do not comply with
requirements for reporting quality data,
as provided for under section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act.
(1) Quality Measures
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(III) of the
Act requires that the Secretary expand
the ‘‘starter set’’ of 10 quality measures
that was established by the Secretary as
of November 1, 2003, as the Secretary
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
determines to be appropriate for the
measurement of the quality of care
furnished by a hospital in inpatient
settings. In expanding this set of
measures, section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(IV)
of the Act requires that, effective for
payments beginning with FY 2007, the
Secretary begin to adopt the baseline set
of performance measures as set forth in
a report issued by the Institute of
Medicine (IOM) of the National
Academy of Sciences under section
238(b) of Public Law 108–173.5
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(V) of the
Act requires that, effective for payments
beginning with FY 2008, the Secretary
add other quality measures that reflect
consensus among affected parties, and
to the extent feasible and practicable,
have been set forth by one or more
national consensus building entities.
The NQF is a voluntary consensus
standard-setting organization with a
diverse representation of consumer,
purchaser, provider, academic, clinical,
and other health care stakeholder
organizations. The NQF was established
to standardize health care quality
measurement and reporting through its
consensus development process. We
have generally adopted NQF-endorsed
measures. However, we believe that
consensus among affected parties also
can be reflected by other means,
including consensus achieved during
the measure development process,
consensus shown through broad
acceptance and use of measures, and
consensus through public comment.
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(VI) of the
Act authorizes the Secretary to replace
any quality measures or indicators in
appropriate cases, such as where all
hospitals are effectively in compliance
with a measure, or the measures or
indicators have been subsequently
shown to not represent the best clinical
practice. Thus, the Secretary is granted
broad discretion to replace measures
that are no longer appropriate for the
RHQDAPU program.
In the FY 2007 IPPS final rule, we
began to expand the RHQDAPU
program measures by adding 11 quality
measures to the 10-measure starter set to
establish an expanded set of 21 quality
measures for the FY 2007 payment
determination (71 FR 48033 through
48037, 48045).
In the CY 2007 OPPS/ASC final rule
(71 FR 68201), we adopted six
5 Institute of Medicine, ‘‘Performance
Measurement: Accelerating Improvement,’’
December 1, 2005, available at: https://
www.iom.edu/CMS/3809/19805/31310.aspx. IOM
set forth these baseline measures in a November
2005 report. However, the IOM report was not
released until December 1, 2005 on the IOM Web
site.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
additional quality measures for the FY
2008 payment determination, for a total
of 27 measures. Two of these measures
(30-Day Risk Standardized Mortality
Rates for Heart Failure and 30-Day Risk
Standardized Mortality Rates for AMI)
were calculated using existing
administrative Medicare claims data;
thus, no additional data submission by
hospitals was required for these two
measures. The measures used for the FY
2008 payment determination included,
for the first time, the HCAHPS patient
experience of care survey.
In the FY 2008 IPPS final rule (72 FR
47348 through 47358) and the CY 2008
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (72 FR 66875 through 66877), we
added three additional process
measures to the RHQDAPU program
measure set. (These three measures are
SCIP-Infection-4: Cardiac Surgery
Patients with Controlled 6AM
Postoperative Serum Glucose, SCIPInfection-6: Surgery Patients with
Appropriate Hair Removal, and
Pneumonia 30-day mortality (Medicare
patients).) The addition of these 3
measures brought the total number of
RHQDAPU program measures to be
used for the FY 2009 payment
determination to 30 (72 FR 66876). The
30 measures used for the FY 2009
annual payment determination are
listed in the FY 2009 IPPS final rule (73
FR 48600 through 48601).
For the FY 2010 payment
determination, we added 15 new
measures to the RHQDAPU program
measure set and retired one measure
from the program (PN–1: Oxygenation
Assessment). Of the new measures, 13
were adopted in the FY 2009 IPPS final
rule (73 FR 48602 through 48611) and
two additional measures were finalized
in the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (73 FR 68780
through 68781). This resulted in an
expansion of the RHQDAPU program
measures from 30 measures for the FY
2009 payment determination to 44
measures for the FY 2010 payment
determination. The RHQDAPU program
measures for the FY 2010 payment
determination consist of: 26 chartabstracted process measures, which
measure quality of care provided for
Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI),
Heart Failure (HF), Pneumonia (PN),
and Surgical Care Improvement (SCIP);
6 claims-based measures, which
evaluate 30-day mortality and 30-day
readmission rates for AMI, HF, or PN; 9
claims-based AHRQ patient safety
indicators and inpatient quality
indicators; 1 claims-based nursing
sensitive measure; 1 structural measure
that assesses participation in a
systematic database for cardiac surgery;
PO 00000
Frm 00107
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23957
and the HCAHPS patient experience of
care survey. The measures are listed in
the IPPS FY 2009 final rule at 73 FR
46809 and in the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period at 73 FR
68781.
On December 31, 2008, CMS advised
hospitals that they would no longer be
required to submit data for the
RHQDAPU program measure AMI–6–
Beta blocker at arrival, beginning with
discharges occurring on April 1, 2009.
This change was based on the evolving
evidence regarding AMI patient care, as
well as changes in the American College
of Cardiology/American Heart
Association (ACC/AHA) practice
guidelines for ST-segment elevation
myocardial infarction and non-ST
segment elevation myocardial
infarction, upon which AMI-6 is based.
CMS took action to remove the measure
from reporting initiatives based on the
lack of support by the measure
developer and the clinical and scientific
considerations described in the FY 2010
IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule at 74
FR 43863.
We had previously discussed
considerations relating to retiring or
replacing measures in the FY 2008 IPPS
final rule with comment period and the
FY 2009 IPPS final rule, including the
‘‘topping out’’ of hospitals’ performance
under a measure (72 FR 47358 through
47359 and 73 FR 48603 through 48604,
respectively). However, in this instance,
the measure no longer ‘‘represent[s] the
best clinical practice,’’ an additional
basis under section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(VI) of the Act for
retiring a measure. In the FY 2010 IPPS/
RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule, we
formally retired the AMI–6 measure
from the RHQDAPU program for the FY
2011 payment determination and
subsequent payment determinations.
For the FY 2011 payment
determination, we retained 41 of the FY
2010 quality measures; harmonized two
FY 2010 RHQDAPU program quality
measures (combining PSI 04—Death
among surgical patients with treatable
serious complications; and Nursing
Sensitive-Failure to rescue into a single
measure (Death among surgical
inpatients with serious, treatable
complications); added two chartabstracted measures (SCIP-Infection-9:
Postoperative Urinary Catheter Removal
on Post Operative Day 1 or 2 and SCIPInfection-10: Perioperative Temperature
Management); and added two structural
measures (1) Participation in a
Systematic Clinical Database Registry
for Stroke Care; and (2) Participation in
a Systematic Clinical Database Registry
for Nursing Sensitive Care) (74 FR
43868 through 43873). The 46 measures
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23958
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
we adopted for the FY 2011 payment
determination are:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00108
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.027
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
23959
BILLING CODE 4120–10–C
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00109
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.028
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
23960
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
(2) Maintenance of Technical
Specifications for Quality Measures
The technical specifications for the
RHQDAPU program measures, or links
to Web sites hosting technical
specifications, are contained in the
CMS/The Joint Commission
Specifications Manual for National
Hospital Inpatient Quality Measures
(Specifications Manual). This
Specifications Manual is posted on the
CMS QualityNet Web site at https://
www.QualityNet.org/. We maintain the
technical specifications by updating this
Specifications Manual semiannually, or
more frequently in unusual cases, and
include detailed instructions and
calculation algorithms for hospitals to
use when collecting and submitting data
on required measures. These
semiannual updates are accompanied by
notifications to users, providing
sufficient time between the change and
the effective date in order to allow users
to incorporate changes and updates to
the specifications into data collection
systems.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
(3) Public Display of Quality Measures
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(VII) of the
Act requires that the Secretary establish
procedures for making quality data
available to the public after ensuring
that a hospital has the opportunity to
review its data before they are made
public. To meet this requirement, data
from the RHQDAPU program are
typically displayed on CMS Web sites
such as the Hospital Compare Web site,
https://www.hospitalcompare.hhs.gov
after a 30-day preview period. An
interactive Web tool, this Web site
assists beneficiaries by providing
information on hospital quality of care
to those who need to select a hospital.
It further serves to encourage
beneficiaries to work with their doctors
and hospitals to discuss the quality of
care hospitals provide to patients,
thereby providing an additional
incentive to hospitals to improve the
quality of care that they furnish. The
RHQDAPU program currently includes
process of care measures, risk adjusted
outcome measures, the HCAHPS patient
experience of care survey, and structural
measures, all of which are featured on
the Hospital Compare Web site.
However, information that may not be
salient to or understood by beneficiaries
and information for which there are
unresolved display issues or design
considerations for inclusion on Hospital
Compare may be made available on
other CMS Web sites that are not
intended to be used as an interactive
Web tool, such as https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/HospitalQualityInits/.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Publicly reporting the information in
this manner, though not on the Hospital
Compare Web site, allows CMS to meet
the requirement under section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(VII) of the Act for
establishing procedures to make quality
data used for RHQDAPU payment
determinations available to the public
following a preview period. In such
circumstances, affected parties are
notified via CMS listservs, CMS e-mail
blasts, national provider calls, and
QualityNet announcements regarding
the release of preview reports followed
by the posting of data on a Web site
other than Hospital Compare.
2. Retirement of RHQDAPU Program
Measures
a. Considerations in Retiring Quality
Measures From the RHQDAPU Program
Unless stated otherwise, we generally
retain measures from the current year’s
RHQDAPU program measure set for
subsequent years’ measure set. We have
previously retired one measure, PN–1:
Oxygenation Assessment for
Pneumonia, from the RHQDAPU
program on the basis of high unvarying
performance among hospitals, as
measures with very high performance
among hospitals present little
opportunity for improvement, and do
not provide meaningful distinctions in
performance for consumers. We also
have retired one measure from the
program because it no longer
‘‘represent[ed] the best clinical practice,’’
as stated under section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(VI) of the Act. In this
latter situation, we stated that when
there is reason to believe that the
continued collection of a measure as it
is currently specified raises potential
patient safety concerns that it is
appropriate for CMS to take immediate
action to remove a measure from the
RHQDAPU program and not wait for the
annual rulemaking cycle. Therefore, in
the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
final rule, we stated that we would
promptly retire such measures followed
by subsequent confirmation of the
retirement in the next IPPS rulemaking.
When we do so, we will notify hospitals
and the public through the usual
hospital and QIO communication
channels used for the RHQDAPU
program, which include memo and
email notification and QualityNet Web
site articles and postings.
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS proposed rule, we invited public
comment regarding additional
RHQDAPU program measures that
should be considered for retirement
along with criteria that should be used
for retiring measures. In the FY 2010
PO 00000
Frm 00110
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule,
commenters recommended 11
RHQDAPU program measures for
retirement for various reasons (74 FR
43865). Among the criteria suggested by
commenters that CMS should consider
when determining whether to retire
RHQDAPU program measures were: (1)
Measure performance among hospitals
is so high and unvarying that
meaningful distinctions and
improvements in performance can no
longer be made; (2) performance or
improvement on a measure does not
result in better patient outcomes; (3) a
measure does not align with current
clinical guidelines or practice; (4) the
availability of a more broadly applicable
(across settings, populations, or
conditions) quality measure for the
topic; (5) the availability of a measure
that is more proximal in time to desired
patient outcomes for the particular
topic; (6) the availability of a measure
that is more strongly associated with
desired patient outcomes for the
particular topic; (7) collection and/or
public reporting of a measure leads to
negative unintended consequences
other than patient harm. We agreed with
commenters that these criteria should be
among those considered in evaluating
current RHQDAPU program measures
for retirement. We again invite
commenters to submit suggestions for
additional measure retirement criteria
for CMS to consider.
b. Proposed Retirement of Quality
Measures Under the RHQDAPU
Program for the FY 2011 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
In the FY 2009 IPPS final rule, for the
FY 2010 payment determination we
adopted nine measures that were
developed by the Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality (AHRQ), and in
the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
we subsequently retained these
measures for the FY 2011 payment
determination. One of these measures
was the AHRQ Mortality for Selected
Surgical Procedures Composite, which
is comprised of measures from the
AHRQ Inpatient Quality Indicator (IQI)
measure set. In late June of 2009,
following an NQF steering committee
evaluation of the AHRQ Mortality for
Selected Surgical Procedures composite,
the AHRQ issued guidance 6 that this
composite is ‘‘not recommended for
comparative reporting’’ as specified due
to significant evidence gaps, and that
these significant evidence gaps are
6 AHRQ. Guidance on Using the AHRQ QI for
Hospital-Level Comparative Reporting. June 2009.
https://www.qualityindicators.ahrq.gov/downloads/
publications/AHRQ%20QI%20Guide%
20to%20Comparative%20Reporting%20v10.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
unlikely to be addressed with further
development or validation work. This
guidance is available at: https://
www.qualityindicators.ahrq.gov/
downloads/publications/
AHRQ%20QI%20Guide%
20to%20Comparative%20
Reporting%20v10.pdf.
For this reason, we are proposing to
retire the Mortality for Selected
Procedures Composite from the
RHQDAPU program measure set from
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
the RHQDAPU program measure set for
the FY 2011 payment determination and
for subsequent payment determinations
because the measure is not considered
suitable for purposes of comparative
reporting by the measure developer. We
will neither calculate this measure for
the FY 2011 payment determination,
nor display results for this measure on
Hospital Compare. We invite comment
on our proposal to retire this measure
from the RHQDAPU program for the FY
PO 00000
Frm 00111
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23961
2011 payment determination and for
subsequent payment determinations.
We also invite commenters to submit
suggestions and rationales for retirement
of other RHQDAPU program measures.
Set out below are the RHQDAPU
program quality measures for the FY
2011 payment determination reflecting
our proposed retirement of one measure:
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00112
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.029
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23962
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
23963
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00113
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.030
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
BILLING CODE 4120–10–C
23964
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
3. Proposed Expansion Plan for Quality
Measures for the FY 2012, FY 2013, and
FY 2014 Payment Determinations
a. Considerations in Expanding and
Updating Quality Measures Under the
RHQDAPU Program
In the FY 2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR
48613) and the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010
LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR 43866
through 43869), we acknowledged the
data collection burden for hospitals
participating in the RHQDAPU program,
and reiterated our desire to expand the
RHQDAPU program measure set while
minimizing burden and seeking to
provide alternative mechanisms for data
submission for the RHQDAPU program.
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
final rule, we also stated that in future
expansions and updates to the
RHQDAPU program measure set, we
would be taking into consideration
several important goals. These goals
include: (a) Expanding the types of
measures beyond process of care
measures to include an increased
number of outcome measures, efficiency
measures, and patients’ experience-ofcare measures; (b) expanding the scope
of hospital services to which the
measures apply; (c) considering the
burden on hospitals in collecting chartabstracted data; (d) harmonizing the
measures used in the RHQDAPU
program with other CMS quality
programs to align incentives and
promote coordinated efforts to improve
quality; (e) seeking to use measures
based on alternative sources of data that
do not require chart abstraction or that
utilize data already being reported by
many hospitals, such as data that
hospitals report to clinical data
registries, or all-payer claims data bases;
and (f) weighing the relevance and
utility of the measures compared to the
burden on hospitals in submitting data
under the RHQDAPU program.
Specifically, we give priority to quality
measures that assess performance on: (a)
Conditions that result in the greatest
mortality and morbidity in the Medicare
population; (b) conditions that are high
volume and high cost for the Medicare
program; and (c) conditions for which
wide cost and treatment variations have
been reported, despite established
clinical guidelines. We have used and
continue to use these criteria to guide
our decisions regarding what measures
to add to the RHQDAPU program
measure set.
RHQDAPU program measures were
initially based solely on a hospital’s
submission of chart-abstracted quality
measure data. However, in recent years
we have adopted measures that do not
require chart abstraction, including
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
structural and claims-based quality
measures which we can calculate using
other data sources. This supports our
goal of expanding the measures for the
RHQDAPU program while minimizing
the burden on hospitals and, in
particular, without significantly
increasing the chart abstraction burden.
In addition to structural and claimsbased measures, we previously noted
that registries 7 and electronic health
records (EHRs) are potential alternative
sources of hospital data for the
RHQDAPU program. We observed that
many hospitals already submit data to
and participate in existing registries,
and that registries often capture
outcome information and provide
ongoing quality improvement feedback
to registry participants. We envisioned
that instead of requiring hospitals to
submit the same data to CMS that many
hospitals are already submitting to
registries, that we would collect the data
directly from the registries. This could
enable the expansion of the RHQDAPU
program measure set without increasing
the burden of data collection for those
hospitals participating in the registries.
We cited as examples of registries
actively used by hospitals the Society of
Thoracic Surgeons (STS) Cardiac
Surgery Registry (with approximately 90
percent participation by cardiac surgery
programs), the AHA Stroke Registry
(with approximately 1200 hospitals
participating), and the American
Nursing Association (ANA) Nursing
Sensitive Measures Registry (with
approximately 1400 hospitals
participating). In the FY 2009 IPPS final
rule (73 FR 48608 through 48609), we
adopted the first RHQDAPU program
measure related to registries:
Participation in a Systematic Database
for Cardiac Surgery. Subsequently, in
the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
final rule (74 FR 43870 through 43872),
we adopted two additional structural
measures of registry participation for the
topics of Stroke and Nursing Sensitive
Care. We continue to evaluate the
feasibility of leveraging registry-based
data collection mechanisms for the
RHQDAPU program and we are
proposing to collect such data for the FY
2013 payment determination.
We also stated our intention to
explore mechanisms for data
submission using EHRs (73 FR 48614;
74 FR 43866, 43892). Establishing such
a system will require interoperability
between EHRs and CMS data collection
systems, additional infrastructure
development on the part of hospitals
7 A registry is a collection of clinical data for
purposes of assessing clinical performance, quality
of care, and opportunities for quality improvement.
PO 00000
Frm 00114
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
and CMS, and the adoption of standards
for the capturing, formatting, and
transmission of data elements that make
up the measures. However, once these
activities are accomplished, the
adoption of measures that rely on data
obtained directly from EHRs will enable
us to expand the RHQDAPU program
measure set with less cost and burden
to hospitals.
In the FY 2009 IPPS final rule, we
adopted nine AHRQ measures for the
RHQDAPU program, one of which is
now proposed for retirement for the FY
2011 payment determination and
subsequent payment determinations in
this proposed rule. We stated that we
would initially calculate the measures
using Medicare claims data (73 FR
48608). However, we also stated that we
remained interested in using all-payer
claims data to calculate them and that
we might propose to collect such data
in the future. In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY
2010 LTCH PPS proposed rule (74 FR
24169), we invited input and
suggestions on how all-payer claims
data can be collected and used by CMS
to calculate these measures, as well as
on additional AHRQ measures that we
should consider adopting for future
RHQDAPU program payment
determinations.
In summary, we will continue to
pursue goals regarding the expansion
and updating of quality measures under
the RHQDAPU program while
minimizing burden. We will take into
account the public comments we
receive on the possible uses of EHRs,
registries, and all-payer claims data in
the RHQDAPU program. We also will
consider the measure selection criteria
suggested by various commenters in
prioritizing and selecting quality
measures for the future.’’ In particular,
we are concerned about the lack of
progress in reducing the rates of
healthcare associated infections that
was recently reported in the 2009
National Healthcare Quality Report
(https://www.ahrq.gov/qual/nhqr09/
nhqr09.pdf). For example, the report
found that rates of postoperative sepsis
increased by 8 percent. It is evident that
more attention needs to be paid to
ensure health care does not result in
avoidable harm and that patients are
informed about hospitals’ performance.
We are soliciting comment on the
option to include among our
prioritization criteria quality measures
that assess performance on healthcare
associated infections. Also, while the
current and proposed measures cover
many aspects of healthcare associated
infections, we are soliciting public
comment on additional measures that
could be added to those hospitals would
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
report and that CMS would make
available to the public in order promote
improvement in healthcare associated
infection rates.
In the past, we have proposed to add
new RHQDAPU program measures for
one year’s payment determination in a
given rulemaking cycle. Although in
prior years we have identified various
measures for future consideration, we
have not proposed or finalized measures
for the RHQDAPU program beyond
those to be collected for the purpose of
the next sequential payment
determination. In this FY 2011
rulemaking cycle, we are proposing an
expansion to the RHQDAPU program
that will take place over three payment
years, and are proposing to add
measures not only for the FY 2012
payment determination, but also for the
FY 2013 and FY 2014 payment
determinations. To the extent we
finalize some or all of these proposed
measures this year, we believe that we
will be providing greater certainty for
hospitals to plan to meet future
reporting requirements and implement
related quality improvement efforts. We
will also have more time to prepare,
organize and implement the necessary
infrastructure necessary to collect data
on the measures and make payment
determinations.
Finally, in section V.A.5.(2) of this
proposed rule, we discuss a proposal to
make RHQDAPU payment
determinations beginning with FY 2013
using, in part, a consecutive calendar
year of quality measure data. This
proposed approach, of synchronizing
the quarters for which data on these
measures must be submitted during
each year with the quarters we will use
to make payment determinations, would
apply beginning with January 1, 2011
discharges although it would not affect
our payment determinations until FY
2013. We invite public comment on the
measures and timeframe for their
addition to the RHQDAPU program
measure set.
b. Proposed RHQDAPU Program Quality
Measures for the FY 2012 Payment
Determination
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
(1) Proposed Retention of 45 Existing
RHQDAPU Program Quality Measures
for the FY 2012 Payment Determination
As noted above, we are proposing to
retire the AHRQ Mortality for Selected
Surgical Procedures Composite for the
FY 2011 payment determination. We are
proposing that the remaining 45 of the
46 quality measures for the FY 2011
RHQDAPU program payment
determination will be used for the FY
2012 RHQDAPU program payment
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
determination. Details regarding data
submission requirements are discussed
in section V.A.5. of this proposed rule.
We invite comment on the proposal to
include all FY 2011 measures except for
the AHRQ Mortality for Selected
Surgical Procedures Composite in the
FY 2012 RHQDAPU measure set.
In proposing to retain 45 of the 46 FY
2011 measures, we recognize that we are
not significantly reducing the burden for
hospitals, since the one measure that we
are proposing to remove is a measure
that currently is calculated based on
Medicare claims. At the same time, we
are proposing to expand the measures
for the FY 2012 and subsequent years’
payment determinations, which may
add additional reporting burdens and
new focus areas for hospital quality
improvement efforts. In view of our
concern about the burden of reporting
for hospitals, especially when it comes
to reporting chart-abstracted measures,
another option that we have considered
to accommodate the expansion of the
measure set is the retirement of
additional measures. Specifically, we
have considered retiring one or more of
those measures suggested by various
commenters that were listed in the FY
2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule
(74 FR 43865). We noted in that final
rule that 11 RHQDAPU program chartabstracted measures were recommended
for retirement by commenters. Seven of
these 11 measures were recommended
for retirement based on their
performance being uniformly high
nationwide, with little variability among
hospitals. Information on the
performance rates for hospitals
reporting is available at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/HospitalQualityInits/
downloads/
HospitalNationalLevelPerformance.pdf.
These measures are:
• AMI–1 Aspirin at arrival
• AMI–3 ACEI/ARB for left
ventricular systolic dysfunction
• AMI–4 Adult smoking cessation
advice/counseling
• AMI–5 Beta-blocker prescribed at
discharge
• HF–4 Adult smoking cessation
advice/counseling
• PN–4 Adult smoking cessation
advice/counseling
• SCIP-Infection-6: Surgery patients
with appropriate hair removal
In addition to these ‘‘topped out’’
measures, commenters recommended
we retire four additional measures listed
below for reasons unrelated to high
unvarying performance. These measures
are:
• HF–1 Discharge instructions
PO 00000
Frm 00115
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23965
• PN–3b Blood culture performed
before first antibiotic received in
hospital
• SCIP-Infection-2: Prophylactic
antibiotic selection for surgical patients
• SCIP-Infection-4: Cardiac Surgery
Patients with Controlled 6AM
Postoperative Serum Glucose
Reasons given by commenters
included the following: (1) Care process
measured has weak or no relationship to
better outcomes; (2) Collection burden
of measure negates or outweighs the
benefit of reporting the measure; and (3)
Measure perceived to be discordant
with current guidelines.
We invite comments on the option to
retire one or more of these 11 measures
that were suggested for retirement by
commenters to the FY 2010 IPPS
proposed rule. We note that some of
these measures were proposed for
electronic reporting under the program
for payment incentives for meaningful
use of electronic health records (75 FR
1896).
In addition, we are considering an
option under which if we propose and
finalize measures that are specified to
more broadly address a clinical topic,
and thus would require hospitals to
submit the same data that they are
already submitting on more narrowly
specified measures that we previously
adopted for the RHQDAPU program, we
would propose to retire the more
narrowly specified measures from the
RHQDAPU measure set. An example of
this that we are considering would be to
retire the current Influenza and
Pneumoccocal vaccination measures
that apply only to the Pneumonia
admission inpatient population (PN–2
Pneumococcal vaccination status; and
PN–7 Influenza vaccination status) if we
proposed and finalized measures of
Influenza and Pneumoccocal
vaccination that apply to all inpatients.
We invite comments on this option to
retire narrowly specified measures in
order to accommodate more broadly
specified measures on a given topic.
(2) Proposed New Claims-Based
Measures
We are proposing to add 10 claimsbased measures to the RHQDAPU
program measure set for the FY 2012
payment determination: 2 AHRQ Patient
Safety Indicators and 8 Hospital
Acquired Condition measures. These
proposed measures would be calculated
using up to three years’ of Medicare
claims for discharges prior to January 1,
2011. These measures are discussed
below.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23966
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
(A) Proposed AHRQ Patient Safety
Indicators
In the FY 2009 IPPS final rule we
adopted a number of AHRQ Patient
Safety Indicators and Inpatient Quality
Indicators for the RHQDAPU program to
be calculated using Medicare claims.
The addition of these measures to the
RHQDAPU program allowed us to
expand the RHQDAPU program
measure set to include measures of
patient safety, in-hospital mortality,
adverse events and complications
without increasing the data submission
burden on hospitals. In the FY 2010
IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule, we
retained these measures for the FY 2011
payment determination. In this
proposed rule, we are proposing to
retire one of those measures (Mortality
for Selected Surgical Procedures
Composite) from the RHQDAPU
program measure set for the FY 2011
payment determination. For the FY
2012 payment determination, we are
proposing to adopt 2 additional Patient
Safety Indicators developed by the
AHRQ. These are: PSI–11: PostOperative Respiratory Failure and PSI–
12: Post-Operative Pulmonary Embolism
(PE) or Deep Vein Thrombosis (DVT).
Both measures address post-operative
complications, a topic that is currently
not well represented in the RHQDAPU
program measure set. Both measures are
NQF-endorsed, and have a Tier 1
evidence rating by AHRQ, the measure
developer. Indicators given this level of
evidentiary rating by AHRQ have the
strongest evidence base, with
established evidence in several or most
evidentiary areas established by AHRQ,
no substantial evidence suggesting that
the indicators may not be useful for
comparative reporting purposes, and in
most cases the indicators have been
NQF-endorsed.8 The specific measures
that we are proposing to add are NQFendorsed, thus reflecting consensus
among affected parties, and are deemed
appropriate for comparative public
reporting by the measure developer.
Like the current AHRQ measures in the
RHQDAPU program, these indicators
are risk-adjusted outcome measures that
can be calculated based on existing
Medicare claims, placing no additional
reporting burden on hospitals while
allowing us to expand outcomes
measurement in the RHQDAPU
program. The specifications for these
measures can be found at https://
www.qualityindicators.ahrq.gov/
TechnicalSpecs41.htm#PSI41. We
8 https://www.qualityindicators.ahrq.gov/
downloads/publications/
AHRQ%20QI%20Guide%20to%20
Comparative%20Reporting%20v10.pdf.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
invite comment on our proposal to
adopt these two AHRQ Patient Safety
Indicators for the FY 2012 payment
determination.
(B) Proposed Hospital Acquired
Condition (HAC) Measures
Section 1886(d)(4)(D) of the Act
required the Secretary to select, in
consultation with the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),
at least two conditions that: (a) Are high
cost, high volume, or both; (b) are
assigned to a higher paying MS–DRG
when present as a secondary diagnosis
(that is, conditions under the MS–DRG
system that are CCs or MCCs); and (c)
could reasonably have been prevented
through the application of evidence
based guidelines. We currently have 10
categories of Hospital Acquired
Conditions (HACs). We refer readers to:
section II.F. of the FY 2008 IPPS final
rule with comment period (72 FR 47202
through 47218); section II.F. of the FY
2009 IPPS final rule with comment
period (73 FR 48474 through 48486);
and section II.F. of the FY 2010 IPPS/
RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR
43782 through 43785) for detailed
discussions regarding the selection of
the current 10 HAC categories. We refer
readers to section II.F. of this proposed
rule for additional discussion and our
proposals for HAC policy for FY 2011.
We have worked collaboratively with
public health and infectious disease
professionals from across HHS,
including CDC, AHRQ, and the Office of
Public Health and Science, to identify
and select preventable HACs with input
and comment from affected parties.
CMS and CDC have also collaborated on
the process for hospitals to submit a
present on admission (POA) indicator
for each diagnosis listed on IPPS
hospital Medicare claims and on the
payment implications for POA reporting
(74 FR 43783).
CMS, CDC and AHRQ held jointly
sponsored HAC and POA Listening
Sessions (December 17, 2007 and
December 18, 2008) to receive input
from affected parties, individuals, and
organizations regarding the selection
and definition of HACs. The adoption of
HACs were informed and continue to be
informed by feedback received during
the listening sessions, as well as through
public comment received during the
IPPS rulemaking process. In addition to
receiving comments regarding the
selection of conditions and POA
indicator reporting, in the FY 2010
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR
43785), commenters suggested that CMS
consider making aggregate POA
information publicly available, and
providing comparative information as a
PO 00000
Frm 00116
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
means of facilitating improvements in
preventing the incidence of HACs.
We are proposing to adopt as
RHQDAPU measures for the FY 2012
payment determination eight (of 10)
current HACs defined in section II.F. of
this proposed rule, six of which have
been identified by NQF as serious
reportable events, and to publicly report
these measures as we do other
RHQDAPU program measures. These
measures are:
• Foreign Object Retained After
Surgery
• Air Embolism
• Blood Incompatibility
• Pressure Ulcer Stages III & IV
• Falls and Trauma: (Includes:
Fracture, Dislocation, Intracranial
Injury, Crushing, Injury, Burn, Electric
Shock)
• Vascular Catheter-Associated
Infection
• Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract
Infection (UTI)
• Manifestations of Poor Glycemic
Control
We do not believe that it is necessary
to propose to adopt the other two
current HAC categories as RHQDAPU
measures because the topics that they
deal with would substantially overlap
with other RHQDAPU program
measures discussed below that we are
proposing to adopt for future payment
determinations as chart-abstracted
measures (which allows us to collect
data on all patients). By contrast, the
eight proposed HAC measures are
claims-based measures for which we
can only (at this time) collect data only
on Medicare beneficiaries.
We are proposing to utilize Medicare
claims data to calculate measure rates
for these eight HACs using the ICD–9–
CM codes in conjunction with POA
coding of ‘‘N’’ or ‘‘U,’’ as defined in IPPS
rulemaking. We refer readers to section
II.F.6. of the FY 2008 IPPS final rule
with comment period (72 FR 47202
through 47218), section II.F.7. of the FY
2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR 48474
through 48486), section II.F.6. (74 FR
43782 through 43785) of the FY 2010
IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule, and
section II.F. of this proposed rule for
detailed discussions regarding the use of
the POA indicator in conjunction with
ICD–9–CM coding to determine the
presence of HACs. We also refer readers
to the current ICD–9–CM codes and
proposed updates for these eight HAC
categories in this proposed rule. We are
proposing to use the ICD–9–CM codes
in conjunction with the ‘‘N’’ and ‘‘U’’
POA indicators for the HAC categories
that will be finalized in the FY 2011
IPPS/RY 2011 LTCH PPS final rule to
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
calculate the eight HAC measures for
the RHQDAPU program.
We believe that these HAC measures
reflect consensus among affected parties
as required for RHQDAPU program
measures by section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(V) of the Act. In
addition to meeting the consensus
requirement through rulemaking and
public comment, Vascular CatheterAssociated Infection and CatheterAssociated UTI are the subject of a
quality measure which gained NQF
endorsement in August 2009. The
remaining six HAC categories have been
identified as serious reportable events
through the NQF consensus process and
have also been selected as HACs
through rulemaking and public
comment. Data reporting requirements
for these measures are provided in
section V.A.5. of this proposed rule. We
invite comment on our proposal to
adopt these eight HAC measures for the
FY 2012 payment determination.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
(3) Proposed All-Patient Volume Data
for Selected MS–DRGs
CMS currently displays volume data
for 70 MS–DRGs, 55 of which relate to
RHQDAPU program measures on the
Hospital Compare Web site. However,
the volume data currently shown on
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Hospital Compare is based on Medicare
claims only. Although we do not
consider volume alone to be a quality
measure unless volume has been
determined to be an indicator of quality,
we believe that to the extent all-patient
volume data are related to the measures,
as they provide context for the quality
measures in the inpatient hospital
setting, and may assist Hospital
Compare users in understanding the
measure calculations. In general, in
implementing RHQDAPU program
measures, we have sought where
currently possible to measure the care
rendered to all patients within a
hospital, and not just Medicare patients.
For this reason, the chart-abstracted
process of care measures we collect and
display on Hospital Compare are based
on the entire inpatient population for
the hospital.
We are proposing that hospitals begin
submitting as data on measures selected
for the RHQDAPU program the allpatient data elements discussed in
section V.A.5. of this proposed rule for
55 MS–DRGs displayed on Hospital
Compare that relate to adopted
RHQDAPU program measures. The
specific MS–DRGs are listed below. As
stated above, we believe that the
addition of this data will enable us and
PO 00000
Frm 00117
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23967
Medicare beneficiaries to better
understand and evaluate the quality of
care provided by hospitals with respect
to both the chart-abstracted and claimsbased measures. We intend to publicly
display this volume data along with the
corresponding measure results on
Hospital Compare. Hospitals would
begin reporting these data once annually
beginning with January 1, 2011
discharges by submitting the all-patient
data elements needed to calculate MS–
DRG volume to QualityNet so we can
determine the volume of cases treated
by a hospital for the 55 MS–DRGs
currently displayed on Hospital
Compare. Rather than require hospitals
to group their all-patient claims data by
MS–DRG category themselves, CMS
would use the data to be submitted by
hospitals to group the data.We invite
comments on this proposal.
We also invite comment on an
alternative that hospitals submit allpatient volume data based upon specific
ICD–9–CM codes related to the
proposed MS–DRGs rather than all data
necessary to calculate the MS–DRGs.
The proposed RHQDAPU measure set
for the FY 2012 payment determination
is listed below:
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00118
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.031
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23968
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00119
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23969
EP04MY10.032
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
23970
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
We invite comment on these proposed
measures for the FY 2012 payment
determination.
c. Proposed RHQDAPU Program Quality
Measures for the FY 2013 Payment
Determination
(1) Proposed Retention of FY 2012
Payment Determination Measures for
the FY 2013 Payment Determination
We generally propose to retain
RHQDAPU program measures from one
year to the next. Consistent with this
approach, we are proposing to retain all
of the proposed measures for the FY
2012 RHQDAPU payment
determination, if finalized, for the FY
2013 payment determination. We invite
public comment on this proposal.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
(2) Proposed New Chart-Abstracted
Measure for the FY 2013 Payment
Determination
We are proposing to add one new
chart-abstracted measure for the FY
2013 payment determination—AMIstatin at discharge. This measure is
similar to the NQF-endorsed stroke
measure ‘‘Ischemic stroke patients with
LDL >/= 100 mg/dL, or LDL not
measured, or, who were on cholesterol
reducing therapy prior to
hospitalization are discharged on a
statin medication’’ (NQF #0439), only
specified for the AMI population.
Current scientific evidence supports the
continuation of statins more strongly for
AMI patients than for stroke patients.
Several randomized clinical trials have
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
proven the benefits of statin drugs (also
known as HMG Co-A reductase
inhibitors) in reducing the risk of death
and recurrent cardiovascular events in a
broad range of patients with established
cardiovascular disease, including those
with prior myocardial infarction.
Current ACC/AHA guidelines place a
strong emphasis on the initiation or
maintenance of statin drugs for patients
hospitalized with AMI, particularly
those with LDL-cholesterol levels at or
above 100 mg/dL. As a result of the
strength of the evidence and guideline
support, the ACC/AHA has developed a
performance measure to assess this
aspect of care for AMI patients.
Because statins are generally welltolerated, most AMI patients are
appropriate candidates for this therapy.
As a result of this clinical evidence, the
NQF has been asked to review whether
it should broaden the current endorsed
measure specification to include the
AMI population. This ad hoc review is
occurring now and is expected to be
completed prior to publication of the FY
2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule.
Information on this project can be found
at: https://www.qualityforum.org/
Projects/a-b/Ad_Hoc_Reviews/
Statin_Medication/Ad_Hoc_
Review__Discharged_on_Statin.aspx.
We will decide whether to finalize this
measure based on whether it achieves
NQF endorsement and public
comments. We believe that minimal
additional burden would result from
adoption of this measure into the
RHQDAPU program because the AMI
PO 00000
Frm 00120
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
population that is the focus of this
measure is already part of data
collection efforts for RHQDAPU, and
very few additional data elements
would be needed to be abstracted for the
proposed new measure on this existing
measurement population. We proposed
that hospitals would begin submission
of data for the AMI-statin at discharge
measure beginning with January 1, 2011
dischares for the RHQDAPU 2013
payment determination.
(3) Proposed New Healthcare Associated
Infection (HAI) Measures for the FY
2013 Payment Determination
In the FY 2009 and FY 2010 IPPS
rulemakings, we listed several
Healthcare Associated Infection (HAI)
measures as being under consideration
for future adoption. Commenters to the
FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
proposed rule supported the HAI
measures that were listed as being under
consideration for the future and
encouraged CMS to consider others as
well (74 FR 43876). For the measure set
to be used for the FY 2013 payment
determination, we are proposing to
adopt two new measures of Healthcare
Acquired Infections that are currently
being collected by the CDC via the
National Healthcare Safety Network
(NHSN). These measures are: (1) Central
Line Associated Blood Stream Infection
(NQF #0139) and (2) Surgical Site
Infection (NQF #0299).
The NHSN is a secure, Internet-based
surveillance system maintained and
managed by the CDC, and can be
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.033
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
utilized by all types of healthcare
facilities in the United States, including
acute care hospitals, long term acute
care hospitals, psychiatric hospitals,
rehabilitation hospitals, outpatient
dialysis centers, ambulatory surgery
centers, and long term care facilities.
The NHSN enables healthcare facilities
to collect and use data about HAIs,
adherence to clinical practices known to
prevent HAIs, the incidence or
prevalence of multidrug-resistant
organisms within their organizations,
and other adverse events. Some States
use NHSN as a means for healthcare
facilities to submit data on HAIs
mandated through their specific State
legislation. Currently, 21 States require
hospitals to report HAIs using NHSN,
and CDC supports more than 2000
hospitals that are using NHSN.9
Both the Central Line Associated
Blood Stream Infection measure and the
Surgical Site Infection measure are
NQF-endorsed, and therefore meet the
statutory requirement for measure
selection of reflecting consensus among
affected parties. The measures address
HAIs, a topic area widely acknowledged
by the HHS, IOM, the National Priorities
Partnership and others as a high priority
requiring measurement and
improvement. HAIs are among the
leading causes of death in the United
States. CDC estimates that as many as 2
million infections are acquired each
year in hospitals and result in
approximately 90,000 deaths per year.10
It is estimated that more Americans die
each year from HAIs than from auto
accidents and homicides combined.
HAIs not only put the patient at risk, but
also increase the days of hospitalization
required for patients and add
considerable health care costs.
HAIs are largely preventable through
interventions such as better hygiene and
advanced scientifically tested
techniques for surgical patients.
Therefore, many health care consumers
and organizations are calling for public
disclosure of HAIs, arguing that public
reporting of HAI rates provides the
information health care consumers need
to choose the safest hospitals, and gives
hospitals an incentive to improve
infection control efforts. Both of the
measures we are proposing to add for
the FY 2013 payment determination are
NQF-endorsed, and are currently
collected using the NHSN as part of
State-mandated reporting and
surveillance requirements for hospitals.
9 https://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/.
10 McKibben L, Horan T Guidance on public
reporting of healthcare-associated infections:
recommendations of the Healthcare Infection
Control Practices Advisory Committee. AJIC
2005;33:217–26.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
NHSN data collection occurs via a Webbased tool hosted by CDC provided free
of charge to hospitals. Additionally,
data submission for these measures
through EHRs may be possible in the
near future.
(A) Central Line Associated Blood
Stream Infection
This HAI measure assesses the rate of
laboratory-confirmed cases of
bloodstream infection or clinical sepsis
among ICU patients. It was endorsed by
the NQF in 2004 and was adopted by
the HQA in 2007. The measure can be
stratified by the type of ICU.
(B) Surgical Site Infection
This HAI measure assesses the
number of NHSN-defined operative
procedures with a surgical site infection
(deep incisional or organ space) within
30 days, or 1 year if an implant is in
place. Infections are identified on
original admission or upon readmission
to the facility of original operative
procedure within the relevant time
frame (30 days for no implants; within
1 year for implants). The measure can be
stratified by procedure type or risk
factors. This measure was NQFendorsed in 2007 and was adopted by
the HQA in 2008.
We invite comment on our proposal
to adopt these two HAI measures into
the RHQDAPU program for the FY 2013
payment determination. Collection of
these measures would begin with
January 1, 2011 discharges for the FY
2013 payment determination. We are
proposing that hospitals use the NHSN
infrastructure to report the measures for
RHQDAPU program purposes. The
proposed reporting mechanism for these
HAI measures is discussed in greater
detail in section V.A.5. of this proposed
rule.
(4) Proposed New Registry-Based
Measures
For the FY 2013 payment
determination, we are proposing that
hospitals choose one of the following
four proposed measure topics: (1)
Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator
(ICD) Complications; (2) Cardiac
Surgery; (3) Stroke; or (4) NursingSensitive Care. With respect to the
proposed measure topic selected by a
hospital, we are proposing that the
hospital report data on the proposed
measure(s) applicable to the measure
topic (discussed below) to a qualified
registry for the specific topic, and direct
the registry to both calculate the
measure results for the hospital and
release those results (along with the
numerator/denominator information
and exclusion information) to CMS for
PO 00000
Frm 00121
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23971
the RHQDAPU program. We are
proposing that hospitals begin
submitting data to the qualified registry
of its choosing for discharges on or after
January 1, 2011, and we intend to
release a list of qualified registries
before that date. In section V.A.13. of
this proposed rule, we specify the selfnomination process we are proposing to
use to qualify registries for each
proposed registry-based measure topic.
Proposed procedural and submission
requirements for the proposed registrybased measures are discussed in section
V.A.5. of this proposed rule. Below is a
discussion of the proposed registrybased measure topics and specific
registry-based measures that fall within
each topic that we are proposing to add
to the RHQDAPU program for the FY
2013 payment determination.
(A) Proposed Implantable Cardioverter
Defibrillator (ICD) Complications
Registry-Based Topic and Measure
Implantable Cardioverter
Defibrillators (ICDs) reduce the risk of
sudden cardiac death for select high risk
patients, and the number of patients
undergoing ICD implantation increased
from 5,600 in 1990 to 108,680 by
2005.11 ICD implantation is an
expensive procedure performed on
patients with advanced cardiovascular
disease and, often, significant
comorbidities. Despite improvements in
technology and increasing experience
with device implantation, the procedure
carries a significant risk of
complications,12 which in turn
increases its cost, the patient’s length of
stay, and the patient’s risk of
mortality.13 In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY
2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR 43873
through 43875), our list of potential
future quality measures under
consideration included a measure of
ICD complications. This measure is a
risk-adjusted complication and
mortality rate following implantation of
ICDs in Medicare Fee for Service (FFS)
patients at least 65 years of age, with
complication specific outcome time
frames. The measure (NQF #OT1–007–
09) is currently undergoing NQF review
11 Brown, D.W., Croft, J.B., et al. (2008). ‘‘Trends
in Hospitalizations for the Implantation of
Cardioverter-Defibrillators in the United States,
1990–2005.’’ American Journal of Cardiology 101
(12): 1753–1755.
12 Hammill S and Curtis J. Publicly Reporting
Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator Outcomes—
Grading the Report Card. Circ Arrhythmia
Electrophysiol. 2008;1:235–237).
13 Al-Khatib SM, Greiner MA, Peterson ED,
Hernandez AF, Schulman KA, Curtis LH. Patient
and Implanting Physician Factors Associated With
Mortality and Complications After Implantable
Cardioverter-Defibrillator Implantation, 2002–2005.
Circ Arrhythmia Electrophysiol. 2008;1:240–249.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23972
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
under Phase 1 of a call for Patient
Outcome Measures initiated in Fall of
2009. We are proposing to add the ICD
complications topic and measure to the
RHQDAPU measure set for collection
beginning with January 1, 2011
discharges for the FY 2013 RHQDAPU
payment determination pending NQF
endorsement. We anticipate that a final
endorsement decision will occur in the
fall of 2010, after publication of the FY
2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule.
Therefore, the decision whether to
finalize this measure for the FY 2013
payment determination will be made in
the CY 2011OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period.
The proposed ICD complications
measure was developed based upon
data submitted to the American College
of Cardiology-National Cardiovascular
Data Registry’s (ACC–NCDR) ICD
registry, and data from that registry has
been linked with CMS administrative
claims data used to identify procedural
complications. For this proposed
measure, the measured outcome for
each ICD index admission is one or
more complications or mortality within
30 or 90 days (depending on the
complication) following ICD
implantation. Complications are
counted in the measure only if they
occur during a hospital admission.
Complications measured for 30 days
include: (1) Pneumothorax or
hemothorax plus a chest tube; (2)
Hematoma plus a blood transfusion or
evacuation; (3) Cardiac tamponade or
pericardiocentesis; and (4) Death.
Complications measured for 90 days
include: (5) Mechanical complications
requiring a system revision; (6) Device
related infection; and (7) Additional ICD
implantation.
To comply with a January 2005
National Coverage Determination for
ICDs for primary prevention, all
hospitals in which ICD procedures are
performed are currently submitting to
the ACC–NCDR ICD registry patient
information needed for us to determine
whether the procedure was reasonable
and necessary. This requirement is
documented in section 20.4 of the
following Medicare National Coverage
Determination Manual: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/manuals/downloads/
ncd103c1_Part1.pdf. For purposes of the
2005 National Coverage Determination,
we require that hospitals submit data to
the ACC–NCDR ICD registry for primary
prevention patients only but do not
require hospitals to submit data on
patients undergoing ICD implantation
for secondary prevention. However, the
ICD complication measure as submitted
to the NQF for endorsement is specified
such that it includes all ICD patients,
regardless of whether they receive an
ICD for the primary or secondary
prevention of sudden cardiac death.
Therefore, hospitals that choose this
registry-based measure topic for the
RHQDAPU program would submit data
on the ICD complications measure for
both primary and secondary prevention
patients to the qualified registry. For
risk adjustment, data matching, and
secondary prevention population
identification purposes, we are
proposing that hospitals also submit to
the qualified ICD complications registry
an additional 11 data elements not
currently required under the NCD in
order for the measure to be calculated
for RHQDAPU program purposes.
In sum, we are proposing to add the
ICD complications measure topic as one
of four proposed measure topics that
hospitals can choose from to submit
required data elements to a qualified
registry for the FY 2013 RHQDAPU
payment determination. The only
measure that we are proposing to
include in this proposed topic at this
time would be the ICD complications
measure. Because the ICD complications
measure is a risk-adjusted outcome
measure, it is necessary that all data for
the measure be collected by a single
qualified registry in order for that
registry to be able to accurately calculate
the risk adjustment model and
subsequent measure results. Therefore,
we are proposing to qualify one registry
for this topic. Proposed registry
qualification criteria are discussed in
section V.A.13. of this proposed rule.
We note that the ACC–NCDR ICD
registry has already been qualified to
receive and transmit data to CMS for a
Medicare National Coverage
Determination, and is currently the only
registry to which hospitals submit data
for this NCD. However, this would not
preclude another registry from selfnominating to become a qualified
registry for this proposed topic for the
RHQDAPU program. Because the ICD
complication measure is a risk adjusted
measure, it requires that all data be
collected at a single repository for
calculation of the measure. Therefore,
we anticipate qualifying a single registry
to collect all of the data for the proposed
ICD complications registry-based topic.
(B) Proposed Stroke Registry-Based
Topic and Measures
We proposed to add five stroke
measures to the RHQDAPU measure set
in the FY 2009 IPPS proposed rule (73
FR 23648). We indicated that we would
again consider these measures once
NQF reviewed and endorsed the
measures. Since that time, eight stroke
measures received NQF endorsement in
July of 2008, and in the FY 2010 IPPS/
RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule we
included these measures in the list of
potential future measures. We also
included these measures in the preview
section of the Specifications Manual,
and have worked with the Office of the
National Coordinator for Health
Information Technology (ONC) and its
partners to create a set of electronic
specifications for these measures to
facilitate collection through EHRs.
We are also aware that a number of
hospitals are already submitting these
measures to registries, and in the FY
2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final
rule, we finalized a structural measure
of participation in a systematic clinical
database registry for stroke care. Stroke
is a topic of great relevance to the
Medicare population due to its impact
on morbidity and mortality, and is an
area of great potential improvement for
hospitals. Commenters on the FY 2010
IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS proposed rule
expressed support for these measures,
indicating that they accurately measure
evidence-based care of the stroke patient
to minimize secondary strokes and other
complications, are widely recognized,
and have great potential for quality
improvement (74 FR 43875).
Therefore, we are proposing to
include the following eight measures in
the Stroke registry-based topic:
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
PROPOSED MEASURES FOR STROKE REGISTRY-BASED TOPIC
STK–1: Venous Thromboembolism (VTE) Prophylaxis for patients with ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke (NQF #0434).
STK–2: Ischemic stroke patients discharged on
antithrombotic therapy. (NQF #0435).
STK–3: Anticoagulation therapy for atrial fibrillation/flutter. (NQF #0436).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Patients with an ischemic stroke or a hemorrhagic stroke and who are non-ambulatory should
start receiving DVT prophylaxis by end of hospital day two.
Patients with an ischemic stroke prescribed antithrombotic therapy at discharge.
Patients with an ischemic stroke with atrial fibrillation discharged on anticoagulation therapy.
PO 00000
Frm 00122
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
23973
PROPOSED MEASURES FOR STROKE REGISTRY-BASED TOPIC—Continued
STK–4: Thrombolytic Therapy for Acute
ischemic stroke patients. (NQF #0437).
STK–5: Antithrombotic therapy by the end of
hospital day two. (NQF #0438).
STK–6: Discharged on statin medication. (NQF
#0439).
STK–8: Stroke education. (NQF #0440) ............
STK–10: Assessed for rehabilitation services.
(NQF #0441).
We are proposing to add the stroke
registry-based topic, which would
include these eight registry-based stroke
measures, to the RHQDAPU program
measure set as one of the four proposed
measure topics that hospitals can
choose from to submit data to a
qualified registry for the FY 2013
payment determination beginning with
January 1, 2011 discharges. We invite
comment on the measures as well as the
timing of their addition to the
RHQDAPU measure set.
(C) Proposed Nursing Sensitive Care
Registry-Based Topic and Measures
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS final rule, we indicated that we
Acute ischemic stroke patients who arrive at the hospital within 120 minutes (2 hours) of time
last known well and for whom IV t-PA was initiated at this hospital within 180 minutes (3
hours) of time last known well.
Patients with ischemic stroke who receive antithrombotic therapy by the end of hospital day
two.
Ischemic stroke patients with LDL >/= 100 mg/dL, or LDL not measured, or, who were on cholesterol reducing therapy prior to hospitalization are discharged on a statin medication.
Patients with ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke or their caregivers who were given education or
educational materials during the hospital stay addressing all of the following: personal risk
factors for stroke, warning signs for stroke, activation of emergency.
Patients with an ischemic stroke or hemorrhagic stroke who were assessed for rehabilitation
services.
were considering adopting a number of
nursing-sensitive care measures for
future RHQDAPU program payment
determinations. Also in that rule, we
adopted a structural measure of
participation in a registry for nursingsensitive care, under which hospitals
submit data directly to the QIO Clinical
Warehouse.
For the FY 2013 payment
determination, we are proposing to add
a nursing sensitive care registry-based
topic to the RHQDAPU measure set,
which would include the eight nursingsensitive care measures listed below. All
of the proposed nursing sensitive
measures are NQF-endorsed. Hospitals
selecting this topic would begin
reporting data on the eight proposed
nursing-sensitive care registry-based
measures to a qualified nursingsensitive care registry beginning with
January 1, 2011 discharges. Hospitals
would continue reporting the nursingsensitive care structural measure
previously adopted for the RHQDAPU
program directly to the QIO Clinical
Warehouse.
We invite comment on the proposed
addition of a nursing sensitive care
registry-based topic, which would
include 8 proposed nursing sensitive
care measures, as well as the timing of
this addition to the RHQDAPU program
for the FY 2013 payment determination.
PROPOSED MEASURES FOR NURSING SENSITIVE CARE REGISTRY-BASED TOPIC
Patient Falls: All documented falls with or without injury, experienced by patients on an eligible unit in a calendar month. (NQF #0141).
Falls with Injury: All documented patient falls with an injury level of minor or greater. (NQF #0202).
Pressure Ulcer Prevalence (NQF #0201).
Restraint Prevalence (vest and limb) (NQF #0203).
Skill Mix: Percentage of hours worked by: RN, LPN/LVN, UAP, Contract/Agency (NQF #0204).
Hours per patient day worked by RN, LPN, and UAP (NQF #0205).
Practice Environment Scale-Nursing Work Index (NQF #0206).
Voluntary turnover for RN, APN, LPN, UAP (NQF #0207).
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
(D) Proposed Cardiac Surgery RegistryBased Topic and Measures
We have previously proposed to add
several measures on the topic of cardiac
surgery to the RHQDAPU measure set
(73 FR 48608), and have also listed a set
of NQF-endorsed cardiac surgery
measures in prior rules as being under
consideration for future adoption (74 FR
43874). We also adopted a structural
measure of cardiac surgery participation
in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
final rule. Cardiac surgery procedures
carry a significant risk of morbidity and
mortality. We believe that the
nationwide public reporting of the 15
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
proposed cardiac surgery registry-based
measures would provide highly
meaningful information for Medicare
beneficiaries because they address
procedures widely performed on
Medicare beneficiaries. Analysis of the
structural measure data we have
received from hospitals indicates that
nearly 90 percent of hospitals
performing these procedures already
report these data to clinical registries.
Therefore, if we adopt this proposed
registry-based topic, a hospital would
not face any additional data submission
burden if it chooses this registry-based
topic for purposes of the FY 2013
payment determination and the registry
PO 00000
Frm 00123
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
to which it already submits data is
qualified for this proposed topic.
For the FY 2013 payment
determination, we are proposing to
include 15 cardiac surgery registrybased measures in the cardiac surgery
registry-based measure topic. These
proposed registry-based measures are
listed below, and hospitals would
submit data on these measures to a
qualified registry for the cardiac surgery
registry-based topic. Hospitals would
continue submitting data for the cardiac
surgery structural measure previously
adopted for the RHQDAPU program
directly to the QIO Clinical Warehouse.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23974
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
PROPOSED MEASURES FOR PROPOSED CARDIAC SURGERY REGISTRY-BASED TOPIC
Post-operative Renal Failure (NQF# 0114).
Surgical Re-exploration (NQF# 0115).
Anti-Platelet Medication at Discharge (NQF# 0116).
Beta Blockade at Discharge (NQF# 0117).
Anti-Lipid Treatment Discharge (NQF# 0118).
Risk-Adjusted Operative Mortality for Coronary Artery Bypass Graft CABG (NQF# 0119)*.
Risk-Adjusted Operative Mortality for Aortic Valve Replacement (AVR) (NQF# 0120)*.
Risk-Adjusted Operative Mortality for Mitral Valve Replacement/Repair (MVR) (NQF# 0121)*.
Risk-Adjusted Operative Mortality MVR+CABG Surgery (NQF# 0122)*.
Risk-Adjusted Operative Mortality for AVR+CABG (NQF# 0123)*.
Pre-Operative Beta Blockade (NQF# 0127).
Duration of Prophylaxis for Cardiac Surgery Patients (NQF# 0128).
Prolonged Intubation (ventilation) (NQF# 0129).
Deep Sternal Wound Infection Rate (NQF# 0130).
Stroke/Cerebrovascular Accident (NQF# 0131).
* Requires risk adjustment.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Because these measures were
endorsed by the NQF in May of 2007,
they meet the statutory requirement of
reflecting consensus among affected
parties. Hospitals selecting this topic
would begin submitting data on the
proposed measures to a qualified
cardiac surgery registry beginning with
January 1, 2011 discharges. We note that
five of these measures (indicated with
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
an asterisk in the table above) must be
risk-adjusted in order to be calculated
properly. Therefore, the data needed to
calculate these measures must be
collected by a single registry. While the
remaining measures do not require risk
adjustment, we believe it may be overly
burdensome for hospitals to submit data
for this topic to more than one registry.
For this reason, we anticipate qualifying
PO 00000
Frm 00124
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
a single registry to collect all of the data
for the proposed cardiac surgery
registry-based topic. We invite comment
on this proposal.
Set out below are the RHQDAPU
program topics and quality measures we
are proposing to adopt for the FY 2013
payment determination:
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00125
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23975
EP04MY10.034
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00126
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.035
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23976
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00127
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23977
EP04MY10.036
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
23978
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
d. Proposed RHQDAPU Program Quality
Measures for the FY 2014 Payment
Determination
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
(1) Proposed Retention of FY 2013
Payment Determination Measures for
the FY 2014 Payment Determination
We are proposing to retain all of the
measures adopted for the FY 2013
payment determination for the FY 2014
payment determination. Collection of
data for these measures would begin
with January 1, 2012 discharges. We
invite comment on this proposal.
(2) Proposed New Chart-Abstracted
Measures for the FY 2014 Payment
Determination
We also are proposing to add the
following 4 new chart-abstracted
measures to the RHQDAPU program
measure set for the FY 2014 payment
determination: (1) ED [Emergency
Department]Throughput—Admit
Decision Time to ED Departure Time for
Admitted Patients (NQF #0497); (2) ED
Throughput—Median time from
emergency department arrival to ED
departure for admitted patients (NQF
#0495); (3) Global Flu Immunization;
and (4) Global Pneumonia
Immunization. In proposing to adopt
these chart-abstracted measures, we
recognize that we are proposing to
increase the chart-abstraction burden on
hospitals with respect to the RHQDAPU
program. However, the burden
associated with the proposed
immunization measures for all
inpatients could be counterbalanced by
future retirement of the two current
immunization measures that apply only
to pneumonia inpatients. This measure
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
retirement option is discussed earlier in
section V.A.2. of this proposed rule.
Furthermore, we note that the ED–
Throughput measures have been
specified for EHR-based collection,
which may also serve to reduce burden
associated with these measures in the
future.
(A) Emergency Department (ED)Throughput Measures
The two ED-Throughput measures we
are proposing for the FY 2014 payment
determination are: (1) Median time from
admit decision time to time of departure
from the emergency department for
emergency department patients
admitted to inpatient status; and (2)
Median time from emergency
department arrival to time of departure
from the emergency room for patients
admitted to the facility from the
emergency department.
The ED-Throughput measures reflect
not only the processes of care that occur
while the patient is in the emergency
department, but also reflect the
coordination of care, communication,
and efficiency of service provision
beyond the walls of the emergency
department. These measures have been
NQF-endorsed (NQF #0497 and #0495)
and adopted by HQA. Specifications for
these measures are available in the
preview section of the current
Specifications Manual available on
QualityNet.
These measures also address ED
overcrowding, which the IOM identified
as a major quality issue. Reducing the
time patients remain in the ED can
improve access to treatment and
increase the quality of care, and
capability of the hospital to provide
PO 00000
Frm 00128
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
adequate treatment to patients. ED
overcrowding may result in delays in
the administration of medication such
as antibiotics for pneumonia and has
been associated with perceptions of
compromised emergency care. For
patients with non-ST-segment-elevation
myocardial infarction, long ED stays
were associated with decreased use of
guideline-recommended therapies and a
higher risk of recurrent myocardial
infarction. Overcrowding and heavy
emergency resource demand have led to
a number of problems, including
ambulance refusals, prolonged patient
waiting times, increased suffering for
those who wait, rushed and unpleasant
treatment environments, and potentially
poor patient outcomes. Finally, when
EDs are overwhelmed, their ability to
respond to community emergencies and
disasters may be compromised.
(B) Global Immunization Measures
For the FY 2014 payment
determination, we are proposing to
adopt two global immunization
measures: (1) Pneumoccocal
Immunization; and (2) Influenza
Immunization. Increasing influenza (flu)
and pneumonia vaccination could
reduce unnecessary hospitalizations and
secondary complications particularly
among high risk populations such as the
elderly. About 36,000 adults die
annually and over 200,000 are
hospitalized for flu-related causes.
Older adults are more vulnerable, and
adults over 65 comprise about 90
percent of flu-related deaths.
Vaccinations can significantly reduce
the number of flu related illnesses and
deaths. The measures we are proposing
were endorsed by the NQF as part of a
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.037
BILLING CODE 4120–10–C
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
consensus development project titled
‘‘National Voluntary Consensus
Standards for Influenza and
Pneumococcal Immunizations’’ which
concluded in 2008. This project resulted
in the endorsement of immunization
measures that reflect current consensus
among affected parties that standard
measure specifications for influenza and
pneumonia immunization should be
broadly applicable across conditions,
populations, and care settings. The
technical specifications for these global
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
measures will be available for preview
in the Specifications Manual published
in April 2010. The difference between
these proposed immunization measures,
and the two immunization measures
that are currently part of the RHQDAPU
program is that the current measures
only apply to inpatients admitted for
pneumonia, whereas the proposed
measures apply to all inpatients
regardless of admission diagnosis.
We are proposing to adopt these four
chart-abstracted measures into the
PO 00000
Frm 00129
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23979
RHQDAPU program measure set for the
FY 2014 payment determination. Data
submission for these measures would
begin with January 1, 2012 discharges.
We invite comment on these proposed
measures as well as the proposed timing
of their addition to the RHQDAPU
program for the FY 2014 payment
determination. The complete list of
proposed quality measures for the FY
2014 payment determination is set out
below.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00130
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.038
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23980
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00131
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23981
EP04MY10.039
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00132
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.040
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23982
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
We are inviting public comment on
the following quality measures and
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
topics set out below that we are
considering for the future. We also are
seeking suggestions and rationales to
support the adoption of measures and
PO 00000
Frm 00133
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
topics that are not included in this list
for the RHQDAPU program.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.041
4. Possible New Quality Measures for
Future Years
23983
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00134
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.042
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23984
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
5. Form, Manner, and Timing of Quality
Data Submission
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Sections 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(I) and (II)
of the Act provide that the payment
update for FY 2007 and each subsequent
fiscal year be reduced by 2.0 percentage
points for any subsection (d) hospital
that does not submit quality data in a
form and manner, and at a time,
specified by the Secretary. The data
submission requirements, Specifications
Manual, and submission deadlines are
posted on the QualityNet Web site at:
https://www.QualityNet.org/. CMS
requires that hospitals submit data in
accordance with the specifications for
the appropriate discharge periods.
Hospitals submit quality data through
the secure portion of the QualityNet
Web site (formerly known as QualityNet
Exchange) (https://www.QualityNet.org).
This Web site meets or exceeds all
current Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (HIPAA)
requirements for security of protected
health information.
a. Proposed RHQDAPU Program
Requirements for FY 2012, FY 2013, and
FY 2014
(1) Procedural Requirements for the FY
2012, FY 2013, and FY 2014 Payment
Determinations
For the FY 2012, FY 2013, and FY
2014 payment determination, we are
proposing that the following procedures
would apply to hospitals participating
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
in the RHQDAPU program. These
procedures are, for the most part, the
same as the procedures that apply to the
FY 2011 payment determination. We
identify below where we are proposing
to modify a procedure.
• Register with QualityNet, before
participating hospitals initially begin
reporting data, regardless of the method
used for submitting data.
• Identify a QualityNet Administrator
who follows the registration process
located on the QualityNet Web site
(https://www.QualityNet.org).
• Complete a Notice of Participation.
New subsection (d) hospitals and
existing hospitals that wish to
participate in the RHQDAPU program
for the first time must complete a
revised ‘‘Reporting Hospital Quality
Data for Annual Payment Update Notice
of Participation’’ form (Notice of
Participation form) that includes the
name and address of each hospital
campus that shares the same CMS
Certification Number (CCN). We will
revise the Notice of Participation form
as needed and will provide appropriate
notification of any revisions to hospitals
and QIOs through the routine
RHQDAPU communication channels
which include memo and e-mail
notification and QualityNet Web site
articles and postings.
We are proposing that, consistent
with our policy for the FY 2011
payment determination, any hospital
that receives a new CCN on or after
October 15, 2009 (including new
PO 00000
Frm 00135
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
subsection (d) hospitals and hospitals
that have merged) that wishes to
participate in the RHQDAPU program
and has not otherwise submitted a
Notice of Participation form using the
new CCN must submit a completed
Notice of Participation form no later
than 180 days from the date identified
as the open date (that is, the Medicare
acceptance date) on the approved CMS
Online System Certification and
Reporting (OSCAR) system to
participate in the RHQDAPU program
for FY 2012 and future years. We
believe that this deadline will give these
hospitals a sufficient amount of time to
get their operations up and running
while simultaneously providing CMS
with clarity regarding whether they
intend to participate in the RHQDAPU
program for FY 2012.
(2) Synchronization of RHQDAPU
Program Data Submission and
Validation Quarters With Quarters Used
To Make Payment Determinations
Currently we determine, in part,
whether a hospital has met the
RHQDAPU program requirements for a
given fiscal year by looking at whether
the hospital properly submitted data
with respect to a number of quarterly
discharge periods. However, the
quarters that we look at for HCAHPS
data, chart-abstracted RHQDAPU
program measures, and structural
measures may not be the same for a
single payment determination. For
example, for the FY 2011 payment
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.043
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
23985
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23986
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
determination, we looked at discharge
data submitted by hospitals from 4th
quarter 2008 through 3rd quarter 2009
for AMI, HF, and PN chart-abstracted
RHQDAPU program measures, 1st
quarter 2010 for the newly added SCIP
Infection 9 and 10 measures, April 2008
through March 2009 data for HCAHPS,
and January 1, 2010 through June 30,
2010 data for structural measures.
This lack of synchronization has
developed because we have generally
made payment decisions using the four
earliest occurring discharge quarters for
each measure topic that we did not
include in a previous year’s payment
determination, and we have not
synchronized when hospitals must
begin reporting data on new measures.
Starting with the FY 2013 payment
determination, we are proposing to
determine whether the hospital meets
the data submission requirement for
quality measure data by looking at
whether the hospital properly submitted
data on the applicable measures during
the same quarterly discharge periods.
Specifically, the quarterly discharge
periods that will apply to a particular
payment determination will be the four
quarters that occur within a calendar
year. In other words, beginning with the
FY 2013 payment determination, we
will look at whether the hospital
properly submitted data for quality
measure data for the four calendar year
quarters of CY 2011.
With respect to our requirement that
hospital data be successfully validated
in order for the hospital to earn the full
payment update for a given fiscal year,
we are also proposing, beginning with
the FY 2013 payment determination, to
validate four discharge quarters, but the
quarters will be the 4th calendar quarter
of the calendar year that occurs two
years before the payment determination
and the first 3 calendar quarters of the
following calendar year. Thus, for the
FY 2013 payment determination, we
will validate data from the 4th calendar
quarter of 2010 through the 3rd calendar
quarter of 2011. We believe this is
appropriate given the time required for
the validation abstraction and appeal
process.
This proposed synchronization will
give us a more complete picture of the
quality of care provided by a hospital
during a given time period, thus
enabling us to link that quality of care
to the applicable RHQDAPU payment
determination. In addition, this
proposal will provide clarity to
hospitals regarding what data we will
look at to make payment determinations
for a given fiscal year. We believe that
this synchronization will also assist us
to more effectively implement the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
RHQDAPU program because we will be
able to achieve operational consistency
regarding what data applies to what
payment determination. Further, we
believe that this proposal may assist the
agency in implementing Hospital ValueBased Purchasing as authorized by the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act, Public Law 111–148, because it
will improve the link between quality,
as measured during a single period of
time, and the payment amounts
provided to hospitals. For example,
under our proposal, the HCAHPS
patient experience of care measure and
chart-abstracted measures for a single
set of discharge quarters will be used
together for a single payment
determination. Finally, we believe that
this proposal will improve hospitals’
ability to implement quality
improvement strategies that affect
RHQDAPU program measures and their
quality of care.
We will post a table outlining the
discharge quarters that will be used to
make each fiscal year payment
determination no later than September
15th annually on the QualityNet Web
site (https://www.QualityNet.org). We
welcome comments on this proposal.
(3) Proposed HCAHPS Requirements for
the FY 2012, FY 2013 and FY 2014
Payment Determinations
We are proposing that, for the FY
2012, FY 2013 and FY 2014 payment
determinations, except as noted below,
the RHQDAPU program HCAHPS
requirements we adopted for FY 2011
would continue to apply. Under these
requirements, a hospital must
continuously collect and submit
HCAHPS data in accordance with the
current HCAHPS Quality Assurance
Guidelines and the quarterly data
submission deadlines, both of which are
posted at https://www.hcahpsonline.org.
In order for a hospital to participate in
the collection of HCAHPS data, a
hospital must either: (1) Contract with
an approved HCAHPS survey vendor
that will conduct the survey and submit
data on the hospital’s behalf to the QIO
Clinical Warehouse; or (2) selfadminister the survey without using a
survey vendor provided that the
hospital attends HCAHPS training and
meets Minimum Survey Requirements
as specified on the Web site at: https://
www.hcahpsonline.org. A current list of
approved HCAHPS survey vendors can
be found on the HCAHPS Web site at:
https://www.hcahpsonline.org.
We are proposing that the FY 2012
payment determination for the
RHQDAPU program for HCAHPS will
be based on discharges from April 1,
2010 through December 31, 2010.
PO 00000
Frm 00136
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
We are proposing that the FY 2013
payment determination for the
RHQDAPU program for HCAHPS will
be based on discharges from January 1,
2011 through December 31, 2011.
We are proposing that the FY 2014
payment determination for the
RHQDAPU program for HCAHPS will
be based on discharges from January 1,
2012 through December 31, 2012.
Every hospital choosing to contract
with a survey vendor should provide
the sample frame of HCAHPS-eligible
discharges to its survey vendor with
sufficient time to allow the survey
vendor to begin contacting each
sampled patient within 6 weeks of
discharge from the hospital. (We refer
readers to the Quality Assurance
Guidelines located at https://
www.hcahpsonline.org for details about
HCAHPS eligibility and sample frame
creation.) In addition, the hospital must
authorize the survey vendor to submit
data via My QualityNet, the secure part
of the QualityNet Web site, on the
hospital’s behalf.
After the survey vendor submits the
data to the QIO Clinical Warehouse, we
strongly recommend that hospitals
employing a survey vendor promptly
review the two HCAHPS Feedback
Reports (the Provider Survey Status
Summary Report and the Data
Submission Detail Report) that are
available. These reports enable a
hospital to ensure that its survey vendor
has submitted the data on time and the
data has been accepted into the QIO
Clinical Warehouse.
Any hospital that has five or fewer
HCAHPS-eligible discharges in any
month is no longer required to submit
HCAHPS surveys for that month,
although the hospital may voluntarily
choose to submit these data. However,
the hospital still must submit its total
number of HCAHPS-eligible cases for
that month to the QIO Clinical
Warehouse as part of its quarterly
HCAHPS data submission.
In order to ensure compliance with
HCAHPS survey and administration
protocols, hospitals and survey vendors
must participate in all oversight
activities. As part of the oversight
process, during the onsite visits or
conference calls, the HCAHPS Project
Team will review the hospital’s or
survey vendor’s survey systems and
assess protocols based upon the most
recent HCAHPS Quality Assurance
Guidelines. All materials relevant to
survey administration will be subject to
review. The systems and program
review includes, but is not limited to:
(a) Survey management and data
systems; (b) printing and mailing
materials and facilities; (c) telephone
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
and IVR materials and facilities; (d) data
receipt, entry and storage facilities; and
(e) written documentation of survey
processes. Organizations will be given a
defined time period in which to correct
any problems and provide follow-up
documentation of corrections for
review. As needed, hospitals and survey
vendors will be subject to follow-up site
visits or conference calls. If CMS
determines that a hospital is not
compliant with HCAHPS program
requirements, CMS may determine that
the hospital is not submitting HCAHPS
data that meet the requirements of the
RHQDAPU program.
We continue to strongly recommend
that each new hospital participate in an
HCAHPS dry run, if feasible, prior to
beginning to collect HCAHPS data on an
ongoing basis to meet RHQDAPU
program requirements. New hospitals
can conduct a dry run in the last month
of a calendar quarter. The dry run will
give newly participating hospitals the
opportunity to gain first-hand
experience collecting and transmitting
HCAHPS data without the public
reporting of results. Using the official
survey instrument and the approved
modes of administration and data
collection protocols, hospitals/survey
vendors will collect HCAHPS dry-run
data and submit the data to My
QualityNet, the secure portion of
QualityNet.
We are again encouraging hospitals to
regularly check the HCAHPS Web site at
https://www.hcahpsonline.org for
program updates and information.
b. Additional Proposed RHQDAPU
Program Procedural Requirements for
the FY 2012, FY 2013 and FY 2014
Payment Determinations
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
(1) Chart-Abstracted Measures For
Which Data Is Submitted Directly to
CMS (via QualityNet)
Hospitals must begin submitting
RHQDAPU program data starting with
the first day of the quarter following the
date when the hospital registers to
participate in the program. For purposes
of meeting this requirement, we
interpret the registration date to be the
date that the hospital submits a
completed Notice of Participation form.
As proposed previously in this section,
hospitals must also register with
QualityNet and identify a QualityNet
Administrator who follows the
QualityNet registration process before
submitting RHQDAPU program data.
Hospitals must continuously collect
and report data to CMS (via QualityNet)
for each of the quality measures under
the topic areas that require chart
abstraction (and are not registry-based
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
topic areas). For the FY 2012 and FY
2013 payment determinations, the
proposed topic areas are AMI, HF, PN,
and SCIP. For the FY 2014 payment
determination, the proposed topic areas
are AMI, HF, PN, SCIP, Emergency
Department Throughput (EDT), and
Global Immunization (GIM).
For FY 2012, we are proposing that
hospitals must submit data for five
calendar year discharge quarters as
follows: 4Q CY 2009, 1Q CY 2010 (AMI,
HF and PN only), 2Q CY 2010, 3Q CY
2010 and 4Q CY 2010. For the FY 2013
payment determination, we are
proposing that hospitals must submit
data for four consecutive calendar year
discharge quarters as follows: 1Q CY
2011, 2Q CY 2011, 3Q CY 2011 and 4Q
CY 2011. For the FY 2014 payment
determination, hospitals must submit
data for four consecutive calendar year
discharge quarters as follows: 1Q CY
2012, 2Q CY 2012, 3Q CY 2012 and 4Q
CY 2012. Hospitals must report these
data by each quarterly deadline.
Hospitals must submit the data to the
QIO Clinical Warehouse using the CMS
Abstraction & Reporting Tool (CART),
The Joint Commission ORYX® Core
Measures Performance Measurement
System, or another third-party vendor
tool that meets the measurement
specification requirements for data
transmission to QualityNet. All
submissions will be executed through
My QualityNet, the secure part of the
QualityNet Web site. Because the
information in the QIO Clinical
Warehouse is considered QIO
information, it is subject to the stringent
QIO confidentiality regulations in 42
CFR Part 480. The QIO Clinical
Warehouse will submit the data to CMS
on behalf of the hospitals.
Hospitals must submit complete data
for each quality measure that requires
chart abstraction in accordance with the
joint CMS/The Joint Commission
sampling requirements located on the
QualityNet Web site. These
requirements specify that hospitals must
submit a random sample or complete
population of cases for each of the
topics covered by the quality measures.
Hospitals must meet the sampling
requirements for these quality measures
for discharges in each quarter.
For the FY 2012 payment
determination, we are proposing that
hospitals must submit population and
sampling data for three consecutive
calendar year discharge quarters as
follows: 2Q CY 2010, 3Q CY 2010 and
4Q CY 2010.
For the FY 2013 payment
determination, we are proposing that
hospitals must submit population and
sampling data for four consecutive
PO 00000
Frm 00137
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23987
calendar year discharge quarters as
follows: 1Q CY 2011, 2Q CY 2011, 3Q
CY 2011 and 4Q CY 2011.
For the FY 2014 payment
determination, we are proposing that
hospitals must submit population and
sampling data for four consecutive
calendar year discharge quarters as
follows: 1Q CY 2012, 2Q CY 2012, 3Q
CY 2012 and 4Q CY 2012.
Hospitals must submit to CMS on a
quarterly basis aggregate population and
sample size counts for Medicare and
non-Medicare discharges for the topic
areas for which chart-abstracted data
must be submitted (currently AMI, HF,
PN, and SCIP). For clarification, we are
proposing that hospitals are required to
submit a numeric representation of their
aggregate population and sample size
count for each topic area even if the
hospital has not treated patients in a
specific topic area. For example, if a
hospital has not treated AMI patients,
the hospital is still required to submit a
zero for its quarterly aggregate
population and sample count for that
topic in order to meet the requirement.
In order to reduce the burden on
hospitals that treat a low number of
patients in a RHQDAPU program topic
area, a hospital that has five or fewer
discharges (Medicare and non-Medicare
combined) in a topic area during a
quarter in which data must be submitted
is not required to submit patient-level
data for that topic area for the quarter.
The hospital must still submit its
aggregate population and sample size
counts for Medicare and non-Medicare
discharges for the topic areas each
quarter. We also note that hospitals
meeting the five or fewer patient
discharge exception may voluntarily
submit these data.
The quarterly data submission
deadline for hospitals to submit patient
level data for the proposed measures
that require chart abstraction is 4c
months following the last discharge date
in the calendar quarter. CMS will post
the quarterly submission deadline
schedule on the QualityNet Web site
(https://www.QualityNet.org). Chartabstracted measures have not been
added for the FY 2012 payment
determination. The collection of new
chart-abstracted measures proposed for
the FY 2013 payment determination
would begin with the 1st calendar
quarter 2011 discharges, for which the
submission deadline would be August
15, 2011. The collection of new chartabstracted measures proposed for the FY
2014 payment determination would
begin with the 1st calendar quarter 2012
discharges, for which the submission
deadline would be August 15, 2012.
Hospitals must comply with the
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23988
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
discharge quarter submission deadlines
in any fiscal year for each quarter for
which data submission is required
(Quarter 1—August 15th; Quarter 2—
November 15th; Quarter 3—February
15th; Quarter 4—May 15th).
The data submission deadline for
hospitals to submit aggregate population
and sample size count data for the
measures requiring chart abstraction is
four months following the last discharge
date in the calendar quarter. This
requirement allows CMS to advise
hospitals regarding their submission
status in enough time for them to make
appropriate revisions before the data
submission deadline. We will post the
aggregate population and sample size
count data submission deadlines on the
QualityNet Web site (https://
www.QualityNet.org).
CMS strongly recommends that
hospitals review the QIO Clinical
Warehouse Feedback Reports and the
RHQDAPU Program Provider
Participation Reports that are available
after patient level data are submitted to
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
the QIO Clinical Warehouse. CMS
generally updates these reports on a
daily basis to provide accurate
information to hospitals about their
submissions. These reports enable
hospitals to ensure that their data were
submitted on time and accepted into the
QIO Clinical Warehouse.
(2) Data Submission Requirements for
HCAHPS
Hospitals must continuously collect
and submit HCAHPS data in accordance
with the current HCAHPS Quality
Assurance Guidelines, which can be
found on the HCAHPS Web site,
https://www.hcahpsonline.org. The QIO
Clinical Warehouse is able to accept
submissions indicating zero HCAHPSeligible discharges in a month. A
hospital with zero HCAHPS-eligible
discharges in a month must submit a
zero as its total number of HCAHPSeligible cases to the QIO Clinical
Warehouse for that month as part of its
quarterly HCAHPS data submission.
In order to reduce the burden on
hospitals that treat a low number of
PO 00000
Frm 00138
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
patients that would be otherwise
covered by the HCAHPS submission
requirements, a hospital that has five or
fewer HCAHPS-eligible discharges
during a month is not required to
submit HCAHPS surveys for that month.
However, hospitals that meet this
exception may voluntarily submit this
data. A hospital with five or fewer
HCAHPS-eligible discharges must
submit its number of HCAHPS-eligible
cases to the QIO Clinical Warehouse for
the month(s) in which it had five or
fewer HCAHPS-eligible discharges as
part of its quarterly HCAHPS data
submission.
(3) Procedures for Claims-Based
Measures
Hospitals are encouraged to regularly
check the QualityNet Web site, https://
www.QualityNet.org, for program
updates and information.
• The following RHQDAPU program
claims-based measures would be
calculated using Medicare claims:
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
For the claims-based RHQDAPU
program measures listed above,
hospitals are not required to submit the
data to the QIO Clinical Warehouse.
CMS uses the existing Medicare fee-forservice claims to calculate the measures.
For the FY 2012 payment
determination, CMS would use up to 3
years of discharges prior to January 1,
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
2011 (as appropriate for the measure), to
calculate the 30-day mortality and 30day readmission measures AHRQ PSI,
IQI and Composite measures (including
the AHRQ PSI and Nursing Sensitive
Care measure, Death among surgical
inpatients with serious, treatable
complications), and the proposed new
HAC Measures. For the FY 2013 and FY
2014 payment determinations, CMS
PO 00000
Frm 00139
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23989
would use up to 3 years of discharges
(as appropriate for the measure) prior to
January 1, 2012, and January 1, 2013
respectively. Hospitals are required to
appropriately report the POA indicator
in conjunction with ICD–9–CM coding
to determine the presence of HACs so
that the proposed HAC measures can be
calculated for the RHQDAPU program
using Medicare claims.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.044
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
23990
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
(4) Data Submission Requirements for
Structural Measures
• We are proposing that for the FY
2012 payment determination, hospitals
submit the required registry
participation information once for the
structural measures via a Web-based
collection tool between July 1, 2011–
August 15, 2011 with respect to the time
Topic
FY 2012 payment determination: Proposed structural measures
Cardiac Surgery ..................................................
Stroke Care .........................................................
Nursing Sensitive Care .......................................
(5) Data Submission of All-Patient
Volume Data for Selected MS–DRGs
Related to RHQDAPU Program
Measures
For submission of the all-patient
volume data for selected MS–DRGs, we
are proposing that hospitals submit
patient level information needed for
CMS to apply the MS–DRG grouper
software to calculate the all-patient
MS–DRG volumes, the data elements for
which would be defined in the
Specifications Manual. Hospitals would
begin submitting this data quarterly via
QualityNet beginning with January 1,
2011 discharges.
We invite comment on an alternative
that hospitals submit hospital-level allpatient volume data based upon specific
ICD–9–CM codes that are related to the
selected MS–DRGs (rather than the
patient-level data) necessary for CMS to
calculate the MS–DRGs. Hospitals
would begin submitting this data
quarterly via QualityNet beginning with
January 1, 2011 discharges.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
(6) Proposed Data Submission and
Reporting Requirements for HAI
Measures Reported via NHSN
We are proposing that hospitals
participating in RHQDAPU submit the
data elements needed to calculate the
Central Line Associated Blood Stream
Infection and Surgical Site Infection
measures to the NHSN using the
standard procedures that have been set
forth by CDC for NHSN participation in
general and for submission of these two
measures to NHSN in particular. This
would include NHSN participation
forms and indications to CDC allowing
CMS to access data for these two
measures for RHQDAPU program
purposes, adherence to training
requirements, use of standard CDC
measure specifications, data element
definitions, data collection requirements
and instructions, and data reporting
timeframes. Detailed requirements for
NHSN participation, measure
specifications, and data collection can
be found at https://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/.
Hospitals must use the current
specifications and data collection tools
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
period of July 1, 2010 through December
31, 2010.
Below is the list of structural
measures we are proposing to adopt for
the FY 2012 payment determination:
Jkt 220001
• Participation in a Systematic Database for Cardiac Surgery.
• Participation in a Systematic Clinical Database Registry for Stroke Care.
• Participation in a Systematic Clinical Database Registry for Nursing Sensitive Care.
available on the CDC Web site to submit
data for the Central Line Associated
Bloodstream Infection and Surgical Site
Infection measures. We are proposing
that hospitals would submit data for
these two measures to CDC’s NHSN on
a monthly basis for discharges occurring
on or after January 1, 2011.
For the FY 2013 payment
determination, we are proposing that
hospitals must submit HAI data via the
NHSN for four consecutive calendar
year discharge quarters as follows: 1Q
CY 2011, 2Q CY 2011, 3Q CY 2011 and
4Q CY 2011.
For the FY 2014 payment
determination, hospitals must submit
HAI data for four consecutive calendar
year discharge quarters as follows: 1Q
CY 2012, 2Q CY 2012, 3Q CY 2012 and
4Q CY 2012.
We are proposing that once quarterly
each hospital would utilize an
automated report function that will be
made available to submitters in the
NHSN, to generate a quarterly report
containing hospital-level numerator,
denominator, and exclusion counts for
these two CDC measures specifically for
the RHQDAPU program. The CDC will
create this automated RHQDAPU report
function and add it to NHSN’s reporting
functionalities in the next few months.
While hospitals may be reporting other
data elements to CDC for other reporting
programs (that is: State mandated
surveillance programs), the quarterly
RHQDAPU report that would be
generated within NHSN would only
contain those data elements needed to
calculate the two measures currently
being proposed for the RHQDAPU
program. CMS will access the reports in
the NHSN and will compile the reports
for RHQDAPU program and public
reporting purposes.
We invite comment on the proposed
mechanism for submitting data for the
Central Line Associated Blood Stream
Infection measure and the Surgical Site
Infection measure for the RHQDAPU
program beginning with the FY 2012
payment determination.
PO 00000
Frm 00140
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
(7) Data Submission Requirements for
Registry-Based Measures
We are proposing that hospitals
participating in RHQDAPU would be
required to choose at least one of four
registry based measure topics (ICD
Complications, Stroke, Nursing
Sensitive Care, or Cardiac Surgery), and
would submit the data needed to
calculate the measures included in the
chosen registry-based topic to a
qualified registry in order to meet the
requirements to receive the full FY 2013
annual payment update.
We are proposing that hospitals then
would arrange to have the qualified
registry calculate the measures and
submit to the QIO Clinical Warehouse
the results, as well as the numerator,
denominator, and exclusions. Any
arrangement reached between the
hospital and the qualified registry must
comply with HIPAA. The qualified
registry would also submit registryderived hospital-level measure
calculations to the QIO Clinical
Warehouse using a CMS-specified
record layout and file format that we
will make available.
Our program and its data system must
maintain compliance with HIPAA
requirements for requesting, processing,
storing, and transmitting data. For the
FY 2013 RHQDAPU payment
determination, hospitals would need to
submit data for the proposed registrybased measures to the qualified registry
in the form and manner and by the
deadline(s) specified by the registry.
CMS will begin qualifying registries
for the four proposed registry-based
topics so that hospitals may begin
submitting data for discharges beginning
January 1, 2011. Proposed registry
qualification criteria are discussed in a
section V.A.13. of this proposed rule.
We are proposing to post on the
RHQDAPU program section of the
QualityNet Web site https://
www.qualitynet.org a list of qualified
registries for the FY 2013 RHQDAPU
payment determination, including the
registry name, contact information, and
the measure(s) that the registry has been
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
qualified to collect and report for the
RHQDAPU program.
We anticipate posting the list of
qualified FY 2011 registries as soon as
we have completed vetting the registries
interested in participating in the FY
2013 RHQDAPU program payment
determination and identified the
qualified registries for the FY 2013
RHQDAPU program payment
determination, which we anticipate will
be completed by December 31, 2010.
Specific data submission requirements
for the registry-based measures are
discussed below:
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
(A) Hospitals That Choose To Report the
ICD Complications Measure
If the hospital chooses the ICD
Complications measure, it would submit
specified data elements for specified
populations to the qualified ICD
registry. We intend to establish criteria
and begin qualifying registries for this
topic so that hospitals can begin
submitting data for discharges beginning
January 1, 2011. The hospital would
follow the standard participation and
reporting procedures set by the registry
regarding the submission of data
elements for the particular measures we
have specified for the topic. These data
elements and population definitions
will be listed in the Specifications
Manual.
Hospitals must allow the qualified
registry it is using to report the patientlevel data to CMS in order to calculate
the ICD complications measure.
(B) Hospitals That Choose To Report
Either the Stroke, Nursing Sensitive
Care, or Cardiac Surgery Measures
If a hospital chooses the Stroke,
Nursing Sensitive Care, or Cardiac
Surgery measure topics, it would submit
data on the measures listed for these
topics to a qualified registry for the
topic. CMS intends to establish criteria
and begin qualifying registries for these
topics so that hospitals can begin
submitting data for discharges beginning
January 1, 2011. The hospital would
follow the standard participation and
reporting procedures set by the registry
regarding the submission of data
elements for the particular measures
CMS has specified for the topic.
Additionally, the hospital would agree
to allow the registry to send calculations
of the measures, numerator,
denominator and exclusion counts to
CMS for the RHQDAPU program.
6. RHQDAPU Program Disaster
Extensions and Waivers
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS proposed rule (74 FR 24176), we
solicited public comment about rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
we could adopt that would enable
hospitals to request either an extension
or a waiver of various RHQDAPU
program requirements in the event of a
disaster (such as a hurricane that
damages or destroys the hospital).
Specifically, we welcomed public
comment on the following issues:
• Recommendations for rules that we
could follow when considering whether
to grant an extension or waiver of
RHQDAPU program requirements in the
event of a disaster, including suggested
criteria that we should take into account
(for example, specific hospital
infrastructure damage, hospital closure
time period, degree of destruction of
medical records, impact on data
vendors, and long-term evacuation of
discharged patients impacting HCAHPS
survey participation).
• The role that QIOs and QIO support
contractors should play in the event of
a disaster, including communicating
with affected hospitals, communicating
with State hospital associations, and
collecting information directly from
hospitals.
• How CMS extension or waiver
decisions should be communicated to
affected hospitals.
• Any other issues commenters deem
relevant to a hospital’s request for an
extension or waiver of RHQDAPU
program requirements in the event of a
disaster.
We responded to public comments in
the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
final rule (74 FR 43881). We recognize
that there are times when hospitals are
unable to submit quality data due to
extraordinary circumstances that are not
within their control. It is our goal to not
penalize hospitals for such
circumstances and we do not want to
unduly increase their burden during
these times.
Therefore, we are proposing a process
for hospitals to request and for CMS to
grant extensions or waivers with respect
to the reporting of required quality data
when there are extraordinary
circumstances beyond the control of the
hospital. Under the proposed process, in
the event of extraordinary
circumstances not within the control of
the hospital, for the hospital to receive
consideration for an extension or waiver
of the requirement to submit quality
data for one or more quarters, a hospital
must submit to the QIO in the hospital’s
State a request form that will be made
available on the QualityNet Web site.
The following information should be
noted on the form:
• Hospital CCN;
• Hospital Name;
• CEO and any other designated
personnel contact information,
PO 00000
Frm 00141
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23991
including name, e-mail address,
telephone number, and mailing address
(must include a physical address, a post
office box address is not acceptable);
• Hospital’s reason for requesting an
extension or waiver;
• Evidence of the impact of the
extraordinary circumstances, including
but not limited to photographs,
newspaper and other media articles; and
• A date when the hospital will again
be able to submit RHQDAPU data, and
a justification for the proposed date.
The request form must be signed by
the hospital’s CEO. A request form must
be submitted within 45 days of the date
that the extraordinary circumstance
occurred. The QIO in the hospital’s state
will forward the request form to CMS.
Following receipt of the request form,
CMS will: (1) Provide a written
acknowledgement using the contact
information provided in the request, to
the CEO and any additional designated
hospital personnel, notifying them that
the hospital’s request has been received;
and (2) provide a formal response to the
CEO and any additional designated
hospital personnel using the contact
information provided in the request
notifying them of our decision.
This proposal does not preclude CMS
from granting waivers or extensions to
hospitals that have not requested them
when we determine that an
extraordinary circumstance, such as an
act of nature (for example, hurricane),
affects an entire region or locale. If CMS
makes the determination to grant a
waiver or extension to hospitals in a
region or locale, CMS will communicate
this decision through routine
communication channels to hospitals,
vendors and QIOs, including but not
limited to issuing memos, e-mails and
notices on the QualityNet Web site. We
invite comment on this proposal.
7. Proposed Chart Validation
Requirements for Chart-Abstracted
Measures
a. Chart Validation Requirements and
Methods for the FY 2012 Payment
Determination
For the FY 2012 payment
determination, we will use the chart
validation requirements and methods
that we adopted for FY 2012 in the FY
2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule
(74 FR 43884 through 43889). These
requirements, as well as additional
information on these requirements, will
be posted on the QualityNet Web site
after we issue the FY 2011 IPPS/RY
2011 LTCH PPS final rule.
Specifically, we will:
• Randomly select on an annual basis
800 participating hospitals that
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23992
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
submitted chart-abstracted data for at
least 100 discharges combined in the
measure topics to be validated. To
determine whether a hospital meets this
‘‘100-case threshold,’’ we will look to the
discharge data submitted by the hospital
during the calendar year three years
prior to the fiscal year of the relevant
payment determination. For example, if
the 100-case threshold applied for the
FY 2011 payment determination (which
it will not), the applicable measure
topics would be AMI, HF, PN, and SCIP,
and we would choose 800 hospitals that
submitted discharge data for at least 100
cases combined in these topics during
calendar year 2008. If a hospital did not
submit discharge data for at least 100
cases in these topics during CY 2008,
we would not select the hospital for
validation. We will announce the topic
areas that apply for the FY 2012
payment determination at a later date,
and we plan to select the first 800
hospitals in July 2010. We will select
hospitals for the FY 2012 validation if
they meet the 100-case threshold during
CY 2009. We adopted this 100-case
threshold because we believe that it
strikes the appropriate balance between
ensuring that the selected hospitals have
a large enough patient population to be
able to submit sufficient data to allow us
to complete an accurate validation,
while not requiring validation for
hospitals with a low number of
submitted quarterly cases and relatively
unreliable measure estimates. Based on
previously submitted data, we estimate
that 98 percent of participating
RHQDAPU program hospitals will meet
this threshold and, thus, be eligible for
validation. As noted below, we solicited
comments and suggestions on how we
might be able to target the remaining 2
percent of hospitals for validation.
• Validate for each of the 800
hospitals a randomly selected stratified
sample for each quarter of the validation
period. Each quarterly sample will
include 12 cases, with at least one but
no more than three cases per topic for
which chart-abstracted data was
submitted by the hospital. However, we
recognize that some selected hospitals
might not have enough cases in all of
the applicable topics to submit data (for
example, if they have 5 or fewer
discharges in a topic area in a quarter).
For those hospitals, we will validate
measures in only those topic areas for
which they have submitted data. For the
FY 2012 payment determination, we
will validate 1st calendar quarter 2010
through 3rd calendar quarter 2010
discharge data. We will validate 3
quarters of data for FY 2012 in order to
provide hospitals with enough time to
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
assess their medical record
documentation and abstraction
practices, and to take necessary
corrective actions to improve these
practices, before documenting their 1st
calendar quarter 2010 discharges into
medical records that may be sampled as
part of this proposed validation process.
The CDAC contractor will, each
quarter that applies to the validation,
ask each of the 800 selected hospitals to
submit 12 randomly selected medical
charts from which data was abstracted
and submitted by the hospital to the
QIO Clinical Warehouse. We note that,
under our current requirements,
hospitals must begin submitting
RHQDAPU program data starting with
the first day of the quarter following the
date when the hospital registers to
participate in the program. For purposes
of meeting this requirement, we
interpret the registration date to be the
date that the hospital submits a
completed Notice of Participation form.
As proposed previously in this section,
hospitals must also register with
QualityNet and identify a QualityNet
Administrator who follows the
QualityNet registration process before
submitting RHQDAPU program data.
In addition, we will continue the
following timeline with respect to
CDAC contractor requests for paper
medical records for the purpose of
validating RHQDAPU program data.
Beginning with CDAC contractor
requests for second calendar quarter
2009 paper medical records, the CDAC
contractor will request paper copies of
the randomly selected medical charts
from each hospital via certified mail (or
other trackable method that requires a
hospital representative to sign for the
letter), and the hospital will have 45
days from the date of the request (as
documented on the request letter) to
submit the requested records to the
CDAC contractor. If the hospital does
not comply within 30 days, the CDAC
contractor will send a second certified
letter to the hospital, reminding the
hospital that it must return paper copies
of the requested medical records within
45 calendar days following the date of
the initial CDAC contractor medical
record request. If the hospital still does
not comply, then the CDAC contractor
will assign a ‘‘zero’’ score to each
measure in each missing record. The
letter from the CDAC contractor is
addressed to the hospital’s medical
record staff identified by the hospital to
their state Quality Improvement
Organization (QIO). CMS recommends
that hospitals routinely check with their
State QIO to ensure the correct person
is listed to receive the record request. If
CMS has evidence from the CDAC
PO 00000
Frm 00142
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
contractor that the hospital received
both letters requesting medical records
(as determined by the tracking system
used by the CDAC contractor), the
hospital is responsible for not returning
their charts and will not be able to
submit charts as part of their
reconsideration request.
Under the validation methodology,
once the CDAC contractor receives the
charts, it will re-abstract the same data
submitted by the hospitals and calculate
the percentage of matching RHQDAPU
program measure numerators and
denominators for each measure within
each chart submitted by the hospital.
Specifically, we will estimate the
accuracy by calculating a match rate
percent agreement for all of the
variables submitted in all of the charts.
For any selected record, a measure’s
numerator and denominator can have
two possible states, included or
excluded, depending on whether the
hospital accurately included the cases
in the measure numerator(s) and
denominator(s). We will count each
measure in a selected record as a match
if the hospital-submitted measure
numerator and denominator sets match
the measure numerator and
denominator states independently
abstracted by our contractor. For
example, one heart failure case from
which data has been abstracted for four
RHQDAPU program chart-abstracted
measures (that is, HF–1, HF–2, HF–3,
and HF–4) would receive a 75-percent
match if three out of four of the
hospital-reported heart failure measure
numerator and denominator states
matched the re-abstracted numerator
and denominator states. This proposed
scoring approach is the same as
recommended in the CMS Hospital
Value-Based Purchasing Report to
Congress, and is illustrated in further
detail using an example in pages 83–84
of the report which can be found on our
Web site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/downloads/
HospitalVBPPlanRTCFINAL
SUBMITTED2007.pdf. We believe that
this approach is appropriate, and it was
supported by many commenters when
we requested comment in the FY 2009
and FY 2010 IPPS final rules for input
about the RHQDAPU program
validation process (73 FR 48622 and
48623, 74 FR 43886 and 43887).
Under the validation methodology,
we will:
• Use, as we currently do, each
selected case as a cluster comprising
one or multiple measures utilized in a
validation score estimate. Each selected
case will have multiple measures
included in the validation score (for
example, for the FY 2011 payment
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
determination, a heart failure record
will include 4 heart failure measures).
Specifically, we will continue using the
design-specific estimate of the variance
for the confidence interval calculation,
which, in this case, is a stratified single
stage cluster sample, with unequal
cluster sizes. (For reference, see
Cochran, William G.: Sampling
Techniques, John Wiley & Sons, New
York, chapter 3, section 3.12 (1977); and
Kish, Leslie: Survey Sampling, John
Wiley & Sons, New York, chapter 3,
section 3.3 (1964).) Each quarter and
clinical topic is treated as a stratum for
variance estimation purposes.
We believe that the clustering
approach is a statistically appropriate
technique for calculating the annual
validation confidence interval. Because
we will not be validating all hospital
records, we need to calculate a
confidence interval that incorporates a
potential sampling error. Our clustering
approach incorporates the degree of
correlation at the individual data record
level, because our previous validation
experience indicates that hospital data
mismatch errors tend to be clustered in
individual data records. We have used
this clustering since the inception of the
RHQDAPU program validation
requirement to calculate variability
estimates needed for calculating
confidence intervals (70 FR 47423).
• Use the upper bound of a one-tailed
95 percent confidence interval to
estimate the validation score; and
• Require all RHQDAPU program
participating hospitals selected for
validation to attain at least a 75 percent
validation score per quarter to pass the
validation requirement.
We believe that this modified
validation methodology incorporates
many of the principles supported by the
vast majority of commenters in response
to our solicitation for public comments
in the FY 2009 and FY 2010 IPPS
proposed rule (73 FR 23658 through
23659, 74 FR 43886 and 43887).
Specifically, we believe that the
increased annual sample size per
hospital will provide more reliable
estimates of validation accuracy. The
sample size of 12 records per quarter
would provide a total of 36 records
across the three sampled quarters for the
FY 2012 payment determination, and 48
records in subsequent years. This
estimate would improve the reliability
of our validation estimate, as compared
to the current RHQDAPU program
annual validation sample of 20 cases per
year. We also believe that modifying the
validation score to reflect measure
numerator and denominator accuracy
will ensure that accurate data are posted
on the Hospital Compare Web site.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
In addition, we believe that stratified
quarterly samples by topic will improve
the feedback provided to hospitals. CMS
will provide validation feedback to
hospitals about all sampled topics
submitted by the hospitals each quarter.
Because all relevant data elements
submitted by the hospital must match
the independently re-abstracted data
elements to count as a match, we
reduced the passing threshold from 80
percent to 75 percent. We will use a
one-tail confidence interval to calculate
the validation score because we strongly
believe that a one-tail test most
appropriately reflects the pass or fail
dichotomous nature of the statistical test
regarding whether the confidence
interval includes or is completely above
the 75 percent passing validation score.
We also will continue to allow
hospitals that fail to meet the passing
threshold for the quarterly validation an
opportunity to appeal the validation
results to their State QIO. QIOs are
currently tasked by CMS to provide
education and technical assistance
about RHQDAPU program data
abstraction and measures to hospitals,
and the quarterly validation appeals
process will provide hospitals with an
opportunity to both appeal their
quarterly results and receive education
free of charge from their State QIO. This
State QIO quarterly validation appeals
process is independent of the proposed
RHQDAPU program reconsideration
procedures for hospital reconsideration
requests involving validation for the FY
2010 payment update proposed in this
proposed rule.
b. Proposed Supplements to the Chart
Validation Process for the FY 2013
Payment Determination and Subsequent
Years
For FY 2013 and future years, we are
also proposing to adopt the same
validation requirements that we adopted
for the FY 2012 payment determination,
except as set forth below.
For FY 2013 and future years, we are
proposing to modify our FY 2012
criteria by adding a targeting criterion,
refining our random sample approach,
and changing our data discharge
quarters validated as part of our
proposed synchronization of RHQDAPU
timelines. Specifically, we are
proposing the following changes for FY
2013:
We are proposing to validate the data
submitted by a hospital if the hospital
failed the previous year’s RHQDAPU
program validation. We are proposing
this targeting criterion to improve data
accuracy for all hospitals failing our
validation requirement in a previous
year. We believe that this proposal is an
PO 00000
Frm 00143
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23993
appropriate method to ensure data
accuracy, since it targets our resources
on the hospitals with the least accurate
data based on FY 2012 validation
results. We also believe that these
hospitals must correct the data
inaccuracies identified in RHQDAPU
validation for their internal quality
improvement and RHQDAPU measures
publicly reported on Hospital Compare.
Our proposal allows CMS to assess the
accuracy of these hospitals’ data and
provide feedback to hospitals until they
comply with our RHQDAPU validation
requirement.
Specifically, we are proposing that all
hospitals selected for validation for the
FY 2012 payment determination and
that fail the validation will be selected
for validation for the FY 2013 payment
determination. Based on data analysis of
past validation results, we estimate that
targeting these hospitals would add
about 20 to 40 hospitals to our list of
validated hospitals to be selected in the
FY 2013 validation sample.
For FY 2013, we also are proposing
the following changes to the FY 2012
RHQDAPU validation random sample
approach:
Starting in FY 2013, we are proposing
to discontinue the 100 case minimum
threshold for selection in the RHQDAPU
800 hospital random sample. We believe
that discontinuing this requirement
would improve the robustness of the
RHQDAPU program validation sample
by including the smallest hospitals
participating in the RHQDAPU program
in the sample. All hospitals successfully
submitting at least one RHQDAPU case
for the third calendar quarter of the year
two years prior to the year to which the
validation applies would be eligible to
be selected for validation. For example,
for the FY 2013 payment determination,
we would select the sample in early
2011, and all hospitals that submitted at
least one RHQDAPU case for third
quarter 2010 discharges would be
eligible to be selected. Starting in FY
2013, we are proposing this change to
the RHQDAPU random validation
sample, rather than including these
hospitals in a targeted sample, to ensure
that all RHQDAPU participating
hospitals are equally likely to be
selected in the random validation
sample.
For the FY 2013 payment
determination, we are proposing to
modify the quarterly stratified sample
selection by reallocating sample cases
when a hospital has submitted fewer
than three cases in a topic within a
quarter. In these rare cases, we are
proposing to randomly reallocate the
extra sample cases to other topics with
more than 3 submitted quarterly cases.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
23994
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
This proposed modification is designed
to ensure that CMS selects 12 cases for
all hospitals in a quarter, including
those hospitals specializing in only one
topic. For example, an orthopedic
specialty surgery hospital submitting
only SCIP measure cases in a given
quarter would have only SCIP measure
cases randomly selected in the
validation sample for that quarter. This
would provide a more reliable estimate
of abstraction and measure accuracy by
maintaining the same 12 case total
quarterly validation sample.
For the FY 2013 payment
determination, we also are proposing to
validate data from the 4th calendar
quarter of 2010 through the 3rd calendar
quarter of 2011 in accordance with our
proposed synchronization of RHQDAPU
data as outlined in section V.A.5.a.(2) of
this proposed rule. This lag between the
time a hospital submits data and the
time we can validate that data is
necessary because data is not due to the
QIO Clinical Warehouse until 41⁄2
months after the end of each quarter,
and we need additional time to select
hospitals and complete the validation
process.
We are also considering additional
changes to our validation approach for
future years. Beginning with the FY
2014 payment determination, we are
considering adding two strata to the
current RHQDAPU program validation
sample of SCIP, AMI, HF, and PN cases.
We are considering selecting 2
additional validation samples of 3 cases
per selected hospital per quarter. One
additional quarterly sample would
enable us to validate the Central Line
Associated Bloodstream Infection
(CLABSI) and Surgical Site Infection
(SSI) measures that we are proposing to
add to the RHQDAPU measure set for
the FY 2013 payment determination,
and the second additional quarterly
sample would enable us to validate the
ED-Throughput and the Immunization
for Influenza and Immunization for
Pneumonia global measures that we are
proposing to add to the RHQDAPU
measure set for the FY 2014 payment
determination. Thus, we would be
validating a total of 18 records per
quarter per validated hospital in six
strata (1) SCIP, (2) AMI, (3) HF, (4) PN,
(5) CLABSI/SSI, and (6) ED–
Throughput/Immunization measures.
We are also considering requiring
hospitals to sign a written form
explicitly granting CMS access to their
patient level data submitted for the
proposed Central Line Associated Blood
Stream Infection measure and the
Surgical Site Infection measure. We
believe that the CLABSI/SSI stratum is
necessary to validate the data in the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
reports that we will access from NHSN
for the RHQDAPU program. We invite
comment on our validation proposals
and considerations.
We note that we are considering
proposing, beginning with the FY 2015
payment determination, to add hospitals
to our validation sample if they were
open under their current CCNs in FY
2012 but not selected for validation in
the three previous annual RHQDAPU
validation samples. We are considering
this addition to supplement our
validation approach to ensure that all
eligible RHQDAPU program hospitals
are selected for validation at least once
every 4 years. We are considering this
addition beginning with the FY 2015
payment determination because FY
2015 would be the fourth year that we
will be using the random validation
approach.
8. Data Accuracy and Completeness
Acknowledgement Requirements for the
FY 2011 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
For the FY 2011 payment
determination and subsequent years, in
the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
proposed rule (74 FR 24180), we
proposed to require hospitals to
electronically acknowledge on an
annual basis the completeness and
accuracy of the data submitted for the
RHQDAPU program payment
determination. Hospitals will be able to
submit this acknowledgement on the
same Web page that they use to submit
data necessary to calculate the structural
measures, and we believe that this Web
page will provide a secure vehicle for
hospitals to directly acknowledge that
their information is complete and
accurate to the best of their knowledge.
A single annual electronic
acknowledgement will provide us with
explicit documentation acknowledging
that the hospital’s data is accurate and
complete, but will not unduly burden
hospitals. We noted that commenters
generally supported the idea of
electronic attestation in the FY 2009
IPPS final rule (73 FR 48625) at the
point of data submission to the QIO
Clinical Warehouse.
In addition, the Government
Accountability Office (GAO)
recommended in a 2006 report (GAO–
06–54) that hospitals self-report that
their data are complete and accurate.
Therefore, in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010
LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR 43890) for
the FY 2010 payment determination, we
required hospitals to electronically
acknowledge their data accuracy and
completeness once between July 1,
2009, and August 15, 2009. Hospitals
will acknowledge that all information
PO 00000
Frm 00144
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
that is, or will be, submitted as required
by the RHQDAPU program for the FY
2010 payment determination is
complete and accurate to the best of
their knowledge.
We are proposing to require hospitals
to electronically acknowledge their data
accuracy and completeness once
between July 1, 2010 and August 15,
2010 for data to be used for the FY 2012
RHQDAPU program payment
determination.
9. Proposed Public Display
Requirements for the FY 2012 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(VII) of the
Act provides that the Secretary shall
establish procedures for making data
submitted under the RHQDAPU
program available to the public. As we
noted in section V.A.1.c.(3) of this
proposed rule, the RHQDAPU program
quality measures are typically reported
on the Hospital Compare Web site
(https://www.hospitalcompare.hhs.gov),
but on occasion are reported on other
CMS Web sites. We require that
hospitals sign a Notice of Participation
form when they first register to
participate in the RHQDAPU program.
Once a hospital has submitted a form,
the hospital is considered to be an
active RHQDAPU program participant
until such time as the hospital submits
a withdrawal form to CMS (72 FR
47360). Hospitals signing this form
agree that they will allow CMS to
publicly report the quality measures
included in the RHQDAPU program.
We will continue to display quality
information for public viewing as
required by section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(VII) of the Act. Before
we display this information, hospitals
will be permitted to review their
information as recorded in the QIO
Clinical Warehouse.
10. Proposed Reconsideration and
Appeal Procedures for the FY 2011
Payment Determination
The general deadline for submitting a
request for reconsideration in
connection with the FY 2011 payment
determination is November 1, 2010. As
discussed more fully below, we are
proposing that all hospitals submit a
request for reconsideration and receive
a decision on that request before they
can file an appeal with the Provider
Reimbursement Review Board (PRRB).
For the FY 2011 payment
determination, we are proposing to
continue utilizing most of the same
procedures that we utilized for the FY
2010 requests for reconsideration.
Under these proposed procedures, the
hospital must—
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Submit to CMS, via QualityNet, a
Reconsideration Request form (available
on the QualityNet Web site) containing
the following information:
—Hospital CMS Certification number
(CCN).
—Hospital Name.
—CMS-identified reason for failure (as
provided in the CMS notification of
failure letter to the hospital).
—Hospital basis for requesting
reconsideration. This must identify
the hospital’s specific reason(s) for
believing it met the RHQDAPU
program requirements and should
receive the full FY 2011 IPPS annual
payment update.
—CEO contact information, including
name, e-mail address, telephone
number, and mailing address (must
include the physical address, not just
the post office box). We no longer
require that the hospital’s CEO sign
the RHQDAPU program
reconsideration request. We have
found that this requirement increases
the burden for hospitals because it
prevents them from electronically
submitting the RHQDAPU program
reconsideration request forms. In
addition, to the extent that a hospital
can submit a request for
reconsideration on-line, the burden
on our staff is reduced and, as a
result, we can more quickly review
the request.
—QualityNet System Administrator
contact information, including name,
e-mail address, telephone number,
and mailing address (must include the
physical address, not just the post
office box).
—Paper medical record requirement for
reconsideration requests involving
validation. We are proposing that if a
hospital asks us to reconsider an
adverse RHQDAPU program payment
decision made because the hospital
failed the validation requirement, the
hospital must submit paper copies of
all the medical records that it
submitted to the CDAC contractor
each quarter for purposes of the
validation. Hospitals must submit this
documentation to a CMS contractor.
The contractor will be a QIO support
contractor, which has authority to
review patient level information
under 42 CFR part 480. We will post
the address where hospitals can ship
the paper charts on the QualityNet
Web site after we issue the FY 2011
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule. Hospitals
submitting a RHQDAPU program
validation reconsideration request
will have all mismatched data
reviewed by CMS, and not their State
QIO. (As discussed in section V.A.6.b.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
of this proposed rule, the State QIO is
available to conduct a quarterly
validation appeal if so requested by a
hospital.)
For the FY 2011 payment
determination, the RHQDAPU program
data that will be validated is 4th
calendar quarter 2008 through 3rd
quarter calendar year 2009 discharge
data. Hospitals must provide a written
justification for each appealed data
element classified during the validation
process as a mismatch. We will review
the data elements that were labeled as
mismatched, as well as the written
justifications provided by the hospitals,
and make a decision on the
reconsideration request. As we
mentioned above, we are proposing that
all hospitals submit a reconsideration
request to CMS and receive a decision
on that request prior to submitting a
PRRB appeal. We believe that the
reconsideration process is less costly for
both CMS and hospitals, and that this
requirement will decrease the number of
PRRB appeals by resolving issues earlier
in the appeals process.
Following receipt of a request for
reconsideration, we will—
• Provide an e-mail
acknowledgement, using the contact
information provided in the
reconsideration request, to the CEO and
the QualityNet Administrator that the
request has been received.
• Provide written notification to the
hospital CEO, using the contact
information provided in the
reconsideration request, regarding our
decision. We expect the process to take
approximately 90 days from the
reconsideration request due date of
November 1, 2010.
As we stated in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY
2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR
43892), the scope of our review when a
hospital requests reconsideration
because it failed our validation
requirements will be as follows:
1. Hospital requests reconsideration
for CDAC contractor-abstracted data
elements classified as mismatches
affecting validation scores. Hospitals
must timely submit a copy of the entire
requested medical record to the CDAC
contractor during the quarterly
validation process for the requested case
to be eligible to be reconsidered on the
basis of mismatched data elements.
2. Hospital requests reconsideration
for medical record copies submitted
during the quarterly validation process
and classified as invalid record
selections. Invalid record selections are
defined as medical records submitted by
hospitals during the quarterly validation
process that do not match the patient’s
PO 00000
Frm 00145
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23995
episode of care information as
determined by the CDAC contractor (in
other words, the contractor determines
that the hospital returned a medical
record that is different from that which
was requested). If the CDAC contractor
determines that the hospital has
submitted an invalid record selection
case, it awards a zero validation score
for the case because the hospital did not
submit the entire copy of the medical
record for that requested case. During
the reconsideration process, our review
of invalid record selections will initially
be limited to determining whether the
record submitted to the CDAC
contractor was actually an entire copy of
the requested medical record. If we
determine during reconsideration that
the hospital did submit the entire copy
of the requested medical record, then
we would abstract data elements from
the medical record submitted by the
hospital.
3. Hospital requests reconsideration
for medical records not submitted to the
CDAC contractor within the 45 calendar
day deadline. Our review will initially
be limited to determining whether the
CDAC contractor received the requested
record within 45 calendar days, and
whether the hospital received the initial
medical record request and reminder
notice. If we determine during
reconsideration that the CDAC
contractor did receive a paper copy of
the requested medical record within 45
calendar days, then we would abstract
data elements from the medical record
submitted by the hospital. If we
determine that the hospital received two
letters requesting medical records and
still did not submit the requested
records within the 45 day period, CMS
will not accept these records as part of
the reconsideration. CMS will not
abstract data from charts not received
timely by the CDAC contractor.
In sum, we are initially limiting the
scope of our reconsideration reviews
involving validation to information
already submitted by the hospital
during the quarterly validation process,
and we will not abstract medical records
that were not submitted to the CDAC
contractor during the quarterly
validation process. We will expand the
scope of our review only if we find
during the initial review that the
hospital correctly and timely submitted
the requested medical records. In that
case, then we would abstract data
elements from the medical record
submitted by the hospital as part of our
review of its reconsideration request.
If a hospital is dissatisfied with the
result of a RHQDAPU program
reconsideration decision, the hospital
may file a claim under 42 CFR part 405,
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23996
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Subpart R (a PRRB appeal). We are again
soliciting public comments on the
extent to which these proposed
procedures will be less costly for
hospitals, and whether they will lead to
fewer PRRB appeals.
11. Proposed RHQDAPU Program
Withdrawal Deadlines
We are proposing to accept
RHQDAPU program withdrawal forms
for the FY 2012 payment determination
from hospitals until August 15, 2011.
We are proposing this deadline so that
we would have sufficient time to update
the FY 2012 payment to hospitals
starting on October 1, 2011. If a hospital
withdraws from the program for the FY
2012 payment determination, it will
receive a 2.0 percentage point reduction
in its FY 2012 annual payment update.
We noted that once a hospital has
submitted a Notice of Participation
form, it is considered to be an active
RHQDAPU program participant until
such time as the hospital submits a
withdrawal form to CMS.
12. Electronic Health Records (EHRs)
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
a. Background
Starting with the FY 2006 IPPS final
rule, we have encouraged hospitals to
take steps toward the adoption of EHRs
(also referred to in previous rulemaking
documents as electronic medical
records) that will allow for reporting of
clinical quality data from the EHRs
directly to a CMS data repository (70 FR
47420 through 47421). We encouraged
hospitals that are implementing,
upgrading, or developing EHR systems
to ensure that the technology obtained,
upgraded, or developed conforms to
standards adopted by HHS. We
suggested that hospitals also take due
care and diligence to ensure that the
EHR systems accurately capture quality
data and that, ideally, such systems
provide point-of-care decision support
that promotes optimal levels of clinical
performance.
We also continue to work with
standard setting organizations and other
entities to explore processes through
which EHRs could speed the collection
of data and minimize the resources
necessary for quality reporting as we
have done in the past.
We note that we have initiated work
directed toward enabling EHR
submission of quality measures through
EHR standards development and
adoption. We have sponsored the
creation of electronic specifications for
quality measures that are currently
proposed for the RHQDAPU program
and measures under future
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
consideration. We look to continue this
activity in the future.
select the measure for inclusion in the
RHQDAPU program measure set.
b. EHR Testing of Quality Measures
Submission
As we have previously stated, we are
interested in the reporting of quality
measures using EHRs, and we continue
to encourage hospitals to adopt and use
EHRs that conform to the certification
criteria as will be defined by the Office
of the National Coordinator for Health
Information Technology, HHS at 45 CFR
part 170. We believe that the testing of
EHR submission is an important and
necessary step to establish the ability of
EHRs to report clinical quality measures
and the capacity of CMS to receive such
data.
The electronic specifications and
interoperability standards for EHRbased collection and transmission of the
data elements for the ED Throughput,
Stroke, and Venous Thromboembolism
(VTE) measures have been finalized by
the Health Information Technology
Standards Panel (HITSP) and are
available for review and testing at http//
www.HITSP.org. We anticipate testing
the components required for the
submission of clinical quality data
extracted from EHRs for these measures,
and are exploring different mechanisms
and formats that will aid the submission
process, as well as ensure that the
summary measure results extracted from
the EHRs are reliable.
We anticipate moving forward with
testing CMS’ technical ability to accept
data from EHRs for the ED, Stroke, and
VTE measures as early as summer of
2011. We anticipate building upon the
work completed by the HITSP in both
the Connectathon and Health
Information Management Systems
Society (HIMSS) Interoperability
Showcase. This testing will encompass
an ‘‘end to end’’ view of data
transmission. Pursuant to the Paperwork
Reduction Act, we have previously
published a Federal Register notice and
information collection request for CMS–
10296 (74 FR 44366) seeking public
comments on the process we intended
to follow to select EHR vendors/
hospitals for testing CMS ability to
accept EHR-based data submissions. We
will notify interested parties of changes
in the process and timeline for testing
via the Inpatient EHR testing Web site
at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
HospitalQualityInits/
15_HospitalInpatientEHRTesting.asp.
The test measures described above are
not currently required under the
RHQDAPU program. In addition, the
posting of the electronic specifications
for any particular measure should not be
interpreted as a signal that we intend to
c. HITECH Act EHR Provisions
PO 00000
Frm 00146
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
The HITECH Act (Title IV of Division
B of the ARRA, together with Title XIII
of Division A of the ARRA) authorizes
payment incentives under Medicare for
the adoption and use of certified EHR
technology beginning in FY 2011.
Hospitals are eligible for these payment
incentives if they meet requirements for
meaningful use of certified EHR
technology, which include reporting on
quality measures using certified EHR
technology. With respect to the
selection of quality measures for this
purpose, under section 1886(n)(3)(A)(ii)
of the Act, as added by section 4102 of
the HITECH Act, the Secretary shall
select measures, including clinical
quality measures, that hospitals must
provide to CMS in order to be eligible
for the EHR incentive payments. With
respect to the clinical quality measures,
section 1886(n)(3)(B)(i) of the Act
requires the Secretary to give preference
to those clinical quality measures that
have been selected for the RHQDAPU
program under section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act or that
have been endorsed by the entity with
a contract with the Secretary under
section 1890(a) of the Act. Any
measures must be proposed for public
comment prior to their selection, except
in the case of measures previously
selected for the RHQDAPU program
under section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the
Act.
Thus, the RHQDAPU program and the
HITECH Act have important areas of
overlap and synergy with respect to the
reporting of quality measures using
EHRs. We believe the financial
incentives under the HITECH Act for
the adoption and meaningful use of
certified EHR technology by hospitals
will encourage the adoption and use of
certified EHRs for the reporting of
clinical quality measures under the
RHQDAPU program. Further, these
efforts to test the submission of quality
data through EHRs may provide a
foundation for establishing the capacity
of hospitals to send, and for CMS to
receive, quality measures via hospital
EHRs for future RHQDAPU program
measures.
We again note that the provisions in
this proposed rule do not implicate or
implement any HITECH statutory
provisions. Those provisions are the
subject of separate rulemaking and
public comment.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
13. Qualification of Registries for
RHQDAPU Data Submission
In section V.A.3.c.(3) of this proposed
rule, we proposed that hospitals would
select at least one of four registry-based
measure topics for which they will
report data on proposed measures to a
qualified registry beginning with
January 1, 2011 discharges, and allow
the registry to calculate and report
measure data for the specified measures
to CMS (via QualityNet) for RHQDAPU
program purposes. The process and
requirements that we are proposing to
use to determine whether a registry is
qualified to collect and submit quality
measure data are described below. We
will post on the RHQDAPU program
section of the QualityNet Web site
https://www.qualitynet.org no later than
December 31, 2010 a list of qualified
registries for the FY 2013 RHQDAPU
payment determination, including the
registry name, contact information, and
the measure(s) for which the registry is
qualified and will report for the FY 2013
RHQDAPU payment determination. We
have proposed measures for inclusion in
each of the four registry-based topics,
and a registry seeking to be qualified for
a particular topic would have to agree
to collect and report the measures
included in the topic. The proposed
measures support CMS and HHS
priorities for improved quality and
efficiency of care for Medicare
beneficiaries (such as, prevention;
chronic conditions; high cost and high
volume conditions; elimination of
health disparities; healthcare-associated
infections and other conditions; and
effective management of acute and
chronic episodes of care). We note,
however, that none of the registries that
we qualify for this purpose will be
acting as a CMS contractor or agent. In
other words, hospitals will still be
responsible for making sure that the
data it submits to the qualified registry
is successfully processed and
transmitted by the registry to CMS.
We are proposing to implement a selfnomination process for registries
seeking to submit FY 2013 RHQDAPU
program quality measures (including
measure calculations, numerators,
denominators, and exclusions) on behalf
of hospitals beginning with January 1,
2011 discharges. A registry would be
able to self-nominate if it meets the
following requirements:
• The registry has been collecting
data elements needed to calculate the
particular measures that are being
proposed for inclusion in the registrybased topic for which the registry is
seeking qualification for at least 3 years
prior to January 1, 2010.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
• As of January 1, 2010, the registry
has been collecting such data from at
least 750 hospitals.
• The registry must have the
capability to collect from hospitals all of
the data elements which are included in
the measure specifications and calculate
the results for the specified measures.
The measures are NQF-endorsed and
will be listed in the Specifications
Manual.
• The registry must agree to report the
hospital level measure data to CMS (via
QualityNet). During the registry
qualification process, CMS will inform
the registries of the specified reporting
format which will include:
Æ The volume of eligible cases
(reporting denominator);
Æ The volume of numerator events for
the quality measure (reporting
numerator);
Æ The number of cases excluded from
the measure;
Æ The measure results
• The registry must agree to transmit
quality measure data in a CMSapproved format. We expect that this
CMS-specified record layout will be
made available in late 2010;
• The registry must be able to perform
data quality validation checks on the
data received from hospitals to
determine if the data submitted by the
hospitals are accurate and agree to
submit an acceptable ‘‘validation
strategy’’ to CMS by December 15, 2011.
A validation strategy ascertains whether
hospitals have submitted data
accurately to the registry. An acceptable
validation strategy may include such
provisions as the registry being able to
verify the accuracy of hospital data
through random sampling or through
the hospital’s adherence to a required
sampling method;
• The registry must agree to enter into
and maintain with its participating
hospitals an appropriate Business
Associate agreement that complies with
HIPAA.
• The registry must obtain and keep
on file signed documentation showing
that each of its participating hospitals
has authorized the registry to calculate
and submit the quality measure
hospital-level data specified by CMS to
CMS. This documentation must be
obtained at the time the hospital
arranges to submit RHQDAPU program
quality measure data to the registry;
• The registry must agree to provide
CMS with access (if requested) to review
the data that the hospital submitted to
it for purposes of the RHQDAPU
program;
• The registry must agree to indicate
to CMS upon request whether a
PO 00000
Frm 00147
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23997
particular hospital has satisfied the
registry’s participation requirements;
• The registry must agree to provide
CMS with a signed, written attestation
statement via mail or e-mail which
states that the quality measure data that
the registry has submitted to CMS on
behalf of its participating hospitals is
accurate and complete.
• The registry must agree to provide
at least 1 feedback report per year to
participating hospitals;
• The registry must agree to provide
on-going technical assistance to its
participating hospitals with respect to
the hospitals’ submission of RHQDAPU
data; and
• The registry must agree to
participate in periodic RHQDAPU
program support calls hosted by CMS.
To apply to be a qualified registry for
any of the four proposed registry-based
topics, a registry must submit a selfnomination letter by October 15, 2010 to
RHQDAPU_Registries@cms.hhs.gov
containing the registry name, point of
contact, the proposed registry-based
measure topic for which qualification is
being sought, and detailed information
regarding how the registry satisfies the
criteria listed above.
B. Payment for Transfers of Cases From
Medicare Participating Acute Care
Hospitals to Nonparticipating Hospitals
and CAHs (§ 412.4)
1. Background
Existing regulations at § 412.4(a)
provide that an inpatient is considered
discharged from a hospital paid under
the IPPS when the patient is either
formally released from the hospital or
dies in the hospital. Under certain
circumstances, a discharge is considered
a transfer for purposes of payment
under the IPPS. Section 412.4(b) defines
acute care transfers, and § 412.4(c)
identifies those discharges considered a
postacute care transfer. In accordance
with § 412.4(f), when a patient is
transferred and his or her length of stay
is less than the geometric mean length
of stay for the MS–DRG to which the
case is assigned, the transferring
hospital is generally paid based on a
graduated per diem rate for each day of
the stay, not to exceed the full MS–DRG
payment that would have been made if
the patient had been discharged without
being transferred. In the case of acute
care transfers, the receiving hospital that
ultimately discharges the transferred
patient receives the full MS–DRG
payment, regardless of whether the
length of the patient’s inpatient stay
exceeds the geometric mean length of
stay for the applicable MS–DRG.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
23998
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
The per diem rate paid to a
transferring hospital is calculated by
dividing the full MS–DRG payment by
the geometric mean length of stay for
the MS–DRG. Based on an analysis that
showed that the first day of
hospitalization is the most expensive
(60 FR 5804), our policy generally
provides for payment that is double the
per diem amount for the first day, with
each subsequent day paid at the per
diem amount up to the full DRG
payment (§ 412.4(f)(1)). Transfer cases
also are eligible for outlier payments. In
general, the outlier threshold for transfer
cases, as described in § 412.80(b) of the
regulations, is equal to the fixed-loss
outlier threshold for nontransfer cases
(adjusted for geographic variations in
costs), divided by the geometric mean
length of stay for the MS–DRG, and
multiplied by the length of stay for the
case plus one day.
The transfer policy adjusts the
payments of the transferring hospital to
approximate the reduced costs of
transfer cases. Medicare adopted its
IPPS transfer policy because, if
Medicare were to pay the full MS–DRG
payment regardless of whether a patient
is transferred or discharged, there would
be a strong incentive for hospitals to
transfer patients to another IPPS
hospital early in their stay in order to
minimize costs while still receiving the
full MS–DRG payment.
b. Proposed Policy Change
The regulations at § 412.4(b) state that
a discharge of a hospital inpatient is
considered to be an acute care transfer
when the patient is readmitted on the
same day to another hospital that is paid
under the IPPS, or to a hospital that is
excluded from the IPPS because of
participation in a statewide cost control
program, unless the readmission is
unrelated to the initial discharge. These
regulations were developed under the
authority granted in section
1886(d)(5)(I)(ii) of the Act. Because a
discharge is only considered an acute
care transfer if the receiving hospital
either is paid under IPPS or participates
in a statewide cost control program, the
current acute care transfer policy only
applies to transfers between acute care
hospitals that participate in the
Medicare program (‘‘participating acute
care hospitals’’); it does not currently
apply to acute care hospitals that would
otherwise be eligible to be paid under
the IPPS, but do not have an agreement
to participate in the Medicare program
(‘‘nonparticipating acute care
hospitals’’). The acute care transfer
policy also does not currently apply to
IPPS acute care hospital transfers to
CAHs.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
The intent of the acute care transfer
policy is to make payment to the
transferring hospital commensurate
with the resources it expends in treating
Medicare beneficiaries. As stated above,
a participating acute care hospital that
admits a beneficiary from a transferring
hospital receives a full MS–DRG
payment, as long as the receiving
hospital does not subsequently transfer
the beneficiary prior to the geometric
mean length of stay for that MS–DRG.
The transferring hospital receives a
reduced per diem payment amount. If
the acute care transfer policy did not
exist, Medicare would make separate
full MS–DRG payments to each of the
hospitals involved with the treatment of
the beneficiary, even though the
hospitals shared in one episode of care
for the same beneficiary and neither
provided the full spectrum of care for
that beneficiary for that episode of care.
Such a policy would inappropriately
pay a ‘‘double’’ Medicare payment and
would be inconsistent with the intent of
the acute care transfer policy.
Although a nonparticipating acute
care hospital is generally ineligible to
receive payments under Medicare, such
a hospital may still treat Medicare
patients. In addition, acute care
hospitals that do participate in the
Medicare program are not precluded
from transferring a Medicare patient to
a nonparticipating acute care hospital.
We note that a hospital that transfers a
patient early in the patient’s stay (that
is, prior to the geometric mean length of
stay of the patient’s MS–DRG) incurs
reduced costs for that case, regardless of
whether the patient is transferred to a
Medicare participating acute care
hospital or a nonparticipating acute care
hospital. A hospital that sends such a
transfer to a CAH incurs similarly
reduced costs, despite the fact that
transfers to CAHs are not currently
included under the Medicare acute care
transfer policy.
These policy changes are also being
proposed in order to avoid creating a
financial incentive for an IPPS hospital
to transfer cases to one type of provider
versus another. A transfer decision
should be made based on the clinical
merits of the beneficiary’s situation and
the transferring hospital’s capabilities.
More pointedly, we want to avoid
providing a Medicare participating
acute care hospital with an incentive to
transfer cases to a nonparticipating
acute care hospital or a CAH. Without
a policy change, these incentives still
exists as payment issues relating to the
IPPS transfer policy. With respect to
nonparticipating acute care hospitals, it
is frequently explained that the
Medicare conditions of participation
PO 00000
Frm 00148
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
provide a certain minimum standard of
care that beneficiaries can expect, and
that Medicare does not make payments
to nonparticipating acute care hospitals
because these hospitals do not commit
to adhering to these conditions of
participation. As such, the lack of a
policy with regard to transfers to
nonparticipating acute care hospitals
results in an inappropriate payment
incentive.
Accordingly, in order to further align
the IPPS regulations relating to transfer
of cases under § 412.4(b) with its
original intent (that is, that a hospital’s
payment should be commensurate with
the resources it expends for the case), in
this proposed rule, we are proposing to
add a new paragraph (b)(3) to § 412.4 to
specify that an acute care hospital
‘‘transfer case’’ includes a transfer to an
acute care hospital that would otherwise
be eligible to be paid under the IPPS,
but does not have an agreement to
participate in the Medicare program,
and a new paragraph (b)(4) to state that
an acute care hospital ‘‘transfer’’ also
includes a transfer to a CAH.
Hospitals must use patient discharge
status code ‘‘66’’ (Discharged/
Transferred to a Critical Access
Hospital) on IPPS claims to identify
transfers to CAHs. For transfers to
nonparticipating acute care hospitals,
hospitals must continue to use patient
status code ‘‘02’’ (Discharged/
Transferred to a Short-Term General
Hospital for Inpatient Care) on IPPS
claims. We note that the National
Uniform Billing Committee (NUBC)
periodically updates or changes patient
status codes; therefore, hospitals should
check NUBC guidance periodically to
determine whether there have been any
changes to these codes.
C. Technical Change to Regulations
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS final rule (74 FR 43939 through
43940), in response to public comments
we received on the FY 2010 proposed
rule relating to the effects on CAH status
arising from the redesignation by OMB
of three Micropolitan Statistical Areas
as MSAs, we amended our regulations
at § 485.610 by adding a paragraph (b)(4)
to provide for a transition period for the
CAHs that are located in counties that
are reclassified from rural to urban to
obtain a rural redesignation. However,
when we added the new paragraph
(b)(4) to § 485.610, we inadvertently
failed to make a conforming change to
the introductory text of paragraph (b) to
include a reference to paragraph (b)(4)
as one of the requirements that the CAH
must meet in order to satisfy the
conditions of participation for CAHs.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
We are proposing to make this
confirming change.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
D. Medicare-Dependent, Small Rural
Hospitals (MDHs): Change to Criteria
(§ 412.108)
1. Background
Under the IPPS, separate special
payment protections are provided to a
Medicare-dependent, small rural
hospital (MDH). Section
1886(d)(5)(G)(iv) of the Act defines an
MDH as a hospital that is located in a
rural area, has not more than 100 beds,
is not an SCH, and has a high
percentage of Medicare discharges (that
is, not less than 60 percent of its
inpatient days or discharges either in its
1987 cost reporting year or in two of its
most recent three settled Medicare cost
reporting years). The regulations that set
forth the criteria that a hospital must
meet to be classified as an MDH are at
42 CFR 412.108.
Although MDHs are paid under an
adjusted payment methodology, they are
still IPPS hospitals paid under section
1886(d) of the Act. Like all IPPS
hospitals paid under section 1886(d) of
the Act, MDHs are paid for their
discharges based on the DRG weights
calculated under section 1886(d)(4) of
the Act.
Through and including FY 2006,
under section 1886(d)(5)(G) of the Act,
MDHs are paid based on the Federal rate
or, if higher, the Federal rate plus 50
percent of the amount by which the
Federal rate is exceeded by the updated
hospital-specific rate based on the
hospital’s FY 1982 or FY 1987 costs per
discharge, whichever of these hospitalspecific rates is higher. Section 5003(b)
of Public Law 109–171 (DRA 2005)
amended section 1886(d)(5)(G) of the
Act to provide that, for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2006,
MDHs are paid based on the Federal rate
or, if higher, the Federal rate plus 75
percent of the amount by which the
Federal rate is exceeded by the updated
hospital-specific rate based on FY 1982,
FY 1987, or FY 2002 costs per
discharge, whichever of these hospitalspecific rates is highest.
For each cost reporting period, the
fiscal intermediary or MAC determines
which of the payment options will yield
the highest aggregate payment. Interim
payments are automatically made at the
highest rate using the best data available
at the time the fiscal intermediary or
MAC makes the determination.
However, it may not be possible for the
fiscal intermediary or MAC to determine
in advance precisely which of the rates
will yield the highest aggregate payment
by year’s end. In many instances, it is
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
not possible to forecast the outlier
payments, the amount of the DSH
adjustment or the IME adjustment, all of
which are applicable only to payments
based on the Federal rate and not to
payments based on the hospital-specific
rate. The fiscal intermediary or MAC
makes a final adjustment at the
settlement of the cost report after it
determines precisely which of the
payment rates would yield the highest
aggregate payment to the hospital.
If a hospital disagrees with the fiscal
intermediary’s or the MAC’s
determination regarding the final
amount of program payment to which it
is entitled, it has the right to appeal the
determination in accordance with the
procedures set forth in 42 CFR Part 405,
Subpart R, which govern provider
payment determinations and appeals.
2. Medicare-Dependency: Counting
Medicare Inpatients
Currently, in order for an IPPS
hospital to qualify as an MDH, at least
60 percent of its inpatient days or
discharges must be attributable to
individuals receiving Medicare Part A
benefits (§ 412.108(a)(1)(iii) of the
regulations).
The MDH policy, as explained in the
FY 1991 final rule (55 FR 35994 through
35998), does not include in the count of
Medicare inpatients those Medicare
beneficiaries who have exhausted their
Medicare Part A inpatient benefits.
Currently, for purposes of determining
DSH payment adjustments under the
IPPS, section 1886(d)(5)(F)(vi)(I) of the
Act and our policy include, in the
Medicare inpatient count, individuals
entitled to Medicare Part A benefits,
regardless of whether or not they have
exhausted Medicare Part A coverage.
This policy is discussed in the FY 2005
IPPS final rule (69 FR 49090 through
49099). In addition, section
1886(d)(5)(G)(iv)(IV) of the Act specifies
that a hospital is Medicare-dependent if
‘‘not less than 60 percent of its inpatient
days or discharges during the cost
reporting period beginning in fiscal year
1987, or two of the three most recently
audited cost reporting periods for which
the Secretary has a settled cost report,
were attributable to inpatients entitled
to benefits under part A.’’ The use of the
word ‘‘entitled’’ in the statute would
encompass individuals who are entitled
to Medicare Part A even though they
have exhausted their Part A hospital
days. Individuals who have exhausted
their Part A inpatient benefit coverage
remain ‘‘entitled’’ to Medicare Part A
because they retain the Medicare Part A
insurance benefit coverage (for example,
covered SNF days), and they continue to
meet all statutory criteria for entitlement
PO 00000
Frm 00149
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23999
to Part A benefits under section 226 of
the Act (Entitlement to Hospital
Insurance Benefits).
Accordingly, we are proposing to
revise the Medicare-dependency
criterion at § 412.108(a)(1)(iii) of the
regulations to replace the term
‘‘receiving’’ with the phrase ‘‘entitled to’’.
As a result, we would include in the
count of Medicare inpatient days or
discharges all days or discharges
attributable to individuals entitled to
the Medicare Part A insurance benefit,
including individuals who have
exhausted their Medicare Part A
inpatient hospital coverage benefit, as
well as individuals enrolled in Medicare
Advantage plans and section 1876 cost
contracts, that is, health maintenance
organizations (HMOs) and competitive
medical plans (CMPs). We note that, for
inpatient care provided to Medicare Part
A beneficiaries enrolled with an HMO
or a CMP, we provided that the days
and discharges for those stays are
counted for purposes of determining
Medicare-dependency for MDH
purposes (55 FR 35995). This was the
case when HMOs and CMPs were
included under Medicare Part A, and
continues to be the case since 1997
when HMOs and CMPs were placed
under Medicare Part C.
E. Rural Referral Centers (RRCs)
(§ 412.96)
Under the authority of section
1886(d)(5)(C)(i) of the Act, the
regulations at § 412.96 set forth the
criteria that a hospital must meet in
order to qualify under the IPPS as an
RRC. For discharges that occurred
before October 1, 1994, RRCs received
the benefit of payment based on the
other urban standardized amount rather
than the rural standardized amount (as
discussed in the FY 1993 IPPS final rule
(59 FR 45404 through 45409)). Although
the other urban and rural standardized
amounts are the same for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 1994,
RRCs continue to receive special
treatment under both the DSH payment
adjustment and the criteria for
geographic reclassification.
Section 402 of Public Law 108–173
raised the DSH adjustment for RRCs
such that they are not subject to the 12percent cap on DSH payments that is
applicable to other rural hospitals. RRCs
are also not subject to the proximity
criteria when applying for geographic
reclassification. In addition, they do not
have to meet the requirement that a
hospital’s average hourly wage must
exceed, by a certain percentage, the
average hourly wage of the labor market
area where the hospital is located.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Section 4202(b) of Public Law 105–33
states, in part, ‘‘[a]ny hospital classified
as an RRC by the Secretary * * * for
fiscal year 1991 shall be classified as
such an RRC for fiscal year 1998 and
each subsequent year.’’ In the August 29,
1997 IPPS final rule with comment
period (62 FR 45999), CMS reinstated
RRC status for all hospitals that lost the
status due to triennial review or MGCRB
reclassification. However, CMS did not
reinstate the status of hospitals that lost
RRC status because they were now
urban for all purposes because of the
OMB designation of their geographic
area as urban. Subsequently, in the
August 1, 2000 IPPS final rule (65 FR
47089), we indicated that we were
revisiting that decision. Specifically, we
stated that we would permit hospitals
that previously qualified as an RRC and
lost their status due to OMB
redesignation of the county in which
they are located from rural to urban, to
be reinstated as an RRC. Otherwise, a
hospital seeking RRC status must satisfy
all of the other applicable criteria. We
use the definitions of ‘‘urban’’ and
‘‘rural’’ specified in Subpart D of 42 CFR
Part 412. One of the criteria under
which a hospital may qualify as an RRC
is to have 275 or more beds available for
use (§ 412.96(b)(1)(ii)). A rural hospital
that does not meet the bed size
requirement can qualify as an RRC if the
hospital meets two mandatory
prerequisites (a minimum CMI and a
minimum number of discharges), and at
least one of three optional criteria
(relating to specialty composition of
medical staff, source of inpatients, or
referral volume). (We refer readers to
§ 412.96(c)(1) through (c)(5) and the
September 30, 1988 Federal Register (53
FR 38513).) With respect to the two
mandatory prerequisites, a hospital may
be classified as an RRC if—
• The hospital’s CMI is at least equal
to the lower of the median CMI for
urban hospitals in its census region,
excluding hospitals with approved
teaching programs, or the median CMI
for all urban hospitals nationally; and
• The hospital’s number of discharges
is at least 5,000 per year, or, if fewer, the
median number of discharges for urban
hospitals in the census region in which
the hospital is located. (The number of
discharges criterion for an osteopathic
hospital is at least 3,000 discharges per
year, as specified in section
1886(d)(5)(C)(i) of the Act.)
The preceding numbers will be
revised in the FY 2011 IPPS final rule
to the extent required to reflect the
updated FY 2009 MedPAR file, which
will contain data from additional bills
received through March 2010.
A hospital seeking to qualify as an
RRC should obtain its hospital-specific
CMI value (not transfer-adjusted) from
its fiscal intermediary or MAC. Data are
available on the Provider Statistical and
Reimbursement (PS&R) System. In
keeping with our policy on discharges,
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
1. Case-Mix Index (CMI)
Section 412.96(c)(1) provides that
CMS establish updated national and
regional CMI values in each year’s
annual notice of prospective payment
rates for purposes of determining RRC
status. The methodology we used to
determine the national and regional CMI
PO 00000
Frm 00150
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
values is set forth in the regulations at
§ 412.96(c)(1)(ii). The proposed national
median CMI value for FY 2011 includes
data from all urban hospitals
nationwide, and the proposed regional
values for FY 2011 are the median CMI
values of urban hospitals within each
census region, excluding those hospitals
with approved teaching programs (that
is, those hospitals that train residents in
an approved GME program as provided
in § 413.75). These proposed values are
based on discharges occurring during
FY 2009 (October 1, 2008 through
September 30, 2009), and include bills
posted to CMS’ records through
December 2009.
We are proposing that, in addition to
meeting other criteria, if rural hospitals
with fewer than 275 beds are to qualify
for initial RRC status for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2010, they must have a CMI value for
FY 2009 that is at least—
• 1.5127; or
• The median CMI value (not
transfer-adjusted) for urban hospitals
(excluding hospitals with approved
teaching programs as identified in
§ 413.75) calculated by CMS for the
census region in which the hospital is
located.
The proposed median CMI values by
region are set forth in the following
table:
the CMI values are computed based on
all Medicare patient discharges subject
to the IPPS MS–DRG-based payment.
2. Discharges
Section 412.96(c)(2)(i) provides that
CMS set forth the national and regional
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.045
24000
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
24001
began during FY 2008 (that is, October
1, 2007 through September 30, 2008),
which are the latest cost report data
available at the time this proposed rule
was developed.
Therefore, we are proposing that, in
addition to meeting other criteria, a
hospital, if it is to qualify for initial RRC
status for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2010,
must have, as the number of discharges
for its cost reporting period that began
during FY 2008, at least—
• 5,000 (3,000 for an osteopathic
hospital); or
• The median number of discharges
for urban hospitals in the census region
in which the hospital is located, as
indicated in the following table.
These numbers will be revised in the
FY 2011 IPPS final rule based on the
latest available cost report data.
We note that the median number of
discharges for hospitals in each census
region is greater than the national
standard of 5,000 discharges. Therefore,
5,000 discharges is the minimum
criterion for all hospitals.
We reiterate that, if an osteopathic
hospital is to qualify for RRC status for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 2010, the hospital
would be required to have at least 3,000
discharges for its cost reporting period
that began during FY 2008.
Public Law 105–33 (BBA 1987)
established a limit on the number of
allopathic and osteopathic residents that
a hospital may include in its full-time
equivalent (FTE) resident count for
direct GME and IME payment purposes.
Under section 1886(h)(4)(F) of the Act,
for cost reporting periods beginning on
or after October 1, 1997, a hospital’s
unweighted FTE count of residents for
purposes of direct GME may not exceed
the hospital’s unweighted FTE count for
its most recent cost reporting period
ending on or before December 31, 1996.
Under section 1886(d)(5)(B)(v) of the
Act, a similar limit on the FTE resident
count for IME purposes is effective for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 1997.
Section 502(a) of Public Law 108–173
modified the formula multiplier (c) to be
used in the calculation of the IME
adjustment. Prior to the enactment of
Public Law 108–173, the formula
multiplier was fixed at 1.35 for
discharges occurring during FY 2003
and thereafter. In the FY 2005 IPPS final
rule, we announced the schedule of
formula multipliers to be used in the
calculation of the IME adjustment and
incorporated the schedule in our
regulations at § 412.105(d)(3)(viii)
through (d)(3)(xii). Section 502(a)
modified the formula multiplier
beginning midway through FY 2004 and
provided for a new schedule of formula
multipliers for FY 2005 and thereafter as
follows:
• For discharges occurring on or after
April 1, 2004, and before October 1,
2004, the formula multiplier is 1.47.
• For discharges occurring during FY
2005, the formula multiplier is 1.42.
• For discharges occurring during FY
2006, the formula multiplier is 1.37.
• For discharges occurring during FY
2007, the formula multiplier is 1.32.
• For discharges occurring during FY
2008 and fiscal years thereafter, the
formula multiplier is 1.35.
Accordingly, for discharges occurring
during FY 2011, the formula multiplier
is 1.35. We estimate that application of
F. Indirect Medical Education (IME)
Adjustment (§ 412.105)
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
1. Background
Section 1886(d)(5)(B) of the Act
provides for an additional payment
amount under the IPPS for hospitals
that have residents in an approved
graduate medical education (GME)
program in order to reflect the higher
indirect patient care costs of teaching
hospitals relative to nonteaching
hospitals. The regulations regarding the
calculation of this additional payment,
known as the indirect medical
education (IME) adjustment, are located
at § 412.105.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
2. IME Adjustment Factor for FY 2011
The IME adjustment to the MS–DRG
payment is based in part on the
applicable IME adjustment factor. The
IME adjustment factor is calculated by
using a hospital’s ratio of residents to
beds, which is represented as r, and a
formula multiplier, which is
represented as c, in the following
equation: c × [{1 + r} .405 ¥1]. The
formula is traditionally described in
terms of a certain percentage increase in
payment for every 10-percent increase
in the resident-to-bed ratio.
PO 00000
Frm 00151
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.046
numbers of discharges in each year’s
annual notice of prospective payment
rates for purposes of determining RRC
status. As specified in section
1886(d)(5)(C)(ii) of the Act, the national
standard is set at 5,000 discharges. We
are proposing to update the regional
standards based on discharges for urban
hospitals’ cost reporting periods that
24002
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
this formula multiplier for the FY 2011
IME adjustment will result in an
increase in IPPS payment of 5.5 percent
for every approximately 10-percent
increase in the hospital’s resident-to-bed
ratio.
3. IME-Related Changes in Other
Sections of This Proposed Rule
We refer readers to section IV.H.2.
and IV.H.3. of the preamble of this
proposed rule for a discussion of
proposed changes to the policies for
identifying ‘‘approved medical
residency programs’’ and the electronic
submission of Medicare GME affiliation
agreements.
G. Payment Adjustment for Medicare
Disproportionate Share Hospitals
(DSHs): Supplemental Security Income
(SSI) Fraction (§ 412.106)
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
1. Background
Section 1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act
provides for additional Medicare
payments to subsection (d) hospitals
that serve a significantly
disproportionate number of low-income
patients. The Act specifies two methods
by which a hospital may qualify for the
Medicare disproportionate share
hospital (DSH) adjustment. Under the
first method, hospitals that are located
in an urban area and have 100 or more
beds may receive a Medicare DSH
payment adjustment if the hospital can
demonstrate that, during its cost
reporting period, more than 30 percent
of its net inpatient care revenues are
derived from State and local
government payments for care furnished
to needy patients with low incomes.
This method is commonly referred to as
the ‘‘Pickle method.’’
The second method for qualifying for
the DSH payment adjustment, which is
the most common, is based on a
complex statutory formula under which
the DSH payment adjustment is based
on the hospital’s geographic
designation, the number of beds in the
hospital, and the level of the hospital’s
disproportionate patient percentage
(DPP). A hospital’s DPP is the sum of
two fractions: The ‘‘Supplemental
Security Income (SSI) fraction’’ and the
‘‘Medicaid fraction.’’ The SSI fraction
(also known as the ‘‘SSI ratio’’ or the
‘‘Medicare fraction’’) is computed by
dividing the number of the hospital’s
inpatient days that are furnished to
patients who were entitled to both
Medicare Part A (including patients
who are enrolled in a Medicare
Advantage (Part C) plan) and SSI
benefits by the hospital’s total number
of patient days furnished to patients
entitled to benefits under Medicare Part
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
A (including patients who are enrolled
in a Medicare Advantage (Part C) plan).
The Medicaid fraction is computed by
dividing the hospital’s number of
inpatient days furnished to patients
who, for such days, were eligible for
Medicaid, but were not entitled to
benefits under Medicare Part A, by the
hospital’s total number of inpatient days
in the same period.
Because the DSH payment adjustment
is part of the IPPS, the DSH statutory
references (under section 1886(d)(5)(F)
of the Act) to ‘‘days’’ apply only to
hospital acute care inpatient days.
Regulations located at 42 CFR 412.106
govern the Medicare DSH payment
adjustment and specify how the DPP is
calculated as well as how beds and
patient days are counted in determining
the DSH payment adjustment. Under
§ 412.106(a)(1)(i), the number of beds for
the Medicare DSH payment adjustment
is determined in accordance with bed
counting rules for the IME adjustment
under § 412.105(b).
2. CMS’ Current Data Matching Process
for the SSI Fraction
From the inception of the Medicare
DSH adjustment in 1986, CMS (formerly
HCFA) has calculated the SSI fraction
for each acute care hospital paid under
the IPPS. This fraction, in combination
with the Medicaid fraction, is used to
determine whether the provider
qualifies for a DSH payment adjustment
and the amount of any such payment
(51 FR 16772, 16777, May 6, 1986
interim final rule). In determining the
number of inpatient days for individuals
entitled to both Medicare Part A and
SSI, as required for calculation of the
numerator of the SSI fraction, CMS
matches the Medicare records and SSI
eligibility records for each hospital’s
patients during the Federal fiscal year,
unless the provider requests calculation
of the SSI fraction on a cost reporting
period basis (in which case the provider
would receive its SSI fraction based on
its own cost reporting period). The data
underlying the match process are drawn
from: (a) The Medicare Provider
Analysis and Review (MedPAR) data
file; and (b) SSI eligibility data provided
by the Social Security Administration
(SSA). CMS has matched Medicare and
SSI eligibility records using Title II
numbers (included in the SSI records)
and Health Insurance Claims Account
Numbers (HICANs) (contained in the
MedPAR file). Below we provide a more
detailed description of both a Title II
number and a HICAN.
Title II Number: If a person qualifies
for retirement or disability benefits
under Title II of the Act (42 U.S.C. 401
et seq.), SSA assigns a ‘‘Title II number’’
PO 00000
Frm 00152
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
to the individual. If the Title II
beneficiary’s own earnings history (or
the individual’s disability) were the
basis for such benefits, the person’s
Social Security number (SSN) would
constitute the ‘‘root’’ of the individual’s
Title II number. However, if the person’s
Title II benefits were based on the
earnings history of another individual
(for example, a spouse), that other
person’s SSN would provide the root for
the beneficiary’s Title II number. In
addition to a root SSN, each Title II
number ends with a Beneficiary
Identification Code (BIC) that identifies
the basis for an individual’s entitlement
to benefits. For example, a person who
becomes eligible for benefits under his
or her own account would be described
by his or her SSN followed by the BIC
‘‘A’’ whereas a wife who becomes
eligible for benefits under her husband’s
account would be described by his SSN
followed by the BIC ‘‘B.’’ Children who
become eligible under a parent’s
account would be described by the
parent’s SSN followed by the BIC ‘‘C1,’’
‘‘C2,’’ etc.
HICAN: When a person becomes
entitled to Medicare benefits, he or she
is assigned a HICAN for purposes of
processing claims submitted on his or
her behalf for Medicare services. A
beneficiary’s HICAN (which may not
necessarily contain his or her SSN) is
included on the Medicare inpatient
hospital claim.
Each HICAN for a beneficiary should
be identical, at the same point in time,
to that individual’s Title II number. This
is because HICANs and Title II numbers
are both assigned on the basis of the
same data source, the SSA-maintained
Master Beneficiary Record, and by using
the same rules (that is, the rules for
determining which person’s SSN will
serve as the root for an individual’s
HICAN and Title II number and for
determining the BIC for both types of
numbers).
We note that a person’s Title II
number and HICAN can change over
time. For example, if the individual’s
entitlement to Title II and Medicare
benefits was originally based on the
earnings history of a first spouse, but the
beneficiary later qualified for such
benefits on the basis of a second
spouse’s earnings history, the
beneficiary’s HICAN and Title II number
would change accordingly. Specifically,
the first spouse’s SSN would be the root
of the beneficiary’s original HICAN and
Title II number; later, the second
spouse’s SSN would become the root of
the beneficiary’s second HICAN and
Title II number.
The SSI eligibility data that CMS
receives from SSA contain monthly
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
indicators to denote which month(s)
each person was eligible for SSI benefits
during a specific time period. The
current matching process uses only one
Title II number (which is included in
the SSI file) and one HICAN (found in
the MedPAR file) for each beneficiary.
In the current matching process, CMS
has used the HICAN because it is the
patient identifier that is provided by
hospitals on the Medicare claim.
Because SSNs are not included on
Medicare inpatient claims, CMS has not
used SSNs in the match process.
For a given fiscal year, CMS
determines the numerator of the
hospital’s SSI fraction (that is, the
number of the hospital’s inpatient days
for all of its patients who were
simultaneously entitled to Medicare
Part A benefits and SSI benefits) by
calculating the sum of the number of the
hospital’s inpatient days that are
associated with all of the identical Title
II numbers and HICANs for the
hospital’s claims that are found through
the data matching process. In turn, CMS
determines the denominator of the
hospital’s SSI fraction by calculating the
sum of the number of the hospital’s
inpatient days for patients entitled to
benefits under Medicare Part A
(regardless of SSI eligibility) that are
included in the hospital’s inpatient
claims for the period.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
3. Baystate Medical Center v. Leavitt
Court Decision
In Baystate Medical Center v. Leavitt,
545 F. Supp. 2d 20, as amended, 587 F.
Supp. 2d 37, 44 (D.D.C. 2008), the
district court concluded that, in certain
respects, CMS’ current matching process
(as described above) did not use the
‘‘best available data’’ to match Medicare
patient day information with SSI
eligibility data when calculating the
plaintiff’s SSI fractions for FYs 1993
through 1996. Specifically, the court
found that:
• Stale SSI Records and Forced Pay
SSI Records. For the earliest years in
question in Baystate, the SSI eligibility
data did not include ‘‘stale’’ records—
that is, records for individuals whose
SSI records were no longer active from
SSA’s perspective. (We note that it is
our understanding that, as of the year
2000, SSA no longer differentiates
between inactive and active records and
therefore, no longer uses the ‘‘stale
record’’ indicator in its databases.) The
court also found that the SSI data file
only included SSI eligibility
information for SSI payments that were
automated (as opposed to manual),
thereby excluding those people who, for
whatever reason, received manual or
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
‘‘forced pay’’ payments. Baystate, 545 F.
Supp. 2d at 44–46.
• Match Based on Only One Title II
Number and One HICAN. The court
found fault with CMS’ use of only a
single Title II number and one HICAN
in the match process. As a beneficiary
may receive SSI and Medicare Part A
benefits under more than one Title II
number and HICAN over a period of
time, CMS would not have matched a
beneficiary’s records if there had been a
change in the person’s Title II number
and HICAN between the time of an
inpatient stay and when the match
process was completed. Baystate, 545 F.
Supp. 2d at 46–49.
• Retroactive SSI Eligibility
Determinations and Lifting of Payment
Suspensions. The court found that the
match process did not appropriately
account for retroactive eligibility
determinations of SSI eligibility and the
lifting of payment suspensions because
the match process used SSI eligibility
data that did not include more recent
retroactive determinations of SSI
eligibility and the lifting of SSI payment
suspensions. By not using more recent
SSI eligibility information that was
available to CMS at the time of the
hospital’s cost report settlement, the
court concluded that CMS did not use
the ‘‘best available data’’ to calculate the
provider’s SSI fraction. Baystate, 545 F.
Supp. 2d at 42–44.
CMS continues to believe that its
current data matching process and the
resultant SSI fraction and DSH
payments were lawful. Nonetheless, the
agency did not appeal the Baystate
decision. Accordingly, CMS
implemented the court’s decision by
recalculating the plaintiff’s SSI fractions
for 1993 through 1996. In recalculating
the SSI fractions at issue in the Baystate
case, we worked closely with SSA to
ensure that stale and forced pay SSI
records were included in the SSI
eligibility data. Also, we used a revised
data matching process (described in
more detail below) that comports with
the court’s decision. As the revised data
matching process was completed using
SSI eligibility data compiled between 13
and 16 years beyond the fiscal years at
issue in the Baystate case, we believe
any issues associated with retroactive
determinations of SSI eligibility and the
lifting of payment suspensions had been
long since resolved. Furthermore,
because we believe that the revised
match process used to implement the
Baystate decision addressed all of the
concerns found by the court, we are
proposing to use the same revised data
matching process for calculating
hospitals’ SSI fractions for FY 2011 and
subsequent fiscal years.
PO 00000
Frm 00153
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24003
4. CMS’ Proposed Process for Matching
Medicare and SSI Eligibility Data
a. Inclusion of Stale Records and Forced
Pay Records in the SSI Eligibility Data
Files
In recalculating the SSI fractions at
issue in the Baystate case, stale records
and forced pay records were included in
the SSI eligibility data files that CMS
used in the revised data match for the
four fiscal years at issue. All SSI
payment records, whether the payments
were automated or manual or were for
an individual whose record was active
or stale, are now included in the data
files provided by SSA and will continue
to be included in the future.
b. Use of SSNs in the Revised Match
Process
As indicated above, the current
matching process only uses one Title II
number and one HICAN in the data
match process. By contrast, our revised
match process would make use of the
Medicare Enrollment Database (EDB),
which is CMS’ system of records for all
individuals who have ever been
enrolled in Medicare. The EDB includes
SSNs as well as all of an individual’s
HICANs. In our proposed revised match
process, the individual’s SSN, contained
in the SSI eligibility data file, would be
compared to the SSNs in the Medicare
EDB, and each matched SSN would
then be ‘‘cross-walked’’ within the EDB
to find any and all HICANs associated
with the individual’s SSN. The resulting
HICANs would then be matched against
those HICANs contained in the MedPAR
claims data files.
Before explaining our proposed
revised match process in more detail,
we believe it is appropriate to provide
some background regarding SSNs and
the three databases that would be used
in our proposed match process. An
individual should have only one SSN,
which should be unique to that
individual. The SSN may be assigned by
SSA when the individual begins gainful
employment (if not earlier). However, if
an applicant for SSI benefits does not
already have a SSN, SSA then assigns a
SSN to the person. Thus, in the SSI
eligibility data that SSA provides to
CMS, each individual identified in
those data should have a unique SSN.
The first database that we are
proposing to use in our revised match
process is the SSI eligibility data file,
which contains a unique SSN for every
SSI record and would include as many
as 10 different historical Title II
numbers for the records related to one
individual. We are proposing to use 10
as the maximum number of Title II
numbers for a beneficiary because that
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24004
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
is likewise the maximum number of
HICANs that can be attributed to any
one individual in our EDB. However, we
note that as a practical matter, the
greatest number of historical HICANs
associated with any beneficiary appears
to be 7. The SSI eligibility file serves as
the system of record for whether or not
SSA made a payment of SSI benefits to
an individual who applied for SSI
benefits.
The second relevant database, the
Medicare EDB, contains a SSN for
virtually every record in the EDB.
Furthermore, the EDB has the capacity
to hold up to 10 historical HICANs for
a specific Medicare enrollee. (It is
important to note that, of the more than
100 million records in the EDB, less
than 0.07 percent (that is, fewer than 7
of every 10,000 records) relate to
individuals for whom the EDB does not
include a SSN for the person. The EDB
might not include a SSN for an
individual if, for example, the person
lives in another country but is entitled
to Medicare benefits through his or her
spouse.)
The third relevant database that we
are proposing to use in our revised
match process is the MedPAR file.
Hospitals submit claims to Medicare for
inpatient services provided to Medicare
beneficiaries. These claims are
eventually accumulated in the MedPAR
database. It is important to note that the
MedPAR database does not contain
SSNs. The MedPAR database contains
one HICAN number for each and every
record of services provided to a
Medicare beneficiary who was admitted
to a Medicare-certified hospital or
skilled nursing facility. This database
allows us to calculate the number of
Medicare inpatient hospital days, which
we use in determining each hospital’s
DSH SSI fraction.
Utilizing the steps set forth below, we
are proposing to use these three
databases in a revised match process for
FY 2011 and subsequent fiscal years:
Step 1—Use SSNs to find any and all
relevant HICANs. Using the SSI
eligibility data file provided by SSA, we
are proposing to compare the individual
SSNs in that file to the SSNs contained
in the Medicare EDB. Each matched
SSN would then be ‘‘cross-walked’’
(within the EDB) to find any and all
HICANs associated with the
individual’s SSN. The resulting HICANs
would then be matched against those
HICANs contained in the MedPAR
claims data files. This process should
identify all relevant SSI records in
which a SSN is associated with an
individual who is simultaneously
enrolled in Medicare Part A and in the
SSI program.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Step 2—Utilize any and all Title II
numbers. In order to provide further
assurance that all of the Title II numbers
and HICANs for SSI-eligible individuals
have been identified, next we are
proposing to compare the complete list
of Title II numbers from the SSI data file
(up to 10 Title II numbers for any one
individual) to the list of HICANs
generated through Step 1 above. If the
SSI data file includes any Title II
numbers that were not already
identified in Step 1, the Title II number
will be included in our revised match
process and compared to any and all
HICANs in MedPAR. We note that by
including this second step (that is,
adding all Title II numbers not
previously identified by Step 1), we are
addressing the very small universe of
individuals for whom the EDB does not
include a SSN. If an individual is
entitled to SSI benefits and Medicare
benefits, the new format of the SSI
eligibility file will contain up to 10 Title
II numbers and, if they have not already
been captured, each of those numbers
will be included in our revised match
process. Even if an individual does not
have a SSN in the EDB, this second step
should ensure that our revised match
process will include that individual.
Step 3—Ensure consistency between
the HICANs in the EDB, Title II
numbers, and the HICANs in the
MedPAR file. The EDB stores the
beneficiary’s record at the most specific
level of detail. For example, if the
beneficiary’s Medicare eligibility was
originally based on a spouse’s earnings
history and the spouse subsequently
dies, the beneficiary would have two
HICANs. Both HICANs, which would
have the same root, but different BICs,
would be stored in the EDB. However,
the inpatient claim in the MedPAR file
will only have the individual’s HICAN
at a more general level of detail; in the
preceding example, the BIC would
identify the beneficiary only as a spouse
without specifying whether the spouse
(that is, the ‘‘primary’’ beneficiary) was
alive or deceased. This third step should
ensure consistency between the HICANs
from Step 1 and the Title II numbers
from Step 2 by ‘‘equating’’ (or
converting) the BIC identifiers to the
identifiers that are on the inpatient
claim that is included in the MedPAR
file. In addition, we are proposing that,
for any SSI-eligible beneficiary who is
receiving Medicare benefits based on his
or her own account but whose records
have not been matched already, we will
attempt to match the beneficiary’s
HICAN in the MedPAR file.
Specifically, we are proposing to simply
add an ‘‘A’’ to all the SSNs in the SSI
PO 00000
Frm 00154
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
eligibility data file so that, if that
individual was not captured by Steps 1
and 2 above (for whatever unlikely
reason) but MedPAR indicated that the
person had received Medicare services,
the individual would be included in the
data match process by this third step.
Step 4—Calculate the SSI fraction. We
are not proposing any changes with
respect to the final step in determining
the SSI fraction. To calculate the
numerator of the SSI fraction, CMS
would continue to sum a hospital’s
Medicare inpatient days in the acute
care part of the hospital (excluding
IPPS-exempt units such as rehabilitation
and psychiatric units) where the
Medicare beneficiary was
simultaneously entitled to SSI benefits.
To calculate the denominator, CMS
would continue to sum a hospital’s total
Medicare inpatient days in the acute
care part of the hospital.
c. Timing of the Match
One of the district court’s findings in
the Baystate decision was that CMS did
not use the latest available SSI
eligibility file to calculate the provider’s
SSI fractions. As a result, it might be
possible that if a beneficiary treated at
the hospital was later determined
retroactively to be SSI eligible or if a
suspension of the individual’s SSI
payments was later lifted, that inpatient
stay might not be included in the
numerator of the SSI fraction. We
believe that, in our recalculation of the
Baystate hospital’s SSI fractions and
DSH payments, retroactive SSI
eligibility determinations and the lifting
of SSI payment suspensions were not an
issue due to the long period of time that
elapsed between the provider’s 1993
through 1996 fiscal years and our use of
updated SSI eligibility data during our
completion of the revised match process
in 2009. However, we believe that
further consideration of the timing of
both the SSI eligibility information that
SSA provides to CMS and our proposed
revised match process for FY 2011 and
subsequent fiscal years is warranted.
At present, SSA provides an annual
file to CMS with SSI eligibility
information that is current through
March 31, or 6 months after the end of
the prior Federal fiscal year on
September 30 (70 FR 47278, 47440,
August 12, 2005). Based on this date, for
a hospital with an October 1 to
September 30 cost reporting period, the
SSI eligibility information we currently
use contains 6 to 18 months worth of
retroactive SSI eligibility determinations
and payment suspension closures—6
months from September (that is, the end
of the cost reporting period) and 18
months from October (that is, the
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
beginning of the cost reporting period).
The time lag between the close of a
hospital’s cost reporting period and the
date that CMS receives SSI eligibility
information could actually be longer or
shorter for some hospitals, depending
on the hospital’s specific cost reporting
period. We note that SSI fractions are
generally based on the Federal fiscal
year. However, under the regulations at
§ 412.106(b)(3), a hospital with a cost
reporting period that differs from the
Federal fiscal year may request a revised
SSI fraction that is based on its own cost
reporting period rather than the Federal
fiscal year. In such a case, we would
revise the hospital’s SSI fraction using
SSI and Medicare data derived from the
data match process for the two Federal
fiscal years that spanned the hospital’s
cost reporting period.
As we stated in the FY 2006 final
IPPS rule, we believe that
administrative finality with respect to
the calculation of a hospital’s SSI
fraction is important (70 FR 47440). We
continue to believe that it is important
to find an appropriate balance between
administrative finality (that is, the final
settlement of a hospital’s cost report)
and the inclusion of retroactive SSI
eligibility determinations and the lifting
of SSI payment suspensions by using
the best and latest available SSI
eligibility data at the time of cost report
settlement. Further, we believe it is
important to account for the time period
in which hospitals are allowed to
submit timely Medicare claims in order
to ensure that the point in time that we
perform the match process includes as
many timely submitted inpatient
hospital claims as are administratively
practicable.
In accordance with the regulations at
42 CFR 424.44 and the Medicare Claims
Processing Manual (Pub. L. 100–04),
Chapter 1, Section 70, a hospital must
generally file a claim by December 31 of
the following year (for services
furnished during the first 9 months of a
calendar year) and by December 31 of
the second following year (for services
provided during the last 3 months of the
calendar year). Therefore, Medicare
claims for hospital services furnished in
FY 2011 would have to be submitted no
later than December 31, 2012. We note
that section 6404 of the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act
(Pub. L. 111–148), as amended, recently
changed these deadlines to no more
than ‘‘1 calendar year after the date of
service’’ effective for services provided
on or after January 1, 2010.
Generally speaking, providers have a
financial incentive to submit fee-forservice claims as close as possible to the
date of the patient’s discharge, and
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
providers have no incentive to wait
until after the end of the fiscal year.
Thus, while conducting a data match
with MedPAR files that were updated 6
months after the end of the Federal
fiscal year may not capture all of a
provider’s Medicare inpatient claims,
we believe that, in large part, the
provider’s fee-for-service claims are
included in that MedPAR file. The same
may not be true for the ‘‘information
only’’ or ‘‘no pay’’ claims that hospitals
are required to submit to their fee-forservice contractor for Medicare
Advantage (MA) beneficiaries. Because
claims for MA beneficiaries are paid by
MA plans and not the fee-for-service
contractor, hospitals may not have the
same incentive to file these claims as
close as possible to the date of the
patient’s discharge.14 However, in
accordance with Transmittal 1396
(issued December 14, 2007) and
Transmittal 1695 (issued March 6,
2009), which changed the instructions
in the Medicare Claims Processing
Manual (Pub. L. 100–04), all IPPS
hospitals that do not qualify for IME
payments, direct GME payments, or
nursing and allied health (N&AH)
payments are required to submit
informational-only claims for all MA
inpatients to ensure that data for MA
beneficiaries is included in the SSI
fraction. Accordingly, we also are
considering changes to the timing of the
data match process to ensure that all of
a hospital’s MA claims are included in
the revised matching process given the
lack of incentives that exist to submit
these claims as soon as possible after the
time of the patient’s discharge.
In addition, in matching eligibility
records for Medicare beneficiaries and
SSI recipients to calculate the SSI
fractions for FY 2011 and future fiscal
years, we are also proposing to use more
recent SSI eligibility information from
SSA and a more updated version of
MedPAR that is likely to contain more
claims data. We currently use SSI
eligibility data and MedPAR claims data
that are updated 6 months after the
close of the Federal fiscal year. We are
proposing to use, for FY 2011 and
subsequent years, SSI eligibility data
14 Teaching hospitals have an incentive to submit
these claims because they receive an indirect
medical education payment. The claims are also
used for a teaching hospital’s direct medical
education payments. Non-teaching DSH hospitals
do not have the same direct incentives to submit
these claims but to the extent that the MA
beneficiary is also SSI eligible, it would be to the
hospital’s advantage to ensure these claims are
included in the match process. However,
nonteaching DSH hospitals are required to submit
MA claims for all MA beneficiaries, regardless of
whether the beneficiaries were eligible for SSI
benefits.
PO 00000
Frm 00155
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24005
files compiled by SSA and MedPAR
claims information that are updated 15
months after the close of each Federal
fiscal year. This proposal would more
closely align the timing of the match
process with the timing of our
requirements (described above) for the
timely submission of claims. For
example, to calculate the FY 2011 SSI
fractions, we would use the December
2012 update of the FY 2011 MedPAR
file (containing claims information for
patient discharges between October 1,
2010 and September 30, 2011), and a
December 2012 SSI eligibility file
(containing FY 2011 SSI eligibility data
updated through December 2012, with a
lag time relative to the Federal fiscal
year of between 15 and 27 months). We
expect that the FY 2011 SSI fractions
would be published around March 2013
and would be used to settle cost reports
for cost reporting periods that began in
FY 2011. In addition, we would
continue our practice of using each
hospital’s latest available SSI fraction in
determining IPPS interim payments
from the time that the SSI fractions are
published until the SSI fractions for the
next fiscal year are published.
Under current law as amended by
section 6404 of Public Law 111–148,
Medicare inpatient claims for FY 2011
can be submitted no later than 1
calendar year from the date of service or
by September 30, 2012, for claims with
a September 30, 2011 date of service.
Therefore, we believe that using the
version of MedPAR that is updated 15
months after the end of the fiscal year
would contain more accurate and
complete inpatient claims information,
as we would be using claims data from
3 months after the filing deadline for
claims with a date of service occurring
on the last day of the second preceding
fiscal year. Furthermore, a later update
of the SSI eligibility file would contain
more accurate eligibility information
and would account for all retroactive
changes in SSI eligibility and the lifting
of SSI payment suspensions through
that date.
The FY 2011 SSI fractions will be
used to determine the hospitals’
Medicare DSH payments for cost
reporting periods beginning in FY 2011
(that is, October 1, 2010 through
September 30, 2011). The proposed
timing of the data match for the SSI
fractions, effective for FY 2011, would
result in FY 2011 SSI fractions being
published around March 2013 and
would generally coincide with the final
settlement of cost reports for cost
reporting periods beginning in FY 2011.
We believe that, by calculating SSI
fractions on the basis of SSI eligibility
data and MedPAR claims data that are
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24006
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
updated 15 months after the end of the
Federal fiscal year, we would be using
the best data available to us, given the
deadlines for the submission and final
settlement of Medicare cost reports. Cost
reports must be submitted to the
Medicare fiscal intermediary or MAC no
later than 5 months after the end of the
provider’s cost reporting period; the
fiscal intermediary or MAC must make
a determination of cost report
acceptability within 30 days of receipt
of the provider’s cost report (42 CFR
413.24(f)(2)(i) and 413.24(f)(5)(iii)). In
accordance with the Medicare Financial
Manual (Pub. 100–06), Chapter 8,
Section 90, the fiscal intermediary or
MAC is expected to settle each cost
report that is not scheduled for audit
within 12 months of the contractor’s
acceptance of the cost report. We
believe that our proposed timing of the
data match would achieve an
appropriate balance between accounting
for additional retroactive SSI eligibility
determinations and the lifting of SSI
payment suspensions using all timely
submitted Part A inpatient claims, and
facilitating administrative finality
through the timely final settlement of
Medicare cost reports.
EXAMPLE OF TIMELINE TO CALCULATE FY 2011 SSI FRACTIONS UNDER CURRENT POLICY
Cost reports that
use the FY 2011
SSI ratios
Deadline for timely filing of claims
Cost reports beginning October 1,
2010 through
September 30,
2011.
MedPAR file used
SSI eligibility file
used
Cost reports normally accepted
Cost report final
settlement
December 2012
March 2012 update of FY 2011
MedPAR.
March 2012 update of FY 2011
SSI eligibility.
Generally between March
2012 and February 2013.
Generally between March
2013 and February 2014.
SSI fraction available
Summer 2012.
EXAMPLE OF TIMELINE TO CALCULATE FY 2011 SSI FRACTIONS UNDER PROPOSED RULE
Cost reports that
use the FY 2011
SSI ratios
Cost reports beginning October 1,
2010 through
September 30,
2011.
Deadline for timely
filing of claims
MedPAR file used
December 2012
December 2012
update of FY
2011 MedPAR.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
5. CMS Ruling
The CMS Administrator has prepared
a CMS Ruling that addresses three
Medicare DSH issues, including CMS’
process for matching Medicare and SSI
eligibility data and calculating
hospitals’ SSI fractions. With respect to
the data matching process issue, the
Ruling requires the Medicare
administrative appeals tribunal (that is,
the Administrator of CMS, the PRRB,
the fiscal intermediary hearing officer,
or the CMS reviewing official) to
remand each qualifying appeal to the
appropriate Medicare contractor. The
Ruling also explains how, on remand,
CMS and the contractor will recalculate
the provider’s DSH payment adjustment
and make any payment deemed owing.
The Ruling further provides that CMS
and the Medicare contractors will apply
the provisions of the Ruling, on the data
matching process issue (and two other
DSH issues, as applicable), in
calculating the DSH payment
adjustment for each hospital cost
reporting period where the contractor
has not yet final settled the provider’s
Medicare cost report through the
issuance of an initial notice of program
reimbursement (NPR) (42 CFR
405.1801(a) and 405.1803).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
SSI eligibility file
used
December 2012
update of FY
2011 SSI eligibility.
Cost reports
normally
accepted
Cost report final
settlement
Generally between
March 2012 and
February 2013.
Generally between
March 2013 and
February 2014.
More specifically, the Ruling provides
that, for qualifying appeals of the data
matching issue and for cost reports not
yet final settled by an initial NPR, CMS
will apply any new data matching
process that is adopted in the
forthcoming FY 2011 IPPS final rule for
each appeal that is subject to the Ruling.
The data matching process provisions of
the Ruling would apply to properly
pending appeals and open cost reports
for cost reporting periods beginning
prior to October 1, 2010 (that is those
preceding the effective date of the FY
2011 IPPS final rule).
The Ruling further states that, if a new
data matching process is not adopted in
the forthcoming FY 2011 IPPS final rule,
CMS would apply to claims subject to
the Ruling the same data matching
process as the agency used to
implement the Baystate decision by
recalculating that provider’s SSI
fractions.
6. Clarification of Language on Inclusion
of Medicare Advantage Days in the SSI
Fraction of the Medicare DSH
Calculation
In the FY 2005 IPPS final rule (69 FR
49099), we discussed in the preamble
our policy change to reflect the
inclusion of the days associated with
PO 00000
Frm 00156
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
SSI fraction
available
Spring 2013.
Medicare + Choice (now Medicare
Advantage (MA)) beneficiaries under
Medicare Part C in the SSI fraction of
the DSH calculation. In that rule, we
indicated that we were revising the
regulation text at § 412.106(b)(2)(i) to
incorporate this policy. However, we
inadvertently did not make a change in
the regulation text to conform to the
preamble language. We also
inadvertently did not propose to change
§ 412.106(b)(2)(iii) in the FY 2005 final
rule, although we intended to do so.
Accordingly, in the FY 2007 IPPS rule
(72 FR 47384), we made a technical
correction to amend the regulations at
§ 412.106(b)(2)(i) and to
§ 412.106(b)(2)(iii) to make them
consistent with the preamble language
of the FY 2005 IPPS final rule and to
conform to the policy implemented in
that rule. Section 412.106(b)(2)(i) of the
regulations discusses the numerator of
the SSI fraction of the Medicare
disproportionate patient percentage
(DPP) calculation, while
§ 412.106(b)(2)(iii) of the regulations
discusses the denominator of the SSI
fraction of the Medicare DPP.
We are aware that there might be
some confusion about our policy to
include MA days in the SSI fraction,
specifically regarding whether we have
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
implied that MA beneficiaries are not
actually ‘‘entitled to receive benefits
under Part A’’ by using the word ‘‘or’’ in
§ 412.106(b)(2)(i)(B) and § 412.106
(b)(2)(iii)(B) with respect to MA days.
We note that in the FY 2005 final rule,
we stated that we believed that
Medicare + Choice (now MA)
beneficiaries are patients who are
entitled to benefits under Medicare Part
A. With respect to the change to the
regulatory text that we intended to make
in the FY 2005 IPPS final rule, we stated
‘‘* * * we are adopting a policy to
include patient days for M+C
beneficiaries in the Medicare fraction’’
(69 FR 49099) (emphasis added). In
order to further clarify our policy that
patients days associated with MA
beneficiaries are to be included in the
SSI fraction because they are still
entitled to benefits under Medicare Part
A, we are proposing to replace the word
‘‘or’’ with the word ‘‘including’’ in
§ 412.106(b)(2)(i)(B) and § 412.106
(b)(2)(iii)(B).
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
H. Payments for Direct Graduate
Medical Education (GME) (§ 413.75)
1. Background
Under section 1886(a)(4) of the Act,
costs of approved educational activities
are excluded from the operating costs of
hospital inpatient services. Section
1886(h) of the Act, as implemented in
regulations at § 413.75 through § 413.83,
establishes a methodology for
determining payments to hospitals for
the direct costs of approved GME
programs. Section 1886(h)(2) of the Act
sets forth a methodology for the
determination of a hospital-specific,
base-period per resident amount (PRA)
that is calculated by dividing a
hospital’s allowable direct 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
of October 1, 1983, through September
30, 1984). Medicare direct GME
payments are calculated by multiplying
the PRA by the weighted number of fulltime equivalent (FTE) residents working
in all areas of the hospital complex (and
nonhospital sites, when applicable), and
the hospital’s Medicare share of total
inpatient days. The base year PRA is
updated annually for inflation.
Hospitals may receive direct GME and
IME payments for residents in
‘‘approved medical residency training
programs.’’ Section 1886(h)(5)(A) of the
Act defines an ‘‘approved medical
residency training program’’ as ‘‘a
residency or other postgraduate medical
training program participation in which
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
may be counted toward certification in
a specialty or subspecialty and includes
formal postgraduate training programs
in geriatric medicine approved by the
Secretary.’’ Section 1886(h)(4)(F) of the
Act established a limit on the number of
allopathic and osteopathic FTE
residents that a hospital may include in
its FTE resident count for purposes of
calculating direct GME payments. For
most hospitals, the limit, or cap, is the
unweighted number of allopathic and
osteopathic FTE residents training in
the hospital’s most recent cost reporting
period ending on or before December
31, 1996.
2. Identifying ‘‘Approved Medical
Residency Programs’’
Despite the fact that current policies
regarding the counting of FTE residents
for IME and direct GME purposes have
been in effect since October 1985, we
continue to receive questions as to
whether certain residents are training in
approved medical residency programs,
and whether these residents should be
included in the Medicare direct GME
and IME FTE counts. Although the
fundamental rules defining an approved
medical residency training program
seem straightforward, some confusion
apparently exists regarding whether
certain trainees in a teaching hospital
should be included in the FTE count for
IME and direct GME purposes, or
whether certain trainees should be
treated as physicians and should instead
bill for their services under Medicare
Part B. These questions arise most often
with regard to subspecialty training and
‘‘fellows.’’ It is important for hospitals to
understand when each of these types of
payment applies.
a. Residents in Approved Medical
Residency Programs
As stated earlier, section
1886(h)(5)(A) of the Act defines an
‘‘approved medical residency training
program’’ as ‘‘a residency or other
postgraduate medical training program
participation in which may be counted
toward certification in a specialty or
subspecialty and includes formal
postgraduate training programs in
geriatric medicine approved by the
Secretary.’’ The regulations at
§ 413.75(b) define an ‘‘approved medical
residency program’’ as a program that
meets one of the following criteria
(emphasis added):
(1) Is approved by one of the national
organizations listed in § 415.152 of the
regulations.
(2) May count towards certification of
the participant in a specialty or
subspecialty listed in the current edition
of either of the following publications:
PO 00000
Frm 00157
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24007
(i) The Directory of Graduate Medical
Education Programs published by the
American Medical Association; or
(ii) The Annual Report and Reference
Handbook published by the American
Board of Medical Specialties.
(3) Is approved by the Accreditation
Council for Graduate Medical Education
(ACGME) as a fellowship program in
geriatric medicine.
(4) Is a program that would be
accredited except for the accrediting
agency’s reliance upon an accreditation
standard that requires an entity to
perform an induced abortion or require,
provide, or refer for training in the
performance of induced abortions, or
make arrangements for such training,
regardless of whether the standard
provides exceptions or exemptions.
The regulations at § 415.152 define an
‘‘approved graduate medical education
program’’ as a residency program
approved by one of the following
national organizations (or their
predecessors): The Accreditation
Council for Graduate Medical Education
(ACGME) of the American Medical
Association, the American Osteopathic
Association (AOA), the Commission on
Dental Accreditation (CODA) of the
American Dental Association, and the
Council on Podiatric Medical Education
(CPME) of the American Podiatric
Medical Association. The statutory basis
for this regulation is at section
1861(b)(6) of the Act, which cites these
accrediting bodies for residency
programs. Thus, in general, under
§ 413.75(b), an ‘‘approved’’ program can
be a program that is accredited by one
of these national organizations, or one
that leads toward board certification by
the American Board of Medical
Specialties (ABMS). In the September
29, 1989 final rule (54 FR 40295), we
explained that, in order to reconcile the
two statutory definitions of approved
programs at sections 1861(b)(6) and
1886(h)(5)(A) of the Act, we did not
limit our regulatory definition of
‘‘approved medical residency program’’
to one that may count toward
certification in a specialty, but added
that a program is also ‘‘approved’’ for
purposes of IME and direct GME if it is
approved by one of the national
accrediting bodies. Furthermore, we
understood that, especially with respect
to subspecialty training, there
historically were some formal programs
for which none of the listed national
accrediting bodies had established
standards. However, the ABMS had
established a national board
examination for some of those
unaccredited programs and,
consequently, those programs do count
toward certification. Accordingly, such
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24008
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
programs also meet the definition of an
‘‘approved medical residency training
program.’’
b. Determining Whether an Individual Is
a Resident or a Physician
The statute and the regulations (in at
least two places in the teaching context)
define the term ‘‘resident.’’ Section
1861(b)(6) of the Act refers to services
provided in a hospital by an ‘‘intern or
resident-in-training under a teaching
program approved’’ by one of the listed
accrediting bodies for residency
programs. In addition, section
1886(h)(5)(I) of the Act states that the
term ‘‘resident’’ includes ‘‘an intern or
other participant in an approved
medical residency training program.’’
The regulations at § 413.75(b) state that
the term resident means ‘‘an intern,
resident, or fellow who participates in
an approved medical residency
program, including programs in
osteopathy, dentistry, and podiatry, as
required in order to become certified by
the appropriate specialty board.’’
As discussed above, an ‘‘approved’’
program is one that is accredited by one
of the listed national organizations, or
one that may count towards board
certification. Generally, residency
programs today, whether they are core
or subspecialty programs, are both
accredited, and lead toward board
certification through an explicit board
examination for that field. Thus, in the
typical instance, a resident is accepted
into an accredited program in a
particular specialty, completes that
program over the course of what is
typically 3 to 5 years, and then qualifies
to take the board certifying examination
in the particular specialty of that
program. This resident may or may not
train in an additional accredited
subspecialty program, which would
typically last for 1 to 3 years, and which
would also lead to board certification
through an additional board certifying
examination which the individual
would be qualified to take upon
completion.
We receive questions from time to
time regarding whether individuals are
considered to be trainees in approved
programs or whether they are
considered to be physicians and should
bill accordingly. These questions
frequently involve programs of further
training that certain senior and junior
faculty at hospitals, typically at large
academic medical centers, undertake on
their own, not under the auspices of any
accrediting body, and in an area of
practice for which there is no board
certification. Therefore, there is no
actual standardized curriculum or
formally organized ‘‘program’’ in which
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
the individual trainee is participating.
Another type of trainee about which we
have received questions is one that has
completed an accredited program in a
certain specialty, but subsequently
participates in additional training in
that specialty that he or she could have
participated in while still within the
accredited program. Sometimes this
individual may even train with
residents who are actually still training
in that accredited program (for example,
an individual who has completed a
dermatology residency may choose to
do additional training with PGY4
dermatology residents). In these
scenarios, in order to decide whether an
individual is considered a resident or a
physician for purposes of Medicare
payment, the pertinent questions are
whether—
(1) The individual actually needs the
training in order to meet board
certification requirements in that
specialty; and
(2) Whether the individual is formally
participating in an organized,
standardized, structured course of
study.
With regard to the junior faculty who
are ‘‘training’’ with senior faculty to
learn highly specialized skills, we
believe that individuals participating in
a course of training that one or more
senior physicians creates absent the
involvement and approval of an
accrediting body, and for which there is
no specific existing board certification
examination, should not be considered
‘‘residents’’ or counted for IME and
direct GME purposes. Similarly,
individuals that already completed an
accredited residency program, but
subsequently participate in additional
training in that same specialty that they
could have participated in while still
within that accredited program, should
also not be considered ‘‘residents’’ or be
included in the IME and direct GME
count. This is because these individuals
have already completed accredited
residency programs in a particular
specialty or subspecialty, and do not
need to complete the additional training
in order to meet board certification
requirements in that field in which they
continue to ‘‘train.’’ The definition of
‘‘resident’’ at § 413.75(b) is ‘‘an intern,
resident, or fellow who participates in
an approved medical residency
program, including programs in
osteopathy, dentistry, and podiatry, as
required in order to become certified by
the appropriate specialty board’’
(emphasis added). Accordingly, the
individuals described in the scenarios
above do not meet the definition of
‘‘resident’’ at § 413.75(b) for IME and
direct GME purposes. Instead, these
PO 00000
Frm 00158
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
individuals should be treated and
receive payment as physicians.
As we explained in the September 29,
1989 Federal Register rule: ‘‘The costs
relating to patient care services of
licensed physicians who are classified
as ‘‘fellows’’ but who are not in an
identifiable formal program leading to
certification as defined in section
1886(h)(5) of the Act but remain at a
teaching hospital/medical school
complex to enhance their expertise in a
field of study are payable on a Part B
reasonable charge basis [now under the
Medicare physician fee schedule] as
physicians’ services’’ (54 FR 40295).
Similarly, in the Provider
Reimbursement Manual, Part I, section
2405.3.F.2, we state, ‘‘Intermediaries
must not count an individual in the
indirect medical education adjustment
if * * * [A]n individual designated as
a ‘‘fellow’’ has elected to remain at a
teaching hospital/university complex
for additional work to gain expertise in
a particular field but is no longer in a
formally organized program to fulfill
certification requirements. The services
of such an individual are generally
covered as physicians’ services payable
on a reasonable charge basis’’ (emphasis
added). (Note: Although we used the
term ‘‘fellow,’’ which is defined
synonymously with ‘‘resident’’ in the
regulations at § 413.75, in these
paragraphs in the September 29, 1989
Federal Register and in the PRM–I, by
stating that such ‘‘fellows’’ are not in
identifiable, formally organized
programs and their services should be
billed under Part B as physician
services, we clearly were indicating that
these ‘‘fellows’’ are licensed physicians,
not residents, and should not be
included in the IME and direct GME
FTE counts. Perhaps ‘‘junior faculty’’
would have been a more apt
characterization of these individuals.)
The passage from the September 29,
1989 Federal Register also mentions an
‘‘identifiable formal program leading to
certification as defined in section
1886(h)(5) of the Act’’ which refers to
the statutory definition of ‘‘approved
medical residency program.’’ The word
‘‘approved’’ connotes formality; a
planned, structured course of study
with a curriculum based on national
(rather than individual physician or
hospital) standards with a standardized
outcome based on standardized
evaluations. Since the early days of
Medicare, prior to the enactment of
section 1886(h) of the Act, when
hospitals received payment on a
reasonable cost basis for ‘‘approved
educational activities,’’ we defined such
activities as ‘‘formally organized or
planned programs of study operated or
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
supported by an institution, as
distinguished from ‘on-the-job,’
‘inservice,’ or similar work-learning
programs’’ (emphasis added) (PRM–I,
section 402.1). We believe the education
that junior faculty receive when
working closely with senior faculty to
gain highly specialized skills is more
appropriately characterized as on-thejob, or inservice training, rather than
training in an ‘‘approved medical
residency program.’’
In order for the training to be
considered an ‘‘approved medical
residency program,’’ the training must
prepare the individual for certification
in the particular specialty or
subspecialty in which the individual is
training. The mere possibility that the
training could be construed as leading
toward or counting toward certification
in some existing board examination is
insufficient. For example, an individual
who is enrolled and participating in a
two year accredited subspecialty
program in allergy and immunology
and, as part of that program, completes
an elective in allergic reactions to insect
stings is considered a resident during
that elective, and may be included in
the IME and direct GME FTE count
(assuming all other requirements are
met). However, if, after completion of
the 2-year allergy and immunology
subspecialty program, this individual
decides to remain at the teaching
hospital for a year to shadow a
physician who has unique expertise in
allergic reactions to insect stings, this
individual would not be considered a
resident, nor would this training be
considered an approved program,
because this individual is not formally
enrolled in a planned, structured,
standardized course of study, nor is this
year of training required for any
individual to qualify to take the board
examination in allergy and
immunology. This individual already
completed the 2-year subspecialty
program, and therefore, the extra year
spent studying allergic reactions to
insect stings is extraneous. Accordingly,
this individual would not be viewed as
a resident participating in an approved
medical residency training program.
Rather, this individual is considered a
physician and should bill Medicare for
services furnished under the physician
fee schedule.
c. Formal Enrollment and Participation
in a Program
We understand that the participation
of individuals in an approved medical
residency program under which they
would be considered residents as
defined at § 413.75 is marked by a
formal application, acceptance, and
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
enrollment process. We believe that in
order for an individual to be considered
a resident for purposes of inclusion in
the IME and direct GME counts,
whether the individual is a graduate of
an allopathic medical school, an
osteopathic medical school, or a school
of podiatry or dentistry, the individual
must be:
(1) Formally accepted and enrolled in
the training program, and
(2) Fully participating in that training
(unless there is a documented
arrangement for the resident to work
part time).
In general, we would expect formal
acceptance to include an application
process (for example, the national
residency match process), and an
enrollment process which would
include letters or other official
notifications from the hospital or
program sponsor regarding the
resident’s acceptance to train in a
particular program. We would also
expect the resident to have an
employment contract with the
institution(s) sponsoring the program
and/or the institution(s) in which he or
she is training. A hospital must be able
to document that the individual’s
participation in the particular course of
training represents a definitive (not
hypothetical) path for that individual’s
certification, and that satisfactory
completion of such training would
fulfill all required elements in order for
the individual to qualify to take a
specific board examination.
In order to make these rules clearer
for the future, we are proposing to revise
the definition of ‘‘resident’’ to specify
that the trainee must be ‘‘formally
accepted and enrolled’’ in the approved
program in order to be considered a
resident for IME and direct GME
purposes. Specifically, we are proposing
to revise the definition of ‘‘resident’’ at
§ 413.75(b) to mean ‘‘an intern, resident,
or fellow who is formally accepted,
enrolled, and participating in an
approved medical residency program,
including programs in osteopathy,
dentistry, and podiatry, as required in
order to become certified by the
appropriate specialty board.’’ We also
are proposing to make a similar
conforming change to the definition of
‘‘primary care resident’’ at § 413.75(b).
This change in the definitions of
‘‘resident’’ and ‘‘primary care resident’’
would be effective for IME and direct
GME for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2010.
In summary, we are proposing to
clarify that individuals participating in
a specialized course of training created
by a senior physician, and not under the
auspices of a national accrediting body,
PO 00000
Frm 00159
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24009
and for which there is no explicit
existing board certification examination,
should not be counted for IME and
direct GME purposes. Such individuals
should be treated as physicians, and
their services should be billed to
Medicare for payment as physicians’
services. If an individual has already
successfully completed at least one
residency program and has met the
requirements to be board eligible in a
specialty (regardless of whether the
individual has passed the board
examination for that specialty), and is
engaged in subsequent training that will
not provide additional knowledge or
skills that could be applied for board
certification in a subspecialty, the
individual should be treated and bill for
services provided as a physician. We
also are proposing to revise the
definition of ‘‘resident’’ at § 413.75(b) to
mean ‘‘an intern, resident, or fellow who
is formally accepted, enrolled, and
participating in an approved medical
residency program, including programs
in osteopathy, dentistry, and podiatry,
as required in order to become certified
by the appropriate specialty board.’’ We
are proposing to make a conforming
change to the definition of ‘‘primary care
resident’’ to mean ‘‘a resident who is
formally accepted, enrolled, and
participating in an approved medical
residency training program in family
medicine, general internal medicine,
general pediatrics, preventive medicine,
geriatric medicine or osteopathic
general practice.’’ This change in the
definitions of ‘‘resident’’ and ‘‘primary
care resident’’ would be effective for
IME and direct GME for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2010.
3. Electronic Submission of Affiliation
Agreements
Sections 1886(h)(4)(F) and
1886(d)(5)(B)(v) of the Act establish
limits on the number of allopathic and
osteopathic FTE residents that hospitals
may count for purposes of calculating
direct GME payments and the IME
adjustment. In addition, under the
authority granted by section
1886(h)(4)(H)(ii) of the Act, the
Secretary issued regulations on May 12,
1998 (63 FR 26358) to allow institutions
that are members of the same Medicare
GME affiliated group to elect to apply
their direct GME and IME FTE resident
caps based on the aggregate cap of all
hospitals that are part of a Medicare
GME affiliation group. Under those
regulations, specified at § 413.79(f) for
direct GME and at § 412.105(f)(1)(vi) for
IME, hospitals that are part of the same
Medicare GME affiliated group are
permitted to adjust each hospital’s caps
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
to reflect the rotation of residents among
affiliated hospitals during an academic
year. Under § 413.75(b), a Medicare
GME affiliated group may be formed by
two or more hospitals if: (1) The
hospitals are located in the same urban
or rural area or in a contiguous area and
have a shared rotational arrangement as
specified at § 413.79(f)(2); (2) the
hospitals are not located in the same or
in a contiguous area, but have a shared
rotational arrangement and they are
jointly listed as the sponsor, primary
clinical site, or major participating
institution for one or more programs as
these terms are used in the most recent
publication of the Graduate Medical
Education Directory, or as the sponsor
or is listed under ‘‘affiliations and
outside rotations’’ for one or more
programs in Opportunities, Directory of
Osteopathic Post-Doctoral Education
Programs; or (3) effective beginning July
1, 2003, two or more hospitals are under
common ownership and have a shared
rotational arrangement under
§ 413.79(f)(2).
The existing regulations at
§ 413.79(f)(1) specify that each hospital
in a Medicare GME affiliated group
must submit a Medicare GME affiliation
agreement (as defined under § 413.75(b))
to the CMS fiscal intermediary or MAC
servicing the hospital and send a copy
of the agreement to CMS’ Central Office
no later than July 1 of the residency
program year during which the
Medicare GME affiliation agreement
will be in effect. For example, in order
for a hospital to receive a temporary
adjustment to its FTE resident caps to
reflect participation in a Medicare GME
affiliated group for the academic year
beginning July 1, 2009, through June 30,
2010, the hospital in the affiliated group
had to submit a Medicare GME
affiliation agreement to the fiscal
intermediary or MAC servicing the
hospital and send a copy of the
agreement to CMS’ Central Office no
later than July 1, 2009.
Over the last several years, we have
received numerous inquiries regarding
the possibility of submitting the
Medicare GME affiliation agreement
electronically. To date, CMS has only
accepted signed hard copies of Medicare
GME affiliation agreements that are
received through the mail. Facsimile
(FAX) and other electronic submissions
of affiliation agreements have not been
acceptable means of transmission of
affiliation agreements to CMS Central
Office in order for a hospital to meet the
requirements of §§ 413.79(f) and
412.105(f)(1)(vi).
The increasing frequency of these
inquiries and our concerns regarding
environmental and paperwork reduction
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
have prompted us to reconsider our
procedure for hospitals to submit
Medicare GME affiliation agreements to
the CMS Central Office. Accordingly,
we are proposing to change our policy
to provide for electronic submission of
the affiliation agreement that is required
to be sent to the CMS Central Office.
This proposal would not affect the
authority of the fiscal intermediary or
MAC to continue to specify its
requirements for submission for
hospitals in its servicing area.
We are proposing an electronic
submission process that would consist
of either an e-mail mailbox or a Web site
where hospitals would submit their
Medicare GME affiliation agreements to
the CMS Central Office. As part of this
process, a copy of the Medicare GME
affiliation agreement would need to be
received through the electronic system
no later than 11:59 p.m. on July 1 of
each academic year. We are proposing
that the electronic affiliation agreement
would need to be submitted either as a
scanned copy or a Printer-Friendly
Display (PDF) version of that hard copy
agreement; we are proposing not to
accept an agreement in any electronic
format that could be subject to
manipulation. The scanned and/or PDF
format will enable CMS to ensure that
the agreements are signed and dated as
required in the regulations at § 413.75.
We believe that allowing an electronic
submission of the affiliation agreement
to the CMS Central Office would assist
us in more effectively tracking the
groups of hospitals that affiliate as well
as the numbers of FTE cap slots that are
being transferred within those groups.
In addition, we believe an electronic
submission process would minimize the
paperwork burden for hospitals.
I. Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist
(CRNA) Services Furnished in Rural
Hospitals and CAHs
Section 2312 of the Deficit Reduction
Act of 1984 (Pub. L. 98–369) provided
for reimbursement to hospitals on a
reasonable cost basis for the costs that
hospitals incur in connection with the
services of certified registered nurse
anesthetists (CRNAs). Section 2312(c)
provided that pass-through of CRNA
costs was effective for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
1984, and before October 1, 1987.
Section 9320 of the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1986 (Pub. L. 99–
509) (which established a fee schedule
for the services of nurse anesthetists)
amended section 2312(c) of Public Law
98–369 by extending the CRNA passthrough provision through cost
reporting periods beginning before
January 1, 1989. In addition, Public Law
PO 00000
Frm 00160
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
99–509 amended section 1861 of the Act
to add a new subsection (bb), which
provides that CRNA services include
anesthesia services and related care
furnished by a CRNA. Section 608 of the
Family Support Act of 1988 (Pub. L.
100–485) extended pass-through
payments for CRNA services through
1991 and amended section 9320 of
Public Law 99–509 by including
language referring to eligibility for passthrough payments for CRNA services if
the facility is ‘‘* * * a hospital located
in a rural area (as defined for purposes
of section 1886(d) of the Social Security
Act) * * *.’’ Reasonable cost-based
payment for CRNA services was
extended indefinitely by section 6132 of
the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act
of 1989 (Pub. L. 101–239).
Section 1886(d)(2)(D) of the Act
defines ‘‘rural’’ as any area outside an
urban area. This definition of ‘‘rural’’
was in effect when Public Law 100–485
was implemented. In 1999, the Balanced
Budget Refinement Act (Pub. L. 106–
113) amended section 1886(d)(8) of the
Act by adding a new subparagraph (E),
which permits a hospital physically
located in an urban area to apply for
reclassification to be treated as rural. In
addition, Public Law 106–113 made a
corresponding change to section
1820(c)(2)(B)(i) of the Act, which
specifies the location requirements for
CAH designation, by adding the phrase
‘‘or is treated as being located in a rural
area pursuant to section 1886(d)(8)(E).’’
The regulations implementing passthrough payments for anesthesia
services and related care furnished by
qualified nonphysician anesthetists
employed by a hospital or CAH,
including CRNAs, are located at
§ 412.113(c). Section 412.113(c)(2)(i)(A)
specifies the location requirement for
facilities that furnish these services and
are eligible to be paid based on
reasonable cost for the services. The
regulations require that the hospital or
CAH be located in a rural area as
defined at § 412.62(f) and not be deemed
to be located in an urban area under the
provisions of § 412.64(b)(3). The
regulations at § 412.62(f) mirror section
1886(d)(2)(D) of the Act and define a
rural area as ‘‘* * * any area outside an
urban area.’’ The regulations at
§ 412.64(b)(3) implement section
1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act, also known as
the ‘‘Lugar’’ provision, which requires a
hospital located in a rural county
adjacent to one or more urban areas to
be treated as being located in the urban
metropolitan statistical area to which
the greatest number of workers in the
county commute.
Under existing regulations, neither
CAHs/hospitals that have reclassified
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
from urban to rural under the
regulations at § 412.103 nor CAHs/
hospitals located in Lugar counties are
eligible to receive pass-through
payments for anesthesia services and
related care furnished by qualified
nonphysician anesthetists. We believe
that because the statute, as revised by
section 608 of Public Law 100–485,
allows for reasonable cost payments for
CRNA services if the facility is a
hospital located in a rural area as
defined for purposes of section 1886(d)
of the Act, it is appropriate for us to
make the regulations consistent by
permitting urban hospitals that have
been reclassified as rural to qualify for
these payments. Therefore, we are
proposing to revise § 412.113(c)(2)(i)(A)
to state that effective for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2010, CAHs and hospitals that have
reclassified pursuant to section
1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act and § 412.103 of
the regulations are also rural for
purposes of section 1886(d) of the Act
and, therefore, are eligible to be paid
based on reasonable cost for anesthesia
services and related care furnished by a
qualified nonphysician anesthetist.
We are not proposing to change our
regulations to permit Lugar facilities to
be paid based on reasonable cost for
anesthesia services and related care
furnished by qualified nonphysician
anesthetists. As noted above, in order to
be paid based on reasonable cost for
anesthesia services and related care
furnished by a qualified nonphysician
anesthetist, a hospital or CAH must be
considered rural for purposes of section
1886(d) of the Act. Lugar facilities
(facilities that have been reclassified
under §§ 412.63(b)(3) and 412.64(b)(3))
are considered urban for purposes of
section 1886(d) of the Act. As a result,
we do not believe it would be consistent
with the statute and our regulations to
permit these facilities to be paid on a
reasonable cost basis for anesthesia
services and related care furnished by
qualified nonphysician anesthetists.
J. Rural Community Hospital
Demonstration Program
Section 410A(a) of Public Law 108–
173 required the Secretary to establish
a demonstration program to test the
feasibility and advisability of
establishing ‘‘rural community
hospitals’’ to furnish covered inpatient
hospital services to Medicare
beneficiaries. The demonstration pays
rural community hospitals for such
services under a cost-based
methodology for Medicare payment
purposes for covered inpatient hospital
services furnished to Medicare
beneficiaries. A rural community
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
hospital, as defined in section
410A(f)(1), is a hospital that—
• Is located in a rural area (as defined
in section 1886(d)(2)(D) of the Act) or is
treated as being located in a rural area
under section 1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act;
• Has fewer than 51 beds (excluding
beds in a distinct part psychiatric or
rehabilitation unit) as reported in its
most recent cost report;
• Provides 24-hour emergency care
services; and
• Is not designated or eligible for
designation as a CAH under section
1820 of the Act.
Section 410A(a)(4) of Public Law 108–
173 (MMA) specified that the Secretary
was to select for participation no more
than 15 rural community hospitals in
rural areas of States that the Secretary
identified as having low population
densities. Using 2002 data from the U.S.
Census Bureau, we identified the 10
States with the lowest population
density in which rural community
hospitals were to be located in order to
participate in the demonstration:
Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Nebraska,
Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota,
South Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming.
(Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Statistical
Abstract of the United States: 2003).
CMS originally solicited applicants
for the demonstration in May 2004; 13
hospitals began participation with cost
report years beginning on or after
October 1, 2004. (Four of these 13
hospitals withdrew from the program
and became CAHs). In a notice
published in the Federal Register on
February 6, 2008 (73 FR 6971), we
announced a solicitation for up to 6
additional hospitals to participate in the
demonstration program. Four additional
hospitals were selected to participate
under this solicitation. These four
additional hospitals began under the
demonstration payment methodology
with the hospital’s first cost reporting
period starting on or after July 1, 2008.
Three hospitals (2 of the hospitals were
among the 13 hospitals that originally
participated in the demonstration and 1
of the hospitals was among the 4
hospitals that began the demonstration
in 2008) withdrew from the
demonstration during CY 2009. (Two of
these hospitals indicated that they will
be paid more for Medicare inpatient
services under the rebasing allowed
under the SCH methodology allowed by
the Medicare Improvement for Patients
and Providers Act of 2008 (Pub. L. 110–
275). The other hospital restructured to
become a CAH.) There are currently 10
hospitals participating in the
demonstration.
Section 410A(a)(5) of Public Law 108–
173 required a 5-year demonstration
PO 00000
Frm 00161
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24011
period of participation. For the seven
currently participating hospitals that
began the demonstration during FY
2005, the demonstration was scheduled
to end for each of these hospitals on the
last day of its cost reporting period that
ends in FY 2010. The end of the
participation for the three participating
hospitals that began the demonstration
in CY 2008 was scheduled to be
September 30, 2010. A 5-year extension
of the demonstration was mandated in
the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act (PPACA, Pub. L. 111–148). We
note that this proposed rule does not
address the relevant changes mandated
by Public Law 111–148. Public Law
111–148 does affect our proposed FY
2011 policy with regard to the rural
community hospital demonstration.
However, we will address that provision
of Public Law 111–148 and any revised
policy proposals in a separate
rulemaking document in the Federal
Register.
Section 410A of Public Law 108–173
required that, ‘‘in conducting the
demonstration program under this
section, the Secretary shall ensure that
the aggregate payments made by the
Secretary do not exceed the amount
which the Secretary would have paid if
the demonstration program under this
section was not implemented.’’ This
requirement is commonly referred to as
‘‘budget neutrality.’’
Generally, when CMS implements a
demonstration program on a budget
neutral basis, the demonstration
program is budget neutral in its own
terms; in other words, the aggregate
payments to the participating hospitals
do not exceed the amount that would be
paid to those same hospitals in the
absence of the demonstration program.
Typically, this form of budget neutrality
is viable when, by changing payments
or aligning incentives to improve overall
efficiency, or both, a demonstration
program may reduce the use of some
services or eliminate the need for others,
resulting in reduced expenditures for
the demonstration program’s
participants. These reduced
expenditures offset increased payments
elsewhere under the demonstration
program, thus ensuring that the
demonstration program as a whole is
budget neutral or yields savings.
However, the small scale of this
demonstration program, in conjunction
with the payment methodology, makes
it extremely unlikely that this
demonstration program could be viable
under the usual form of budget
neutrality. Specifically, cost-based
payments to participating small rural
hospitals are likely to increase Medicare
outlays without producing any
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24012
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
offsetting reduction in Medicare
expenditures elsewhere. Therefore, a
rural community hospital’s
participation in this demonstration
program is unlikely to yield benefits to
the participant if budget neutrality were
to be implemented by reducing other
payments for these same hospitals.
In the past six IPPS final regulations,
spanning the period for which the
demonstration has been implemented,
we have adjusted the national inpatient
PPS rates by an amount sufficient to
account for the added costs of this
demonstration program, thus applying
budget neutrality across the payment
system as a whole rather than merely
across the participants in this
demonstration program. As we
discussed in the FY 2005, FY 2006, FY
2007, FY 2008, FY 2009, and FY 2010
IPPS final rules (69 FR 49183; 70 FR
47462; 71 FR 48100; 72 FR 47392; 73 FR
48670; and 74 FR 43922), we believe
that the language of the statutory budget
neutrality requirements permits the
agency to implement the budget
neutrality provision in this manner.
In this proposed rule, in order to
ensure that the demonstration in FY
2007 is budget neutral, we are proposing
to incorporate a component into the
adjustment factor to the FY 2011
national IPPS rates that would offset the
amount by which the costs of the
demonstration program, as indicated by
settled cost reports beginning in FY
2007 for hospitals participating in the
demonstration during FY 2007,
exceeded the amount that was identified
in the FY 2007 final rule as the budget
neutrality offset for FY 2007.
Specifically, we are proposing the
following methodology: (1) Calculate
the FY 2007 costs of the demonstration
program according to the settled cost
reports that began in FY 2007 for the
then participating hospitals (which
represent the third year in the
demonstration for each of the then
participating hospitals); (2) Subtract the
amount that was offset by the budget
neutrality adjustment for FY 2007
($9,197,870) from the costs of the
demonstration in FY 2007 as calculated
in step 1; and (3) Calculate an
adjustment factor for the standardized
amount for FY 2011 based on the dollar
amount calculated in step 2 of this
proposed methodology. This factor
would represent the component of the
proposed overall budget neutrality offset
amount for FY 2011 that accounts for
the difference between the cost of the
demonstration in FY 2007 and the
amount of the budget neutrality
adjustment published in the FY 2007
final rule.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
With respect to the first step of this
proposed methodology, we note that we
are proposing to use settled cost reports
beginning in FY 2007 for hospitals
participating in the demonstration
during FY 2007 because we believe that
these settled cost reports correspond
most accurately to FY 2007 and because
all such costs reports also began in FY
2007. Therefore, we believe they
correctly represent FY 2007 inpatient
costs for the demonstration during that
period. In addition, in the process of
making adjustments comparing the
demonstration’s costs to the amounts
estimated annually for the budget
neutrality offset over the
demonstration’s entire period of
performance, the cost amounts from
these hospitals’ cost reports correspond
most precisely to FY 2007. In addition,
the settlement process for the
demonstration hospitals’ third year cost
reports, that is, cost reporting periods
starting in FY 2007, has experienced a
delay. Therefore, for this FY 2011 IPPS
proposed rule, we are unable to
calculate the costs of the demonstration
corresponding to FY 2007 and as a
result are unable to propose the specific
numeric adjustment that would be
applied to the national IPPS rates.
However, we expect cost reports
beginning in FY 2007 for hospitals that
participated in the demonstration
during FY 2007 to be settled before the
FY 2011 IPPS final rule is published.
Therefore, for the FY 2011 IPPS final
rule, we will be able to calculate the
amount by which the costs
corresponding to FY 2007 exceeded the
amount offset by the budget neutrality
adjustment for FY 2007.
V. Proposed Changes to the IPPS for
Capital-Related Costs
On March 23, 2010, the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act
(PPACA), Public Law 111–148 was
enacted. Following the enactment of
Public Law 111–148, the Health Care
and Education Reconciliation Act of
2010, Public L. 111–152 (enacted on
March 30, 2010), amended certain
provisions of Public Law 111–148. A
number of the provisions of Public Law
111–148, as amended by Public Law
111–152, affect the IPPS and the LTCH
PPS and the providers and suppliers
addressed in this proposed rule.
However, due to the timing of the
passage of the legislation, we are unable
to address those provisions in this
proposed rule. Therefore, the proposed
policies and payment rates in this
proposed rule do not reflect the new
legislation. We plan to issue separate
rulemaking documents in the Federal
Register addressing the provisions of
PO 00000
Frm 00162
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Public Law 111–148, as amended, that
affect our proposed policies and
payment rates for FY 2011 under the
IPPS and LTCH PPS, as well as the
provisions of Public Law 111–148, as
amended, that affect the policies and
payment rates for FY 2010 under the
IPPS and LTCH PPS.
A. Overview
Section 1886(g) of the Act requires the
Secretary to pay for the capital-related
costs of inpatient acute hospital services
‘‘in accordance with a prospective
payment system established by the
Secretary.’’ Under the statute, the
Secretary has broad authority in
establishing and implementing the IPPS
for acute care hospital inpatient capitalrelated costs. We initially implemented
the IPPS for capital-related costs in the
Federal fiscal year (FY) 1992 IPPS final
rule (56 FR 43358), in which we
established a 10-year transition period
to change the payment methodology for
Medicare hospital inpatient capitalrelated costs from a reasonable costbased methodology to a prospective
methodology (based fully on the Federal
rate).
FY 2001 was the last year of the 10year transition period established to
phase in the IPPS for hospital inpatient
capital-related costs. For cost reporting
periods beginning in FY 2002, capital
IPPS payments are based solely on the
Federal rate for almost all acute care
hospitals (other than hospitals receiving
certain exception payments and certain
new hospitals). (We refer readers to the
FY 2002 IPPS final rule (66 FR 39910
through 39914) for additional
information on the methodology used to
determine capital IPPS payments to
hospitals both during and after the
transition period.) The basic
methodology for determining capital
prospective payments using the Federal
rate is set forth in § 412.312 of the
regulations. For the purpose of
calculating payments for each discharge,
currently the standard Federal rate is
adjusted as follows:
(Standard Federal Rate) × (DRG
Weight) × (Geographic Adjustment
Factor (GAF)) × (COLA for hospitals
located in Alaska and Hawaii) × (1 +
Capital DSH Adjustment Factor +
Capital IME Adjustment Factor, if
applicable).
B. Exception Payments
The regulations at § 412.348(f)
provide that a hospital may request an
additional payment if the hospital
incurs unanticipated capital
expenditures in excess of $5 million due
to extraordinary circumstances beyond
the hospital’s control. This policy was
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
originally established for hospitals
during the 10-year transition period, but
as we discussed in the FY 2003 IPPS
final rule (67 FR 50102), we revised the
regulations at § 412.312 to specify that
payments for extraordinary
circumstances are also made for cost
reporting periods after the transition
period (that is, cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2001).
Additional information on the exception
payment for extraordinary
circumstances in § 412.348(f) can be
found in the FY 2005 IPPS final rule (69
FR 49185 and 49186).
During the transition period, under
§§ 412.348(b) through (e), eligible
hospitals could receive regular
exception payments. These exception
payments guaranteed a hospital a
minimum payment percentage of its
Medicare allowable capital-related costs
depending on the class of the hospital
(§ 412.348(c)), but were available only
during the 10-year transition period.
After the end of the transition period,
eligible hospitals can no longer receive
this exception payment. However, even
after the transition period, eligible
hospitals receive additional payments
under the special exceptions provisions
at § 412.348(g), which guarantees all
eligible hospitals a minimum payment
of 70 percent of its Medicare allowable
capital-related costs provided that
special exceptions payments do not
exceed 10 percent of total capital IPPS
payments. Special exceptions payments
may be made only for the 10 years from
the cost reporting year in which the
hospital completes its qualifying
project, and the hospital must have
completed the project no later than the
hospital’s cost reporting period
beginning before October 1, 2001. Thus,
an eligible hospital may receive special
exceptions payments for up to 10 years
beyond the end of the capital IPPS
transition period. Hospitals eligible for
special exceptions payments are
required to submit documentation to the
fiscal intermediary or MAC indicating
the completion date of their project. (For
more detailed information regarding the
special exceptions policy under
§ 412.348(g), we refer readers to the FY
2002 IPPS final rule (66 FR 39911
through 39914) and the FY 2003 IPPS
final rule (67 FR 50102).)
C. New Hospitals
Under the IPPS for capital-related
costs, § 412.300(b) of the regulations
defines a new hospital as a hospital that
has operated (under current or previous
ownership) for less than 2 years. For
example, the following hospitals are not
considered new hospitals: (1) A hospital
that builds new or replacement facilities
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
at the same or another location, even if
coincidental with a change of
ownership, a change in management, or
a lease arrangement; (2) a hospital that
closes and subsequently reopens; (3) a
hospital that has been in operation for
more than 2 years but has participated
in the Medicare program for less than 2
years; and (4) a hospital that changes its
status from a hospital that is excluded
from the IPPS to a hospital that is
subject to the capital IPPS. For more
detailed information, we refer readers to
the FY 1992 IPPS final rule (56 FR
43418). During the 10-year transition
period, a new hospital was exempt from
the capital IPPS for its first 2 years of
operation and was paid 85 percent of its
reasonable costs during that period.
Originally, this provision was effective
only through the transition period and,
therefore, ended with cost reporting
periods beginning in FY 2002. Because,
as discussed in the FY 2003 IPPS final
rule (67 FR 50101), we believe that
special protection to new hospitals is
also appropriate even after the transition
period, we revised the regulations at
§ 412.304(c)(2) to provide that, for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2002, a new hospital (defined
under § 412.300(b)) is paid 85 percent of
its Medicare allowable capital-related
costs through its first 2 years of
operation, unless the new hospital
elects to receive full prospective
payment based on 100 percent of the
Federal rate. (We refer readers to the FY
2003 IPPS final rule (67 FR 50101
through 50102) for a detailed discussion
of the special payment provisions for
new hospitals under the capital IPPS
after the 10-year transition period.)
D. Hospitals Located in Puerto Rico
Section 412.374 of the regulations
provides for the use of a blended
payment amount for prospective
payments for capital-related costs to
hospitals located in Puerto Rico.
Accordingly, under the capital IPPS, we
compute a separate payment rate
specific to Puerto Rico hospitals using
the same methodology used to compute
the national Federal rate for capitalrelated costs. In general, hospitals
located in Puerto Rico are paid a blend
of the applicable capital IPPS Puerto
Rico rate and the applicable capital IPPS
Federal rate.
Prior to FY 1998, hospitals in Puerto
Rico were paid a blended capital IPPS
rate that consisted of 75 percent of the
capital IPPS Puerto Rico specific rate
and 25 percent of the capital IPPS
Federal rate. However, effective October
1, 1997 (FY 1998), in conjunction with
the change to the operating IPPS blend
percentage for hospitals located in
PO 00000
Frm 00163
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24013
Puerto Rico required by section 4406 of
Public Law 105–33, we revised the
methodology for computing capital IPPS
payments to hospitals in Puerto Rico to
be based on a blend of 50 percent of the
capital IPPS Puerto Rico rate and 50
percent of the capital IPPS Federal rate.
Similarly, in conjunction with the
change in operating IPPS payments to
hospitals located in Puerto Rico for FY
2005 required by section 504 of Public
Law 108–173, we again revised the
methodology for computing capital IPPS
payments to hospitals located in Puerto
Rico to be based on a blend of 25
percent of the capital IPPS Puerto Rico
rate and 75 percent of the capital IPPS
Federal rate effective for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2004.
E. Proposed Changes for FY 2011: MS–
DRG Documentation and Coding
Adjustment
1. Background on the Prospective MS–
DRG Documentation and Coding
Adjustments for FY 2008 and FY 2009
In the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with
comment period (72 FR 47175 through
47186), we adopted the MS–DRG
patient classification system for the
IPPS, effective October 1, 2007, to better
recognize patients’ severity of illness in
Medicare payment rates. Adoption of
the MS–DRGs resulted in the expansion
of the number of DRGs from 538 in FY
2007 to 745 in FY 2008. (Currently,
there are 746 MS–DRGs, including one
additional MS–DRG created in FY 2009.
For FY 2011, there would be 747 DRGs
with our proposals in this proposed rule
to delete one MS- DRG and to create two
new MS–DRGs.) By increasing the
number of DRGs and more fully taking
into account patients’ severity of illness
in Medicare payment rates, the MS–
DRGs encourage hospitals to change
their documentation and coding of
patient diagnoses. In that same final rule
with comment period (72 FR 47183), we
indicated that we believe the adoption
of the MS–DRGs had the potential to
lead to increases in aggregate payments
without a corresponding increase in
actual patient severity of illness due to
the incentives for changes in
documentation and coding.
Accordingly, we established
adjustments to both the national
operating standardized amount and the
national capital Federal rate to eliminate
the estimated effect of changes in
documentation and coding resulting
from the adoption of the MS–DRGs that
do not reflect real changes in case-mix.
Specifically, we established prospective
documentation and coding adjustments
of ¥1.2 percent for FY 2008, ¥1.8
percent for FY 2009, and ¥1.8 percent
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24014
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
for FY 2010. However, to comply with
section 7(a) of Public Law 110–90,
enacted on September 29, 2007, in a
final rule published in the Federal
Register on November 27, 2007 (72 FR
66886 through 66888), we modified the
documentation and coding adjustment
for FY 2008 to ¥0.6 percent, and
consequently revised the FY 2008 IPPS
operating and capital payment rates,
factors, and thresholds accordingly,
with these revisions effective October 1,
2007.
For FY 2009, section 7(a) of Public
Law 110–90 required a documentation
and coding adjustment of ¥0.9 percent
instead of the ¥1.8 percent adjustment
established in the FY 2008 IPPS final
rule with comment period. As discussed
in the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with
comment period (72 FR 48447 and
48733 through 48774), we applied a
documentation and coding adjustment
of ¥0.9 percent to the FY 2009 IPPS
national standardized amounts and the
capital Federal rate. The documentation
and coding adjustments established in
the FY 2009 IPPS final rule, as amended
by Public Law 110–90, are cumulative.
As a result, the ¥0.9 percent
documentation and coding adjustment
in FY 2009 was in addition to the ¥0.6
percent adjustment in FY 2008, yielding
a combined effect of ¥1.5 percent. (For
additional details on the development
and implementation of the
documentation and coding adjustments
for FY 2008 and FY 2009, we refer
readers to section II.D. of this preamble
and the following rules published in the
Federal Register: August 22, 2007 (72
FR 47175 through 47186 and 47431
through 47432); November 27, 2007 (72
FR 66886 through 66888); and August
19, 2008 (73 FR 48447 through 48450
and 48773 through 48775).)
2. Retrospective Evaluation of FY 2008
Claims Data
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS proposed rule, we presented the
results of a retrospective evaluation of
the FY 2008 data for claims paid
through December 2008. Based on this
evaluation, our actuaries determined
that implementation of the MS–DRG
system resulted in a 2.5 percent change
due to documentation and coding that
did not reflect real changes in case-mix
for discharges occurring during FY 2008
(74 FR 24092 through 24101). We also
sought public comment on our
methodology and analysis and the
proposed ¥1.9 percent prospective
adjustment to address the effect of
documentation and coding changes
unrelated to changes in real case-mix in
FY 2008 (that is, the estimated ¥2.5
percent documentation and coding
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
effect for FY 2008 minus the ¥0.6
percent documentation and coding
adjustment that was applied to the
national capital Federal rate for FY
2008). In addition, we sought public
comment on addressing in the FY 2011
rulemaking cycle any differences
between the increase in FY 2009 casemix due to documentation and coding
changes that do not reflect real changes
in case-mix for discharges occurring
during FY 2009 and the ¥0.9 percent
prospective documentation and coding
adjustment applied in determining the
FY 2009 capital Federal rate established
in the FY 2009 IPPS final rule. However,
after consideration of the public
comments received on the FY 2010
IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS proposed rule,
consistent with the application of the
documentation and coding adjustment
to the operating IPPS standardized
amounts, we determined that it would
be appropriate to postpone the adoption
of any additional documentation and
coding adjustments to the capital IPPS
rates until a full analysis of FY 2009
case-mix changes could be completed.
We stated that although we only
proposed to make a ¥1.9 percent
adjustment to account for the portion of
the estimated 2.5 percent change in FY
2008 case-mix due to documentation
and coding changes that exceeds the
¥0.6 percent prospective
documentation and coding adjustment
applied to the FY 2008 capital Federal
rate (that is, ¥2.5 percent minus ¥0.6
percent = ¥1.9 percent), our then
current estimate of the MS–DRG
documentation and coding effect for FY
2009 was 2.3 percent (that is, the 4.8
percent total increase minus the 2.5
percent increase from FY 2008). We
indicated that if the estimated
documentation and coding effect
determined based on a full analysis of
FY 2009 claims data is more or less than
our then current estimates, it would
change the anticipated cumulative
adjustments that we then estimated we
would have to make for FY 2008 and FY
2009 combined. We indicated that, in
future rulemaking, we would consider
applying a prospective documentation
and coding adjustment to the capital
IPPS rates based on a complete analysis
of FY 2008 and FY 2009 claims data (74
FR 43926 through 43928).
3. Retrospective Analysis of FY 2009
Claims Data
For this proposed rule, we have
performed a thorough retrospective
evaluation of the most recent available
claims data, and the results of this
evaluation were used by our actuaries to
determine any necessary payment
adjustments beyond the cumulative
PO 00000
Frm 00164
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
¥1.5 percent adjustment that has
already been applied to the national
capital Federal rate to ensure budget
neutrality for the implementation of
MS–DRGs. Specifically, as discussed in
greater detail in section II.D.5. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, we
performed a retrospective evaluation of
the FY 2009 claims data updated
through December 2009 using the same
analysis methodology as we did for FY
2008 claims in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY
2010 LTCH PPS proposed and final
rules. Based on this evaluation, our
actuaries have determined that the
implementation of the MS–DRG system
resulted in a 5.4 percent change in casemix due to documentation and coding
that did not reflect real changes in casemix for discharges occurring during FY
2009.
The 5.4 percent estimate of the
cumulative effect of changes in
documentation and coding under the
MS–DRG system that did not reflect real
changes in case-mix for FYs 2008 and
2009 exceeds the cumulative ¥1.5
percent prospective documentation and
coding adjustment that has already been
applied to the national capital Federal
rate by 3.9 percentage points (5.4
percent minus 1.5 percent). An
additional cumulative adjustment of
¥3.9 percent to the national capital
Federal rate would be necessary to
eliminate the full effect of the
documentation and coding changes due
to the adoption of the MS–DRGs on
future payments. We intend to update
our analysis with FY 2009 data on
claims paid through March 2009 for the
FY 2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule.
4. Proposed Prospective MS–DRG
Documentation and Coding Adjustment
to the National Capital Federal Rate for
FY 2011 and Subsequent Years
We continue to believe that it is
appropriate to make adjustments to the
capital IPPS rates to eliminate the effect
of any documentation and coding
changes as a result of the
implementation of the MS–DRGs. These
adjustments are intended to ensure that
future annual aggregate IPPS payments
are the same as payments that otherwise
would have been made had the
prospective adjustments for
documentation and coding applied in
FY 2008 and FY 2009 accurately
reflected the change due to
documentation and coding that
occurred in those years. As noted in
section V.A. of this preamble, under
section 1886(g) of the Act, the Secretary
has broad authority in establishing and
implementing the IPPS for acute care
hospital inpatient capital-related costs
(that is, the capital IPPS). We have
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
consistently stated since the initial
implementation of the MS–DRG system
that we do not believe it is appropriate
for Medicare expenditures under the
capital IPPS to increase due to MS–DRG
related changes in documentation and
coding. Accordingly, we believe that it
is appropriate under the Secretary’s
broad authority under section 1886(g) of
the Act, in conjunction with section
1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act and section
7(b) of Public Law 110–90, to make
adjustments to the capital Federal rate
to eliminate the full effect of the
documentation and coding changes
resulting from the adoption of the MS–
DRGs. We believe that this is
appropriate because, in absence of such
adjustments, the effect of the
documentation and coding changes
resulting from the adoption of the MS–
DRGs results in inappropriately high
capital IPPS payments because that
portion of the increase in aggregate
payments is not due to an increase in
patient severity of illness (and costs).
As discussed in greater detail in
section II.D.7. of this preamble, we
explain that we are proposing a ¥2.9
percent adjustment for FY 2011 under
the authority of section 7(b)(1)(B) of
Public Law 110–90. We refer readers to
that section of the preamble for a
detailed discussion of the issue. In
section II.D.6. of this preamble, we also
discuss our retrospective evaluation of
the FY 2009 claims, and our actuaries’
determination that implementation of
the MS–DRG system resulted in a 5.4
percent change in case-mix due to
documentation and coding that did not
reflect real changes in case-mix for
discharges occurring during FY 2009.
The estimated 5.4 percent cumulative
documentation and coding effect for
FYs 2008 and 2009 exceeds the
cumulative ¥1.5 percent prospective
documentation and coding adjustment
that has already been applied to the
national capital Federal rate. Thus, an
additional cumulative adjustment of
¥3.9 percent would be necessary to
meet the requirements of section
7(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 110–90 to make
an appropriate prospective adjustment
to the IPPS operating average
standardized amounts in order to
eliminate the full effect of the
documentation and coding changes on
future payments. However, we are not
proposing a prospective adjustment to
the IPPS operating average standardized
amounts under section 7(b)(1)(A) of
Public Law 110–90 for FY 2011.
As discussed above in this section,
given the increase in payments that we
have determined is due to
documentation and coding, we believe
it is necessary and appropriate under
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
the Secretary’s broad authority under
section 1886(g) of the Act, in
conjunction with section
1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act and section
7(b) of Public Law 110–90, to make
further adjustments to the capital
Federal rate to eliminate the full effect
of the documentation and coding
changes resulting from the adoption of
the MS–DRGs.
It is often our practice to phase in rate
adjustments over more than one year in
order to moderate the effect on rates in
any one year. Therefore, consistently
with transitional policies we have
adopted in many similar cases and in
order to maintain consistency as far as
possible with the adjustments that we
are proposing to apply to IPPS hospitals,
we are proposing an adjustment of ¥2.9
percent in FY 2011 to the national
capital Federal rate. We believe that this
proposed adjustment allows us to
moderate the effects to hospitals in one
year and to maintain equity between
hospitals paid on the basis of different
prospective rates. We are seeking public
comment on the proposed ¥2.9 percent
prospective adjustment to the national
capital Federal rate for FY 2011 and our
plans to address in future rulemaking
cycles the cumulative effect of changes
in case-mix due to changes in
documentation and coding that do not
reflect real changes in case-mix for
discharges occurring during FY 2008
and FY 2009, noting that our current
estimates of the remaining adjustment to
the national capital Federal rate is ¥1.0
percent. We intend to update our
analysis with FY 2009 data on claim
paid through March 2009 for the FY
2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule.
Therefore, in this proposed rule,
under the Secretary’s broad authority
under section 1886(g) of the Act, in
conjunction with section
1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act and section
7(b) of Public Law 110–90, we are
proposing to reduce the capital Federal
rate in FY 2011 by ¥2.9 percent to
account for the cumulative effect of the
estimated changes in documentation
and coding changes under the MS–DRG
system in FYs 2008 and 2009 that did
not reflect real changes in case-mix.
Furthermore, consistent with our
proposal for the hospital-specific rates
under the operating IPPS, we are
proposing to leave that proposed ¥2.9
percent adjustment in place for
subsequent fiscal years to account for
the effect in FY 2011 and subsequent
years. As noted above, we intend to
address in future rulemaking cycles the
remaining estimated adjustment to the
national capital Federal rate of ¥1.0
percent (that is, the estimated
cumulative effect of documentation and
PO 00000
Frm 00165
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24015
coding changes under the MS–DRG
system for FYs 2008 and 2009 of ¥5.4
percent minus the existing ¥0.6 percent
and ¥0.9 adjustments and the proposed
FY 2011 of ¥2.9 percent adjustment).
5. Proposed Documentation and Coding
Adjustment to the Puerto Rico-Specific
Capital Rate
Under § 412.74, Puerto Rico hospitals
are currently paid based on 75 percent
of the national capital Federal rate and
25 percent of the Puerto Rico-specific
capital rate. In the FY 2009 IPPS final
rule (73 FR 48775), consistent with our
development of the FY 2009 Puerto
Rico-specific operating standardized
amount, we did not apply the additional
¥0.9 percent documentation and
coding adjustment (or the cumulative
¥1.5 percent adjustment) to the FY
2009 Puerto Rico-specific capital rate.
However, the statute gives broad
authority to the Secretary under section
1886(g) of the Act, with respect to the
development of and adjustments to a
capital PPS, and therefore we would not
be outside the authority of section
1886(g) of the Act in applying the
documentation and coding adjustment
to the Puerto Rico-specific portion of the
capital payment rate. To date, we had
not applied a documentation and coding
adjustment to the Puerto Rico-specific
capital rate because we have historically
made changes to the capital IPPS
consistent with those changes made to
the operating IPPS. We stated that we
may propose to apply such an
adjustment to the Puerto Rico capital
rates in the future.
As discussed in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY
2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR
43928), when we performed a
retrospective evaluation of the FY 2008
claims data of hospitals located in
Puerto Rico using the same
methodology discussed above, we found
that the change in case-mix due to
documentation and coding that did not
reflect real changes in case-mix for
discharges occurring during FY 2008
from hospitals located in Puerto Rico
was approximately 1.3 percent. Given
this case-mix increase due to changes in
documentation and coding under the
MS–DRGs, we had proposed to adjust
the Puerto Rico-specific capital rate by
¥1.3 percent in FY 2010 for the FY
2008 increase in case-mix due to
changes in documentation and coding
under the MS–DRGs. However, in that
same final rule, postponed the adoption
of any documentation and coding
adjustments to the capital IPPS rates
until a full analysis of FY 2009 case-mix
changes could be completed. We
indicated that any future documentation
and coding adjustment to the capital
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24016
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Puerto Rico-specific IPPS rates based on
a complete analysis of FY 2008 and FY
2009 claims data for Puerto Rico
hospitals would be established through
the notice and comment rulemaking
process.
As discussed in section II.D.9. of this
preamble, when we performed a
retrospective evaluation of the FY 2009
claims data of hospitals located in
Puerto Rico using the same
methodology discussed above, we found
that the change in case-mix due to
documentation and coding that did not
reflect real changes in case-mix for
discharges occurring during FY 2008
from hospitals located in Puerto Rico
was approximately 2.4 percent. Given
this case-mix increase due to changes in
documentation and coding under the
MS–DRGs, consistent with our proposal
to adjust the FY 2011 capital Federal
rate presented above and consistent
with our proposed adjustment to the FY
2011 Puerto Rico-specific standardized
amount discussed in section II.D.9. of
the preamble of this proposed rule,
under the Secretary’s broad authority
under section 1886(g) of the Act, we are
proposing to adjust the Puerto Ricospecific capital rate by ¥2.4 percent in
FY 2011 for the cumulative increase in
case-mix due to changes in
documentation and coding under the
MS–DRGs for FYs 2008 and 2009. In
addition, consistent with our other
proposals concerning prospective MS–
DRG documentation and coding
adjustments to the capital Federal rate
and operating IPPS standardized
amounts presented in this proposed
rule, we are proposing to leave that
proposed ¥2.4 percent adjustment in
place for subsequent fiscal years in
order to ensure that changes in
documentation and coding resulting
from the adoption of the MS–DRGs do
not lead to an increase in aggregate
payments not reflective of an increase in
real case-mix. We are proposing that the
proposed ¥2.4 percent documentation
and coding adjustment would be
applied to the capital Puerto Ricospecific rate that accounts for 25 percent
of payments to hospitals located in
Puerto Rico, with the remaining 75
percent based on the proposed national
capital Federal rate, which we are
proposing to adjust for documentation
and coding as described above.
Consequently, the proposed overall
reduction to the FY 2011 payment rates
for hospitals located in Puerto Rico to
account for documentation and coding
changes would be slightly less than the
reduction for IPPS hospitals paid based
on 100 percent of the national capital
Federal rate. As noted above, the Puerto
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Rico-specific capital rate was not
adjusted for the cumulative effects of
documentation and coding changes in
FY 2008 or FY 2009 as is the case with
the national capital Federal rate.
F. Other Proposed Changes for FY 2011
The proposed annual update to the
capital IPPS national and Puerto Ricospecific rates, as provided for at
§ 412.308(c), for FY 2011 is discussed in
section III. of the Addendum to this
proposed rule.
VI. Proposed Changes for Hospitals
Excluded From the IPPS
A. Excluded Hospitals
Historically, hospitals and hospital
units excluded from the prospective
payment system received payment for
inpatient hospital services they
furnished on the basis of reasonable
costs, subject to a rate-of-increase
ceiling. A per discharge limit (the target
amount as defined in § 413.40(a)) was
set for each hospital or hospital unit
based on the hospital’s own cost
experience in its base year, and updated
annually by a rate-of-increase
percentage. The updated target amount
was multiplied by total Medicare
discharges during that period and
applied as an aggregate upper limit (the
ceiling as defined in § 413.40(a)) on total
inpatient operating costs for a hospital’s
cost reporting period. Prior to October 1,
1997, these payment provisions applied
consistently to all categories of excluded
providers, which included
rehabilitation hospitals and units (now
referred to as IRFs), psychiatric
hospitals and units (now referred to as
IPFs), LTCHs, children’s hospitals, and
cancer hospitals.
Payment to children’s hospitals and
cancer hospitals that are excluded from
the IPPS continues to be subject to the
rate-of-increase ceiling based on the
hospital’s own historical cost
experience. (We note that, in accordance
with § 403.752(a) of the regulations,
RNHCIs are also subject to the rate-ofincrease limits established under
§ 413.40 of the regulations.)
For FY 2011, we are proposing that
the rate-of-increase percentage to be
applied to the target amount for cancer
and children’s hospitals and RNHCIs
would be the proposed FY 2011
percentage increase in the IPPS
operating market basket. Beginning with
FY 2006, we have used the percentage
increase in the IPPS operating market
basket to update the target amounts for
children’s and cancer hospitals. As
explained in the FY 2006 IPPS final rule
(70 FR 47396 through 47398), with IRFs,
IPFs, and LTCHs being paid under their
PO 00000
Frm 00166
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
own PPS, the remaining number of
providers being paid based on
reasonable cost subject to a ceiling (that
is, children’s and cancer hospitals and
RNHCIs) is too small and the cost report
data are too limited to be able to create
a market basket solely for these
hospitals. We are proposing to continue
to use the IPPS market basket to update
the target amounts for children’s and
cancer hospitals and RNHCIs for the
reasons discussed in the FY 2006 IPPS
final rule.
We are proposing to use the revised
and rebased FY 2006-based IPPS
operating market baskets to update the
target amounts for children’s and cancer
hospitals and RNHCIs for FY 2011.
Based on IHS Global Insight, Inc.’s 2010
first quarter forecast, with historical
data through the 2009 fourth quarter, we
are estimating that the FY 2011 update
to the IPPS operating market basket
would be 2.4 percent (that is, the
current estimate of the market basket
rate-of-increase).
We calculated the proposed rate-ofincrease in the IPPS operating market
basket for FY 2011 using the most recent
data available. However, if data that are
more recent become available for the
final rule, we will use them to calculate
the IPPS operating market basket update
for FY 2011. Therefore, consistent with
our proposal that the rate-of-increase
percentage for cancer and children’s
hospitals and RNHCIs would be the
proposed percentage increase in the FY
2011 IPPS operating market basket, the
proposed FY 2011 rate-of-increase
percentage that would be applied to FY
2010 target amounts in order to
calculate the FY 2011 target amounts for
cancer and children’s hospitals and
RNHCIs would be 2.4 percent, in
accordance with the applicable
regulations in 42 CFR 413.40.
We note that IRFs, IPFs, and LTCHs,
which were paid previously under the
reasonable cost methodology, now
receive payment under their own
prospective payment systems, in
accordance with changes made to the
statute. In general, the prospective
payment systems for IRFs, IPFs, and
LTCHs provided transition periods of
varying lengths during which time a
portion of the prospective payment was
based on cost-based reimbursement
rules under Part 413. (However, certain
providers do not receive a transition
period or may elect to bypass the
transition period as applicable under 42
CFR Part 412, Subparts N, O, and P.) We
note that the various transition periods
provided for under the IRF PPS, the IPF
PPS, and the LTCH PPS have ended.
The IRF PPS, the IPF PPS, and the
LTCH PPS are updated annually. We
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
refer readers to section IV. of the
Addendum to this proposed rule for the
specific proposed update changes to the
Federal payment rates for LTCHs under
the LTCH PPS for RY 2011. The annual
updates for the IRF PPS and the IPF PPS
are issued by the agency in separate
Federal Register documents.
B. Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
1. Background
Section 1820 of the Act provides for
the establishment of Medicare Rural
Hospital Flexibility Programs (MRHFPs)
under which individual States may
designate certain facilities as critical
access hospitals (CAHs). Facilities that
are so designated and that meet the CAH
conditions of participation under 42
CFR part 485, Subpart F, will be
certified as CAHs by CMS. Regulations
governing payments to CAHs for
services to Medicare beneficiaries are
located in 42 CFR part 413.
2. CAH Optional Method Election for
Payment of Outpatient Services
Section 1834(g) of the Act establishes
the payment rules for outpatient
services furnished by a CAH. Section
403(d) of Public Law 106–113 (BBRA)
amended section 1834(g) of the Act to
provide for two methods of payment for
outpatient services furnished by a CAH.
Specifically, section 1834(g)(1) of the
Act, as amended by Public Law 106–
113, provided that the amount of
payment for outpatient services
furnished by a CAH is equal to the
reasonable cost of providing such
services, unless the CAH made an
election, under section 1834(g)(2) of the
Act, to receive amounts that were equal
to the reasonable cost of the CAH for
facility services plus, with respect to the
professional services, the amount
otherwise paid for professional services
under Medicare, less the applicable
Medicare deductible and coinsurance
amount. The election made under
section 1834(g)(2) of the Act is
sometimes referred to as ‘‘method II.’’
Throughout this section of this
preamble, we refer to this election as the
‘‘optional method.’’ Section 202 of
Public Law 106–554 (BIPA) amended
section 1834(g)(2)(B) of the Act to
increase the payment for professional
services under the optional method to
115 percent of the amount otherwise
paid for professional services under
Medicare. In addition, section 405(a)(1)
of Public Law 108–173 (MMA) amended
section 1834(g)(l) of the Act by inserting
the phrase ‘‘equal to 101 percent of’’
before the phrase ‘‘the reasonable costs.’’
However, the MMA made no changes to
the amount of payment under the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
optional method at section 1834(g)(2)(A)
of the Act. As stated earlier, the
proposed policies and payment rates in
this proposed rule do not reflect the
provisions of the recently enacted
Public Law 111–148, as amended by
Public Law 111–152. We plan to address
the provisions of Public Law 111–148,
as amended, as they affect payments to
CAHs in separate documents in the
Federal Register or through further
instructions.
Accordingly, section 1834(g) of the
Act currently provides for two methods
of payment for outpatient CAH services.
Under the method specified at section
1834(g)(1) of the Act, facility services
are paid at 101 percent of reasonable
costs to the CAH through the Medicare
fiscal intermediary or the Medicare Part
A/B MAC, while payments for
physician and other professional
services are made to the physician or
other practitioner under the Medicare
Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS) through
the Medicare carriers. Under section
1834(g)(2) of the Act (the optional
method), a CAH submits bills for both
the facility and the professional services
to its Medicare fiscal intermediary or its
Medicare Part A/B MAC. If a CAH
chooses this optional method for
outpatient services, the physician or
other practitioner must reassign his or
her billing rights to the CAH to bill the
Medicare program for those services. In
accordance with section 1834(g)(2) of
the Act, under this optional method, the
CAH receives reasonable cost payment
for its facility costs and, with respect to
the professional services, 115 percent of
the amount otherwise paid for
professional services under Medicare.
The existing regulations at
§ 413.70(b)(3)(i)(A) require that if a CAH
wishes to elect the optional method,
that election must be made in writing,
made on an annual basis, and delivered
to the fiscal intermediary servicing the
CAH at least 30 days before the start of
the cost reporting period for which the
election is made. The regulations at
§ 413.70(b)(3)(i)(B) specify that once an
election is made for a cost reporting
period, that election remains in effect
for all of that period. Therefore, under
the existing regulations, a CAH that is
being paid under the optional method is
required to submit an election on an
annual basis if it wishes to continue to
be paid under the optional method for
a subsequent cost reporting period.
We have been informed that, in past
years, some CAHs have submitted their
elections several days late, which has
caused these CAHs to lose their optional
method election for the entire cost
reporting year and has resulted in
financial hardship for these providers.
PO 00000
Frm 00167
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24017
Such untimely submission of the
optional method election may be due to
staffing turnovers at the CAH as well as
a change in fiscal intermediary or MAC
assignments because, in the past, some
CAHs received correspondence from
their fiscal intermediaries or MACs
reminding them to elect the optional
method on an annual basis. Due to the
significant consequences if a CAH fails
to make a timely election, we are
proposing to amend the regulations at
§ 413.70(b)(3)(i) to state that, effective
for CAH cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2010, if
a CAH has elected the optional method
for its most recent cost reporting period
beginning prior to October 1, 2010 or
chooses to elect the optional method for
its upcoming cost reporting period, that
election will remain in place until it is
terminated.
We believe that removing the annual
election requirement will reduce any
perceived burden associated with the
election process and make it easier for
CAHs to maintain their election if they
experience administrative staffing
changes. If a CAH is being paid under
the traditional method and wishes to
elect the optional method, it must
submit its election in writing to its
servicing fiscal intermediary or MAC at
least 30 days prior to the first cost
reporting period for which the election
is effective. Once that initial election is
made, it will remain in place until it is
terminated.
We are proposing to revise the
regulations to include a mechanism for
CAHs that are being paid under the
optional method to terminate that
election. Specifically, we are proposing
that if a CAH is being paid under the
optional method and wishes to
terminate that election, it must submit
its termination request to the fiscal
intermediary or MAC servicing the CAH
at least 30 days prior to the start of the
next cost reporting period. Because the
proposed effective date for this
provision is for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2010,
CAHs that have cost reporting periods
beginning in October 2010 or November
2010 may not have sufficient time to
terminate their optional method election
at least 30 days prior to the start of the
cost reporting period. Therefore, we are
proposing that CAHs that have cost
reporting periods beginning in October
2010 or November 2010 and elected the
optional method in 2009 that wish to
terminate that election will have until
December 1, 2010, to terminate their
prior year election. The termination will
be effective for the entire FY 2011 cost
reporting period. Thus, if a CAH with a
cost reporting period beginning in
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24018
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
October 2010 or November 2010
terminates its optional method election
after the beginning of its cost reporting
period but before December 1, 2010, the
fiscal intermediary or MAC would be
instructed to reprocess any payments
made under the optional method for
services provided during that period as
efficiently as possible.
Section 1834(g)(2)(B) of the Act
provides that if a CAH elects the
optional method, it is not required that
each physician or other practitioner
providing professional services in the
CAH must reassign billing rights with
respect to the services. Rather, the
reassignment of billing rights is
physician/practitioner specific. For this
reason, the optional payment method
should not apply to the computation of
payments to the CAH for its facility
services in conjunction with services
furnished by physicians and
practitioners who have not reassigned
such billing rights. Accordingly, if a
physician or practitioner has not
reassigned his or her billing rights to the
CAH, the CAH will be paid for its
facility services at 101 percent of
reasonable cost, as specified at
§ 413.70(b)(2)(i) of the regulations. If a
CAH experiences changes in its
physician or practitioner staffing, there
may be a change in which physicians or
practitioners choose to reassign their
billing rights in order to permit the CAH
to bill for their professional services. In
order to ensure appropriate payments,
and specifically, in order to ensure that
there is no duplicate billing for a
physician’s or practitioner’s
professional services by the CAH to the
fiscal intermediary or MAC and by the
physician or practitioner providing the
service to the carrier, a CAH must
continue to notify its fiscal intermediary
or MAC when changes in reassignment
occur.
In summary, we are proposing to
revise § 413.70(b)(3)(i) to specify, under
paragraphs (A)(1) and (A)(2), that for
CAH cost reporting periods beginning
on or after October 1, 2010, once a CAH
elects the optional method, including an
election made for its most recent cost
reporting period beginning prior to
October 1, 2010, its election will remain
in place until it is terminated. That is,
CAHs would no longer be required to
make an annual election in order to
continue to be paid under the optional
method in a subsequent year. If a CAH
has not elected the optional method for
its most recent cost reporting period
beginning prior to October 1, 2010, and
would like to be paid for outpatient
services under the optional method for
a cost reporting period beginning on or
after October 1, 2010, consistent with
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
our existing regulations, it would be
required to provide its election in
writing to its servicing fiscal
intermediary or MAC at least 30 days
prior to the start of the first cost
reporting period for which the election
is effective. In addition, we are
proposing to revise the regulations to
specify that if a CAH wishes to
terminate its optional method election,
it must submit its termination request to
the fiscal intermediary or MAC
servicing the CAH at least 30 days prior
to the start of the next cost reporting
period. We are proposing that CAHs that
have cost reporting periods beginning in
October 2010 or November 2010 and
elected the optional method in 2009,
that wish to terminate that election, will
have until December 1, 2010, to
terminate their prior year election. The
termination would be effective for the
entire FY 2011 cost reporting period.
We also are proposing to make a
conforming change to paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(D).
3. Costs of Provider Taxes as Allowable
Costs for CAHs
a. Background and Statutory Basis
Currently, certain taxes assessed
against a provider may be allowable
costs under Medicare to the extent that
such taxes are related to the reasonable
and necessary cost of providing patient
care and represent costs actually
incurred. Reasonable cost
reimbursement is addressed in section
1861(v)(1)(A) of the Act. Section
1861(v)(1)(A) of the Act defines
‘‘reasonable cost,’’ in part, as the cost
actually incurred, excluding costs found
to be unnecessary in the efficient
delivery of needed health services and
are determined in accordance with
regulations establishing the method or
methods to be used and the items to be
included. Section 1861(v)(1)(A) of the
Act does not specifically address the
determination of reasonable costs, but
authorizes the Secretary to promulgate
regulations and principles to be applied
in determining reasonable costs.
We have issued regulations
implementing this provision of the Act,
including 42 CFR 413.9(a) which
provide that the determination of
reasonable cost ‘‘must be based on the
reasonable cost of services covered
under Medicare and related to the care
of beneficiaries.’’ In addition, § 413.9(c)
requires that the provision for payment
of reasonable cost of services is
intended to meet the actual costs
incurred in providing services.
Therefore, in accordance with the
statute, the regulations include two
principles that help guide the
PO 00000
Frm 00168
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
determination of which expenses may
be considered allowable reasonable
costs that can be paid under Medicare;
that is, such costs must be ‘‘related’’ to
the care of Medicare beneficiaries, and
such costs must actually be ‘‘incurred.’’
Consistent with these provisions, we
also have issued policy instructions in
the Provider Reimbursement Manual
(PRM) for determining allowable
reasonable costs under Medicare.
Specifically, section 2122 of the PRM
sets forth Medicare policy on
determining when taxes levied on
providers are allowable costs and
provides a list of taxes that are
considered unallowable costs.
Specifically, section 2122.1 (General
Rule) of the PRM states: ‘‘The general
rule is that taxes assessed against the
provider, in accordance with the levying
enactments of the several States and
lower levels of government and for
which the provider is liable for
payment, are allowable costs. Tax
expenses should not include fines and
penalties.’’ Section 2122.2 (Taxes Not
Allowable as Costs) of the PRM lists
certain taxes that are levied on
providers that are not allowable costs.
The listed taxes are:
• Federal income and excess profit
taxes, including any interest or penalties
paid thereon (A).
• State or local income and excess
profit taxes (B).
• Taxes in connection with financing,
refinancing, or refunding operations,
such as taxes on the issuance of bonds,
property transfers, issuance or transfer
of stocks, etc. Generally, these costs are
either amortized over the life of the
securities or depreciated over the life of
the asset. They are not, however,
recognized as tax expense. (C)
• Taxes from which exemptions are
available to the provider. (D)
• Special assessments on land which
represent capital improvements such as
sewers, water, and pavements should be
capitalized and depreciated over their
estimated useful lives. (E)
• Taxes on property which is not
used in the rendition of covered
services. (F)
• Taxes, such as sales taxes, levied
against the patient and collected and
remitted by the provider. (G)
• Self-employment (FICA) taxes
applicable to individual proprietors,
partners, members of a joint venture,
etc. (H)
b. Proposed Clarification of Payment
Policy for Provider Taxes
We have learned that there is some
confusion relating to the determination
of whether a tax is an allowable cost.
We believe that much of this confusion
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
has arisen because it may be possible to
read sections 2122.1 and 2122.2 of the
PRM as permitting all taxes assessed on
a provider by a State that are not
specifically listed in section 2122.2 to
be treated as allowable costs. Section
2122 of the PRM was last updated in
1979 when States typically raised
revenue only from income, sales, and
property taxes. The list in section
2212.2 is incomplete now, as it does not
reflect the variety of provider taxes
imposed by States. In addition, we are
concerned that, even if a particular tax
may be an allowable cost that is related
to the care of Medicare beneficiaries,
providers may not, in fact, ‘‘incur’’ the
entire amount of these assessed taxes.
For example, in accordance with the
Medicaid statute and regulations, some
States levy tax assessments on hospitals.
The assessed taxes may be paid by the
hospitals into a fund that includes all
taxes paid, all Federal matching monies,
and any penalties for nonpayment. The
State is then authorized to disburse
monies from the fund to the hospitals.
We believe that these types of
subsequent disbursements to providers
are associated with the assessed taxes
and may, in fact, offset some, if not all,
of the taxes originally paid by the
hospitals.
We believe that the treatment of these
types of payments on the Medicare cost
report should be analogous to the
adjustments described at § 413.98 of the
regulations. Specifically, § 413.98(d)
provides that the ‘‘true cost of the goods
or services is the net amount actually
paid for them.’’ Section 413.98
specifically addresses the purchase of
goods and services and reflects the
statutory mandate that a provider’s
allowable costs are the net expenses it
incurs for items and services. In
situations in which payments that are
associated with the assessed tax are
made to providers specifically to make
the provider whole or partly whole for
the tax expenses, Medicare should
similarly recognize only the net expense
incurred by the provider. Thus, while a
tax may be an allowable Medicare cost
in that it is related to beneficiary care,
the provider may only treat as a
reasonable cost the net tax expense; that
is, the tax paid by the provider, reduced
by payments the provider received that
are associated with the assessed tax. In
addition, we do not believe that
determinations made regarding whether
the structure of specific taxes and
subsequent reimbursements are
consistent with Medicaid ‘‘hold
harmless’’ provisions necessarily require
the Medicare program to find that the
same tax is an allowable cost. The
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Medicare statute and regulations set
forth a different standard that requires a
determination of how much of the
allowable tax expense is actually
‘‘incurred’’ by the provider.
In this proposed rule, we are
proposing to clarify our policy
concerning when provider taxes may be
considered allowable costs under
Medicare. As stated above, section 2122
of the PRM was last updated in 1979,
and it no longer reflects the variety of
provider taxes that may be imposed by
States. Although some of the more
recently enacted provider taxes may be
allowable costs, we are concerned that
some of these taxes may not be ‘‘related
to the care of beneficiaries’’ and that
some, if not all, of the costs of these
taxes might not be actually ‘‘incurred’’
by the providers. This payment policy
may not directly affect providers that
are paid under a Medicare prospective
payment system unless a cost-based
prospective payment system is rebased
on more current reported reasonable
costs. However, this policy clarification
could impact certain providers that are
paid on the basis of their incurred
reasonable costs, such as CAHs.
Therefore, we are proposing to clarify
the policy set forth in sections 2122.1
and 2122.2 of the PRM to reflect our
concerns set forth above regarding when
certain provider taxes may be allowable
costs under the Medicare program. We
will modify the PRM consistent with
these principles. We believe that the
proposed revision would clarify that our
Medicare contractors will determine the
allowability of provider taxes on a caseby-case basis, based on reasonable cost
principles, and will determine if a
reduction of the allowable tax expenses
is proper to account for payments
providers receive that are associated
with the assessed tax.
VII. Proposed Changes to the LongTerm Care Hospital Prospective
Payment System (LTCH PPS) for FY
2011
A. Background of the LTCH PPS
1. 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
PO 00000
Frm 00169
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24019
Medicare prospective payment system
(PPS) for LTCHs applies to hospitals
that are 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 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.
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 the BBRA and BIPA (67 FR
55954). This system currently uses
information from LTCH patient records
to classify patients into distinct MSlong-term care diagnosis-related groups
(MS–LTC–DRGs) based on clinical
characteristics and expected resource
needs. Payments are calculated for each
MS–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
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24020
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
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 section VIII. of
this preamble, 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
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 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.
In addition, in the August 30, 2002
final rule, we presented an in-depth
discussion of the LTCH PPS, including
the patient classification system,
relative weights, payment rates,
additional payments, and the budget
neutrality 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 were to be effective, such
that the annual updated rates were
effective from July 1 through June 30
instead of from October 1 through
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
September 30. We referred to the July
through June time period as a ‘‘long-term
care hospital rate year’’ (LTCH PPS rate
year). 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 are
based on a LTCH PPS rate year. In the
past, while the LTCH payment rate
updates were effective July 1, the annual
update of the DRG classifications and
relative weights for LTCHs continued to
be linked to the annual adjustments of
the acute care hospital inpatient DRGs
and were effective each October 1.
As discussed in detail in section
VIII.A.1. of the May 9, 2008 RY 2009
LTCH PPS final rule (73 FR 26788), we
again changed the schedule for the
annual updates of the LTCH PPS
Federal payment rates beginning with
RY 2010. We consolidated the
rulemaking cycle for the annual update
of the LTCH PPS Federal payment rates
and description of the methodology and
data used to calculate these payment
rates with the annual update of the MS–
LTC–DRG classifications and associated
weighting factors for LTCHs so that the
updates to the rates and the weights
now occur on the same schedule and
appear in the same publication. As a
result, the updates to the rates and the
weights are now effective on October 1
(on a Federal fiscal year schedule), and
the annual updates to the LTCH PPS
Federal rates are no longer published
with a July 1 effective date (73 FR 26797
through 26798).
Public Law 110–173 (MMSEA),
enacted on December 29, 2007, included
provisions that have various effects on
the LTCH PPS. In addition to amending
section 1861 of the Act to add a
subsection (ccc) which provided an
additional definition of LTCHs, Public
Law 110–173 also required the Secretary
to submit, no later than 18 months after
the date of enactment of the law, a
report to Congress on a study of national
long-term care hospital facility and
patient criteria that included
‘‘recommendations for such legislation
and administrative actions, including
timelines for the implementation of
LTCH patient criteria or other actions,
as the Secretary determines
appropriate.’’ The payment policy
provisions under sections 114(c)(1) and
114(c)(2) of Public Law 110–173 focused
on providing 3 years of relief for certain
LTCHs from the percentage threshold
payment adjustment policy at 42 CFR
412.534 and 412.536. However, because
of the original implementation schedule
of those sections of the regulations, the
payment provisions had varying
PO 00000
Frm 00170
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
timeframes of applicability (73 FR
29701 through 29704). In addition,
section 114(c)(3) of Public Law 110–173
provided that the Secretary shall not
apply, for the 3-year period beginning
on the date of enactment of the Act the
revision to the short-stay outlier (SSO)
policy that was finalized in the RY 2008
LTCH PPS final rule (72 FR 26904 and
26992). In addition, section 114(c)(4) of
Public Law 110–173 provided that the
Secretary shall not, for the 3-year period
beginning on the date of enactment of
the Act, make the one-time adjustment
to the payment rates provided for in
§ 412.523(d)(3) or any similar provision
(73 FR 26800 through 26804). The
statute also provided that the base rate
for RY 2008 be the same as the base rate
for RY 2007 (the revised base rate,
however, does not apply to discharges
occurring on or after July 1, 2007, and
before April 1, 2008) (73 FR 24875
through 24877). Section 114(d) of Public
Law 110–173 established a 3-year
moratorium (with specified exceptions)
on the establishment and classification
of new LTCHs, LTCH satellites, and on
the increase in the number of LTCH
beds in existing LTCHs or satellite
facilities. Finally, section 114(f) of
Public Law 110–173 provided for an
expanded review of medical necessity
for admission and continued stay at
LTCHs.
In the RY 2009 LTCH PPS final rule
(73 FR 26804 through 26812), we
established the applicable Federal rates
for RY 2009, consistent with section
1886(m)(2) of the Act as amended by
Public Law 110–173. We also revised
the regulations at § 412.523(d)(3) to
change the methodology for the onetime budget neutrality adjustment and
to comply with section 114(c)(4) of
Public Law 110–173. Other policy
revisions that were necessary as a result
of the statutory changes of Public Law
110–173 were addressed in separate
interim final rules with comment period
(73 FR 24871 and 73 FR 29699). In the
FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final
rule (74 FR 43976 through 43990), we
address all of the public comments
received and finalized these two interim
final rules with comment period.
Section 4302 of the ARRA, Public
Law 111–5, enacted on February 17,
2009, included several amendments to
the provisions set forth in section 114 of
Public Law 110–173. Specifically,
section 4302(a) modified the effective
dates of the provisions of section 114(c)
of Public Law 110–173, described
above, and added an additional category
of LTCHs or satellite facilities that
would not be subject to the percentage
threshold payment adjustment at
§ 412.536 for a 3-year period. In
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
addition, section 4302(a)(2)(A) of Public
Law 111–5 added ‘‘grandfathered’’
satellites (specified in § 412.22(h)(3)(i)
of the regulations) to those ‘‘applicable’’
LTCHs (specified in § 412.534(g) of the
regulations) originally granted relief
under section 114(c) of Public Law 110–
173. We issued instructions to the fiscal
intermediaries and MACs interpreting
the provisions of section 4302 of Public
Law 111–5 (Change Request 6444). In
addition, in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010
LTCH PPS final rule (43990 through
43992), we implemented the provisions
of section 4302 of Public Law 111–5
through an interim final rule with
comment period. We received one piece
of timely correspondence regarding the
provisions of section 4302 of Public Law
111–5 that were implemented through
the interim final rule with comment
period that was included in the FY 2010
IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule. We
plan to address this public comment
and finalize the interim final rule with
comment period in the FY 2011 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule, which is
scheduled to be issued by August l,
2010.
On March 23, 2010, the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act
(PPACA), Public Law 111–148 was
enacted. Following the enactment of
Public Law 111–148, the Health Care
and Education Reconciliation Act of
2010, Public L. 111–152 (enacted on
March 30, 2010), amended certain
provisions of Public Law 111–148. A
number of the provisions of Public Law
111–148, as amended by Public Law
111–152, affect the IPPS and the LTCH
PPS and the providers and suppliers
addressed in this proposed rule.
However, due to the timing of the
passage of the legislation, we are unable
to address those provisions in this
proposed rule. Therefore, the proposed
policies and payment rates in this
proposed rule do not reflect the new
legislation. We plan to issue separate
documents in the Federal Register
addressing the provisions of Public Law
111–148, as amended, that affect our
proposed policies and payment rates for
FY 2011 under the IPPS and the LTCH
PPS. In addition, we plan to issue
further instructions implementing the
provisions of Public Law 111–148, as
amended, that affect the policies and
payment rates for FY 2010 under the
IPPS and for RY 2010 under the LTCH
PPS.
2. Criteria for Classification as a LTCH
a. 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
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
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 length of stay (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 length of stay for all patients,
including both Medicare and nonMedicare inpatients, of greater than 20
days.
b. 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.
3. 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
PO 00000
Frm 00171
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24021
beneficiary has coverage until the SSO
threshold is exceeded. 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).
4. 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 the Health
Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (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 HIPAA
regulations, which include, among other
provisions, the transactions and code
sets standards requirements codified at
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 certain electronic healthcare
transactions according to the applicable
transactions and code sets standards.
B. Proposed Medicare Severity LongTerm Care Diagnosis-Related Group
(MS–LTC–DRG) Classifications and
Relative Weights
1. Background
Section 123 of the BBRA requires that
the Secretary implement a PPS for
LTCHs (that is, a per discharge system
with a diagnosis-related group (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 longterm care hospital (LTCH) PPS] on the
use of existing (or refined) hospital
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24022
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
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.’’
When the LTCH PPS was
implemented for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2002,
we adopted the same DRG patient
classification system (that is, the CMS
DRGs) that was utilized at that time
under the IPPS. As a component of the
LTCH PPS, we refer to this patient
classification system as the ‘‘long-term
care diagnosis-related groups (LTC–
DRGs). Although the patient
classification systems used under both
the LTCH PPS and the IPPS are the
same, the relative weights are different.
The established relative weight
methodology and data used under the
LTCH PPS result in relative weights
under the LTCH PPS that reflect ‘‘the
differences in patient resource use
* * *’’ of LTCH patients (section
123(a)(1) of the BBRA (Pub. L. 106–
113)).
As part of our efforts to better
recognize severity of illness among
patients, in the FY 2008 IPPS final rule
with comment period (72 FR 47130), the
MS–DRGs and the Medicare severity
long-term care diagnosis-related groups
(MS–LTC–DRGs) were adopted under
the IPPS and the LTCH PPS,
respectively, effective beginning
October 1, 2007 (FY 2008). For a full
description of the development and
implementation and rationale for the
use of the MS–DRGs and MS–LTC–
DRGs, we refer readers to the FY 2008
IPPS final rule with comment period (72
FR 47141 through 47175 and 47277
through 47299). (We note that, in that
same final rule, we revised the
regulations at § 412.503 to specify that
for LTCH discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2007, when applying
the provisions of 42 CFR part 412,
Subpart O applicable to LTCHs for
policy descriptions and payment
calculations, all references to LTC–
DRGs would be considered a reference
to MS–LTC–DRGs. For the remainder of
this section, we present the discussion
in terms of the current MS–LTC–DRG
patient classification system unless
specifically referring to the previous
LTC–DRG patient classification system
that was in effect before October 1,
2007.) We believe the MS–DRGs (and by
extension, the MS–LTC–DRGs)
represent a substantial improvement
over the previous CMS DRGs in their
ability to differentiate cases based on
severity of illness and resource
consumption.
The MS–DRGs adopted in FY 2008
represent an increase in the number of
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
DRGs by 207 (that is, from 538 to 745)
(72 FR 47171). In FY 2009, an additional
MS–DRG was adopted for a total of 746
distinct groupings (73 FR 48497). For
FY 2011, we are proposing to delete one
MS–DRG and create two new MS–DRGs,
for a net gain of one MS–DRG, as noted
in section II. of the preamble of this
proposed rule. This would result in 747
distinct MS–DRG groupings for FY
2011. Consistent 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 LTCH
discharges into distinct MS–LTC–DRGs
based on clinical characteristics and
estimated resource needs. We then
assign an appropriate weight to the MS–
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, and as
discussed in greater detail below in
section VII.B.3.f. of this preamble, we
use low-volume MS–LTC–DRGs (that is,
MS–LTC–DRGs with less than 25 LTCH
cases) in determining the MS–LTC–DRG
relative weights because LTCHs do not
typically treat the full range of
diagnoses as do acute care hospitals. For
purposes of determining the relative
weights for the large number of lowvolume MS–LTC–DRGs, we group all of
the low-volume MS–LTC–DRGs into
five quintiles based on average charge
per discharge. (A detailed discussion of
the initial development and application
of the quintile methodology appears in
the August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS final
rule (67 FR 55978).) We also account for
adjustments to payments for short-stay
outlier (SSO) cases (that is, cases where
the covered LOS at the LTCH is less
than or equal to five-sixths of the
geometric ALOS for the MS–LTC–DRG).
Furthermore, we make adjustments to
account for nonmonotonically
increasing weights, when necessary.
That is, theoretically, cases under the
MS–LTC–DRG system that are more
severe require greater expenditure of
medical care resources and will result in
higher average charges such that, in the
severity levels within a base MS–LTC–
DRG, the weights should increase
monotonically with severity from the
lowest to highest severity level. (We
discuss nonmonotonicity in greater
detail and our methodology to adjust the
RY 2010 MS–LTC–DRG relative weights
to account for nonmonotonically
increasing relative weights in section
VII.B.3.g. (Step 6) of this preamble.)
PO 00000
Frm 00172
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
2. Patient Classifications Into MS–LTC–
DRGs
a. Background
The MS–DRGs (used under the IPPS)
and the MS–LTC–DRGs (used under the
LTCH PPS) are based on the CMS DRG
structure. As noted above in this
section, we refer to the DRGs under the
LTCH PPS as MS–LTC–DRGs although
they are structurally identical to the
MS–DRGs used under the IPPS.
The MS–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). 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 affecting DRG
assignment. That is, procedures that are
not surgical (for example, EKG), or
minor surgical procedures (for example,
biopsy of skin and subcutaneous tissue
(procedure code 86.11)) do not affect the
MS–LTC–DRG assignment based on
their presence on the claim.
Generally, under the LTCH PPS, a
Medicare payment is made at a
predetermined specific rate for each
discharge and that payment varies by
the MS–LTC–DRG to which a
beneficiary’s stay is assigned. Cases are
classified into MS–LTC–DRGs for
payment based on the following six data
elements:
• Principal diagnosis;
• Additional or secondary diagnoses;
• Surgical procedures;
• Age;
• Sex; and
• Discharge status of the patient.
Through FY 2010, the number of
secondary or additional diagnoses and
the number of surgical procedures
considered for MS–DRG assignment was
limited to eight and six, respectively.
Elsewhere in this proposed rule,
however, we are proposing that, for
claims submitted on the 5010 format
beginning January 1, 2011, we would
increase the capacity to process
diagnosis and procedure codes up to 25
diagnoses and 25 procedures. This will
include one principal diagnosis and up
to 24 secondary diagnoses for severity of
illness determinations. We refer readers
to section II.G.11.c. of this preamble for
a complete discussion of this proposed
change.
Upon the discharge of the patient
from a LTCH, the LTCH must assign
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
appropriate diagnosis and procedure
codes from the most current version of
the International Classification of
Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical
Modification (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 (45 CFR 162.1002 and 45
CFR 162.1102). For additional
information on the ICD–9–CM Coding
System, we refer readers to the FY 2008
IPPS final rule with comment period (72
FR 47241 through 47243 and 47277
through 47281). We also refer readers to
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 are published
in the Coding Clinic for ICD–9–CM, a
product of the American Hospital
Association. (We refer readers to section
II.G.11. of this preamble for additional
information on the annual revisions to
the ICD–9–CM codes.)
With respect to the ICD–9–CM coding
system, we have been discussing the
conversion to the ICD–10–CM and the
ICD–10–PCS coding systems for many
years. As is discussed in detail in
section II.G.11. of this preamble, the
ICD–10 coding systems applicable to
hospital inpatient services will be
implemented on October 1, 2013. In
order for the industry to make the
necessary conversions from ICD–9–CM
to ICD–10–CM and ICD–10–PCS, we
proposed, through the ICD–9–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee, to consider a moratorium on
updates to the ICD–9–CM and ICD–10
coding sets. We refer readers to section
II.G.11. of this preamble for additional
information on the adoption of ICD–10–
CM and ICD–10–PCS.
To create the MS–DRGs (and by
extension, the MS–LTC–DRGs),
individual DRGs were subdivided
according to the presence of specific
secondary diagnoses designated as
complications or comorbidities (CCs)
into three, two, or one level, depending
on the impact of the CCs on resources
used for those cases. Specifically, there
are sets of MS–DRGs that are split into
2 or 3 subgroups based on the presence
or absence of a CC or a major
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
complication and comorbidity (MCC).
We refer readers to section II.D. of the
FY 2008 IPPS final rule with comment
period for a detailed discussion about
the creation of MS–DRGs based on
severity of illness levels (72 FR 47141
through 47175).
Medicare contractors (that is, fiscal
intermediaries and MACs) enter the
clinical and demographic information
submitted by LTCHs 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
MS–LTC–DRG can be made. During this
process, certain cases are selected for
further development (74 FR 43949).
After screening through the MCE,
each claim is classified into the
appropriate MS–LTC–DRG by the
Medicare LTCH GROUPER software on
the basis of diagnosis and procedure
codes and other demographic
information (age, sex, and discharge
status). The GROUPER software used
under the LTCH PPS is the same
GROUPER software program used under
the IPPS. Following the MS–LTC–DRG
assignment, the Medicare contractor
determines the prospective payment
amount by using the Medicare PRICER
program, which accounts for hospitalspecific adjustments. Under the LTCH
PPS, we provide an opportunity for
LTCHs to review the MS–LTC–DRG
assignments made by the Medicare
contractor and to submit additional
information within a specified
timeframe as provided in § 412.513(c).
The GROUPER software is used both
to classify past cases to measure relative
hospital resource consumption to
establish the MS–LTC–DRG weights and
to classify current cases for purposes of
determining payment. The records for
all Medicare hospital inpatient
discharges are maintained in the
MedPAR file. The data in this file are
used to evaluate possible MS–DRG and
MS–LTC–DRG classification changes
and to recalibrate the MS–DRG and MS–
LTC–DRG relative weights during our
annual update under both the IPPS
(§ 412.60(e)) and the LTCH PPS
(§ 412.517), respectively.
b. Proposed Changes to the MS–LTC–
DRGs for FY 2011
As specified by our regulations at
§ 412.517(a), which requires that the
LTC–MS–DRG classifications and
relative weights be updated annually
and consistent with our historical
practice of using the same patient
classification system under the LTCH
PPS as is used under the IPPS, in this
PO 00000
Frm 00173
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24023
proposed rule, we are proposing to
modify and revise the MS–LTC–DRG
classifications effective October 1, 2010,
through September 30, 2011 (FY 2011)
consistent with the proposed changes to
specific MS–DRG classifications
presented above in section II.G. of this
proposed rule (that is, proposed
GROUPER Version 28.0). Therefore, the
MS–LTC–DRGs for FY 2011 presented
in this proposed rule are the same as the
proposed MS–DRGs that would be used
under the IPPS for FY 2011. In addition,
because the proposed MS–LTC–DRGs
for FY 2011 are the same as the
proposed MS–DRGs for FY 2011, the
other changes that would affect MS–
DRG (and by extension MS–LTC–DRG)
assignments under Version 28.0 of the
GROUPER discussed in section II.G. of
the preamble of this proposed rule,
including the proposed changes to the
MCE software and proposed changes to
the ICD–9–CM coding system, would
also be applicable under the LTCH PPS
for FY 2011.
3. Development of the Proposed FY
2011 MS–LTC–DRG Relative Weights
a. General Overview of the Development
of the MS–LTC–DRG Relative Weights
As we stated in the August 30, 2002
LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR 55984), one
of the primary goals for the
implementation of the LTCH PPS is to
pay each LTCH an appropriate amount
for the efficient delivery of medical care
to Medicare patients. The system must
be able to account adequately for each
LTCH’s case-mix in order to ensure both
fair distribution of Medicare payments
and access to adequate care for those
Medicare patients whose care is more
costly. To accomplish these goals, we
have annually adjusted the LTCH PPS
standard Federal prospective payment
system rate by the applicable relative
weight in determining payment to
LTCHs for each case.
Although the adoption of the MS–
LTC–DRGs resulted in some
modifications of existing procedures for
assigning weights in cases of zero
volume and/or nonmonotonicity (as
discussed in the FY 2008 IPPS final rule
with comment period (72 FR 47289
through 47295) and the FY 2009 IPPS
final rule (73 FR 48542 through 48550)),
the basic methodology for developing
the proposed FY 2011 MS–LTC–DRG
relative weights in this proposed rule
continues to be determined in
accordance with the general
methodology established in the August
30, 2002 LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR
55989 through 55991). Under the LTCH
PPS, relative weights for each MS–LTC–
DRG are a primary element used to
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24024
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
account for the variations in cost per
discharge and resource utilization
among the payment groups (§ 412.515).
To ensure that Medicare patients
classified to each MS–LTC–DRG have
access to an appropriate level of services
and to encourage efficiency, we
calculate a relative weight for each MS–
LTC–DRG that represents the resources
needed by an average inpatient LTCH
case in that MS–LTC–DRG. For
example, cases in an MS–LTC–DRG
with a relative weight of 2 will, on
average, cost twice as much to treat as
cases in an MS–LTC–DRG with a weight
of 1.
b. Development of the Proposed MS–
LTC–DRG Relative Weights for FY 2011
Beginning with the FY 2008 update,
we established a budget neutral
requirement for the annual update to the
MS–LTC–DRG classifications and
relative weights at 42 CFR 412.517(b) (in
conjunction with § 412.503), 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 would have been made
without the classification and relative
weight changes (May 11, 2007 LTCH
PPS final rule, 72 FR 26882 through
26884).
Consistent with § 412.517(b), we
apply a two-step budget neutrality
methodology, which is based on the
current year MS–LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights. (For
additional information on the
established two-step budget neutrality
methodology, we refer readers to the FY
2008 IPPS final rule (72 FR 47295
through 47296).) Thus, the proposed
annual update to the MS–LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights for
FY 2011 is based on the FY 2010 MS–
LTC–DRG classifications and relative
weights.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
c. Data
In this proposed rule, to calculate the
proposed MS–LTC–DRG relative
weights for FY 2011, we are proposing
to obtain total Medicare allowable
charges from FY 2009 Medicare LTCH
bill data from the December 2009
update of the MedPAR file, which are
the best available data at this time, and
to use the proposed Version 28.0 of the
GROUPER to classify LTCH cases (as
discussed above). We also are proposing
that if more recent data become
available, we would use those data and
the finalized Version 28.0 of the
GROUPER in establishing the FY 2011
MS–LTC–DRG relative weights in the
final rule.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Consistent with our historical
methodology, we excluded the data
from LTCHs that are all-inclusive rate
providers and LTCHs that are
reimbursed in accordance with
demonstration projects authorized
under section 402(a) of Public Law 90–
248 or section 222(a) of Public Law 92–
603. In addition, as is the case with the
IPPS, Medicare Advantage (Part C)
claims are now included in the MedPAR
files (74 FR 43808). Consistent with
IPPS policy, we are proposing to
exclude such claims in the calculations
for the relative weights under the LTCH
PPS that are used to determine
payments for fee-for-service Medicare
claims. Specifically, we have added an
edit to the relative weight calculation to
remove any claims from the MedPAR
files that have a GHO Paid indicator
value of ‘‘1,’’ which effectively removes
Medicare Advantage claims from the
relative weight calculations (73 FR
48532). Accordingly, in the
development of the proposed FY 2011
MS–LTC–DRG relative weights in this
proposed rule, we excluded the data of
13 all-inclusive rate providers and the 2
LTCHs that are paid in accordance with
demonstration projects that had claims
in the FY 2009 MedPAR file, as well as
any Medicare Advantage claims.
d. Hospital-Specific Relative Value
(HSRV) Methodology
By nature, LTCHs often specialize in
certain areas, such as ventilatordependent patients and rehabilitation
and wound care. Some case types
(DRGs) may be treated, to a large extent,
in hospitals that have, from a
perspective of charges, relatively high
(or low) charges. This nonrandom
distribution of cases with relatively high
(or low) charges in specific MS–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, consistent
with the methodology we have used
since the implementation of the LTCH
PPS, we are proposing to continue to
use a hospital-specific relative value
(HSRV) methodology to calculate the
proposed MS–LTC–DRG relative
weights. We believe this method
removes this hospital-specific source of
bias in measuring LTCH average charges
(67 FR 55985). Specifically, we are
reducing the impact of the variation in
charges across providers on any
particular proposed MS–LTC–DRG
relative weight by converting each
LTCH’s charge for a case to a relative
value based on that LTCH’s average
charge.
PO 00000
Frm 00174
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Under the HSRV methodology, we
standardize charges for each LTCH by
converting its charges for each case to
hospital-specific relative charge values
and then adjust those values for the
LTCH’s case-mix. The adjustment for
case-mix is needed to rescale the
hospital-specific relative charge values
(which, by definition, average 1.0 for
each LTCH). The average relative weight
for a LTCH is its case-mix, so it is
reasonable to scale each LTCH’s average
relative charge value by its case-mix. In
this way, each LTCH’s relative charge
value is adjusted by its case-mix to an
average that reflects the complexity of
the cases it treats relative to the
complexity of the cases treated by all
other LTCHs (the average case-mix of all
LTCHs).
In accordance with our established
methodology, we continue to
standardize charges for each case by
first dividing the adjusted charge for the
case (adjusted for SSOs under § 412.529
as described in section VII.B.3.g. (step 3)
of the preamble of this proposed rule)
by the average adjusted charge for all
cases at the LTCH in which the case was
treated. SSO cases are cases with a
length of stay that is less than or equal
to five-sixths the average length of stay
of the MS–LTC–DRG (§ 412.529 and
§ 412.503). The average adjusted charge
reflects the average intensity of the
health care services delivered by a
particular LTCH and the average cost
level of that LTCH. The resulting ratio
is multiplied by that LTCH’s case-mix
index to determine the standardized
charge for the case. (67 FR 55989)
Multiplying by the LTCH’s case-mix
index accounts for the fact that the same
relative charges are given greater weight
at a LTCH with higher average costs
than they would at a LTCH with low
average costs, which is needed to adjust
each LTCH’s relative charge value to
reflect its case-mix relative to the
average case-mix for all LTCHs. Because
we standardize charges in this manner,
we count charges for a Medicare patient
at a LTCH with high average charges as
less resource intensive than they would
be at a LTCH with low average charges.
For example, a $10,000 charge for a case
at a LTCH with an average adjusted
charge of $17,500 reflects a higher level
of relative resource use than a $10,000
charge for a case at a LTCH with the
same case-mix, but an average adjusted
charge of $35,000. We believe that the
adjusted charge of an individual case
more accurately reflects actual resource
use for an individual LTCH because the
variation in charges due to systematic
differences in the markup of charges
among LTCHs is taken into account.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
e. Treatment of Severity Levels in
Developing the Proposed MS–LTC–DRG
Relative Weights
For purposes of determining the
proposed MS–LTC–DRG relative
weights, there are three different
categories of DRGs based on volume of
cases within specific MS–LTC–DRGs.
MS–LTC–DRGs with at least 25 cases
are each assigned a unique proposed
relative weight; low-volume proposed
MS–LTC–DRGs (that is, proposed MS–
LTC–DRGs that contain between 1 and
24 cases based on a given year’s claims
data) are grouped into quintiles (as
described below) and assigned the
proposed relative weight of the quintile.
No-volume proposed MS–LTC–DRGs
(that is, no cases in the given year’s
claims data were assigned to those
proposed MS–LTC–DRGs) are
crosswalked to other proposed MS–
LTC–DRGs based on the clinical
similarities and assigned the relative
weight of the crosswalked MS–LTC–
DRG (as described in greater detail
below). (We provide in-depth
discussions of our policy regarding
weight-setting for low-volume MS–
LTC–DRGs in section VII.B.3.f. of the
preamble of this proposed rule and for
no-volume MS–LTC–DRGs, under Step
5 in section VII.B.3.g. of the preamble of
this proposed rule.)
As also noted above, while the LTCH
PPS and the IPPS use the same patient
classification system, the methodology
that is used to set the DRG relative
weights for use in each payment system
differs because the overall volume of
cases in the LTCH PPS is much less
than in the IPPS. In general, consistent
with our existing methodology, we are
proposing to determine the proposed FY
2011 relative weights for the proposed
MS–LTC–DRGs using the following
steps: (1) If a proposed MS–LTC–DRG
has at least 25 cases, it is assigned its
own proposed relative weight; (2) if a
proposed MS–LTC–DRG has between 1
and 24 cases, it is assigned to a quintile
for which we compute a proposed
relative weight for all of the proposed
MS–LTC–DRGs assigned to that
quintile; and (3) if a proposed MS–LTC–
DRG has no cases, it is crosswalked to
another proposed MS–LTC–DRG based
upon clinical similarities to assign an
appropriate proposed relative weight (as
described below in detail in Step 5 of
section VII.B.3.g. of this preamble).
Furthermore, in determining the
proposed FY 2011 MS–LTC–DRG
relative weights, when necessary, we are
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
proposing to make adjustments to
account for nonmonotonicity, as
discussed in greater detail below in Step
6 of section VII.B.3.g. of this preamble.
We refer readers to the discussion in the
FY 2010 IPPS/RY LTCH PPS final rule
for our rationale for including an
adjustment for nonmonotonicity (74 FR
43953 through 43954).
f. Low-Volume MS–LTC–DRGs
In order to account for proposed MS–
LTC–DRGs with low volume (that is,
with fewer than 25 LTCH cases),
consistent with our existing
methodology, for purposes of
determining the MS–LTC–DRG relative
weights, we are proposing to continue to
employ this quintile methodology for
low-volume proposed MS–LTC–DRGs,
such that we group those ‘‘low-volume
MS–LTC–DRGs’’ (that is, MS–LTC–
DRGs that contained between 1 and 24
cases annually) into one of five
categories (quintiles) based on average
charges (67 FR 55984 through 55995
and 72 FR 47283 through 47288). In
determining the proposed FY 2011 MS–
LTC–DRG relative weights in this
proposed rule, in cases where the initial
assignment of a low-volume proposed
MS–LTC–DRG to quintiles results in
nonmonotonicity within a base-DRG, in
order to ensure appropriate Medicare
payments, consistent with our historical
methodology, we are proposing to make
adjustments to the treatment of lowvolume proposed MS–LTC–DRGs to
preserve monotonicity, as discussed in
detail below in section VII.B.3.g. (Step
6) in this preamble.
In this proposed rule, using LTCH
cases from the December 2009 update of
the FY 2009 MedPAR file, we identified
283 MS–LTC–DRGs that contained
between 1 and 24 cases. This list of
proposed MS–LTC–DRGs was then
divided into one of the 5 low-volume
quintiles, each containing a minimum of
56 proposed MS–LTC–DRGs (283/5 = 56
with 3 proposed MS–LTC–DRG as the
remainder). We are proposing to assign
a low-volume proposed MS–LTC–DRG
to a specific low-volume quintile by
sorting the low-volume proposed MS–
LTC–DRGs in ascending order by
average charge in accordance with our
established methodology. Furthermore,
because the number of proposed MS–
LTC–DRGs with less than 25 cases was
not evenly divisible by 5, the average
charge of the low-volume quintile was
used to determine which of the lowvolume quintiles would contain the 3
PO 00000
Frm 00175
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24025
additional low-volume proposed MS–
LTC–DRGs. Specifically, after sorting
the 283 low-volume proposed MS–LTC–
DRGs by ascending order by average
charge, we are proposing to assign the
first fifth (1st through 56th) of lowvolume proposed MS–LTC–DRGs (with
the lowest average charge) into Quintile
1. The proposed MS–LTC–DRGs with
the highest average charge cases would
be assigned into Quintile 5. Because the
average charge of the 113th low-volume
proposed MS–LTC–DRG in the sorted
list is closer to the average charge of the
112th low-volume proposed MS–LTC–
DRG (assigned to Quintile 2) than to the
average charge of the 114th low-volume
MS–LTC–DRG (assigned to Quintile 3),
we are proposing to place it into
Quintile 2 (such that Quintile 2 would
contain 57 low-volume proposed MS–
LTC–DRGs before any adjustments for
nonmonotonicity, as discussed below).
This process was repeated through the
remaining low-volume proposed MS–
LTC–DRGs so that 2 of the 5 lowvolume quintiles contain 56 MS–LTC–
DRGs (Quintiles 1 and 4) and the other
3 low-volume quintiles contain 57 MS–
LTC–DRGs (Quintiles 2, 3, and 5).
Accordingly, in order to determine
the proposed FY 2011 relative weights
for the proposed MS–LTC–DRGs with
low volume, we are proposing to use the
5 low-volume quintiles described above.
The composition of each of the 5 lowvolume quintiles shown in the chart
below was used in determining the
proposed FY 2011 MS–LTC–DRG
relative weights (as shown in Table 11
of the Addendum to this proposed rule).
We determined a proposed relative
weight and (geometric) average length of
stay for each of the 5 low-volume
quintiles using the methodology that we
applied to the proposed MS–LTC–DRGs
(25 or more cases), as described in
section VII.B.3.g. of the preamble of this
proposed rule. We are proposing to
assign the same proposed relative
weight and average length of stay to
each of the low-volume proposed MS–
LTC–DRGs that make up an individual
low-volume quintile. We note that, as
this system is dynamic, it is possible
that the number and specific type of
MS–LTC–DRGs with a low volume of
LTCH cases will vary in the future. We
use the best available claims data in the
MedPAR file to identify low-volume
MS–LTC–DRGs and to calculate the
proposed relative weights based on our
methodology.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00176
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.047
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24026
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00177
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24027
EP04MY10.048
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00178
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.049
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24028
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00179
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24029
EP04MY10.050
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00180
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.051
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24030
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00181
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24031
EP04MY10.052
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00182
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.053
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24032
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
We note that we will continue to
monitor the volume (that is, the number
of LTCH cases) in the low-volume
quintiles to ensure that our quintile
assignments used in determining the
proposed MS–LTC–DRG relative
weights result in appropriate payment
for such cases and do not result in an
unintended financial incentive for
LTCHs to inappropriately admit these
types of cases.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
g. Steps for Determining the Proposed
FY 2011 MS–LTC–DRG Relative
Weights
In general, we are proposing to
determine the FY 2011 MS–LTC–DRG
relative weights based on our existing
methodology. For additional
information on the original
development of this methodology, and
modifications to it since the adoption of
the MS–LTC–DRGs, we refer readers to
the August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS final
rule (67 FR 55989 through 55995) and
the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
final rule (74 FR 43951 through 43966).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
In summary, for FY 2011, to
determine the proposed FY 2011 MS–
LTC–DRG relative weights, we are
proposing to group LTCH cases to the
appropriate proposed MS–LTC–DRG,
while taking into account the lowvolume proposed MS–LTC–DRGs (as
described above). After grouping the
cases to the appropriate MS–LTC–DRG
(or low-volume quintile), we calculate
the proposed FY 2011 relative weights
by first removing statistical outliers and
cases with a length of stay of 7 days or
less (as discussed in greater detail
below). Next, we adjust the number of
cases in each proposed MS–LTC–DRG
(or low-volume quintile) for the effect of
SSO cases (step 3 below). After
removing statistical outliers (step 1
below) and cases with a length of stay
of less than 8 days (step 2 below), the
SSO adjusted discharges and
corresponding charges are then used to
calculate ‘‘relative adjusted weights’’ for
each proposed MS–LTC–DRG (or lowvolume quintile) using the HSRV
method.
PO 00000
Frm 00183
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24033
Below we discuss in detail the steps
for calculating the proposed FY 2011
MS–LTC–DRG relative weights. We note
that, as we stated in section VII.B.3.c. of
this preamble, we excluded the data of
all-inclusive rate LTCHs, LTCHs that are
paid in accordance with demonstration
projects, and any Medicare Advantage
claims in the FY 2009 MedPAR file.
Step 1—Remove statistical outliers.
The first step in the calculation of the
proposed FY 2011 MS–LTC–DRG
relative weights is to remove statistical
outlier cases. Consistent with our
historical relative weight methodology,
we are proposing to continue to define
statistical outliers as cases that are
outside of 3.0 standard deviations from
the mean of the log distribution of both
charges per case and the charges per day
for each MS–LTC–DRG. These statistical
outliers are removed prior to calculating
the proposed relative weights because
we believe that they may represent
aberrations in the data that distort the
measure of average resource use.
Including those LTCH cases in the
calculation of the proposed relative
weights could result in an inaccurate
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.054
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24034
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
relative weight that does not truly
reflect relative resource use among the
MS–LTC–DRGs. (For additional
information on this step of the relative
weight methodology, we refer readers to
67 FR 55989 and 74 FR 43959.)
Step 2—Remove cases with a length
of stay of 7 days or less.
The MS–LTC–DRG relative weights
reflect the average of resources used on
representative cases of a specific type.
Generally, cases with a length of stay of
7 days or less do not belong in a LTCH
because these stays do not fully receive
or benefit from treatment that is typical
in a LTCH stay, and full resources are
often not used in the earlier stages of
admission to a LTCH. If we were to
include stays of 7 days or less in the
computation of the proposed FY 2011
MS–LTC–DRG relative weights, the
value of many proposed relative weights
would decrease and, therefore,
payments would decrease to a level that
may no longer be appropriate. We do
not believe that it would be appropriate
to compromise the integrity of the
payment determination for those LTCH
cases that actually benefit from and
receive a full course of treatment at a
LTCH by including data from these very
short-stays. Therefore, consistent with
our historical relative weight
methodology, in determining the
proposed FY 2011 MS–LTC–DRG
relative weights, we are proposing to
remove LTCH cases with a length of stay
of 7 days or less. (For additional
information on this step of the relative
weight methodology, we refer readers to
67 FR 55989 and 74 FR 43959.)
Step 3—Adjust charges for the effects
of SSOs.
After removing cases with a length of
stay of 7 days or less, we are left with
cases that have a length of stay of greater
than or equal to 8 days. As the next step
in the calculation of the proposed FY
2011 MS–LTC–DRG relative weights,
consistent with our historical relative
weight methodology, we are proposing
to adjust each LTCH’s charges per
discharge for those remaining cases for
the effects of SSOs (as defined in
§ 412.529(a) in conjunction with
§ 412.503).
We make this adjustment by counting
an SSO case as a fraction of a discharge
based on the ratio of the length of stay
of the case to the average length of stay
for the MS–LTC–DRG for non-SSO
cases. This has the effect of
proportionately reducing the impact of
the lower charges for the SSO cases in
calculating the average charge for the
MS–LTC–DRG. This process produces
the same result as if the actual charges
per discharge of an SSO case were
adjusted to what they would have been
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
had the patient’s length of stay been
equal to the average length of stay of the
MS–LTC–DRG.
Counting SSO cases as full discharges
with no adjustment in determining the
proposed RY 2011 MS–LTC–DRG
relative weights would lower the
proposed FY 2011 MS–LTC–DRG
relative weight for affected MS–LTC–
DRGs because the relatively lower
charges of the SSO cases would bring
down the average charge for all cases
within an MS–LTC–DRG. This would
result in an ‘‘underpayment’’ for nonSSO cases and an ‘‘overpayment’’ for
SSO cases. Therefore, we are proposing
to adjust for SSO cases under § 412.529
in this manner because it results in
more appropriate payments for all LTCH
cases. (For additional information on
this step of the relative weight
methodology, we refer readers to 67 FR
55989 and 74 FR 43959.)
Step 4—Calculate the proposed FY
2011 MS–LTC–DRG relative weights on
an iterative basis.
Consistent with our historical relative
weight methodology, we are proposing
to calculate the proposed FY 2011 MS–
LTC–DRG relative weights using the
HSRV methodology, which is an
iterative process. First, for each LTCH
case, we calculate a hospital-specific
relative charge value by dividing the
SSO adjusted charge per discharge (see
Step 3) of the LTCH case (after removing
the statistical outliers (see Step 1)) and
LTCH cases with a length of stay of 7
days or less (see Step 2) by the average
charge per discharge for the LTCH in
which the case occurred. The resulting
ratio is then multiplied by the LTCH’s
case-mix index to produce an adjusted
hospital-specific relative charge value
for the case. An initial case-mix index
value of 1.0 is used for each LTCH.
For each proposed MS–LTC–DRG, the
proposed FY 2011 relative weight was
calculated by dividing the average of the
adjusted hospital-specific relative
charge values (from above) for the
proposed MS–LTC–DRG by the overall
average hospital-specific relative charge
value across all cases for all LTCHs.
Using these recalculated proposed MS–
LTC–DRG relative weights, each LTCH’s
average relative weight for all of its
cases (that is, its case-mix) is calculated
by dividing the sum of all the LTCH’s
proposed MS–LTC–DRG relative
weights by its total number of cases. The
LTCHs’ hospital-specific relative charge
values above is multiplied by these
hospital-specific case-mix indexes.
These hospital-specific case-mix
adjusted relative charge values are then
used to calculate a new set of proposed
MS–LTC–DRG relative weights across
all LTCHs. This iterative process was
PO 00000
Frm 00184
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
continued until there is convergence
between the weights produced at
adjacent steps, for example, when the
maximum difference is less than 0.0001.
Step 5—Determine a proposed FY
2011 relative weight for MS–LTC–DRGs
with no LTCH cases.
As we stated above, we are proposing
to determine the proposed FY 2011
relative weight for each proposed MS–
LTC–DRG using total Medicare
allowable charges reported in the best
available LTCH claims data (that is, the
December 2009 update of the FY 2009
MedPAR file for this proposed rule).
Using these data, we identified a
number of proposed MS–LTC–DRGs for
which there were no LTCH cases in the
database, such that no patients who
would have been classified to those
proposed MS–LTC–DRGs were treated
in LTCHs during FY 2009 and,
therefore, no charge data were available
for these proposed MS–LTC–DRGs.
Thus, in the process of determining the
proposed MS–LTC–DRG relative
weights, we were unable to calculate
proposed relative weights for the
proposed MS–LTC–DRGs with no LTCH
cases using the methodology described
in Steps 1 through 4 above. However,
because patients with a number of the
diagnoses under these proposed MS–
LTC–DRGs may be treated at LTCHs,
consistent with our historical
methodology, we are proposing to
assign a proposed relative weight to
each of the no-volume proposed MS–
LTC–DRGs based on clinical similarity
and relative costliness (with the
exception of ‘‘transplant’’ proposed MS–
LTC–DRGs and ‘‘error’’ proposed MS–
LTC–DRGs, as discussed below). (For
additional information on this step of
the relative weight methodology, we
refer readers to 67 FR 55991 and 74 FR
43959 through 43960.)
In general, we determined proposed
FY 2011 relative weights for the
proposed MS–LTC–DRGs with no LTCH
cases in the FY 2009 MedPAR file used
in this proposed rule (that is, ‘‘novolume’’ proposed MS–LTC–DRGs) by
crosswalking each no-volume proposed
MS–LTC–DRG to another proposed MS–
LTC–DRG with a calculated proposed
relative weight (determined in
accordance with the methodology
described above). Then, the ‘‘novolume’’ proposed MS–LTC–DRG is
assigned the same proposed relative
weight (and average length of stay) of
the proposed MS–LTC–DRG to which it
was crosswalked (as described in greater
detail below).
Of the 747 proposed MS–LTC–DRGs
for FY 2011, we identified 223 proposed
MS–LTC–DRGs for which there were no
LTCH cases in the database (including
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
the 8 ‘‘transplant’’ proposed MS–LTC–
DRGs and 2 ‘‘error’’ proposed MS–LTC–
DRGs). As stated above, we are
proposing to assign proposed relative
weights for each of the 213 no-volume
proposed MS–LTC–DRGs (with the
exception of the 8 ‘‘transplant’’ proposed
MS–LTC–DRGs and the 2 ‘‘error’’
proposed MS–LTC–DRGs, which are
discussed below) based on clinical
similarity and relative costliness to one
of the remaining 524 (747—223 = 524)
proposed MS–LTC–DRGs for which we
were able to determine proposed
relative weights based on FY 2009
LTCH claims data using the steps
described above. (For the remainder of
this discussion, we refer to the proposed
‘‘crosswalked’’ MS–LTC–DRGs as the
proposed MS–LTC–DRGs to which we
are proposing to crosswalk one of the
213 ‘‘no volume’’ proposed MS–LTC–
DRGs for purposes of determining a
proposed relative weight.) Then, we are
proposing to assign the no-volume
proposed MS–LTC–DRG the proposed
relative weight of the proposed
crosswalked MS–LTC–DRG. (As
explained below in Step 6, when
necessary, we made adjustments to
account for nonmonotonicity.)
In this proposed rule, we are
proposing to use the following
methodology for determining the
proposed FY 2011 relative weights for
the no-volume proposed MS–LTC–
DRGs: We crosswalk the no-volume
proposed MS–LTC–DRG to a proposed
MS–LTC–DRG for which there were
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
LTCH cases in the FY 2009 MedPAR file
and to which it is similar clinically in
intensity of use of resources and relative
costliness as determined by criteria such
as care provided during the period of
time surrounding surgery, surgical
approach (if applicable), length of time
of surgical procedure, postoperative
care, and length of stay. We evaluate the
relative costliness in determining the
applicable proposed MS–LTC–DRG to
which a no-volume proposed MS–LTC–
DRG was crosswalked in order to assign
an appropriate proposed relative weight
for the no-volume MS–LTC–DRGs in FY
2011. (For more detail on our process
for evaluating relative costliness, we
refer readers to the FY 2010 IPPS/RY
2010 LTCH PPS final rule (73 FR
48543).) We believe in the rare event
that there would be a few LTCH cases
grouped to one of the no-volume
proposed MS–LTC–DRGs in FY 2011,
the proposed relative weights assigned
based on the crosswalked proposed MS–
LTC–DRGs would result in an
appropriate LTCH PPS payment because
the proposed crosswalks, which are
based on similar clinical similarity and
relative costliness, generally require
equivalent relative resource use.
We then assign the proposed relative
weight of the crosswalked proposed
MS–LTC–DRG as the proposed relative
weight for the no-volume proposed MS–
LTC–DRG such that both of these MS–
LTC–DRGs (that is, the no-volume
proposed MS–LTC–DRG and the
crosswalked proposed MS–LTC–DRG)
PO 00000
Frm 00185
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24035
would have the same proposed relative
weight for FY 2011. We note that if the
crosswalked proposed MS–LTC–DRG
had 25 cases or more, its proposed
relative weight, which is calculated
using the methodology described in
Steps 1 through 4 above, is assigned to
the no-volume proposed MS–LTC–DRG
as well. Similarly, if the MS–LTC–DRG
to which the no-volume proposed MS–
LTC–DRG is crosswalked has 24 or less
cases and, therefore, is designated to
one of the low-volume quintiles for
purposes of determining the proposed
relative weights, we assign the proposed
relative weight of the applicable lowvolume quintile to the no-volume
proposed MS–LTC–DRG such that both
of these proposed MS–LTC–DRGs (that
is, the no-volume proposed MS–LTC–
DRG and the crosswalked proposed
MS–LTC–DRG) have the same proposed
relative weight for FY 2011. (As we
noted above, in the infrequent case
where nonmonotonicity involving a novolume proposed MS–LTC–DRG results,
additional measures as described in
Step 6 are required in order to maintain
monotonically increasing proposed
relative weights.)
For this proposed rule, a list of the novolume MS–LTC–DRGs and the
proposed MS–LTC–DRG to which it is
crosswalked (that is, the crosswalked
MS–LTC–DRG) for FY 2011 is shown in
the chart below.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00186
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.055
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24036
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00187
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24037
EP04MY10.056
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00188
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.057
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24038
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00189
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24039
EP04MY10.058
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00190
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.059
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24040
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
To illustrate this methodology for
determining the proposed relative
weights for the proposed FY 2011 MS–
LTC–DRGs with no LTCH cases, we are
providing the following example, which
refers to the no-volume proposed MS–
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
LTC–DRGs crosswalk information for
FY 2011 provided in the chart above.
Example: There were no cases in the FY
2009 MedPAR file used for this proposed
rule for MS–LTC–DRG 61 (Acute Ischemic
Stroke with Use of Thrombolytic Agent with
MCC). We determined that proposed MS–
LTC–DRG 70 (Nonspecific Cebrovascular
PO 00000
Frm 00191
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24041
Disorders with MCC) was similar clinically
and based on resource use to MS–LTC–DRG
61. Therefore, we assigned the same
proposed relative weight of MS–LTC–DRG 70
of 0.9204 for FY 2011 to MS–LTC–DRG 61
(Table 11 of the Addendum to this proposed
rule).
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.060
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24042
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Furthermore, for FY 2011, consistent
with our historical relative weight
methodology, we are proposing to
establish MS–LTC–DRG relative weights
of 0.0000 for the following transplant
proposed MS–LTC–DRGs: Heart
Transplant or Implant of Heart Assist
System with MCC (proposed MS–LTC–
DRG 1); Heart Transplant or Implant of
Heart Assist System without MCC
(proposed MS–LTC–DRG 2); Liver
Transplant with MCC or Intestinal
Transplant (proposed MS–LTC–DRG 5);
Liver Transplant without MCC
(proposed MS–LTC–DRG 6); Lung
Transplant (proposed MS–LTC–DRG 7);
Simultaneous Pancreas/Kidney
Transplant (proposed MS–LTC–DRG 8);
Pancreas Transplant (proposed MS–
LTC–DRG 10); and Kidney Transplant
(proposed MS–LTC–DRG 652). This is
because Medicare will only cover these
procedures if they are performed at a
hospital that has been certified for the
specific procedures by Medicare and
presently no LTCH has been so certified.
At the present time, we only include
these eight transplant MS–LTC–DRGs in
the GROUPER program for
administrative purposes only. Because
we use the same GROUPER program for
LTCHs as is used under the IPPS,
removing these MS–LTC–DRGs would
be administratively burdensome. (For
additional information regarding our
treatment of transplant MS–LTC–DRGs,
we refer readers to the RY 2010 LTCH
PPS final rule (74 FR 43964).) Again, we
note that, as this system is dynamic, it
is entirely possible that the number of
MS–LTC–DRGs with no volume of
LTCH cases based on the system will
vary in the future. We used the most
recent available claims data in the
MedPAR file to identify no-volume MS–
LTC–DRGs and to determine the
proposed relative weights in this
proposed rule.
Step 6—Adjust the proposed FY 2011
MS–LTC–DRG relative weights to
account for nonmonotonically
increasing relative weights.
As discussed earlier in this section,
the MS–DRGs contain base DRGs that
have been subdivided into one, two, or
three severity of illness levels. Where
there are three severity levels, the most
severe level has at least one code that is
referred to as an MCC (that is, major
complication or comorbidity). The next
lower severity level contains cases with
at least one code that is a CC (that is,
complication or comorbidity). Those
cases without an MCC or a CC are
referred to as ‘‘without CC/MCC.’’ When
data do not support the creation of three
severity levels, the base DRG is
subdivided into either two levels or the
base DRG is not subdivided. The two-
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
level subdivisions could consist of the
with CC/MCC and the without CC/MCC.
Alternatively, the other type of twolevel subdivision may consist of the
MCC and without MCC.
In those base MS–LTC–DRGs that are
split into either two or three severity
levels, cases classified into the ‘‘without
CC/MCC’’ MS–LTC–DRG are expected to
have a lower resource use (and lower
costs) than the ‘‘with CC/MCC’’ MS–
LTC–DRG (in the case of a two-level
split) or both the ‘‘with CC’’ and the
‘‘with MCC’’ MS–LTC–DRGs (in the case
of a three-level split). That is,
theoretically, cases that are more severe
typically require greater expenditure of
medical care resources and will result in
higher average charges. Therefore, in the
three severity levels, relative weights
should increase by severity, from lowest
to highest. If the relative weights
decrease as severity decreased (that is,
if within a base MS–LTC–DRG, an MS–
LTC–DRG with CC has a higher relative
weight than one with MCC, or the MS–
LTC–DRG without CC/MCC has a higher
relative weight than either of the
others), they are nonmonotonic. We
continue to believe that utilizing
nonmonotonic relative weights to adjust
Medicare payments would result in
inappropriate payments because the
payment for the cases in the higher
severity level in a base MS–LTC–DRG
(which are generally expected to have
higher resource use and costs) would be
lower than the payment for cases in a
lower severity level within the same
base MS–LTC–DRG (which are generally
expected to have lower resource use and
costs). Consequently, in determining the
proposed FY 2011 MS–LTC–DRG
relative weights in this proposed rule,
consistent with our historical
methodology, we are proposing to
combine MS–LTC–DRG severity levels
within a base MS–LTC–DRG for the
purpose of computing a relative weight
when necessary to ensure that
monotonicity is maintained. For a
comprehensive description of our
existing methodology to adjust for
nonmonotonicity, we refer readers to
the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
final rule (74 FR 43964 through 43966).
Any adjustments for nonmonotonicity
that were made in determining the
proposed FY 2011 MS–LTC–DRG
relative weights in this proposed rule by
applying this methodology are denoted
in Table 11 of the Addendum to this
proposed rule.
Step 7— Calculate the proposed FY
2011 budget neutrality factor.
As we established in the RY 2008
LTCH PPS final rule (72 FR 26882),
under the broad authority conferred
upon the Secretary to develop the LTCH
PO 00000
Frm 00192
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
PPS under section 123 of Public Law
106–113, as amended by section 307(b)
of Public Law 106–554, beginning with
the MS–LTC–DRG update for FY 2008,
the annual update to the MS–LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights is
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 would have been made
without the MS–LTC–DRG classification
and relative weight changes
(§ 412.517(b) in conjunction with
§ 412.503). (For a detailed discussion on
the establishment of the budget
neutrality requirement to update the
MS–LTC–DRG classifications and
relative weights, we refer readers to the
RY 2008 LTCH PPS final rule (72 FR
26881).)
The MS–LTC–DRG classifications and
relative weights are updated annually
based on the most recent available
LTCH claims data to reflect changes in
relative LTCH resource use (§ 412.517(a)
in accordance with § 412.503). Under
the budget neutrality requirement at
§ 412.517(b), for each annual update, the
MS–LTC–DRG relative weights are
uniformly adjusted to ensure that
estimated aggregate payments under the
LTCH PPS would not be affected (that
is, decreased or increased). Consistent
with that provision, we are proposing to
update the proposed MS–LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights for
FY 2011 based on the most recent
available LTCH data, and to apply a
budget neutrality adjustment in
determining the proposed FY 2011 MS–
LTC–DRG relative weights.
To ensure budget neutrality in the
proposed update to the MS–LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights
under § 412.517(b), we are proposing to
continue to use our established two-step
budget neutrality methodology.
Specifically, in the first step of our MS–
LTC–DRG budget neutrality
methodology, we calculate and apply a
normalization factor to the proposed
recalibrated relative weights (the result
of Steps 1 through 6 above) to ensure
that estimated payments are not
influenced by changes in the
composition of case types or the
changes to the classification system.
That is, the normalization adjustment is
intended to ensure that the recalibration
of the proposed MS–LTC–DRG relative
weights (that is, the process itself)
neither increases nor decreases the
average CMI.
To calculate the proposed
normalization factor for FY 2011 (the
first step of our budget neutrality
methodology), we are proposing to use
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
the following three steps: (1.a.) We use
the most recent available LTCH claims
data (FY 2009) and group them using
the proposed FY 2011 GROUPER
(Version 28.0) and the proposed
recalibrated FY 2011 MS–LTC–DRG
relative weights (determined in steps 1
through 6 of the Steps for Determining
the Proposed FY 2011 MS–LTC–DRG
Relative Weights above) to calculate the
average CMI; (1.b.) we group the same
LTCH claims data (FY 2009) using the
FY 2010 GROUPER (Version 27.0) and
FY 2010 MS–LTC–DRG relative weights
and calculate the average CMI; and (1.c.)
we compute the ratio of these average
CMIs by dividing the average CMI for
FY 2010 (determined in Step 1.b.) by the
average CMI for FY 2011 (determined in
step 1.a.). In determining the proposed
MS–LTC–DRG relative weights for FY
2011, each recalibrated MS–LTC–DRG
relative weight is multiplied by 1.10362
in the first step of the budget neutrality
methodology, which produces
‘‘normalized relative weights.’’
In the second step of our MS–LTC–
DRG budget neutrality methodology, we
determine a budget neutrality factor to
ensure that estimated aggregate LTCH
PPS payments (based on the most recent
available LTCH claims data) after
reclassification and recalibration (that
is, the proposed FY 2011 MS–LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights) are
equal to estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments before reclassification and
recalibration (that is, the FY 2010 MS–
LTC–DRG classifications and relative
weights). Accordingly, consistent with
our existing methodology, we are
proposing to use FY 2009 discharge data
to simulate payments and compare
estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments using the FY 2010 MS–LTC–
DRGs and relative weights to estimate
aggregate LTCH PPS payments using the
proposed FY 2011 MS–LTC–DRGs and
relative weights. As noted above, the
most recent available LTCH claims data
for this proposed rule are from the
December 2009 update of the FY 2009
MedPAR file. Consistent with our
historical policy of using the best
available data, we are proposing to use
the most recently available claims data
for determining the budget neutrality
adjustment factor in the final rule.
For this proposed rule, we determined
the proposed FY 2011 budget neutrality
adjustment factor rule using the
following three steps: (2.a.) we simulate
estimated total LTCH PPS payments
using the normalized proposed relative
weights for FY 2011 and GROUPER
Version 28.0 (as described above); (2.b.)
we simulate estimated total LTCH PPS
payments using the FY 2010 GROUPER
(Version 27.0) and the FY 2010 MS–
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
LTC–DRG relative weights shown in
Table 11 of the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010
LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR 44183
through 44192); and (2.c.) we calculate
the ratio of these estimated total LTCH
PPS payments by dividing the estimated
total LTCH PPS payments using the FY
2010 GROUPER (Version 27.0) and the
FY 2010 MS–LTC–DRG relative weights
(determined in step 2.b.) by the
estimated total LTCH PPS payments
using the proposed FY 2011 GROUPER
(Version 28.0) and the normalized
proposed MS–LTC–DRG relative
weights for FY 2011 (determined in Step
2.a.). In determining the proposed FY
2011 MS–LTC–DRG relative weights,
each normalized proposed relative
weight is multiplied by a budget
neutrality factor of 0.987575 in the
second step of the budget neutrality
methodology to determine the proposed
budget neutral FY 2011 relative weight
for each MS–LTC–DRG.
Accordingly, in determining the
proposed FY 2011 MS–LTC–DRG
relative weights in this proposed rule,
consistent with our existing
methodology, we are proposing to apply
a normalization factor of 1.10362 and a
budget neutrality factor of 0.987575
(computed as described above).
Table 11 in the Addendum to this
proposed rule lists the proposed MS–
LTC–DRGs and their respective
proposed relative weights, geometric
mean length of stay, and five-sixths of
the geometric mean length of stay (used
in determining SSO payments under
§ 412.529) for FY 2011. The proposed
FY 2011 MS–LTC–DRG relative weights
in Table 11 in the Addendum to this
proposed rule reflect both the proposed
normalization factor of 1.10362 and the
proposed budget neutrality factor of
0.987575.
C. Proposed Changes to the LTCH
Payment Rates and Other Changes to
the FY 2011 LTCH PPS
1. Overview of Development of the
LTCH Payment Rates
The LTCH PPS was effective
beginning with a LTCH’s first cost
reporting period beginning on or after
October 1, 2002. Effective beginning
with that cost reporting period, LTCHs
were paid, during a 5-year transition
period, a total LTCH prospective
payment that was comprised of an
increasing proportion of the LTCH PPS
Federal rate and a decreasing proportion
based on reasonable cost-based
principles, unless the hospital made 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
PO 00000
Frm 00193
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24043
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 § 412.536. In this
section, we discuss the factors that
would be used to update the LTCH PPS
standard Federal rate for the FY 2011
that would be effective for LTCH
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2010 through September 30, 2011.
For further details on the
development of the FY 2003 standard
Federal rate, we refer readers to the
August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS final rule
(67 FR 56027 through 56037), and for
subsequent updates to the LTCH PPS
Federal rate, we refer readers 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), RY 2007 LTCH PPS
final rule (71 FR 27819 through 27827),
RY 2008 LTCH PPS final rule (72 FR
26870 through 27029), RY 2009 LTCH
PPS final rule (73 FR 26800 through
26804), and RY 2010 LTCH PPS final
rule (74 FR 44021 through 44030). The
proposed update to the LTCH PPS
standard Federal rate for FY 2011 is
presented in section V.A. of the
Addendum to this proposed rule. The
two components of the proposed update
to the LTCH PPS standard Federal rate
for FY 2011 are discussed below.
2. Market Basket for LTCHs Reimbursed
Under the LTCH PPS
a. Overview
Historically, the Medicare program
has used a market basket to account for
price increases in 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. With the
initial implementation of the LTCH PPS
for FY 2003, we established the use of
the excluded hospital with capital
market basket as the LTCH PPS market
basket (67 FR 56016 through 56017).
The development of the initial LTCH
PPS standard Federal rate for FY 2003,
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).
For further details on the development
of the excluded hospital with capital
market basket, we refer readers to the
RY 2004 LTCH PPS final rule (68 FR
34134 through 34137).
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24044
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Beginning in RY 2007, we adopted the
rehabilitation, psychiatric, long-term
care (RPL) hospital market basket based
on FY 2002 data as the appropriate
market basket of goods and services
under the LTCH PPS for discharges
occurring on or after July 1, 2006. As
discussed in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
final rule (71 FR 27810), based on our
research, we did not develop a market
basket specific to LTCH services. We
were unable to create a separate market
basket specifically for LTCHs at that
time due to the small number of
facilities and the limited amount of data
that was reported.
For further details on the
development of the FY 2002-based RPL
market basket, we refer readers to the
RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR
27810 through 27817).
b. Market Basket Under the LTCH PPS
for FY 2011
When we initially created the FY
2002-based RPL market basket, we were
unable to create a separate market
basket specifically for LTCHs due, in
part, to the small number of facilities
and the limited data that were provided
in the Medicare cost reports. Over the
last several years, however, the number
of LTCH facilities submitting valid
Medicare cost report data has increased.
Based on this development, as well as
our desire to move from one RPL market
basket to three stand-alone and
provider-specific market baskets (for
IRFs, IPFs, and LTCHs, respectively), we
plan to begin exploring the viability of
creating these market baskets for future
use. However, as we discussed in the
RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR
43967 through 43968), we are
conducting further research to assist us
in understanding the reasons for the
variations in costs and cost structure
between freestanding IRFs and hospitalbased IRFs. We also are researching the
reasons for similar variations in costs
and cost structure between freestanding
IPFs and hospital-based IPFs. Therefore,
as we continue to explore the
development of stand-alone market
baskets for LTCHs, IRFs and IPFs,
respectively, we believe that it is
appropriate to continue to use the FY
2002-based RPL market basket for
LTCHs, IRFs and IPFs under their
respective PPSs.
In addition, for the reasons discussed
when we adopted the RPL market basket
for use under the LTCH PPS in the RY
2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27810
through 27817), we continue to believe
that the RPL market basket
appropriately reflect the cost structure
of LTCHs. For the reasons explained
above, in this proposed rule, we are
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
proposing to continue to use the FY
2002-based RPL market basket under the
LTCH PPS for FY 2011. We are hopeful
that progress can be made in the near
future with respect to creating standalone market baskets for LTCHs, IRFs,
and IPFs and, as a result, may propose
to rebase the appropriate market
basket(s) for subsequent updates in the
future.
c. Proposed Market Basket Update for
LTCHs for FY 2011
Consistent with our historical
practice, we estimate the RPL market
basket update based on IHS Global
Insight, Inc.’s forecast using the most
recent available data. IHS Global
Insight, Inc. is a nationally recognized
economic and financial forecasting firm
that contracts with CMS to forecast the
components of the hospital market
baskets. Based on IHS Global Insight
Inc.’s first quarter 2010 forecast, the
proposed FY 2011 market basket
estimate for the LTCH PPS using the FY
2002-based RPL market basket is 2.4
percent. Consistent with our historical
practice of using market basket
estimates based on the most recent
available data, we are proposing that if
more recent data are available when we
develop the final rule, we would use
such data, if appropriate. (We note that
in section V. of the Addendum to this
proposed rule, for FY 2011, we are
proposing to update the LTCH PPS
standard Federal rate by ¥0.1 percent.
This proposed update reflects an
adjustment based on the most recent
market basket estimate (currently 2.4
percent, as discussed above) and a
proposed adjustment to account for the
increase in case-mix in the prior periods
(FYs 2008 through 2009) that resulted
from changes in documentation and
coding practices rather than increases in
patients’ severity of illness.)
d. Proposed Labor-Related Share Under
the LTCH PPS for FY 2011
As discussed in section V.B. of the
Addendum to this proposed rule, 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 payments to account for
differences in LTCH area wage levels at
§ 412.525(c). The labor-related portion
of the LTCH PPS Federal rate, hereafter
referred to as the labor-related share, is
adjusted to account for geographic
differences in area wage levels by
applying the applicable LTCH PPS wage
index.
The labor-related share is determined
by identifying the national average
proportion of operating and capital costs
that are related to, influenced by, or
PO 00000
Frm 00194
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
vary with the local labor market. We
continue to classify a cost category as
labor-related if the costs are laborintensive and vary with the local labor
market. Consistent with our proposal to
continue to use the FY 2002-based RPL
market basket under the LTCH PPS for
FY 2011 discussed above, we are
proposing to continue to define the
labor-related share as the national
average proportion of operating costs
that are attributable to wages and
salaries, employee benefits, contract
labor, professional fees, labor-intensive
services, and a labor-related portion of
capital based on the FY 2002-based RPL
market basket. (Additional information
on the development of the FY 2002based RPL market basket used under the
LTCH PPS can be found in the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27809
through 27818).)
Furthermore, for FY 2011, we are
proposing to continue to define the
LTCH PPS labor-related share as the
national average proportion of operating
costs (wages and salaries, employee
benefits, professional fees, and all other
labor-intensive services) and a laborrelated portion of capital costs based on
the FY 2002-based RPL market basket.
Consistent with our historical practice
of using the best available data, we are
proposing to use IHS Global Insight,
Inc.’s first quarter 2010 forecast of the
FY 2002-based RPL market basket for
FY 2011 to determine the proposed
labor-related share for the LTCH PPS for
FY 2011 that would be effective for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2010, and through September 30,
2011, as these are the most recent
available data.
The proposed labor-related share for
FY 2011 would be the sum of the
proposed FY 2011 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 FY 2011.
The sum of the proposed relative
importance for FY 2011 for operating
costs (wages and salaries, employee
benefits, professional fees, and all-other
labor-intensive services) would be
71.537 percent, as shown in the chart
below. The portion of capital that is
influenced by the local labor market is
estimated to be 46 percent. Because the
relative importance for capital in FY
2011 would be 8.414 percent of the FY
2002-based RPL market basket, we are
proposing to take 46 percent of 8.414
percent to determine the proposed
labor-related share of capital for FY
2011. The result would be 3.870
percent, which we are proposing to add
to 71.537 percent for the operating cost
amount to determine the total proposed
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24045
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
labor-related share for FY 2011. Thus,
the labor-related share that we are
proposing to use for LTCH PPS in FY
2011 would be 75.407 percent.
The chart below shows the proposed
FY 2011 relative importance labor-
related share using the FY 2002-based
RPL market basket.
PROPOSED FY 2011 LABOR-RELATED SHARE BASED ON THE FY 2002–BASED RPL MARKET BASKET
FY 2011 relative
importance (percent)
Cost category
Wages and Salaries ............................................................................................................................................................
Employee Benefits ...............................................................................................................................................................
Professional Fees ................................................................................................................................................................
All Other Labor-Intensive Services ......................................................................................................................................
52.590
13.987
2.848
2.112
Subtotal .........................................................................................................................................................................
71.537
Labor-Related Share of Capital Costs (46 percent × 8.414) ..............................................................................................
3.870
Total Labor-Related Share ...........................................................................................................................................
75.407
Accordingly, under the authority set
forth in section 123 of the BBRA as
amended by section 307(b) of the BIPA,
we are proposing to establish a laborrelated share of 75.407 percent under
the LTCH PPS for the FY 2011.
Furthermore, consistent with our
historical practice of using the best data
available, we also are proposing that if
more recent data are available to
determine the labor-related share used
under the LTCH PPS for FY 2011, we
would use these data for determining
the FY 2011 LTCH PPS labor-related
share in the final rule.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
3. Proposed Adjustment for Changes in
LTCHs’ Case-Mix Due to Changes in
Documentation and Coding Practices
That Occurred in a Prior Period
a. Background
Beginning in RY 2007, in updating the
standard Federal rate for the LTCH PPS,
we have accounted for increases in
payments from a past period that were
due to changes in case-mix due to
changes in documentation and coding
practices. For additional information on
the adjustments established for changes
in LTCHs’ case-mix due to changes in
documentation and coding practices
that occurred in a prior period, we refer
readers to the following final rules
published in the Federal Register: The
RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR
27820); the RY 2008 LTCH PPS final
rule (72 FR 26880 through 26890); the
RY 2009 LTCH PPS final rule (73 FR
26805 through 26812); and the FY
2010IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule
(74 FR 43969 through 43970).
For RY 2010, we performed an
analysis of LTCHs’ case-mix index
(CMI) changes in the prior periods (FY
2007 and FY 2008) and established a
methodology to determine if an
adjustment to account for changes in
documentation and coding practices
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
was applicable (74 FR 43969 through
43970). This methodology is consistent
with the methodology established for
case-mix analysis under the IPPS. In
general, under our established
methodology, in order to isolate the
documentation and coding effect, we
divided the combined effect of the
changes in documentation and coding
and measurement by the measurement
effect (74 FR 43970).
For the RY 2010 LTCH PPS proposed
rule, we performed a retrospective
evaluation of the FY 2007 and FY 2008
data for LTCH claims paid through
December 2008. Based on this
evaluation, our actuaries determined
that case-mix increased 0.5 percent in
FY 2007 and 1.3 percent in FY 2008 due
to documentation and coding that did
not reflect real changes in case-mix. In
light of this analysis, in the RY 2010
LTCH PPS proposed rule, we proposed
to apply a cumulative adjustment for
changes in documentation and coding
that do not reflect an increase in
patients’ severity of illness of ¥1.8
percent (that is, ¥0.5 percent for FY
2007 plus ¥1.3 percent for FY 2008).
We also invited public comment on our
proposed methodology and analysis.
(For additional information on our
methodology and the results of the
retrospective evaluation, we refer reader
to sections VIII.C.3. of the preamble of
the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
proposed and final rules (74 FR 24229
through 24230 and 74 FR 43970 through
43972, respectively).)
In the FY 2010 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule, we responded to comments on our
methodology for the retrospective
evaluation of FY 2007 and FY 2008
claims data, as well as our proposed
¥1.8 percent documentation and
coding adjustment for RY 2010. In that
same final rule, we finalized our
proposal and established an adjustment
PO 00000
Frm 00195
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
of ¥0.5 percent to account for the
documentation and coding increase that
occurred in FY 2007. However, after
consideration of public comments, and
consistent with the decision to postpone
the application of the prospective
adjustment for estimated FY 2008
documentation and coding increases
under the IPPS, we delayed the
application of the FY 2008
documentation and coding adjustment
of ¥1.3 percent that was proposed
under the LTCH PPS for RY 2010. We
also stated our intent to address any
future documentation and coding
adjustment to the LTCH PPS standard
Federal rate based on our analysis of the
FY 2008 LTCH claims data in the FY
2011 rulemaking cycle through the
notice-and-comment rulemaking
process. (74 FR 43970 through 43972)
b. Evaluation of FY 2009 Claims Data
For this proposed rule, we have
performed a thorough retrospective
evaluation of the most recent available
claims data (that is, FY 2009 claims
updated through December 2009) using
the methodology that was adopted in
the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
final rule and that was used to assess
whether an adjustment for RY 2010 to
account for changes in documentation
and coding practices that occurred in a
prior period was appropriate. (We refer
readers to the explanation of our
rationale for adopting this methodology
as well as its intended purpose in the
FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final
rule (74 FR 43970 through 43972).)
We performed this analysis by first
dividing the CMI obtained by grouping
the FY 2009 LTCH claims through the
FY 2009 GROUPER (Version 26.0) by
the CMI obtained by grouping these
same FY 2009 LTCH claims through the
FY 2007 GROUPER (Version 24.0). This
resulted in a value of 1.0248. Because
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24046
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
this CMI analysis is based on the same
FY 2009 cases grouped using the
Versions 24.0 and 26.0 of the
GROUPER, we attribute this increase in
average CMI primarily to two factors: (1)
The effect of changes in documentation
and coding under the MS–DRG system;
and (2) the measurement effect from the
calibration of the GROUPER. Next, we
estimated the measurement effect from
the calibration of the GROUPER by
dividing the CMI obtained by grouping
the FY 2007 LTCH claims through the
FY 2009 GROUPER (Version 26.0) by
the CMI obtained by grouping these
same LTCH claims through the FY 2007
GROUPER (Version 24.0). This resulted
in a value of 0.9999. In order to isolate
the documentation and coding effect,
we then divided the combined effect of
the changes in documentation and
coding measurement (1.0248) by the
measurement effect (0.9999) to yield
1.025. Therefore, based on the results of
this analysis, we estimate that the
cumulative effect of documentation and
coding changes that occurred in FYs
2008 and 2009 was 2.5 percent. We note
that, in applying the methodology we
established for determining the effects
of documentation and coding in the FY
2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS proposed
and final rules, we applied such
methodology separately to FY 2007 and
FY 2008 LTCH claims data because
those data were generated under
different patient classification systems
(that is, FY 2007 was the last year under
the CMS LTC–DRGs and FY 2008 was
the first year under the MS–LTC–DRGs).
Because the same patient classification
system was in effect for both FY 2008
and FY 2009 (that is, the MS–LTC–
DRGs), consistent with the application
of this methodology under the IPPS
(discussed in section II.D.5. of this
preamble), we believe it is appropriate
to propose to apply our established
methodology for determining the
cumulative effects of documentation
and coding for FYs 2008 and 2009,
rather than proposing to applying the
methodology separately to FY 2008 and
FY 2009 LTCH claims data. We seek
public comment on our proposal to
determine the cumulative effects of
documentation and coding in FYs 2008
and 2009. (We note that the FY 2007
and FY 2009 (as well as FY 2008)
MedPAR files are available to the public
to allow independent analysis of the
documentation and coding effect in FYs
2008 and 2009.)
c. Proposed FY 2011 Documentation
and Coding Adjustment
Based on analysis of the most recent
available LTCH claims data as described
above, we are proposing to apply a
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
cumulative adjustment for changes in
documentation and coding in a prior
period (FYs 2008 and 2009) that do not
reflect an increase in patients’ severity
of illness of ¥2.5 percent. Accordingly,
as discussed in section V.A.2. of the
Addendum to this proposed rule, we are
proposing to update the proposed FY
2011 LTCH PPS standard Federal rate
by ¥0.1 percent, which is based on the
most recent estimate of the market
basket increase (2.4 percent) and a
proposed adjustment to account for
changes in documentation and coding
practices (¥2.5 percent). We also are
proposing that if more recent data are
available for the final rule, we would
use those data to establish a final update
to the FY 2011 LTCH PPS standard
Federal rate, if applicable.
D. Proposed Change in Terminology
From ‘‘Rate Year’’ to ‘‘Fiscal Year’’ and
Other Proposed Changes
Beginning with the annual update to
the LTCH PPS that took effect on
October 1, 2009, we consolidated the
rulemaking cycle for the annual update
of the LTCH PPS Federal payment rates
with the annual update of the MS–LTC–
DRG classifications and associated
weighting factors for LTCHs so that the
updates to the rates and the weights
now occur on the same schedule and
appear in the same Federal Register
document. As a result, the updates to
the LTCH standard Federal rates and the
MS–LTC–DRG relative weights are now
effective on October 1 (on a Federal
fiscal year schedule), and the annual
updates to the LTCH standard Federal
rates are no longer published with a July
1 effective date. To reflect this change
to the annual payment rate update
cycle, we revised the regulations at
§ 412.503 to specify that, beginning on
or after October 1, 2009, the LTCH PPS
rate year is defined as October 1 through
September 30 (73 FR 26797 through
26798 and 26838).
In this proposed rule, we are
proposing to change the terminology
used under the LTCH PPS to designate
the annual payment update and MS–
DRG relative weight recalibration cycle
from ‘‘rate year’’ to ‘‘fiscal year,’’ in order
to conform with the standard definition
of the Federal fiscal year (October 1
through September 30) used by the
IPPS. We believe that this proposed
change is appropriate because both the
yearly update cycle of the LTCH
standard Federal rates (and associated
factors) and the annual reclassification
and recalibration of the MS–LTC–DRG
relative weights (which were always
updated on October 1, consistent with
the IPPS) are now concurrent with the
IPPS update and implementation
PO 00000
Frm 00196
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
schedule of October 1 through
September 30. Because the annual
updates to both the LTCH standard
Federal rates (and associated factors)
and the MS–LTC–DRG relative weights
now occur at the same time as the
annual updates under the IPPS, we
believe we would eliminate any
possible confusion that may be caused
by continuing to identify the LTCH PPS
update cycle as a ‘‘rate year.’’ We believe
that changing the ‘‘fiscal year’’
terminology would provide important
clarity for the LTCH provider
community, particularly because both
the proposed and final rules for the IPPS
and the LTCH PPS are generally
published in the same Federal Register
document. Consequently, we are
proposing to use the term ‘‘fiscal year’’
when referring to the annual updates for
the LTCH standard Federal payment
rates and MS–LTC–DRG relative
weights as well as to the publication
cycle for rulemaking for the LTCH PPS,
consistent with the IPPS. We are
proposing to revise our definition of
‘‘rate year’’ in the regulations at
§ 412.503 to reflect this proposed
terminology change.
This proposed terminology revision
from ‘‘rate year’’ to ‘‘fiscal year’’ would
clarify the fact that since October 1,
2003, when we implemented the LTCH
PPS, at different times, we have used
the terms ‘‘rate year’’ and ‘‘fiscal year’’
when referring to the payment year
under the LTCH PPS. In existing
regulations at § 412.503, we specify the
time periods during which each term
was used. We also are proposing to add
a definition of ‘‘long-term care hospital
prospective payment system payment
year’’ to § 412.503 in order to encompass
both the long-term care hospital
prospective payment system rate year
and the long-term care hospital
prospective payment system fiscal year.
This proposed term would be used
when describing ongoing policy features
of the LTCH PPS for which, depending
upon the time period, either the term
‘‘long-term care hospital prospective
payment system rate year’’ or ‘‘long-term
care hospital prospective payment
system fiscal year’’ would be applicable.
We believe that creating this term would
minimize confusion by keeping the
regulation text as simple as possible
because this term would apply to the
‘‘long-term care hospital prospective
payment system rate year’’ or to the
‘‘long-term care hospital prospective
payment system fiscal year.’’ In this
respect, existing regulation text (for
example, § 412.525(a)) would not need
to be revised to address the specific time
periods during which the terms ‘‘long-
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
term care hospital prospective payment
system rate year’’ and ‘‘long-term care
hospital prospective payment system
fiscal year’’ are used.
In addition, as a conforming change,
we are proposing to change the
terminology in § 412.525(a)(1) and
(a)(2), which describes the high-cost
outlier policy (an ongoing feature of the
LTCH PPS from its inception), from
‘‘long-term care hospital prospective
payment system rate year’’ to ‘‘long-term
care hospital prospective payment
system payment year’’. We believe that
this proposed change, which would
reference the proposed new definition
of the long-term care hospital
prospective payment system payment
year period at § 412.503, clearly reflects
the application of the high-cost outlier
policy for the period encompassed by
both the current ‘‘rate year’’ terminology
and the proposed change to ‘‘fiscal year’’
terminology, described above. We
believe that these proposed changes
present a straightforward way to provide
additional clarity to our regulations in a
circumstance that reflects changes in
terminology but do not entail any
change to the high-cost outlier policy.
Furthermore, consistent with this
proposal, for purposes of clarity, in this
proposed rule, when discussing the
annual update for the LTCH PPS, we
employ ‘‘FY’’ rather than RY’’ because it
is our intent that ‘‘FY’’ be used
prospectively in all circumstances
dealing with the LTCH PPS.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
VIII. Effective Date of Provider
Agreements and Supplier Approvals
A. Background
Section 1866 of the Act states that any
provider of services as defined under
section 1861(u) of the Act (except a fund
designated for purposes of sections
1814(g) and 1835(e) of the Act) shall be
qualified to participate in the Medicare
program and shall be eligible for
Medicare payments if it files with the
Secretary a Medicare provider
agreement and abides by the
requirements applicable to Medicare
provider agreements. These
requirements are incorporated into our
regulations in 42 CFR part 489, Subparts
A and B. Section 1866(b)(2) of the Act
provides that the Secretary may refuse
to enter into, or may terminate, an
agreement with a provider for various
reasons, including the provider’s failure
to comply with the provisions of the
agreement and if it has been determined
that the provider fails to meet the
applicable provisions of section 1861 of
the Act, including health and safety
standards. Certain suppliers are also
required under the Act to meet health
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
and safety standards specified by the
Secretary: section 1861(aa)(2)(K), with
respect to rural health clinics; section
1832(a)(2)(F)(i), with respect to
ambulatory surgical centers; and section
1881(b)(1)(A), with respect to providers
of renal dialysis services.
Under section 1864(a) of the Act, the
Secretary enters into agreements with
State agencies to determine if providers
and suppliers meet the requisite
Medicare requirements. Section 1865 of
the Act permits CMS to ‘‘deem’’ facilities
that have been accredited by a national
accreditation organization under a CMSapproved accreditation program as
having met the Medicare health and
safety standards. Section 1871 of the Act
authorizes the Secretary to adopt such
regulations as may be necessary to carry
out the requirements of Title XVIII of
the Act.
On August 18, 1997, we adopted
regulations, effective September 17,
1997 (1997 final rule), establishing
uniform criteria for determining the
effective dates of provider agreements
and supplier approvals in the Medicare
and Medicaid programs (62 FR 43931).
Included in these regulations was 42
CFR 489.13, governing the
determination of the effective date of a
Medicare provider agreement or
supplier approval for health care
facilities that are subject to survey and
certification. Facilities subject to survey
and certification are those that must
comply with Medicare health and safety
standards, that is, the conditions of
participation (CoPs), long-term care
requirements, conditions for coverage
(CfC), or conditions for certification,
depending on the type of facility. (The
regulations exempt clinical laboratories,
community mental health centers, and
federally qualified health centers from
its general provisions, establishing
alternative requirements for these
entities.) Compliance with the
applicable health and safety standards is
determined through an onsite survey by
a State survey agency, CMS staff, or a
CMS contractor, or, in accordance with
section 1865 of the Act, CMS may
‘‘deem’’ an entity to have satisfied these
requirements if it has been accredited by
a national accreditation program
approved by CMS. Currently, we have
approved 15 accreditation programs
offered by 7 national accreditation
organizations for the following types of
providers or suppliers: Hospitals, CAHs,
HHAs, hospices, and ambulatory
surgical centers.
Under § 489.13(b) of the regulations,
the date the survey is completed is the
effective date of the provider agreement
or supplier approval, if all applicable
Federal requirements have been met on
PO 00000
Frm 00197
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24047
that date. Similarly, § 489.13(d)
provides that the effective date for a
provider or supplier accredited by a
national accreditation organization
under a CMS-approved program, and
which is subject to additional
requirements not contained in the
approved program, is the date on which
all Federal requirements have been met,
including the additional requirements.
We have interpreted these provisions to
mean not only that the survey/
accreditation decision must show that
the prospective provider or supplier is
in compliance with all of the applicable
health and safety standards, but also
that all other Federal requirements
related to the prospective provider’s or
supplier’s participation in the Medicare
program have been met.
Other Federal requirements include,
but are not limited to, the submission of
an application to enroll in the Medicare
program that has been reviewed by our
legacy fiscal intermediaries, legacy
carriers, or MACs, as applicable, and
has been found to meet the enrollment
requirements established in 42 CFR part
424, Subpart P. Other Federal
requirements also include, for
providers, compliance with Office for
Civil Rights requirements. There also
are additional Federal requirements
specific to certain provider types, such
as IPPS exclusion requirements for
certain types of hospitals, capitalization
and surety bond requirements for home
health agencies, among others.
Under our current process, section
2003B of the State Operations Manual
(SOM) (Publication No. 100–07) states
that: ‘‘The SA [State Survey agency]
should not perform a survey of a new
facility until it has received notice from
the FI [fiscal intermediary] or carrier
that the information provided on the
enrollment application has been
verified.’’ Section 2005 of the SOM
further states: ‘‘The MAC/legacy FI will
process the Form CMS–855A and the
MAC/legacy Carrier will process the
Form CMS–855B, depending on which
contractor is responsible for processing
bills or claims for the provider/supplier.
* * * The State Survey Agency will be
responsible for surveying initial
applicants following the contractor’s
recommendation for approval, and
providing the initial certification
package.’’ (Emphasis added.)
In accordance with § 488.8(a)(2) of the
regulations, one of the requirements for
our approval of a national accreditation
program is the comparability of its
survey process to that of State survey
agencies. Consistent with this
requirement, in Survey and Certification
Policy Memorandum S&C–09–08, dated
October 17, 2008, we indicated that a
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24048
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
CMS-approved national accreditation
organization also must not conduct a
survey of a facility seeking a Medicare
provider agreement or supplier approval
until after the MAC, the legacy fiscal
intermediary, or the legacy carrier has
completed its review of the enrollment
application and notified the applicant
that its review has been completed and
a recommendation has been made to
CMS.
Therefore, historically, in the normal
course of events, the health and safety
survey (including the Life Safety Code
survey, if applicable) of a prospective
provider or supplier has usually
occurred after it has demonstrated that
it meets the Medicare enrollment
requirements, and, as a result, the
effective date of a provider agreement or
supplier approval is generally later than
the date when the contractor has
verified that all enrollment
requirements have been met. However,
on occasion, a survey can take place
before the CMS contractor has verified
that enrollment requirements have been
met. This has tended to happen more
frequently in the case of facilities that
seek to satisfy Medicare participation
requirements through accreditation by a
CMS-approved accreditation program,
because the accreditation organization
relies upon the facility to advise it when
it has received notice of completion of
the review of its enrollment application.
This can result in the date of an
accreditation decision preceding the
date when the CMS contractor
determination has occurred. In addition,
in order to prevent fraud and abuse,
there may be other situations in which
the CMS contractor performs additional
enrollment verification activities even
after a health and safety survey has been
performed.
In cases where the CMS contractor
determines that the prospective
provider’s or supplier’s compliance
with enrollment requirements did not
occur until after a survey by the State
survey agency or after the accreditation
survey and accreditation decision take
place, it is our policy, consistent with
our interpretation of § 489.13(b), to
make the effective date of the provider
agreement or supplier approval the date
when the enrollment requirements are
considered to have been met, that is, the
date determined by the CMS contractor,
pursuant to its review and verification
activities, to be the date when the
applicant is in compliance with all
enrollment requirements and the CMS
contractor is prepared to convey
Medicare billing privileges to the
provider or supplier, unless there are
still other Federal requirements that
remain to be satisfied, such as
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
submission of required civil rights
compliance documentation or
satisfaction of the specialized
requirements governing IPPS-excluded
hospitals. If there are other unsatisfied
requirements, the effective date would
be the date when the last requirement
has been satisfied, as determined by
CMS.
B. Departmental Appeals Board
Decision
In a decision dated September 28,
2009, the Appellate Division of the
Departmental Appeals Board (DAB), in
the case of Renal CarePartners of Delray
Beach, LLC v. Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services (DAB Decision No.
2271), rejected our longstanding
interpretation of § 489.13(b). In this
case, a State survey agency completed
an initial certification survey on July 6,
2007, of an end-stage renal disease
supplier, Renal CarePartners, prior to
the CMS contractor’s November 21,
2007 recommendation of approval of the
supplier’s enrollment application. The
DAB concluded that there was no basis
in regulation or policy issuances for our
position that CMS contractor approval is
a requirement a supplier must satisfy
‘‘before it may furnish services for which
it will be reimbursed under Medicare
once it is enrolled and obtains billing
privileges’’ (DAB Decision No. 2271,
page 2). The DAB further characterized
the issue as ‘‘* * * not whether the
effective date may be earlier than the
date Renal CarePartners complied with
a prerequisite it was required to meet in
order to enroll, but whether the effective
date must be delayed until the date the
Medicare contractor notified CMS that
the requirements were met’’ (DAB
Decision No. 2271, page 5) (emphasis in
original). The DAB agreed with Renal
CarePartners that the requirement for
the Medicare contractor to verify and
determine whether an application
should be approved is not a requirement
for the supplier to meet, but a
requirement for Medicare contractor
action (DAB Decision No. 2271, page 5).
The DAB further cited the provisions of
§ 489.13(d), concerning accredited
facilities, as an example to bolster its
contention that there is precedent for
providers or suppliers to be
retroactively reimbursed for services
provided before the date of approval of
the supplier or provider agreement
(DAB Decision No. 2271, page 7).
We disagree with the DAB’s reading
of our existing regulations. We believe
that the intent of the existing regulations
is to require that all applicable Federal
requirements, including a determination
of whether the enrollment requirements
have been satisfied, must be met before
PO 00000
Frm 00198
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
a provider agreement or supplier
approval may be effective. Any other
reading of the regulations could result
in a provider or supplier being
permitted to bill the Medicare program
for services provided at a time when its
compliance with Medicare’s
requirements is unknown and possibly
deficient. For example, in the event a
State survey precedes the CMS
contractor’s review of the enrollment
application of a prospective provider or
supplier, it might be possible that the
application originally submitted to the
CMS contractor is incomplete or
incorrect, or both, and the applicant
must provide additional information to
the CMS contractor to demonstrate
compliance with the enrollment
requirements. It would not be consistent
with our duty to protect the Medicare
Trust Funds from unsupported claims
against it to permit payment for services
furnished by a health care facility after
it has passed a State survey or been
accredited, but before it has satisfied all
other Medicare participation
requirements, including enrollment
requirements.
Such a reading also might undermine
the incentives inherent in our
longstanding policy, affirmed in the
June 1, 1994 decision of the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in U.S.
v. Vernon Home Health, Inc. (21 F.3d
693 (5th Cir. 1994), cert. denied, 115
S.Ct. 575 (1994)). Under that policy, a
buyer of a Medicare-participating
facility that chooses not to assume the
provider agreement or supplier approval
of the seller must be treated as an initial
applicant to the Medicare program, with
a necessary break in Medicare payments
for services furnished to beneficiaries
during the period between the effective
date of the change of ownership, and the
effective date of the new owner’s
provider agreement or supplier
approval. Assumption of the seller’s
provider agreement or supplier approval
includes assumption of the assets and
liabilities associated with that
agreement or approval, which has
proven to be an important tool in
protecting the Medicare Trust Funds
through continuity in the ability to
recover outstanding overpayments. Any
requirement to make payments
retroactive to the date of a State survey
or accreditation decision, despite the
fact that all other Federal requirements
may not yet have been met, could
provide an incentive for more buyers to
refuse assumption of the seller’s
provider agreement or supplier
approval, because there would
potentially be no break in payments.
Therefore, effectively, a buyer who does
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
not assume the seller’s active provider
agreement could begin receiving
Medicare payments (assuming it meets
all the requirements), but not be
responsible for any existing liabilities of
the provider agreement. This would also
be an incentive for existing providers or
suppliers with civil money penalties or
overpayments to sell their facilities in
order to escape any financial
responsibility to the Medicare program.
C. Proposed Revisions to Regulations
We are proposing to amend § 489.13
and make a technical amendment to
§ 489.1 in order to clarify our policy.
Specifically, we are proposing to revise
§ 489.13(a) to make it clearer that it is
only CMS that determines whether
health care facilities have satisfied the
requirements for participation in the
Medicare program, not State survey
agencies or national accreditation
organizations. We note that, although
this CMS determination is sometimes
referred to as a ‘‘certification,’’ or
‘‘certification decision,’’ § 488.1 defines
‘‘certification’’ as ‘‘a recommendation
made by the State survey agency on the
compliance of providers and suppliers
with the conditions of participation,
requirements (for SNFs and NFs), and
conditions of coverage.’’ Further,
§ 488.12 provides that CMS makes the
determination on whether a provider or
supplier is eligible to participate in or
be covered by the Medicare program,
based on the State survey agency’s
recommendation, or on the facility’s
accreditation.
We also are proposing to add language
to § 489.13(a) in order to clarify that
surveys of nonaccredited facilities may
be conducted not only by State survey
agencies, but also by CMS staff or
contractors, as appropriate. We have
used contractors to conduct certain
types of surveys, such as life safety
code, transplant program and
psychiatric hospital special conditions
surveys, and may continue to do so in
the future. In addition, certain types of
facilities, such as Indian Health Services
(IHS) facilities and RNHCIs, have
traditionally been surveyed by CMS
employees rather than State survey
agencies.
We are proposing to revise § 489.13(b)
to make explicit that the effective date
of a provider agreement or supplier
approval may not be earlier than the
latest of the dates on which each
applicable Federal requirement is
determined to be met. We also are
proposing to state explicitly that
‘‘Federal requirements’’ include, but are
not limited to, the enrollment
requirements established in 42 CFR part
424, Subpart P, that have been
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
determined by CMS to have been met.
In addition, we are proposing to revise
§ 489.13(b) to include language
concerning accredited facilities, to
assure that accredited and
nonaccredited facilities are treated in
the same manner.
We wish to further explain the
rationale behind the proposed change to
§ 489.13(b), particularly with respect to
the requirements in the provider/
supplier enrollment process.
A CMS contractor will review and
conduct an initial assessment of a
prospective provider’s or supplier’s
enrollment. If the contractor finds that
a prospective provider or supplier meets
the basic enrollment requirements to
participate in the Medicare program for
its identified certified provider or
supplier type, the contractor will notify
the appropriate CMS Regional Office.
Essentially, the contractor’s initial
assessment means that it has concluded
its preliminary review of the application
and has concluded that the survey and
certification process can be initiated,
and, consequently, it issues a
recommendation of approval. In order to
help ensure compliance with
enrollment requirements throughout
this process, the contractor may
continue to perform a number of
enrollment verification tasks even after
it has issued a recommendation for
approval. These include, but are not
limited to, conducting onsite visits of
the prospective provider or supplier to
ensure that it is still operational;
verifying an HHA applicant’s
compliance with the capitalization
provisions in 42 CFR 489.28; and
requesting the provider or supplier
applicant to reaffirm the accuracy of the
information it furnished on its initial
enrollment application. Given the
potentially significant length of time
between when the contractor issues its
recommendation of approval after its
initial assessment and when the health
and safety survey (or accreditation) and
certification process is completed, we
believe that it is essential for the
contractor to verify that a provider or
supplier applicant continues to meet
enrollment requirements prior to the
issuance of a Medicare provider
agreement or supplier approval and the
issuance of Medicare billing privileges.
To that end, we believe that the CMS
contractor should verify that a provider
or supplier is in compliance with all
enrollment requirements when an
enrollment application is submitted,
during the period in which a provider
or supplier is undergoing the health and
safety survey and certification process
and before the issuance of a Medicare
provider agreement or supplier approval
PO 00000
Frm 00199
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24049
and billing privileges. If a provider or
supplier is determined to be in
compliance with all Medicare
requirements, including the enrollment
requirements, the enrollment process
will be completed, and the Medicare
provider agreement or supplier approval
and billing privileges will be issued to
the applicant. However, if a provider or
supplier is determined to be out of
compliance with Medicare enrollment
requirements prior to the issuance of a
Medicare provider agreement or
supplier approval and billing privileges
to the applicant, we believe that CMS
must deny Medicare billing privileges
using the applicable denial reason
found in 42 CFR 424.530 and afford the
applicant with the applicable Medicare
appeal rights.
We are proposing to revise § 489.13(c)
to make clear that this paragraph
addresses those situations in which a
facility has met all other Federal
requirements but, upon survey, has been
found to not meet all applicable CoPs,
long-term care requirements, CfCs, or
conditions for certification. We also are
proposing to revise this paragraph to
include language concerning accredited
facilities, to assure that accredited and
nonaccredited facilities are treated in
the same manner.
We are proposing to remove
§ 489.13(d), concerning the
determination of the effective date for
accredited facilities. We see no reason
for differential treatment of accredited
and nonaccredited facilities with
respect to the determination of their
effective date, and, in practice, we have
not treated them differentially. In
particular, as a matter of policy, we have
not exercised the discretion permitted
under § 489.13(d)(2) to grant accredited
facilities an effective date retroactive up
to 1 year prior to what otherwise would
be their effective date. Permitting such
retroactive payment would provide
accredited facilities an unwarranted
advantage when compared to
nonaccredited facilities. It would also
seriously undermine our policy
concerning change of ownership
without assumption of the seller’s
provider agreement or supplier
approval. However, the existence of this
discretionary provision appears to cause
confusion among accredited providers
and suppliers who incorrectly believe
they are entitled to a retroactive
effective date.
This discretionary provision was
included in the 1997 final rule as a
result of public comments that
concerned the Medicaid program. The
commenters were concerned that the
proposed rule would not have allowed
for a retroactive agreement for a facility
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24050
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
that was already accredited and cited
two Medicaid program scenarios to
illustrate their concern. In one scenario,
a facility participates in its own State’s
Medicaid program and provides services
to a Medicaid recipient from another
State. In the other scenario, a facility
does not participate in Medicaid but
provides services to a Medicaid
recipient before learning of the
individual’s Medicaid status. Neither of
these scenarios is pertinent to the
Medicare program because Medicare
enrollment is managed nationally.
However, the stated intent of the 1997
final rule was to use a standard
approach for both Medicare and
Medicaid to determine the effective date
of a provider agreement and a supplier
approval, and, as a result, the provisions
of § 489.13(d)(2) are identical to those at
§ 431.108(d)(2) for the Medicaid
program.
Upon further consideration, we
believe it is important to recognize the
significant differences resulting from a
State-based versus national system of
beneficiary enrollment, and to ensure
that the provisions of § 489.13 are
tailored to the requirements of the
Medicare program. As stated, as a matter
of longstanding policy, reflected in
issuances dating back at least as far as
1994, we have required new owners
who do not accept the seller’s Medicare
provider agreement or supplier approval
to be treated as initial applicants to the
Medicare program. In a 1999 issuance,
reaffirmed in several subsequent
issuances, including the 2004
publication of the online version of the
SOM and in Survey and Certification
Memorandum S&C–09–08 issued on
October 17, 2008, we explicitly state
that this policy applies to accredited
facilities as well. Therefore, we believe
it is appropriate to remove § 489.13(d),
and to instead make appropriate
reference to the situation of accredited
facilities in §§ 489.13(b) and (c).
Finally, we are proposing to make
several technical amendments to
§ 489.1. Specifically, we are proposing
to revise that section to add a reference
to section 1865 of the Act, which
permits CMS to ‘‘deem’’ facilities that
have been accredited by a national
accreditation organization under a CMSapproved accreditation program as
having met the Medicare health and
safety standards. We also are proposing
to revise and renumber the existing
provision of § 489.1 and to add
references to ‘‘the Act’’ where the section
refers to a provision of the Social
Security Act.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
IX. Proposed Changes to Medicare
Conditions of Participation Affecting
Hospital Rehabilitation Services and
Respiratory Care Services
Recently, CMS received several public
requests for clarification of the Medicare
conditions of participation (CoPs) for
hospitals relating to rehabilitation
services at § 482.56 and respiratory care
services at § 482.57. The questions
concerning these conditions have been
in the context of apparent
inconsistencies between the two COPs
themselves, and between the two CoPs
and many State laws, regarding which
practitioners are allowed to order
rehabilitation and respiratory care
services in the hospital setting.
Many States, under their scope-ofpractice laws and other regulations,
allow qualified, licensed practitioners
(including nurse practitioners (NPs) and
physician assistants (PAs)) to order
rehabilitation services and respiratory
care services, in addition to other
common hospital services such as
dietary and social work services. We
also found that most States limit the
types of practitioners allowed to order
rehabilitation services, respiratory care
services, and other hospital services to
physicians and other qualified, licensed
practitioners such as NPs and PAs.
However, the current standard at
§ 482.56(b) (Delivery of services)
requires only that hospital rehabilitation
services (for example, physical therapy,
occupational therapy, audiology, and
speech-pathology services) be ordered
by ‘‘practitioners who are authorized by
the medical staff to order the services.’’
We believe that this requirement may be
too open for interpretation and is not
consistent with various State laws that
limit the ordering of hospital services
(including diagnostic tests, drugs and
biologicals, and inpatient treatment
modalities) to qualified, licensed
practitioners who are responsible for the
care of the patient and who are, most
importantly, working within a State’s
delineated scope of practice for these
types of practitioners. As this
requirement is currently written, it
would be conceivable for a hospital’s
medical staff to grant ordering privileges
for rehabilitation services to personnel
who are responsible for providing such
services, that is, physical therapists,
occupational therapists, audiologists,
and speech-language pathologists. Such
a situation would not only constitute a
conflict of interest (for example, a
physical therapists ordering physical
therapy services for a patient for which
medical necessity has not been
established), but it would also
potentially compromise coordination of
PO 00000
Frm 00200
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
care and patient safety if the
practitioners who are responsible for the
care of patients (that is, doctors of
medicine, doctors of osteopathy, NPs,
and PAs) are unaware of which services
have been ordered for their patients.
Conversely, the current requirement
for respiratory care services at
§ 482.57(b)(3) explicitly states that these
services ‘‘must be provided only on, and
in accordance with, the orders of a
doctor of medicine or osteopathy.’’
Similar to our finding that the
requirement for the ordering of
rehabilitation services is too broad in its
parameters for determining which
practitioners should be allowed to order
those services, we find the parameters
for the ordering of respiratory care
services to be too narrow. While doctors
of medicine or doctors of osteopathy
have the option of delegating this task
to NPs and PAs, this delegation requires
physicians to countersign all orders by
NPs or PAs for respiratory care services.
We have not found any evidence that
indicates that the ordering of respiratory
care services should be kept to a
different, and possibly higher, standard
than rehabilitation and other hospital
services. Nor have we found any
documented studies indicating that
qualified, licensed practitioners such as
NPs and PAs should be restricted from
ordering these necessary services for
their patients. Further, we believe that
the process of physician
countersignature of orders written by
qualified, licensed NPs and PAs,
specifically for common hospital
services such as rehabilitation and
respiratory care services, is burdensome
to practitioners (physicians as well as
NPs and PAs) and the hospitals that
they serve. In addition, we believe that
this process also runs counter to what
many States have already decided for
NPs and PAs in their individual State
regulations and scope-of-practice laws.
As a result of our analysis of the
issues surrounding conflict of the
Medicare CoPs with State laws, and
conflict of the Medicare CoP with each
other, we are proposing several
revisions to the existing regulations. We
are proposing to revise § 482.56 to
clarify the types of practitioners who are
allowed to order rehabilitation services.
Further, we are proposing to limit those
types of individuals to qualified,
licensed practitioners who are
responsible for the care of the patient
and who are acting within the scope of
practice under State law. We also are
proposing that these practitioners would
need to be authorized to order
rehabilitation services by the hospital’s
medical staff, in accordance with both
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
hospital policies and procedures and
State laws.
In addition, we are proposing changes
to the existing requirements for the
ordering of respiratory care services at
§ 482.57. Existing requirements only
allow for services to be provided on the
orders of a doctor of medicine or
osteopathy. As stated above, we recently
received several public requests
(including requests from various
hospitals as well as from The Joint
Commission) for clarification of this
requirement in the context of what is
currently allowed under many State
laws. Many States, under their scope-ofpractice laws and other regulations,
allow qualified, licensed practitioners
(including NPs and PAs) to order
respiratory care services. We are
proposing to revise the existing
requirements at § 482.57 to allow these
practitioners, in addition to physicians
as currently allowed, to order these
services as long as such privileges are
authorized by the medical staff and are
in accordance with both hospital
policies and procedures and State laws.
As is required under the CoPs for all
patient orders, the ordering practitioner
must also be an individual who is
responsible for the care of the patient.
In both of the CoPs for rehabilitation
services and respiratory care services,
we also are proposing that all orders for
these services be documented in
accordance with the requirements at
§ 482.24, Medical records.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
X. Proposed Changes to the
Accreditation Requirements for
Medicaid Providers of Inpatient
Psychiatric Services for Individuals
Under Age 21
A. Background
Inpatient psychiatric services
provided to individuals under the age of
21 were authorized as part of the
Medicaid program by the Social
Security Amendments of 1972 (Pub. L.
92–603). At that time, these services
were only permitted to be provided by
psychiatric hospitals accredited by the
Joint Commission on Accreditation of
Hospitals (later renamed as the Joint
Commission on Accreditation of
Healthcare Organizations and now
named The Joint Commission). In 1984,
Congress eliminated the requirement
that such hospitals be accredited
exclusively by The Joint Commission
(section 2340(b) of Pub. L. 98–369).
Through statutory and regulatory
amendments, inpatient psychiatric
services provided to individuals under
the age of 21 were also authorized to be
provided in inpatient psychiatric
programs within hospitals and in
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
psychiatric facilities other than
hospitals, called psychiatric residential
treatment facilities (PRTFs). While
PRTFs were given flexibility through
rulemaking in 1998 to obtain
accreditation from several specific
accrediting organizations, or any other
accrediting body with comparable
standards recognized by the State,
accreditation by The Joint Commission
has remained a requirement for
psychiatric hospitals and inpatient
psychiatric programs within hospitals.
We have been contacted by several
psychiatric hospitals and hospitals with
inpatient psychiatric programs asking
for relief of The Joint Commission
accreditation requirement. In addition,
The Joint Commission has previously
expressed concern with the mandate for
Joint Commission accreditation
contained in existing regulation, as its
policy is for facilities to seek
accreditation voluntarily.
B. Proposed Revision of Policy and
Regulations
In response to the concerns described
above, we are proposing to remove the
requirement that psychiatric hospitals
and hospitals with inpatient psychiatric
programs providing inpatient
psychiatric services to individuals
under age 21 must obtain accreditation
from The Joint Commission in order to
provide these services under the
Medicaid program. Under our proposed
policy change, psychiatric hospitals
would have the choice of meeting the
requirements to participate in Medicare
as a psychiatric hospital under 42 CFR
482.60 or obtaining accreditation from a
national accrediting organization whose
psychiatric hospital accrediting program
has been approved by CMS. Hospitals
with inpatient psychiatric programs
would have the choice of meeting the
requirements for participation in
Medicare as a hospital as specified in 42
CFR part 482 or obtaining accreditation
from a national accrediting organization
whose hospital accreditation program
has been approved by CMS. These
national accreditation bodies must
provide reasonable assurance to CMS
that their hospital accrediting programs
require adherence to requirements that
are at least as stringent as the Medicare
requirements.
In addition, we are proposing to
revise the accreditation requirements for
PRTFs by removing any specific
references to accreditation organizations
to afford them flexibility in obtaining
accreditation by a national accrediting
organization whose program has been
approved by CMS, or by any other
accrediting organization with
comparable standards that is recognized
PO 00000
Frm 00201
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24051
by the State. This proposed revision
would remove specific reference to
national accrediting bodies to provide
appropriate administrative flexibility to
account for any changes in qualifying
accrediting organizations. Accrediting
bodies approved by CMS must have
accrediting requirements for an entity
comparable to the CMS requirements for
the same entity, and must have survey
procedures comparable to those of State
survey agencies.
The regulations at 42 CFR 488.4
describe the procedures to be followed
by accrediting organizations applying or
reapplying for approval of deeming
authority for Medicare requirements.
The regulations at 42 CFR 488.5(b) and
488.6(b) allow providers and suppliers
deemed eligible for Medicare by these
accrediting organizations to be also
deemed eligible for Medicaid
participation in the absence of Medicaid
regulations requiring adherence to a
different standard. In addition, the
regulations at 42 CFR 488.8 detail the
procedures that CMS will follow in
reviewing and approving national
accreditation organizations. Nothing in
this proposed rule would alter the
implementation of these regulatory
provisions.
We believe this flexibility in obtaining
accreditation would facilitate the
provision of medically necessary,
Medicaid-reimbursable psychiatric
services to vulnerable children, while
maintaining the high quality of care
demanded by the Medicaid program.
While services may be provided in
different settings, the requirements of 42
CFR 441.150 through 441.182 must be
adhered to by any provider of services.
We are inviting public comments on our
suggestions for improving current
protections for children.
To incorporate the proposed changes
described above in our regulations, we
are proposing to revise § 440.160(b)(1)
and § 441.151(a)(2)(i) by removing the
requirement for accreditation by The
Joint Commission of psychiatric
hospitals and hospitals with inpatient
psychiatric programs. Psychiatric
hospitals would have the choice of
meeting the requirements to participate
in Medicare as a psychiatric hospital
under 42 CFR 482.60 or obtaining
accreditation from a national accrediting
organization whose psychiatric hospital
accrediting program has been approved
by CMS. Hospitals with inpatient
psychiatric programs would have the
choice of meeting the requirements for
participation in Medicare as a hospital
as specified in 42 CFR part 482 or
obtaining accreditation by a national
accrediting organization whose hospital
accrediting program has been approved
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24052
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
by CMS. We are proposing to revise
§ 440.160(b)(2) and § 441.151(a)(2)(ii) by
removing an specific references to
accreditation organizations to afford
PRTFs the flexibility in obtaining
accreditation by a national accrediting
organization whose program has been
approved by CMS, or by any other
accrediting organization with
comparable standards that is recognized
by the State.
XI. MedPAC Recommendations
Under section 1886(e)(4)(B) of the
Act, the Secretary must consider
MedPAC’s recommendations regarding
hospital inpatient payments. Under
section 1886(e)(5) of the Act, the
Secretary must publish in the annual
proposed and final IPPS rules the
Secretary’s recommendations regarding
MedPAC’s recommendations. We have
reviewed MedPAC’s March 2010
‘‘Report to the Congress: Medicare
Payment Policy’’ and have given the
recommendations in the report careful
consideration in conjunction with the
policies set forth in this proposed rule.
MedPAC’s Recommendation 2A–1
states that ‘‘The Congress should
increase payment rates for the acute
inpatient and outpatient prospective
payment systems in 2011 by the
projected rate of increase in the hospital
market basket index, concurrent with
implementation of a quality incentive
payment program.’’ This
recommendation for the IPPS is
discussed in Appendix B to this
proposed rule.
MedPAC’s Recommendation 2A–2
states that ‘‘To restore budget neutrality,
the Congress should require the
Secretary to fully offset increases in
inpatient payments due to hospitals’
documentation and coding
improvements. To accomplish this goal,
the Secretary must reduce payment rates
in the inpatient prospective payment
system by the same percentage (not to
exceed 2 percentage points) each year in
2011, 2012, and 2013. The lower rates
would remain in place until
overpayments are fully recovered.’’
Response to Recommendation 2A–2:
Beginning in FY 2008, CMS adopted the
new MS–DRG patient classification
system for the IPPS to better recognize
severity of illness in Medicare payment
rates. Adoption of the MS–DRGs
resulted in the expansion of the number
of DRGs from 538 in FY 2007 to 745 in
FY 2008. The increase in the number of
DRGs provides incentives for hospitals
to change documentation and coding
that can increase Medicare expenditures
without any corresponding increase in
underlying patient severity. Consistent
with the statutory requirement to
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
maintain budget neutrality, we
established prospective documentation
and coding adjustments of ¥1.2 percent
for FY 2008, ¥1.8 percent for FY 2009,
and ¥1.8 percent for FY 2010 when the
new MS–DRG system was implemented
in FY 2008. Subsequent to issuance of
the FY 2008 IPPS final rule, section 7 of
the TMA of 2007 (Pub. L. 110–90)
divided in half the documentation and
coding adjustments for the MS–DRG
system that we adopted in the FY 2008
IPPS final rule to ¥0.6 percent for FY
2008 and -0.9 percent for FY 2009.
Section 7 requires that, if the
implementation of the new MS–DRG
payment system resulted in actual
changes in documentation and coding
in FY 2008 or FY 2009, or both years,
that are different from those reflected in
the ¥0.6 percent and ¥0.9 percent
documentation and coding adjustments
applied to payment rates in FY 2008
and FY 2009, respectively, the Secretary
further adjust operating IPPS rates. This
further adjustment must offset the
estimated amount of the increase or
decrease in aggregate payments for
discharges occurring during FY 2008
and FY 2009, and must be made during
FY 2010, FY 2011, and/or FY 2012.
These adjustments are referred to as the
recoupment adjustments and apply only
to acute IPPS operating payments. In
addition, the law requires that the
Secretary eliminate the effect of all
actual documentation and coding
changes occurring in FY 2008 and FY
2009 incorporated into FY 2010 IPPS
operating rates not already accounted
for beyond the ¥0.6 and ¥0.9 percent
adjustments. These adjustments are
referred to as the prospective
adjustments. As discussed in section
II.D. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, our current estimate is that an
aggregate adjustment of 9.7 percent
would be necessary to satisfy these
requirements.
We discuss our proposed adjustments
to correct for the effects of improved
documentation and coding on Medicare
payments to hospitals in section II.D. of
the preamble of this proposed rule for
IPPS operating payments, in section
V.E. of the preamble of this proposed
rule for IPPS capital payments, and in
section VII.C.3. of the preamble of this
proposed rule for LTCH PPS payments.
In this context, we note that, in
considering whether to adopt MedPAC’s
recommendation, we took into
consideration the statutory requirement
that the adjustment must offset the
estimated amount of the increase or
decrease in aggregate payments for
discharges occurring during FY 2008
PO 00000
Frm 00202
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
and FY 2009 must be made during FY
2010, FY 2011, and/or FY 2012.
For further information relating
specifically to the MedPAC reports or to
obtain a copy of the reports, contact
MedPAC at (202) 653–7226, or visit
MedPAC’s Web site at: https://
www.medpac.gov.
XII. Other Required Information
A. Requests for Data From the Public
In order to respond promptly to
public requests for data related to the
prospective payment system, we have
established a process under which
commenters can gain access to raw data
on an expedited basis. Generally, the
data are now available on compact disc
(CD) format. However, many of the files
are available on the Internet at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS.
Data files and the cost for each file, if
applicable, are listed below. Anyone
wishing to purchase data tapes,
cartridges, or diskettes should submit a
written request along with a company
check or money order (payable to CMS–
PUF) to cover the cost of the following
address: Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, Public Use Files,
Accounting Division, P.O. Box 7520,
Baltimore, MD 21207–0520, (410) 786–
3691. Files on the Internet may be
downloaded without charge.
1. CMS Wage Data Public Use File
This file contains the hospital hours
and salaries from Worksheet S–3, Parts
II and III from FY 2007 Medicare cost
reports used to create the proposed FY
2011 prospective payment system wage
index. Multiple versions of this file are
created each year. For a complete
schedule on the release of different
versions of this file, we refer readers to
the wage index schedule in section III.K.
of the preamble of this proposed rule.
Processing
year
Wage data
year
PPS Fiscal
year
2010
2009
2008
2007
2007
2006
2005
2004
2011
2010
2009
2008
Media: Internet at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/
WIFN/list.asp#TopOfPage.
Periods Available: FY 2007 through
FY 2011 IPPS Update.
2. CMS Occupational Mix Data Public
Use File
This file contains the 2007–2008
occupational mix survey data to be used
to compute the occupational mix
adjustment wage indexes. Multiple
versions of this file are created each
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
year. For a complete schedule on the
release of different versions of this file,
we refer readers to the wage index
schedule in section III.K. of the
preamble of this proposed rule.
Media: Internet at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/
WIFN/list.asp#TopOfPage.
Period Available: FY 2011 IPPS
Update.
3. Provider Occupational Mix
Adjustment Factors for Each
Occupational Category Public Use File
This file contains each hospital’s
occupational mix adjustment factors by
occupational category. Two versions of
these files are created each year. They
support the following:
• Notice of proposed rulemaking
published in the Federal Register.
• Final rule published in the Federal
Register.
Media: Internet at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/
WIFN/list.asp#TopOfPage.
Period Available: FY 2011 IPPS
Update.
4. Other Wage Index Files
CMS releases other wage index
analysis files after each proposed and
final rule.
Media: Internet at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/
WIFN/list.asp#TopOfPage.
Periods Available: FY 2007 through
FY 2011 IPPS Update.
5. FY 2011 IPPS SSA/FIPS CBSA State
and County Crosswalk
This file contains a crosswalk of State
and county codes used by the Social
Security Administration (SSA) and the
Federal Information Processing
Standards (FIPS), county name, and a
historical list of Metropolitan Statistical
Areas (MSAs).
Media: Internet at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/
FFD/list.asp#TopOfPage.
Period Available: FY 2011 IPPS
Update.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
6. HCRIS Cost Report Data
The data included in this file contain
cost reports with fiscal years ending on
or after September 30, 1996. These data
files contain the highest level of cost
report status.
Media: Internet at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/CostReports/
02_HospitalCostReport.asp and
Compact Disc (CD).
File Cost: $100.00 per year.
7. Provider-Specific File
This file is a component of the
PRICER program used in the fiscal
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
intermediary’s or the MAC’s system to
compute DRG/MS–DRG payments for
individual bills. The file contains
records for all prospective payment
system eligible hospitals, including
hospitals in waiver States, and data
elements used in the prospective
payment system recalibration processes
and related activities. Beginning with
December 1988, the individual records
were enlarged to include pass-through
per diems and other elements.
Media: Internet at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/
ProspMedicareFeeSvcPmtGen/
03_psf_text.asp.
Period Available: FY 2011 IPPS
Update.
8. CMS Medicare Case-Mix Index File
This file contains the Medicare casemix index by provider number as
published in each year’s update of the
Medicare hospital inpatient prospective
payment system. The case-mix index is
a measure of the costliness of cases
treated by a hospital relative to the cost
of the national average of all Medicare
hospital cases, using DRG/MS–DRG
weights as a measure of relative
costliness of cases. Two versions of this
file are created each year. They support
the following:
• Notice of proposed rulemaking
published in the Federal Register.
• Final rule published in the Federal
Register.
Media: Internet at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/
FFD/list.asp#TopOfPage.
Periods Available: FY 1985 through
FY 2011.
9. MS–DRG Relative Weights (Also
Table 5—MS–DRGs)
This file contains a listing of MS–
DRGs, MS–DRG narrative descriptions,
relative weights, and geometric and
arithmetic mean lengths of stay as
published in the Federal Register. There
are two versions of this file as published
in the Federal Register.
• Notice of proposed rulemaking.
• Final rule.
Media: Internet at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/
FFD/list.asp#TopOfPage.
Periods Available: FY 2006 through
2011 IPPS Update.
10. IPPS Payment Impact File
This file contains data used to
estimate payments under Medicare’s
hospital inpatient prospective payment
systems for operating and capital-related
costs. The data are taken from various
sources, including the Provider-Specific
File, Minimum Data Sets, and prior
impact files. The data set is abstracted
PO 00000
Frm 00203
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24053
from an internal file used for the impact
analysis of the changes to the
prospective payment systems published
in the Federal Register.
Media: Internet at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/
FFD/list.asp#TopOfPage and https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/
HIF/list.asp#TopOfPage.
Periods Available: FY 1994 through
FY 2011 IPPS Update.
11. AOR/BOR Tables
This file contains data used to
develop the MS–DRG relative weights. It
contains mean, maximum, minimum,
standard deviation, and coefficient of
variation statistics by MS–DRG for
length of stay and standardized charges.
The BOR tables are ‘‘Before Outliers
Removed’’ and the AOR is ‘‘After
Outliers Removed.’’ (Outliers refer to
statistical outliers, not payment
outliers.)
Two versions of this file are created
each year. They support the following:
• Notice of proposed rulemaking
published in the Federal Register.
• Final rule published in the Federal
Register.
Media: Internet at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/
FFD/list.asp#TopOfPage.
Periods Available: FY 2006 through
FY 2011 IPPS Update.
12. Prospective Payment System (PPS)
Standardizing File
This file contains information that
standardizes the charges used to
calculate relative weights to determine
payments under the hospital inpatient
operating and capital prospective
payment systems. Variables include
wage index, cost-of-living adjustment
(COLA), case-mix index, indirect
medical education (IME) adjustment,
disproportionate share, and the Corebased Statistical Area (CBSA). The file
supports the following:
• Notice of proposed rulemaking
published in the Federal Register.
• Final rule published in the Federal
Register.
Media: Internet at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/
FFD/list.asp#TopOfPage.
Period Available: FY 2011 IPPS
Update.
For further information concerning
these data tapes, contact the CMS Public
Use Files Hotline at (410) 786–3691.
Commenters interested in discussing
any data used in constructing this
proposed rule should contact Nisha
Bhat at (410) 786–5320.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24054
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
B. Collection of Information
Requirements
1. Legislative Requirement for
Solicitation of Comments
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
(ICRs).
2. Requirements in Regulation Text
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
a. ICRs Regarding Withdrawing an
Application, Terminating an Approved
3-Year Reclassification, or Canceling a
Previous Withdrawal or Termination
(Proposed Revised § 412.273)
Proposed revised § 412.273(b) states
that the MGCRB allows a hospital, or
group of hospitals, to withdraw its
application or to terminate an already
existing 3-year reclassification.
Proposed revised § 412.273(c) further
specifies the timing requirements for the
withdrawal or termination
requirements. Proposed § 412.273(c)(1)
provides that a request for withdrawal
must be received by the MGCRB at any
time before the MGCRB issues a
decision on the application; or after the
MGCRB issues a decision, provided that
the request for withdrawal is received
by the MGCRB within 45 days of
publication of CMS’ annual notice of
proposed rulemaking concerning
changes to the IPPS and proposed
payment rates for the fiscal year for
which the application has been filed.
The burden associated with this
requirement is the time and effort
necessary for a hospital to submit a
written withdrawal request to the
MGCRB. While this requirement is
subject to the PRA, we cannot
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
accurately quantify the burden
associated with this requirement. We
currently review each request on a caseby-case basis. We believe the associated
burden is thereby exempt from the PRA
as stipulated under 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(6).
Proposed revised § 412.273(c)(2)
provides that a request for termination
must be received by the MGCRB within
45 days of the publication of CMS’
annual notice of proposed rulemaking
concerning changes to the IPPS and
proposed payment rates for the fiscal
year for which the termination is to
apply. The burden associated with this
requirement is the time and effort
necessary for a hospital to submit a
written termination request to the
MGCRB. While this requirement is
subject to the PRA, we cannot
accurately quantify the burden
associated with this requirement. We
currently review each request on a caseby-case basis. We believe the associated
burden is thereby exempt from the PRA
as stipulated under 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(6).
Proposed revised § 412.273(d)(1)
states that a hospital (or group of
hospitals) may cancel a withdrawal or
termination in a subsequent year and
request the MGCRB to reinstate the
wage index reclassification for the
remaining fiscal year(s) of the 3-year
period. Proposed revised § 412.273(d)(2)
would require that cancellation requests
be received in writing by the MGCRB no
later than the deadline for submitting
reclassification applications for the
following fiscal year, as specified in
§ 412.256(a)(2). The burden associated
with this requirement is the time and
effort necessary for a hospital to submit
a written request to the MGCRB,
requesting that the current withdrawal
or termination request be cancelled.
While this requirement is subject to the
PRA, we cannot accurately quantify the
burden associated with this
requirement. We currently review each
request on a case-by-case basis. We
believe the associated burden is thereby
exempt from the PRA as stipulated
under 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(6).
Proposed § 412.273(d)(3) states that a
hospital would be able to apply for
reclassification to a different area (that
is, an area different from the one to
which it was originally reclassified for
the 3-year period). If the application is
approved, the reclassification will be
effective for 3 years. Once a 3-year
reclassification becomes effective, a
hospital may no longer cancel a
withdrawal or termination of another 3year reclassification, regardless of
whether the withdrawal or termination
request is made within 3 years from the
date of the withdrawal or termination.
The burden associated with the
PO 00000
Frm 00204
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
reapplication requirement is the time
and effort necessary for a hospital to
submit a reclassification request to the
MGCRB. While this requirement is
subject to the PRA, the associated
burden is approved under OMB control
number 0938–0573, with an expiration
date of December 31, 2011.
Proposed § 412.273(f)(1) states that a
hospital may file an appeal of the
MGCRB’s denial of its request for
withdrawal or termination, or of the
MGCRB’s denial of its request for a
cancellation of such withdrawal or
termination, to the Administrator. The
appeal must be received within 15 days
of the date of the notice of the denial.
The burden associated with this
requirement is the time and effort
necessary for a hospital to file a written
appeal of the MGCRB’s denial. While
this requirement is subject to the PRA,
the associated burden is exempt under
5 CFR 1320.4. The burden associated
with collection of information as part of
or subsequent to an administrative
action is not subject to the PRA.
b. ICRs Regarding Condition of
Participation: Respiratory Care Services
(§ 482.57)
Proposed § 482.57(b)(4) imposes a
recordkeeping requirement. This section
would require all respiratory care
services orders to be documented in the
patient’s medical record according to
the requirements at § 482.24. The
burden associated with this requirement
is the time and effort necessary for
hospital staff to document and maintain
the respiratory care services orders in a
patient’s medical record. While these
requirements are subject to the PRA, the
associated burden is exempt from the
PRA under 5 CFR 1320.3(b)(2). We
believe hospitals will not incur any
burden above and beyond that
associated with the usual and customary
business practice of maintaining
detailed patient medical records.
3. Additional Information Collection
Requirements
This proposed rule imposes collection
of information requirements as outlined
in the regulation text and specified
above. However, this proposed rule also
makes reference to several associated
information collections that are not
discussed in the regulation text
contained in this document. The
following is a discussion of these
information collections, some of which
have already received OMB approval.
a. Present on Admission (POA)
Indicator Reporting
Section II.F.6. of the preamble of this
proposed rule discusses the POA
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
indicator reporting program. As stated
earlier, collection of POA indicator data
is necessary to identify which
conditions were acquired during
hospitalization for the HAC payment
provision and for broader public health
uses of Medicare data. Through Change
Request 5499 dated May 11, 2007, CMS
issued instructions that require IPPS
hospitals to submit POA indicator data
for all diagnosis codes on Medicare
claims.
The burden associated with this
requirement is the time and effort
necessary to place the appropriate POA
indicator codes on Medicare claims.
This requirement is subject to the PRA;
however, the associated burden is
currently approved under OMB control
number 0938–0997, with an expiration
date of October 31, 2012.
b. Add-On Payments for New Services
and Technologies
Section II.I.1. of the preamble of this
proposed rule discusses add-on
payments for new services and
technologies. Specifically, this section
states that applicants for add-on
payments for new medical services or
technologies for FY 2011 must submit a
formal request. A formal request
includes a full description of the
clinical applications of the medical
service or technology and the results of
any clinical evaluations demonstrating
that the new medical service or
technology represents a substantial
clinical improvement. In addition, the
request must contain a significant
sample of the data to demonstrate that
the medical service or technology meets
the high-cost threshold. We detailed the
burden associated with this requirement
in the September 7, 2001, IPPS final rule
(66 FR 46902). As stated in that final
rule, collection of the information for
this requirement is conducted on an
individual case-by-case basis. We
believe the associated burden is thereby
exempt from the PRA as stipulated
under 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(6). Similarly, we
also believe the burden associated with
this requirement is exempt from the
PRA under 5 CFR 1320.3(c), which
defines the agency collection of
information subject to the requirements
of the PRA as information collection
imposed on 10 or more persons within
any 12-month period. This information
collection does not impact 10 or more
entities in a 12-month period. In FYs
2008, 2009, 2010, and 2011 we received
1, 4, 5, and 3 applications, respectively.
c. Reporting of Hospital Quality Data for
Annual Hospital Payment Update
As discussed in section V.A. of this
proposed rule, the RHQDAPU program
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
was originally established to implement
section 501(b) of Public Law 108–173.
The RHQDAPU program originally
consisted of a ‘‘starter set’’ of 10 quality
measures. OMB approved the collection
of data associated with the original
starter set of quality measures under
OMB control number 0938–0918, with a
current expiration date of January 31,
2011.
As part of our implementation of
section 5001(a) of the DRA, we
expanded the number of quality
measures reported in the RHQDAPU
program. Specifically, section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(III) of the Act, added
by section 5001(a) of the DRA, requires
that the Secretary expand the ‘‘starter
set’’ of 10 quality measures that were
established by the Secretary as of
November 1, 2003, to include measures
‘‘that the Secretary determines to be
appropriate for the measurement of the
quality of care (including medication
errors) furnished by hospitals in
inpatient settings.’’ Under this
provision, we established additional
program measures to bring the total
number of measures to 30. The burden
associated with these reporting
requirements is currently approved
under OMB control number 0938–1022,
with a current expiration date of June
30, 2011.
In the FY 2010 IPPS proposed rule (74
FR 24168), we solicited public
comments on several considerations for
expanding and updating quality
measures. We responded to the public
comments received in the FY 2010
IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74
FR 43866 through 43868). We also
expanded and finalized the RHQDAPU
program measure set for the FY 2011
payment determination. As part of the
expansion effort, we finalized 46
measures in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010
LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR 43872).
In this FY 2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS
proposed rule, we are proposing to
retire one measure for the FY 2011
payment determination. For the FY
2012 through FY 2014 payment
determinations, we are proposing to
retain the remaining 45 of the 46 current
measures; and for FY 2012, to add 10
new measures and to require all-patient
volume data for selected MS–DRGs that
relate to RHQDAPU program measures;
for FY 2013, to retain the FY 2012
measures and add 35 new measures;
and for FY 2014, to retain the FY 2013
measures and to add 4 new measures. In
addition, we have listed 28 new
measures that are under consideration
for adoption in future years. We are
proposing that beginning with CY 2011
discharges, hospitals submit some of the
new measure data to a qualified registry.
PO 00000
Frm 00205
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24055
We are also soliciting public comments
on retiring one or more of the 11
additional measures suggested by
commenters in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY
2010 LTCH PPS final rule based on
topped out performance and other
rationales.
In summary, we are proposing to
retire one measure for the FY 2011
annual payment update and seeking
comments on whether to retire 11
additional measures suggested by
commenters in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY
2010 LTCH PPS final rule. In addition,
we are proposing to expand the
RHQDAPU program measure set to: 55
measures for the FY 2012 annual
payment update (taking into account
our proposal to retire one measure for
the FY 2011 annual payment update);
90 measures for the FY 2013 annual
payment update, and 94 measures for
the FY 2014 annual payment update.
We also list 28 additional measures
under consideration for adoption in
future years which may increase these
numbers if we propose and adopt them
in future IPPS rulemaking. Finally, we
are proposing that, beginning with the
FY 2012 annual payment update,
hospitals that participate in the
RHQDAPU program submit all-patient
volume data for selected MS–DRGs that
relate to RHQDAPU program measures.
This proposal would require hospitals
to report these data beginning with CY
2011 discharges.
We submitted a revised version of the
information collection request approved
under OMB control number 0938–1022,
to obtain approval for the proposed new
measures.
Section V.A.10. of this proposed rule
addresses the reconsideration and
appeal procedures for a hospital that we
believe did not meet the RHQDAPU
program requirements. If a hospital
disagrees with our determination, it may
submit a written request to CMS to
reconsider our decision. The hospital’s
request for reconsideration must explain
the reasons why it believes it satisfied
the RHQDAPU program requirements.
While this is a reporting requirement,
the burden associated with it is not
subject to the PRA under 5 CFR
1320.4(a)(2). The burden associated
with information collection
requirements imposed subsequent to an
administrative action is not subject to
the PRA.
d. Proposed Occupational Mix
Adjustment to the FY 2011 Index
(Hospital Wage Index Occupational Mix
Survey)
Section II.D. of the preamble of this
proposed rule discusses the proposed
occupational mix adjustment to the FY
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24056
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
2011 wage index. While the preamble
does not contain any new ICRs, it is
important to note that there is an OMB
approved information collection request
associated with the hospital wage index.
Section 304(c) of Public Law 106–554
amended section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the
Act to require CMS to collect data at
least once every 3 years on the
occupational mix of employees for each
short-term, acute care hospital
participating in the Medicare program
in order to construct an occupational
mix adjustment to the wage index. We
collect the data via the occupational mix
survey.
The burden associated with this
information collection requirement is
the time and effort required to collect
and submit the data in the Hospital
Wage Index Occupational Mix Survey to
CMS. The aforementioned burden is
subject to the PRA; however, it is
currently approved under OMB control
number 0938–0907, with an expiration
date of February 28, 2013.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
e. Hospital Applications for Geographic
Reclassifications by the MGCRB
Section III.I.3. of the preamble of this
proposed rule discusses revisions to the
wage index based on hospital
redesignations. As stated in that section,
under section 1886(d)(10) of the Act, the
MGCRB has the authority to accept
short-term IPPS hospital applications
requesting geographic reclassification
for wage index or standardized payment
amounts and to issue decisions on these
requests by hospitals for geographic
reclassification for purposes of payment
under the IPPS.
The burden associated with this
application process is the time and
effort necessary for an IPPS hospital to
complete and submit an application for
reclassification to the MGCRB. While
this requirement is subject to the PRA,
the associated burden is currently
approved under OMB control number
0938–0573, with an expiration date of
December 31, 2011.
f. Direct GME Payments: General
Requirements
Existing regulations at § 413.75(b)
permit hospitals that share residents to
elect to form a Medicare GME affiliated
group if they are in the same or
contiguous urban or rural areas, if they
are under common ownership, or if they
are jointly listed as program sponsors or
major participating institutions in the
same program. The purpose of a
Medicare GME affiliated group is to
provide flexibility to hospitals in
structuring rotations under an aggregate
FTE resident cap when they share
residents. The existing regulations at
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
§ 413.79(f)(1) specify that each hospital
in a Medicare GME affiliated group
must submit a Medicare GME affiliation
agreement (as defined under § 413.75(b))
to the Medicare fiscal intermediary or
MAC servicing the hospital and send a
copy to CMS’ Central Office no later
than July 1 of the residency program
year during which the Medicare GME
affiliation agreement will be in effect.
In section V.H.3. of the preamble of
this proposed rule, we are proposing to
allow hospitals to electronically submit
the copy of the affiliation agreement that
is required to be sent to the CMS Central
Office. As stated earlier in the preamble,
the proposed electronic submission
process would consist of either an email mailbox or a Web site where
hospitals would submit their Medicare
GME affiliation agreements to the CMS
Central Office to a designated online
mailbox. We are proposing that a copy
of the Medicare GME affiliation
agreement would need to be received
through the electronic system no later
than 11:59 p.m. on July 1 of each
academic year. We are proposing that
the electronic affiliation agreement
would need to be submitted either as a
scanned copy or a Printer-Friendly
Display (PDF) version of that hard copy
agreement; we are proposing not to
accept an agreement in any electronic
format that could be subject to
manipulation. The scanned and/or PDF
format will enable CMS to ensure that
the agreements are signed and dated as
required in the regulations at § 413.75.
Under this proposal, hospitals would
have the option to continue to submit a
hard copy of its affiliation agreement to
the CMS Central Office. In addition,
each fiscal intermediary or MAC would
continue to have the authority to specify
its requirements for submittal of the
Medicare GME affiliation agreement by
hospitals that are part of the affiliation.
The burden associated with this
requirement is the time and effort it
would take for the new hospital to
develop and submit the Medicare GME
affiliation agreement, to submit it the
agreement to its fiscal intermediary or
MAC, and to submit a copy to CMS. In
the proposed and final rules that
published on May 22, 2009 (74 FR
24080) and August 27, 2009 (74 FR
43754), we stated that it was difficult for
us to estimate the annual burden
associated with this requirement
because we cannot estimate the
additional number of hospitals that will
be permitted to submit Medicare GME
affiliation agreements in any given year
as a result of the change. However, we
now have better data available to
quantify the burden associated with the
existing requirement for hospitals to
PO 00000
Frm 00206
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
submit GME affiliation agreements to
the fiscal intermediary or MAC
servicing the hospital and new
requirement for the electronic
submission of a copy of the affiliation
agreement to CMS. We are submitting a
new information collection request to
OMB for review and approval of the
associated burden.
We anticipate receiving between 100
and 150 GME affiliation agreements
annually. For the purposes of our
information collection request, we
estimate that we will receive 125
agreements annually. CMS provides a
two-page sample agreement for
hospitals; however, some facilities may
submit additional information that is
not required. We estimate that it will
take 1 hour for a hospital to develop a
GME affiliation agreement or to follow
the format provided by CMS. Similarly,
we estimate that it will take each
hospital 15 minutes to submit a hard
copy of the affiliation agreement to its
fiscal intermediary or MAC. Finally, we
estimate that it will take each hospital
5 minutes to submit an electronic copy
of its GME affiliation agreement to CMS.
The total annual burden associated with
developing the affiliation agreement is
125 hours. The total annual burden
associated with submitting a hard copy
of the affiliation agreement is 31 hours.
The total annual burden associated with
submitting the agreement electronically
is 10 hours. The total annual burden
associated with all of the requirements
in this section is 166 hours. The total
cost associated with this requirement is
$5,000 ($40.00 x 125 agreements).
If you comment on these information
collection and recordkeeping
requirements, please do either of the
following:
1. Submit your comments
electronically as specified in the
ADDRESSES section of this proposed rule;
or
2. Submit your comments to the
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and
Budget, Attention: CMS Desk Officer,
CMS–1498–P; Fax: (202) 395–6974; or
E-mail: OIRA_submission@omb.eop.gov.
C. Response to Comments
Because of the large number of public
comments we normally receive on
Federal Register documents, we are not
able to acknowledge or respond to them
individually. We will consider all
comments we receive by the date and
time specified in the DATES section of
this preamble, and, when we proceed
with a subsequent document, we will
respond to the comments in the
preamble to that document.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
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, Puerto Rico, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
§ 412.106
42 CFR Part 440
Grant program-health, Medicaid.
42 CFR Part 441
Family planning, Grant programhealth, Infants and children, Medicaid,
Penalties, Prescription drugs, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
§ 412.113
PART 412—PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT
SYSTEMS FOR INPATIENT HOSPITAL
SERVICES
1. The authority citation for Part 412
continues to read as follows:
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the
Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302 and
1395hh), and sec. 124 of Public Law 106–113
(113 Stat. 1501A–332).
2. Section 412.4 is amended by—
a. Republishing the introductory
language of paragraph (b).
b. Removing the word ‘‘or’’ at the end
of paragraph (b)(1).
c. Removing the period at the end of
paragraph (b)(2) and adding in its place
a semicolon.
d. Adding new paragraphs (b)(3) and
(b)(4).
The additions read as follows:
Discharges and transfers.
*
*
*
*
(b) Acute care transfers. A discharge
of a hospital inpatient is considered to
be a transfer for purposes of payment
under this part if the patient is
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Other payments.
*
42 CFR Part 489
Health facilities, Medicare, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons stated in the preamble
of this proposed rule, the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services is
proposing to amend 42 CFR Chapter IV
as follows:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
[Amended]
4. Amend § 412.108 (a)(1)(iii)
introductory text by removing the word
‘‘receiving’’ and adding in its place the
words ‘‘entitled to’’.
5. Section 412.113 is amended by
revising paragraph (c)(2)(i)(A) to read as
follows:
42 CFR Part 485
Grant programs-health, Health
facilities, Medicaid, Medicare,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
*
[Amended]
3. Section 412.106 is amended by—
a. In paragraph (b)(2)(i)(B), removing
the word ‘‘or’’ and adding in its place the
word ‘‘including’’.
b. In paragraph (b)(2)(iii)(B), removing
the word ‘‘or’’ and adding in its place the
word ‘‘including’’.
§ 412.108
42 CFR Part 482
Grant program-health, Hospitals,
Medicaid, Medicare, Reporting and
rcordkeeping requirements.
§ 412.4
readmitted the same day (unless the
readmission is unrelated to the initial
discharge) to another hospital that is—
*
*
*
*
*
(3) An acute care hospital that would
otherwise be eligible to be paid under
the IPPS, but does not have an
agreement to participate in the Medicare
program; or
(4) A critical access hospital.
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(2)(i) * * *
(A) The hospital or CAH is located in
a rural area as defined in § 412.62(f) and
is not deemed to be located in an urban
area under the provisions of
§ 412.64(b)(3). For cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2010,
the hospital or CAH is either located in
a rural area as defined in § 412.62(f) and
is not deemed to be located in an urban
area under the provisions of
§ 412.64(b)(3) or the hospital or CAH
has reclassified as rural under the
provisions at § 412.103.
*
*
*
*
*
6. Section 412.273 is revised to read
as follows:
§ 412.273 Withdrawing an application,
terminating an approved 3-year
reclassification, or canceling a previous
withdrawal or termination.
(a) Definitions. For purposes of this
section, the following definitions apply.
Termination refers to the termination
of an already existing 3-year MGCRB
reclassification where such
reclassification has already been in
effect for 1 or 2 years, and there are 1
or 2 years remaining on the 3-year
reclassification. A termination is
effective only for the full fiscal year(s)
remaining in the 3-year period at the
time the request is received. Requests
for terminations for part of a fiscal year
are not considered.
PO 00000
Frm 00207
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24057
Withdrawal refers to the withdrawal
of a 3-year MGCRB reclassification that
has not yet gone into effect or where the
MGCRB has not yet issued a decision on
the application.
(b) General rule. The MGCRB allows
a hospital, or group of hospitals, to
withdraw its application or to terminate
an already existing 3-year
reclassification, in accordance with this
section.
(c) Timing. (1) A request for
withdrawal must be received by the
MGCRB—
(i) At any time before the MGCRB
issues a decision on the application; or
(ii) After the MGCRB issues a
decision, provided that the request for
withdrawal is received by the MGCRB
within 45 days of publication of CMS’
annual notice of proposed rulemaking
concerning changes to the inpatient
hospital prospective payment system
and proposed payment rates for the
fiscal year for which the application has
been filed.
(2) A request for termination must be
received by the MGCRB within 45 days
of the publication of CMS’ annual notice
of proposed rulemaking concerning
changes to the inpatient hospital
prospective payment system and
proposed payment rates for the fiscal
year for which the termination is to
apply.
(d) Reapplication within the approved
3-year period, cancellations of
terminations and withdrawals, and
prohibition on overlapping
reclassification approvals.
(1) Cancellation of terminations or
withdrawals. Subject to the provisions
of this section, a hospital (or group of
hospitals) may cancel a withdrawal or
termination in a subsequent year and
request the MGCRB to reinstate the
wage index reclassification for the
remaining fiscal year(s) of the 3-year
period. (Withdrawals may be cancelled
only in cases where the MGCRB issued
a decision on the geographic
reclassification request.)
(2) Timing and process of cancellation
request. Cancellation requests must be
received in writing by the MGCRB no
later than the deadline for submitting
reclassification applications for the
following fiscal year, as specified in
§ 412.256(a)(2).
(3) Reapplications. A hospital may
apply for reclassification to a different
area (that is, an area different from the
one to which it was originally
reclassified for the 3-year period). If the
application is approved, the
reclassification will be effective for 3
years. Once a 3-year reclassification
becomes effective, a hospital may no
longer cancel a withdrawal or
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24058
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
termination of another 3-year
reclassification, regardless of whether
the withdrawal or termination request is
made within 3 years from the date of the
withdrawal or termination.
(4) Termination of existing 3-year
reclassification. In a case in which a
hospital with an existing 3-year wage
index reclassification applies to be
reclassified to another area, its existing
3-year reclassification will be
terminated when a second 3-year wage
index reclassification goes into effect for
payments for discharges on or after the
following October 1.
(e) Written request only. A request to
withdraw an application must be made
in writing to the MGCRB by all hospitals
that are party to the application. A
request to terminate an approved
reclassification may be made in writing
to the MGCRB by an individual hospital
or by an individual hospital that is party
to a group classification.
(f) Appeal of the MGCRB’s denial of
a hospital’s request for withdrawal or
termination, or for cancellation of a
withdrawal or termination.
(1) A hospital may file an appeal of
the MGCRB’s denial of its request for
withdrawal or termination, or of the
MGCRB’s denial of its request for a
cancellation of such withdrawal or
termination, to the Administrator. The
appeal must be received within 15 days
of the date of the notice of the denial.
(2) Within 20 days of receipt of the
hospital’s request for appeal, the
Administrator affirms or reverses the
denial.
7. Section 412.503 is amended by—
a. Adding a definition of ‘‘long-term
care hospital prospective payment
system fiscal year’’.
b. Adding a definition of ‘‘long-term
care hospital prospective payment
system payment year’’.
c. Revising paragraph (3) of the
definition of ‘‘long-term care hospital
prospective payment system rate year’’.
The additions and revision read as
follows:
§ 412.503
Definitions.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
*
*
*
*
*
Long-term care hospital prospective
payment system fiscal year means,
beginning October 1, 2010, the 12month period of October 1 through
September 30.
Long-term care hospital prospective
payment system payment year means
the general term that encompasses both
the definition of ‘‘long-term care
hospital prospective payment system
rate year’’ and ‘‘long-term care hospital
prospective payment system fiscal year’’
specified in this section.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Long-term care hospital prospective
payment system rate year means—
*
*
*
*
*
(3) From October 1, 2009 through
September 30, 2010, the 12-month
period of October 1 through September
30.
*
*
*
*
*
8. Section 412.523 is amended by
adding a new paragraph (c)(3)(vii) to
read as follows:
§ 412.523 Methodology for calculating the
Federal prospective payment rate.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(3) * * *
(vii) For long-term care hospital
prospective payment system fiscal year
beginning October 1, 2010, and ending
September 30, 2011. The standard
Federal rate for the long-term care
hospital prospective payment system
fiscal year beginning October 1, 2010,
and ending September 30, 2011, is the
standard Federal rate for the previous
long-term care hospital prospective
payment system rate year updated by
¥0.1 percent. The standard Federal rate
is adjusted, as appropriate, as described
in paragraph (d) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
9. Section 412.525 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) to
read as follows:
§ 412.525 Adjustments to the Federal
prospective payment.
(a) Adjustments for high-cost outliers.
(1) CMS provides for an additional
payment to a long-term care hospital if
its estimated costs for a patient exceed
the adjusted LTC–MS–DRG payment
plus a fixed-loss amount. For each longterm care hospital prospective payment
system payment year, as described in
§ 412.503, CMS determines a fixed-loss
amount that is the maximum loss that
a hospital can incur under the
prospective payment system for a case
with unusually high costs.
(2) The fixed-loss amount is
determined for the long-term care
hospital prospective payment system
payment year, as defined in § 412.503,
using the LTC–MS–DRG relative
weights that are in effect at the start of
the applicable long-term care hospital
prospective payment system payment
year, as defined in § 412.503.
*
*
*
*
*
PO 00000
Frm 00208
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
PART 413—PRINCIPLES OF
REASONABLE COST
REIMBURSEMENT; PAYMENT FOR
END-STAGE RENAL DISEASE
SERVICES; OPTIONAL
PROSPECTIVELY DETERMINED
PAYMENT RATES FOR SKILLED
NURSING FACILITIES
10. 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 Public Law 106–133 (113 Stat.
1501A–332).
11. Section 413.70 is amended by—
a. Revising paragraph (b)(3)(i)(A).
b. Revising paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B).
c. Revising paragraph (b)(3)(i)(D).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 413.70
Payment for services of a CAH.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) * * *
(A)(1) For cost reporting periods
beginning before October 1, 2010. The
election must be made in writing, made
on an annual basis, and delivered to the
fiscal intermediary or MAC servicing
the CAH at least 30 days before the start
of the cost reporting period for which
the election is made. An election, once
made for a cost reporting period,
remains in effect for all of that period.
(2) For cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2010. If
a CAH had elected the method specified
in paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this section in
its most recent cost reporting period
beginning prior to October 1, 2010, that
election remains in effect for all of that
period and for all subsequent cost
reporting periods, unless the CAH
submits a termination request to the
fiscal intermediary or MAC servicing
the CAH at least 30 days before the start
of the next cost reporting period. If a
CAH had not, in its most recent cost
reporting period, elected the method
described in paragraphs (b)(3)(ii) and
(b)(3)(iii) of this section and chooses to
elect this method on or after October 1,
2010, the election must be made in
writing and delivered to the fiscal
intermediary or MAC servicing the CAH
at least 30 days before the start of the
first cost reporting period for which the
election is made. Once the election is
made, it remains in effect for all of that
period and for all subsequent cost
reporting periods unless the CAH
submits a termination request to the
fiscal intermediary or MAC servicing
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
the CAH at least 30 days before the start
of the next cost reporting period. For
cost reporting periods beginning in
October 2010 and November 2010, if a
CAH wishes to terminate its election,
the CAH must submit a termination
request to the fiscal intermediary or
MAC servicing the CAH prior to
December 1, 2010.
(B) An election of the payment
method specified under paragraph
(b)(3)(i) of this section applies to all
services furnished to outpatients by a
physician or other practitioner who has
reassigned his or her rights to bill for
those services to the CAH in accordance
with subpart F of Part 424 of this
chapter. If a physician or other
practitioner does not reassign his or her
billing rights to the CAH in accordance
with subpart F of Part 424 of this
chapter, payment for the physician’s or
practitioner’s services furnished to CAH
outpatients will be made on a fee
schedule or other applicable basis as
specified in subpart B of Part 414 of this
subchapter.
*
*
*
*
*
(D) An election made under paragraph
(b)(3)(i) of this section is effective as
provided for under paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(A) or paragraph (b)(3)(i)(C) of
this section and does not apply to an
election that was terminated prior to the
start of the cost reporting period for
which it would otherwise apply.
*
*
*
*
*
12. Section 413.75 is amended by
revising the definitions of ‘‘Primary care
resident’’ and ‘‘Resident’’ under
paragraph (b) to read as follows:
§ 413.75 Direct GME payments: General
requirements.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
Primary care resident is a resident
who is enrolled in an approved medical
residency training program in family
medicine, general internal medicine,
general pediatrics, preventive medicine,
geriatric medicine or osteopathic
general practice. Effective for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2010, primary care resident
is a resident who is formally accepted,
enrolled, and participating in an
approved medical residency training
program in family medicine, general
internal medicine, general pediatrics,
preventive medicine, geriatric medicine
or osteopathic general practice.
*
*
*
*
*
Resident means an intern, resident, or
fellow who participates in an approved
medical residency program, including
programs in osteopathy, dentistry, and
podiatry, as required in order to become
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
certified by the appropriate specialty
board. Effective for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2010, resident means an intern,
resident, or fellow who is formally
accepted, enrolled, and participating in
an approved medical residency
program, including programs in
osteopathy, dentistry, and podiatry, as
required in order to become certified by
the appropriate specialty board.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 440—SERVICES: GENERAL
PROVISIONS
13. The authority citation for Part 440
continues to read as follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 1302).
18. Section 440.160 is amended by
revising paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2) to
read as follows:
§ 440.160 Inpatient psychiatric services for
individuals under age 21.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) A psychiatric hospital that meets
the requirements for participation in
Medicare as a psychiatric hospital as
specified in § 482.60 of this chapter, or
is accredited by a national organization
whose psychiatric hospital accrediting
program has been approved by CMS, or
a hospital with an inpatient psychiatric
program that meets the requirements for
participation in Medicare as a hospital
as specified in Part 482 of this chapter
or is accredited by a national accrediting
organization whose hospital accrediting
program has been approved by CMS.
(2) A psychiatric facility that is not a
hospital and is accredited by a national
accrediting organization whose program
has been approved by CMS, or by any
other accrediting organization with
comparable standards that is recognized
by the State.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 441—SERVICES:
REQUIREMENTS AND LIMITS
APPLICABLE TO SPECIFIC SERVICES
14. The authority citation for Part 441
continues to read as follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 1302).
15. Section 441.151 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a)(2)(i) and (a)(2)(ii)
to read as follows:
§ 441.151
General requirements.
(a) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) A psychiatric hospital that meets
the requirements for participation in
Medicare as a psychiatric hospital as
PO 00000
Frm 00209
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24059
specified in § 482.60 of this chapter, or
is accredited by a national organization
whose psychiatric hospital accrediting
program has been approved by CMS, or
a hospital with an inpatient psychiatric
program that meets the requirements for
participation in Medicare as a hospital
as specified in Part 482 of this chapter
or is accredited by a national accrediting
organization whose hospital accrediting
program has been approved by CMS.
(ii) A psychiatric facility that is not a
hospital and is accredited by a national
accrediting organization whose program
has been approved by CMS, or by any
other accrediting organization with
comparable standards that is recognized
by the State.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 482—CONDITIONS OF
PARTICIPATION FOR HOSPITALS
16. The authority citation for Part 482
continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the
Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302 and
1395(hh)).
17. Section 482.56 is amended by
revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:
§ 482.56 Condition of participation:
Rehabilitation services.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Standard: Delivery of services.
Services must only be provided under
the orders of a qualified and licensed
practitioner who is responsible for the
care of the patient, acting within his or
her scope of practice under State law,
and who is authorized by the hospital’s
medical staff to order the services in
accordance with hospital policies and
procedures and State laws.
(1) All rehabilitation services orders
must be documented in the patient’s
medical record according to the
requirements at § 482.24.
(2) The provision of care and the
personnel qualifications must be in
accordance with national acceptable
standards of practice and must also
meet the requirements of § 409.17 of this
chapter.
18. Section 482.57 is amended by
revising paragraph (b)(3) and adding
paragraph (b)(4) to read as follows:
§ 482.57 Condition of participation:
Respiratory care services.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(3) Services must only be provided
under the orders of a qualified and
licensed practitioner who is responsible
for the care of the patient, acting within
his or her scope of practice under State
law, and who is authorized by the
hospital’s medical staff to order the
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24060
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
services in accordance with hospital
policies and procedures and State laws.
(4) All respiratory care services orders
must be documented in the patient’s
medical record according to the
requirements at § 482.24.
PART 485—CONDITIONS OF
PARTICIPATION: SPECIALIZED
PROVIDERS
19. The authority citation for Part 485
continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the
Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302 and
1395(hh)).
20. Section 485.610 is amended by
revising the introductory text of
paragraph (b) to read as follows:
§ 485.610 Condition of participation:
Status and location.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Standard: Location in a rural area
or treatment as rural. The CAH meets
the requirements of either paragraph
(b)(1) or (b)(2) of this section or the
requirements of either (b)(3) or (b)(4) of
this section.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 489—PROVIDER AGREEMENTS
AND SUPPLIER APPROVAL
21. The authority citation for Part 489
continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 1102, 1819, 1820(e), 1861,
1864(m), 1866, 1869, and 1871 of the Social
Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395i–3, 1395x,
1395aa(m), 1395cc, 1395ff, and 1395hh).
22. Section 489.1 is revised to read as
follows:
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
§ 489.1
Statutory basis.
(a) This part implements section 1866
of the Social Security Act (the Act).
Section 1866 of the Act specifies the
terms of provider agreements, the
grounds for terminating a provider
agreement, the circumstances under
which payment for new admissions may
be denied, and the circumstances under
which payment may be withheld for
failure to make timely utilization
review. The sections of the Act specified
in paragraphs (a)(1) through (a)(4) of this
section are also pertinent.
(1) Section 1861 of the Act defines the
services covered under Medicare and
the providers that may be reimbursed
for furnishing those services.
(2) Section 1864 of the Act provides
for the use of State survey agencies to
ascertain whether certain entities meet
the conditions of participation.
(3) Section 1865(a)(1) of the Act
provides that an entity accredited by a
national accreditation body found by
the Secretary to satisfy the Medicare
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
conditions of participation, conditions
for coverage, or conditions of
certification or requirements for
participation shall be treated as meeting
those requirements. Section 1865(a)(2)
of the Act requires the Secretary to
consider when making such a finding,
among other things, the national
accreditation body’s accreditation
requirements and survey procedures.
(4) Section 1871 of the Act authorizes
the Secretary to prescribe regulations for
the administration of the Medicare
program.
(b) Although section 1866 of the Act
speaks only to providers and provider
agreements, the effective date rules in
this part are made applicable also to the
approval of suppliers that meet the
requirements specified in § 489.13.
(c) Section 1861(o)(7) of the Act
requires each HHA to provide CMS with
a surety bond.
23. Section 489.13 is revised to read
as follows:
§ 489.13 Effective date of agreement or
approval.
(a) Applicability—(1) General rule.
Except as provided in paragraph (a)(2)
of this section, this section applies to
Medicare provider agreements with, and
supplier approval of, entities that, as a
basis for participation in Medicare are
subject to a determination by CMS on
the basis of—
(i) A survey conducted by the State
survey agency or CMS staff surveyors; or
(ii) Accreditation by an accreditation
organization whose program has CMS
approval at the time of the accreditation
survey and accreditation decision.
(2) Exceptions. (i) For an agreement
with a community mental health center
(CMHC) or a federally qualified health
center (FQHC), the effective date is the
date on which CMS accepts a signed
agreement which assures that the CMHC
or FQHC meets all Federal
requirements.
(ii) A Medicare supplier approval of a
laboratory is effective only while the
laboratory has in effect a valid CLIA
certificate issued under Part 493 of this
chapter, and only for the specialty and
subspecialty tests it is authorized to
perform.
(b) All health and safety standards are
met on the date of survey. The
agreement or approval is effective on the
date the State agency, CMS staff, or the
CMS contractor survey (including the
Life Safety Code survey, if applicable) is
completed, or on the date of the
accreditation decision, as applicable, if
on that date the provider or supplier
meets all applicable Federal
requirements as set forth in this chapter.
(If the agreement or approval is time-
PO 00000
Frm 00210
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
limited, the new agreement or approval
is effective on the day following the
expiration of the current agreement or
approval.) However, the effective date of
the agreement or approval may not be
earlier than the latest of the dates on
which CMS determines that each
applicable Federal requirement is met.
Federal requirements include, but are
not limited to—
(1) Enrollment requirements
established in Part 424, Subpart P, of
this chapter. CMS determines, based
upon its review and verification of the
prospective provider’s or supplier’s
enrollment application, the date on
which enrollment requirements have
been met;
(2) The requirements identified in
§§ 489.10 and 489.12; and
(3) The applicable Medicare health
and safety standards, such as the
applicable conditions of participation,
the requirements for participation, the
conditions for coverage, or the
conditions for certification.
(c) All health and safety standards are
not met on the date of survey. If, on the
date the survey is completed, the
provider or supplier has failed to meet
any one of the applicable health and
safety standards, the following rules
apply for determining the effective date
of the provider agreement or supplier
approval, assuming that no other
Federal requirements remain to be
satisfied. The effective date of the
agreement or approval may not be
earlier than the latest of the dates on
which each applicable Federal
requirement is met.
(1) For an agreement with an SNF, the
effective date is the date on which—
(i) The SNF is in substantial
compliance (as defined in § 488.301 of
this chapter) with the requirements for
participation; and
(ii) CMS or the State survey agency
receives from the SNF, if applicable, an
approvable waiver request.
(2) For an agreement with, or an
approval of, any other provider or
supplier, (except those specified in
paragraph (a)(2) of this section), the
effective date is the earlier of the
following:
(i) The date on which the provider or
supplier meets all applicable conditions
of participation, conditions for coverage,
or conditions for certification; or, if
applicable, the date of a CMS-approved
accreditation organization program’s
positive accreditation decision, issued
after the accreditation organization has
determined that the provider or supplier
meets all applicable conditions.
(ii) The date on which a provider or
supplier is found to meet all conditions
of participation, conditions for coverage,
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
or conditions for certification, but has
lower-level deficiencies, and—
(A) CMS or the State survey agency
receives an acceptable plan of correction
for the lower-level deficiencies (the date
of receipt is the effective date regardless
of when the plan of correction is
approved); or, if applicable, a CMSapproved accreditation organization
program issues a positive accreditation
decision after it receives an acceptable
plan of correction for the lower-level
deficiencies; or
(B) CMS receives an approvable
waiver request (the date of receipt is the
effective date regardless of when CMS
approves the waiver request).
(C) For an agreement with any other
provider or an approval of any other
supplier (except those specified in
paragraph (a)(2) of this section) that is
found to meet all conditions of
participation, conditions for coverage,
or conditions for certification, but has
lower-level deficiencies and has
submitted both an approvable plan of
correction/positive accreditation
decision and an approvable waiver
request, the effective date is the later of
the dates that result when calculated in
accordance with paragraph (c)(2)(ii)(A)
or (c)(2)(ii)(B) of this section.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program No. 93.773, Medicare—Hospital
Insurance; Program No. 93.774, Medicare—
Supplementary Medical Insurance Program;
and Program No. 93.778, Medical Assistance)
Dated: April 6, 2010.
Charlene Frizzera,
Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services.
Dated: April 16, 2010.
Kathleen Sebelius,
Secretary.
Editorial Note: The following Addendum
and appendixes will not appear in the Code
of Federal Regulations.]
Addendum—Proposed Schedule of
Standardized Amounts, Update
Factors, and Rate-of-Increase
Percentages Effective With Cost
Reporting Periods Beginning on or
After October 1, 2010
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
I. Summary and Background
In this Addendum, we are setting
forth a description of the methods and
data we used to determine the proposed
prospective payment rates for Medicare
hospital inpatient operating costs and
Medicare hospital inpatient capitalrelated costs for FY 2011 for acute care
hospitals. We note that on March 23,
2010, the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act (PPACA), Pub. L.
111–148 was enacted. Following the
enactment of Public Law 111–148, the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Health Care and Education
Reconciliation Act of 2010, Public L.
111–152 (enacted on March 30, 2010),
amended certain provisions of Public
Law 111–148. A number of the
provisions of Public Law 111–148, as
amended by Public Law 111–152, affect
the IPPS and the LTCH PPS and the
providers and suppliers addressed in
this proposed rule. However, due to the
timing of the passage of the legislation,
we are unable to address those
provisions in this proposed rule.
Therefore, the proposed policies and
payment rates in this proposed rule do
not reflect the new legislation. We plan
to issue separate documents in the
Federal Register addressing the
provisions of Public Law 111–148, as
amended, that affect our proposed
policies and payment rates for FY 2011
under the IPPS and the LTCH PPS. In
addition, we plan to issue further
instructions implementing the
provisions of Public Law 111–148, as
amended, that affect the policies and
payment rates for FY 2010 under the
IPPS and for RY 2010 under the LTCH
PPS.
We also are setting forth the proposed
rate-of-increase percentages for updating
the target amounts for certain hospitals
excluded from the IPPS for FY 2011. We
note that, because certain hospitals
excluded from the IPPS are paid on a
reasonable cost basis subject to a rate-ofincrease ceiling (and not by the IPPS),
these hospitals are not affected by the
figures for the standardized amounts,
offsets, and budget neutrality factors.
Therefore, in this proposed rule, we are
proposing to establish the rate-ofincrease percentages for updating the
target amounts for certain hospitals
excluded from the IPPS that are
effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2010.
In addition, we are setting forth a
description of the methods and data we
used to determine the proposed
standard Federal rate that will be
applicable to Medicare LTCHs for FY
2011.
In general, except for SCHs, MDHs,
and hospitals located in Puerto Rico,
each hospital’s payment per discharge
under the IPPS is based on 100 percent
of the Federal national rate, also known
as the national adjusted standardized
amount. This amount reflects the
national average hospital cost per case
from a base year, updated for inflation.
Currently, SCHs are paid based on
whichever of the following rates yields
the greatest aggregate payment: The
Federal national rate; the updated
hospital-specific rate based on FY 1982
costs per discharge; the updated
hospital-specific rate based on FY 1987
PO 00000
Frm 00211
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24061
costs per discharge; the updated
hospital-specific rate based on FY 1996
costs per discharge; or the updated
hospital-specific rate based on the FY
2006 costs per discharge.
Under section 1886(d)(5)(G) of the
Act, MDHs historically have been paid
based on the Federal national rate or, if
higher, the Federal national rate plus 50
percent of the difference between the
Federal national rate and the updated
hospital-specific rate based on FY 1982
or FY 1987 costs per discharge,
whichever was higher. However, section
5003(a)(1) of Public Law 109–171
extended and modified the MDH special
payment provision that was previously
set to expire on October 1, 2006, to
include discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 2006, but before October 1,
2011. Under section 5003(b) of Public
Law 109–171, if the change results in an
increase to an MDH’s target amount, we
must rebase an MDH’s hospital-specific
rates based on its FY 2002 cost report.
Section 5003(c) of Public Law 109–171
further required that MDHs be paid
based on the Federal national rate or, if
higher, the Federal national rate plus 75
percent of the difference between the
Federal national rate and the updated
hospital-specific rate. Further, based on
the provisions of section 5003(d) of
Public Law 109–171, MDHs are no
longer subject to the 12-percent cap on
their DSH payment adjustment factor.
For hospitals located in Puerto Rico,
the payment per discharge is based on
the sum of 25 percent of an updated
Puerto Rico-specific rate based on
average costs per case of Puerto Rico
hospitals for the base year and 75
percent of the Federal national rate. (We
refer readers to section II.D.3. of this
Addendum for a complete description.)
As discussed below in section II. of
this Addendum, we are proposing to
make changes in the determination of
the prospective payment rates for
Medicare inpatient operating costs for
acute care hospitals for FY 2011. In
section III. of this Addendum, we
discuss our proposed policy changes for
determining the prospective payment
rates for Medicare inpatient capitalrelated costs for FY 2011. In section IV.
of this Addendum, we are setting forth
our proposed changes for determining
the rate-of-increase limits for certain
hospitals excluded from the IPPS for FY
2011. In section V. of this Addendum,
we are proposing to make changes in the
determination of the standard Federal
rate for LTCHs under the LTCH PPS for
FY 2011. The tables to which we refer
in the preamble of this proposed rule
are presented in section VI. of this
Addendum.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24062
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
II. Proposed Changes to Prospective
Payment Rates for Hospital Inpatient
Operating Costs for Acute Care
Hospitals for FY 2011
The basic methodology for
determining prospective payment rates
for hospital inpatient operating costs for
acute care hospitals for FY 2005 and
subsequent fiscal years is set forth at
§ 412.64. The basic methodology for
determining the prospective payment
rates for hospital inpatient operating
costs for hospitals located in Puerto
Rico for FY 2005 and subsequent fiscal
years is set forth at §§ 412.211 and
412.212. Below we discuss the factors
used for determining the proposed
prospective payment rates for FY 2011.
In summary, the proposed
standardized amounts set forth in
Tables 1A, 1B, and 1C of section VI. of
this Addendum reflect—
• Equalization of the standardized
amounts for urban and other areas at the
level computed for large urban hospitals
during FY 2004 and onward, as
provided for under section
1886(d)(3)(A)(iv)(II) of the Act, updated
by the applicable percentage increase
required under sections
1886(b)(3)(B)(i)(XX) and
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act.
• The labor-related share that is
applied to the standardized amounts
and Puerto Rico-specific standardized
amounts to give the hospital the highest
payment, as provided for under sections
1886(d)(3)(E) and 1886(d)(9)(C)(iv) of
the Act.
• Proposed updates of 2.4 percent for
all areas (that is, the estimated full
market basket percentage increase of 2.4
percent), as required by section
1886(b)(3)(B)(i)(XX) of the Act, as
amended by section 5001(a)(1) of Public
Law 109–171, and reflecting the
requirements of section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act, as added
by section 5001(a)(3) of Public Law 109–
171, to reduce the applicable percentage
increase by 2.0 percentage points for a
hospital that fails to submit data, in a
form and manner, and at the time
specified by the Secretary, relating to
the quality of inpatient care furnished
by the hospital.
• A proposed update of 2.4 percent to
the Puerto Rico-specific standardized
amount (that is, the full estimated rateof-increase in the hospital market basket
for IPPS hospitals), as provided for
under § 412.211(c), which states that we
update the Puerto Rico-specific
standardized amount using the
percentage increase specified in
§ 412.64(d)(1), or the percentage
increase in the market basket index for
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
prospective payment hospitals for all
areas.
• An adjustment to the standardized
amount to ensure budget neutrality for
DRG recalibration and reclassification,
as provided for under section
1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act.
• An adjustment to ensure the wage
index changes are budget neutral, as
provided for under section
1886(d)(3)(E)(i) of the Act. We note that
section 1886(d)(3)(E)(i) of the Act
requires that we do not consider the
labor-related share of 62 percent to
compute wage index budget neutrality.
• An adjustment to ensure the effects
of geographic reclassification are budget
neutral, as provided for in section
1886(d)(8)(D) of the Act, by removing
the FY 2010 budget neutrality factor and
applying a revised factor.
• An adjustment to remove the FY
2010 outlier offset and apply an offset
for FY 2011, as provided for in section
1886(d)(3)(B) of the Act.
• As discussed below and in section
II.D. of the preamble to this proposed
rule, an adjustment to meet the
requirements of section 7(b)(1)(B) of
Public Law 110–90 to adjust the
standardized amounts to offset the
estimated amount of the increase in
aggregate payments (including interest)
due to documentation and coding that
did not reflect real changes in case-mix
for discharges occurring during FY 2008
and FY 2009.
For FY 2011 (in the absence of the
provisions of Public Law 111–148 as
amended by Pub. L. 111–152), the
requirement under section 410A of
Public Law 108–173 to conduct a rural
community hospital demonstration
program and under section 410A(c)(2) of
Public Law 108–173 to adjust the
standardized amount to ensure the
effects of the rural community hospital
demonstration are budget neutral has
expired. Therefore, for this proposed
rule, there is no adjustment applied to
the standardized amount to ensure the
effects of the rural community hospital
demonstration are budget neutral.
We note that, beginning in FY 2008,
we applied the budget neutrality
adjustment for the rural floor to the
hospital wage indices rather than the
standardized amount. As we did for FY
2010, for FY 2011, we are proposing to
continue to apply the rural floor budget
neutrality adjustment to hospital wage
indices rather than the standardized
amount. In addition, instead of applying
the budget neutrality adjustment for the
imputed floor adopted under section
1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act to the
standardized amount, for FY 2011, we
are proposing to continue to apply the
imputed floor budget neutrality
PO 00000
Frm 00212
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
adjustment to the wage indices.
Consistent with the policy we
established in the FY 2009 IPPS final
rule (in absence of the provisions of
Pub. L. 111–148, as amended by Pub. L.
111–152), we also are proposing to
continue to apply the budget neutrality
adjustments for the rural floor and
imputed rural floor at the State level
rather than the national level. For a
complete discussion of the budget
neutrality changes concerning the rural
floor and the imputed floor, including
the within-State budget neutrality
adjustment, we refer readers to section
III.B.2. of the preamble of the FY 2009
IPPS final rule and this proposed rule.
A. Calculation of the Adjusted
Standardized Amount
1. Standardization of Base-Year Costs or
Target Amounts
In general, the national standardized
amount is based on per discharge
averages of adjusted hospital costs from
a base period (section 1886(d)(2)(A) of
the Act), updated and otherwise
adjusted in accordance with the
provisions of section 1886(d) of the Act.
For Puerto Rico hospitals, the Puerto
Rico-specific standardized amount is
based on per discharge averages of
adjusted target amounts from a base
period (section 1886(d)(9)(B)(i) of the
Act), updated and otherwise adjusted in
accordance with the provisions of
section 1886(d)(9) of the Act. The
September 1, 1983 interim final rule (48
FR 39763) contained a detailed
explanation of how base-year cost data
(from cost reporting periods ending
during FY 1981) were established for
urban and rural hospitals in the initial
development of standardized amounts
for the IPPS. The September 1, 1987
final rule (52 FR 33043 and 33066)
contains a detailed explanation of how
the target amounts were determined and
how they are used in computing the
Puerto Rico rates.
Sections 1886(d)(2)(B) and
1886(d)(2)(C) of the Act require us to
update base-year per discharge costs for
FY 1984 and then standardize the cost
data in order to remove the effects of
certain sources of cost variations among
hospitals. These effects include casemix, differences in area wage levels,
cost-of-living adjustments for Alaska
and Hawaii, IME costs, and costs to
hospitals serving a disproportionate
share of low-income patients.
In accordance with section
1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, the Secretary
estimates, from time-to-time, the
proportion of hospitals’ costs that are
attributable to wages and wage-related
costs. In general, the standardized
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
amount is divided into labor-related and
nonlabor-related amounts; only the
proportion considered to be the laborrelated amount is adjusted by the wage
index. Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act
requires that 62 percent of the
standardized amount be adjusted by the
wage index, unless doing so would
result in lower payments to a hospital
than would otherwise be made. (Section
1886(d)(9)(C)(iv)(II) of the Act extends
this provision to the labor-related share
for hospitals located in Puerto Rico.)
For FY 2011, we are proposing to
continue to use a labor-related share of
68.8 percent for discharges occurring on
or after October 1, 2010 for the national
standardized amounts and 62.1 percent
for the Puerto Rico-specific
standardized amount. Consistent with
section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, we are
applying the wage index to a laborrelated share of 62 percent for all IPPS
hospitals whose wage index values are
less than or equal to 1.0000. For all IPPS
hospitals whose wage indices are greater
than 1.0000, we are applying the wage
index to a labor-related share of 68.8
percent of the national standardized
amount. For FY 2011, all Puerto Rico
hospitals have a wage index less than
1.0. Therefore, the national labor-related
share will always be 62 percent because
the wage index for all Puerto Rico
hospitals is less than 1.0.
For hospitals located in Puerto Rico,
we are applying a labor-related share of
62.1 percent if its Puerto Rico-specific
wage index is greater than 1.0000. For
hospitals located in Puerto Rico whose
Puerto-Rico specific wage index values
are less than or equal to 1.0000, we are
applying a labor share of 62 percent.
The proposed standardized amounts
for operating costs appear in Table 1A,
1B, and 1C of the Addendum to this
proposed rule.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
2. Computing the Average Standardized
Amount
Section 1886(d)(3)(A)(iv)(II) of the Act
requires that, beginning with FY 2004
and thereafter, an equal standardized
amount be computed for all hospitals at
the level computed for large urban
hospitals during FY 2003, updated by
the applicable percentage update.
Section 1886(d)(9)(A)(ii)(II) of the Act
equalizes the Puerto Rico-specific urban
and rural area rates. Accordingly, we are
proposing to calculate the FY 2011
national and Puerto Rico standardized
amounts irrespective of whether a
hospital is located in an urban or rural
location.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
3. Updating the Average Standardized
Amount
In accordance with section
1886(d)(3)(A)(iv)(II) of the Act, we are
proposing to update the equalized
standardized amount for FY 2011 by the
full estimated market basket percentage
increase for hospitals in all areas, as
specified in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(i)(XX)
of the Act, as amended by section
5001(a)(1) of Public Law 109–171. The
percentage increase in the market basket
reflects the average change in the price
of goods and services comprising
routine, ancillary, and special care unit
hospital inpatient services. The most
recent forecast of the hospital market
basket increase for FY 2011 is 2.4
percent. Thus, for FY 2011, the
proposed update to the average
standardized amount is 2.4 percent for
hospitals in all areas. The estimated
market basket increase of 2.4 percent is
based on IHS Global Insight, Inc.’s 2010
first quarter forecast of the hospital
market basket increase (as discussed in
Appendix B of this proposed rule).
Section 1886(b)(3)(B) of the Act
specifies the mechanism to be used to
update the standardized amount for
payment for inpatient hospital operating
costs. Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the
Act, as added by section 5001(a)(3) of
Public Law 109–171, provides for a
reduction of 2.0 percentage points from
the update percentage increase (also
known as the market basket update) for
FY 2007 and each subsequent fiscal year
for any ‘‘subsection (d) hospital’’ that
does not submit quality data, as
discussed in section V.A. of the
preamble of this final rule. The
proposed standardized amounts in
Tables 1A through 1C of section VI. of
this Addendum reflect these differential
amounts.
Section 412.211(c) states that we
update the Puerto Rico-specific
standardized amount using the
percentage increase specified in
§ 412.64(d)(1), or the percentage
increase in the market basket index for
prospective payment hospitals for all
areas. We are proposing to apply the full
rate-of-increase in the hospital market
basket for IPPS hospitals to the Puerto
Rico-specific standardized amount.
Therefore, the proposed update to the
Puerto Rico-specific standardized
amount is 2.4 percent.
Although the update factors for FY
2011 are set by law, we are required by
section 1886(e)(4) of the Act to
recommend, taking into account
MedPAC’s recommendations,
appropriate update factors for FY 2011
for both IPPS hospitals and hospitals
and hospital units excluded from the
PO 00000
Frm 00213
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24063
IPPS. Section 1886(e)(5)(A) of the Act
requires that we publish our proposed
recommendations in the Federal
Register for public comment. Our
recommendation on the update factors
is set forth in Appendix B of this
proposed rule.
4. Other Adjustments to the Average
Standardized Amount
As in the past, we are proposing to
adjust the FY 2011 standardized amount
to remove the effects of the FY 2010
geographic reclassifications and outlier
payments before applying the FY 2011
updates. We then apply budget
neutrality offsets for outliers and
geographic reclassifications to the
standardized amount based on FY 2011
payment policies.
We do not remove the prior year’s
budget neutrality adjustments for
reclassification and recalibration of the
DRG weights and for updated wage data
because, in accordance with sections
1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) and 1886(d)(3)(E) of
the Act, estimated aggregate payments
after updates in the DRG relative
weights and wage index should equal
estimated aggregate payments prior to
the changes. If we removed the prior
year’s adjustment, we would not satisfy
these conditions.
Budget neutrality is determined by
comparing aggregate IPPS payments
before and after making changes that are
required to be budget neutral (for
example, changes to DRG
classifications, recalibration of the DRG
relative weights, updates to the wage
index, and different geographic
reclassifications). We include outlier
payments in the simulations because
they may be affected by changes in these
parameters.
Similar to last year, because IME
Medicare Advantage payments are made
to IPPS hospitals under section 1886(d)
of the Act, we believe these payments
must be part of these budget neutrality
calculations. However, we note that it is
not necessary to include Medicare
Advantage IME payments in the outlier
threshold calculation or the outlier
offset to the standardized amount
because the statute requires that outlier
payments be not less than 5 percent nor
more than 6 percent of total ‘‘operating
DRG payments,’’ which does not include
IME and DSH payments. In order to
account for these Medicare Advantage
IME payments in determining the
budget neutrality adjustments for this
proposed rule, we identified Medicare
Advantage claims from IPPS teaching
hospitals in the MedPAR data. The GHO
Paid indicator with a value of ‘‘1’’ on the
MedPAR file indicates that the claim
was paid by a Medicare Advantage plan
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24064
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
(other than the IPPS IME payment
specified at § 412.105(g)). For these
Medicare Advantage claims from IPPS
teaching hospitals, we computed a
transfer-adjusted CMI by provider based
on the FY 2009 MS–DRG GROUPER
Version 27.0 assignment and relative
weights. We also computed a transferadjusted CMI for these Medicare
Advantage claims from IPPS teaching
hospitals based on the FY 2010 MS–
DRG GROUPER Version 28.0
assignments and relative weights. These
transfer-adjusted CMIs (and
corresponding case counts) were used to
calculate an IME teaching add-on
payment in accordance with
§ 412.105(g). The total Medicare
Advantage IME payment amount was
then added to the total Federal payment
amount for each provider (where
applicable) in order to account for the
Medicare Advantage IME payment in
determining the budget neutrality
adjustments. We note that we did not
include Medicare Advantage IME claims
when estimating outlier payments for
providers because Medicare Advantage
claims are not eligible for outlier
payments under the IPPS.
a. Proposed Recalibration of DRG
Weights and Updated Wage Index—
Budget Neutrality Adjustment
Section 1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act
specifies that, beginning in FY 1991, the
annual DRG reclassification and
recalibration of the relative weights
must be made in a manner that ensures
that aggregate payments to hospitals are
not affected. As discussed in section II.
of the preamble of this proposed rule,
we normalized the recalibrated DRG
weights by an adjustment factor so that
the average case weight after
recalibration is equal to the average case
weight prior to recalibration. However,
equating the average case weight after
recalibration to the average case weight
before recalibration does not necessarily
achieve budget neutrality with respect
to aggregate payments to hospitals
because payments to hospitals are
affected by factors other than average
case weight. Therefore, as we have done
in past years, we are proposing to make
a budget neutrality adjustment to ensure
that the requirement of section
1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act is met.
Section 1886(d)(3)(E)(i) of the Act
requires us to update the hospital wage
index on an annual basis beginning
October 1, 1993. This provision also
requires us to make any updates or
adjustments to the wage index in a
manner that ensures that aggregate
payments to hospitals are not affected
by the change in the wage index.
Section 1886(d)(3)(E)(i) of the Act
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
requires that we implement the wage
index adjustment in a budget neutral
manner. However, section
1886(d)(3)(E)(ii) of the Act sets the
labor-related share at 62 percent for
hospitals with a wage index less than or
equal to 1.0, and section 1886(d)(3)(E)(i)
of the Act provides that the Secretary
shall calculate the budget neutrality
adjustment for the adjustments or
updates made under that provision as if
section 1886(d)(3)(E)(ii) of the Act had
not been enacted. In other words, this
section of the statute requires that we
implement the updates to the wage
index in a budget neutral manner, but
that our budget neutrality adjustment
should not take into account the
requirement that we set the labor-related
share for hospitals with indices less
than or equal to 1.0 at the more
advantageous level of 62 percent.
Therefore, for purposes of this budget
neutrality adjustment, section
1886(d)(3)(E)(i) of the Act prohibits us
from taking into account the fact that
hospitals with a wage index less than or
equal to 1.0 are paid using a laborrelated share of 62 percent. Consistent
with current policy, for FY 2011, we are
proposing to adjust 100 percent of the
wage index factor for occupational mix.
We describe the proposed occupational
mix adjustment in section III.D. of the
preamble of this proposed rule.
For FY 2011, to comply with the
requirement that DRG reclassification
and recalibration of the relative weights
be budget neutral for the Puerto Rico
standardized amount and the hospitalspecific rates, we used FY 2009
discharge data to simulate payments
and compared aggregate payments using
the FY 2010 labor-related share
percentages, the FY 2010 relative
weights, and the FY 2010 prereclassified wage data to aggregate
payments using the FY 2010 laborrelated share percentages, the proposed
FY 2011 relative weights, and the FY
2010 pre-reclassified wage data. Based
on this comparison, we computed a
proposed budget neutrality adjustment
factor equal to 0.996963. As discussed
in section IV. of this Addendum, we
would also apply the proposed DRG
reclassification and recalibration budget
neutrality factor of 0.996856 to the
hospital-specific rates that are to be
effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2010.
In order to meet the statutory
requirements that we do not take into
account the labor-related share of 62
percent when computing wage index
budget, it was necessary to use a threestep process to comply with the
requirements that DRG reclassification
and recalibration of the relative weights
PO 00000
Frm 00214
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
and the updated wage index and laborrelated share have no effect on aggregate
payments for IPPS hospitals. We first
determined a proposed DRG
reclassification and recalibration budget
neutrality factor of 0.996856 by using
the same methodology described above
to determine the proposed DRG
reclassification and recalibration budget
neutrality factor for the Puerto Rico
standardized amount and hospitalspecific rates. Secondly, to compute a
budget neutrality factor for wage index
and labor-related share changes, we
used FY 2009 discharge data to simulate
payments and compared aggregate
payments using proposed FY 2011
relative weights and FY 2010 prereclassified wage indices, and applied
the FY 2010 labor-related share of 68.8
percent to all hospitals (regardless of
whether the hospital’s wage index was
above or below 1.0) to aggregate
payments using the proposed FY 2011
relative weights and the proposed FY
2011 pre-reclassified wage indices, and
applied the labor-related share for FY
2011 of 68.8 percent to all hospitals
(regardless of whether the hospital’s
wage index was above or below 1.0). In
addition, we applied the proposed DRG
reclassification and recalibration budget
neutrality factor (derived in the first
step) to the rates that were used to
simulate payments for this comparison
of aggregate payments from FY 2010 to
FY 2011. By applying this methodology,
we determined a proposed budget
neutrality factor of 1.000107 for changes
to the wage index. Finally, we
multiplied the proposed DRG
reclassification and recalibration budget
neutrality factor of 0.996856 (derived in
the first step) by the proposed budget
neutrality factor of 1.000107 for changes
to the wage index (derived in the second
step) to determine the proposed DRG
reclassification and recalibration and
updated wage index budget neutrality
factor of 0.996963.
b. Reclassified Hospitals—Proposed
Budget Neutrality Adjustment
Section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
provides that, effective with discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 1988,
certain rural hospitals are deemed
urban. In addition, section 1886(d)(10)
of the Act provides for the
reclassification of hospitals based on
determinations by the MGCRB. Under
section 1886(d)(10) of the Act, a hospital
may be reclassified for purposes of the
wage index.
Under section 1886(d)(8)(D) of the
Act, the Secretary is required to adjust
the standardized amount to ensure that
aggregate payments under the IPPS after
implementation of the provisions of
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
sections 1886(d)(8)(B) and (C) and
1886(d)(10) of the Act are equal to the
aggregate prospective payments that
would have been made absent these
provisions. We note that the wage index
adjustments provided under section
1886(d)(13) of the Act are not budget
neutral. Section 1886(d)(13)(H) of the
Act provides that any increase in a wage
index under section 1886(d)(13) shall
not be taken into account ‘‘in applying
any budget neutrality adjustment with
respect to such index’’ under section
1886(d)(8)(D) of the Act. To calculate
the proposed budget neutrality factor for
FY 2011, we used FY 2009 discharge
data to simulate payments and
compared total IPPS payments with
proposed FY 2011 relative weights, FY
2011 labor share percentages, and
proposed FY 2011 wage data prior to
any reclassifications under sections
1886(d)(8)(B) and (C) and 1886(d)(10) of
the Act to total IPPS payments with
proposed FY 2011 relative weights, FY
2011 labor share percentages, and
proposed FY 2011 wage data after such
reclassifications. Based on these
simulations, we calculated a proposed
adjustment factor of 0.991756 to ensure
that the effects of these provisions are
budget neutral, consistent with the
statute.
The proposed FY 2011 budget
neutrality adjustment factor is applied
to the standardized amount after
removing the effects of the FY 2010
budget neutrality adjustment factor. We
note that the proposed FY 2011 budget
neutrality adjustment reflects proposed
FY 2011 wage index reclassifications
approved by the MGCRB or the
Administrator. Furthermore, for this
proposed rule, we note that the
proposed FY 2011 wage index
reclassifications approved by the
MGCRB or the Administrator are in the
absence of the provisions of Public Law
111–148, as amended by Public Law
111–152.
c. Proposed Rural Floor and Imputed
Floor Budget Neutrality Adjustment
CMS makes an adjustment to the wage
index to ensure that aggregate payments
after implementation of the rural floor
under section 4410 of the BBA (Pub. L.
105–33) and the imputed floor under
§ 412.64(h)(4) of the regulations are
made in a manner that ensures that
aggregate payments to hospitals are not
affected. As discussed in section III.B. of
the preamble of the FY 2009 IPPS final
rule (73 FR 48570 through 48574), we
adopted as final State-level budget
neutrality for the rural and imputed
floors, effective beginning with the FY
2009 wage index. In response to the
public’s concerns and taking into
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
account the potentially significant
payment cuts that could occur to
hospitals in some States if we
implemented this change with no
transition, we decided to phase in, over
a 3-year period, the transition from the
national rural floor budget neutrality
adjustment on the wage index to the
State-level rural floor budget neutrality
adjustment on the wage index. In FY
2009, hospitals received a blended wage
index that was comprised of 20 percent
of the wage index adjusted by applying
the State-level rural and imputed floor
budget neutrality adjustment and 80
percent of the wage index adjusted by
applying the national budget neutrality
adjustment. For FY 2010, the blended
wage index was determined by adding
50 percent of the wage index adjusted
by applying the State-level rural and
imputed floor budget neutrality
adjustment and 50 percent of the wage
index adjusted by applying the national
budget neutrality adjustment. In FY
2011 (in the absence of provisions of
Pub. L. 111–148, as amended by Public
Law 111–152), the proposed adjustment
will be completely transitioned to the
State-level methodology, such that the
wage index will be determined by
applying 100 percent of the State-level
budget neutrality adjustment. As stated
earlier, we note that the rural floor
budget neutrality adjustment is applied
to the wage index and not the
standardized amount. However, because
the 100 percent State-level rural and
imputed floor budget neutrality
adjustment is used in calculating the
proposed FY 2011 outlier threshold (as
discussed below), we are explaining our
calculation of the proposed rural floor
budget neutrality adjustments (in this
section) below.
In order to compute a budget neutral
wage index that is 100 percent of the
wage index adjusted by the State-level
rural and imputed floor budget
neutrality adjustment, we used FY 2009
discharge data with proposed FY 2011
relative weights, proposed FY 2011
labor share percentages, and proposed
FY 2011 post reclassified wage indices
to simulate IPPS payments. To
determine each State’s rural or imputed
floor budget neutrality adjustment, we
compared each State’s total simulated
payments with and without the rural or
imputed floor applied. These State-level
rural and imputed floor budget
neutrality factors were then applied to
the wage indices to produce a Statelevel rural and imputed floor budget
neutral wage index, which was used in
determining the FY 2011 wage indices.
PO 00000
Frm 00215
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24065
d. Proposed Case-Mix Budget Neutrality
Adjustment
(1) Adjustment to the FY 2011 IPPS
Standardized Amount
As stated earlier, beginning in FY
2008, we adopted the MS–DRG patient
classification system for the IPPS to
better recognize patients’ severity of
illness in Medicare payment rates. In
the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with
comment period (73 FR 47175 through
47186), we indicated that we believe the
adoption of the MS–DRGs had the
potential to lead to increases in
aggregate payments without a
corresponding increase in actual patient
severity of illness due to the incentives
for changes in documentation and
coding. In that final rule, using the
Secretary’s authority under section
1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act to maintain
budget neutrality by adjusting the
national standardized amounts to
eliminate the effect of changes in
documentation and coding that do not
reflect real change in case-mix, we
established prospective documentation
and coding adjustments of ¥1.2 percent
for FY 2008, ¥1.8 percent for FY 2009,
and ¥1.8 percent for FY 2010 (for a
total adjustment of ¥4.8 percent). On
September 29, 2007, Public Law 110–90
was enacted. Section 7 of Public Law
110–90 included a provision that
reduces the documentation and coding
adjustment for the MS–DRG system that
we adopted in the FY 2008 IPPS final
rule with comment period to ¥0.6
percent for FY 2008 and ¥0.9 percent
for FY 2009. To comply with the
provision of section 7(a) of Public Law
110–90, in a final rule that appeared in
the Federal Register on November 27,
2007 (72 FR 66886), we changed the
IPPS documentation and coding
adjustment for FY 2008 to ¥0.6 percent,
and revised the FY 2008 national
standardized amounts (as well as other
payment factors and thresholds)
accordingly, with these revisions being
effective as of October 1, 2007. For FY
2009, section 7(a) of Public Law 110–90
required a documentation and coding
adjustment of ¥0.9 percent instead of
the ¥1.8 percent adjustment specified
in the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with
comment period. As required by statute,
we applied a documentation and coding
adjustment of ¥0.9 percent to the FY
2009 IPPS national standardized
amounts. The documentation and
coding adjustments established in the
FY 2008 IPPS final rule with comment
period are cumulative. As a result, the
¥0.9 percent documentation and
coding adjustment in FY 2009 was in
addition to the ¥0.6 percent adjustment
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24066
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
in FY 2008, yielding a combined effect
of ¥1.5 percent.
In the FY 2010 IPPS proposed and
final rules, we discussed our analysis of
FY 2008 claims data which showed an
increase in case-mix of 2.5 percent due
to changes in documentation and coding
that do not reflect real changes in casemix for discharges occurring during FY
2008. For FY 2010, we proposed to
reduce the average standardized
amounts under section 1886(d) of the
Act in FY 2010 by ¥1.9 percent, which
represents the difference between
changes in documentation and coding
that do not reflect real changes in casemix for discharges occurring during FY
2008 and the prospective adjustment
applied under Public Law 110–90. As
discussed in section II.D. of the
preamble of the FY 2010 IPPS final rule,
after consideration of the public
comments we received on our analysis
and proposals presented in the
proposed rule, we decided to postpone
adopting documentation and coding
adjustments as authorized under section
7(a) of Public Law 110–90 and section
1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act until a full
analysis of FY 2009 case-mix changes
could be completed. Accordingly, in the
FY 2010 IPPS final rule, for FY 2010, we
did not apply any additional
documentation and coding adjustments
to the average standardized amounts
under section 1886(d) of the Act.
As indicated in section II.D.in the
preamble to this proposed rule, the
change due to documentation and
coding that did not reflect real changes
in case mix for discharges occurring
during FY 2008 and FY 2009 exceeded
the ¥0.6 and ¥0.9 percent prospective
documentation and coding adjustment
applied under section 7(a) of Public Law
110–90 for those 2 years respectively by
1.9 percentage points in FY 2008 and
3.9 percentage points in FY 2009. In
total, this change exceeded the
cumulative prospective adjustments by
5.8 percentage points. Our actuaries
currently estimate that this 5.8
percentage point increase resulted in an
increase in aggregate payments of
approximately $6.9 billion. Therefore,
an aggregate adjustment of ¥5.8 percent
in FYs 2011 and 2012, subject to
actuarial adjustment to reflect
accumulated interest, is necessary in
order to meet the requirements of
section 7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110–90
to adjust the standardized amounts for
discharges occurring in FYs 2010, 2011,
and/or 2012 to offset the estimated
amount of the cumulative increase in
aggregate payments (including interest)
in FYs 2008 and 2009. We refer the
reader to section II.D. of the preamble to
this proposed rule for more discussion.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
It is often our practice to phase in rate
adjustments over more than one year in
order to moderate the effect on rates in
any one year. Therefore, we are
proposing to make an adjustment to the
standardized amount of ¥2.9 percent,
representing half of the aggregate
adjustment required under section
7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110–90, for FY
2011. As we have previously noted,
unlike the prospective adjustment to the
standardized amounts under section
7(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 110–90
described earlier, the recoupment or
repayment adjustment to the
standardized amounts under section
7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110–90 is not
cumulative, but would be removed for
subsequent fiscal years once we have
offset the increase in aggregate
payments for discharges for FY 2008
expenditures and FY 2009 expenditures.
We note that we are not making a formal
proposal for the further implementation
of section 7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110–
90 in FY 2012 in this proposed rule.
(2) Proposed Adjustment to the FY 2011
Hospital-Specific Rates for SCHs and
MDHs
As discussed in section II.D. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, because
hospitals (SCHs and MDHs) paid based
in whole or in part on the hospitalspecific rate use the same MS–DRG
system as other hospitals, we believe
they have the potential to realize
increased payments from
documentation and coding changes that
do not reflect real increases in patients’
severity of illness. Under section
1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act, Congress
stipulated that hospitals paid based on
the standardized amount should not
receive additional payments based on
the effect of documentation and coding
changes that do not reflect real changes
in case-mix. Similarly, we believe that
hospitals paid based on the hospitalspecific rate should not have the
potential to realize increased payments
due to documentation and coding
changes that do not reflect real increases
in patients’ severity of illness. While we
continue to believe that section
1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act does not
provide explicit authority for
application of the documentation and
coding adjustment to the hospitalspecific rates, we believe that we have
the authority to apply the
documentation and coding adjustment
to the hospital-specific rates using our
special exceptions and adjustment
authority under section 1886(d)(5)(I)(i)
of the Act.
As discussed in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY
2010 LTCH PPS proposed rule, based on
our analysis of FY 2008 claims data, we
PO 00000
Frm 00216
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
found that, independently for both
SCHs and MDHs, the change due to
documentation and coding that did not
reflect real changes in case-mix for
discharges occurring during FY 2008
slightly exceeded the 2.5 percent result
discussed earlier, but did not
significantly differ from that result.
Therefore, in FY 2010, we proposed to
use our authority under section
1886(d)(5)(I)(i) of the Act to
prospectively adjust the hospitalspecific rates by ¥2.5 percent in FY
2011 for our estimated documentation
and coding effect in FY 2008 that does
not reflect real changes in case-mix. We
also noted that, unlike the national
standardized rates, the FY 2010
hospital-specific rates were not
previously reduced in order to account
for anticipated changes in
documentation and coding that do not
reflect real changes in case-mix
resulting from the adoption of the MS–
DRGs.
Consistent with our approach for
determining the national average
standardized amounts discussed earlier,
after consideration of the public
comments we received on our analysis
and proposals presented in the FY 2010
IPPS proposed rule, for FY 2010, we
also postponed adoption of a
documentation and coding adjustment
to the hospital-specific rate until a full
analysis of FY 2009 case-mix changes
could be completed. Accordingly, for
FY 2010, we did not apply a
documentation and coding adjustment
to the hospital-specific rates.
As we discuss in section II.D. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, because
SCHs and MDHs use the same DRG
system as all other hospitals, we believe
they have the potential to realize
increased payments from
documentation and coding changes that
do not reflect real increases in patients’
severity of illness. Therefore, we believe
they should be equally subject to a
prospective budget neutrality
adjustment that we are applying for
adoption of the MS–DRGs to all other
hospitals. While the findings of the
effects documentation and coding are
different for SCHs/MDHs and other IPPS
hospitals, we continue to believe that
the documentation and coding
adjustments for all subsection (d)
hospitals should be the same. We
continue to believe that this is the
appropriate policy so as to neither
advantage nor disadvantage different
types of providers.
As we have also discussed in section
II.D. of the preamble to this proposed
rule, our best estimate, based on the
most recently available data, is that a
cumulative adjustment of ¥5.4 percent
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
is required to eliminate the full effect of
the documentation and coding changes
on future payments. Unlike the case of
standardized amounts paid to IPPS
hospitals, we have not made any
previous adjustments to the hospital
specific rates paid to SCHs and MDHs
to account for documentation and
coding changes. Therefore, the entire
¥5.4 percent adjustment remains to be
implemented. Therefore, in order to
maintain consistency as far as possible
with the adjustments applied to IPPS
hospitals, we are proposing an
adjustment of ¥2.9 percent in FY 2011
to the hospital-specific rates paid to
SCHs and MDHs. We believe that this
proposed adjustment is the most
appropriate means to take into full
account the effect of documentation and
coding changes on payments, and to
maintain equity between hospitals paid
on the basis of different prospective
rates.
(3) Proposed Adjustment to the FY 2011
Puerto Rico Standardized Amount
As stated in section II.D. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, we
believe that we have the authority to
apply the documentation and coding
adjustment to the Puerto Rico-specific
standardized amount using our special
exceptions and adjustment authority
under section 1886(d)(5)(I)(i) of the Act.
Similar to SCHs and MDHs that are paid
based on the hospital-specific rate, we
believe that Puerto Rico hospitals that
are paid based on the Puerto Ricospecific standardized amount should
not have the potential to realize
increased payments due to
documentation and coding changes that
do not reflect real increases in patients’
severity of illness. In the FY 2010 IPPS
proposed rule, we discussed our
analysis of FY 2008 claims data for
Puerto Rico hospitals, which showed
that, for Puerto Rico hospitals, the
increase in payments for discharges
occurring during FY 2008 due to
documentation and coding changes that
did not reflect real changes in case-mix
for discharges occurring during FY 2008
was approximately 1.1 percent. We
noted that, unlike the national
standardized rates, the FY 2009 Puerto
Rico-specific standardized amount was
not previously reduced in order to
account for anticipated changes in
documentation and coding that do not
reflect real changes in case-mix
resulting from the adoption of the MS–
DRGs. Therefore, for FY 2010, we
proposed to use our authority under
section 1886(d)(5)(I)(i) of the Act to
adjust the Puerto Rico-specific
standardized amount by ¥1.1 percent
in FY 2010 to account for the FY 2008
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
documentation and coding changes that
are not due to changes in real case-mix
and to leave that adjustment in place for
subsequent fiscal years.
Consistent with our approach for
determining the national average
standardized amounts and hospitalspecific rates of SCHs and MDHs
discussed above, after consideration of
the public comments we received on
our analysis and proposals presented in
the FY 2010 IPPS proposed rule, for FY
2010, we also postponed adoption of a
documentation and coding adjustment
to the Puerto Rico-specific rates until a
full analysis of FY 2009 case-mix
changes can be completed. Accordingly,
in the FY 2010 IPPS final rule, for FY
2010, we did not apply a documentation
and coding adjustment to the Puerto
Rico-specific rates.
As we have noted above, similar to
SCHs and MDHs, hospitals in Puerto
Rico use the same DRG system as all
other hospitals and we believe they
have the potential to realize increased
payments from documentation and
coding changes that do not reflect real
increases in patients’ severity of illness.
Therefore, we believe they should be
equally subject to a prospective budget
neutrality adjustment that we are
applying for adoption of the MS–DRGs
to all other hospitals.
As we have discussed in section II.D.
of the preamble of this proposed rule,
our best estimate, based on the most
recently available data, is that a
cumulative adjustment of ¥2.4 percent
is required to eliminate the full effect of
the documentation and coding changes
on future payments from the Puerto
Rico-specific rate. Unlike the case of
standardized amounts paid to IPPS
hospitals, we have not made any
previous adjustments to the hospitalspecific rates paid to Puerto Rico
hospitals to account for documentation
and coding changes. Therefore, the
entire ¥2.4 percent adjustment remains
to be implemented. In order to maintain
consistency as far as possible with the
adjustments applied to IPPS hospitals
but to take into consideration the fact
that the cumulative impact was smaller
in Puerto Rico hospitals, we are
therefore proposing an adjustment of
¥2.4 percent in FY 2011 to Puerto Ricospecific rate that accounts for 25 percent
of payments to Puerto Rico hospitals,
with the remaining 75 percent based on
the national standardized amount,
which are proposing to adjust as
described above. Consequently, the
overall reduction to rates for Puerto Rico
hospitals to account for the
documentation and coding changes will
be slightly less than the reduction for
IPPS hospitals based on 100 percent of
PO 00000
Frm 00217
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24067
the national standardized amount. We
note that this proposed ¥2.4 percent
prospective adjustment would eliminate
the full effect of the documentation and
coding changes on future payments
from the Puerto Rico-specific rate. We
believe that this proposed adjustment is
the most appropriate means to take into
full account the effect of documentation
and coding changes on payments, and to
maintain equity between hospitals paid
on the basis of different prospective
rates.
e. Proposed Outlier Payments
Section 1886(d)(5)(A) of the Act
provides for payments in addition to the
basic prospective payments for ‘‘outlier’’
cases involving extraordinarily high
costs. To qualify for outlier payments, a
case must have costs greater than the
sum of the prospective payment rate for
the DRG, any IME and DSH payments,
any new technology add-on payments,
and the ‘‘outlier threshold’’ or ‘‘fixedloss’’ amount (a dollar amount by which
the costs of a case must exceed
payments in order to qualify for an
outlier payment). We refer to the sum of
the prospective payment rate for the
DRG, any IME and DSH payments, any
new technology add-on payments, and
the outlier threshold as the outlier
‘‘fixed-loss cost threshold.’’ To
determine whether the costs of a case
exceed the fixed-loss cost threshold, a
hospital’s CCR is applied to the total
covered charges for the case to convert
the charges to estimated costs. Payments
for eligible cases are then made based
on a marginal cost factor, which is a
percentage of the estimated costs above
the fixed-loss cost threshold. The
marginal cost factor for FY 2011 is 80
percent, the same marginal cost factor
we have used since FY 1995 (59 FR
45367).
In accordance with section
1886(d)(5)(A)(iv) of the Act, outlier
payments for any year are projected to
be not less than 5 percent nor more than
6 percent of total operating DRG
payments plus outlier payments. We
note that the statute requires outlier
payments to be not less than 5 percent
nor more than 6 percent of total
‘‘operating DRG payments’’ (which does
not include IME and DSH payments)
plus outlier payments. When setting the
outlier threshold, we compute the 5.1
percent target by dividing the total
operating outlier payments by the total
operating DRG payments plus outlier
payments. We do not include any other
payments such as IME and DSH within
the outlier target amount. Therefore, it
is not necessary to include Medicare
Advantage IME payments in the outlier
threshold calculation. Section
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24068
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
1886(d)(3)(B) of the Act requires the
Secretary to reduce the average
standardized amount by a factor to
account for the estimated proportion of
total DRG payments made to outlier
cases. Similarly, section
1886(d)(9)(B)(iv) of the Act requires the
Secretary to reduce the average
standardized amount applicable to
hospitals located in Puerto Rico to
account for the estimated proportion of
total DRG payments made to outlier
cases. More information on outlier
payments may be found on the CMS
Web site at https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
AcuteInpatientPPS/
04_outlier.asp#TopOfPage.
(1) Proposed FY 2011 Outlier FixedLoss Cost Threshold
For FY 2011, we are proposing to
continue to use the same methodology
used for FY 2009 (73 FR 48763 through
48766) to calculate the outlier threshold.
Similar to the methodology used in the
FY 2009 IPPS final rule, for FY 2011, we
are proposing to apply an adjustment
factor to the CCRs to account for cost
and charge inflation (as explained
below). As we have done in the past, to
calculate the proposed FY 2011 outlier
threshold, we simulated payments by
applying the proposed FY 2011 rates
and policies using cases from the FY
2009 MedPAR files. Therefore, in order
to determine the proposed FY 2011
outlier threshold, we inflated the
charges on the MedPAR claims by 2
years, from FY 2009 to FY 2011.
We are proposing to continue to use
a refined methodology that takes into
account the lower inflation in hospital
charges that are occurring as a result of
the outlier final rule (68 FR 34494),
which changed our methodology for
determining outlier payments by
implementing the use of more current
CCRs. Our refined methodology uses
more recent data that reflect the rate-ofchange in hospital charges under the
new outlier policy.
Using the most recent data available,
we calculated the 1-year average
annualized rate-of-change in chargesper-case from the last quarter of FY 2008
in combination with the first quarter of
FY 2008 (July 1, 2008 through December
31, 2008) to the last quarter of FY 2009
in combination with the first quarter of
FY 2010 (July 1, 2009 through December
31, 2009). This rate of change was 5.16
percent (1.0516) or 10.59 percent
(1.1059) over 2 years.
As we have done in the past, we
established the proposed FY 2011
outlier threshold using hospital CCRs
from the December 2009 update to the
Provider-Specific File (PSF)—the most
recent available data at the time of this
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
proposed rule. This file includes CCRs
that reflect implementation of the
changes to the policy for determining
the applicable CCRs that became
effective August 8, 2003 (68 FR 34494).
As discussed in the FY 2007 IPPS
final rule (71 FR 48150), we worked
with the Office of Actuary to derive the
methodology described below to
develop the CCR adjustment factor. For
FY 2011, we are proposing to continue
to use the same methodology to
calculate the CCR adjustment by using
the FY 2009 operating cost per
discharge increase in combination with
the actual FY 2009 operating market
basket percentage increase determined
by IHS Global Insight, Inc., as well as
the charge inflation factor described
above to estimate the adjustment to the
CCRs. (We note that the FY 2009 actual
(otherwise referred to as ‘‘final’’)
operating market basket percentage
increase reflects historical data, whereas
the published FY 2009 operating market
basket update factor was based on IHS
Global Insight, Inc.’s 2008 second
quarter forecast with historical data
through the first quarter of 2008. We
also note that while the FY 2009
published operating market basket
update was based on the FY 2002-based
IPPS market basket, the actual or ‘‘final’’
market basket percentage increase is
based on the FY 2006-based IPPS
market basket. Similarly, the FY 2009
published capital market basket upate
factor was based on the FY 2002-based
capital market basket and the actual or
‘‘final’’ capital market basket percentage
increase is based on the FY 2006-based
capital market basket.) By using the
operating market basket percentage
increase and the increase in the average
cost per discharge from hospital cost
reports, we are using two different
measures of cost inflation. For FY 2011,
we determined the adjustment by taking
the percentage increase in the operating
costs per discharge from FY 2007 to FY
2008 (1.0513) from the cost report and
dividing it by the final operating market
basket percentage increase from FY
2008 (1.04). This operation removes the
measure of pure price increase (the
market basket) from the percentage
increase in operating cost per discharge,
leaving the nonprice factors in the cost
increase (for example, quantity and
changes in the mix of goods and
services). We repeated this calculation
for 2 prior years to determine the 3-year
average of the rate of adjusted change in
costs between the operating market
basket percentage increase and the
increase in cost per case from the cost
report (the FY 2005 to FY 2006
percentage increase of operating costs
PO 00000
Frm 00218
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
per discharge of 1.0577 divided by the
FY 2006 final operating market basket
percentage increase of 1.04, the FY 2006
to FY 2007 percentage increase of
operating costs per discharge of 1.0466
divided by FY 2007 final operating
market basket percentage increase of
1.0360). For FY 2011, we averaged the
differentials calculated for FY 2006, FY
2007, and FY 2008, which resulted in a
mean ratio of 1.0127. We multiplied the
3-year average of 1.0127 by the FY 2009
final operating market basket percentage
increase of 1.027, which resulted in an
operating cost inflation factor of 4.00
percent or 1.0400. We then divided the
operating cost inflation factor by the 1year average change in charges (1.0515)
and applied an adjustment factor of
0.989016 to the operating CCRs from the
PSF (calculation performed on
unrounded numbers).
As stated in the FY 2009 IPPS final
rule (73 FR 48763), we continue to
believe it is appropriate to apply only a
1-year adjustment factor to the CCRs. On
average, it takes approximately 9
months for a fiscal intermediary or MAC
to tentatively settle a cost report from
the fiscal year end of a hospital’s cost
reporting period. The average ‘‘age’’ of
hospitals’ CCRs from the time the fiscal
intermediary or the MAC inserts the
CCR in the PSF until the beginning of
FY 2009 is approximately 1 year.
Therefore, as stated above, we believe a
1-year adjustment factor to the CCRs is
appropriate.
We used the same methodology for
the capital CCRs and determined the
adjustment by taking the percentage
increase in the capital costs per
discharge from FY 2007 to FY 2008
(1.0800) from the cost report and
dividing it by the final capital market
basket percentage increase from FY
2008 (1.015). We repeated this
calculation for 2 prior years to
determine the 3-year average of the rate
of adjusted change in costs between the
capital market basket percentage
increase and the increase in cost per
case from the cost report (the FY 2005
to FY 2006 percentage increase of
capital costs per discharge of 1.0464
divided by the FY 2006 final capital
market basket percentage increase of
1.011, the FY 2006 to FY 2007
percentage increase of capital costs per
discharge of 1.0512 divided by the FY
2007 final capital market basket
percentage increase of 1.012). For FY
2011, we averaged the differentials
calculated for FY 2006, FY 2007, and FY
2008, which resulted in a mean ratio of
1.0459. We multiplied the 3-year
average of 1.0459 by the FY 2009 final
capital market basket percentage
increase of 1.014, which resulted in a
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
capital cost inflation factor of 6.06
percent or 1.0606. We then divided the
capital cost inflation factor by the 1-year
average change in charges (1.0516) and
applied an adjustment factor of
1.008534 to the capital CCRs from the
PSF (calculation performed on
unrounded numbers). We are proposing
to use the same charge inflation factor
for the capital CCRs that was used for
the operating CCRs. The charge inflation
factor is based on the overall billed
charges. Therefore, we believe it is
appropriate to apply the charge factor to
both the operating and capital CCRs.
As stated above, for FY 2011, we
applied the proposed FY 2011 rates and
policies using cases from the FY 2009
MedPAR files in calculating the
proposed outlier threshold. In FY 2010,
for purposes of estimating the proposed
outlier threshold, we took into account
the remaining projected case-mix
growth when calculating the outlier
threshold that results in outlier
payments being 5.1 percent of total
payments for FY 2010. As explained in
the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
final rule (74 FR 44008), for the FY 2010
analysis, we inflated the FY 2008 claims
data by an additional 1.6 percent for the
additional case-mix growth projected to
have occurred since FY 2008. If we did
not take into account the remaining 1.6
percent projected case-mix growth, our
estimate of total FY 2010 payments
would have been too low, and, as a
result, the FY 2010 final outlier
threshold would have been too high,
such that estimated outlier payments
would be less than our projected 5.1
percent of total payments. For this
proposed rule, we are using the FY 2009
claims data to calculate the FY 2011
proposed outlier threshold. Our
estimate of the cumulative effect of
changes in documentation and coding
due to the adoption of the MS–DRGs
through FY 2009 is 5.4 percent, which
is already included within the claims
data (FY 2009 MedPAR files) used to
calculate the proposed FY 2011 outlier
threshold. Furthermore, we currently
estimate that there will be no continued
changes in documentation and coding
in FYs 2010 and 2011. Therefore, the
cumulative effect of documentation and
coding that has occurred is already
reflected within the FY 2009 MedPAR
claims data, and we do not believe there
is any need to inflate FY 2009 claims
data for any additional case-mix growth
projected to have occurred since FY
2009.
Using this methodology, we are
proposing an outlier fixed-loss cost
threshold for FY 2011 equal to the
prospective payment rate for the DRG,
plus any IME and DSH payments, and
any add-on payments for new
technology, plus $23,970.
As we did in establishing the FY 2009
outlier threshold (73 FR 57891), in our
projection of FY 2011 outlier payments,
we are not proposing to make any
adjustments for the possibility that
hospitals’ CCRs and outlier payments
may be reconciled upon cost report
settlement. We continue to believe that,
due to the policy implemented in the
June 9, 2003 outlier final rule (68 FR
34494), CCRs will no longer fluctuate
significantly and, therefore, few
hospitals will actually have these ratios
reconciled upon cost report settlement.
In addition, it is difficult to predict the
specific hospitals that will have CCRs
and outlier payments reconciled in any
given year. We also noted that
reconciliation occurs because hospitals’
actual CCRs for the cost reporting period
are different than the interim CCRs used
to calculate outlier payments when a
bill is processed. Our simulations
assume that CCRs accurately measure
hospital costs based on information
available to us at the time we set the
outlier threshold. For these reasons, we
are proposing not to make any
assumptions about the effects of
reconciliation on the outlier threshold
calculation.
(2) Other Proposed Changes Concerning
Outliers
As stated in the FY 1994 IPPS final
rule (58 FR 46348), we establish an
outlier threshold that is applicable to
both hospital inpatient operating costs
and hospital inpatient capital-related
costs. When we modeled the combined
operating and capital outlier payments,
we found that using a common
threshold resulted in a lower percentage
of outlier payments for capital-related
costs than for operating costs. We
project that the thresholds for FY 2011
will result in outlier payments that will
equal 5.1 percent of operating DRG
payments and 5.8 percent of capital
payments based on the Federal rate.
In accordance with section
1886(d)(3)(B) of the Act, we are
proposing to reduce the FY 2011
standardized amount by the same
percentage to account for the projected
proportion of payments paid as outliers.
The outlier adjustment factors that
would be applied to the standardized
amount for the proposed FY 2011
outlier threshold are as follows:
Operating standardized
amounts
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
National ................................................................................................................
Puerto Rico ..........................................................................................................
We are proposing to apply the outlier
adjustment factors to the proposed FY
2011 rates after removing the effects of
the FY 2010 outlier adjustment factors
on the standardized amount.
To determine whether a case qualifies
for outlier payments, we apply hospitalspecific CCRs to the total covered
charges for the case. Estimated operating
and capital costs for the case are
calculated separately by applying
separate operating and capital CCRs.
These costs are then combined and
compared with the outlier fixed-loss
cost threshold.
Under our current policy at § 412.84,
for hospitals for which the fiscal
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
0.948999
0.951686
intermediary or MAC computes
operating CCRs greater than 1.176 or
capital CCRs greater than 0.154, or
hospitals for whom the fiscal
intermediary or MAC is unable to
calculate a CCR (as described at
§ 412.84(i)(3) of our regulations), we still
use statewide average CCRs to
determine whether a hospital qualifies
for outlier payments.15 Table 8A in this
Addendum contains the proposed
statewide average operating CCRs for
urban hospitals and for rural hospitals
15 These figures represent 3.0 standard deviations
from the mean of the log distribution of CCRs for
all hospitals.
PO 00000
Frm 00219
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24069
Capital federal rate
0.942415
0.924977
for which the fiscal intermediary or
MAC is unable to compute a hospitalspecific CCR within the above range.
Effective for discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2010, these statewide
average ratios would replace the ratios
published in the IPPS final rule for FY
2010 (74 FR 44159). Table 8B in this
Addendum contains the proposed
comparable statewide average capital
CCRs. Again, the proposed CCRs in
Tables 8A and 8B would be used during
FY 2011 when hospital-specific CCRs
based on the latest settled cost report are
either not available or are outside the
range noted above. Table 8C contains
the proposed statewide average total
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24070
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
CCRs used under the LTCH PPS as
discussed in section V. of this
Addendum.
We finally note that we published a
manual update (Change Request 3966)
to our outlier policy on October 12,
2005, which updated Chapter 3, Section
20.1.2 of the Medicare Claims
Processing Manual. The manual update
covered an array of topics, including
CCRs, reconciliation, and the time value
of money. We encourage hospitals that
are assigned the statewide average
operating and/or capital CCRs to work
with their fiscal intermediary or MAC
on a possible alternative operating and/
or capital CCR as explained in Change
Request 3966. Use of an alternative CCR
developed by the hospital in
conjunction with the fiscal intermediary
or MAC can avoid possible
overpayments or underpayments at cost
report settlement, thus ensuring better
accuracy when making outlier payments
and negating the need for outlier
reconciliation. We also note that a
hospital may request an alternative
operating or capital CCR ratio at any
time as long as the guidelines of Change
Request 3966 are followed. To
download and view the manual
instructions on outlier and CCRs, we
refer readers to CMS Web site: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/manuals/downloads/
clm104c03.pdf.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
(3) FY 2009 and FY 2010 Outlier
Payments
In the FY 2010 IPPS final rule (74 FR
44012), we stated that, based on
available data, we estimated that actual
FY 2009 outlier payments would be
approximately 5.4 percent of actual total
DRG payments. This estimate was
computed based on simulations using
the FY 2008 MedPAR file (discharge
data for FY 2008 claims). That is, the
estimate of actual outlier payments did
not reflect actual FY 2009 claims, but
instead reflected the application of FY
2009 rates and policies to available FY
2008 claims.
Our current estimate, using available
FY 2009 claims data, is that actual
outlier payments for FY 2009 were
approximately 5.3 percent of actual total
DRG payments. Thus, the data indicate
that, for FY 2009, the percentage of
actual outlier payments relative to
actual total payments is higher than we
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
projected before FY 2009. Consistent
with the policy and statutory
interpretation we have maintained since
the inception of the IPPS, we do not
plan to make retroactive adjustments to
outlier payments to ensure that total
outlier payments for FY 2009 are equal
to 5.1 percent of total DRG payments.
We currently estimate that actual
outlier payments for FY 2010 will be
approximately 4.7 percent of actual total
DRG payments, approximately 0.4
percentage points lower than the 5.1
percent we projected in setting the
outlier policies for FY 2010. This
estimate is based on simulations using
the FY 2009 MedPAR file (discharge
data for FY 2009 claims). We used these
data to calculate an estimate of the
actual outlier percentage for FY 2010 by
applying FY 2010 rates and policies,
including an outlier threshold of
$23,140 to available FY 2009 claims.
5. Proposed FY 2011 Standardized
Amount
The proposed adjusted standardized
amount is divided into labor-related and
nonlabor-related portions. Tables 1A
and 1B of this Addendum contain the
national standardized amounts that we
are proposing to apply to all hospitals,
except hospitals located in Puerto Rico,
for FY 2011. The proposed Puerto Ricospecific amounts are shown in Table 1C
of this Addendum. The proposed
amounts shown in Tables 1A and 1B
differ only in that the labor-related share
applied to the standardized amounts in
Table 1A is the labor-related share of
68.8 percent, and Table 1B is 62
percent. In accordance with sections
1886(d)(3)(E) and 1886(d)(9)(C)(iv) of
the Act, we are applying a labor-related
share of 62 percent, unless application
of that percentage would result in lower
payments to a hospital than would
otherwise be made. In effect, the
statutory provision means that we will
apply a labor-related share of 62 percent
for all hospitals (other than those in
Puerto Rico) whose wage indices are
less than or equal to 1.0000.
In addition, Tables 1A and 1B include
proposed standardized amounts
reflecting the proposed full 2.4 percent
update for FY 2011, and the proposed
standardized amounts reflecting the 2.0
percentage point reduction to the
update (a 0.4 percent update) applicable
PO 00000
Frm 00220
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
for hospitals that fail to submit quality
data consistent with section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act.
Under section 1886(d)(9)(A)(ii) of the
Act, the Federal portion of the Puerto
Rico payment rate is based on the
discharge-weighted average of the
national large urban standardized
amount (this proposed amount is set
forth in Table 1A). The proposed laborrelated and nonlabor-related portions of
the national average standardized
amounts for Puerto Rico hospitals for
FY 2011 are set forth in Table 1C of this
Addendum. This table also includes the
proposed Puerto Rico standardized
amounts. The labor-related share
applied to the Puerto Rico specific
standardized amount is the proposed
labor-related share of 62.1 percent, or 62
percent, depending on which provides
higher payments to the hospital.
(Section 1886(d)(9)(C)(iv) of the Act, as
amended by section 403(b) of Public
Law 108–173, provides that the laborrelated share for hospitals located in
Puerto Rico be 62 percent, unless the
application of that percentage would
result in lower payments to the
hospital.)
The following table illustrates the
proposed changes from the FY 2010
national standardized amount. The
second column shows the proposed
changes from the FY 2010 standardized
amounts for hospitals that satisfy the
quality data submission requirement for
receiving the full update (2.4 percent).
The third column shows the proposed
changes for hospitals receiving the
reduced update (0.4 percent). The first
row of the table shows the proposed
updated (through FY 2010) average
standardized amount after restoring the
FY 2010 offsets for outlier payments,
demonstration budget neutrality and the
geographic reclassification budget
neutrality. The DRG reclassification and
recalibration wage index budget
neutrality factors are cumulative.
Therefore, the FY 2010 factor is not
removed from this table. Additionally,
the documentation and coding
adjustments for FY 2008 and FY 2009
are cumulative. Therefore, the FY 2008
and FY 2009 adjustment factors are not
removed from this table. We also have
added separate rows to this table to
reflect the different labor-related shares
that apply to hospitals.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Under section 1886(d)(9)(A)(ii) of the
Act, the Federal portion of the Puerto
Rico payment rate is based on the
discharge-weighted average of the
national standardized amount (as set
forth in Table 1A of this Addendum).
The labor-related and nonlabor-related
portions of the proposed national
average standardized amounts for
Puerto Rico hospitals are set forth in
Table 1C of this Addendum. This table
also includes the proposed Puerto Rico
standardized amounts. The labor-related
share applied to the proposed Puerto
Rico standardized amount is 62.1
percent, or 62 percent, depending on
which results in higher payments to the
hospital. (Section 1886(d)(9)(C)(iv) of
the Act, as amended by section 403(b)
of Public Law 108–173, provides that
the labor-related share for hospitals in
Puerto Rico will be 62 percent, unless
the application of that percentage would
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
result in lower payments to the
hospital.)
B. Proposed Adjustments for Area Wage
Levels and Cost-of-Living
Tables 1A through 1C, as set forth in
this Addendum, contain the laborrelated and nonlabor-related shares that
we are proposing to use to calculate the
prospective payment rates for hospitals
located in the 50 States, the District of
Columbia, and Puerto Rico for FY 2011.
This section addresses two types of
adjustments to the standardized
amounts that are made in determining
the proposed prospective payment rates
as described in this Addendum.
1. Proposed Adjustment for Area Wage
Levels
Sections 1886(d)(3)(E) and
1886(d)(9)(C)(iv) of the Act require that
we make an adjustment to the labor-
PO 00000
Frm 00221
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24071
related portion of the national and
Puerto Rico prospective payment rates,
respectively, to account for area
differences in hospital wage levels. This
adjustment is made by multiplying the
labor-related portion of the adjusted
standardized amounts by the
appropriate wage index for the area in
which the hospital is located. In section
III. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we discuss the data and
methodology for the proposed FY 2011
wage index.
2. Proposed Adjustment for Cost-ofLiving in Alaska and Hawaii
Section 1886(d)(5)(H) of the Act
authorizes the Secretary to make an
adjustment to take into account the
unique circumstances of hospitals in
Alaska and Hawaii. Higher labor-related
costs for these two States are taken into
account in the adjustment for area
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.061
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
24072
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
wages described above. For FY 2011, we
are proposing to adjust the payments for
hospitals in Alaska and Hawaii by
multiplying the nonlabor-related
portion of the standardized amount by
the applicable adjustment factor
contained in the table below. These
proposed factors were obtained from the
U.S. Office of Personnel Management
(OPM) and are the same as the factors
currently in use under the IPPS for FY
2010. In addition, we are proposing that
if OPM releases revised COLA factors
after publication of this proposed rule,
we would use the revised factors for the
development of IPPS payments for FY
2011 and publish those revised COLA
factors in the final rule.
TABLE OF COST-OF-LIVING ADJUSTMENT FACTORS: ALASKA AND HAWAII
HOSPITALS
Area
Cost of living
adjustment
factor
Alaska:
City of Anchorage and
80-kilometer (50-mile)
radius by road ............
City of Fairbanks and
80-kilometer (50-mile)
radius by road ............
City of Juneau and 80kilometer (50-mile) radius by road ...............
Rest of Alaska ...............
Hawaii:
City and County of Honolulu ...........................
County of Hawaii ...........
County of Kauai .............
County of Maui and
County of Kalawao ....
1.23
1.23
1.23
1.25
1.25
1.18
1.25
1.25
The above factors are based on data obtained from the U.S. Office of Personnel Management Web site at: https://www.opm.gov/oca/
cola/rates.asp.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
C. Proposed MS–DRG Relative Weights
As discussed in section II.H. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, we have
developed proposed relative weights for
each MS–DRG that reflect the resource
utilization of cases in each MS–DRG
relative to Medicare cases in other MS–
DRGs. Table 5 of this Addendum
contains the proposed relative weights
that we would apply to discharges
occurring in FY 2011. These factors
have been recalibrated as explained in
section II. of the preamble of this
proposed rule.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
D. Calculation of the Proposed
Prospective Payment Rates
General Formula for Calculation of the
Proposed Prospective Payment Rates for
FY 2011
In general, the operating prospective
payment rate for all hospitals paid
under the IPPS located outside of Puerto
Rico, except SCHs and MDHs, for FY
2011 equals the Federal rate.
Currently, SCHs are paid based on
whichever of the following rates yields
the greatest aggregate payment: the
Federal national rate; the updated
hospital-specific rate based on FY 1982
costs per discharge; the updated
hospital-specific rate based on FY 1987
costs per discharge; the updated
hospital-specific rate based on FY 1996
costs per discharge; or the updated
hospital-specific rate based on the FY
2006 costs per discharge to determine
the rate that yields the greatest aggregate
payment.
The prospective payment rate for
SCHs for FY 2011 equals the higher of
the applicable Federal rate, or the
hospital-specific rate as described
below. The prospective payment rate for
MDHs for FY 2011 equals the higher of
the Federal rate, or the Federal rate plus
75 percent of the difference between the
Federal rate and the hospital-specific
rate as described below. For MDHs, the
updated hospital-specific rate is based
on FY 1982, FY 1987 or FY 2002 costs
per discharge, whichever yields the
greatest aggregate payment.
The prospective payment rate for
hospitals located in Puerto Rico for FY
2011 equals 25 percent of the Puerto
Rico rate plus 75 percent of the
applicable national rate.
1. Federal Rate
The Federal rate is determined as
follows:
Step 1—Select the applicable average
standardized amount depending on
whether the hospital submitted
qualifying quality data (full update for
qualifying hospitals, update minus 2.0
percentage points for nonqualifying
hospitals).
Step 2—Multiply the labor-related
portion of the standardized amount by
the applicable wage index for the
geographic area in which the hospital is
located or the area to which the hospital
is reclassified.
Step 3—For hospitals in Alaska and
Hawaii, multiply the nonlabor-related
portion of the standardized amount by
the applicable cost-of-living adjustment
factor.
Step 4—Add the amount from Step 2
and the nonlabor-related portion of the
PO 00000
Frm 00222
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
standardized amount (adjusted, if
applicable, under Step 3).
Step 5—Multiply the final amount
from Step 4 by the relative weight
corresponding to the applicable MS–
DRG (see Table 5 of this Addendum).
The Federal rate as determined in
Step 5 may then be further adjusted if
the hospital qualifies for either the IME
or DSH adjustment. In addition, for
hospitals that qualify for a low-volume
payment adjustment under section
1886(d)(12) of the Act and 42 CFR
412.101(b), the payment in Step 5
would be increased by 25 percent.
2. Hospital-Specific Rate (Applicable
Only to SCHs and MDHs)
a. Calculation of Hospital-Specific Rate
Section 1886(b)(3)(C) of the Act
provides that currently SCHs are paid
based on whichever of the following
rates yields the greatest aggregate
payment: the Federal rate; the updated
hospital-specific rate based on FY 1982
costs per discharge; the updated
hospital-specific rate based on FY 1987
costs per discharge; the updated
hospital-specific rate based on FY 1996
costs per discharge; or the updated
hospital-specific rate based on the FY
2006 costs per discharge to determine
the rate that yields the greatest aggregate
payment.
As discussed previously, currently
MDHs are paid based on the Federal
national rate or, if higher, the Federal
national rate plus 75 percent of the
difference between the Federal national
rate and the greater of the updated
hospital-specific rates based on either
FY 1982, FY 1987 or FY 2002 costs per
discharge.
Hospital-specific rates have been
determined for each of these hospitals
based on the FY 1982 costs per
discharge, the FY 1987 costs per
discharge, or, for SCHs, the FY 1996
costs per discharge or the FY 2006 costs
per discharge, and for MDHs, the FY
2002 cost per discharge. For a more
detailed discussion of the calculation of
the hospital-specific rates, we refer the
reader to the FY 1984 IPPS interim final
rule (48 FR 39772); the April 20, 1990
final rule with comment period (55 FR
15150); the FY 1991 IPPS final rule (55
FR 35994); and the FY 2001 IPPS final
rule (65 FR 47082). In addition, for both
SCHs and MDHs, the hospital-specific
rate is adjusted by the budget neutrality
adjustment factor as discussed in
section III. of this Addendum. The
resulting rate will be used in
determining the payment rate an SCH or
MDH will receive for its discharges
beginning on or after October 1, 2010.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
b. Updating the FY 1982, FY 1987, FY
1996, FY 2002, and FY 2006 HospitalSpecific Rates for FY 2011
We are proposing to increase the
hospital-specific rates by 2.4 percent
(the hospital market basket percentage
increase) for FY 2011 for those SCHs
and MDHs that submit qualifying
quality data and by 0.4 percent for SCHs
and MDHs that fail to submit qualifying
quality data. Section 1886(b)(3)(C)(iv) of
the Act provides that the update factor
applicable to the hospital-specific rates
for SCHs is equal to the update factor
provided under section 1886(b)(3)(B)(iv)
of the Act, which, for SCHs in FY 2011,
is the market basket percentage increase
for hospitals that submit qualifying
quality data and the market basket
percentage increase minus 2 percentage
points for hospitals that fail to submit
qualifying quality data. Section
1886(b)(3)(D) of the Act provides that
the update factor applicable to the
hospital-specific rates for MDHs also
equals the update factor provided for
under section 1886(b)(3)(B)(iv) of the
Act, which, for FY 2011, is the market
basket percentage increase for hospitals
that submit qualifying quality data and
the market basket percentage increase
minus 2 percentage points for hospitals
that fail to submit qualifying quality
data.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
3. General Formula for Calculation of
Prospective Payment Rates for Hospitals
Located in Puerto Rico Beginning on or
After October 1, 2010, and Before
October 1, 2011
Section 1886(d)(9)(E)(iv) of the Act
provides that, effective for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2004,
hospitals located in Puerto Rico are paid
based on a blend of 75 percent of the
national prospective payment rate and
25 percent of the Puerto Rico-specific
rate.
a. Puerto Rico Rate
The Puerto Rico prospective payment
rate is determined as follows:
Step 1—Select the applicable average
standardized amount considering the
applicable wage index (Table 1C of this
Addendum).
Step 2—Multiply the labor-related
portion of the standardized amount by
the applicable Puerto Rico-specific wage
index.
Step 3—Add the amount from Step 2
and the nonlabor-related portion of the
standardized amount.
Step 4—Multiply the amount from
Step 3 by the applicable MS–DRG
relative weight (Table 5 of this
Addendum).
Step 5—Multiply the result in Step 4
by 25 percent.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
b. National Rate
The national prospective payment
rate is determined as follows:
Step 1—Select the applicable average
standardized amount.
Step 2—Multiply the labor-related
portion of the standardized amount by
the applicable wage index for the
geographic area in which the hospital is
located or the area to which the hospital
is reclassified.
Step 3—Add the amount from Step 2
and the nonlabor-related portion of the
national average standardized amount.
Step 4—Multiply the amount from
Step 3 by the applicable MS–DRG
relative weight (Table 5 of this
Addendum).
Step 5—Multiply the result in Step 4
by 75 percent.
The sum of the Puerto Rico rate and
the national rate computed above equals
the prospective payment for a given
discharge for a hospital located in
Puerto Rico. This rate would then be
further adjusted if the hospital qualifies
for either the IME or DSH adjustment.
III. Proposed Changes to Payment Rates
for Acute Care Hospital Inpatient
Capital-Related Costs for FY 2011
The PPS for acute care hospital
inpatient capital-related costs was
implemented for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 1991.
Effective with that cost reporting period,
hospitals were paid during a 10-year
transition period (which extended
through FY 2001) to change the
payment methodology for Medicare
acute care hospital inpatient capitalrelated costs from a reasonable costbased methodology to a prospective
methodology (based fully on the Federal
rate).
The basic methodology for
determining Federal capital prospective
rates is set forth in the regulations at 42
CFR 412.308 through 412.352. Below we
discuss the factors that we are proposing
to use to determine the capital Federal
rate for FY 2011, which would be
effective for discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2010.
The 10-year transition period ended
with hospital cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2001
(FY 2002). Therefore, for cost reporting
periods beginning in FY 2002, all
hospitals (except ‘‘new’’ hospitals under
§ 412.304(c)(2)) are paid based on the
capital Federal rate. For FY 1992, we
computed the standard Federal payment
rate for capital-related costs under the
IPPS by updating the FY 1989 Medicare
inpatient capital cost per case by an
actuarial estimate of the increase in
Medicare inpatient capital costs per
PO 00000
Frm 00223
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24073
case. Each year after FY 1992, we
update the capital standard Federal rate,
as provided at § 412.308(c)(1), to
account for capital input price increases
and other factors. The regulations at
§ 412.308(c)(2) provide that the capital
Federal rate be adjusted annually by a
factor equal to the estimated proportion
of outlier payments under the capital
Federal rate to total capital payments
under the capital Federal rate. In
addition, § 412.308(c)(3) requires that
the capital Federal rate be reduced by an
adjustment factor equal to the estimated
proportion of payments for (regular and
special) exceptions under § 412.348.
Section 412.308(c)(4)(ii) requires that
the capital standard Federal rate be
adjusted so that the effects of the annual
DRG reclassification and the
recalibration of DRG weights and
changes in the geographic adjustment
factor (GAF) are budget neutral.
For FYs 1992 through 1995, § 412.352
required that the capital Federal rate
also be adjusted by a budget neutrality
factor so that aggregate payments for
inpatient hospital capital costs were
projected to equal 90 percent of the
payments that would have been made
for capital-related costs on a reasonable
cost basis during the respective fiscal
year. That provision expired in FY 1996.
Section 412.308(b)(2) describes the 7.4
percent reduction to the capital Federal
rate that was made in FY 1994, and
§ 412.308(b)(3) describes the 0.28
percent reduction to the capital Federal
rate made in FY 1996 as a result of the
revised policy for paying for transfers.
In FY 1998, we implemented section
4402 of Public Law 105–33, which
required that, for discharges occurring
on or after October 1, 1997, the budget
neutrality adjustment factor in effect as
of September 30, 1995, be applied to the
unadjusted capital standard Federal rate
and the unadjusted hospital-specific
rate. That factor was 0.8432, which was
equivalent to a 15.68 percent reduction
to the unadjusted capital payment rates.
An additional 2.1 percent reduction to
the rates was effective from October 1,
1997 through September 30, 2002,
making the total reduction 17.78
percent. As we discussed in the FY 2003
IPPS final rule (67 FR 50102) and
implemented in § 412.308(b)(6), the 2.1
percent reduction was restored to the
unadjusted capital payment rates
effective October 1, 2002.
To determine the appropriate budget
neutrality adjustment factor and the
regular exceptions payment adjustment
during the 10-year transition period, we
developed a dynamic model of
Medicare inpatient capital-related costs;
that is, a model that projected changes
in Medicare inpatient capital-related
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24074
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
costs over time. With the expiration of
the budget neutrality provision, the
capital cost model was only used to
estimate the regular exceptions payment
adjustment and other factors during the
transition period. As we explained in
the FY 2002 IPPS final rule (66 FR
39911), beginning in FY 2002, an
adjustment for regular exception
payments is no longer necessary
because regular exception payments
were only made for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
1991, and before October 1, 2001 (see
§ 412.348(b)). Because payments are no
longer made under the regular exception
policy effective with cost reporting
periods beginning in FY 2002, we
discontinued use of the capital cost
model. The capital cost model and its
application during the transition period
are described in Appendix B of the FY
2002 IPPS final rule (66 FR 40099).
Section 412.374 provides for blended
payments to hospitals located in Puerto
Rico under the IPPS for acute care
hospital inpatient capital-related costs.
Accordingly, under the capital PPS, we
compute a separate payment rate
specific to hospitals located in Puerto
Rico using the same methodology used
to compute the national Federal rate for
capital-related costs. In accordance with
section 1886(d)(9)(A) of the Act, under
the IPPS for acute care hospital
operating costs, hospitals located in
Puerto Rico are paid for operating costs
under a special payment formula. Prior
to FY 1998, hospitals located in Puerto
Rico were paid a blended operating rate
that consisted of 75 percent of the
applicable standardized amount specific
to Puerto Rico hospitals and 25 percent
of the applicable national average
standardized amount. Similarly, prior to
FY 1998, hospitals located in Puerto
Rico were paid a blended capital rate
that consisted of 75 percent of the
applicable capital Puerto Rico-specific
rate and 25 percent of the applicable
capital Federal rate. However, effective
October 1, 1997, in accordance with
section 4406 of Public Law 105–33, the
methodology for operating payments
made to hospitals located in Puerto Rico
under the IPPS was revised to make
payments based on a blend of 50
percent of the applicable standardized
amount specific to Puerto Rico hospitals
and 50 percent of the applicable
national average standardized amount.
In conjunction with this change to the
operating blend percentage, effective
with discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 1997, we also revised the
methodology for computing capital
payments to hospitals located in Puerto
Rico to be based on a blend of 50
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
percent of the Puerto Rico capital rate
and 50 percent of the national capital
Federal rate.
As we discussed in the FY 2005 IPPS
final rule (69 FR 49185), section 504 of
Public Law 108–173 increased the
national portion of the operating IPPS
payments for hospitals located in Puerto
Rico from 50 percent to 62.5 percent
and decreased the Puerto Rico portion
of the operating IPPS payments from 50
percent to 37.5 percent for discharges
occurring on or after April 1, 2004
through September 30, 2004 (refer to the
March 26, 2004 One-Time Notification
(Change Request 3158)). In addition,
section 504 of Public Law 108–173
provided that the national portion of
operating IPPS payments for hospitals
located in Puerto Rico is equal to 75
percent and the Puerto Rico-specific
portion of operating IPPS payments is
equal to 25 percent for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2004.
Consistent with that change in operating
IPPS payments to hospitals located in
Puerto Rico, for FY 2005 (as we
discussed in the FY 2005 IPPS final
rule), we revised the methodology for
computing capital payments to hospitals
located in Puerto Rico to be based on a
blend of 25 percent of the Puerto Ricospecific capital rate and 75 percent of
the national capital Federal rate for
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2004.
A. Determination of Proposed Federal
Hospital Inpatient Capital-Related
Prospective Payment Rate Update
In the correction notice to the FY
2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule
published on October 7, 2009 (74 FR
51499), we established the final capital
Federal rate of $429.26 for FY 2010. In
the discussion that follows, we explain
the factors that we are proposing to use
to determine the capital Federal rate for
FY 2011. In particular, we explain why
the proposed FY 2011 capital Federal
rate would decrease approximately 1.9
percent, compared to the FY 2010
capital Federal rate. As discussed in the
impact analysis, we estimate capital
payments per discharge would decrease
0.2 percent during that same period.
Because capital payments constitute
about 10 percent of hospital payments,
a 1-percent change in the capital Federal
rate yields only about a 0.1 percent
change in actual payments to hospitals.
We note that on March 23, 2010, the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act, Public Law 111–148, was enacted.
Following the enactment of Public Law
111–148, the Health Care and Education
Reconciliation Act of 2010, Public Law
111–152 (enacted on March 30, 2010),
amended certain provisions of Public
PO 00000
Frm 00224
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Law 111–148. A number of the
provisions of Public Law 111–148, as
amended by Public Law 111–152, affect
the IPPS and the providers addressed in
this proposed rule. However, due to the
timing of the passage of the legislation,
we are unable to implement those
provisions in this proposed rule.
Therefore, the proposed policies and
payment rates in this section do not
reflect the new legislation. We plan to
issue separate rulemaking documents in
the Federal Register addressing the
provisions of Public Law 111–148, as
amended, that affect our proposed
policies and payment rates for FY 2011
under the IPPS and LTCH PPS, as well
as the provisions of Public Law 111–
148, as amended, that affect the policies
and payment rates for FY 2010 under
the IPPS.
1. Projected Capital Standard Federal
Rate Update
a. Description of the Update Framework
Under § 412.308(c)(1), the capital
standard Federal rate is updated on the
basis of an analytical framework that
takes into account changes in a capital
input price index (CIPI) and several
other policy adjustment factors.
Specifically, we adjust the projected
CIPI rate-of-increase as appropriate each
year for case-mix index-related changes,
for intensity, and for errors in previous
CIPI forecasts. The proposed update
factor for FY 2011 under that framework
is 1.5 percent based on the best data
available at this time. The proposed
update factor under that framework is
based on a projected 1.2 percent
increase in the CIPI, a 0.0 percent
adjustment for intensity, a 0.0 percent
adjustment for case-mix, a 0.0 percent
adjustment for the FY 2009 DRG
reclassification and recalibration, and a
forecast error correction of 0.3 percent.
As discussed below in section III.C. of
this Addendum, we continue to believe
that the CIPI is the most appropriate
input price index for capital costs to
measure capital price changes in a given
year. We also explain the basis for the
FY 2011 CIPI projection in that same
section of this Addendum. We note, as
discussed in section VI.E.1. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing to apply a ¥2.9 percent
adjustment to the capital rate in FY
2011 to account for the cumulative
effect of changes in documentation and
coding under the MS–DRGs that do not
correspond to changes in real increases
in patients’ severity of illness. Below we
describe the policy adjustments that we
are proposing to apply in the update
framework for FY 2011.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
The case-mix index is the measure of
the average DRG weight for cases paid
under the IPPS. Because the DRG weight
determines the prospective payment for
each case, any percentage increase in
the case-mix index corresponds to an
equal percentage increase in hospital
payments.
The case-mix index can change for
any of several reasons:
• The average resource use of
Medicare patients changes (‘‘real’’ casemix change);
• Changes in hospital documentation
and coding of patient records result in
higher weight DRG assignments
(‘‘coding effects’’); and
• The annual DRG reclassification
and recalibration changes may not be
budget neutral (‘‘reclassification effect’’).
We define real case-mix change as
actual changes in the mix (and resource
requirements) of Medicare patients as
opposed to changes in documentation
and coding behavior that result in
assignment of cases to higher weighted
DRGs but do not reflect higher resource
requirements. The capital update
framework includes the same case-mix
index adjustment used in the former
operating IPPS update framework (as
discussed in the May 18, 2004 IPPS
proposed rule for FY 2005 (69 FR
28816)). (We no longer use an update
framework to make a recommendation
for updating the operating IPPS
standardized amounts as discussed in
section II. of Appendix B in the FY 2006
IPPS final rule (70 FR 47707).)
Absent any increase in case-mix
resulting from changes in
documentation and coding due to the
adoption of the MS–DRGs, for FY 2011,
we are projecting a 1.0 percent total
increase in the case-mix index. We
estimated that the real case-mix increase
will also equal 1.0 percent for FY 2011.
The net adjustment for change in casemix is the difference between the
projected real increase in case-mix and
the projected total increase in case-mix.
Therefore, the proposed net adjustment
for case-mix change in FY 2011 is 0.0
percentage points.
The capital update framework also
contains an adjustment for the effects of
DRG reclassification and recalibration.
This adjustment is intended to remove
the effect on total payments of prior
year’s changes to the DRG classifications
and relative weights, in order to retain
budget neutrality for all case-mix indexrelated changes other than those due to
patient severity. Due to the lag time in
the availability of data, there is a 2-year
lag in data used to determine the
adjustment for the effects of DRG
reclassification and recalibration. For
example, we have data available to
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
evaluate the effects of the FY 2009 DRG
reclassification and recalibration as part
of our proposed update for FY 2011. To
adjust for reclassification and
recalibration effects, under our
historical methodology, we run the FY
2009 cases through the FY 2008
GROUPER and through the FY 2009
GROUPER. The resulting ratio of the
case-mix indices should equate to 1.0. If
not, under our historical methodology,
in the update framework for FY 2011,
we would make an adjustment to adjust
for the reclassification and recalibration
effects in FY 2009. As discussed in
detail in section II.B. of the preamble of
this proposed rule, however, when we
adopted the MS–DRGs beginning in FY
2008 to better recognize severity of
illness in Medicare payment rates, we
also recognized that changes in
documentation and coding could
potentially lead to increases in aggregate
payments without a corresponding
increase in patients’ severity of illness
(that is, increased case-mix index other
than real case-mix index increase). To
maintain budget neutrality for the
adoption of the MS–DRGs, as discussed
in greater detail in section V.E. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing to make an adjustment to the
proposed capital Federal rate in FY
2011 based on actuarial estimates of the
cumulative effects of documentation
and coding changes that occurred in
FYs 2008 and 2009 (based on FYs 2008
and 2009 claims data). Therefore, we are
not adjusting for reclassification and
recalibration effects from FY 2009 in the
update framework for FY 2011 because
it is already accounted for in the
proposed documentation and coding
adjustment to the capital Federal rates
for FY 2011. Consequently, we are
proposing a 0.0 percent adjustment for
DRG reclassification and recalibration in
the proposed FY 2011 update
framework.
The capital update framework also
contains an adjustment for forecast
error. The input price index forecast is
based on historical trends and
relationships ascertainable at the time
the update factor is established for the
upcoming year. In any given year, there
may be unanticipated price fluctuations
that may result in differences between
the actual increase in prices and the
forecast used in calculating the update
factors. In setting a prospective payment
rate under the framework, we make an
adjustment for forecast error only if our
estimate of the change in the capital
input price index for any year is off by
0.25 percentage points or more. There is
a 2-year lag between the forecast and the
availability of data to develop a
PO 00000
Frm 00225
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24075
measurement of the forecast error. A
forecast error of 0.3 percentage point
was calculated for the FY 2011 update.
That is, current historical data indicate
that the forecasted FY 2009 CIPI (1.4
percent) used in calculating the FY 2009
update factor slightly understated the
actual realized price increases (1.7
percent) by 0.3 percentage point. This is
due to the prices associated with both
the depreciation and interest cost
categories growing faster than
anticipated. Historically, when the
estimation of the change in the CIPI is
greater than 0.25 percentage points, it is
reflected in the update recommended
under this framework. Therefore, we are
proposing to make a 0.3 percent
adjustment for forecast error in the
update for FY 2011.
Under the capital IPPS update
framework, we also make an adjustment
for changes in intensity. Historically, we
have calculated this adjustment using
the same methodology and data that
were used in the past under the
framework for operating IPPS. The
intensity factor for the operating update
framework reflects how hospital
services are utilized to produce the final
product, that is, the discharge. This
component accounts for changes in the
use of quality-enhancing services, for
changes within DRG severity, and for
expected modification of practice
patterns to remove noncost-effective
services. Our intensity measure is based
on a 5-year average.
Historically, we have calculated casemix constant intensity as the change in
total charges per admission, adjusted for
price level changes (the CIPI for hospital
and related services) and changes in real
case-mix. Without reliable estimates of
the proportions of the overall annual
intensity increases that are due,
respectively, to ineffective practice
patterns and the combination of qualityenhancing new technologies and
complexity within the DRG system, we
assume that one-half of the annual
increase is due to each of these factors.
The capital update framework thus
provides an add-on to the input price
index rate of increase of one-half of the
estimated annual increase in intensity,
to allow for increases within DRG
severity and the adoption of qualityenhancing technology.
We have developed a Medicarespecific intensity measure based on a 5year average. Past studies of case-mix
change by the RAND Corporation (Has
DRG Creep Crept Up? Decomposing the
Case Mix Index Change Between 1987
and 1988 by G. M. Carter, J. P.
Newhouse, and D. A. Relles, R–4098–
HCFA/ProPAC (1991)) suggest that real
case-mix change was not dependent on
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24076
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
total change, but was usually a fairly
steady increase of 1.0 to 1.5 percent per
year. However, we used 1.4 percent as
the upper bound because the RAND
study did not take into account that
hospitals may have induced doctors to
document medical records more
completely in order to improve
payment.
As we noted above, in accordance
with § 412.308(c)(1)(ii), we began
updating the capital standard Federal
rate in FY 1996 using an update
framework that takes into account,
among other things, allowable changes
in the intensity of hospital services. For
FYs 1996 through 2001, we found that
case-mix constant intensity was
declining, and we established a 0.0
percent adjustment for intensity in each
of those years. For FYs 2002 and 2003,
we found that case-mix constant
intensity was increasing, and we
established a 0.3 percent adjustment
and 1.0 percent adjustment for intensity,
respectively. For FYs 2004 and 2005, we
found that the charge data appeared to
be skewed as a result of hospitals
attempting to maximize outlier
payments, while lessening costs, and we
established a 0.0 percent adjustment in
each of those years. Furthermore, we
stated that we would continue to apply
a 0.0 percent adjustment for intensity
until any increase in charges can be tied
to intensity rather than attempts to
maximize outlier payments. For FYs
2006 through 2010, we continued to
apply a 0.0 percent adjustment for
intensity in the capital update
framework.
In an effort to further refine the
intensity adjustment and more
accurately reflect allowable changes in
hospital intensity, we are proposing to
use changes in hospital costs per
discharge over a 5-year average rather
than changes in hospital charges, which
have been the basis of the intensity
adjustment in prior years. The unique
nature of capital—how and when it is
purchased, its longevity, and how it is
financed—creates a greater degree of
variance in capital cost among hospitals
than does operating cost. We believe
that using changes in capital costs per
discharge as the basis for the intensity
adjustment in lieu of changes in charges
will decrease some of the variability of
this adjustment. A case in point is the
charge data over much of the last
decade— the annual change in hospital
charges has fluctuated erratically from
as little as 3 percent to as large as 16
percent. As we have discussed for
several years in past rulemaking, we
believe the effects of hospitals’ charge
practices prior to the implementation of
the outlier policy revisions established
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
in the June 9, 2003 final rule were the
main cause of the variability and large
annual increases in hospital charges for
much of the past decade. However, even
after the outlier policy was
implemented, we continued to see
evidence of these charge practices in the
data, as it may have taken hospitals
some time to adopt changes in their
behavior in response to the new outlier
policy. Thus, we believe that the charge
data for much of the past decade was
skewed because if hospitals were
treating new or different types of cases,
which would result in an appropriate
increase in charges per discharge, we
would expect hospitals’ case-mix to
increase proportionally, and it did not.
Therefore, in this proposed rule, for
the reasons discussed above, we believe
it would be more appropriate to use our
intensity adjustment based on the
change in capital cost per discharge. To
determine the proposed intensity
adjustment for FY 2011, we have
replaced charge data with capital cost
per discharge data. As expected, there
are significantly smaller increases in
cost per discharge over this time period
and less fluctuation from year to year.
As we did when using charge data, we
are basing the intensity measure on a 5year average. Therefore, the proposed
intensity measure for FY 2011 is based
on an average of cost per discharge data
from the 5-year period beginning with
FY 2004 and extending through FY
2008. Based on these data, we estimate
that case-mix constant intensity
declined during FYs 2004 through 2008.
In the past (FYs 1996 through 2001)
when we found intensity to be
declining, we believed a zero (rather
than negative) intensity adjustment was
appropriate. Because we estimate
intensity declined during that 5-year
period, we believe that it is appropriate
to continue apply a zero intensity
adjustment for FY 2011. Therefore, we
are proposing to make a 0.0 percent
adjustment for intensity in the update
for FY 2011.
Above, we described the basis of the
components used to develop the
proposed 1.5 percent capital update
factor under the capital update
framework for FY 2011 as shown in the
table below.
CMS FY 2011 PROPOSED UPDATE
FACTOR TO THE CAPITAL FEDERAL
RATE—Continued
Subtotal .......................................
1.2
Effect of FY 2009 Reclassification
and Recalibration ............................
Forecast Error Correction ...................
0.0
0.3
Total Update ................................
1.5
b. Comparison of CMS and MedPAC
Update Recommendation
In its March 2010 Report to Congress,
MedPAC did not make a specific update
recommendation for capital IPPS
payments for FY 2011. (MedPAC’s
Report to the Congress: Medicare
Payment Policy, March 2010, Section
2A.)
2. Proposed Outlier Payment
Adjustment Factor
Section 412.312(c) establishes a
unified outlier payment methodology
for inpatient operating and inpatient
capital-related costs. A single set of
thresholds is used to identify outlier
cases for both inpatient operating and
inpatient capital-related payments.
Section 412.308(c)(2) provides that the
standard Federal rate for inpatient
capital-related costs be reduced by an
adjustment factor equal to the estimated
proportion of capital-related outlier
payments to total inpatient capitalrelated PPS payments. The outlier
thresholds are set so that operating
outlier payments are projected to be 5.1
percent of total operating IPPS DRG
payments.
For FY 2010, we estimated that outlier
payments for capital would equal 5.35
percent of inpatient capital-related
payments based on the capital Federal
rate in FY 2010. Based on the thresholds
as set forth in section II.A. of this
Addendum, we estimate that outlier
payments for capital-related costs would
equal 5.76 percent for inpatient capitalrelated payments based on the proposed
capital Federal rate in FY 2011.
Therefore, we are proposing to apply an
outlier adjustment factor of 0.9424 in
determining the capital Federal rate.
Thus, we estimate that the percentage of
capital outlier payments to total capital
standard payments for FY 2011 would
CMS FY 2011 PROPOSED UPDATE
FACTOR TO THE CAPITAL FEDERAL be higher than the percentage for FY
2010. This increase in capital outlier
RATE
payments is primarily due to the
estimated decrease in capital IPPS
Capital Input Price Index Intensity:
1.2
payments per discharge. That is,
0.0
because capital payments per discharge
Case-Mix Adjustment Factors:
Real Across DRG Change .............. ¥1.0 are projected to be slightly lower in FY
Projected Case-Mix Change ...........
1.0 2011 compared to FY 2010, as shown in
Table III. in section VIII. of Appendix A
PO 00000
Frm 00226
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
to this proposed rule, more cases would
qualify for outlier payments.
The outlier reduction factors are not
built permanently into the capital rates;
that is, they are not applied
cumulatively in determining the capital
Federal rate. The proposed FY 2011
outlier adjustment of 0.9424 is a -0.54
percent change from the FY 2010 outlier
adjustment of 0.9475. Therefore, the net
change in the outlier adjustment to the
proposed capital Federal rate for FY
2011 is 0.9946 (0.9424/0.9475). Thus,
the proposed outlier adjustment
decreases the proposed FY 2011 capital
Federal rate by 0.54 percent compared
with the FY 2010 outlier adjustment.
3. Proposed Budget Neutrality
Adjustment Factor for Changes in DRG
Classifications and Weights and the
GAF
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Section 412.308(c)(4)(ii) requires that
the capital Federal rate be adjusted so
that aggregate payments for the fiscal
year based on the capital Federal rate
after any changes resulting from the
annual DRG reclassification and
recalibration and changes in the GAF
are projected to equal aggregate
payments that would have been made
on the basis of the capital Federal rate
without such changes. Because we
implemented a separate GAF for Puerto
Rico, we apply separate budget
neutrality adjustments for the national
GAF and the Puerto Rico GAF. We
apply the same budget neutrality factor
for DRG reclassifications and
recalibration nationally and for Puerto
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Rico. Separate adjustments were
unnecessary for FY 1998 and earlier
because the GAF for Puerto Rico was
implemented in FY 1998.
In the past, we used the actuarial
capital cost model (described in
Appendix B of the FY 2002 IPPS final
rule (66 FR 40099)) to estimate the
aggregate payments that would have
been made on the basis of the capital
Federal rate with and without changes
in the DRG classifications and weights
and in the GAF to compute the
adjustment required to maintain budget
neutrality for changes in DRG weights
and in the GAF. During the transition
period, the capital cost model was also
used to estimate the regular exception
payment adjustment factor. As we
explain in section III.A. of this
Addendum, beginning in FY 2002, an
adjustment for regular exception
payments is no longer necessary.
Therefore, we no longer use the capital
cost model. Instead, we are using
historical data based on hospitals’ actual
cost experiences to determine the
exceptions payment adjustment factor
for special exceptions payments.
To determine the proposed factors for
FY 2011, we compared (separately for
the national capital rate and the Puerto
Rico capital rate) estimated aggregate
capital Federal rate payments based on
the FY 2010 MS–DRG classifications
and relative weights and the FY 2010
GAF to estimated aggregate capital
Federal rate payments based on the FY
2010 MS–DRG classifications and
relative weights and the proposed FY
PO 00000
Frm 00227
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24077
2011 GAFs. In making the comparison,
we set the exceptions reduction factor to
1.00. To achieve budget neutrality for
the changes in the national GAFs, based
on calculations using updated data, we
are proposing to apply an incremental
budget neutrality adjustment of 1.0007
for FY 2011 to the previous cumulative
FY 2010 adjustment of 0.9907, yielding
an adjustment of 0.9915, through FY
2011 (calculated with unrounded
numbers). For the Puerto Rico GAFs, we
are proposing to apply an incremental
budget neutrality adjustment of 1.0004
for FY 2011 to the previous cumulative
FY 2010 adjustment of 0.9969, yielding
a cumulative adjustment of 0.9973
through FY 2011.
We then compared estimated
aggregate capital Federal rate payments
based on the FY 2010 DRG relative
weights and the proposed FY 2011
GAFs to estimated aggregate capital
Federal rate payments based on the
cumulative effects of the proposed FY
2011 MS–DRG classifications and
relative weights and the proposed FY
2011 GAFs. The proposed incremental
adjustment for DRG classifications and
proposed changes in relative weights is
0.9992 both nationally and for Puerto
Rico. The proposed cumulative
adjustments for MS–DRG classifications
and proposed changes in relative
weights and for proposed changes in the
GAFs through FY 2011 are 0.9907
nationally and 0.9965 for Puerto Rico.
The following table summarizes the
adjustment factors for each fiscal year:
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
The methodology used to determine the
recalibration and geographic adjustment
factor (DRG/GAF) budget neutrality
adjustment is similar to the
methodology used in establishing
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
budget neutrality adjustments under the
IPPS for operating costs. One difference
is that, under the operating IPPS, the
budget neutrality adjustments for the
effect of geographic reclassifications are
determined separately from the effects
PO 00000
Frm 00228
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
of other changes in the hospital wage
index and the DRG relative weights.
Under the capital IPPS, there is a single
DRG/GAF budget neutrality adjustment
factor (the national capital rate and the
Puerto Rico capital rate are determined
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.062
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24078
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
separately) for changes in the GAF
(including geographic reclassification)
and the DRG relative weights. In
addition, there is no adjustment for the
effects that geographic reclassification
has on the other payment parameters,
such as the payments for DSH or IME.
For FY 2010, we calculated a final
GAF/DRG budget neutrality factor of
0.9990 (74 FR 44019). For FY 2011, we
are proposing to establish a GAF/DRG
budget neutrality factor of 1.0000. The
GAF/DRG budget neutrality factors are
built permanently into the capital rates;
that is, they are applied cumulatively in
determining the capital Federal rate.
This follows the requirement that
estimated aggregate payments each year
be no more or less than they would have
been in the absence of the annual DRG
reclassification and recalibration and
changes in the GAFs. The incremental
change in the proposed adjustment from
FY 2010 to FY 2011 is 1.0000. The
cumulative change in the proposed
capital Federal rate due to this
adjustment is 0.9907 (the product of the
incremental factors for FYs 1995 though
2010 and the proposed incremental
factor of 1.0000 for FY 2011). (We note
that averages of the incremental factors
that were in effect during FYs 2005 and
2006, respectively, were used in the
calculation of the cumulative
adjustment of 0.9907 for FY 2011.)
The proposed factor accounts for the
proposed MS–DRG reclassifications and
recalibration and for proposed changes
in the GAFs. It also incorporates the
effects on the proposed GAFs of FY
2011 geographic reclassification
decisions made by the MGCRB
compared to FY 2010 decisions.
However, it does not account for
changes in payments due to changes in
the DSH and IME adjustment factors.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
4. Exceptions Payment Adjustment
Factor
Section 412.308(c)(3) of our
regulations requires that the capital
standard Federal rate be reduced by an
adjustment factor equal to the estimated
proportion of additional payments for
both regular exceptions and special
exceptions under § 412.348 relative to
total capital PPS payments. In
estimating the proportion of regular
exception payments to total capital PPS
payments during the transition period,
we used the actuarial capital cost model
originally developed for determining
budget neutrality (described in
Appendix B of the FY 2002 IPPS final
rule (66 FR 40099)) to determine the
exceptions payment adjustment factor,
which was applied to both the Federal
and hospital-specific capital rates.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
An adjustment for regular exception
payments is no longer necessary in
determining the proposed FY 2011
capital Federal rate because, in
accordance with § 412.348(b), regular
exception payments were only made for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 1991 and before October
1, 2001. Accordingly, as we explained
in the FY 2002 IPPS final rule (66 FR
39949), in FY 2002 and subsequent
fiscal years, no payments are made
under the regular exceptions provision.
However, in accordance with
§ 412.308(c), we still need to compute a
budget neutrality adjustment for special
exception payments under § 412.348(g).
We describe our methodology for
determining the proposed exceptions
adjustment used in calculating the FY
2011 capital Federal rate below.
Under the special exceptions
provision specified at § 412.348(g)(1),
eligible hospitals include SCHs, urban
hospitals with at least 100 beds that
have a disproportionate share
percentage of at least 20.2 percent or
qualify for DSH payments under
§ 412.106(c)(2), and hospitals with a
combined Medicare and Medicaid
inpatient utilization of at least 70
percent. An eligible hospital may
receive special exceptions payments if it
meets the following criteria: (1) a project
need requirement as described at
§ 412.348(g)(2), which, in the case of
certain urban hospitals, includes an
excess capacity test as described at
§ 412.348(g)(4); (2) an age of assets test
as described at § 412.348(g)(3); and (3) a
project size requirement as described at
§ 412.348(g)(5).
Based on information compiled from
our fiscal intermediaries and MACs, six
hospitals have qualified for special
exceptions payments under
§ 412.348(g). One of these hospitals
closed in May 2005. Because we have
cost reports ending in FY 2008 for four
of these five hospitals, we calculated the
adjustment based on actual cost
experience. (We note that the one
hospital for which we do not have FY
2008 cost report data has had zero
special exception payments for all
available past cost reports.
Consequently, we expect that this
hospital would not have any special
exceptions payments in FY 2008, and
the lack of this hospital’s FY 2008 cost
report data would not distort the
calculation of the adjustment.) Using
data from cost reports ending in FY
2008 from the December 2009 update of
the HCRIS data, we divided the capital
special exceptions payment amounts for
the four available hospitals that
qualified for special exceptions by the
total capital PPS payment amounts
PO 00000
Frm 00229
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24079
(including special exception payments)
for all hospitals. Based on the data from
cost reports ending in FY 2008, this
ratio is rounded to 0.0003, and we are
proposing to make an adjustment of
0.0003. Because special exceptions are
budget neutral, we are proposing to
offset the capital Federal rate by 0.03
percent for special exceptions payments
for FY 2011. Therefore, the proposed
exceptions adjustment factor is equal to
0.9997 (1 ¥ 0.0003) to account for
estimated special exceptions payments
in FY 2011.
In the FY 2010 IPPS final rule (74 FR
44019), we estimated that total (special)
exceptions payments for FY 2010 would
equal 0.02 percent of aggregate
payments based on the capital Federal
rate. Therefore, we applied an
exceptions adjustment factor of 0.9998
(1 ¥ 0.0002) to determine the FY 2010
capital Federal rate. As we stated above,
we are proposing to apply an exceptions
payment adjustment factor of 0.9997 to
the proposed capital Federal rate for FY
2011 based on our estimate that
exceptions payments in FY 2011 would
equal 0.03 percent of aggregate
payments based on the proposed FY
2011 capital Federal rate. The proposed
exceptions reduction factors are not
built permanently into the capital rates;
that is, the factors are not applied
cumulatively in determining the capital
Federal rate. Therefore, the net change
in the proposed exceptions adjustment
factor used in determining the proposed
FY 2011 capital Federal rate is 0.9999
(0.9997/0.9998).
5. Proposed Capital Standard Federal
Rate for FY 2011
For FY 2010, we established a final
capital Federal rate of $429.26 (74 FR
51499). We are proposing to establish an
update of 1.5 percent in determining the
proposed FY 2011 capital Federal rate
for all hospitals. However, as discussed
in greater detail in section V.E. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, under
the statutory authority at section 1886(g)
of the Act, in conjunction with section
1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act and section
7(b) of Public Law 110–90, we are
proposing an additional 2.9 percent
reduction to the national capital Federal
payment rate in FY 2011. The proposed
¥2.9 percent adjustment is based on
our actuary’s analysis of the effect of
changes in case-mix resulting from
documentation and coding changes that
do not reflect real changes in the casemix in light of the adoption of MS–
DRGs. Accordingly, we are proposing to
apply a cumulative documentation and
coding adjustment factor of 0.957 in
determining the proposed FY 2011
capital Federal rate percent (that is, the
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
existing ¥0.6 percent adjustment in FY
2008 plus the ¥0.9 percent adjustment
in FY 2009 plus the proposed additional
¥2.9 percent adjustment, computed as
1 divided by (1.006 × 1.009 × 1.029).
(We note that we did not apply a
documentation and coding adjustment
to the capital Federal rate in FY 2010
(74 FR 43927).) As a result of the
proposed 1.5 percent update and other
proposed budget neutrality factors
discussed above, we are proposing to
establish a national capital Federal rate
of $420.99 for FY 2011. The proposed
national capital Federal rate for FY 2011
was calculated as follows:
• The proposed FY 2011 update
factor is 1.015, that is, the update is 1.5
percent.
• The proposed FY 2011 budget
neutrality adjustment factor that is
applied to the proposed capital standard
Federal payment rate for proposed
changes in the MS–DRG classifications
and relative weights and proposed
changes in the GAFs is 1.0000.
• The proposed FY 2011 outlier
adjustment factor is 0.9424.
• The proposed FY 2011 (special)
exceptions payment adjustment factor is
0.9997.
• The proposed cumulative
adjustment factor for FY 2011 applied to
the national capital Federal rate for
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
changes in documentation and coding
under the MS–DRGs is 0.957.
Because the proposed capital Federal
rate has already been adjusted for
differences in case-mix, wages, cost-ofliving, indirect medical education costs,
and payments to hospitals serving a
disproportionate share of low-income
patients, we are not proposing to make
additional adjustments in the proposed
capital standard Federal rate for these
factors, other than the proposed budget
neutrality factor for proposed changes in
the MS–DRG classifications and relative
weights and for proposed changes in the
GAFs.
We are providing the following chart
that shows how each of the proposed
factors and adjustments for FY 2011
affects the computation of the proposed
FY 2011 national capital Federal rate in
comparison to the FY 2010 national
capital Federal rate. The proposed FY
2011 update factor has the effect of
increasing the proposed capital Federal
rate by 1.5 percent compared to the FY
2010 capital Federal rate. The proposed
GAF/DRG budget neutrality factor of
1.000 has no net effect on the proposed
capital Federal rate. The proposed FY
2011 outlier adjustment factor has the
effect of decreasing the proposed capital
Federal rate by 0.54 percent compared
to the FY 2010 capital Federal rate. The
PO 00000
Frm 00230
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
proposed FY 2011 exceptions payment
adjustment factor has the effect of
decreasing the proposed capital Federal
rate by 0.01 percent compared to the FY
2010 capital Federal rate. Furthermore,
as shown in the chart below, the
resulting cumulative adjustment for
changes in documentation and coding
that do not reflect real changes in
patients’ severity of illness (that is, the
proposed cumulative adjustment factor
of 0.957 has the net effect of decreasing
the proposed FY 2011 national capital
Federal rate by 2.8 percent as compared
to the FY 2010 national capital Federal
rate. (As discussed in section VI.E.1. of
the preamble of this proposed rule, a
cumulative adjustment of ¥1.5 percent
(that is, the ¥0.6 percent in FY 2008
and ¥0.9 percent in FY 2009) or a
cumulative adjustment factor of 0.985
has already been applied to the FY 2010
capital Federal rate for changes in
documentation and coding that do not
reflect real changes in patients’ severity
of illness. We did not apply any
additional documentation and coding
adjustment to the capital Federal rate in
FY 2010). The combined effect of all the
proposed changes would decrease the
proposed national capital Federal rate
by approximately 1.93 percent
compared to the FY 2010 national
capital Federal rate.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.063
24080
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
6. Proposed Special Capital Rate for
Puerto Rico Hospitals
Section 412.374 provides for the use
of a blended payment system for
payments to hospitals located in Puerto
Rico under the PPS for acute care
hospital inpatient capital-related costs.
Accordingly, under the capital PPS, we
compute a separate payment rate
specific to hospitals located in Puerto
Rico using the same methodology used
to compute the national Federal rate for
capital-related costs. Under the broad
authority of section 1886(g) of the Act,
as discussed in section V. of the
preamble of this proposed rule,
beginning with discharges occurring on
or after October 1, 2004, capital
payments to hospitals located in Puerto
Rico are based on a blend of 25 percent
of the Puerto Rico capital rate and 75
percent of the capital Federal rate. The
Puerto Rico capital rate is derived from
the costs of Puerto Rico hospitals only,
while the capital Federal rate is derived
from the costs of all acute care hospitals
participating in the IPPS (including
Puerto Rico).
To adjust hospitals’ capital payments
for geographic variations in capital
costs, we apply a GAF to both portions
of the blended capital rate. The GAF is
calculated using the operating IPPS
wage index, and varies depending on
the labor market area or rural area in
which the hospital is located. We use
the Puerto Rico wage index to determine
the GAF for the Puerto Rico part of the
capital-blended rate and the national
wage index to determine the GAF for
the national part of the blended capital
rate.
Because we implemented a separate
GAF for Puerto Rico in FY 1998, we also
apply separate budget neutrality
adjustments for the national GAF and
for the Puerto Rico GAF. However, we
apply the same budget neutrality factor
for DRG reclassifications and
recalibration nationally and for Puerto
Rico. The proposed national GAF
budget neutrality factor is 1.0004 and
the proposed DRG adjustment is 0.9992,
for a combined cumulative adjustment
of 0.9965.
In computing the payment for a
particular Puerto Rico hospital, the
Puerto Rico portion of the capital rate
(25 percent) is multiplied by the Puerto
Rico-specific GAF for the labor market
area in which the hospital is located,
and the national portion of the capital
rate (75 percent) is multiplied by the
national GAF for the labor market area
in which the hospital is located (which
is computed from national data for all
hospitals in the United States and
Puerto Rico). In FY 1998, we
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
implemented a 17.78 percent reduction
to the Puerto Rico capital rate as a result
of Public Law 105–33. In FY 2003, a
small part of that reduction was
restored.
For FY 2010, the special capital rate
for hospitals located in Puerto Rico was
$203.56 (74 FR 51499). Consistent with
our development of the FY 2010 Puerto
Rico-specific operating standardized
amount, we have not applied the ¥0.6
percent adjustment in FY 2008 or the
¥0.9 percent documentation and
coding adjustment in FY 2009 (that is,
the cumulative ¥1.5 percent
adjustment) that was applied to the
national capital Federal rate to the
Puerto Rico-specific capital rate.
However, we noted in the FY 2009 IPPS
final rule (73 FR 48449 through 48550)
that we may propose to apply such an
adjustment to the Puerto Rico operating
and capital rates in the future.
As noted above and discussed in
greater detail in section V.E.4. of the
preamble of this proposed rule,
consistent with our development of the
Puerto Rico-specific operating
standardized amount, we are proposing
to apply a ¥2.4 percent adjustment to
account for changes in documentation
and coding that resulted from the
adoption of the MS–DRGs in
determining the proposed FY 2011
Puerto Rico-specific capital rate. With
the changes we are proposing to make
to the other factors used to determine
the capital rate, the proposed FY 2011
special capital rate for hospitals in
Puerto Rico is $199.43.
B. Calculation of the Proposed Inpatient
Capital-Related Prospective Payments
for FY 2011
Because the 10-year capital PPS
transition period ended in FY 2001, all
hospitals (except ‘‘new’’ hospitals under
§ 412.324(b) and under § 412.304(c)(2))
are paid based on 100 percent of the
capital Federal rate in FY 2011.
For purposes of calculating payments
for each discharge during FY 2011, the
capital standard Federal rate is adjusted
as follows: (Standard Federal Rate) x
(DRG weight) x (GAF) x (COLA for
hospitals located in Alaska and Hawaii)
x (1 + DSH Adjustment Factor + IME
Adjustment Factor, if applicable). The
result is the adjusted capital Federal
rate.
Hospitals also may receive outlier
payments for those cases that qualify
under the thresholds established for
each fiscal year. Section 412.312(c)
provides for a single set of thresholds to
identify outlier cases for both inpatient
operating and inpatient capital-related
payments. The proposed outlier
thresholds for FY 2011 are in section
PO 00000
Frm 00231
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24081
II.A. of this Addendum. For FY 2011, a
case would qualify as a cost outlier if
the cost for the case plus the (operating)
IME and DSH payments is greater than
the prospective payment rate for the
MS–DRG plus the fixed-loss amount of
$23,970.
An eligible hospital may also qualify
for a special exceptions payment under
§ 412.348(g) up through the 10th year
beyond the end of the capital transition
period if it meets the following criteria:
(1) A project need requirement
described at § 412.348(g)(2), which in
the case of certain urban hospitals
includes an excess capacity test as
described at § 412.348(g)(4); and (2) a
project size requirement as described at
§ 412.348(g)(5). Eligible hospitals
include SCHs, urban hospitals with at
least 100 beds that have a DSH patient
percentage of at least 20.2 percent or
qualify for DSH payments under
§ 412.106(c)(2), and hospitals that have
a combined Medicare and Medicaid
inpatient utilization of at least 70
percent. Under § 412.348(g)(8), the
amount of a special exceptions payment
is determined by comparing the
cumulative payments made to the
hospital under the capital PPS to the
cumulative minimum payment level.
This amount is offset by: (1) Any
amount by which a hospital’s
cumulative capital payments exceed its
cumulative minimum payment levels
applicable under the regular exceptions
process for cost reporting periods
beginning during which the hospital has
been subject to the capital PPS; and (2)
any amount by which a hospital’s
current year operating and capital
payments (excluding 75 percent of
operating DSH payments) exceed its
operating and capital costs. Under
§ 412.348(g)(6), the minimum payment
level is 70 percent for all eligible
hospitals. We note that this was a 10year provision. Therefore, FY 2012 is
the final year hospitals will be eligible
for the special exceptions payment.
Currently, as provided in
§ 412.304(c)(2), we pay a new hospital
85 percent of its reasonable costs during
the first 2 years of operation unless it
elects to receive payment based on 100
percent of the capital Federal rate.
Effective with the third year of
operation, we pay the hospital based on
100 percent of the capital Federal rate
(that is, the same methodology used to
pay all other hospitals subject to the
capital PPS).
C. Capital Input Price Index
1. Background
Like the operating input price index,
the capital input price index (CIPI) is a
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24082
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
fixed-weight price index that measures
the price changes associated with
capital costs during a given year. The
CIPI differs from the operating input
price index in one important aspect—
the CIPI reflects the vintage nature of
capital, which is the acquisition and use
of capital over time. Capital expenses in
any given year are determined by the
stock of capital in that year (that is,
capital that remains on hand from all
current and prior capital acquisitions).
An index measuring capital price
changes needs to reflect this vintage
nature of capital. Therefore, the CIPI
was developed to capture the vintage
nature of capital by using a weightedaverage of past capital purchase prices
up to and including the current year.
We periodically update the base year
for the operating and capital input price
indexes to reflect the changing
composition of inputs for operating and
capital expenses. In the FY 2010 IPPS
final rule (74 FR44021), we rebased and
revised the CIPI to a FY 2006 base year
to reflect the more current structure of
capital costs in hospitals. A complete
discussion of this rebasing is provided
in section IV. of the preamble of that
final rule.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
2. Forecast of the CIPI for FY 2011
Based on the latest forecast by IHS
Global Insight, Inc. (first quarter of
2010), we are forecasting the FY 2006based CIPI to increase 1.2 percent in FY
2011. This reflects a projected 1.8
percent increase in vintage-weighted
depreciation prices (building and fixed
equipment, and movable equipment),
and a 1.9 percent increase in other
capital expense prices in FY 2011,
partially offset by 1.9 percent decline in
vintage-weighted interest expenses in
FY 2011. The weighted average of these
three factors produces the 1.2 percent
increase for the FY 2006-based CIPI as
a whole in FY 2011.
IV. Proposed Changes to Payment Rates
for Excluded Hospitals: Rate-ofIncrease Percentages
Historically, hospitals and hospital
units excluded from the prospective
payment system received payment for
inpatient hospital services they
furnished on the basis of reasonable
costs, subject to a rate-of-increase
ceiling. An annual per discharge limit
(the target amount as defined in
§ 413.40(a)) was set for each hospital or
hospital unit based on the hospital’s
own cost experience in its base year,
and updated annually by a rate-ofincrease percentage. The updated target
amount for that period was multiplied
by the Medicare discharges during that
period and applied as an aggregate
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
upper limit (the ceiling as defined in
§ 413.40(a)) on total inpatient operating
costs for a hospital’s cost reporting
period. Prior to October 1, 1997, these
payment provisions applied
consistently to all categories of excluded
providers (rehabilitation hospitals and
units (now referred to as IRFs),
psychiatric hospitals and units (now
referred to as IPFs), LTCHs, children’s
hospitals, and cancer hospitals).
Payments for services furnished in
children’s hospitals and cancer
hospitals that are excluded from the
IPPS continue to be subject to the rateof-increase ceiling based on the
hospital’s own historical cost
experience. (We note that, in accordance
with § 403.752(a), RNHCIs are also
subject to the rate-of-increase limits
established under § 413.40 of the
regulations.)
We are proposing that the FY 2011
rate-of-increase percentage for updating
the target amounts for cancer and
children’s hospitals and RNHCIs be the
estimated percentage increase in the FY
2011 IPPS operating market basket,
estimated to be 2.4 percent, using the
most recent data available based on IHS
Global Insight, Inc.’s first quarter 2010
forecast, with historical data through the
2009 fourth quarter. (We are proposing
to use more recent data when
determining the estimated percentage
increase for the FY 2011 IPPS operating
market basket for the final rule, to the
extent these data are available.)
IRFs, IPFs, and LTCHs were
previously paid under the reasonable
cost methodology. However, the statute
was amended to provide for the
implementation of prospective payment
systems for IRFs, IPFs, and LTCHs. In
general, the prospective payment
systems for IRFs, IPFs, and LTCHs
provide transitioning periods of varying
lengths of time during which a portion
of the prospective payment is based on
cost-based reimbursement rules under
42 CFR Part 413 (certain providers do
not receive a transitioning period or
may elect to bypass the transition as
applicable under 42 CFR part 412,
Subparts N, O, and P.) We note that all
of the various transitioning periods
provided for under the IRF PPS, the IPF
PPS, and the LTCH PPS have ended.
The IRF PPS, the IPF PPS, and the
LTCH PPS are updated annually. We
refer readers to section VII. of the
preamble and section V. of the
Addendum to this proposed rule for the
proposed update changes to the Federal
payment rates for LTCHs under the
LTCH PPS for RY 2011. The annual
updates for the IRF PPS and the IPF PPS
are issued by the agency in separate
Federal Register documents.
PO 00000
Frm 00232
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
V. Proposed Changes to the Payment
Rates for the LTCH PPS for FY 2011
A. Proposed LTCH PPS Standard
Federal Rate for FY 2011
1. Background
In section VII. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we discuss our proposed
changes to the payment rates, factors,
and specific policies under the LTCH
PPS for FY 2011. We note that on March
23, 2010, the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act, Public Law 111–
148, was enacted. Following the
enactment of Public Law 111–148, the
Health Care and Education
Reconciliation Act of 2010, Public Law
111–152 (enacted on March 30, 2010),
amended certain provisions of Public
Law 111–148. A number of the
provisions of Public Law 111–148, as
amended by Public Law 111–152, affect
the IPPS and the LTCH PPS and the
providers and suppliers addressed in
this proposed rule. However, due to the
timing of the passage of the legislation,
we are unable to address those
provisions in this proposed rule.
Therefore, the proposed policies and
payment rates in this proposed rule do
not reflect the new legislation. We plan
to issue separate documents in the
Federal Register addressing the
provisions of Public Law 111–148, as
amended, that affect our proposed
policies and payment rates for FY 2011
under the IPPS and the LTCH PPS. In
addition, we plan to issue further
instructions implementing the
provisions of Public Law 111–148, as
amended, that affect the policies and
payment rates for FY 2010 under the
IPPS and for RY 2010 under the LTCH
PPS.
At § 412.523(c)(3)(ii) of the
regulations, for LTCH PPS rate years
beginning RY 2004 through RY 2006, we
updated the standard Federal rate by a
factor to adjust for the most recent
estimate of the increases in prices of an
appropriate market basket of goods and
services for LTCHs. We established that
policy of annually updating the
standard Federal rate because, at that
time, we believed that was the most
appropriate method for updating the
LTCH PPS standard Federal rate
annually for years after the initial
implementation of the LTCH PPS in FY
2003. Under § 412.523(c)(3)(ii), for RYs
2004 through 2006, the annual update to
the LTCH PPS standard Federal rate was
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.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
In determining the annual update to
the standard Federal rate for RY 2007,
based on our ongoing monitoring
activity, we believed that, rather than
solely using the most recent estimate of
the LTCH PPS market basket as the basis
of the update factor, it was appropriate
to adjust the standard Federal rate to
account for the changes in
documentation and coding practices in
a prior period that were unrelated to
patient severity of illness (71 FR 27818).
Accordingly, we established regulations
at § 412.523(c)(3)(iii) to specify that the
update to the standard Federal rate for
RY 2007 is zero percent based on the
most recent estimate of the LTCH PPS
market basket at the time, offset by an
adjustment to account for changes in
case-mix in prior periods due to changes
in documentation and coding that were
unrelated to patient severity of illness in
FY 2004. For RYs 2008 through 2010,
we also considered changes in
documentation and coding practices
that were unrelated to patient severity of
illness in establishing the annual update
to the standard Federal rate as set forth
in the regulations at §§ 412.523(c)(3)(iv)
through (c)(3)(vi). (We note that section
114(e)(1) of Public Law 110–173
provided that the standard Federal rate
for RY 2008 shall be the same as the
standard Federal rate for RY 2007. In
addition, section 114(e)(2) of Public Law
110–173 specified that the revised
standard Federal rate provided for
under section 114(e)(1) ‘‘shall not apply
to discharges occurring on or after July
1, 2007, and before April 1, 2008,’’
effectively resulting in a delay of the
application of the updated standard
Federal rate for RY 2007 established in
the RY 2008 LTCH PPS final rule (72 FR
26890).) Consistent with our historical
practice, in the RY 2010 LTCH PPS final
rule, we established an annual update to
the standard Federal rate for RY 2010
based on the most recent estimate of the
increase in the LTCH PPS market basket
at that time (2.5 percent and an
adjustment of ¥0.5 percent to account
for the increase in case-mix in a prior
period (FY 2007) due to changes in
documentation and coding practices
unrelated to an increase in patient
severity of illness (74 FR 44022)).
Accordingly, we established regulations
at § 412.523(c)(3)(vi) to specify that the
update to the standard Federal rate for
RY 2010 is 2.0 percent.
2. Development of the Proposed FY
2011 LTCH PPS Standard Federal Rate
While we continue to believe that an
update to the LTCH PPS standard
Federal rate should be based on the
most recent estimate of the increase in
the LTCH PPS market basket, we also
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
believe it is appropriate that the
standard Federal rate be offset by an
adjustment to account for any changes
in documentation and coding practices
that do not reflect increased patient
severity of illness. 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.
Furthermore, as we discussed most
recently in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010
LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR 44022), we
did not establish a case-mix budget
neutrality factor (that is, a
documentation and coding adjustment
for changes in case-mix that are not due
to changes in patient severity of illness)
for the adoption of the severity adjusted
MS–LTC–DRG patient classification
system. Rather, we noted that,
consistent with past LTCH payment
policy, we would continue to monitor
LTCH data and we could propose to
make adjustments when updating the
LTCH PPS standard Federal rate in the
future to account for changes in
documentation and coding that do not
reflect any real changes in case-mix
during these years that we are
implementing MS–LTC–DRGs. As noted
above, in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010
LTCH PPS final rule, we applied a ¥0.5
percent adjustment to account for the
effect of changes in documentation and
coding on the increase in case-mix in
FY 2007. Although we proposed a ¥1.3
percent adjustment to account for the
effect of changes in documentation and
coding on the increase in case-mix in
FY 2008, in the final rule after
consideration of public comments and
consistent with IPPS policy, we delayed
the application of that adjustment (74
FR 43970 through 43972).
For FY 2011, for this proposed rule as
discussed in greater detail in section
VII.C.3. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we performed a CMI analysis using
the most recent available LTCH claims
data (FY 2009) under both the current
MS–LTC–DRG and the former CMS
LTC–DRG patient classification systems.
Based on this evaluation, we
determined that there was a cumulative
increase in LTCH CMI of 2.5 percent
due to changes in documentation and
coding that did not reflect real changes
in patient severity of illness for LTCH
discharges occurring in FY 2008 and FY
2009. At this time, the most recent
estimate of the increase in the proposed
LTCH PPS market basket (that is, the FY
2002-based RPL market basket) for FY
2011 is 2.4 percent, as discussed in
section VII.B.2. of the preamble of this
proposed rule. Consistent with our
historical practice, in this proposed
PO 00000
Frm 00233
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24083
rule, we are proposing to update the
LTCH PPS standard Federal rate for FY
2011 based on the full proposed LTCH
PPS market basket increase estimate of
2.4 percent and an adjustment to
account for the increase in case-mix in
a prior period (FYs 2008 and 2009) that
resulted from changes in documentation
and coding practices of ¥2.5 percent.
The proposed update factor to the
standard Federal rate for FY 2011 is
¥0.1 percent (that is, we are proposing
to apply a factor of 0.999 in determining
the LTCH PPS standard Federal rate for
FY 2011, calculated as 1.024 × 1 divided
by 1.025 = 0.999 or ¥0.1 percent).
Therefore, in this proposed rule, under
the broad authority conferred upon the
Secretary under the BBRA and the BIPA
to determine appropriate updates under
the LTCH PPS, we are proposing to
amend § 412.523 to add a new
paragraph (c)(3)(vii) to specify that the
standard Federal rate for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2010,
through September 30, 2011, is the
standard Federal rate for the previous
rate year updated by ¥0.1 percent. In
determining the proposed standard
Federal rate for FY 2011, we are
applying the proposed 0.999 update
factor to the RY 2010 Federal rate of
$39,896.65 (as established in the FY
2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule
(74 FR 44022)). Consequently, the
proposed standard Federal rate for FY
2011 is $39,856.75. We also are
proposing that if more recent data
become available, we would use those
data, if appropriate, to determine the
update to the standard Federal rate for
FY 2011 in the final rule, and, thus, the
standard Federal rate update specified
in the proposed regulation text at
§ 412.523(c)(3)(vii) could change
accordingly.
B. Proposed Adjustment for Area Wage
Levels Under the LTCH PPS for FY 2011
1. 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 standard
Federal rate to account for differences in
LTCH area wage levels at § 412.525(c).
The labor-related share of the LTCH PPS
standard Federal rate 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 section
1886(d)(8) or section 1886(d)(10) of the
Act.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24084
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
As we discussed in the August 30,
2002 LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR
56015), when we implemented the
LTCH PPS, we established a 5-year
transition to the full wage index
adjustment. The wage index adjustment
was completely phased in for cost
reporting periods beginning in FY 2007.
Therefore, for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006,
the applicable LTCH wage index values
are the full (five-fifths) LTCH PPS wage
index values calculated based on acute
care hospital inpatient wage index data
without taking into account geographic
reclassification under section 1886(d)(8)
and section 1886(d)(10) of the Act. For
additional information on the phase-in
of the wage index adjustment under the
LTCH PPS, we refer readers to the
August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS final rule
(67 FR 56017 through 56019) and the
RY 2008 LTCH PPS final rule (72 FR
26891).
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
2. Proposed Updates to the Geographic
Classifications/Labor Market Area
Definitions
a. Background
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, 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. Specifically, the
application of the LTCH PPS wage
index adjustment at § 412.525(c) is
made on the basis of the location of the
LTCH in either an urban area or a rural
area as defined in § 412.503. Currently
under the LTCH PPS at § 412.503, an
‘‘urban area’’ is defined as a
Metropolitan Statistical Area (which
would include a metropolitan division,
where applicable) as defined by the
Executive OMB and a ‘‘rural area’’ is
defined as any area outside of an urban
area.
In the RY 2006 LTCH PPS final rule
(70 FR 24184 through 24185), in
regulations at § 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 Executive OMB’s
CBSA designations, which are based on
2000 Census data. We made this
revision because we believe that the
CBSA-based 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
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
compared to the national average
hospital wage level. We note that these
are the same CBSA-based designations
implemented for acute care hospitals
under the IPPS at § 412.64(b), effective
October 1, 2004 (69 FR 49026 through
49034). (For further discussion of the
CBSA-based labor market area
(geographic classification) definitions
currently used under the LTCH PPS, we
refer readers to the RY 2006 LTCH PPS
final rule (70 FR 24182 through 24191).)
We have updated the LTCH PPS CBSAbased labor market area definitions
annually since they were adopted for
RY 2006 (73 FR 26812 through 26814,
and 74 FR 44023 through 44204).
b. Update to the CBSA-Based Labor
Market Area Titles and Principal Cities
On December 1, 2009, the Executive
OMB announced changes to the
principal cities and titles of a number of
CBSAs and Metropolitan Divisions
(OMB Bulletin No. 10–02). 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 update our
titles and definitions using the
Executive OMB’s bulletin. These
changes are effective for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2010.
Specifically, for FY 2011, the
following CBSAs have new titles and
new principal cities:
• San Marcos, TX qualifies as a new
principal city of the Austin-Round
Rock, TX CBSA. The new title is AustinRound Rock-San Marcos, TX CBSA
(CBSA Code 12420).
• Delano, CA qualifies as a new
principal city of the Bakersfield, CA
CBSA. The new title: BakersfieldDelano, CA CBSA (CBSA Code 12540).
• Conroe, TX qualifies as a new
principal city of the Houston-Sugar
Land-Baytown, TX CBSA (CBSA Code
26420). The CBSA title is unchanged.
• North Port, FL qualifies as a new
principal city of the Bradenton-SarasotaVenice, FL CBSA (currently CBSA Code
14600). The new title is North PortBradenton-Sarasota, FL CBSA. The new
code is CBSA 35840.
• Sanford, FL qualifies as a new
principal city of the OrlandoKissimmee, FL CBSA (CBSA Code
36740). The new title is OrlandoKissimmee-Sanford, FL CBSA.
• Glendale, AZ qualifies as a new
principal city of the Phoenix-MesaScottsdale, AZ CBSA. The new title is
Phoenix-Mesa-Glendale, AZ CBSA
(CBSA Code 38060).
• Palm Desert, CA qualifies as a new
principal city of the Riverside-San
Bernardino-Ontario, CA CBSA (CBSA
PO 00000
Frm 00234
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Code 40140). The CBSA title is
unchanged.
• New Braunfels, TX qualifies as a
new principal city of the San Antonio,
TX CBSA. The new title is San AntonioNew Braunfels, TX CBSA (CBSA Code
41700).
• Auburn, WA qualifies as a new
principal city of the Seattle-TacomaBellevue, WA CBSA (CBSA Code
42644). The CBSA title is unchanged.
In addition, the following CBSAs have
new titles as a result of changes to the
order of principal cities based on
population:
• Rockville, MD replaces Frederick,
MD as the second most populous
principal city in the Bethesda-FrederickRockville, MD Metropolitan Division.
The new title is Bethesda-RockvilleFrederick, MD Metropolitan Division
(CBSA Code 13644).
• Rock Hill, SC replaces Concord, NC
as the third most populous principal
city in the Charlotte-Gastonia-Concord,
NC-SC CBSA. The new title is CharlotteGastonia-Rock Hill, NC-SC CBSA (CBSA
Code 16740).
• Joliet, IL replaces Naperville, IL as
the second most populous principal city
in the Chicago-Naperville-Joliet, IL
Metropolitan Division. The new title is
Chicago-Joliet-Naperville, IL
Metropolitan Division (CBSA Code
16974).
• Crestview, FL replaces Fort Walton
Beach, FL as the most populous
principal city in the Fort Walton BeachCrestview-Destin, FL CBSA (currently
CBSA Code 23020). The new title is
Crestview-Fort Walton Beach-Destin, FL
CBSA. The new code is 18880.
• Hillsboro, OR replaces Beaverton,
OR as the third most populous principal
city in the Portland-VancouverBeaverton, OR-WA CBSA. The new title
is Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro, ORWA CBSA (CBSA Code 38900).
• Steubenville, OH replaces Weirton,
WV as the most populous principal city
in the Weirton-Steubenville, WV-OH
CBSA (currently CBSA Code 48260).
The new title is Steubenville-Weirton,
OH-WV CBSA. The new CBSA code is
44600.
OMB Bulletin No. 10–02 is available
on the OMB Web site at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/OMB—go to
‘‘Bulletins’’ or ‘‘Statistical Programs and
Standards.’’
The proposed FY 2011 LTCH PPS
wage index values presented in Tables
12A and 12B in the Addendum of this
proposed rule reflect the revisions to the
CBSA-based labor market area titles and
codes described above.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
3. Proposed LTCH PPS Labor-Related
Share
As noted above in this section, under
the adjustment for difference in area
wage levels at § 412.525(c), the laborrelated share of a LTCH’s PPS Federal
prospective payment is adjusted by the
applicable wage index for the labor
market area in which the LTCH is
located. The LTCH PPS labor-related
share represents the sum of the laborrelated portion of operating costs (wages
and salaries, employee benefits,
professional fees, and all other laborintensive services) and a labor-related
portion of capital costs using the
applicable LTCH PPS market basket.
Currently, as established in the RY 2007
LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27829
through 27830), the LTCH PPS laborrelated share is based on the relative
importance of the labor-related share of
operating costs and capital costs of the
rehabilitation psychiatric long-term care
(hospital) (RPL) market basket based on
FY 2002 data, as they are the best
available data that reflect the cost
structure of LTCHs. For the past 3 years
(RYs 2008, 2009, and 2010), we updated
the LTCH PPS labor-related share
annually based on the latest available
data for the RPL market basket. For RY
2010, the labor-related share is 75.779
percent, as established in the RY 2010
LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR 43968 and
44024). (Additional background
information on the historical
development of the labor-related share
under the LTCH PPS and the
development of the RPL market basket
can be found in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS
final rule (71 FR 27810 through 27817
and 27829 through 27830) and the RY
2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR
43968).)
As discussed in greater detail in
section VII.C.2.d. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we are proposing to use
IHS Global Insight, Inc.’s first quarter
2010 forecast of the FY 2002-based RPL
market basket for FY 2011 to determine
the proposed labor-related share for the
LTCH PPS for FY 2011 that would be
effective for discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2010, and through
September 30, 2011, as these are the
most recent available data. The
proposed labor-related share for FY
2011 would be the sum of the proposed
FY 2011 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 FY 2011. The
sum of the proposed relative importance
for FY 2011 for operating costs (wages
and salaries, employee benefits,
professional fees, and all-other labor-
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
intensive services) would be 71.537
percent and the labor-related share of
capital costs would be 3.870 percent.
Thus, the labor-related share that we are
proposing to use for LTCH PPS in FY
2011 would be 75.407 percent (71.537
percent + 3.870 percent), as shown in
the chart in section VII.C.2.d. of the
preamble of this proposed rule.
Accordingly, under the authority set
forth in section 123 of the BBRA as
amended by section 307(b) of the BIPA,
we are proposing to establish a laborrelated share of 75.407 percent under
the LTCH PPS for the FY 2011.
Furthermore, consistent with our
historical practice of using the best data
available, we also are proposing that if
more recent data are available to
determine the labor-related share used
under the LTCH PPS for FY 2011, we
would use these data for determining
the FY 2011 LTCH PPS labor-related
share in the final rule.
4. Proposed LTCH PPS Wage Index for
FY 2011
Historically, under the LTCH PPS, we
have established LTCH PPS wage index
values calculated from acute care IPPS
hospital wage data without taking into
account geographic reclassification
under sections 1886(d)(8) and
1886(d)(10) of the Act (67 FR 56019).
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 the RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule
(74 FR 44024 through 44026), we
calculated the LTCH PPS wage indices
using the same data used for the FY
2010 acute care hospital IPPS (that is,
data from cost reporting periods
beginning during FY 2006), without
taking into account geographic
reclassification under sections
1886(d)(8) and 1886(d)(10) of the Act.
To determine the applicable wage
index values under the LTCH PPS for
FY 2011, 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, consistent with our
historical methodology, we are
proposing to use wage data collected
from cost reports submitted by IPPS
hospitals for cost reporting periods
beginning during FY 2007, without
taking into account geographic
reclassification under sections
1886(d)(8) and 1886(d)(10) of the Act,
because these data (FY 2007) are the
most recent complete data available at
this time. These are the same data used
to compute the proposed FY 2011 acute
PO 00000
Frm 00235
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24085
care hospital inpatient wage index, as
discussed in section III. of the preamble
of this proposed rule. For our rationale
for using IPPS hospital wage data as a
proxy for determining the wage index
values used under the LTCH PPS, we
refer readers to the FY 2010 IPPS/RY
2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR 44024
through 44025).
The proposed FY 2011 LTCH PPS
wage index values are computed
consistent with the urban and rural
geographic classifications (labor market
areas) discussed above in section V.B.2.
of the Addendum of this proposed rule
and consistent with the pre-reclassified
IPPS wage index policy (that is, our
historical policy of not taking into
account IPPS geographic
reclassifications in determining
payments under the LTCH PPS). We
also note that, as with the IPPS wage
data, wage data for multicampus
hospitals with campuses located in
different labor market areas (CBSAs) are
apportioned to each CBSA where the
campus or campuses are located
(discussed in section III.C. of the
preamble of this proposed rule). We also
would continue to use our existing
policy for determining wage index
values in areas where there are no IPPS
wage data.
We established a methodology for
determining a LTCH PPS wage index
values for areas that have no IPPS wage
data in the RY 2009 LTCH PPS final
rule, and we are proposing to use this
methodology for FY 2011. (We refer
readers to 73 FR 26817 through 26818
for an explanation of and rationale for
our policy.) Under this methodology,
the LTCH PPS wage index value for
urban CBSAs with no IPPS wage data is
determined by using an average of all of
the urban areas within the State. As was
the case in RY 2010, there are currently
no LTCHs located in labor areas without
IPPS hospital wage data (or IPPS
hospitals) for FY 2011. However, we
calculate LTCH PPS wage index values
for these areas using our established
methodology in the event that, in the
future, a LTCH should open in one of
those areas.
Based on the current FY 2007 IPPS
wage data that we are proposing to use
to determine the proposed FY 2011
LTCH PPS wage index values, there are
no IPPS wage data for the urban area of
Anderson, SC (CBSA 11340) and
Hinesville-Fort Stewart, GA (CBSA
25980). Consistent with the
methodology discussed above, we
calculated the proposed FY 2011 wage
index value for CBSA 11340 as the
average of the proposed wage index
values for all of the other urban areas
within the State of South Carolina (that
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24086
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
is, CBSAs 12260, 16700, 16740, 17900,
22500, 24860, 34820, 43900 and 44940)
(reflected in Table 12A of the
Addendum of this proposed rule).
Similarly, for CBSA 25980 as the
average of the proposed wage index
values for all of the other urban areas
within the State of Georgia (that is,
CBSAs 10500, 12020, 12060, 12260,
15260, 16860, 17980, 19140, 23580,
31420, 40660, 42340, 46660 and 47580)
(reflected in Table 12A of the
Addendum of this proposed rule). (As
noted above, there are currently no
LTCHs located in CBSA 11340 or CBSA
25980.) As discussed in the RY 2009
final rule (73 FR 26817), as IPPS wage
data are dynamic, it is possible that
urban areas without IPPS wage data will
vary in the future.
For FY 2011, using our established
methodology, we calculated a LTCH
PPS wage index value for rural areas
with no IPPS wage data using the
unweighted average of the wage indices
from all of the CBSAs that are
contiguous to the rural counties of the
State (for an explanation of this policy,
we refer readers to 73 FR 26818). For
this purpose, we define ‘‘contiguous’’ as
sharing a border.
Based on the FY 2007 IPPS wage data,
there are no IPPS wage data for the rural
area of Massachusetts (CBSA code 22).
Consistent with the methodology
discussed above, the proposed FY 2011
wage index value for rural
Massachusetts is computed using the
unweighted average of the wage indices
from all of the CBSAs contiguous to the
rural counties in that State. Specifically,
the entire Massachusetts rural area
consists of Dukes and Nantucket
counties. The borders of Dukes and
Nantucket counties are ‘‘contiguous’’
with Barnstable County, MA, and
Bristol County, MA. Therefore, the
proposed FY 2011 LTCH PPS wage
index value for rural Massachusetts is
computed as the unweighted average of
the proposed FY 2011 wage indexes for
Barnstable County and Bristol County
(reflected in Tables 12A and 12B in the
Addendum of this proposed rule).
(There are currently no LTCHs located
in rural Massachusetts.) As discussed in
the RY 2009 final rule (73 FR 26817), as
IPPS wage data are dynamic, it is
possible that rural areas without IPPS
wage data will vary in the future.
The proposed FY 2011 LTCH wage
index values that would be applicable
for LTCH discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2010, through
September 30, 2011, are presented in
Table 12A (for urban areas) and Table
12B (for rural areas) in the Addendum
of this proposed rule.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
5. Proposed LTCH PPS Cost-of-Living
Adjustment for LTCHs Located in
Alaska and Hawaii
In the August 30, 2002 final rule (67
FR 56022), we established, under
§ 412.525(b), a cost-of-living adjustment
(COLA) for LTCHs located in Alaska
and Hawaii to account for the higher
costs incurred in those States. In the RY
2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR 44026)
(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
RY 2010, we applied a COLA to
payments to LTCHs located in Alaska
and Hawaii by multiplying the standard
Federal payment rate by the factors
listed in Table III of that same rule.
For FY 2011, 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 to apply a
COLA to payments to LTCHs located in
Alaska and Hawaii by multiplying the
proposed standard Federal payment rate
by the factors listed in the chart below
because they are the most recent
available data at this time. These
proposed factors were obtained from the
U.S. Office of Personnel Management
(OPM) and are also proposed to be used
under the IPPS effective October 1, 2010
(section II.B.2. of the Addendum of this
proposed rule). We note that there has
been no change in the COLA factors
since the current factors were
established in the RY 2010 LTCH PPS
final rule. In addition, we are proposing
that if OPM releases revised COLA
factors before publication of the final
rule, we would use the revised factors
for the development of LTCH PPS
payments for FY 2011 and publish those
revised COLA factors in the final rule.
PROPOSED COST-OF-LIVING ADJUSTMENT FACTORS FOR ALASKA AND
HAWAII HOSPITALS FOR THE LTCH
PPS FOR FY 2011
Alaska:
City of Anchorage and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by
road ...................................
City of Fairbanks and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by
road ...................................
City of Juneau and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by
road ...................................
All other areas of Alaska ......
Hawaii:
City and County of Honolulu
County of Hawaii ...................
County of Kauai ....................
PO 00000
Frm 00236
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
1.23
1.23
1.23
1.25
1.25
1.18
1.25
PROPOSED COST-OF-LIVING ADJUSTMENT FACTORS FOR ALASKA AND
HAWAII HOSPITALS FOR THE LTCH
PPS FOR FY 2011—Continued
County of Maui and County
of Kalawao .........................
1.25
C. Proposed Adjustment for LTCH PPS
High-Cost Outlier (HCO) Cases
1. 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.
We refer to these cases as high cost
outliers (HCOs). 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
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.
Under § 412.525(a) in the regulations
(in conjunction with § 412.503), we
make outlier payments for any
discharges if the estimated cost of a case
exceeds the adjusted LTCH PPS
payment for the MS–LTC–DRG plus a
fixed-loss amount. Specifically, in
accordance with § 412.525(a)(3) (in
conjunction with § 412.503), we pay
outlier cases 80 percent of the difference
between the estimated cost of the
patient case and the outlier threshold,
which is the sum of the adjusted Federal
prospective payment for the MS–LTC–
DRG and the 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 (MS–LTC–DRG
payment plus the fixed-loss amount).
The fixed percentage of costs is called
the marginal cost factor. We calculate
the estimated cost of a case by
multiplying the Medicare allowable
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
covered charge by the hospital’s overall
hospital cost-to-charge ratio (CCR).
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
results 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 from 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.
2. Determining LTCH CCRs Under the
LTCH PPS
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
a. Background
The following is a discussion of CCRs
that are used in determining payments
for HCO and SSO cases under the LTCH
PPS, at § 412.525(a) and § 412.529,
respectively. Although this section is
specific to HCO cases, because CCRs
and the policies and methodologies
pertaining to them are used in
determining payments for both HCO
and SSO cases (to determine the
estimated cost of the case at
§ 412.529(d)(2)), we are discussing the
determination of CCRs under the LTCH
PPS for both of these types of cases
simultaneously.
In determining both HCO payments
(at § 412.525(a)) and SSO payments (at
§ 412.529), we calculate the estimated
cost of the case by multiplying the
LTCH’s overall CCR by the Medicare
allowable charges for the case. In
general, we use the LTCH’s overall CCR,
which is computed 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, in accordance with
§ 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(B) and
§ 412.529(f)(4)(ii) for HCOs and SSOs,
respectively. (We note that, in some
instances, we use an alternative CCR,
such as the statewide average CCR in
accordance with the regulations at
§ 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(C) and
§ 412.529(f)(4)(iii), or a CCR that is
specified by CMS or that is requested by
the hospital under the provisions of the
regulations at § 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(A) and
§ 412.529(f)(4)(i).) Under the LTCH PPS,
a single prospective payment per
discharge is made for both inpatient
operating and capital-related costs.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Therefore, we compute a single ‘‘overall’’
or ‘‘total’’ LTCH-specific CCR based on
the sum of LTCH operating and capital
costs (as described in Section 150.24,
Chapter 3, of the Medicare Claims
Processing Manual (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).
b. LTCH Total CCR Ceiling
Generally, 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). This is because
CCRs above this threshold are most
likely due to faulty data reporting or
entry, and, therefore, CCRs based on
erroneous data should not be used to
identify and make payments for outlier
cases. Thus, under our established
policy, generally, if a LTCH’s calculated
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.
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS final rule (74 FR 44027), in
accordance with § 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(C)(2)
for HCOs and § 412.529(f)(4)(iii)(B) for
SSOs, using our established
methodology for determining the LTCH
total CCR ceiling, based on IPPS total
CCR data from the March 2009 update
of the Provider Specific File (PSF), we
established a total CCR ceiling of 1.232
under the LTCH PPS, effective October
1, 2009, through September 30, 2010.
(For further detail on our current
methodology for annually determining
the LTCH total CCR ceiling, we refer
readers to the FY 2007 IPPS final rule
(71 FR 48119 through 48121).)
In this proposed rule, in accordance
with § 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(C)(2) for HCOs
and § 412.529(f)(4)(iii)(B) for SSOs,
using our established methodology for
determining the LTCH total CCR ceiling
(described above), based on IPPS total
CCR data from the December 2009
update of the PSF, we are proposing to
establish a total CCR ceiling of 1.230
under the LTCH PPS that would be
effective for discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2010, through
September 30, 2011.
c. LTCH Statewide Average CCRs
Our general methodology established
for determining the statewide average
PO 00000
Frm 00237
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24087
CCRs used under the LTCH PPS is
similar to our established methodology
for determining the LTCH total CCR
ceiling (described above) because it is
based on ‘‘total’’ IPPS CCR data. Under
the LTCH PPS HCO policy at
§ 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(C) and the SSO
policy at § 412.529(f)(4)(iii), the fiscal
intermediary 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 circumstances:
(1) new LTCHs that have not yet
submitted their first Medicare cost
report (for this purpose, consistent with
current policy, a new LTCH is defined
as an entity that has not accepted
assignment of an existing hospital’s
provider agreement in accordance with
§ 489.18); (2) LTCHs whose CCR is in
excess of the LTCH CCR ceiling; and (3)
other LTCHs for whom data with which
to calculate a CCR are not available (for
example, missing or faulty data). (Other
sources of data that the fiscal
intermediary may consider in
determining a LTCH’s CCR include 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.)
In Table 8C of the Addendum to the
FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final
rule (74 FR 44160 through 44161), in
accordance with the regulations at
§ 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(C) for HCOs and
§ 412.529(f)(4)(iii) for SSOs, using our
established methodology for
determining the LTCH statewide
average CCRs, based on using the most
recent complete IPPS total CCR data
from the March 2009 update of the PSF,
we established the LTCH PPS statewide
average total CCRs for urban and rural
hospitals effective for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2009,
through September 30, 2010. (For
further detail on our current
methodology for annually determining
the LTCH statewide average CCRs, we
refer readers to the FY 2007 IPPS final
rule (71 FR 48119 through 48121).)
In this proposed rule, using our
established methodology for
determining the LTCH statewide
average CCRs, based on the most recent
complete IPPS total CCR data from the
December 2009 update of the PSF, we
are proposing to establish LTCH PPS
statewide average total CCRs for urban
and rural hospitals that would be
effective for discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2010, through
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24088
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
September 30, 2011, in Table 8C of the
Addendum to this proposed rule.
We also note that all areas in the
District of Columbia, New Jersey, Puerto
Rico, and Rhode Island are classified as
urban; therefore, there are no rural
statewide average total CCRs listed for
those jurisdictions in Table 8C of the
Addendum to this proposed rule. This
policy is consistent with the policy that
we established when we revised our
methodology for determining the
applicable LTCH statewide average
CCRs in the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71
FR 48119 through 48121) and is the
same as the policy applied under the
IPPS. In addition, although
Massachusetts has areas that are
designated as rural, there are no shortterm acute care IPPS hospitals or LTCHs
located in those areas as of December
2009. Therefore, for this proposed rule,
there is no rural statewide average total
CCR listed for rural Massachusetts in
Table 8C of the Addendum of this
proposed rule.
In addition, as we established when
we revised our methodology for
determining the applicable LTCH
statewide average CCRs in the FY 2007
IPPS final rule (71 FR 48120 through
48121), in determining the urban and
rural statewide average total CCRs for
Maryland LTCHs paid under the LTCH
PPS, in this proposed rule, we use, as
a proxy, the national average total CCR
for urban IPPS hospitals and the
national average total CCR for rural IPPS
hospitals, respectively. We use this
proxy because we believe that the CCR
data on the PSF for Maryland hospitals
may not be entirely accurate (as
discussed in greater detail in that same
final rule (71 FR 48120)).
d. Reconciliation of LTCH HCO and
SSO Payments
We note that under the LTCH PPS
HCO policy at § 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(D) and
the LTCH PPS SSO policy at
§ 412.529(f)(4)(iv), the payments for
HCO and SSO cases, respectively, are
subject to reconciliation. Specifically,
any reconciliation of outlier payments is
based on the CCR that is calculated
based on a ratio of CCRs computed from
the relevant cost report and charge data
determined at the time the cost report
coinciding with the discharge is settled.
For additional information, we refer
readers to the RY 2009 LTCH PPS final
rule (73 FR 26820 through 26821).
3. Establishment of the Proposed LTCH
PPS Fixed-Loss Amount for FY 2011
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
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
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 applicable
CCR. Under § 412.525(a)(3) (in
conjunction with § 412.503), if the
estimated cost of the case exceeds the
outlier threshold (the sum of the
adjusted Federal prospective payment
for the MS–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 MS–LTC–DRG and the fixed-loss
amount).
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH
PPS final rule (74 FR 44028), we used
our existing methodology to calculate
the fixed-loss amount for RY 2010 in
order to maintain estimated HCO
payments at the projected 8 percent of
total estimated LTCH PPS payments.
Specifically, we used LTCH claims data
from the March 2009 update of the FY
2008 MedPAR files and CCRs from the
March 2009 update of the PSF to
determine a fixed-loss amount that
would result in estimated outlier
payments projected to be equal to 8
percent of total estimated payments in
RY 2010 because those data were the
most recent complete LTCH data
available at that time. In that same final
rule, we established a fixed-loss amount
of $18,425 for RY 2010.
In this proposed rule, we are
proposing to continue to use our
existing methodology to calculate the
proposed fixed-loss amount for FY 2011
(based on updated data and the
proposed rates and policies presented in
this proposed rule) in order to maintain
estimated HCO payments at the
projected 8 percent of total estimated
LTCH PPS payments. (For an
explanation of our rationale for
establishing an HCO payment ‘‘target’’ of
8 percent of total estimated LTCH
payments, we refer readers to the
August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS final rule
(67 FR 56022 through 56024).)
Consistent with our historical practice
of using the best data available, in
determining the proposed fixed-loss
amount for FY 2011, we use the most
recent available LTCH claims data and
PO 00000
Frm 00238
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
CCR data. Specifically, for this proposed
rule, we used LTCH claims data from
the December 2009 update of the FY
2009 MedPAR files and CCRs from the
December 2009 update of the PSF to
determine a fixed-loss amount that
would result in estimated outlier
payments projected to be equal to 8
percent of total estimated payments in
FY 2011 because these data are the most
recent complete LTCH data currently
available. Consistent with the historical
practice of using the best available data,
we are proposing that if more recent
LTCH claims data become available, we
will use them for determining the fixedloss amount for FY 2011 in the final
rule. Furthermore, we are proposing to
determine the proposed FY 2011 fixedloss amount based on the MS–LTC–DRG
classifications and relative weights from
the version of the GROUPER that will be
in effect as of the beginning of FY 2011,
that is, proposed Version 28.0 of the
GROUPER (discussed in section VII.B.
of the preamble of this proposed rule).
In this proposed rule, 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 $18,692 for FY 2011. Thus,
we would 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
payment for the MS–LTC–DRG and the
fixed-loss amount of $18,692).
The proposed fixed-loss amount for
FY 2011 of $18,692 is slightly higher
than the RY 2010 fixed-loss amount of
$18,425. Based on our payment
simulations using the most recent
available data, the proposed slight
increase in the fixed-loss amount for FY
2011 would be necessary to maintain
the existing requirement that estimated
outlier payments would equal 8 percent
of estimated total LTCH PPS payments.
(For further information on the existing
8 percent HCO ‘‘target’’ requirement, we
refer readers to the August 30, 2002
LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR 56022
through 56024.) Maintaining the fixedloss amount at the current level would
result in HCO payments that are greater
than the current regulatory requirement
8 percent requirement because a higher
fixed-loss amount would result in fewer
cases qualifying as outlier cases as well
as decreases the amount of the
additional payment for a HCO case
because the maximum loss that a LTCH
must incur before receiving an HCO
payment (that is, the fixed-loss amount)
would be larger. For these reasons, we
believe that proposing to raise the fixedloss amount is appropriate and
necessary to maintain that estimated
outlier payments would equal 8 percent
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
4. Application of Outlier Policy to 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 in the regulations at
§ 412.529 in conjunction with § 412.503)
and also as a HCO case. In this scenario,
a patient could be hospitalized for less
than five-sixths of the geometric average
length of stay for the specific MS–LTC–
DRG, and yet incur extraordinarily high
treatment costs. If the costs exceeded
the HCO threshold (that is, the SSO
payment plus the fixed-loss amount),
the discharge is eligible for payment as
a HCO. Thus, for a SSO case in FY 2011,
the HCO payment would be 80 percent
of the difference between the estimated
cost of the case and the outlier threshold
(the sum of the proposed fixed-loss
amount of $18,692 and the amount paid
under the SSO policy as specified in
§ 412.529).
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
VI. Tables
This section contains the tables
referred to throughout the preamble to
this proposed rule and in this
Addendum. Tables 1A, 1B, 1C, 1D, 1E,
2, 3A, 3B, 4A, 4B, 4C, 4D–1, 4D–2, 4E,
4F, 4J, 5, 7A, 7B, 8A, 8B, 8C, 9A, 9C,
10, 11, 12A, and 12B are presented
below. Table 6G.—Additions to the CC
Exclusions List, Table 6H.—Deletions
from the CC Exclusions List, Table 6I.—
Complete List of Complication and
Comorbidity (CC) Exclusions, Table
6J.—Major Complication and
Comorbidity (MCC) List, and Table
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
In accordance with § 412.525, the
proposed standard Federal rate is
adjusted to account for differences in
area wages by multiplying the proposed
labor-related share of the proposed
standard Federal rate by the appropriate
proposed LTCH PPS wage index (as
shown in Tables 12A and 12B of the
Addendum of this proposed rule). The
proposed standard Federal rate is also
adjusted to account for the higher costs
of hospitals in Alaska and Hawaii by
multiplying the proposed nonlaborrelated share of the proposed standard
Federal rate by the appropriate cost-ofliving factor (shown in the chart in
section V.C.5. of the Addendum of this
proposed rule). In this proposed rule,
we are proposing to establish a standard
Federal rate for FY 2011 of $39,856.75,
as discussed in section V.A.2. of the
Addendum of this proposed rule. We
illustrate the methodology to adjust the
proposed LTCH PPS Federal rate for FY
2011 in the following example:
Example: During FY 2011, a Medicare
patient is in a LTCH located in Chicago,
Illinois (CBSA 16974). The proposed FY 2011
LTCH PPS wage index value for CBSA 16974
is 1.0573 (Table 12A of the Addendum of this
proposed rule). The Medicare patient is
classified into MS–LTC–DRG 28 (Spinal
Procedures with MCC), which has a proposed
relative weight for FY 2011 of 1.0834 (Table
11 of the Addendum of this proposed rule).
To calculate the LTCH’s total adjusted
Federal prospective payment for this
Medicare patient, we compute the wageadjusted proposed Federal prospective
payment amount by multiplying the
unadjusted proposed standard Federal rate
($39,856.75) by the proposed labor-related
share (75.407 percent) and the proposed
wage index value (1.0573). This wageadjusted amount is then added to the
proposed nonlabor-related portion of the
unadjusted proposed standard Federal rate
(24.593 percent; adjusted for cost of living, if
applicable) to determine the adjusted
proposed Federal rate, which is then
multiplied by the proposed MS–LTC–DRG
relative weight (1.0834) to calculate the total
adjusted proposed Federal LTCH PPS
prospective payment for FY 2011
($45,046.57). The table below illustrates the
components of the calculations in this
example.
6K.—Complications and Comorbidity
(CC) List are available only through the
Internet on the CMS Web site at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/.
We note that, because of the
provisions of Public Law 111–148, as
amended, that affect our proposed
policies and payment rates for FY 2011
under the IPPS and the LTCH PPS, as
well as the provisions of Public Law
111–148, as amended, that affect the
policies and payment rates for FY 2010
under the IPPS and for RY 2010 under
the LTCH PPS, tables 1A, 1B, 1C, 1D,
1E, 2, 4A, 4B, 4C, 4D–1, 4D–2, 4J, 9A,
10, and 11 will need to be updated to
reflect these provisions. We plan to
issue separate documents in the Federal
Register and instructions to address
these changes and to issue new tables
that reflect these provisions.
The tables presented below are as
follows:
Table 1A.—Proposed National Adjusted
Operating Standardized Amounts,
Labor/Nonlabor (68.8 Percent Labor
Share/31.2 Percent Nonlabor Share If
Wage Index Is Greater Than 1)
Table 1B.—Proposed National Adjusted
Operating Standardized Amounts,
D. Computing the Proposed Adjusted
LTCH PPS Federal Prospective
Payments for FY 2011
PO 00000
Frm 00239
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.064
of estimated total LTCH PPS payments
as required under § 412.525(a).
24089
24090
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Labor/Nonlabor (62 Percent Labor
Share/38 Percent Nonlabor Share If
Wage Index Is Less Than or Equal To
1)
Table 1C.—Proposed Adjusted
Operating Standardized Amounts for
Puerto Rico, Labor/Nonlabor
Table 1D.—Proposed Capital Standard
Federal Payment Rate
Table 1E.—Proposed LTCH Standard
Federal Prospective Payment Rate
Table 2.—Acute Care Hospitals CaseMix Indexes for Discharges Occurring
in Federal Fiscal Year 2009; Proposed
Hospital Wage Indexes for Federal
Fiscal Year 2011; Hospital Average
Hourly Wages for Federal Fiscal Years
2009 (2005 Wage Data), 2010 (2006
Wage Data), and 2011 (2007 Wage
Data); and 3-Year Average of Hospital
Average Hourly Wages
Table 3A.—FY 2011 and 3-Year Average
Hourly Wage for Acute Care Hospitals
in Urban Areas by CBSA
Table 3B.—FY 2011 and 3-Year Average
Hourly Wage for Acute Care Hospitals
in Rural Areas by CBSA
Table 4A.—Proposed Wage Index and
Capital Geographic Adjustment Factor
(GAF) for Acute Care Hospitals in
Urban Areas by CBSA and by State—
FY 2011
Table 4B.—Proposed Wage Index and
Capital Geographic Adjustment Factor
(GAF) for Acute Care Hospitals in
Rural Areas by CBSA and by State—
FY 2011
Table 4C.—Proposed Wage Index and
Capital Geographic Adjustment Factor
(GAF) for Acute Care Hospitals That
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Are Reclassified by CBSA and by
State—FY 2011
Table 4D–1.—Proposed Rural Floor
Budget Neutrality Factors for Acute
Care Hospitals—FY 2011
Table 4D–2.—Urban Areas with Acute
Care Hospitals Receiving the
Statewide Rural Floor or Imputed
Floor Wage Index—FY 2011
Table 4E.—Urban CBSAs and
Constituent Counties for Acute Care
Hospitals—FY 2011
Table 4F.—Proposed Puerto Rico Wage
Index and Capital Geographic
Adjustment Factor (GAF) for Acute
Care Hospitals by CBSA—FY 2011
Table 4J.—Proposed Out-Migration
Adjustment for Acute Care
Hospitals—FY 2011
Table 5.—List of Medicare Severity
Diagnosis-Related Groups (MS–
DRGs), Relative Weighting Factors,
and Geometric and Arithmetic Mean
Length of Stay
Table 6A.—New Diagnosis Codes
Table 6B.—New Procedure Codes
Table 6C.—Invalid Diagnosis Codes
Table 6D.—Invalid Procedure Codes
Table 6E.—Revised Diagnosis Code
Titles
Table 6F.—Revised Procedure Code
Titles
Table 7A.—Medicare Prospective
Payment System Selected Percentile
Lengths of Stay: FY 2009 MedPAR
Update—December 2009 GROUPER
V27.0 MS–DRGs
Table 7B.—Medicare Prospective
Payment System Selected Percentile
Lengths of Stay: FY 2009 MedPAR
Update—December 2009 GROUPER
V28.0 MS–DRGs
PO 00000
Frm 00240
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Table 8A.—Proposed Statewide Average
Operating Cost-to-Charge Ratios
(CCRs) for Acute Care Hospitals—
March 2009
Table 8B.—Proposed Statewide Average
Capital Cost-to-Charge Ratios (CCRs)
for Acute Care Hospitals—March 2009
Table 8C.—Proposed Statewide Average
Total Cost-to-Charge Ratios (CCRs) for
LTCHs—March 2009
Table 9A.—Hospital Reclassifications
and Redesignations—FY 2011
Table 9C.—Hospitals Redesignated as
Rural under Section 1886(d)(8)(E) of
the Act—FY 2011
Table 10.—Geometric Mean Plus the
Lesser of .75 of the National Adjusted
Operating Standardized Payment
Amount (Increased to Reflect the
Difference Between Costs and
Charges) or .75 of One Standard
Deviation of Mean Charges by
Medicare Severity Diagnosis-Related
Group (MS–DRG) —March 2009
Table 11.—Proposed MS–LTC–DRGs,
Relative Weights, Geometric Average
Length of Stay, and Short-Stay Outlier
(SSO) Threshold for Discharges
Occurring from October 1, 2010
through September 30, 2011 under the
LTCH PPS
Table 12A.—Proposed LTCH PPS Wage
Index for Urban Areas for Discharges
Occurring from October 1, 2010
through September 30, 2011
Table 12B.—Proposed LTCH PPS Wage
Index for Rural Areas for Discharges
Occurring From October 1, 2010
through September 20, 2011
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00241
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24091
EP04MY10.065
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00242
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.066
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24092
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00243
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24093
EP04MY10.067
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00244
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.068
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24094
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00245
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24095
EP04MY10.069
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00246
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.070
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24096
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00247
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24097
EP04MY10.071
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00248
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.072
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24098
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00249
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24099
EP04MY10.073
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00250
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.074
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24100
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00251
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24101
EP04MY10.075
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00252
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.076
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24102
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00253
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24103
EP04MY10.077
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00254
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.078
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24104
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00255
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24105
EP04MY10.079
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00256
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.080
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24106
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00257
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24107
EP04MY10.081
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00258
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.082
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24108
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00259
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24109
EP04MY10.083
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00260
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.084
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24110
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00261
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24111
EP04MY10.085
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00262
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.086
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24112
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00263
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24113
EP04MY10.087
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00264
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.088
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24114
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00265
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24115
EP04MY10.089
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00266
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.090
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24116
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00267
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24117
EP04MY10.091
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00268
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.092
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24118
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00269
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24119
EP04MY10.093
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00270
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.094
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24120
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00271
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24121
EP04MY10.095
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00272
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.096
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24122
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00273
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24123
EP04MY10.097
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00274
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.098
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24124
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00275
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24125
EP04MY10.099
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00276
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.100
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24126
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00277
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24127
EP04MY10.101
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00278
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.102
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24128
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00279
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24129
EP04MY10.103
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00280
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.104
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24130
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00281
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24131
EP04MY10.105
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00282
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.106
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24132
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00283
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24133
EP04MY10.107
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00284
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.108
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24134
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00285
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24135
EP04MY10.109
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00286
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.110
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24136
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00287
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24137
EP04MY10.111
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00288
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.112
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24138
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00289
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24139
EP04MY10.113
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00290
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.114
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24140
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00291
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24141
EP04MY10.115
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00292
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.116
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24142
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00293
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24143
EP04MY10.117
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00294
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.118
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24144
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00295
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24145
EP04MY10.119
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00296
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.120
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24146
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00297
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24147
EP04MY10.121
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00298
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.122
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24148
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00299
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24149
EP04MY10.123
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00300
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.124
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24150
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00301
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24151
EP04MY10.125
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00302
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.126
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24152
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00303
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24153
EP04MY10.127
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00304
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.128
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24154
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00305
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24155
EP04MY10.129
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00306
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.130
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24156
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00307
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24157
EP04MY10.131
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00308
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.132
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24158
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00309
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24159
EP04MY10.133
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00310
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.134
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24160
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00311
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24161
EP04MY10.135
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00312
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.136
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24162
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00313
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24163
EP04MY10.137
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00314
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.138
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24164
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00315
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24165
EP04MY10.139
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00316
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.140
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24166
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00317
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24167
EP04MY10.141
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00318
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.142
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24168
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00319
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24169
EP04MY10.143
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00320
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.144
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24170
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00321
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24171
EP04MY10.145
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00322
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.146
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24172
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00323
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24173
EP04MY10.147
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00324
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.148
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24174
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00325
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24175
EP04MY10.149
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00326
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.150
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24176
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00327
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24177
EP04MY10.151
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00328
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.152
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24178
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00329
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24179
EP04MY10.153
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00330
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.154
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24180
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00331
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24181
EP04MY10.155
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00332
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.156
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24182
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00333
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24183
EP04MY10.157
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00334
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.158
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24184
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00335
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24185
EP04MY10.159
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00336
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.160
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24186
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00337
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24187
EP04MY10.161
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00338
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.162
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24188
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00339
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24189
EP04MY10.163
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00340
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.164
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24190
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00341
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24191
EP04MY10.165
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00342
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.166
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24192
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00343
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24193
EP04MY10.167
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00344
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.168
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24194
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00345
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24195
EP04MY10.169
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00346
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.170
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24196
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00347
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24197
EP04MY10.171
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00348
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.172
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24198
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00349
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24199
EP04MY10.173
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00350
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.174
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24200
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00351
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24201
EP04MY10.175
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00352
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.176
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24202
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00353
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24203
EP04MY10.177
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00354
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.178
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24204
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00355
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24205
EP04MY10.179
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00356
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.180
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24206
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00357
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24207
EP04MY10.181
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00358
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.182
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24208
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00359
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24209
EP04MY10.183
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00360
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.184
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24210
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00361
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24211
EP04MY10.185
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00362
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.186
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24212
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00363
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24213
EP04MY10.187
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00364
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.188
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24214
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00365
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24215
EP04MY10.189
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00366
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.190
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24216
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00367
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24217
EP04MY10.191
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00368
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.192
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24218
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00369
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24219
EP04MY10.193
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00370
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.194
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24220
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00371
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24221
EP04MY10.195
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00372
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.196
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24222
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00373
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24223
EP04MY10.197
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00374
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.198
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24224
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00375
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24225
EP04MY10.199
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00376
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.200
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24226
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00377
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24227
EP04MY10.201
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00378
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.202
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24228
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00379
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24229
EP04MY10.203
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00380
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.204
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24230
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00381
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24231
EP04MY10.205
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00382
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.206
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24232
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00383
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24233
EP04MY10.207
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00384
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.208
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24234
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00385
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24235
EP04MY10.209
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00386
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.210
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24236
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00387
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24237
EP04MY10.211
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00388
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.212
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24238
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00389
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24239
EP04MY10.213
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00390
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.214
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24240
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00391
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24241
EP04MY10.215
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00392
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.216
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24242
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00393
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24243
EP04MY10.217
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00394
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.218
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24244
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00395
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24245
EP04MY10.219
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00396
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.220
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24246
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00397
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24247
EP04MY10.221
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00398
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.222
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24248
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00399
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24249
EP04MY10.223
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00400
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.224
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24250
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00401
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24251
EP04MY10.225
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00402
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.226
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24252
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00403
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24253
EP04MY10.227
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00404
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.228
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24254
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00405
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24255
EP04MY10.229
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00406
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.230
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24256
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00407
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24257
EP04MY10.231
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00408
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.232
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24258
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00409
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24259
EP04MY10.233
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00410
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.234
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24260
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00411
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24261
EP04MY10.235
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00412
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.236
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24262
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00413
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24263
EP04MY10.237
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00414
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.238
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24264
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00415
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24265
EP04MY10.239
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00416
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.240
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24266
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00417
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24267
EP04MY10.241
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00418
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.242
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24268
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00419
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24269
EP04MY10.243
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00420
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.244
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24270
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00421
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24271
EP04MY10.245
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00422
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.246
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24272
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00423
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24273
EP04MY10.247
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00424
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.248
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24274
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00425
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24275
EP04MY10.249
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00426
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.250
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24276
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00427
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24277
EP04MY10.251
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00428
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.252
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24278
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00429
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24279
EP04MY10.253
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00430
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.254
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24280
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00431
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24281
EP04MY10.255
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00432
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.256
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24282
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00433
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24283
EP04MY10.257
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00434
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.258
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24284
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00435
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24285
EP04MY10.259
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
BILLING CODE 4120–10–C
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00436
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.260
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24286
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Appendix A: Regulatory Impact
Analysis
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Note: The impacts of the proposed FY 2011
policy changes and payment rates addressed
in this Appendix do not reflect the
provisions of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111–148), as
amended by the Health Care and Education
Reconciliation Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111–152).
A number of the provisions of Public Law
111–148, as amended by Public Law 111–
152, affect the IPPS and the LTCH PPS and
the providers and suppliers addressed in this
proposed rule. However, due to the timing of
the passage of the legislation, we are unable
to address those provisions in this proposed
rule. Therefore, the proposed policies and
payment rates in this proposed rule do not
reflect the new legislation. We plan to issue
separate documents in the Federal Register
addressing the provisions of Public Law 111–
148, as amended, that affect our proposed
policies and payment rates for FY 2011 under
the IPPS and the LTCH PPS. In addition, we
plan to issue further instructions
implementing the provisions of Public Law
111–148, as amended, that affect the policies
and payment rates for FY 2010 under the
IPPS and for RY 2010 under the LTCH PPS.
I. Overall Impact
We have examined the impacts of this
proposed rule as required by Executive
Order 12866 (September 1993,
Regulatory Planning and Review) and
the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
(September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96–354),
section 1102(b) of the Social Security
Act, the Unfunded Mandates Reform
Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4), Executive
Order 13132 on Federalism, and the
Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C.
804(2)).
Executive Order 12866 directs
agencies to assess all costs and benefits
of available regulatory alternatives and,
if regulation is necessary, to select
regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential
economic, environmental, public health
and safety effects, distributive impacts,
and equity). A regulatory impact
analysis (RIA) must be prepared for
major rules with economically
significant effects ($100 million or more
in any 1 year).
We have determined that this
proposed rule is a major rule as defined
in 5 U.S.C. 804(2). We estimate that the
proposed changes for FY 2011 acute
care hospital operating and capital
payments will redistribute in excess of
$100 million among different types of
inpatient cases. The proposed market
basket update to the IPPS rates required
by the statute, in conjunction with other
proposed payment changes in this
proposed rule, would result in an
estimated $142 million decrease in FY
2011 operating payments (or ¥0.1
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
percent increase), and an estimated $20
million decrease in FY 2011 capital
payments (or ¥0.2 percent change). The
impact analysis of the capital payments
can be found in section VIII. of this
Appendix. In addition, as described in
section IX. of this Appendix, LTCHs are
expected to experience an increase in
payments by $41 million (or 0.8
percent).
Our operating impact estimate
includes the proposed ¥2.9 percent
documentation and coding adjustment
applied to the hospital-specific rates,
the proposed ¥2.4 percent
documentation and coding adjustment
applied to the Puerto Rico-specific rates
and the proposed ¥2.9 percent
adjustment for documentation and
coding changes to the IPPS standardized
amounts. In addition, our operating
impact estimate includes the proposed
2.4 percent market basket update to the
standardized amount. The estimates of
IPPS operating payments to acute care
hospitals do not reflect any changes in
hospital admissions or real case-mix
intensity, which would also affect
overall payment changes.
The RFA requires agencies to analyze
options for regulatory relief of small
businesses. For purposes of the RFA,
small entities include small businesses,
nonprofit organizations, and small
government jurisdictions. Most
hospitals and most other providers and
suppliers are considered to be small
entities, either by being nonprofit
organizations or by meeting the Small
Business Administration definition of a
small business (having revenues of
$34.5 million or less in any 1 year). (For
details on the latest standards for health
care providers, we refer readers to the
Table of Small Business Size Standards
for NAIC 622 found on the Small
Business Administration Office of Size
Standards Web site at: https://
www.sba.gov/contractingopportunities/
officials/size/GC-SMALL-BUS-SIZESTANDARDS.html.) For purposes of the
RFA, all hospitals and other providers
and suppliers are considered to be small
entities. Individuals and States are not
included in the definition of a small
entity. We believe that the provisions of
this proposed rule relating to acute care
hospitals would have a significant
impact on small entities as explained in
this Appendix. Because we lack data on
individual hospital receipts, we cannot
determine the number of small
proprietary LTCHs. Therefore, we are
assuming that all LTCHs are considered
small entities for the purpose of the
analysis in section IX. of this Appendix.
Medicare fiscal intermediaries and
MACs are not considered to be small
entities. Because we acknowledge that
PO 00000
Frm 00437
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24287
many of the affected entities are small
entities, the analysis discussed
throughout the preamble of this
proposed rule constitutes our proposed
regulatory flexibility analysis.
Therefore, we are soliciting public
comments on our estimates and analysis
of the impact of this proposed rule on
those small entities.
The Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
(SBREFA), Public Law 104–121, as
amended by section 8302 of Public Law
110–28, requires an agency to provide
compliance guides for each rule or
group of related rules for which an
agency is required to prepare a final
regulatory flexibility analysis. The
compliance guides associated with this
proposed rule are available on the CMS
IPPS Web page at https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/
01_overview.asp. We also note that the
Hospital Center Web page at https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/center/hospital.asp
was developed to assist hospitals in
understanding and adapting to changes
in Medicare regulations and in billing
and payment procedures. This Web
page provides hospitals with substantial
downloadable explanatory materials.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act
requires us to prepare a regulatory
impact analysis for any proposed or
final rule that may have a significant
impact on the operations of a substantial
number of small rural hospitals. This
analysis must conform to the provisions
of section 603 of the RFA. With the
exception of hospitals located in certain
New England counties, for purposes of
section 1102(b) of the Act, we now
define a small rural hospital as a
hospital that is located outside of an
urban area and has fewer than 100 beds.
Section 601(g) of the Social Security
Amendments of 1983 (Pub. L. 98–21)
designated hospitals in certain New
England counties as belonging to the
adjacent urban area. Thus, for purposes
of the IPPS and the LTCH PPS, we
continue to classify these hospitals as
urban hospitals. (We refer readers to
Table 1 and section VI. of this Appendix
for the quantitative effects of the
proposed policy changes under the IPPS
for operating costs.)
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L.
104–4) also requires that agencies assess
anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule whose mandates
require spending in any 1 year of $100
million in 1995 dollars, updated
annually for inflation. That threshold
level is currently approximately $133
million. This proposed rule would not
mandate any requirements for State,
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24288
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
local, or tribal governments, nor would
it affect private sector costs.
Executive Order 13132 establishes
certain requirements that an agency
must meet when it promulgates a
proposed rule (and subsequent final
rule) that imposes substantial direct
requirement costs on State and local
governments, preempts State law, or
otherwise has Federalism implications.
As stated above, this proposed rule
would not have a substantial effect on
State and local governments.
The following analysis, in
conjunction with the remainder of this
document, demonstrates that this
proposed rule is consistent with the
regulatory philosophy and principles
identified in Executive Order 12866, the
RFA, and section 1102(b) of the Act.
The proposed rule would affect
payments to a substantial number of
small rural hospitals, as well as other
classes of hospitals, and the effects on
some hospitals may be significant.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
II. Objectives of the IPPS
The primary objective of the IPPS is
to create incentives for hospitals to
operate efficiently and minimize
unnecessary costs while at the same
time ensuring that payments are
sufficient to adequately compensate
hospitals for their legitimate costs. In
addition, we share national goals of
preserving the Medicare Hospital
Insurance Trust Fund.
We believe the proposed changes in
this proposed rule would further each of
these goals while maintaining the
financial viability of the hospital
industry and ensuring access to high
quality health care for Medicare
beneficiaries. We expect that these
proposed changes would ensure that the
outcomes of the prospective payment
systems are reasonable and equitable
while avoiding or minimizing
unintended adverse consequences.
III. Limitations of Our Analysis
The following quantitative analysis
presents the projected effects of our
proposed policy changes, as well as
statutory changes effective for FY 2011,
on various hospital groups. We estimate
the effects of individual policy changes
by estimating payments per case while
holding all other payment policies
constant. We use the best data available,
but, generally, we do not attempt to
make adjustments for future changes in
such variables as admissions, lengths of
stay, or case-mix. However, in the FY
2008 IPPS final rule with comment
period, we indicated that we believe
that implementation of the MS–DRGs
would lead to increases in case-mix that
do not reflect actual increases in
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
patients’ severity of illness as a result of
more comprehensive documentation
and coding. As explained in section
II.D. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with
comment period established a
documentation and coding adjustment
of ¥1.2 percent for FY 2008, ¥1.8
percent for FY 2009, and ¥1.8 percent
for FY 2010 to maintain budget
neutrality for the transition to the MS–
DRGs. Subsequently, Congress enacted
Public Law 110–90. Section 7 of Public
Law 110–90 reduced the IPPS
documentation and coding adjustment
from ¥1.2 percent to ¥0.6 percent for
FY 2008 and from ¥1.8 percent to ¥0.9
percent for FY 2009. In the FY 2010
IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74
FR 43773), we postponed the
documentation and coding adjustment
to the average standardized amount
until FY 2011 and did not apply the
adjustment to the average standardized
amount for FY 2010. An analysis of the
FY 2008 IPPS claims data and the FY
2009 IPPS claims data found that an
estimated recoupment adjustment of
¥5.8 percent applied to the national
standardized amount is required to
remove the full effects of documentation
and coding due to the transition to MS–
DRGs. Therefore, we are proposing to
reduce the national standardized
amount for IPPS hospitals by 2.9
percent in FY 2011 with additional
reductions in subsequent years.
Furthermore, we believe that
hospitals that are paid under the
hospital-specific payment rate,
specifically SCHs and MDHs,
experience similar increases in case-mix
due to documentation and coding
changes that do not reflect real changes
in case-mix. Our actuarial office
estimates that hospitals paid under the
hospital-specific rate experienced a 4.8
percent increase in payments due to
documentation and coding changes in
FY 2008 and FY 2009. We did not apply
a documentation and coding adjustment
to the hospital-specific rates when we
first implemented the MS–DRG system.
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
final rule (74 FR 43776), we postponed
the documentation and coding
adjustment to the hospital-specific
payment rate until FY 2011 and did not
apply the adjustment to hospitalspecific payment rate for FY 2010. We
believe that SCHs and MDHs paid under
the hospital-specific rate also should
receive an adjustment to the hospitalspecific rate due to changes in
documentation and coding that do not
reflect real changes in case-mix. Our
best estimate, based on the most
recently available data, is that a
PO 00000
Frm 00438
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
cumulative adjustment of ¥5.4 percent
to the hospital-specific payment rate
would address the effect of the
documentation and coding changes on
future payments. Therefore, for FY
2011, we are proposing to apply a ¥2.9
percent documentation and coding
adjustment to the hospital-specific
payment rate.
Our analysis, as described in section
II.D. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, shows that Puerto Rico hospitals
experienced an increase in case-mix by
1.1 percent in FY 2008 due to changes
in documentation and coding. We did
not apply a documentation and coding
adjustment to the Puerto Rico-specific
rate when we first implemented the
MS–DRG system. In the FY 2010 IPPS/
RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR
43777), consistent with our decision to
postpone documentation and coding
adjustments for the hospital-specific
rate and the Federal standardized
amount, we also postponed the
documentation and coding adjustment
to the Puerto Rico-specific payment rate.
Analysis of claims data from Puerto
Rico hospitals found that a cumulative
adjustment of ¥2.4 percent is required
to eliminate the full effect of the
documentation and coding changes on
future payments from the Puerto Ricospecific rate. Therefore, for FY 2011, we
are proposing to apply a ¥2.4 percent
adjustment to the Puerto Rico-specific
rate to account for changes due to
documentation and coding.
The impacts shown below illustrate
the impact of the proposed FY 2011
IPPS changes on acute care hospital
operating payments, including the
proposed ¥2.9 percent FY 2011
documentation and coding adjustment
to the IPPS national standardized
amount, the proposed ¥2.9 percent FY
2011 documentation and coding
adjustment to the hospital-specific
payment rates, and the proposed ¥2.4
percent FY 2011 documentation and
coding adjustment to the Puerto Ricospecific standardized amount. The
proposed documentation and coding
adjustment that would be applicable to
the Federal rate under the LTCH PPS for
FY 2011 is discussed in section IX. of
this Appendix. As we have done in the
previous rules, we are soliciting public
comments and information about the
anticipated effects of the proposed
changes on acute care hospitals and our
methodology for estimating them.
IV. Hospitals Included in and Excluded
From the IPPS
The prospective payment systems for
hospital inpatient operating and capitalrelated costs of acute care hospitals
encompass most general short-term,
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
acute care hospitals that participate in
the Medicare program. There were 33
Indian Health Service hospitals in our
database, which we excluded from the
analysis due to the special
characteristics of the prospective
payment methodology for these
hospitals. Among other short-term,
acute care hospitals, only the 46 such
hospitals in Maryland remain excluded
from the IPPS pursuant to the waiver
under section 1814(b)(3) of the Act.
As of March 2010, there are 3,472
IPPS acute care hospitals to be included
in our analysis. This represents about 64
percent of all Medicare-participating
hospitals. The majority of this impact
analysis focuses on this set of hospitals.
There are also approximately 1,338
CAHs. These small, limited service
hospitals are paid on the basis of
reasonable costs rather than under the
IPPS. (We refer readers to section VII. of
this Appendix for a further description
of the impact of CAH-related proposed
policy changes.) There are also 1,270
IPPS-excluded hospitals and 2,169
IPPS-excluded hospital units. These
IPPS-excluded hospitals and units
include IPFs, IRFs, LTCHs, RNHCIs,
children’s hospitals, and cancer
hospitals, which are paid under separate
payment systems. Changes in the
prospective payment systems for IPFs
and IRFs are made through separate
rulemaking. Payment impacts for these
IPPS-excluded hospitals and units are
not included in this proposed rule. The
impact of the proposed update and
policy changes to the LTCH PPS for FY
2011 are discussed in section IX. of this
Appendix.
V. Effects on Hospitals and Hospital
Units Excluded From the IPPS
As of March 2010, there were 3,439
hospitals and hospital units excluded
from the IPPS. Of these, 78 children’s
hospitals, 11 cancer hospitals, and 17
RNHCIs are being paid on a reasonable
cost basis subject to the rate-of-increase
ceiling under § 413.40. The remaining
providers, 228 rehabilitation hospitals
and 961 rehabilitation units, and 429
LTCHs, are paid the Federal prospective
per discharge rate under the IRF PPS
and the LTCH PPS, respectively, and
507 psychiatric hospitals and 1,208
psychiatric units are paid the Federal
per diem amount under the IPF PPS. As
stated above, IRFs and IPFs are not
affected by rate updates in this proposed
rule. The impacts of the changes to
LTCHs are discussed in section IX. of
this Appendix.
In the past, certain hospitals and units
excluded from the IPPS have been paid
based on their reasonable costs subject
to limits as established by the Tax
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of
1982 (TEFRA). Cancer and children’s
hospitals continue to be paid on a
reasonable cost basis subject to TEFRA
limits for FY 2011. For these hospitals
(cancer and children’s hospitals),
consistent with the authority provided
in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ii) of the Act,
the update is the percentage increase in
the FY 2011 IPPS operating market
basket. In compliance with section 404
of the MMA, in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY
2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR
43930), we replaced the FY 2002-based
IPPS operating and capital market
baskets with the revised and rebased FY
2006-based IPPS operating and capital
market baskets. Therefore, consistent
with current law, based on IHS Global
Insight, Inc.’s 2010 first quarter forecast,
with historical data through the 2009
fourth quarter, we are estimating that
the proposed FY 2011 update to the
IPPS operating market basket would be
2.4 percent (that is, the current estimate
of the market basket rate-of-increase). In
addition, in accordance with
§ 403.752(a) of the regulations, RNHCIs
are paid under § 413.40. Therefore, for
RNHCIs, the proposed update is the
same as for children’s and cancer
hospitals, which is the percentage
increase in the FY 2011 IPPS operating
market basket increase, estimated to be
2.4 percent.
The impact of the proposed update in
the rate-of-increase limit on those
excluded hospitals depends on the
cumulative cost increases experienced
by each excluded hospital since its
applicable base period. For excluded
hospitals that have maintained their
cost increases at a level below the rateof-increase limits since their base
period, the major effect is on the level
of incentive payments these excluded
hospitals receive. Conversely, for
excluded hospitals with per-case cost
increases above the cumulative update
in their rate-of-increase limits, the major
effect is the amount of excess costs that
will not be reimbursed.
We note that, under § 413.40(d)(3), an
excluded hospital that continues to be
paid under the TEFRA system, whose
costs exceed 110 percent of its rate-ofincrease limit receives its rate-ofincrease limit plus 50 percent of the
difference between its reasonable costs
and 110 percent of the limit, not to
exceed 110 percent of its limit. In
addition, under the various provisions
set forth in § 413.40, cancer and
children’s hospitals can obtain payment
adjustments for justifiable increases in
operating costs that exceed the limit.
PO 00000
Frm 00439
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24289
VI. Quantitative Effects of the Policy
Changes Under the IPPS for Operating
Costs
A. Basis and Methodology of Estimates
In this proposed rule, we are
announcing proposed policy changes
and payment rate updates for the IPPS
for operating costs of acute care
hospitals. Updates to the capital
payments to acute care hospitals are
discussed in section VIII. of this
Appendix. Based on the overall
percentage change in payments per case
estimated using our payment simulation
model, we estimate that total FY 2011
operating payments would decrease by
0.1 percent compared to FY 2010,
largely due to the documentation and
coding adjustments and market basket
update to the IPPS rates. This amount
reflects the proposed FY 2011
documentation and coding adjustments
described above and in section II.D. of
the preamble of this proposed rule:
¥2.9 percent for the IPPS national
standardized amounts, ¥2.9 percent for
the IPPS hospital-specific rates, and
¥2.4 percent for the IPPS Puerto Ricospecific standardized amount. The
impacts do not illustrate changes in
hospital admissions or real case-mix
intensity, which will also affect overall
payment changes.
We have prepared separate impact
analyses of the proposed changes to
each system. This section deals with
changes to the operating prospective
payment system for acute care hospitals.
Our payment simulation model relies on
the most recent available data to enable
us to estimate the impacts on payments
per case of certain proposed changes in
this proposed rule. However, there are
other proposed changes for which we do
not have data available that would allow
us to estimate the payment impacts
using this model. For those proposed
changes, we have attempted to predict
the payment impacts based upon our
experience and other more limited data.
The data used in developing the
quantitative analyses of changes in
payments per case presented below are
taken from the FY 2009 MedPAR file
and the most current Provider-Specific
File that is used for payment purposes.
Although the analyses of the proposed
changes to the operating PPS do not
incorporate cost data, data from the
most recently available hospital cost
report were used to categorize hospitals.
Our analysis has several qualifications.
First, in this analysis, we do not make
adjustments for future changes in such
variables as admissions, lengths of stay,
or underlying growth in real case-mix.
Second, due to the interdependent
nature of the IPPS payment
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24290
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
components, it is very difficult to
precisely quantify the impact associated
with each change. Third, we use various
sources for the data used to categorize
hospitals in the tables. In some cases,
particularly the number of beds, there is
a fair degree of variation in the data
from different sources. We have
attempted to construct these variables
with the best available source overall.
However, for individual hospitals, some
miscategorizations are possible.
Using cases from the FY 2009
MedPAR file, we simulated payments
under the operating IPPS given various
combinations of payment parameters.
Any short-term, acute care hospitals not
paid under the IPPS (Indian Health
Service hospitals and hospitals in
Maryland) were excluded from the
simulations. The impact of payments
under the capital IPPS, or the impact of
payments for costs other than inpatient
operating costs, are not analyzed in this
section. Estimated payment impacts of
the capital IPPS for FY 2011 are
discussed in section VIII. of this
Appendix.
The changes discussed separately
below are the following:
• The effects of the proposed annual
reclassification of diagnoses and
procedures, full implementation of the
MS–DRG system and 100 percent costbased MS–DRG relative weights.
• The effects of the proposed changes
in hospitals’ wage index values
reflecting wage data from hospitals’ cost
reporting periods beginning during FY
2007, compared to the FY 2006 wage
data.
• The effects of the recalibration of
the MS–DRG relative weights as
required by section 1886(d)(4)(C) of the
Act, including the proposed wage and
recalibration budget neutrality factors.
• The effects of geographic
reclassifications by the MGCRB that will
be effective in FY 2011.
• The effects of the third year of the
3-year transition to apply rural floor
budget neutrality adjustment at the State
level. For purposes of this impact
analysis, we assume that in FY 2011,
hospitals will receive a wage index with
the State level rural and imputed floor
budget neutrality adjustment. However,
we recognize that this policy was
recently changed by the provisions of
section 3141 of Public Law 111–148 and
will address the new impact in a
separate document in the Federal
Register.
• The effects of section 505 of Public
Law 108–173, which provides for an
increase in a hospital’s wage index if the
hospital qualifies by meeting a
threshold percentage of residents of the
county where the hospital is located
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
who commute to work at hospitals in
counties with higher wage indexes.
• The total estimated change in
payments based on the proposed FY
2011 policies relative to payments based
on FY 2010 policies that include the
proposed market basket update of 2.4
percent.
To illustrate the impacts of the
proposed FY 2011 changes, our analysis
begins with a FY 2010 baseline
simulation model using: The proposed
FY 2011 market basket update of 2.4
percent; the FY 2010 MS–DRG
GROUPER (Version 27.0); the most
current CBSA designations for hospitals
based on OMB’s MSA definitions; the
FY 2010 wage index; and no MGCRB
reclassifications. Outlier payments are
set at 5.1 percent of total operating MS–
DRG and outlier payments.
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act,
as added by section 5001(a) of Public
Law 109–171, provides that, for FY 2007
and subsequent years, the update factor
will be reduced by 2.0 percentage points
for any hospital that does not submit
quality data in a form and manner and
at a time specified by the Secretary. At
the time that this impact was prepared,
104 hospitals did not receive the full
market basket rate-of-increase for FY
2010 because they failed the quality
data submission process or did not
choose to participate. For purposes of
the simulations shown below, we
modeled the proposed payment changes
for FY 2011 using a reduced update for
these 104 hospitals. However, we do not
have enough information at this time to
determine which hospitals will not
receive the full market basket rate-ofincrease for FY 2011.
Each policy change, statutory or
otherwise, is then added incrementally
to this baseline, finally arriving at an FY
2011 model incorporating all of the
changes. This simulation allows us to
isolate the effects of each proposed
change.
Our final comparison illustrates the
proposed percent change in payments
per case from FY 2010 to FY 2011.
Three factors not discussed separately
have significant impacts here. The first
factor is the update to the standardized
amount. In accordance with section
1886(b)(3)(B)(i) of the Act, we are
proposing to update the standardized
amounts for FY 2011 using the most
recently forecasted hospital market
basket increase for FY 2011 of 2.4
percent. (Hospitals that fail to comply
with the quality data submission
requirements to receive the full update
will receive an update reduced by 2.0
percentage points from 2.4 percent to
0.4 percent.) Under section
1886(b)(3)(B)(iv) of the Act, the updates
PO 00000
Frm 00440
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
to the hospital-specific amounts for
SCHs and for MDHs are also equal to the
market basket percentage increase, or
2.4 percent.
A second significant factor that affects
the changes in hospitals’ payments per
case from FY 2010 to FY 2011 is the
change in a hospital’s geographic
reclassification status from one year to
the next. That is, payments may be
reduced for hospitals reclassified in FY
2010 that are no longer reclassified in
FY 2011. Conversely, payments may
increase for hospitals not reclassified in
FY 2010 that are reclassified in FY 2011.
A third significant factor is that we
currently estimate that actual outlier
payments during FY 2011 will be 5.1
percent of total MS–DRG payments.
When the FY 2010 final rule was
published, we projected FY 2010 outlier
payments would be 5.1 percent of total
MS–DRG plus outlier payments; the
average standardized amounts were
offset correspondingly. The effects of
the higher than expected outlier
payments during FY 2010 (as discussed
in the Addendum to this proposed rule)
are reflected in the analyses below
comparing our current estimates of FY
2010 payments per case to estimated FY
2011 payments per case (with outlier
payments projected to equal 5.1 percent
of total MS–DRG payments).
B. Analysis of Table I
Table I displays the results of our
analysis of the proposed changes for FY
2011. The table categorizes hospitals by
various geographic and special payment
consideration groups to illustrate the
varying impacts on different types of
hospitals. The top row of the table
shows the overall impact on the 3,472
acute care hospitals included in the
analysis.
The next four rows of Table I contain
hospitals categorized according to their
geographic location: All urban, which is
further divided into large urban and
other urban; and rural. There are 2,502
hospitals located in urban areas
included in our analysis. Among these,
there are 1,365 hospitals located in large
urban areas (populations over 1
million), and 1,137 hospitals in other
urban areas (populations of 1 million or
fewer). In addition, there are 970
hospitals in rural areas. The next two
groupings are by bed-size categories,
shown separately for urban and rural
hospitals. The final groupings by
geographic location are by census
divisions, also shown separately for
urban and rural hospitals.
The second part of Table I shows
hospital groups based on hospitals’ FY
2011 payment classifications, including
any reclassifications under section
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
1886(d)(10) of the Act. For example, the
rows labeled urban, large urban, other
urban, and rural show that the numbers
of hospitals paid based on these
categorizations after consideration of
geographic reclassifications (including
reclassifications under section
1886(d)(8)(B) and section 1886(d)(8)(E)
of the Act that have implications for
capital payments) are 2,555, 1,403,
1,152 and 917, respectively.
The next three groupings examine the
impacts of the changes on hospitals
grouped by whether or not they have
GME residency programs (teaching
hospitals that receive an IME
adjustment) or receive DSH payments,
or some combination of these two
adjustments. There are 2,434
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
nonteaching hospitals in our analysis,
798 teaching hospitals with fewer than
100 residents, and 240 teaching
hospitals with 100 or more residents.
In the DSH categories, hospitals are
grouped according to their DSH
payment status, and whether they are
considered urban or rural for DSH
purposes. The next category groups
together hospitals considered urban or
rural, in terms of whether they receive
the IME adjustment, the DSH
adjustment, both, or neither.
The next five rows examine the
impacts of the changes on rural
hospitals by special payment groups
(SCHs, RRCs, and MDHs). There were
183 RRCs, 340 SCHs, 187 MDHs, and
108 hospitals that are both SCHs and
PO 00000
Frm 00441
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24291
RRCs, and 13 hospitals that are both an
MDH and an RRC.
The next series of groupings are based
on the type of ownership and the
hospital’s Medicare utilization
expressed as a percent of total patient
days. These data were taken from the FY
2008 or FY 2007 Medicare cost reports.
The next two groupings concern the
geographic reclassification status of
hospitals. The first grouping displays all
urban hospitals that were reclassified by
the MGCRB for FY 2011. The second
grouping shows the MGCRB rural
reclassifications.
The final category shows the impact
of the proposed policy changes on the
19 cardiac hospitals in our analysis.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00442
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.262
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24292
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00443
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24293
EP04MY10.263
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00444
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.264
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24294
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00445
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24295
EP04MY10.265
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00446
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.266
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24296
24297
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00447
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.267
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
24298
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
C. Effects of the Proposed Changes to
the MS–DRG Reclassifications and
Relative Cost-Based Weights (Column 1)
In Column 1 of Table I, we present the
effects of the proposed MS–DRG
reclassifications, as discussed in section
II. of the preamble to this proposed rule.
Section 1886(d)(4)(C)(i) of the Act
requires us annually to make
appropriate classification changes in
order to reflect changes in treatment
patterns, technology, and any other
factors that may change the relative use
of hospital resources.
As discussed in the preamble of this
proposed rule, the proposed FY 2011
MS–DRG relative weights will be 100
percent cost-based and 100 percent MS–
DRGs. For FY 2011, the MS–DRGs are
calculated using the FY 2009 MedPAR
data grouped to the Version 28.0 (FY
2011) MS–DRGs. The methods of
calculating the proposed relative
weights and the reclassification changes
to the GROUPER are described in more
detail in section II.H. of the preamble to
this proposed rule. The proposed
changes to the relative weights and MS–
DRGs shown in Column 2 are prior to
any offset for budget neutrality. Overall,
hospitals will experience a 0.3 percent
increase in payments due to the changes
in the MS–DRGs and relative weights
prior to budget neutrality. Urban
hospitals and rural hospitals will
experience a 0.3 percent increase in
payments under the updates to the
relative weights and MS–DRGs.
D. Effects of the Application of
Recalibration Budget Neutrality
(Column 2)
Column 2 shows the effects of the
changes to the MS–DRGs and relative
weights with the application of the
recalibration budget neutrality factor to
the standardized amounts. Consistent
with section 1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the
Act, we are calculating a recalibration
budget neutrality factor to account for
the changes in MS–DRGs and relative
weights to ensure that the overall
payment impact is budget neutral. In FY
2010, we began calculating a budget
neutrality factor to account for changes
in MS–DRGs and relative weights
separately from the budget neutrality
factor to account for changes in wage
data. In addition, as described in section
II.A.4. of the Addendum to this
proposed rule, we are including IME
payments made on Medicare Advantage
claims to IPPS hospitals in order to
calculate budget neutrality.
The ‘‘All Hospitals’’ line in Column 1
indicates that proposed changes due to
MS–DRGs and relative weights will
increase payments by 0.3 percent before
application of the budget neutrality
factor. The proposed recalibration
budget neutrality factor is 0.996856,
which is applied to the standardized
amount. Thus, the impact after
accounting only for budget neutrality for
changes to the MS–DRG relative weights
and classification is somewhat lower
than the figures shown in Column 1
(approximately 0.3 percent).
Consequentially, urban and rural
hospitals will not experience a change
in payments when recalibration budget
neutrality is applied.
E. Effects of Proposed Wage Index
Changes (Column 3)
Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act
requires that, beginning October 1, 1993,
we annually update the wage data used
to calculate the wage index. In
accordance with this requirement, the
proposed wage index for acute care
hospitals for FY 2011 is based on data
submitted for hospital cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2006 and before October 1, 2007. The
estimated impact of the updated wage
data and labor share on hospital
payments is isolated in Column 3 by
holding the other payment parameters
constant in this simulation. That is,
Column 3 shows the percentage change
in payments when going from a model
using the FY 2010 wage index, based on
FY 2006 wage data, the current laborrelated share and having a 100-percent
occupational mix adjustment applied, to
a model using the FY 2011 prereclassification wage index with the
labor-related share, also having a 100percent occupational mix adjustment
applied, based on FY 2007 wage data
(while holding other payment
parameters such as use of the Version
28.0 MS–DRG GROUPER constant). The
occupational mix adjustment is based
on the FY 2008/2009 occupational mix
survey.
Column 3 shows the impacts of
updating the wage data using FY 2007
cost reports. Overall, the new wage data
will lead to a 0.0 percent change for all
hospitals before being combined with
the wage budget neutrality adjustment
shown in Column 5. Among the regions,
the largest increase is in the rural
Middle Atlantic region, which
experiences a 0.4 percent increase
before applying an adjustment for
budget neutrality. The largest decline
from updating the wage data is seen in
Urban East South Central (0.5 percent
decrease).
In looking at the wage data itself, the
national average hourly wage increased
1.2 percent compared to FY 2010.
Therefore, the only manner in which to
maintain or exceed the previous year’s
wage index was to match or exceed the
national 1.2 percent increase in average
hourly wage. Of the 3,442 hospitals with
wage data for both FYs 2010 and 2011,
2,696, or 78.3 percent, experienced an
average hourly wage increase of 1.2
percent or more.
The following chart compares the
shifts in proposed wage index values for
hospitals for FY 2011 relative to FY
2010. Among urban hospitals, 39 will
experience an increase of more than 5
percent and less than 10 percent and 7
will experience an increase of more than
10 percent. Among rural hospitals, 2
will experience an increase of more than
5 percent and less than 10 percent, and
none will experience an increase of
more than 10 percent. However, 938
rural hospitals will experience increases
or decreases of less than 5 percent,
while 2,415 urban hospitals will
experience increases or decreases of less
than 5 percent. Twenty-four urban
hospitals will experience decreases in
their wage index values of more than 5
percent and less than 10 percent.
Sixteen urban hospitals will experience
decreases in their wage index values of
greater than 10 percent. One rural
hospital will experience a decrease of
more than 10 percent. These figures
reflect changes in the wage index which
is an adjustment to either 68.8 percent
or 62 percent of a hospital’s
standardized amount, depending upon
whether its wage index is greater than
1.0 or less than or equal to 1.0.
Therefore, these figures are illustrating a
somewhat larger change in the wage
index than will occur to the hospital’s
total payment.
The following chart shows the
projected impact for urban and rural
hospitals.
Number of hospitals
Percentage change in area wage index values
Urban
Increase more than 10 percent ...............................................................................................................................
Increase more than 5 percent and less than 10 percent ........................................................................................
Increase or decrease less than 5 percent ...............................................................................................................
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00448
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
7
39
2,415
Rural
0
2
938
24299
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Number of hospitals
Percentage change in area wage index values
Urban
Decrease more than 5 percent and less than 10 percent ......................................................................................
Decrease more than 10 percent ..............................................................................................................................
F. Application of the Wage Budget
Neutrality Factor (Column 4)
Column 4 shows the impact of the
new wage data with the application of
the wage budget neutrality factor. In FY
2010, we began calculating separate
wage budget neutrality and recalibration
budget neutrality factors, in accordance
with section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act,
which specifies that budget neutrality to
account for wage changes or updates
made under that subparagraph must be
made without regard to the 62 percent
labor-related share guaranteed under
section 1886(d)(3)(E)(ii) of the Act.
Therefore, for FY 2011, we are
calculating the wage budget neutrality
factor to ensure that payments under
updated wage data and the proposed
labor-related share are budget neutral
without regard to the lower labor-related
share of 62 percent applied to hospitals
with a wage index less than or equal to
1. In other words, the wage budget
neutrality is calculated under the
assumption that all hospitals receive the
higher labor-related share of the
standardized amount. Because the wage
data changes did not change overall
payments (displayed in Column 3), the
wage budget neutrality factor is minimal
at 1.000107, and the overall payment
change is 0.0 percent.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
G. Combined Effects of Proposed
MS–DRG and Wage Index Changes
(Column 5)
Section 1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act
requires that changes to MS–DRG
reclassifications and the relative weights
cannot increase or decrease aggregate
payments. In addition, section
1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act specifies that
any updates or adjustments to the wage
index are to be budget neutral. We
computed a proposed wage budget
neutrality factor of 1.000107, and a
proposed recalibration budget neutrality
factor of 0.996856 (which is applied to
the Puerto Rico specific standardized
amount and the hospital-specific rates).
The product of the two budget
neutrality factors is the cumulative wage
and recalibration budget neutrality
factor. The proposed cumulative wage
and recalibration budget neutrality
adjustment is 0.996963, or
approximately ¥0.3 percent, which is
applied to the national standardized
amounts. Because the wage budget
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
neutrality and the recalibration budget
neutrality are calculated under different
methodologies according to the statute,
when the two budget neutralities are
combined and applied to the
standardized amount, the overall
payment impact is not necessarily
budget neutral. However, in this
proposed rule, we are estimating that
the proposed changes in the MS–DRG,
relative weights and updated wage data
with wage and budget neutrality applied
will result in a 0.0 change in payments.
The estimated changes shown in this
column reflect the combined effects of
the changes in Columns 2, 3, and 4 and
the budget neutrality factors discussed
previously.
We estimate that the combined impact
of the proposed changes to the relative
weights and MS–DRGs and the
proposed updated wage data with
budget neutrality applied will result in
no change in payments for urban or
rural hospitals. Urban New England
would experience a 0.6 decrease in
payments due to reductions in their
case-mix and wages compared to the
national average, while the urban
Pacific area would experience a 0.5
percent increase in payments because of
above average increases in wages and
case-mix. Among the rural hospital
categories, rural South Atlantic
hospitals would experience the greatest
decline in payment (¥0.9 percent)
primarily due to the changes to MS–
DRGs and the relative cost weights.
H. Effects of MGCRB Reclassifications
(Column 6)
Our impact analysis to this point has
assumed acute care hospitals are paid
on the basis of their actual geographic
location (with the exception of ongoing
policies that provide that certain
hospitals receive payments on other
bases than where they are
geographically located). The changes in
Column 6 reflect the per case payment
impact of moving from this baseline to
a simulation incorporating the MGCRB
decisions for FY 2011 which affect
hospitals’ wage index area assignments.
By spring of each year, the MGCRB
makes reclassification determinations
that will be effective for the next fiscal
year, which begins on October 1. The
MGCRB may approve a hospital’s
reclassification request for the purpose
of using another area’s wage index
PO 00000
Frm 00449
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Rural
24
16
0
1
value. Hospitals may appeal denials of
MGCRB decisions to the CMS
Administrator. Further, hospitals have
45 days from publication of the IPPS
rule in the Federal Register to decide
whether to withdraw or terminate an
approved geographic reclassification for
the following year. This column reflects
all MGCRB decisions, Administrator
appeals and decisions of hospitals for
FY 2011 geographic reclassifications.
The overall effect of geographic
reclassification is required by section
1886(d)(8)(D) of the Act to be budget
neutral. Therefore, for the purposes of
this impact analysis, we are applying an
adjustment of 0.991756 to ensure that
the effects of the section 1886(d)(10)
reclassifications are budget neutral
(section II.A. of the Addendum to this
proposed rule). Geographic
reclassification generally benefits
hospitals in rural areas. We estimate
that geographic reclassification will
increase payments to rural hospitals by
an average of 1.6 percent. By region, all
the rural hospital categories will
experience increases in payments due to
MGCRB reclassification where rural
hospitals in the Mountain region will
experience a 0.1 percent increase in
payments and rural hospitals in the East
South Central region will experience a
2.4 percent increase in payments.
Table 9A of the Addendum to this
proposed rule reflects the approved
reclassifications for FY 2011.
I. Effects of the Rural Floor and Imputed
Floor, Including Application of Budget
Neutrality at the State Level (Column 7)
As discussed in section III.B. of the
preamble of the FY 2009 IPPS final rule,
the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH final
rule and this proposed rule, section
4410 of Public Law 105–33 established
the rural floor by requiring that the wage
index for a hospital in any urban area
cannot be less than the wage index
received by rural hospitals in the same
State. In FY 2008, we changed how we
applied budget neutrality to the rural
floor. Rather than applying a budget
neutrality adjustment to the
standardized amount, a uniform budget
neutrality adjustment is applied to the
wage index. In the FY 2009 final rule,
we finalized the policy to apply the
rural floor budget neutrality at the State
level with a 3-year transition. In FY
2009, hospitals received a blended wage
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24300
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
index that is 20 percent of a wage index
with the State level rural and imputed
floor budget neutrality adjustment and
80 percent of a wage index with the
national budget neutrality adjustment.
In FY 2010, hospitals received a
blended wage index that is 50 percent
of a wage index with the State level
rural and imputed floor budget
neutrality and 50 percent of a wage
index with the national budget
neutrality adjustment. For FY 2011, for
purposes of this impact analysis, we
assume application of the third year of
the transitional period so that wage
indices adjusted for the rural floor will
have 100 percent of the wage index
adjusted with a within-State rural
budget neutrality factor. However, we
recognize that this policy was recently
changed by the provisions of section
3141 of Public Law 111–148.
Furthermore, the FY 2005 IPPS final
rule (69 FR 49109) established a
temporary imputed floor for all urban
States from FY 2005 to FY 2007. The
rural floor requires that an urban wage
index cannot be lower than the wage
index for any rural hospital in that
State. Therefore, an imputed floor was
established for States that do not have
rural areas or rural IPPS hospitals. In the
FY 2008 IPPS final rule with comment
period (72 FR 47321), we finalized our
proposal to extend the imputed floor for
1 additional year. In the FY 2009 IPPS
final rule (73 FR 48573), we extended
the imputed floor for an additional 3
years through FY 2011. Furthermore, as
noted above, in that final rule we
provided for a 3-year transition to the
rural floor budget neutrality adjustment
at the State level. Therefore, we also
apply the imputed floor budget
neutrality adjustment at the State level
through a 3-year transition, so that, for
FY 2011, wage indices adjusted for the
imputed floor will have 100 percent of
the wage index computed using the
within-State rural and imputed budget
neutrality adjustment.
Column 7 shows the projected impact
of the rural floor and the imputed floor
and the within-State rural and imputed
floor budget neutrality. The column
compares the proposed postreclassification FY 2011 wage index of
providers before the rural floor
adjustment and the post-reclassification
FY 2011 wage index of providers with
the rural floor and imputed floor
adjustment. Only urban hospitals can
benefit from the rural floor provision.
Because the provision is budget neutral,
in prior years, all other hospitals (that
is, all rural hospitals and those urban
hospitals to which the adjustment is not
made) had experienced a decrease in
payments due to the budget neutrality
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
adjustment applied nationally.
However, because, for FY 2011, this
calculation assumes that the rural floor
adjusted wage index is made budget
neutral through a within-State budget
neutrality factor, rural hospitals and
urban hospitals located in States that do
not benefit from the rural floor will not
experience a change in payments
attributable to the rural floor.
Conversely, all hospitals in States with
hospitals receiving a rural floor will
have their wage indices downwardly
adjusted to achieve budget neutrality
within the State.
We project that, in aggregate, rural
hospitals will experience a 0.1 percent
decrease in payments as a result of the
application of rural floor budget
neutrality because the rural hospitals
located in States with a rural floor do
not benefit from the rural floor, but have
their wage indexes downwardly
adjusted to ensure that the application
of the rural floor is budget neutral
overall within the State. We project
hospitals located in other urban areas
(populations of 1 million or fewer) will
experience a 0.1 percent increase in
payments because those providers
benefit from the rural floor. Urban
hospitals in the regions can expect
0 percent change in payments because
within each state, the rural floor is
budget neutral and increases in
payments for providers receiving the
rural floor re offset by the within-State
budget neutrality factors applied to the
wage index of the providers in States
with a rural floor. Rural hospitals
located in the Pacific area will
experience a 0.3 percent decrease in
payments because of the rural floor
budget neutrality factor in California
downwardly adjusts the wage index by
2.4 percent. Rural hospitals located in
the Middle Atlantic area will experience
a 0.1 percent decrease in payments
because of the imputed rural floor
budget neutrality factor (0.97946) in
New Jersey downwardly adjusts the
wage index for rural hospitals by
approximately 2 percent.
J. Effects of the Proposed Wage Index
Adjustment for Out-Migration (Column
8)
Section 1886(d)(13) of the Act, as
added by section 505 of Public Law
108–173, provides for an increase in the
wage index for hospitals located in
certain counties that have a relatively
high percentage of hospital employees
who reside in the county, but work in
a different area with a higher wage
index. Hospitals located in counties that
qualify for the payment adjustment are
to receive an increase in the wage index
that is equal to a weighted average of the
PO 00000
Frm 00450
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
difference between the wage index of
the resident county, post-reclassification
and the higher wage index work area(s),
weighted by the overall percentage of
workers who are employed in an area
with a higher wage index. With the outmigration adjustment, small rural DSH
providers with less than 100 beds will
experience a 0.5 percent increase in
payments in FY 2011 relative to no
adjustment at all. We included these
additional payments to providers in the
impact table shown above, and we
estimate the impact of these providers
receiving the out-migration increase to
be approximately $20 million.
K. Effects of All Proposed Changes Prior
to Documentation and Coding (or CMI)
Adjustment (Column 9)
Column 9 shows our estimate of the
changes in payments per discharge from
FY 2010 and FY 2011, resulting from all
proposed changes reflected in this
proposed rule for FY 2011 (including
statutory changes), other than the
proposed documentation and coding
adjustment. Column 9 reflects the
impact of all other FY 2011 changes
relative to FY 2010, including those
shown in Columns 1 through 8. The
average increase in payments under the
IPPS for all hospitals is approximately
2.8 percent. In addition, it reflects the
estimated 0.5 percentage point
difference between the projected outlier
payments in FY 2010 (5.1 percent of
total MS–DRG payments), the current
estimate of the percentage of actual
outlier payments in FY 2010 (4.7
percent) as described in the
introduction to this Appendix and the
Addendum to this proposed rule.
There might also be interactive effects
among the various factors comprising
the payment system that we are not able
to isolate. For these reasons, the values
in Column 9 may not equal the sum of
the percentage changes described above.
L. Effects of All Proposed Changes With
CMI Adjustment (Column 10)
Column 10 shows our estimate of the
changes in payments per discharge from
FY 2010 and FY 2011, resulting from all
proposed changes reflected in this
proposed rule for FY 2011 (including
statutory changes). This column
includes the proposed FY 2011
documentation and coding adjustment
of ¥2.9 percent on the national
standardized amount, ¥2.9 percent on
the hospital-specific rates, and ¥2.4
percent on the Puerto Rico-specific
standardized amount, which overall
accounts for a 2.9 percent decrease in
payments.
Column 10 reflects the impact of all
proposed FY 2011 changes relative to
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
FY 2010, including those shown in
Columns 1 through 9. The average
decrease in payments under the IPPS for
all hospitals is approximately ¥0.1
percent. As described in Column 9, this
average decrease includes the effects of
the 2.4 percent market basket update,
the 0.5 percentage point difference
between the projected outlier payments
in FY 2010 (5.1 percent of total MS–
DRG payments), and the current
estimate of the percentage of actual
outlier payments in FY 2010 (4.7
percent). There might also be interactive
effects among the various factors
comprising the payment system that we
are not able to isolate. For these reasons,
the values in Column 10 may not equal
the sum of the percentage changes
described above.
The overall proposed change in
payments per discharge for hospitals
paid under the IPPS in FY 2011 is
estimated to decrease by 0.1 percent.
The payment decreases among the
hospital categories are largely attributed
to the proposed documentation and
coding adjustments. Hospitals in urban
areas would experience an estimated 0.1
percent decrease in payments per
discharge in FY 2011 compared to FY
2010. Hospital payments per discharge
in rural areas are estimated to decrease
by 0.5 percent in FY 2011 as compared
to FY 2010. The decreases larger than
the national average for rural areas are
largely attributed to the differential
impact of the MS–DRGs and wage data
and due to the ¥2.9 percent
documentation and coding adjustment
applied to the national standardized
amount and the ¥2.9 percent
documentation and coding adjustment
to the hospital-specific rate applied to
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
SCHs and MDHs, which generally are
classified as rural hospitals.
Among urban census divisions, the
largest estimated payment decreases
will be 0.9 percent in the New England
region and 0.6 percent in the Middle
Atlantic region, while urban hospitals in
the Pacific will see the largest payment
increases (0.5 percent). Among the rural
regions, the providers in the New
England region will experience the
largest decrease in payments (1.6
percent) because of reductions due to
case-mix and the documentation and
coding adjustments while rural
hospitals in the West South Central
region will experience an increase in
payments by 0.4 percent due to
increases in case-mix, wage data and
MGCRB reclassification.
Among special categories of rural
hospitals, MDHs will receive an
estimated payment decrease of 0.6
percent. MDHs are paid the higher of
the IPPS rate based on the national
standardized amount, that is, the
Federal rate, or, if the hospital-specific
rate exceeds the Federal rate, the
Federal rate plus 75 percent of the
difference between the Federal rate and
the hospital-specific rate. MDHs will
experience a decrease in payments
because of the proposed documentation
and coding adjustments applied to both
the hospital-specific rate and the
Federal rate. SCHs are also paid the
higher of their hospital-specific rate or
the federal rate. Overall, SCHs will
experience an estimated decrease in
payments by 0.5 percent due to the
proposed documentation and coding
adjustments to the national
standardized amount and the hospitalspecific rates.
Rural hospitals reclassified for FY
2011 are anticipated to receive a 0.3
PO 00000
Frm 00451
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24301
percent payment decrease, and rural
hospitals that are not reclassifying are
estimated to receive a payment decrease
of 0.7 percent.
Cardiac hospitals are expected to
experience a payment increase of 0.8
percent in FY 2011 relative to FY 2010
due to increases in payments
attributable to changes in the MS–DRGs
and relative weights.
M. Effects of Proposed Policy on
Payment Adjustments for Low-Volume
Hospitals
For FY 2011, we are proposing to
continue to apply the volume
adjustment criteria we specified in the
FY 2005 IPPS final rule (69 FR 49099).
We expect that three providers will
receive the low-volume adjustment for
FY 2011. We estimate that low-volume
hospitals will experience an increase of
$114,000 in payments due to the low
volume payment adjustment.
N. Impact Analysis of Table II
Table II presents the projected impact
of the proposed changes for FY 2011 for
urban and rural hospitals and for the
different categories of hospitals shown
in Table I. It compares the estimated
average payments per discharge for FY
2010 with the proposed payments per
discharge for FY 2011, as calculated
under our models. Thus, this table
presents, in terms of the average dollar
amounts paid per discharge, the
combined effects of the proposed
changes presented in Table I. The
estimated percentage changes shown in
the last column of Table II equal the
estimated percentage changes in average
payments per discharge from Column 10
of Table I.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00452
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.268
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24302
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00453
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24303
EP04MY10.269
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
24304
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
VII. Effects of Other Proposed Policy
Changes
In addition to those proposed policy
changes discussed above that we are
able to model using our IPPS payment
simulation model, we are proposing to
make various other changes in this
proposed rule. Generally, we have
limited or no specific data available
with which to estimate the impacts of
these changes. Our estimates of the
likely impacts associated with these
other proposed changes are discussed
below.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
A. Effects of Proposed Policy on HACs,
Including Infections
In section II.F. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we discuss our
implementation of section 1886(d)(4)(D)
of the Act, which requires the Secretary
to identify conditions that are: (1) High
cost, high volume, or both; (2) result in
the assignment of a case to an MS–DRG
that has a higher payment when present
as a secondary diagnosis; and (3) could
reasonably have been prevented through
application of evidence-based
guidelines. For discharges occurring on
or after October 1, 2008, hospitals will
not receive additional payment for cases
in which one of the selected conditions
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
was not present on admission, unless
based on data and clinical judgment, it
cannot be determined at the time of
admission whether a condition is
present. That is, the case will be paid as
though the secondary diagnosis were
not present. However, the statute also
requires the Secretary to continue
counting the condition as a secondary
diagnosis that results in a higher IPPS
payment when doing the budget
neutrality calculations for MS–DRG
reclassifications and recalibration.
Therefore, we will perform our budget
neutrality calculations as though the
payment provision did not apply, but
Medicare will make a lower payment to
the hospital for the specific case that
includes the secondary diagnosis. Thus,
the provision results in cost savings to
the Medicare program.
We note that the provision will only
apply when one or more of the selected
conditions are the only secondary
diagnosis or diagnoses present on the
claim that will lead to higher payment.
Medicare beneficiaries will generally
have multiple secondary diagnoses
during a hospital stay, such that
beneficiaries having one MCC or CC will
frequently have additional conditions
that also will generate higher payment.
Only a small percentage of the cases
will have only one secondary diagnosis
PO 00000
Frm 00454
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
that would lead to a higher payment.
Therefore, if at least one nonselected
secondary diagnosis that leads to higher
payment is on the claim, the case will
continue to be assigned to the higher
paying MS–DRG and there will be no
Medicare savings from that case. In
addition, as discussed in section II.F.3.e.
of the preamble of this proposed rule, it
is possible to have two severity levels
where the HAC does not affect the MS–
DRG assignment or for an MS–DRG not
to have severity levels. In either of these
circumstances, the case will continue to
be assigned to the higher paying MS–
DRG and there will be no Medicare
savings from that case.
The HAC payment provision went
into effect on October 1, 2008. Our
savings estimates for the next 5 fiscal
years are shown below:
Year
FY
FY
FY
FY
FY
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
................................
................................
................................
................................
................................
04MYP2
Savings
(in millions)
23
24
25
26
26
EP04MY10.270
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
B. Effects of Proposed Policy Relating to
New Medical Service and Technology
Add-On Payments
In section II.I. of the preamble to this
proposed rule, we discuss the three
applications for add-on payments for
new medical services and technologies
for FY 2011, as well as the status of the
new technologies that were approved to
receive new technology add-on
payments in FY 2010. As explained in
that section, add-on payments for new
technology under section 1886(d)(5)(K)
of the Act are not required to be budget
neutral. As discussed in section II.I.4. of
the preamble of this proposed rule, we
have yet to determine whether any of
the three applications we received for
consideration for new technology addon payments for FY 2011 will meet the
specified criteria. Consequently, it is
premature to estimate the potential
payment impact of any potential new
technology add-on payments for FY
2011. We note that if any of the three
applications are found to be eligible for
new technology add-on payments for FY
2011, in the FY 2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule, we would discuss the
estimated payment impact for FY 2011
in that final rule.
However, we are proposing to
continue to make new technology addon payments in FY 2011 for the
CardiowestTM Temporary Total
Artificial Heart System (TAH-t) and the
Spiration® IBV® Valve System.
Therefore, we are providing an estimate
of total payments for these technologies
in FY 2011. We note that new
technology add-on payments per case
are limited to the lesser of: (1) 50
percent of the costs of the new
technology; or (2) 50 percent of the
amount by which the costs of the case
exceed the standard MS–DRG payment
for the case. Because it is difficult to
predict the actual new technology addon payment for each case, our estimate
below is based on the increase in addon payments for FY 2011 as if every
claim that would qualify for a new
technology add-on payments would
receive the maximum add-on payment.
Therefore, we currently estimate that
payments for the TAH-t will increase
overall FY 2011 payments by $9.54
million. For FY 2010, the applicant
estimated that approximately 2,286
Medicare beneficiaries would be eligible
for the Spiration® IBV® Valve System.
Therefore, based on the applicant’s
estimate from FY 2010, we currently
estimate that payments for the
Spiration® IBV® Valve System will
increase overall FY 2011 payments by
$7.80 million.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
C. Effects of Proposed Requirements for
Hospital Reporting of Quality Data for
Annual Hospital Payment Update
In Appendix A, section VII.C. of the
FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final
rule (74 FR 44224), we discussed the
impact of the FY 2011 RHQDAPU
program requirements. In this proposed
rule, we are proposing to retire one of
the FY 2011 quality measures. We
believe that this proposal would not
have a significant effect on our previous
analysis. We note that, in that final rule,
we estimated that 96 hospitals would
not receive the full payment update in
FY 2010 and that 96 hospitals would
not receive the full payment update in
FY 2011. As noted above, at the time
this analysis was prepared, 104
hospitals did not receive the full
payment update in FY 2010.
In section IV.A. of the preamble of
this proposed rule, we discuss our
proposed requirements for hospitals to
report quality data under the RHQDAPU
program in order to receive the full
payment update for FY 2012, FY 2013,
and FY 2014. We estimate that
approximately 104 hospitals may not
receive the full payment update in any
fiscal year. We believe that most of these
hospitals would be either small rural or
small urban hospitals. However, at this
time, information is not available to
determine the hospitals that will not
meet the requirements for the full
hospital market basket increase for FY
2012, FY 2013, and FY 2014.
For the FY 2012 payment
determination, hospitals would be
required to submit all-patient volume
data for selected MS–DRGs that relate to
RHQDAPU program measures. The
submission of all-patient volume data
will occur free of charge to hospitals.
Therefore, the additional resource
burden to hospitals for this requirement
is expected to be minimal. For the FY
2013 payment determination, we have
proposed that hospitals will choose one
of four proposed registry-based topics
for which there are currently a number
of nationwide registries each
individually collecting data from a
significant proportion of IPPS hospitals.
We have proposed that hospitals will
submit data on proposed measures
included within the proposed registrybased topic to a registry that we qualify
for this purpose.
For the proposed ICD Complications
registry-based topic, currently, 100
percent of hospitals performing ICD
implantation participate in the
American College of CardiologyNational Cardiovascular Data Registry’s
(ACC–NCDR) ICD registry and 78
percent of those hospitals are already
PO 00000
Frm 00455
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24305
submitting the additional data elements
and secondary population needed to
calculate the ICD complication measure.
For the proposed Cardiac Surgery
registry-based topic, we have estimated
that 80 to 90 percent of hospitals
performing cardiac surgery currently
participate in a cardiac surgery registry.
Therefore, the number of additional
hospitals not currently participating in
a cardiac surgery registry that would
choose this topic is expected to be
minimal. For the proposed Stroke and
Nursing Sensitive Care registry-based
topics, there are a number of registries
to which at least 25 percent of IPPS
hospitals currently submit data. We
currently do not know if hospitals
would choose one of these two
proposed topics if they are not already
submitting data to one of these
registries. The AMI-statin at discharge
measure, proposed for FY 2013 payment
determination, would create minimal
additional burden as hospitals can
collect the data elements from the same
charts already being pulled for existing
RHQDAPU program AMI measures.
For the FY 2014 payment
determination, the proposed addition of
four chart-abstracted measures that
require hospitals to submit data on all
inpatients is expected to create an
additional burden for hospitals. The
information needed for the proposed
ED–Throughput measures is captured as
routine documentation, and therefore is
not expected to impose much additional
burden. The proposed Global
Immunization measures would require
hospitals to collect information on all
inpatients regarding flu and pneumonia
vaccinations that they are currently only
collecting for patients admitted for
pneumonia. Therefore, the number of
patients for which these data would
need to be collected will increase.
We also note that, beginning with the
FY 2012 payment update, hospitals
must pass our validation requirement of
a minimum of 75 percent reliability,
based upon our chart-audit validation
process, for three quarters of data from
the first quarter of CY 2010 through the
third quarter of CY 2010. These data are
due to the QIO Clinical Warehouse by
August 15, 2010 (first quarter CY 2010
discharges), November 15, 2010 (second
quarter CY 2010 discharges), and
February 15, 2011 (third quarter CY
2010 discharges). We have continued
our efforts to ensure that QIOs provide
assistance to all hospitals that wish to
participate in the RHQDAPU program.
The requirement of 12 charts per
hospital submitted for validation would
result in approximately 9,600 charts per
quarter being submitted to CMS. We
reimburse hospitals for the cost of
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24306
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sending charts to the Clinical Data
Abstraction Center (CDAC) contractor at
the rate of 12 cents per page for copying
and approximately $4.00 per chart for
postage. Our experience shows that the
average chart received by the CDAC
contractor is approximately 150 pages.
Thus, as a result of the validation
requirements we are proposing for the
FY 2012 annual payment update, we
estimate that CMS would have
expenditures of approximately $212,000
per quarter, which is a reduction from
the $597,600 per quarter to collect the
charts for the FY 2010 and FY 2011
annual payment updates. Given that we
reimburse for the data collection effort,
we believe that a requirement for 12
charts per hospital per quarter
represents a minimal burden to
participating hospitals.
We have finalized a new validation
methodology for FY 2012. We believe
that these modifications will not change
the number of hospitals that fail the
validation requirement for FY 2012 from
previous years. We are changing the
way we calculate the validation matches
(that is, all relevant data elements
submitted by the hospital must match
the independently re-abstracted data
elements to count as a match), which
will make it more difficult for hospitals
to satisfy the validation requirement.
However, we also will validate data for
a smaller number of hospitals each year
and we changed the validation
threshold from 80 percent to 75 percent.
In addition, we conducted analysis in
FY 2010 of past validation data and
found that at least 95 percent of
sampled hospitals are expected to pass
the 75 percent validation threshold
starting in FY 2012. In combination, we
believe that these proposed revisions
will counterbalance each other and
result in no additional impact to the
number of hospitals failing our
validation requirement for FY 2012.
If we determine that a hospital is not
entitled to receive the full FY 2012
payment update because it failed to
satisfy the validation requirement, and
the hospital asks for a reconsideration of
that decision, we are proposing that the
hospital submit complete copies of the
medical records that it submitted to the
CDAC contractor for purposes of the
validation for which the hospital incurs
the cost. We estimate that no greater
than 40 hospitals would fail this
requirement for FY 2012. We estimate
that this proposal would cost hospitals
approximately 12 cents per page for
copying and approximately $4.00 per
chart for postage. We have found, based
on experience, that an average sized
medical chart is approximately 150
pages. Hospitals would be required to
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
return all 36 sampled medical records
for the three quarters of data from FY
2010. We estimate that the total cost to
the 40 impacted hospitals would be
approximately $17,600, or $440 per
hospital. We believe that this cost is
minimal, compared with the 2.0 percent
RHQDAPU program component of the
annual payment update at risk. This
proposed requirement is necessary so
that CMS has all the information it
needs to fairly and timely make a
decision on the hospital’s
reconsideration request. We also
anticipate that this proposed
requirement would benefit hospitals
seeking a reconsideration because it will
enable us to resolve potential issues
earlier in the appeals process, obviating
the need for a hearing before the
Provider Reimbursement Review Board
(PRRB). We believe that this benefit
would greatly outweigh the burden of
copying and mailing the requested
records.
We note that, beginning with FY 2014
and future years, we are considering
adding two stratum to the current
RHQDAPU validation sample of SCIP,
AMI, HF, and PN cases. We will
consider selecting two additional
samples of three cases per selected
hospital per quarter to validate
proposed surgical site infection, blood
stream infection, ED-Throughput and
Global Immunization measures. If we
later propose this requirement and
adopt it as final through rulemaking, we
would randomly select a total of 18
records per quarter per validated
hospital in 6 strata (SCIP, AMI, HF, PN,
CLABSI/SSI, and ED-Throughput/
Immunization measures). The
requirement of an additional 6 charts
per hospital submitted for validation
would result in approximately 4,800
additional charts per quarter being
submitted to CMS. We reimburse
hospitals for the cost of sending charts
to the CDAC contractor at the rate of 12
cents per page for copying and
approximately $4.00 per chart for
postage. Our experience shows that the
average chart received by the CDAC
contractor is approximately 150 pages.
Thus, we would expend approximately
$105,600 per quarter to collect the
charts for the annual payment update
for FY 2014 and future years. Given that
we reimburse for the data collection
effort, we believe that a proposed
requirement of the additional records in
FY 2014 per hospital per quarter
represents a minimal burden to the
participating hospital.
PO 00000
Frm 00456
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
D. Effects of Proposed Policy on
Payment for Transfer Cases From
Medicare Participating Hospitals to
Nonparticipating Hospitals and CAHs
In section IV.B. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we are proposing to
expand the acute care transfer policy to
transfers to nonparticipating acute care
hospitals and to CAHs. This proposed
expansion of the acute care transfer
policy aims to further align the policy
with its original intent, that is, to pay a
hospital commensurate with the
resources it expends in treating a
Medicare beneficiary who is transferred.
However, the impacts of this change are
not possible to measure, although we
believe the any change in Medicare
payments to hospitals associated with
this proposed change would be
negligible. Specifically, because there
are relatively few nonparticipating acute
care hospitals, we expect that there
would be few, if any, transfers to
nonparticipating hospitals in a given
period. In addition, based on the capped
inpatient bed size of CAHs (that is, not
more than 25 inpatient beds) and the
CAH distance requirements (that is, a
CAH must generally be located at least
35 miles from another hospital), we
believe that transfers from an IPPS acute
care hospital to a CAH occur very
infrequently. Therefore, we estimate
that this proposed expansion of the
acute care transfer policy would not
have a material impact on Medicare
payments to acute care hospitals.
E. Effects of Proposed Change in Criteria
for MDHs
In section IV.D. of the preamble of
this proposed rule, we discuss our
proposal to revise the existing Medicaredependency criterion for MDHs at
§ 412.108(a)(1)(iii) of the regulations
(that is, ‘‘At least 60 percent of the
hospital’s inpatient days or discharges
were attributable to individuals
receiving Medicare Part A benefits
during the hospital’s cost reporting
period. * * *’’) by replacing the word
‘‘receiving’’ with the phrase ‘‘entitled to’’.
As a result, we would include in the
count of Medicare inpatient days or
discharges, all days or discharges
attributable to individuals entitled to
the Medicare Part A insurance benefit,
including individuals who have
exhausted their Medicare Part A
hospital inpatient coverage benefit.
Based on our analysis of data for cost
reporting periods beginning in FYs 2007
and 2008, we estimate that the proposed
change to the MDH definition of
Medicare-dependency may allow 48
more IPPS hospitals to qualify as an
MDH. We estimate that this proposed
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
change would result in increased
expenditure of $3.6 million in FY 2011.
(We note that the PPACA (Pub. L. 111–
148) extended the sunset date for MDHs
from the end of FY 2011 to the end of
FY 2012. We plan to issue a separate
rulemaking document in the Federal
Register to address this statutory
provision.
F. Effects of Proposed Change Relating
to Payment Adjustment for
Disproportionate Share Hospitals
In section IV.E. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we are proposing to
change, effective for FY 2011 and
subsequent years, the data matching
process used to calculate the SSI
fraction for the Medicare DSH payment
adjustment. The SSI fraction is part of
the formula used to determine whether
a subsection (d) hospital qualifies for a
DSH payment adjustment and the
amount of any DSH payment.
The numerator of a hospital’s DSH
SSI fraction is the number of inpatient
days for the provider’s patients who
were entitled to both Medicare Part A
and SSI benefits. The denominator of
the hospital’s SSI fraction is the total
number of inpatient days for the
provider’s patients who were entitled to
Part A benefits. In order to calculate the
numerator of a hospital’s DSH SSI
fraction, CMS matches certain Medicare
data files with SSI eligibility data files
that are furnished by SSA. In Baystate
Medical Center v. Leavitt (545 F. Supp.
2d 20, as amended, 587 F. Supp. 2d 37,
44 (D.D.C. 2008)), the district court
concluded that, in certain respects,
CMS’ current matching process did not
use the ‘‘best available data’’ to match
Medicare patient day information with
SSI eligibility data. In implementing the
Baystate decision, CMS recalculated the
plaintiff’s SSI fractions and DSH
payments for its FYs 1993 through 1996
by using a revised data matching
process that comports with the district
court’s decision.
We are now proposing to adopt the
same revised data matching process for
calculating hospitals’ DSH SSI fractions
for FY 2011 and subsequent fiscal years.
In addition, we are proposing to use, in
the revised matching process, a later
update of the MedPAR claims data file
and the SSI eligibility data file.
Specifically, we are proposing to use
MedPAR claims files and SSI eligibility
data that are updated 15 months after
the end of the Federal fiscal year, rather
than continue with our current practice
of using data updated 6 months after the
end of the Federal fiscal year. We
believe that our proposed revision to the
timing of the data match would achieve
an appropriate balance between
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
accounting for additional retroactive SSI
eligibility determinations and the lifting
of SSI payment suspensions and
facilitating administrative finality
through the timely final settlement of
Medicare cost reports.
We are not able to provide a detailed
analysis of the potential impact of the
proposed revised data matching process.
That is, it is not possible to determine
whether Medicare DSH adjustment
payments to hospitals will generally
increase or decrease, because hospitals’
SSI fractions will vary depending on
various factors, including the use of a
more updated MedPAR claims data file,
use of a more updated SSI eligibility
data file, and the other features of our
proposed revised data matching process.
With respect to the use of a more
updated MedPAR claims data file, we
expect that using a later version of the
MedPAR claims file would increase the
number of inpatient claims for a given
Federal fiscal year and, therefore, would
increase the number of Medicare
inpatient days included in the
denominator of the SSI fraction.
Depending on whether or not the
additional claims in the MedPAR file
were for Medicare patients who were
also eligible for SSI during the inpatient
stay, the numerator of the SSI fraction
might increase or decrease.
As for the use of an updated SSI
eligibility file, we note that retroactive
SSI eligibility determinations include
both the granting and the denial of SSI
benefits. Therefore, assuming that some
of the retroactive SSI eligibility
determinations were for Medicare
patients, the use of an updated SSI
eligibility file also could increase or
decrease the numerator of the SSI
fraction. We expect that, as a result of
using an updated SSI eligibility file, the
SSI fraction for some hospitals would
increase while it would decrease for
other hospitals.
We also note that, in the Baystate
decision, the district court found that
certain records (for example, ‘‘stale
records’’ and ‘‘forced pay records’’) were
not included in the SSI eligibility data
that SSA gave to CMS for use in the data
matching process. However, the SSI
eligibility data files began to include
certain of these records in the mid1990’s, and stale records and forced pay
records were included in the SSI
eligibility data files that CMS used in
recalculating the specific SSI fractions
and DSH adjustment payments at issue
in the Baystate case. As certain of these
records are already included in the data
matching process and we are making no
proposals that would change this policy,
we are unable to determine if this issue
PO 00000
Frm 00457
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24307
has any cost or savings for FY 2011 and
subsequent years.
Finally, our proposed revised data
matching process includes the use of
SSNs and a greater number of Title II
numbers and HICANs. As a result, we
might be able to identify some
individuals who were entitled to both
Part A and SSI benefits that our current
data matching process might not have
identified. Therefore, we would expect
an increase in the SSI fraction for
certain providers, but we are unable to
determine the extent to which DSH
adjustment payments would increase.
G. Effects of Proposed Changes Relating
to Payments for IME and Direct GME
1. Identifying ‘‘Approved Medical
Residency Programs’’
In section IV.H.2. of the preamble of
this proposed rule, we discuss our
proposal to clarify our policy regarding
whether an individual is considered to
be training in an approved medical
residency program such that the
individual’s time should be included in
the FTE count for IME and direct GME
purposes, or whether that individual
should be treated and bill as a
physician. Specifically, our proposed
clarification states that individuals
should be treated as and bill as
physicians if they have already
successfully completed at least one
residency program (regardless of
whether they have passed the board
examination for that specialty program),
and are engaged in subsequent training
that will not provide them with
knowledge or skills that could be
applied for additional board
certification in another subspecialty, nor
do they need that training to satisfy
requirements for board certification in
the specialty program they already
successfully completed. We also are
proposing to revise the definition of
‘‘resident’’ at § 413.75(b) to mean ‘‘an
intern, resident, or fellow who is
formally accepted, enrolled, and
participating in an approved medical
residency program, including programs
in osteopathy, dentistry, and podiatry,
as required in order to become certified
by the appropriate specialty board.’’
With respect to the policy regarding
the treatment of trainees that have
already successfully completed at least
one residency program, there is no
financial impact on the Medicare
program because this is a proposed
clarification of existing policy and is not
a policy revision or addition of a new
policy. The proposed policy change to
the regulations might have some limited
financial impact to the extent that a
hospital previously included trainees
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24308
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
who were not formally enrolled in an
approved program in its FTE counts,
and as a result of the proposed change
to the regulations, would no longer be
able to include such trainees in its FTE
count for IME and direct GME purposes.
However, we believe it would be rare for
a hospital to have included in its FTE
count trainees who are not formally
enrolled in a residency program in the
typical fashion. Further, we believe that
it would be rare for such a hospital to
have sufficient room under its IME and
direct GME FTE resident caps to include
any such ‘‘informally enrolled’’ residents
in addition to the typically enrolled
residents. Thus, the financial impact of
the proposed change in the regulatory
definition of ‘‘resident’’ would be
insignificant.
2. Submission of Electronic Affiliation
Agreements
In section IV.H.3. of the preamble of
this proposed rule, we discuss our
proposal to allow hospitals to submit
Medicare GME affiliation agreements to
the CMS Central Office by electronic
submission. Over the last several years,
we have received numerous inquiries
regarding the possibility of submitting
the Medicare GME affiliation agreement
electronically. To date, CMS has only
accepted signed hard copies of Medicare
GME affiliation agreements that are
received through the mail. Facsimile
(FAX) and other electronic submissions
of affiliation agreements have not been
an acceptable means of transmission of
affiliation agreements to CMS Central
Office in order for a hospital to meet the
requirements of §§ 413.79(f) and
412.105(f)(1)(vi).
The increasing frequency of these
inquiries and our concerns regarding
environmental and paperwork reduction
have prompted us to reconsider our
procedure for hospitals to submit
Medicare GME affiliation agreements to
the CMS Central Office. Accordingly,
we are proposing to change our policy
to provide for electronic submission of
the affiliation agreement that is required
to be sent to the CMS Central Office.
This proposal would not affect the
authority of the fiscal intermediary or
MAC to continue to specify its
requirements for submission for
hospitals in its servicing area.
We are proposing an electronic
submission process that would consist
of either an e-mail mailbox or a Web site
where hospitals would submit their
Medicare GME affiliation agreements to
the CMS Central Office. As part of this
process, a copy of the Medicare GME
affiliation agreement would need to be
received through the electronic system
no later than 11:59 p.m. on July 1 of
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
H. Effects of Proposed Changes Relating
to CRNA Services Furnished in Rural
Hospitals and CAHs
We believe it is difficult to quantify
the payment impact of this proposed
change because, in order to qualify for
reasonable cost-based payment for
anesthesia and related services provided
by qualified nonphysician anesthetists,
a rural hospital or CAH cannot exceed
an annual limit of 800 surgical
procedures requiring anesthesia. We
cannot establish the number of facilities
that would meet this threshold. In
addition, although a hospital or CAH
may contract with more than one
qualified nonphysician anesthetist and
be paid based on reasonable cost for
anesthesia and related services
performed by these nonphysician
anesthetists, the total number of hours
of service furnished by the
nonphysician anesthetists may not
exceed 2,080 hours annually. We also
cannot determine the number of
facilities that would exceed this
threshold. Therefore, while we believe
the impact would be relatively minor,
we are unable to quantify the impact of
the proposed change.
In section IV.I. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we discuss our proposal
to amend the regulations at
§ 412.113(c)(2)(i)(A) to state that,
effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2010,
hospitals and CAHs that have
reclassified under section 1886(d)(8)(E)
of the Act and § 412.103 are eligible to
be paid based on reasonable cost for
anesthesia and related care furnished by
qualified nonphysician anesthetists.
Under existing regulations, a hospital or
CAH is not eligible to be paid based on
reasonable cost for anesthesia and
related care furnished by qualified
nonphysician anesthetists if the hospital
or CAH has been granted rural status
under § 412.103. However, because the
Act, as revised by section 608 of Public
Law 100–485, allows for reasonable cost
payments for CRNA services if the
facility is a hospital located in a rural
area as defined for purposes of section
1886(d) of the Act, we are proposing to
revise the regulations to permit urban
hospitals that have been reclassified as
rural, in accordance with section
1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act, to qualify for
these payments. We are proposing to
revise the regulations to state that,
effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2010,
hospitals and CAHs that have
reclassified pursuant to section
1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act and § 412.103 of
the regulations would be eligible to be
paid based on reasonable cost for
anesthesia services and related care
provided by qualified nonphysician
anesthetists.
I. Effects of Implementation of Rural
Community Hospital Demonstration
Program
In section IV.J. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we discuss our
implementation of section 410A of
Public Law 108–173, which requires the
Secretary to establish a demonstration
that will modify reimbursement for
inpatient services for up to 15 small
rural hospitals. Section 410A(c)(2)
requires that ‘‘[i]n conducting the
demonstration program under this
section, the Secretary shall ensure that
the aggregate payments made by the
Secretary do not exceed the amount
which the Secretary would have paid if
the demonstration program under this
section was not implemented.’’ As
discussed in section IV.J. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, in the
IPPS final rule for each of the previous
6 fiscal years, we have estimated the
additional payments as a result of the
demonstration for each of the
participating hospitals. In order to
achieve budget neutrality, we are
proposing to adjust the national IPPS
rates by an amount sufficient to account
for the added costs of this
demonstration. In other words, we are
proposing to apply budget neutrality
across the payment system as a whole
rather than merely across the
participants of this demonstration. We
believe that the language of the statutory
budget neutrality requirement permits
the agency to implement the budget
neutrality provision in this manner. The
statutory language requires that
‘‘aggregate payments made by the
each academic year. We are proposing
that the electronic affiliation agreement
would need to be submitted either as a
scanned copy or a PDF version of that
hard copy agreement. We are proposing
not to accept an agreement in any
electronic format that could be subject
to manipulation. The scanned and/or
PDF format will enable CMS to ensure
that the agreements are signed and
dated as required in the regulations at
§ 413.75.
We believe that allowing an electronic
submission of the affiliation agreement
to the CMS Central Office would assist
us in more effectively tracking the
groups of hospitals that become an
affiliation as well as the numbers of FTE
cap slots that are being transferred
within those groups. In addition, we
believe an electronic submission
process would minimize the paperwork
burden for hospitals.
PO 00000
Frm 00458
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Secretary do not exceed the amount
which the Secretary would have paid if
the demonstration * * * was not
implemented’’ but does not identify the
range across which aggregate payments
must be held equal.
An extension of this demonstration
has been mandated by the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act
(Pub. L. 111–148). The provisions of
Public Law 111–148 will be addressed
in a separate notice in the Federal
Register. For this proposed rule,
because the mandated period for the
demonstration was scheduled to end by
the end of FY 2010, we are proposing no
additional payment offset for upcoming
years of the demonstration. However,
we are proposing to make an adjustment
in the FY 2011 IPPS final rule to the
national IPPS rates to account for any
differences between the cost of the
demonstration program for hospitals
participating in the demonstration
during FY 2007, represented by their
cost reports beginning in FY 2007, and
the amount that was offset by the budget
neutrality adjustment for FY 2007. The
specific numeric value associated with
the proposed adjustment to the national
IPPS rates cannot be known until cost
reports beginning in FY 2007 of the
hospitals participating during FY 2007
in the demonstration are settled. We
expect those cost reports to be settled
prior to the publication of the FY 2011
IPPS final rule, and that we will be able
to provide an estimated amount in the
FY 2011 IPPS final rule.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
J. Effects of Proposed Changes Relating
to CAHs
1. CAH Optional Method of Payment for
Outpatient Services
In section VI.B.2. of the preamble of
this proposed rule, we discuss our
proposal to amend the regulations to
permit a CAH to elect to be paid for
outpatient services under the optional
method on a continuous basis. Under
existing regulations, if a CAH wishes to
be paid under the optional method for
outpatient services on a continuous
basis, it must submit an annual election
to the fiscal intermediary or MAC
servicing the CAH at least 30 days prior
to the cost reporting period for which
the election is made. Due to the
significant consequences that result if a
CAH fails to make a timely election, we
are proposing to amend the regulations
at § 413.70(b)(3)(i) to state that, effective
for CAH cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2010, if
a CAH has elected the optional method
for its most recent cost reporting period
beginning prior to October 1, 2010, or
chooses to elect the optional method for
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
its upcoming cost reporting period, that
election will remain in place until it is
terminated. If a CAH chooses to
terminate its election, it must submit a
termination request to the fiscal
intermediary or MAC servicing the CAH
at least 30 days prior to the start of the
next cost reporting period. In order to
provide CAHs that have cost reporting
periods beginning in October or
November 2010 time to choose to
terminate an existing election of the
optional method, we are proposing that
these CAHs would have until December
1, 2010, to terminate their election. We
anticipate that there would be no
additional Medicare expenditure
associated with this proposed change
because we are not proposing any
changes that govern payment rules for
CAHs. Rather, we believe the regulatory
changes we are proposing would reduce
any perceived burden associated with
the election process and make it easier
for CAHs to maintain their election of
the optional method on a continuous
basis.
2. Consideration of Costs of Provider
Taxes as Allowable Costs for CAHs
In section VI.B.3. of the preamble of
this proposed rule, we discuss our
proposal to clarify our policy on the
determination of whether the costs of
property taxes are allowable costs under
Medicare, as described in sections
2212.1 and 2212.2 of the PRM. This is
a clarification of our longstanding
policy. Therefore, we have determined
that there is no financial impact of the
proposed change.
K. Effects of Proposed Policy Relating to
Effective Date of Provider Agreements
and Supplier Approvals
In section VIII. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we discuss our proposal
to clarify the requirements supporting
the existing process for assignment of an
effective date for a provider agreement
or supplier approval. Approximately
54,500 Medicare providers and
suppliers are subject to survey and
certification requirements under this
proposal. However, the proposed
clarification would not change the
process for providers and suppliers.
Therefore, the impact of our proposed
clarification is negligible.
L. Effects of Proposed Changes Relating
to Hospital Rehabilitation Services and
Respiratory Care Services Conditions of
Participation
In section IX. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we discuss our proposed
changes to the conditions of
participation for hospital rehabilitation
services and respiratory care services to
PO 00000
Frm 00459
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24309
clarify the categories of practitioners
allowed to order rehabilitation services
and respiratory care services. We
believe that this proposal would impose
minimal additional costs on hospitals.
In fact, hospitals may realize some
minimal cost savings due to the
regulatory flexibility of these proposed
changes, which may allow for greater
consistency with existing State laws and
with hospital policies and procedures.
The cost of implementing these
proposed changes would largely be
limited to the one-time cost related to
the revision of a hospital’s medical staff
bylaws and its policies and procedures
as they relate to the proposed
requirements for the categories of
practitioners allowed to order
rehabilitation and respiratory care
services. There also may be some
minimal cost associated with
communicating these changes to
affected hospital staff.
However, we believe that these costs
would be offset by the benefits derived
from the overall intent of this proposed
clarification to allow qualified, licensed
practitioners, who are authorized by the
medical staff, to order these services as
long as they are responsible for the care
of the patient for whom they are
ordering the services and as long as
such privileges are in accordance with
hospital policies and applicable State
laws and regulations. Furthermore, the
proposed changes would clarify existing
hospital conditions of participation to
make them more consistent not only
with each other, but also with many
State laws and with current practice.
Therefore, while this proposal would
impose a minimal burden on hospitals,
we believe that, in sum, the changes
proposed would greatly benefit
hospitals overall.
VIII. Effects of Proposed Changes in the
Capital IPPS
A. General Considerations
Fiscal year (FY) 2001 was the last year
of the 10-year transition period
established to phase in the PPS for
hospital capital-related costs. During the
transition period, hospitals were paid
under one of two payment
methodologies: fully prospective or hold
harmless. Under the fully prospective
methodology, hospitals were paid a
blend of the capital Federal rate and
their hospital-specific rate (§ 412.340).
Under the hold-harmless methodology,
unless a hospital elected payment based
on 100 percent of the capital Federal
rate, hospitals were paid 85 percent of
reasonable costs for old capital costs
(100 percent for SCHs) plus an amount
for new capital costs based on a
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24310
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
proportion of the capital Federal rate
(§ 412.344). As we state in section V. of
the preamble of this proposed rule, with
the 10-year transition period ending
with hospital cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2001
(FY 2002), beginning in FY 2002 capital
prospective payment system payments
for most hospitals are based solely on
the capital Federal rate. Therefore, we
no longer include information on
obligated capital costs or projections of
old capital costs and new capital costs,
which were factors needed to calculate
payments during the transition period,
for our impact analysis.
The basic methodology for
determining a capital IPPS payment is
set forth at § 412.312. The basic
methodology for calculating capital
IPPS payments in FY 2011 is as follows:
(Standard Federal Rate) × (DRG
weight) × (GAF) × (COLA for hospitals
located in Alaska and Hawaii) × (1 +
DSH Adjustment Factor + IME
adjustment factor, if applicable).
In addition to the other adjustments,
hospitals may also receive outlier
payments for those cases that qualify
under the threshold established for each
fiscal year.
The data used in developing the
impact analysis presented below are
taken from the December 2009 update of
the FY 2009 MedPAR file and the
December 2009 update of the ProviderSpecific File (PSF) that is used for
payment purposes. Although the
analyses of the changes to the capital
prospective payment system do not
incorporate cost data, we used the
December 2009 update of the most
recently available hospital cost report
data (FYs 2006 and 2007) to categorize
hospitals. Our analysis has several
qualifications. We use the best data
available and make assumptions about
case-mix and beneficiary enrollment as
described below. In addition, as
discussed in section V.E. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing a ¥2.9 percent
documentation and coding adjustment
to the capital Federal rate for FY 2011,
in addition to the ¥0.6 percent
adjustment established for FY 2008 and
the ¥0.9 percent adjustment for FY
2009. This proposal results in a
cumulative adjustment factor of 0.957
that we are proposing to apply to the
capital Federal rate to account for
improvements in documentation and
coding under the MS–DRGs in FY 2011.
We also are proposing to adjust the
Puerto Rico-specific capital rate in FY
2011 by ¥2.4 percent to account for
changes in documentation and coding
resulting from the adoption of the MS–
DRGs.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Due to the interdependent nature of
the IPPS, it is very difficult to precisely
quantify the impact associated with
each change. In addition, we draw upon
various sources for the data used to
categorize hospitals in the tables. In
some cases (for instance, the number of
beds), there is a fair degree of variation
in the data from different sources. We
have attempted to construct these
variables with the best available sources
overall. However, for individual
hospitals, some miscategorizations are
possible.
Using cases from the December 2009
update of the FY 2009 MedPAR file, we
simulated payments under the capital
PPS for FY 2010 and FY 2011 for a
comparison of total payments per case.
Any short-term, acute care hospitals not
paid under the general IPPS (Indian
Health Service hospitals and hospitals
in Maryland) are excluded from the
simulations.
As we explain in section III.A.4. of the
Addendum to this proposed rule,
payments are no longer made under the
regular exceptions provision under
§§ 412.348(b) through (e). Therefore, we
no longer use the actuarial capital cost
model (described in Appendix B of the
August 1, 2001 proposed rule (66 FR
40099)). We modeled payments for each
hospital by multiplying the capital
Federal rate by the GAF and the
hospital’s case-mix. We then added
estimated payments for indirect medical
education, disproportionate share, and
outliers, if applicable. For purposes of
this impact analysis, the model includes
the following assumptions:
• We estimate that the Medicare casemix index will increase by 1.0 percent
in both FYs 2010 and 2011.
• We estimate that the Medicare
discharges will be approximately 11.8
million in FY 2010 and 12.1 million FY
2011.
• The capital Federal rate was
updated beginning in FY 1996 by an
analytical framework that considers
changes in the prices associated with
capital-related costs and adjustments to
account for forecast error, changes in the
case-mix index, allowable changes in
intensity, and other factors. As
discussed in section III.1.a. of the
Addendum to this proposed rule, the
proposed FY 2011 update is 1.5 percent.
• In addition to the FY 2011 update
factor, the proposed FY 2011 capital
Federal rate was calculated based on a
proposed GAF/DRG budget neutrality
factor of 1.0000, a proposed outlier
adjustment factor of 0.9424, and a
proposed (special) exceptions
adjustment factor of 0.9997.
• For FY 2011, as discussed above
and in section V.E. of the preamble to
PO 00000
Frm 00460
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
this proposed rule, we also are
proposing to apply a 0.957 adjustment
to the proposed FY 2011 capital Federal
rate for changes in documentation and
coding that are expected to increase
case-mix under the MS–DRGs.
B. Results
We used the actuarial model
described above to estimate the
potential impact of our proposed
changes for FY 2011 on total capital
payments per case, using a universe of
3,472 hospitals. As described above, the
individual hospital payment parameters
are taken from the best available data,
including the December 2009 update of
the FY 2009 MedPAR file, the December
2009 update to the PSF, and the most
recent cost report data from the
December 2009 update of HCRIS. In
Table III, we present a comparison of
estimated total payments per case for FY
2010 compared to FY 2011 based on the
proposed FY 2011 payment policies.
Column 2 shows estimates of payments
per case under our model for FY 2010.
Column 3 shows estimates of payments
per case under our model for FY 2011.
Column 4 shows the total percentage
change in payments from FY 2010 to FY
2011. The change represented in
Column 4 includes the proposed 1.5
percent update to the capital Federal
rate and other proposed changes in the
adjustments to the capital Federal rate.
The comparisons are provided by: (1)
Geographic location; (2) region; and (3)
payment classification.
The simulation results show that, on
average, capital payments per case in FY
2011 are expected to decrease as
compared to capital payments per case
in FY 2010. The proposed capital
Federal rate for FY 2011 would increase
1.5 percent as compared to the FY 2010
capital rate. The proposed changes to
the GAFs are expected to result, on
average, in a slight decrease in capital
payments, although, for rural areas, it is
more of a contributing factor to the
overall estimated decrease in capital
payments than to urban areas mostly
due to the application of the rural floor
to the wage index. Our impact analysis
includes actuarial assumptions of
growth from FY 2010 to FY 2011
resulting in a slight increase in capital
payments. The net result of these
proposed changes is an estimated ¥0.2
percent change in capital payments per
discharge from FY 2010 to FY 2011 for
all hospitals (as shown below in Table
III).
The geographic comparison shows
that, on average, all urban hospitals are
expected to experience a 0.2 percent
decrease in capital IPPS payments per
case in FY 2011 as compared to FY
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
2010, while hospitals in large urban
areas are expected to experience a 0.1
percent decrease in capital IPPS
payments per case in FY 2011 as
compared to FY 2010. Capital IPPS
payments per case for rural hospitals are
expected to decrease 0.7 percent.
The change comparisons by regions
show some regions experiencing slight
increases in total capital payments,
while other regions are estimated to
experience decreases in capital
payments from FY 2010 to FY 2011. For
the urban regions, changes in capital
payments range from a ¥1.3 percent for
the New England urban region to a 0.5
percent for the Pacific urban region.
Estimates for two urban regions, East
North Central and West North Central,
show no change in total capital
payments from FY 2010 to FY 2011.
Estimates of changes for the rural
regions from FY 2010 to FY 2011 range
from a 2.3 percent decrease in capital
payments in the New England rural
region to a 0.6 percent increase for the
West South Central rural region. These
regional differences are primarily due to
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
the proposed changes to the GAFs and
differences in the estimated increase in
outlier payments from FY 2010 to FY
2011.
By type of ownership, proprietary
hospitals are estimated to experience an
increase of 0.1 percent in capital
payments per case, and voluntary
hospitals are estimated to experience a
0.3 percent decrease in capital payments
per case from FY 2010 to FY 2011. We
estimate no change in capital payments
per case for government hospitals from
FY 2010 to FY 2011.
Section 1886(d)(10) of the Act
established the MGCRB. Before FY
2005, hospitals could apply to the
MGCRB for reclassification for purposes
of the standardized amount, wage index,
or both. Section 401(c) of Public Law
108–173 equalized the standardized
amounts under the operating IPPS.
Therefore, beginning in FY 2005, there
is no longer reclassification for the
purposes of the standardized amounts;
however, hospitals still may apply for
reclassification for purposes of the wage
index for FY 2011. Reclassification for
PO 00000
Frm 00461
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24311
wage index purposes also affects the
GAFs because that factor is constructed
from the hospital wage index.
To present the effects of the hospitals
being reclassified for FY 2011, we show
the average capital payments per case
for reclassified hospitals for FY 2010.
All classifications of reclassified
hospitals are expected to experience a
decrease in capital payments per case in
FY 2011 as compared to FY 2010. Urban
reclassified and rural reclassified
hospitals are expected to have a
decrease in capital payments of 0.2
percent and 0.3 percent, respectively.
Capital payments for urban
nonreclassified are estimated to
decrease 0.1 percent while rural
nonreclassified hospitals are estimated
to decrease 1.1 percent. Other
reclassified hospitals (that is, hospitals
reclassified under section 1886(d)(8)(B)
of the Act) are expected to experience a
decrease of 1.6 percent in capital
payment from FY 2010 to FY 2011.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00462
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.271
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24312
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
IX. Effects of Proposed Payment Rate
Changes and Policy Changes Under the
LTCH PPS
A. Introduction and General
Considerations
In section VII. of the preamble and
section V. of the Addendum of this
proposed rule, we are setting forth the
proposed annual update to the payment
rates for the LTCH PPS for FY 2011. In
the preamble, we specify the statutory
authority for the proposed provisions
that are presented, identify those
proposed policies where discretion has
been exercised, and present rationale for
our decisions as well as alternatives that
were considered. In this section of
Appendix A to this proposed rule, we
discuss the impact of the proposed
changes to the payment rates, factors,
and other payment rate policies related
to the LTCH PPS that are presented in
the preamble of this proposed rule in
terms of their estimated fiscal impact on
the Medicare budget and on LTCHs.
On March 23, 2010, the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act,
Public Law 111–148, was enacted.
Following the enactment of Public Law
111–148, the Health Care and Education
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Reconciliation Act of 2010, Public Law
111–152 (enacted on March 30, 2010),
amended certain provisions of Public
Law 111–148. A number of the
provisions of Public Law 111–148, as
amended by Public Law 111–152, affect
the IPPS and the LTCH PPS and the
providers and suppliers addressed in
this proposed rule. However, due to the
timing of the passage of the legislation,
we are unable to address those
provisions in this proposed rule.
Therefore, the proposed policies and
payment rates in this proposed rule do
not reflect the new legislation. We plan
to issue separate documents in the
Federal Register addressing the
provisions of Public Law 111–148, as
amended, that affect our proposed
policies and payment rates for FY 2011
under the IPPS and the LTCH PPS. In
addition, we plan to issue further
instructions implementing the
provisions of Public Law 111–148, as
amended, that affect the policies and
payment rates for FY 2010 under the
IPPS and for RY 2010 under the LTCH
PPS.
Currently, our database of 421 LTCHs
includes the data for 77 nonprofit
(voluntary ownership control) LTCHs
and 301 proprietary LTCHs. Of the
PO 00000
Frm 00463
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24313
remaining 43 LTCHs, 12 LTCHs are
government-owned and operated and
the ownership type of the other 31
LTCHs is unknown. In the impact
analysis, we are using the proposed
rates, factors, and policies presented in
this proposed rule, including proposed
updated wage index values and the
labor-related share, and the best
available claims and CCR data to
estimate the change in payments for FY
2011. The standard Federal rate for RY
2010 is $39,896.65. As discussed in
section V.A.2. of the Addendum to this
proposed rule, consistent with our
historical practice, we are proposing to
update the standard Federal rate for FY
2011 by ¥0.1 percent in order to
establish the proposed FY 2011
standard Federal rate at $39,856.75.
This includes a proposed market basket
update of 2.4 percent and a proposed
documentation and coding adjustment
of ¥2.5 percent to account for increases
in case-mix that do not reflect real
changes in patients’ severity of illness
associated with the adoption of the MS–
LTC–DRGs. Based on the best available
data for the 421 LTCHs in our database,
we estimate that the proposed update to
the standard Federal rate for FY 2011
(discussed in section VII.C. of the
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.272
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
24314
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
preamble of this proposed rule) and the
proposed changes to the area wage
adjustment (discussed in section V.B. of
the Addendum to this proposed rule) for
FY 2011, in addition to an estimated
increase in HCO payments and an
estimated increase in SSO payments,
will result in an increase in estimated
payments from RY 2010 of
approximately $41 million (or about 0.8
percent). Based on the 421 LTCHs in our
database, we estimate FY 2011 LTCH
PPS payments to be approximately
$4.946 billion, an increase from RY
2010 LTCH PPS payments of
approximately $4.905 billion. Because
the combined distributional effects and
estimated changes to the Medicare
program payments would be greater
than $100 million, this proposed rule is
considered a major economic rule, as
defined in this section. We note the
approximately $41 million for the
projected increase in estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments from RY
2010 to FY 2011 does not reflect
changes in LTCH admissions or casemix intensity in estimated LTCH PPS
payments, which also would affect
overall payment changes.
The projected 0.8 percent increase in
estimated payments per discharge from
RY 2010 to FY 2011 is attributable to
several factors, including the proposed
¥0.1 percent decrease to the standard
Federal rate, proposed changes in the
wage index values (including the
proposed change to the labor-related
share) and projected increases in
estimated HCO and SSO payments. As
Table IV shows, the proposed change
attributable solely to the standard
Federal rate is projected to result in a
decrease of 0.1 percent in estimated
payments per discharge from RY 2010 to
FY 2011, on average, for all LTCHs,
while the proposed changes to the area
wage adjustment are projected to result
in an increase in estimated payments of
0.1 percent, on average, for all LTCHs.
As discussed in section V.B. of the
Addendum to this proposed rule, we are
proposing to update the wage index
values for FY 2011 based on the most
recent available data. In addition, we are
proposing to decrease the labor-related
share slightly from 75.779 percent to
75.407 percent under the LTCH PPS for
FY 2011 based on the most recent
available data on the relative
importance of the labor-related share of
operating and capital costs of the RPL
market basket (discussed in section
VII.C.2. of the preamble of this proposed
rule). This proposed update to the wage
data and the labor-related share is
expected to increase LTCH PPS
payments by 0.1 percent.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Table IV below shows the impact of
the proposed payment rate and
proposed policy changes on LTCH PPS
payments for FY 2011 by comparing RY
2010 estimated payments to FY 2011
estimated payments. The projected
increase in payments per discharge from
RY 2010 to FY 2011 is 0.8 percent
(shown in Column 8). This projected
increase in payments is attributable to
the impacts of the proposed change to
the standard Federal rate (¥0.1 percent
in Column 6) and the proposed change
due to the area wage adjustment (0.1
percent in Column 7), as well as the
effect of the estimated increase in
payments for HCO cases and SSO cases
in FY 2011 as compared to RY 2010 (0.5
percent and 0.3 percent, respectively).
That is, estimated total HCO payments
are projected to increase from RY 2010
to FY 2011 in order to ensure that
estimated HCO payments will be 8
percent of total estimated LTCH PPS
payments in FY 2011. An analysis of the
most recent available LTCH PPS claims
data (FY 2009 claims from the December
2009 update of the MedPAR files)
indicates that the RY 2010 HCO
threshold of $18,425 may result in HCO
payments in RY 2010 that fall below the
estimated 8 percent. Specifically, we
currently estimate that HCO payments
will be approximately 7.5 percent of
estimated total LTCH PPS payments in
RY 2010. We estimate that the impact of
the increase in HCO payments would
result in approximately a 0.5 percent
increase in estimated payments from RY
2010 to FY 2011 on average for all
LTCHs. Furthermore, in calculating the
estimated increase in payments from RY
2010 to FY 2011 for HCO and SSO
cases, we increased estimated costs by
the applicable market basket percentage
increase as projected by our actuaries,
which increases payments by 0.3
percent relative to last year. We note
that estimated payments for all SSO
cases comprise approximately 14
percent of estimated total LTCH PPS
payments, and estimated payments for
HCO cases comprise approximately 8
percent of estimated total LTCH PPS
payments. Payments for HCO cases are
based on 80 percent of the estimated
cost above the HCO threshold, while the
majority of the payments for SSO cases
(over 65 percent) are based on the
estimated cost of the SSO case.
As we discuss in detail throughout
this proposed rule, based on the most
recent available data, we believe that the
provisions of this proposed rule relating
to the LTCH PPS will result in an
increase in estimated aggregate LTCH
PPS payments and that the resulting
PO 00000
Frm 00464
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
LTCH PPS payment amounts result in
appropriate Medicare payments.
B. Impact on Rural Hospitals
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
IV, we are projecting a 1.4 percent
increase in estimated payments per
discharge for FY 2011 as compared to
RY 2010 for rural LTCHs that would
result from the proposed changes
presented in this proposed rule (that is,
the proposed update to the standard
Federal rate discussed in section V.A. of
the Addendum to this proposed rule
and the proposed changes to the area
wage adjustment as discussed in section
V.B. of the Addendum to this proposed
rule) as well as the effect of estimated
changes to HCO and SSO payments.
This estimated impact is based on the
data for the 26 rural LTCHs in our
database of 421 LTCHs, for which
complete data were available.
The estimated increase in LTCH PPS
payments from RY 2010 to FY 2011 for
rural LTCHs is primarily due to the
higher than average impacts from the
proposed changes to the area wage
adjustment and the proposed reduction
in the labor-related share from 75.779 to
75.407 percent, which results in an
estimated 0.6 percent increase in
payments. We believe that the proposed
changes to the area wage adjustment
presented in this proposed rule (that is,
the proposed use of updated wage data
and the proposed change in the laborrelated share) would result in accurate
and appropriate LTCH PPS payments in
FY 2011 because they are based on the
most recent available data. Such
updated data appropriately reflect
national differences in area wage levels
and appropriately identifies the portion
of the standard Federal rate that should
be adjusted to account for such
differences in area wages, thereby
resulting in accurate and appropriate
LTCH PPS payments.
C. Anticipated Effects of Proposed LTCH
PPS Payment Rate Change and Policy
Changes
We discuss the impact of the
proposed changes to the payment rates,
factors, and other payment rate policies
under the LTCH PPS for FY 2011 (in
terms of their estimated fiscal impact on
the Medicare budget and on LTCHs) in
section VII. of the preamble of this
proposed rule.
1. Budgetary Impact
Section 123(a)(1) of the BBRA
requires that the PPS developed for
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
LTCHs ‘‘maintain budget neutrality.’’ We
believe that the statute’s mandate for
budget neutrality 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 were estimated to equal the
amount that would have been paid if the
LTCH PPS had not been implemented.
As discussed in section IX.A. of this
Appendix A, we project an increase in
aggregate LTCH PPS payments in FY
2011 of approximately $41 million (or
0.8 percent) based on the 421 LTCHs in
our database.
2. Impact on Providers
The basic methodology for
determining a per discharge LTCH PPS
payment is set forth in § 412.515
through § 412.536. In addition to the
basic MS–LTC–DRG payment (standard
Federal rate multiplied by the MS–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 year.
To understand the impact of the
proposed changes to the LTCH PPS
payments presented in this proposed
rule on different categories of LTCHs for
FY 2011, it is necessary to estimate
payments per discharge for RY 2010
using the rates and factors, including
the FY 2010 GROUPER (Version 27.0)
and relative weights, and policies
established in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY
2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR 43945
through 43994 and 44021 through
44030). It is also necessary to estimate
the payments per discharge that would
be made under the proposed LTCH PPS
rates, factors, policies, and GROUPER
(Version 28.0) for FY 2011 (as discussed
in VII. of the preamble and section V. of
the Addendum to this proposed rule).
These estimates of RY 2010 and FY
2011 LTCH PPS payments are based on
the best available LTCH claims data and
other factors, such as the application of
inflation factors to estimate costs for
SSO and HCO cases in each year. We
also evaluated the change in estimated
RY 2010 payments to estimated FY 2011
payments (on a per discharge basis) for
each category of LTCHs.
Hospital groups were based on
characteristics provided in the OSCAR
data, FY 2006 through FY 2007 cost
report data in HCRIS, and PSF data.
Hospitals with incomplete
characteristics were grouped into the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
‘‘unknown’’ category. Hospital groups
include the following:
• Location: large urban/other urban/
rural.
• Participation date.
• Ownership control.
• Census region.
• Bed size.
To estimate the impacts of the
payment rates and policy changes
among the various categories of existing
providers, we used LTCH cases from the
FY 2009 MedPAR file to estimate
payments for RY 2010 and to estimate
payments for FY 2011 for 421 LTCHs.
We believe that the discharges based on
the FY 2009 MedPAR data for the 421
LTCHs in our database, which includes
301 proprietary LTCHs, provide
sufficient representation in the MS–
LTC–DRGs containing discharges for
patients who received LTCH care for the
most commonly treated LTCH patients’
diagnoses.
3. Calculation of Prospective Payments
For purposes of this impact analysis,
to estimate per discharge payments
under the LTCH PPS, we simulated
payments on a case-by-case basis using
LTCH claims from the FY 2009 MedPAR
files. For modeling estimated LTCH PPS
payments for RY 2010, we applied the
RY 2010 standard Federal rate (that is,
$39,896.65, which is effective for LTCH
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2009, and through September 30,
2010). For modeling estimated LTCH
PPS payments for FY 2011, we applied
the proposed FY 2011 standard Federal
rate of $39,856.75, which would be
effective for LTCH discharges occurring
on or after October 1, 2010, and through
September 30, 2011.
Furthermore, in modeling estimated
LTCH PPS payments for both RY 2010
and FY 2011 in this impact analysis, we
applied the RY 2010 and proposed FY
2011 adjustments for area wage
differences and the COLA for Alaska
and Hawaii. Specifically, we adjusted
for area wage differences for estimated
RY 2010 payments using the RY 2010
LTCH PPS labor-related share of 75.779
percent (74 FR 43968), the wage index
values established in the Tables 12A
and 12B of the Addendum to the FY
2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule
(74 FR 44192 through 44213) and the
RY 2010 COLA factors shown in the
table in section V. of the Addendum to
that final rule (74 FR 44026). Similarly,
we adjusted for area wage differences
for estimated FY 2011 payments using
the proposed LTCH PPS FY 2011 laborrelated share of 75.407 percent (section
VII.C.2.d. of the preamble of this
proposed rule), the FY 2011 proposed
wage index values presented in Tables
PO 00000
Frm 00465
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24315
12A and 12B of the Addendum to this
proposed rule, and the FY 2011 COLA
factors shown in the table in section
V.B.5. of the Addendum to this
proposed rule.
As discussed above, our impact
analysis reflects an estimated change in
payments for SSO cases as well as an
estimated increase in payments for HCO
cases (as described in section V.C. of the
Addendum to this proposed rule). In
modeling proposed payments for SSO
and HCO cases in RY 2010, we applied
an inflation factor of 1.024 percent
(determined by OACT) to the estimated
costs of each case determined from the
charges reported on the claims in the FY
2009 MedPAR files and the best
available CCRs from the December 2009
update of the PSF. In modeling
proposed payments for SSO and HCO
cases in FY 2011, we applied an
inflation factor of 1.049 (determined by
OACT) to the estimated costs of each
case determined from the charges
reported on the claims in the FY 2009
MedPAR files and the best available
CCRs from the December 2009 update of
the PSF. Furthermore, in modeling
estimated LTCH PPS payments for both
RY 2010 and FY 2011 in this impact
analysis, we applied the RY 2010 HCO
fixed-loss amount of $18,425 (74 FR
44029) and the proposed FY 2011 fixed
loss amount of $18,692 (as discussed in
section V.C.3. of the Addendum of this
proposed rule).
These impacts reflect the estimated
‘‘losses’’ or ‘‘gains’’ among the various
classifications of LTCHs from the RY
2010 to FY 2011 based on the proposed
payment rates and policy changes
presented in this proposed rule. Table
IV 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 RY
2010 (as described above).
• The fifth column shows the
estimated payment per discharge for FY
2011 (as described above).
• The sixth column shows the
percentage change in estimated
payments per discharge from RY 2010 to
FY 2011 for proposed changes to the
standard Federal rate (as discussed in
section V.A. of the Addendum to this
proposed rule).
• The seventh column shows the
percentage change in estimated
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24316
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
payments per discharge from RY 2010 to
FY 2011 for proposed changes to the
area wage adjustment at § 412.525(c) (as
discussed in section V.B. of the
Addendum to this proposed rule).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
• The eighth column shows the
percentage change in estimated
payments per discharge from RY 2010
(Column 4) to FY 2011 (Column 5) for
all proposed changes (and includes the
PO 00000
Frm 00466
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
effect of estimated changes to HCO and
SSO payments).
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00467
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24317
EP04MY10.273
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
24318
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
4. Results
Based on the most recent available
data (as described previously for 421
LTCHs, we have prepared the following
summary of the impact (as shown in
Table IV) of the proposed LTCH PPS
payment rate and policy changes
presented in this proposed rule. The
impact analysis in Table IV shows that
estimated payments per discharge are
expected to increase approximately 0.8
percent, on average, for all LTCHs from
RY 2010 to FY 2011 as a result of the
proposed payment rate and policy
changes presented in this proposed rule,
as well as estimated increases in HCO
and SSO payments. We note that we are
proposing a ¥0.1 percent decrease to
the standard Federal rate for FY 2011,
based on the latest market basket
estimate (2.4 percent) and the
adjustment for the cumulative effect of
changes in documentation and coding
in FYs 2008 and 2009 (¥2.5 percent).
We noted earlier in this section that for
most categories of LTCHs, as shown in
Table IV (Column 6), the impact of the
proposed decrease of ¥0.1 percent to
the standard Federal rate is projected to
result in approximately a ¥0.1 percent
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
decrease in estimated payments per
discharge for all LTCHs from RY 2010
to FY 2011. Furthermore, as discussed
previously in this regulatory impact
analysis, the average increase in
estimated payments per discharge from
the RY 2010 to FY 2011 for all LTCHs
of approximately 0.8 percent (as shown
in Table IV) was determined by
comparing estimated FY 2011 LTCH
PPS payments (using the proposed rates
and policies discussed in this proposed
rule) to estimated RY 2010 LTCH PPS
payments (as described above in section
IX.C. of this Appendix A).
a. Location
Based on the most recent available
data, the vast majority of LTCHs are
located in urban areas. Only
approximately 6 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 IV shows that the
average percent increase in estimated
payments per discharge from RY 2010 to
FY 2011 for all hospitals is 0.8 percent
for all proposed changes. For rural
LTCHs, the percent change for all
proposed changes is estimated to be 1.4
PO 00000
Frm 00468
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
percent, while for urban LTCHs, we
estimate the increase to be 0.8 percent.
Large urban LTCHs are projected to
experience an increase of 0.9 percent in
estimated payments per discharge from
RY 2010 to FY 2011, while other urban
LTCHs are projected to experience an
increase of 0.7 percent in estimated
payments per discharge from RY 2010 to
FY 2011, as shown in Table IV.
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 49 percent) of the LTCH
cases are in hospitals that began
participating between October 1993 and
September 2002, and are projected to
experience nearly the average increase
(0.7 percent) in estimated payments per
discharge from RY 2010 to FY 2011, as
shown in Table IV.
In the participation category where
LTCHs began participating in Medicare
before October 1983, LTCHs are
projected to experience a higher than
average percent increase (1.1 percent) in
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
EP04MY10.274
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
estimated payments per discharge from
RY 2010 to FY 2011, as shown in Table
IV. Approximately 4 percent of LTCHs
began participating in Medicare before
October 1983. The LTCHs in this
category are projected to experience a
higher than average increase in
estimated payments because of
estimated increases in payments due to
the proposed change to the area wage
adjustment, the proposed changes in the
MS–LTC–DRG classifications and
relative weights, and also because of
estimated increases in their SSO
payments relative to last year.
Approximately 10 percent of LTCHs
began participating in Medicare
between October 1983 and September
1993. These LTCHs are projected to
experience a slightly above average
increase (0.9 percent) in estimated
payments from RY 2010 to FY 2011.
LTCHs that began participating in
Medicare after October 2002 currently
represent approximately 38 percent of
all LTCHs, and are projected to
experience a slightly above average
increase (0.9 percent) in estimated
payments from RY 2010 to FY 2011.
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 18 percent of LTCHs are
identified as voluntary (Table IV). We
expect that, for these LTCHs in the
voluntary category, estimated FY 2011
LTCH payments per discharge will
increase higher than the average (1.1
percent) in comparison to estimated
payments in RY 2010 primarily because
we project an increase in estimated HCO
payments and SSO payments to be
higher than the average for these LTCHs.
The majority (71 percent) of LTCHs are
identified as proprietary and these
LTCHs are projected to experience an
average increase (0.8 percent) in
estimated payments per discharge from
RY 2010 to FY 2011. Finally,
government-owned and operated LTCHs
(3 percent) are expected to experience a
higher than the average increase (1.3
percent) in estimated payments
primarily due to a larger than the
average increase in estimated HCO
payments and increases under the
proposed MS–LTC–DRG GROUPER
(Version 28) and relative weights.
d. Census Region
Estimated payments per discharge for
FY 2011 are projected to increase for
LTCHs located in all regions in
comparison to RY 2010. Of the 9 census
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
regions, we project that the increase in
estimated payments per discharge will
have the largest positive impact on
LTCHs in the New England and West
South Central regions (1.1 percent, 1.0,
respectively, as shown in Table IV). The
estimated percent increase in payments
per discharge from RY 2010 to FY 2011
for New England is largely attributable
to the projected increase in estimated
HCO and SSO payments (explained in
greater detail above in section XV.B.4. of
this Appendix A). The projected
increase in estimated payments per
discharge from RY 2010 to FY 2011 for
LTCHs in the West South Central region
is mostly due to the 43 percent of
providers in this region that would
receive a higher wage index in FY 2011
compared to RY 2010 and because all
the providers have a proposed FY 2011
wage index less than 1, which results in
an estimated payment increase because
the proposed labor-related share (the
portion of the rate adjusted by the wage
index) is being reduced so their lower
wage index adjusts a smaller portion of
the rate.
In contrast, LTCHs located in the East
South Central region are projected to
experience a lower than average
increase in estimated payments per
discharge from RY 2010 to FY 2011. The
less than average estimated increase in
payments of 0.5 percent for LTCHs in
the East South Central region is
primarily due to estimated decreases in
payments associated with the proposed
wage index because 50 percent of
LTCHs located in this region will have
a proposed FY 2011 wage index value
that is less than their RY 2010 wage
index value. Similarly, LTCHs in the
Middle Atlantic and South Atlantic are
expected to experience a below average
increase in payments of 0.6 percent
primarily due to an estimated decrease
in payment because of the proposed FY
2011 wage index changes.
e. Bed Size
LTCHs were grouped into six
categories based on bed size: 0–24 beds;
25–49 beds; 50–74 beds; 75–124 beds;
125–199 beds; and greater than 200
beds.
We project that payments for small
LTCHs (0–24 beds) will experience a 1.4
percent increase in payments due to
increases in their wage index while
large LTCHs (200+ beds) will experience
smaller than average increase in
payments of 0.6 percent. LTCHs with
between 75 and 124 beds and between
125 and 199 beds are expected to
experience an above average increase in
payments per discharge from RY 2010 to
FY 2011 (1.1 percent and 1.0 percent,
respectively) primarily due to a larger
PO 00000
Frm 00469
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24319
than average estimated increase in
payments from the proposed FY 2011
changes to the area wage adjustment.
D. Effect on the Medicare Program
As noted previously, we project that
the provisions of this proposed rule will
result in an increase in estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments in FY
2011 of approximately $41 million (or
about 0.8 percent) for the 421 LTCHs in
our database.
E. 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.
X. Effects of Proposed Policy Changes
Regarding Accreditation Requirements
for Medicaid Providers of Inpatient
Psychiatric Services for Individuals
Under Age 21
In section X. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we discuss our proposal
to remove the Medicaid requirement for
Joint Commission accreditation of
psychiatric hospitals, hospitals with
inpatient psychiatric programs, and
PRTFs. Psychiatric hospitals would
have the choice of meeting the
requirements to participate in Medicare
as a psychiatric hospital under 42 CFR
482.60, or obtaining accreditation from
a national accrediting organization
whose psychiatric hospital accrediting
program has been approved by CMS.
Hospitals with inpatient psychiatric
programs would have the choice of
meeting the requirements for
participation in Medicare as a hospital
as specified in 42 CFR part 482 or
obtaining accreditation from a national
accrediting organization whose hospital
accreditation program has been
approved by CMS. In addition, PRTFs
would be afforded the flexibility in
obtaining accreditation by a national
accrediting organization whose program
has been approved by CMS, or by any
other accrediting organization with
comparable standards that is recognized
by the State. This proposal would
remove specific references to national
accrediting bodies to provide
appropriate administrative flexibility to
account for any changes in qualifying
accrediting organizations.
Ensuring access to services is a
priority for CMS, and we believe that
this proposal would result in
psychiatric hospitals, hospitals with
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24320
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
inpatient psychiatric programs, and
PRTFs meeting comparable standards
required in order to provide services. In
addition, the proposed revision to the
accreditation requirement aligns
Medicaid standards with existing
standards in the Medicare program. We
believe that this flexibility in obtaining
accreditation will facilitate the
provision of medically necessary,
Medicaid-reimbursable psychiatric
services to vulnerable children, while
maintaining the high quality of care
demanded by the Medicaid program.
We are not preparing an analysis for
this proposal under the RFA because we
have determined that the proposal
would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
We are not preparing an analysis for
section 1102(b) of the Act because this
proposal would not have a significant
impact on the operations of a substantial
number of small rural hospitals.
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 also
requires that agencies assess anticipated
costs and benefits before issuing any
rule that may result in expenditure in
any one year of $100 million in 1995
dollars, updated annually for inflation.
That threshold level is currently
approximately $135 million. This
proposal would not result in an impact
of $135 million or more on State, local
or tribal governments, in the aggregate,
or on the private sector.
Executive Order 13132 establishes
certain requirements that an agency
must meet when it promulgates a
proposed rule (and subsequent final
rule) that imposes substantial direct
requirement costs on State and local
governments, preempts State law, or
otherwise has Federalism implications.
Because this proposal does not impose
any costs on State or local governments,
the requirements of Executive Order
13132 are not applicable.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
XI. Alternatives Considered
This proposed rule contains a range of
policies. The preamble of this proposed
rule provides descriptions of the
statutory provisions that are addressed,
identifies implementing policies where
discretion has been exercised, and
presents rationales for our decisions
and, where relevant, alternatives that
were considered.
XII. Overall Conclusion
A. Acute Care Hospitals
Table I of section VI. of this Appendix
demonstrates the estimated
distributional impact of the IPPS budget
neutrality requirements for the proposed
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
MS–DRG and wage index changes, and
for the wage index reclassifications
under the MGCRB. Table I also shows
an overall decrease of 0.1 percent in
operating payments. We estimate that
operating payments will decrease by
approximately $142 million in FY 2011.
In addition, this estimate includes the
reporting of hospital quality data
program costs of $2.4 million, and a
savings of $21 million associated with
the proposed HACs policies and all
other proposed operating payment
policies described in section VII. of this
Appendix. We estimate that capital
payments will experience ¥0.2 percent
change in payments per case, as shown
in Table III of section VIII. of this
Appendix. We estimate that capital
payments will decrease by
approximately $20 million in FY 2011
compared to FY 2010. The proposed
cumulative operating and capital
payments should result in a net
decrease of $181 million to IPPS
providers. The discussions presented in
the previous pages, in combination with
the rest of this proposed rule, constitute
a regulatory impact analysis.
B. LTCHs
Overall, LTCHs are projected to
experience an increase in estimated
payments per discharge in FY 2011. In
the impact analysis, we are using the
proposed rates, factors, and policies
presented in this proposed rule,
including proposed updated wage index
values and relative weights, and the best
available claims and CCR data to
estimate the change in payments under
the LTCH PPS for FY 2011.
Accordingly, based on the best available
data for the 421 LTCHs in our database,
we estimate that FY 2011 LTCH PPS
payments will increase approximately
$41 million (or about 0.8 percent).
XIII. Accounting Statements
TABLE V—ACCOUNTING STATEMENT:
CLASSIFICATION OF ESTIMATED EXPENDITURES
UNDER THE IPPS
FROM FY 2010 TO FY 2011
Category
Annualized Monetized
Transfers.
From Whom to Whom
¥$181 million.
Total ...................
¥$181 million.
As discussed in section IX. of this
Appendix, the impact analysis for the
proposed changes under the LTCH PPS
for this proposed rule projects an
increase in estimated aggregate
payments of approximately $41 million
(or about 0.8 percent) for the 421 LTCHs
in our database that are subject to
payment under the LTCH PPS.
Therefore, as required by OMB Circular
A–4 (available at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars/
a004/a-4.pdf), in Table VI below, we
have prepared an accounting statement
showing the classification of the
expenditures associated with the
provisions of this proposed rule as they
relate to changes to the LTCH PPS.
Table VI provides our best estimate of
the proposed increase in Medicare
payments under the LTCH PPS as a
result of the proposed provisions
presented in this proposed rule based
on the data for the 421 LTCHs in our
database. All expenditures are classified
as transfers to Medicare providers (that
is, LTCHs).
TABLE VI—ACCOUNTING STATEMENT:
CLASSIFICATION OF ESTIMATED EXPENDITURES FROM THE 2010 LTCH
PPS RATE YEAR TO THE FY 2011
LTCH PPS
Category
As required by OMB Circular A–4
(available at https://www.whitehousegov/
omb/circulars/a004/a-4.pdf), in Table V
below, we have prepared an accounting
statement showing the classification of
the expenditures associated with the
provisions of this proposed rule as they
relate to acute care hospitals. This table
provides our best estimate of the change
in Medicare payments to providers as a
result of the proposed changes to the
IPPS presented in this proposed rule.
All expenditures are classified as
transfers to Medicare providers.
Frm 00470
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Federal Government
to IPPS Medicare
Providers.
B. LTCHs
A. Acute Care Hospitals
PO 00000
Transfers
Transfers
Annualized Monetized
Transfers.
Positive transfer—Estimated increase in
expenditures: $41
million.
Federal Government
to LTCH PPS Medicare Providers.
From Whom to Whom
Total ...................
$41 million.
XIV. Executive Order 12866
In accordance with the provisions of
Executive Order 12866, the Executive
Office of Management and Budget
reviewed this proposed rule.
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Appendix B: Recommendation of
Update Factors for Operating Cost
Rates of Payment for Inpatient Hospital
Services
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
I. Background
Section 1886(e)(4)(A) of the Act
requires that the Secretary, taking into
consideration the recommendations of
the MedPAC, recommend update factors
for inpatient hospital services for each
fiscal year that take into account the
amounts necessary for the efficient and
effective delivery of medically
appropriate and necessary care of high
quality. Under section 1886(e)(5) of the
Act, we are required to publish update
factors recommended by the Secretary
in the proposed and final IPPS rules,
respectively. Accordingly, this
Appendix provides the
recommendations for the update factors
for the IPPS national standardized
amount, the Puerto Rico-specific
standardized amount, the hospitalspecific rates for SCHs and MDHs, and
the rate-of-increase limits for certain
hospitals excluded from the IPPS, as
well as LTCHs, IPFs, and IRFs. We also
discuss our response to MedPAC’s
recommended update factors for
inpatient hospital services.
II. Inpatient Hospital Update for FY
2011
On March 23, 2010, the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act
(PPACA), Public Law 111–148 was
enacted. Following the enactment of
Public Law 111–148, the Health Care
and Education Reconciliation Act of
2010, Public L. 111–152 (enacted on
March 30, 2010), amended certain
provisions of Public Law 111–148. A
number of the provisions of Public Law
111–148, as amended by Public Law
111–152, affect the IPPS and the LTCH
PPS and the providers and suppliers
addressed in this proposed rule.
However, due to the timing of the
passage of the legislation, we are unable
to address those provisions in this
proposed rule. Therefore, the proposed
policies and payment rates in this
proposed rule do not reflect the new
legislation. We plan to issue separate
documents in the Federal Register
addressing the provisions of Public Law
111–148, as amended, that affect our
proposed policies and payment rates for
FY 2011 under the IPPS and LTCH PPS,
as well as the provisions of Public Law
111–148, as amended, that affect the
policies and payment rates for FY 2010
under the IPPS and LTCH PPS.
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(i)(XX) of the
Act, as amended by section 5001(a) of
Public Law 109–171, sets the FY 2011
percentage increase in the operating cost
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
standardized amount equal to the rateof-increase in the hospital market basket
for IPPS hospitals in all areas, subject to
the hospital submitting quality
information under rules established by
the Secretary in accordance with section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act. For
hospitals that do not provide these data,
the update is equal to the market basket
percentage increase less 2.0 percentage
points.
Consistent with current law, based on
IHS Global Insight, Inc.’s first quarter
2010 forecast, with historical data
through the 2009 fourth quarter, of the
FY 2011 IPPS market basket increase,
we are estimating that the FY 2011
update to the standardized amount will
be 2.4 percent (that is, the current
estimate of the market basket rate-ofincrease) for hospitals in all areas,
provided the hospital submits quality
data in accordance with our rules. For
hospitals that do not submit quality
data, we are estimating that the update
to the standardized amount will be 0.4
percent (that is, the current estimate of
the market basket rate-of-increase minus
2.0 percentage points).
Section 1886(d)(9)(C)(1) of the Act is
the basis for determining the percentage
increase to the Puerto Rico-specific
standardized amount. For FY 2011, we
are proposing to apply the full rate-ofincrease in the hospital market basket
for IPPS hospitals to the Puerto Ricospecific standardized amount.
Therefore, the update to the Puerto
Rico-specific standardized amount is
estimated to be 2.4 percent.
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(iv) of the Act
sets the FY 2011 percentage increase in
the hospital-specific rates applicable to
SCHs and MDHs equal to the rate set
forth in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(i) of the
Act (that is, the same update factor as
for all other hospitals subject to the
IPPS, or the rate-of-increase in the
market basket). Therefore, the update to
the hospital-specific rates applicable to
SCHs and MDHs is estimated to be 2.4
or 0.4 percent, depending upon whether
the hospital submits quality data.
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ii) of the Act is
used for purposes of determining the
percentage increase in the rate-ofincrease limits for children’s and cancer
hospitals. Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ii) of the
Act sets the percentage increase in the
rate-of-increase limits equal to the
market basket percentage increase. In
accordance with § 403.752(a) of the
regulations, RNHCIs are paid under
§ 413.40, which also uses section
1886(b)(3)(B)(ii) of the Act to update the
percentage increase in the rate-ofincrease limits. Section 1886(j)(3)(C) of
the Act addresses the increase factor for
the Federal prospective payment rate of
PO 00000
Frm 00471
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
24321
IRFs. Section 123 of Public Law 106–
113, as amended by section 307(b) of
Public Law 106–554, provides the
statutory authority for updating
payment rates under the LTCH PPS. In
addition, section 124 of Public Law
106–113 provides the statutory
authority for updating all aspects of the
payment rates for IPFs.
Currently, children’s hospitals, cancer
hospitals, and RNHCIs are the
remaining three types of hospitals still
reimbursed under the reasonable cost
methodology. We are proposing to
provide our current estimate of the FY
2011 IPPS operating market basket
percentage increase (2.4 percent) to
update the target limits for children’s
hospitals, cancer hospitals, and RNHCIs.
For FY 2011, as discussed in section
VII. of the preamble to this proposed
rule, we are proposing an update of
¥0.1 percent to the LTCH PPS standard
Federal rate, which is based on a
proposed market basket increase of 2.4
percent (based on IHS Global Insight,
Inc.’s first quarter 2010 forecast of the
FY 2002-based RPL market basket
increase for FY 2011) and an adjustment
of ¥2.5 percent to account for the
increase in case-mix in a prior year that
resulted from changes in coding
practices rather than an increase in
patient severity.
Effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after January 1, 2005,
IPFs are paid under the IPF PPS. IPF
PPS payments are based on a Federal
per diem rate that is derived from the
sum of the average routine operating,
ancillary, and capital costs for each
patient day of psychiatric care in an IPF,
adjusted for budget neutrality.
IRFs are paid under the IRF PPS for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after January 1, 2002. For cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2002 (FY 2003), and thereafter, the
Federal prospective payments to IRFs
are based on 100 percent of the adjusted
Federal IRF prospective payment
amount, updated annually (69 FR
45721).
III. Secretary’s Recommendations
MedPAC is recommending an
inpatient hospital update equal to the
market basket rate of increase for FY
2011. MedPAC’s rationale for this
update recommendation is described in
more detail below. As mentioned above,
section 1886(e)(4)(A) of the Act requires
that the Secretary, taking into
consideration the recommendations of
the MedPAC, recommend update factors
for inpatient hospital services for each
fiscal year that take into account the
amounts necessary for the efficient and
effective delivery of medically
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
24322
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with PROPOSALS
appropriate and necessary care of high
quality. Consistent with the update
factor in the President’s budget, we are
recommending an update to the
standardized amount of 2.9 percent. We
are recommending that this same update
factor apply to SCHs and MDHs.
Section 1886(d)(9)(C)(i) of the Act is
the basis for determining the percentage
increase to the Puerto Rico-specific
standardized amount. For FY 2011, we
are proposing to apply the full rate-ofincrease in the hospital market basket
for IPPS hospitals to the Puerto Ricospecific standardized amount.
Therefore, the update to the Puerto
Rico-specific standardized amount is
estimated to be 2.4 percent.
In addition to making a
recommendation for IPPS hospitals, in
accordance with section 1886(e)(4)(A) of
the Act, we also are recommending
update factors for all other types of
hospitals. Consistent with the update
factor in the President’s budget, we are
recommending an update for children’s
hospitals, cancer hospitals, and RNHCIs
of 2.9 percent.
For FY 2011, consistent with the
proposal set forth in section VII. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, we are
recommending an update of ¥0.1
percent to the LTCH PPS standard
Federal rate. In addition, based on IHS
Global Insight, Inc.’s first quarter 2010
forecast of the RPL market basket
increase, we are recommending an
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:28 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
update of 2.4 percent to the IRF PPS
Federal rate for FY 2011 and an update
of 2.4 percent to the IPF PPS Federal
rate for RY 2011 for the Federal per
diem payment amount.
IV. MedPAC Recommendation for
Assessing Payment Adequacy and
Updating Payments in Traditional
Medicare
In its March 2010 Report to Congress,
MedPAC assessed the adequacy of
current payments and costs, and the
relationship between payments and an
appropriate cost base. MedPAC
recommended an update to the hospital
inpatient rates equal to the increase in
the hospital market basket in FY 2011,
concurrent with implementation of a
quality incentive program. MedPAC’s
reasoning is that under a quality
program, an individual hospital’s
quality performance should determine
whether its net increase in payments is
above or below the market basket
increase. MedPAC noted the importance
of hospitals to control their costs rather
than accommodate the current rate of
cost growth.
MedPAC also noted that indicators of
payment adequacy are positive.
MedPAC expects Medicare margins to
remain low in 2011. At the same time
though, MedPAC’s analysis finds that
high-performing hospitals have been
able to maintain relatively low costs
while maintaining a relatively high
PO 00000
Frm 00472
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
quality of care. In addition, roughly half
of these providers are generating a profit
on their Medicare business.
Response: Similar to our response last
year, we agree with MedPAC that
hospitals should control costs rather
than have Medicare accommodate the
current rate of growth. As MedPAC
noted, the lack of financial pressure at
certain hospitals can lead to higher costs
and in turn bring down the overall
Medicare margin for the industry.
In addition to the quality data that
hospitals are required to submit to CMS,
as discussed in section II. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, CMS
implemented the MS–DRGs in FY 2008
to better account for severity of illness
under the IPPS and is basing the DRG
weights on costs rather than charges. We
continue to believe that these
refinements will better match Medicare
payment of the cost of care and provide
incentives for hospitals to be more
efficient in controlling costs.
We note that, because the operating
and capital prospective payment
systems remain separate, we are
continuing to use separate updates for
operating and capital payments. The
proposed update to the capital rate is
discussed in section III. of the
Addendum to this proposed rule.
[FR Doc. 2010–9163 Filed 4–19–10; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\04MYP2.SGM
04MYP2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 85 (Tuesday, May 4, 2010)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 23852-24322]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-9163]
[[Page 23851]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Part II
Book 2 of 2 Books
Pages 23851-24362
Department of Health and Human Services
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
42 CFR Parts 412, 413, et al.
Medicare Program; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Proposed
Rules
[[Page 23852]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Parts 412, 413, 440, 441, 482, 485, and 489
[CMS-1498-P]
RIN 0938-AP80
Medicare Program; Proposed Changes to the Hospital Inpatient
Prospective Payment Systems for Acute Care Hospitals and the Long-Term
Care Hospital Prospective Payment System and Proposed Fiscal Year 2011
Rates; Effective Date of Provider Agreements and Supplier Approvals;
and Hospital Conditions of Participation for Rehabilitation and
Respiratory Care Services Medicaid Program: Accreditation Requirements
for Providers of Inpatient Psychiatric Services for Individuals Under
Age 21
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We are proposing to revise the Medicare hospital inpatient
prospective payment systems (IPPS) for operating and capital-related
costs of acute care hospitals to implement changes arising from our
continuing experience with these systems. In addition, in the Addendum
to this proposed rule, we describe the proposed changes to the amounts
and factors used to determine the rates for Medicare acute care
hospital inpatient services for operating costs and capital-related
costs. These proposed changes would be applicable to discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2010. We also are setting forth the
proposed update to the rate-of-increase limits for certain hospitals
excluded from the IPPS that are paid on a reasonable cost basis subject
to these limits. The proposed updated rate-of-increase limits would be
effective for cost reporting periods beginning on or after October 1,
2010.
We are proposing to update the payment policy and the annual
payment rates for the Medicare prospective payment system (PPS) for
inpatient hospital services provided by long-term care hospitals
(LTCHs). In the Addendum to this proposed rule, we also set forth the
proposed changes to the payment rates, factors, and other payment rate
policies under the LTCH PPS. These proposed changes would be applicable
to discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2010.
We are proposing changes affecting the Medicare conditions of
participation for hospitals relating to the types of practitioners who
may provide rehabilitation services and respiratory care services.
We are proposing changes affecting the determination of the
effective date of provider agreements and supplier approvals under
Medicare.
Finally, we are proposing to offer psychiatric hospitals, hospitals
with inpatient psychiatric programs, and psychiatric facilities that
are not hospitals increased flexibility in obtaining accreditation to
participate in the Medicaid program. Psychiatric hospitals would have
the choice of meeting the existing regulatory requirements to
participate in Medicare as a psychiatric hospital or to obtaining
accreditation from a national accrediting organization whose
psychiatric hospital accrediting program has been approved by CMS.
Hospitals with inpatient psychiatric programs would have the choice of
meeting the existing regulatory requirements for participation in
Medicare as a hospital or obtaining accreditation from a national
accrediting organization whose hospital accreditation program has been
approved by CMS. In addition, psychiatric facilities that are not
hospitals would be afforded the flexibility in obtaining accreditation
by a national accrediting organization whose program has been approved
by CMS, or by any other accrediting organization with comparable
standards that is recognized by the State.
DATES: To be assured consideration, comments on this proposed rule must
be received at one of the addresses provided below, no later than 5
p.m. Eastern Daylight Time (E.D.T.) on June 18, 2010.
ADDRESSES: When commenting on issues presented in this proposed rule,
please refer to file code CMS-1498-P. Because of staff and resource
limitations, we cannot accept comments by facsimile (FAX) transmission.
You may submit comments in one of four ways (please choose only one
of the ways listed):
1. Electronically. You may submit electronic comments on this
regulation at https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the instructions for
``Comment or Submission'' and enter the file code CMS-1498-P to submit
comments on this proposed rule.
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-1498-P, P.O. Box 8011, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed comments to be received
before the close of the comment period.
3. By express or overnight mail. You may send written comments (one
original and two copies) to the following address only: Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services, Department of Health and Human Services,
Attention: CMS-1498-P, Mail Stop C4-26-05, 7500 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
4. By hand or courier. If you prefer, you may deliver (by hand or
courier) your written comments (one original and two copies) before the
close of the comment period to either of the following addresses:
a. Room 445-G, Hubert H. Humphrey Building, 200 Independence
Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20201.
(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.)
b. 7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
If you intend to deliver your comments to the Baltimore address,
please call telephone number (410) 786-7195 in advance to schedule your
arrival with one of our staff members.
Comments mailed to the addresses indicated as appropriate for hand
or courier delivery may be delayed and received after the comment
period.
For information on viewing public comments, see the beginning of
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tzvi Hefter, (410) 786-4487, and Ing-
Jye Cheng, (410) 786-4548, Operating Prospective Payment, MS-DRGs,
Hospital Acquired Conditions (HAC), Wage Index, New Medical Service and
Technology Add-On Payments, Hospital Geographic Reclassifications,
Acute Care Transfers, Capital Prospective Payment, Excluded Hospitals,
Direct and Indirect Graduate Medical Education Payments,
Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH), and Critical Access Hospital
(CAH) Issues.
Michele Hudson, (410) 786-4487, and Judith Richter, (410) 786-2590,
Long-Term Care Hospital Prospective Payment System and MS-LTC-DRG
Relative Weights Issues.
[[Page 23853]]
Siddhartha Mazumdar, (410) 786-6673, Rural Community Hospital
Demonstration Program Issues.
James Poyer, (410) 786-2261, Reporting of Hospital Quality Data for
Annual Payment Update--Program Administration, Validation, and
Reconsideration Issues.
Shaheen Halim, (410) 786-0641, Reporting of Hospital Quality Data
for Annual Payment Update--Measures Issues Except Hospital Consumer
Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems.
Elizabeth Goldstein, (410) 786-6665 Reporting of Hospital Quality
Data for Annual Payment Update--Hospital Consumer Assessment of
Healthcare Providers and Systems Measures Issues.
Marcia Newton, (410-786-5265) and CDR Scott Cooper (U.S. Public
Health Service), (410) 786-9465, Hospital Conditions of Participation
for Rehabilitation Services and Respiratory Therapy Care Issues.
Marilyn Dahl, (410) 786-8665, Provider Agreement and Supplier
Approval Issues.
Melissa Harris, (410) 786-3397 or Adrienne Delozier, (410) 786-
0278, Accreditation of Providers of Inpatient Psychiatric Services to
Individuals under Age 21 Issues.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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.regulations.gov. Follow the search instructions at that Web site to
view public comments.
Comments received timely will also be available for public
inspection, generally beginning approximately 3 weeks after publication
of a document, at the headquarters of the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, 7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, Maryland 21244,
Monday through Friday of each week from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. To schedule
an appointment to view public comments, phone 1-800-743-3951.
Electronic Access
This Federal Register document is also available from the Federal
Register online database through GPO Access, a service of the U.S.
Government Printing Office. Free public access is available on a Wide
Area Information Server (WAIS) through the Internet and via
asynchronous dial-in. Internet users can access the database by using
the World Wide Web (the Superintendent of Documents' home Web page
address is https://www.gpoaccess.gov/), by using local WAIS client
software, or by telnet to swais.access.gpo.gov, then login as guest (no
password required). Dial-in users should use communications software
and modem to call (202) 512-1661; type swais, then login as guest (no
password required).
Acronyms
3M 3M Health Information System
AAHKS American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons
AAMC Association of American Medical Colleges
ACGME Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education
AHA American Hospital Association
AHIC American Health Information Community
AHIMA American Health Information Management Association
AHRQ Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
ALOS Average length of stay
ALTHA Acute Long Term Hospital Association
AMA American Medical Association
AMGA American Medical Group Association
AOA American Osteopathic Association
APR DRG All Patient Refined Diagnosis Related Group System
ARRA American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, Public Law 111-
5
ASC Ambulatory surgical center
ASCA Administrative Simplification Compliance Act of 2002, Public
Law 107-105
ASITN American Society of Interventional and Therapeutic
Neuroradiology
BBA Balanced Budget Act of 1997, Public Law 105-33
BBRA Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP [State Children's Health
Insurance Program] Balanced Budget Refinement Act of 1999, Public
Law 106-113
BIC Beneficiary Identification Code
BIPA Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP [State Children's Health
Insurance Program] Benefits Improvement and Protection Act of 2000,
Public Law 106-554
BLS Bureau of Labor Statistics
CAH Critical access hospital
CARE [Medicare] Continuity Assessment Record & Evaluation
[Instrument]
CART CMS Abstraction & Reporting Tool
CBSAs Core-based statistical areas
CC Complication or comorbidity
CCR Cost-to-charge ratio
CDAC [Medicare] Clinical Data Abstraction Center
CDAD Clostridium difficile-associated disease
CIPI Capital input price index
CMI Case-mix index
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
CMSA Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Area
COBRA Consolidated Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1985, Pub. L. 99-
272
COLA Cost-of-living adjustment
CoP [Hospital] condition of participation
CPI Consumer price index
CRNA Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist
CY Calendar year
DPP Disproportionate patient percentage
DRA Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, Pub. L. 109-171
DRG Diagnosis-related group
DSH Disproportionate share hospital
ECI Employment cost index
EDB [Medicare] Enrollment Database
EMR Electronic medical record
FAH Federation of Hospitals
FDA Food and Drug Administration
FFY Federal fiscal year
FHA Federal Health Architecture
FIPS Federal information processing standards
FQHC Federally qualified health center
FTE Full-time equivalent
FY Fiscal year
GAAP Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
GAF Geographic Adjustment Factor
GME Graduate medical education
HACs Hospital-acquired conditions
HCAHPS Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and
Systems
HCFA Health Care Financing Administration
HCO High-cost outlier
HCRIS Hospital Cost Report Information System
HHA Home health agency
HHS Department of Health and Human Services
HICAN Health Insurance Claims Account Number
HIPAA Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996,
Pub. L. 104-191
HIPC Health Information Policy Council
HIS Health information system
HIT Health information technology
HMO Health maintenance organization
HPMP Hospital Payment Monitoring Program
HSA Health savings account
HSCRC [Maryland] Health Services Cost Review Commission
HSRV Hospital-specific relative value
HSRVcc Hospital-specific relative value cost center
HQA Hospital Quality Alliance
HQI Hospital Quality Initiative
HwH Hospital-within-a-hospital
ICD-9-CM International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision,
Clinical Modification
ICD-10-CM International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision,
Clinical Modification
ICD-10-PCS International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision,
Procedure Coding System
ICR Information collection requirement
IHS Indian Health Service
IME Indirect medical education
I-O Input-Output
IOM Institute of Medicine
IPF Inpatient psychiatric facility
IPPS [Acute care hospital] inpatient prospective payment system
[[Page 23854]]
IRF Inpatient rehabilitation facility
LAMCs Large area metropolitan counties
LOS Length of stay
LTC-DRG Long-term care diagnosis-related group
LTCH Long-term care hospital
MA Medicare Advantage
MAC Medicare Administrative Contractor
MCC Major complication or comorbidity
MCE Medicare Code Editor
MCO Managed care organization
MCV Major cardiovascular condition
MDC Major diagnostic category
MDH Medicare-dependent, small rural hospital
MedPAC Medicare Payment Advisory Commission
MedPAR Medicare Provider Analysis and Review File
MEI Medicare Economic Index
MGCRB Medicare Geographic Classification Review Board
MIEA-TRHCA Medicare Improvements and Extension Act, Division B of
the Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006, Pub. L. 109-432
MIPPA Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008,
Pub. L. 110-275
MMA Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act
of 2003, Pub. L. 108-173
MMSEA Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Extension Act of 2007, Pub. L.
110-173
MPN Medicare provider number
MRHFP Medicare Rural Hospital Flexibility Program
MRSA Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus
MSA Metropolitan Statistical Area
MS-DRG Medicare severity diagnosis-related group
MS-LTC-DRG Medicare severity long-term care diagnosis-related group
NAICS North American Industrial Classification System
NALTH National Association of Long Term Hospitals
NCD National coverage determination
NCHS National Center for Health Statistics
NCQA National Committee for Quality Assurance
NCVHS National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics
NECMA New England County Metropolitan Areas
NP Nurse practitioner
NQF National Quality Forum
NTIS National Technical Information Service
NTTAA National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1991 (Pub.
L. 104-113)
NVHRI National Voluntary Hospital Reporting Initiative
OACT [CMS'] Office of the Actuary
OBRA 86 Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1996, Pub. L. 99-509
OES Occupational employment statistics
OIG Office of the Inspector General
OMB Executive Office of Management and Budget
OPM U.S. Office of Personnel Management
O.R. Operating room
OSCAR Online Survey Certification and Reporting [System]
PA Physician assistant
PIP Periodic interim payment
PLI Professional liability insurance
PMSAs Primary metropolitan statistical areas
POA Present on admission
PPACA Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Pub. L. 111-148
PPI Producer price index
PPS Prospective payment system
PRM Provider Reimbursement Manual
ProPAC Prospective Payment Assessment Commission
PRRB Provider Reimbursement Review Board
PRTFs Psychiatric residential treatment facilities
PSF Provider-Specific File
PS&R Provider Statistical and Reimbursement (System)
QIG Quality Improvement Group, CMS
QIO Quality Improvement Organization
RCE Reasonable compensation equivalent
RHC Rural health clinic
RHQDAPU Reporting hospital quality data for annual payment update
RNHCI Religious nonmedical health care institution
RPL Rehabilitation psychiatric long-term care (hospital)
RRC Rural referral center
RTI Research Triangle Institute, International
RUCAs Rural-urban commuting area codes
RY Rate year
SAF Standard Analytic File
SCH Sole community hospital
SFY State fiscal year
SIC Standard Industrial Classification
SNF Skilled nursing facility
SOCs Standard occupational classifications
SOM State Operations Manual
SSN Social Security number
SSO Short-stay outlier
TEFRA Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982, Pub. L. 97-
248
TEP Technical expert panel
TMA TMA [Transitional Medical Assistance], Abstinence Education, and
QI [Qualifying Individuals] Programs Extension Act of 2007, Pub. L.
110-90
UHDDS Uniform hospital discharge data set
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. Summary
1. Acute Care Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment System
(IPPS)
2. Hospitals and Hospital Units Excluded From the IPPS
3. Long-Term Care Hospital Prospective Payment System (LTCH PPS)
4. Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
5. Payments for Graduate Medical Education (GME)
B. Provisions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
(Pub. L. 111-148), as Amended by the Health Care and Education
Reconciliation Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-152)
C. Major Content of This Proposed Rule
1. Proposed Changes to MS-DRG Classifications and Recalibrations
of Relative Weights
2. Proposed Changes to the Hospital Wage Index for Acute Care
Hospitals
3. Other Decisions and Proposed Changes to the IPPS for
Operating Costs and GME Costs
4. Proposed FY 2011 Policy Governing the IPPS for Capital-
Related Costs
5. Proposed Changes to the Payment Rates for Certain Excluded
Hospitals: Rate-of-Increase Percentages
6. Proposed Changes to the LTCH PPS
7. Proposed Changes Relating to Effective Date of Provider
Agreements and Supplier Approvals
8. Proposed Changes to Medicare Conditions of Participation
Affecting Hospital Rehabilitation Services and Respiratory Care
Services
9. Proposed Changes to the Accreditation Requirements for
Medicaid Providers of Inpatient Psychiatric Services for Individuals
under Age 21
10. Determining Proposed Prospective Payment Operating and
Capital Rates and Rate-of-Increase Limits for Acute Care Hospitals
11. Determining Proposed Prospective Payments Rates for LTCHs
12. Impact Analysis
13. Recommendation of Update Factors for Operating Cost Rates of
Payment for Hospital Inpatient Services
14. Discussion of Medicare Payment Advisory Commission
Recommendations
E. Interim Final Rule With Comment Period That Implemented
Certain Provisions of the ARRA Relating to Payments to LTCHs and
LTCH Satellite Facilities
II. Proposed Changes to Medicare Severity Diagnosis-Related Group
(MS-DRG) Classifications and Relative Weights
A. Background
B. MS-DRG Reclassifications
1. General
2. Yearly Review for Making MS-DRG Changes
C. Adoption of the MS-DRGs in FY 2008
D. Proposed FY 2011 MS-DRG Documentation and Coding Adjustment,
Including the Applicability to the Hospital-Specific Rates and the
Puerto Rico-Specific Standardized Amount
1. Background on the Prospective MS-DRG Documentation and Coding
Adjustments for FY 2008 and FY 2009 Authorized by Public Law 110-90
2. Prospective Adjustment to the Average Standardized Amounts
Required by Section 7(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 110-90
3. Recoupment or Repayment Adjustments in FYs 2010 Through 2012
Required by Public Law 110-90
4. Retrospective Evaluation of FY 2008 Claims Data
5. Retrospective Analysis of FY 2009 Claims Data
6. Prospective Adjustment for FY 2010 and Subsequent Years
Authorized by Section 7(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 110-90 and Section
1886(d)(3)(vi) of the Act
7. Recoupment or Repayment Adjustment for FY 2010 Authorized by
Section 7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110-90
8. Background on the Application of the Documentation and Coding
Adjustment to the Hospital-Specific Rates
9. Proposed Documentation and Coding Adjustment to the Hospital-
Specific
[[Page 23855]]
Rates for FY 2011 and Subsequent Fiscal Years
10. Background on the Application of the Documentation and
Coding Adjustment to the Puerto Rico-Specific Standardized Amount
11. Proposed Documentation and Coding Adjustment to the Puerto
Rico-Specific Standardized Amount
E. Refinement of the MS-DRG Relative Weight Calculation
1. Background
a. Summary of FY 2009 Changes and Discussion for FY 2011
b. Summary of the RAND Corporation Study of Alternative Relative
Weight Methodologies
2. Proposals for FY 2011 and Timeline for Changes to the
Medicare Cost Report
F. Preventable Hospital-Acquired Conditions (HACs), Including
Infections
1. Background
a. Statutory Authority
b. HAC Selection
c. Collaborative Process
d. Application of HAC Payment Policy to MS-DRG Classifications
e. Public Input Regarding Selected and Potential Candidate HACs
f. POA Indicator Reporting
2. Proposed HAC Conditions for FY 2011
3. RTI Program Evaluation Summary
a. Background
b. Preliminary RTI Analysis on POA Indicator Reporting Across
Medicare Discharges
c. Preliminary RTI Analysis on POA Indicator Reporting of
Current HACs
d. Preliminary RTI Analysis of Frequency of Discharges and POA
Indicator Reporting for Current HACs
e. Preliminary RTI Analysis of Circumstances When Application of
HAC Provisions Would Not Result in MS-DRG Reassignment for Current
HACs
f. Preliminary RTI Analysis of Coding Changes for HAC-Associated
Secondary Diagnoses for Current HACs
g. Preliminary RTI Analysis of Estimated Net Savings for Current
HACs
h. Previously Considered Candidate HACs--Preliminary RTI
Analysis of Frequency of Discharges and POA Indicator Reporting
i. Current and Previously Considered Candidate HACs--RTI Report
on Evidence-Based Guidelines
j. Proposals Regarding Current HACs and Previously Considered
Candidate HACs
G. Proposed Changes to Specific MS-DRG Classifications
1. Pre-Major Diagnostic Categories (MDCs
a. Postsurgical Hypoinsulinemia (MS-DRG 008 (Simultaneous
Pancreas/Kidney Transplant)
b. Bone Marrow Transplants
2. MDC 1 (Nervous System): Administration of Tissue Plasminogen
Activator (tPA) (rtPA)
3. MDC 5 (Diseases and Disorders of the Circulatory System):
Intraoperative Fluorescence Vascular Angiography (IFVA) and X-Ray
Coronary Angiography in Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgery
a. New MS-DRGs for Intraoperative Fluorescence Vascular
Angiography (IFVA) With CABG
b. New MS-DRG for Intraoperative Angiography, by Any Method,
With CABG
c. New Procedure Codes
d. MS-DRG Reassignment of Intraoperative Fluorescence Vascular
Angiography (IFVA)
4. MDC 6 (Diseases and Disorders of the Digestive System):
Gastrointestinal Stenting
5. MDC 8 (Diseases and Disorders of the Musculoskeletal System
and Connective Tissue): Pedicle-Based Dynamic Stabilization
6. MDC 15 (Newborns and Other Neonates With Conditions
Originating in the Perinatal Period)
a. Discharges/Transfers of Neonates to a Designated Cancer
Center or a Children's Hospital
b. Vaccination of Newborns
7. Medicare Code Editor (MCE) Changes
a. Unacceptable Principal Diagnosis Edit: Addition of Code for
Gastroparesis
b. Open Biopsy Check Edit
c. Noncovered Procedure Edit
8. Surgical Hierarchies
9. Complication or Comorbidity (CC) Exclusions List
a. Background
b. Proposed CC Exclusions List for FY 2011
10. Review of Procedure Codes in MS-DRGs 981 Through 983, 984
Through 986, and 987 Through 989
a. Moving Procedure Codes From MS-DRGs 981 Through 983 or MS-
DRGs 987 Through 989 to MDCs
b. Reassignment of Procedures Among MS-DRGs 981 Through 983, 984
Through 986, and 987 Through 989
c. Adding Diagnosis or Procedure Codes to MDCs
11. Changes to the ICD-9-CM Coding System, Including Discussion
of the Replacement of the ICD-9-CM System With the ICD-10-CM and
ICD-10-PCS Systems in FY 2014
a. ICD-9-CM Coding System
b. Code Freeze
c. Processing of 25 Diagnosis Codes and 25 Procedure Codes on
Hospital Inpatient Claims
H. Recalibration of MS-DRG Weights
I. Proposed Add-On Payments for New Services and Technologies
1. Background
2. Public Input Before Publication of a Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking on Add-On Payments
3. FY 2011 Status of Technologies Approved for FY 2010 Add-On
Payments
a. Spiration[supreg] IBV[supreg] Valve System
b. CardioWestTM Temporary Total Artificial Heart
System (CardioWestTM TAH-t)
4. FY 2011 Applications for New Technology Add-On Payments
a. Auto Laser Interstitial Thermal Therapy
(AutoLITTTM) System
b. LipiScanTM Coronary Imaging System
c. LipiScanTM Coronary Imaging System With
Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS)
III. Proposed Changes to the Hospital Wage Index for Acute Care
Hospitals
A. Background
B. Wage Index Reform
1. Wage Index Study Required Under the MIEA-TRHCA
a. Legislative Requirement
b. Interim and Final Reports on Results of Acumen's Study
2. FY 2009 Policy Changes in Response to Requirements Under
Section 106(b) of the MIEA-TRHCA
a. Reclassification Average Hourly Wage Comparison Criteria
b. Budget Neutrality Adjustment for the Rural and Imputed Floors
C. Core-Based Statistical Areas for the Hospital Wage Index
D. Proposed Occupational Mix Adjustment to the Proposed FY 2011
Wage Index
1. Development of Data for the Proposed FY 2011 Occupational Mix
Adjustment Based on the 2007-2008 Occupational Mix Survey
2. New 2010 Occupational Mix Survey for the FY 2013 Wage Index
3. Calculation of the Proposed Occupational Mix Adjustment for
FY 2011
E. Worksheet S-3 Wage Data for the Proposed FY 2011 Wage Index
1. Included Categories of Costs
2. Excluded Categories of Costs
3. Use of Wage Index Data by Providers Other Than Acute Care
Hospitals Under the IPPS
F. Verification of Worksheet S-3 Wage Data
G. Method for Computing the Proposed FY 2011 Unadjusted Wage
Index
H. Analysis and Implementation of the Proposed Occupational Mix
Adjustment and the Proposed FY 2011 Occupational Mix Adjusted Wage
Index
I. Revisions to the Wage Index Based on Hospital Redesignations
and Reclassifications
1. General
2. Effects of Reclassification/Redesignation
3. FY 2011 MGCRB Reclassifications
a. FY 2011 Reclassification Requirements and Approvals
b. Applications for Reclassifications for FY 2012
c. Appeals of MGCRB Denials of Withdrawals and Terminations
4. Redesignations of Hospitals under Section 1886(d)(8)(B) of
the Act
5. Reclassifications Under Section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
6. Reclassifications Under Section 508 of Public Law 108-173
J. Proposed FY 2011 Wage Index Adjustment Based on Commuting
Patterns of Hospital Employees
K. Process for Requests for Wage Index Data Corrections
L. Labor-Market Share for the Proposed FY 2011 Wage Index
IV. Other Decisions and Proposed Changes to the IPPS for Operating
Costs and GME Costs
A. Reporting of Hospital Quality Data for Annual Hospital
Payment Update
1. Background
a. Overview
b. Hospital Quality Data Reporting Under Section 501(b) of
Public Law 108-173
[[Page 23856]]
c. Hospital Quality Data Reporting Under Section 5001(a) of
Public Law 109-171
2. Retirement of RHQDAPU Program Measures
a. Considerations in Retiring Quality Measures From the RHQDAPU
Program
b. Proposed Retirement of Quality Measures Under the RHQDAPU
Program for the FY 2011 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
3. Proposed Expansion Plan for Quality Measures for the FY 2012,
FY 2013, and FY 2014 Payment Determinations
a. Considerations in Expanding and Updating Quality Measures
Under the RHQDAPU Program
b. Proposed RHQDAPU Program Quality Measures for the FY 2012
Payment Determination
c. Proposed RHQDAPU Program Quality Measures for the FY 2013
Payment Determination
d. Proposed RHQDAPU Program Quality Measures for the FY 2014
Payment Determination
4. Possible New Quality Measures for Future Years
5. Form, Manner, and Timing of Quality Data Submission
a. Proposed RHQDAPU Program Requirements for FY 2012, FY 2013,
and FY 2014
b. Additional Proposed RHQDAPU Program Procedural Requirements
for FY 2012, FY 2013, and FY 2014 Payment Determinations
6. RHQDAPU Program Disaster Extensions and Waivers
7. Proposed Chart Validation Requirements for Chart-Abstracted
Measures
a. Proposed Chart Validation Requirements and Methods for the FY
2012 Payment Determination
b. Proposed Supplements to the Chart Validation Process for the
FY 2013 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
8. Data Accuracy and Completeness Acknowledgement Requirements
for the FY 2012 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
9. Proposed Public Display Requirements for the FY 2012 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
10. Proposed Reconsideration and Appeal Procedures for the FY
2011 Payment Determination
11. Proposed RHQDAPU Program Withdrawal Deadlines
12. Electronic Health Records (EHRs)
a. Background
b. EHR Testing of Quality Measures Submission
c. HITECH Act EHR Provisions
13. Qualification of Registries for RHQDAPU Data Submission
B. Payment for Transfers of Cases From Medicare Participating
Acute Care Hospitals to Nonparticipating Hospitals and CAHs
1. Background
2. Proposed Policy Change
C. Technical Change to Regulations
D. Medicare-Dependent, Small Rural Hospitals (MDHs): Change to
Criteria
1. Background
2. Medicare-Dependency: Counting Medicare Inpatients
E. Rural Referral Centers (RRCs)
1. Case-Mix Index (CMI)
2. Discharges
F. Indirect Medical Education (IME) Adjustment
1. Background
2. IME Adjustment Factor for FY 2011
3. IME-Related Changes in Other Sections of this Proposed Rule
G. Payment Adjustment for Medicare Disproportionate Share
Hospitals (DSHs): Supplemental Security Income (SSI) Fraction
1. Background
2. CMS' Current Data Matching Process for the SSI Fraction
3. Baystate Medical Center v. Leavitt Court Decision
4. CMS' Proposed Process for Matching Medicare and SSI
Eligibility Data
a. Inclusion of Stale Records and Forced Pay Records in the SSI
Eligibility Data Files
b. Use of SSNs in the Revised Match Process
c. Timing of the Match
5. CMS Ruling
6. Clarification of Language on Inclusion of Medicare Advantage
Days in the SSI Fraction of the Medicare DSH Calculation
H. Payments for Direct Graduate Medical Education (GME) Costs
1. Background
2. Identifying ``Approved Medical Residency Programs''
a. Residents in Approved Medical Residency Programs
b. Determining Whether an Individual Is a Resident or a
Physician
c. Formal Enrollment and Participation in a Program
3. Electronic Submission of Affiliation Agreements
I. Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA) Services
Furnished in Rural Hospitals and CAHs
J. Rural Community Hospital Demonstration Program
V. Proposed Changes to the IPPS for Capital-Related Costs
A. Overview
B. Exception Payments
C. New Hospitals
D. Hospitals Located in Puerto Rico
E. Proposed Changes for FY 2011: MS-DRG Documentation and Coding
Adjustment
1. Background on the Prospective MS-DRG Documentation and Coding
Adjustments for FY 2008 and FY 2009
2. Retrospective Evaluation of FY 2008 Claims Data
3. Retrospective Analysis of FY 2009 Claims Data
4. Proposed Prospective MS-DRG Documentation and Coding
Adjustment to the National Capital Federal Rate for FY 2011 and
Subsequent Years
5. Proposed Documentation and Coding Adjustment to the Puerto
Rico-Specific Capital Rate
F. Other Proposed Changes for FY 2011
VI. Proposed Changes for Hospitals Excluded From the IPPS
A. Excluded Hospitals
B. Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
1. Background
2. CAH Optional Method Election for Payment of Outpatient
Services
3. Costs of Provider Taxes as Allowable Costs for CAHs
a. Background and Statutory Basis
b. Proposed Clarification of Payment Policy for Provider Taxes
VII. Proposed Changes to the Long-Term Care Hospital Prospective
Payment System (LTCH PPS) for FY 2011
A. Background of the LTCH PPS
1. Legislative and Regulatory Authority
2. Criteria for Classification as a LTCH
a. Classification as a LTCH
b. Hospitals Excluded From the LTCH PPS
3. Limitation on Charges to Beneficiaries
4. Administrative Simplification Compliance Act (ASCA) and
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)
Compliance
B. Proposed Medicare Severity Long-Term Care Diagnosis-Related
Group (MS-LTC-DRG) Classifications and Relative Weights
1. Background
2. Patient Classifications into MS-LTC-DRGs
a. Background
b. Proposed Changes to the MS-LTC-DRGs for FY 2011
3. Development of the Proposed FY 2011 MS-LTC-DRG Relative
Weights
a. General Overview of the Development of the MS-LTC-DRG
Relative Weights
b. Development of the Proposed MS-LTC-DRG Relative Weights for
FY 2011
c. Data
d. Hospital-Specific Relative Value (HSRV) Methodology
e. Treatment of Severity Levels in Developing the Proposed MS-
LTC-DRG Relative Weights
f. Low-Volume MS-LTC-DRGs
g. Steps for Determining the Proposed RY 2011 MS-LTC-DRG
Relative Weights
C. Proposed Changes to the LTCH Payment Rates and Other Proposed
Changes to the FY 2011 LTCH PPS
1. Overview of Development of the LTCH Payment Rates
2. Market Basket for LTCHs Reimbursed Under the LTCH PPS
a. Overview
b. Market Basket Under the LTCH PPS for FY 2011
c. Proposed Market Basket Update for LTCHs for FY 2011
d. Proposed Labor-Related Share Under the LTCH PPS for FY 2011
3. Proposed Adjustment for Changes in LTCHs' Case-Mix Due to
Changes in Documentation and Coding Practices That Occurred in a
Prior Period
a. Background
b. Evaluation of FY 2009 Claims Data
c. Proposed FY 2011 Documentation and Coding Adjustment
D. Proposed Change in Terminology From ``Rate Year'' to ``Fiscal
Year'' and Other Proposed Changes
VIII. Determination of Effective Date of Provider Agreements and
Supplier Approvals
[[Page 23857]]
A. Background
B. Departmental Appeals Board Decision
C. Proposed Revisions to Regulations
IX. Proposed Changes to Medicare Conditions of Participation
Affecting Hospital Rehabilitation Services and Respiratory Care
Services
X. Proposed Changes to the Accreditation Requirements for Medicaid
Providers of Inpatient Psychiatric Services for Individuals Under
Age 21
A. Background
B. Proposed Revision of Policy and Regulations
XI. MedPAC Recommendations
XII. Other Required Information
A. Requests for Data From the Public
B. Collection of Information Requirements
1. Legislative Requirement for Solicitation of Comments
2. Requirements in Regulation Text
a. ICRs Regarding Withdrawing an Application, Terminating an
Approved 3 Year Reclassification, or Canceling a Previous Withdrawal
or Termination (Proposed Revised Sec. 412.273)
b. ICRs Regarding Condition of Participation: Respiratory Care
Services (Sec. 482.57)
3. Additional Information Collection Requirements
a. Present on Admission (POA) Indicator Reporting
b. Add-On Payments for New Services and Technologies
c. Reporting of Hospital Quality Data for Annual Hospital
Payment Update
d. Occupational Mix Adjustment to the FY 2011 Index (Hospital
Wage Index Occupational Mix Survey)
e. Hospital Applications for Geographic Reclassifications by the
MGCRB
f. Direct GME Payments: General Requirements
C. Response to Comments
Regulation Text
Addendum--Proposed Schedule of Standardized Amounts, Update Factors,
and Rate-of-Increase Percentages Effective With Cost Reporting Periods
Beginning on or After October 1, 2010
I. Summary and Background
II. Proposed Changes to the Prospective Payment Rates for Hospital
Inpatient Operating Costs for Acute Care Hospitals for FY 2011
A. Calculation of the Adjusted Standardized Amount
B. Proposed Adjustments for Area Wage Levels and Cost-of-Living
C. Proposed MS-DRG Relative Weights
D. Calculation of the Proposed Prospective Payment Rates
III. Proposed Changes to Payment Rates for Acute Care Hospital
Inpatient Capital-Related Costs for FY 2011
A. Determination of Federal Hospital Inpatient Capital-Related
Prospective Payment Rate Update
B. Calculation of the Proposed Inpatient Capital-Related
Prospective Payments for FY 2011
C. Capital Input Price Index
IV. Proposed Changes to Payment Rates for Certain Excluded
Hospitals: Rate-of-Increase Percentages
V. Proposed Changes to the Payment Rates for the LTCH PPS for FY
2011
A. Proposed LTCH PPS Standard Federal Rate for FY 2011
B. Proposed Adjustment for Area Wage Levels Under the LTCH PPS
for FY 2011
C. Proposed Adjustment for LTCH PPS High-Cost Outlier (HCO)
Cases
D. Computing the Proposed Adjusted LTCH PPS Federal Prospective
Payments for FY 2011
VI. Tables
Table 1A.--Proposed National Adjusted Operating Standardized
Amounts, Labor/Nonlabor (68.8 Percent Labor Share/31.2 Percent
Nonlabor Share If Wage Index Is Greater Than 1)
Table 1B.--Proposed National Adjusted Operating Standardized
Amounts, Labor/Nonlabor (62 Percent Labor Share/38 Percent Nonlabor
Share If Wage Index Is Less Than or Equal to 1)
Table 1C.--Proposed Adjusted Operating Standardized Amounts for
Puerto Rico, Labor/Nonlabor
Table 1D.--Proposed Capital Standard Federal Payment Rate
Table 1E.--Proposed LTCH Standard Federal Prospective Payment
Rate
Table 2.--Acute Care Hospitals Case-Mix Indexes for Discharges
Occurring in Federal Fiscal Year 2009; Proposed Hospital Wage
Indexes for Federal Fiscal Year 2011; Hospital Average Hourly Wages
for Federal Fiscal Years 2009 (2005 Wage Data), 2010 (2006 Wage
Data), and 2011 (2007 Wage Data); and 3-Year Average of Hospital
Average Hourly Wages
Table 3A.--FY 2011 and 3-Year Average Hourly Wage for Acute Care
Hospitals in Urban Areas by CBSA
Table 3B.--FY 2011 and 3-Year Average Hourly Wage for Acute Care
Hospitals in Rural Areas by CBSA
Table 4A.--Proposed Wage Index and Capital Geographic Adjustment
Factor (GAF) for Acute Care Hospitals in Urban Areas by CBSA and by
State--FY 2011
Table 4B.--Proposed Wage Index and Capital Geographic Adjustment
Factor (GAF) for Acute Care Hospitals in Rural Areas by CBSA and by
State--FY 2011
Table 4C.--Proposed Wage Index and Capital Geographic Adjustment
Factor (GAF) for Acute Care Hospitals That Are Reclassified by CBSA
and by State--FY 2011
Table 4D-1.--Proposed Rural Floor Budget Neutrality Factors for
Acute Care Hospitals--FY 2011
Table 4D-2.--Urban Areas with Acute Care Hospitals Receiving the
Proposed Statewide Rural Floor or Imputed Floor Wage Index--FY 2011
Table 4E.--Urban CBSAs and Constituent Counties for Acute Care
Hospitals--FY 2011
Table 4F.--Proposed Puerto Rico Wage Index and Capital
Geographic Adjustment Factor (GAF) for Acute Care Hospitals by
CBSA--FY 2011
Table 4J.--Proposed Out-Migration Adjustment for Acute Care
Hospitals--FY 2011
Table 5.--List of Medicare Severity Diagnosis-Related Groups
(MS-DRGs), Relative Weighting Factors, and Geometric and Arithmetic
Mean Length of Stay--FY 2011
Table 6A.--New Diagnosis Codes
Table 6B.--New Procedure Codes
Table 6C.--Invalid Diagnosis Codes
Table 6D.--Invalid Procedure Codes
Table 6E.--Revised Diagnosis Code Titles
Table 6F.--Revised Procedure Code Titles
Table 6G.--Additions to the CC Exclusions List (Available
Through the Internet on the CMS Web site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/)
Table 6H.--Deletions from the CC Exclusions List (Available
Through the Internet on the CMS Web site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/)
Table 6I.--Complete List of Complication and Comorbidity (CC)
Exclusions (Available only through the Internet on the CMS Web site
at: http:/www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/)
Table 6J.--Major Complication and Comorbidity (MCC) List
(Available Through the Internet on the CMS Web site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/)
Table 6K.--Complication and Comorbidity (CC) List (Available
Through the Internet on the CMS Web site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/)
Table 7A.--Medicare Prospective Payment System Selected
Percentile Lengths of Stay: FY 2009 MedPAR Update--December 2009
GROUPER V27.0 MS-DRGs
Table 7B.--Medicare Prospective Payment System Selected
Percentile Lengths of Stay: FY 2009 MedPAR Update--December 2009
GROUPER V28.0 MS-DRGs
Table 8A.--Proposed Statewide Average Operating Cost-to-Charge
Ratios (CCRs) for Acute Care Hospitals--March 2009
Table 8B.--Proposed Statewide Average Capital Cost-to-Charge
Ratios (CCRs) for Acute Care Hospitals--March 2009
Table 8C.--Proposed Statewide Average Total Cost-to-Charge
Ratios (CCRs) for LTCHs--March 2009
Table 9A.--Hospital Reclassifications and Redesignations--FY
2011
Table 9C.--Hospitals Redesignated as Rural Under Section
1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act--FY 2011
Table 10.--Geometric Mean Plus the Lesser of .75 of the National
Adjusted Operating Standardized Payment Amount (Increased To Reflect
the Difference Between Costs and Charges) or .75 of One Standard
Deviation of Mean Charges by Medicare Severity Diagnosis-Related
Groups (MS-DRGs)--March 2009
Table 11.--Proposed MS-LTC-DRGs, Relative Weights, Geometric
Average Length of Stay, Short-Stay Outlier Threshold, and IPPS
Comparable Threshold for Discharges Occurring From October 1, 2010
Through
[[Page 23858]]
September 30, 2011 Under the LTCH PPS
Table 12A.--Proposed LTCH PPS Wage Index for Urban Areas for
Discharges Occurring from October 1, 2010 Through September 30, 2011
Table 12B.--Proposed LTCH PPS Wage Index for Rural Areas for
Discharges Occurring From October 1, 2010 Through September 30, 2011
Appendix A--Regulatory Impact Analysis
I. Overall Impact
II. Objectives of the IPPS
III. Limitations of Our Analysis
IV. Hospitals Included In and Excluded From the IPPS
V. Effects on Hospitals and Hospital Units Excluded From the IPPS
VI. Quantitative Effects of the Proposed Policy Changes Under the
IPPS for Operating Costs
A. Basis and Methodology of Estimates
B. Analysis of Table I
C. Effects of the Proposed Changes to the MS-DRG
Reclassifications and Relative Cost-Based Weights (Column 1)
D. Effects of the Application of Recalibration Budget Neutrality
(Column 2)
E. Effects of Proposed Wage Index Changes (Column 3)
F. Application of the Wage Budget Neutrality Factor (Column 4)
G. Combined Effects of Proposed MS-DRG and Wage Index Changes
(Column 5)
H. Effects of MGCRB Reclassifications (Column 6)
I. Effects of the Proposed Rural Floor and Imputed Floor,
Including Application of Budget Neutrality at the State Level
(Column 7)
J. Effects of the Proposed Wage Index Adjustment for Out-
Migration (Column 8)
K. Effects of All Proposed Changes Prior to Documentation and
Coding (Or CMI) Adjustment (Column 9)
L. Effects of All Proposed Changes With CMI Adjustment (Column
10)
M. Effects of Proposed Policy on Payment Adjustments for Low-
Volume Hospitals
N. Impact Analysis of Table II
VII. Effects of Other Proposed Policy Changes
A. Effects of Proposed Policy on HACs, Including Infections
B. Effects of Proposed Policy Changes Relating to New Medical
Service and Technology Add-On Payments
C. Effects of Proposed Requirements for Hospital Reporting of
Quality Data for Annual Hospital Payment Update
D. Effects of Proposed Policy on Payment for Transfer Cases From
Medicare Participating Hospitals to Nonparticipating Hospitals and
CAHs
E. Effects of Proposed Change in Criteria for MDHs
F. Effects of Proposed Change Relating to Payment Adjustment for
Disproportionate Share Hospitals
G. Effects of Proposed Changes Relating to Payments for IME and
Direct GME
1. Identifying ``Approved Medical Residency Programs''
2. Submission of Electronic Affiliation Agreements
H. Effects of Proposed Changes Relating to CRNA Services
Furnished in Rural Hospitals and CAHs
I. Effects of Implementation of Rural Community Hospital
Demonstration Program
J. Effects of Proposed Changes Relating to CAHs
1. CAH Optional Method of Payment for Outpatient Services
2. Consideration of Costs of Provider Taxes as Allowable Costs
for CAHs
K. Effects of Proposed Policy Relating to Effective Date of
Provider Agreements and Supplier Approvals
L. Effects of Proposed Changes Relating to Hospital
Rehabilitation Services and Respiratory Care Services Conditions of
Participation
VIII. Effects of Proposed Changes in the Capital IPPS
A. General Considerations
B. Results
IX. Effects of Proposed Payment Rate Changes and Proposed Policy
Changes Under the LTCH PPS
A. Introduction and General Considerations
B. Impact on Rural Hospitals
C. Anticipated Effects of Proposed LTCH PPS Payment Rate Change
and Proposed Policy Changes
D. Effect on the Medicare Program
E. Effect on Medicare Beneficiaries
X. Effects of Proposed Policy Changes Relating to Accreditation
Requirements for Medicaid Providers of Inpatient Psychiatric
Services to Individuals Under Age 21
XI. Alternatives Considered
XII. Overall Conclusion
A. Acute Care Hospitals
B. LTCHs
XIII. Accounting Statements
A. Acute Care Hospitals
B. LTCHs
XIV. Executive Order 12866
Appendix B--Recommendation of Update Factors for Operating Cost Rates
of Payment for Inpatient Hospital Services
I. Background
II. Inpatient Hospital Update for FY 2011
III. Secretary's Recommendation
IV. MedPAC Recommendation for Assessing Payment Adequacy and
Updating Payments in Traditional Medicare
I. Background
A. Summary
1. Acute Care Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment System (IPPS)
Section 1886(d) of the Social Security Act (the Act) sets forth a
system of payment for the operating costs of acute care hospital
inpatient stays under Medicare Part A (Hospital Insurance) based on
prospectively set rates. Section 1886(g) of the Act requires the
Secretary to pay for the capital-related costs of hospital inpatient
stays under a prospective payment system (PPS). Under these PPSs,
Medicare payment for hospital inpatient operating and capital-related
costs is made at predetermined, specific rates for each hospital
discharge. Discharges are classified according to a list of diagnosis-
related groups (DRGs).
The base payment rate is comprised of a standardized amount that is
divided into a labor-related share and a nonlabor-related share. The
labor-related share is adjusted by the wage index applicable to the
area where the hospital is located. If the hospital is located in
Alaska or Hawaii, the nonlabor-related share is adjusted by a cost-of-
living adjustment factor. This base payment rate is multiplied by the
DRG relative weight.
If the hospital treats a high percentage of low-income patients, it
receives a percentage add-on payment applied to the DRG-adjusted base
payment rate. This add-on payment, known as the disproportionate share
hospital (DSH) adjustment, provides for a percentage increase in
Medicare payments to hospitals that qualify under either of two
statutory formulas designed to identify hospitals that serve a
disproportionate share of low-income patients. For qualifying
hospitals, the amount of this adjustment may vary based on the outcome
of the statutory calculations.
If the hospital is an approved teaching hospital, it receives a
percentage add-on payment for each case paid under the IPPS, known as
the indirect medical education (IME) adjustment. This percentage
varies, depending on the ratio of residents to beds.
Additional payments may be made for cases that involve new
technologies or medical services that have been approved for special
add-on payments. To qualify, a new technology or medical service must
demonstrate that it is a substantial clinical improvement over
technologies or services otherwise available, and that, absent an add-
on payment, it would be inadequately paid under the regular DRG
payment.
The costs incurred by the hospital for a case are evaluated to
determine whether the hospital is eligible for an additional payment as
an outlier case. This additional payment is designed to protect the
hospital from large financial losses due to unusually expensive cases.
Any eligible outlier payment is added to the DRG-adjusted base payment
rate, plus any DSH, IME, and new technology or medical service add-on
adjustments.
Although payments to most hospitals under the IPPS are made on the
basis of the standardized amounts, some categories of hospitals are
paid in whole or in part based on their hospital-specific rate based on
their costs in a base year. For example, sole community
[[Page 23859]]
hospitals (SCHs) receive the higher of a hospital-specific rate based
on their costs in a base year (the highest of FY 1982, FY 1987, FY
1996, or FY 2006) or the IPPS Federal rate based on the standardized
amount. Through and including FY 2006, a Medicare-dependent, small
rural hospital (MDH) received the higher of the Federal rate or the
Federal rate plus 50 percent of the amount by which the Federal rate is
exceeded by the higher of its FY 1982 or FY 1987 hospital-specific
rate. As discussed below, for discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2007, but before October 1, 2011, an MDH will receive the higher of
the Federal rate or the Federal rate plus 75 percent of the amount by
which the Federal rate is exceeded by the highest of its FY 1982, FY
1987, or FY 2002 hospital-specific rate. SCHs are the sole source of
care in their areas, and MDHs are a major source of care for Medicare
beneficiaries in their areas. Specifically, section 1886(d)(5)(D)(iii)
of the Act defines an SCH as a hospital that is located more than 35
road miles from another hospital or that, by reason of factors such as
isolated location, weather conditions, travel conditions, or absence of
other like hospitals (as determined by the Secretary), is the sole
source of hospital inpatient services reasonably available to Medicare
beneficiaries. In addition, certain rural hospitals previously
designated by the Secretary as essential access community hospitals are
considered SCHs. Section 1886(d)(5)(G)(iv) of the Act defines an MDH as
a hospital that is located in a rural area, has not more than 100 beds,
is not an SCH, and has a high percentage of Medicare discharges (not
less than 60 percent of its inpatient days or discharges in its cost
reporting year beginning in FY 1987 or in two of its three most
recently settled Medicare cost reporting years). Both of these
categories of hospitals are afforded this special payment protection in
order to maintain access to services for beneficiaries.
Section 1886(g) of the Act requires the Secretary to pay for the
capital-related costs of inpatient hospital services ``in accordance
with a prospective payment system established by the Secretary.'' The
basic methodology for determining capital prospective payments is set
forth in our regulations at 42 CFR 412.308 and 412.312. Under the
capital IPPS, payments are adjusted by the same DRG for the case as
they are under the operating IPPS. Capital IPPS payments are also
adjusted for IME and DSH, similar to the adjustments made under the
operating IPPS. In addition, hospitals may receive outlier payments for
those cases that have unusually high costs.
The existing regulations governing payments to hospitals under the
IPPS are located in 42 CFR part 412, Subparts A through M.
2. Hospitals and Hospital Units Excluded From the IPPS
Under section 1886(d)(1)(B) of the Act, as amended, certain
hospitals and hospital units are excluded from the IPPS. These
hospitals and units are: rehabilitation hospitals and units; long-term
care hospitals (LTCHs); psychiatric hospitals and units; children's
hospitals; and cancer hospitals. Religious nonmedical health care
institutions (RNHCIs) are also excluded from the IPPS. Various sections
of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (BBA, Pub. L. 105-33), the Medicare,
Medicaid and SCHIP [State Children's Health Insurance Program] Balanced
Budget Refinement Act of 1999 (BBRA, Pub. L. 106-113), and the
Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits Improvement and Protection Act
of 2000 (BIPA, Pub. L. 106-554) provide for the implementation of PPSs
for rehabilitation hospitals and units (referred to as inpatient
rehabilitation facilities (IRFs)), LTCHs, and psychiatric hospitals and
units (referred to as inpatient psychiatric facilities (IPFs)). (We
note that the annual updates to the LTCH PPS are now included as part
of the IPPS annual update document. Updates to the IRF PPS and IPF PPS
are issued as separate documents.) Children's hospitals, cancer
hospitals, and RNHCIs continue to be paid solely under a reasonable
cost-based system subject to a rate-of-increase ceiling on inpatient
operating costs per discharge.
The existing regulations governing payments to excluded hospitals
and hospital units are located in 42 CFR parts 412 and 413.
3. Long-Term Care Hospital Prospective Payment System (LTCH PPS)
The Medicare prospective payment system (PPS) for LTCHs applies to
hospitals described in section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv) effective for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 2002. The LTCH PPS
was established under the authority of sections 123(a) and (c) of
Public Law 106-113 and section 307(b)(1) of Public Law 106-554 (as
codified under section 1886(m)(1) of the Act). During the 5-year
(optional) transition period, a LTCH's payment under the PPS was based
on an increasing proportion of the LTCH Federal rate with a
corresponding decreasing proportion based on reasonable cost
principles. Effective for cost reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2006, all LTCHs are paid 100 percent of the Federal rate.
The existing regulations governing payment under the LTCH PPS are
located in 42 CFR part 412, Subpart O. Beginning October 1, 2009, we
issue the annual updates to the LTCH PPS in the same documents that
update the IPPS (73 FR 26797 through 26798).
4. Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
Under sections 1814(l), 1820, and 1834(g) of the Act, payments are
made to critical access hospitals (CAHs) (that is, rural hospitals or
facilities that meet certain statutory requirements) for inpatient and
outpatient services are generally based on 101 percent of reasonable
cost. Reasonable cost is determined under the provisions of section
1861(v)(1)(A) of the Act and existing regulations under 42 CFR parts
413 and 415.
5. Payments for Graduate Medical Education (GME)
Under section 1886(a)(4) of the Act, costs of approved educational
activities are excluded from the operating costs of inpatient hospital
services. Hospitals with approved graduate medical education (GME)
programs are paid for the direct costs of GME in accordance with
section 1886(h) of the Act. The amount of payment for direct GME costs
for a cost reporting period is based on the hospital's number of
residents in that period and the hospital's costs per resident in a
base year. The existing regulations governing payments to the various
types of hospitals are located in 42 CFR part 413.
B. Provisions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Pub.
L. 111-148), as Amended by the Health Care and Education Reconciliation
Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-152)
On March 23, 2010, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
(PPACA), Public Law 111-148 was enacted. Following the enactment of
Public Law 111-148, the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of
2010, Public L. 111-152 (enacted on March 30, 2010), amended certain
provisions of Public Law 111-148. A number of the provisions of Public
Law 111-148, as amended by Public Law 111-152, affect the IPPS and the
LTCH PPS and the providers and suppliers addressed in this proposed
rule. However, due to the timing of the passage of the legislation, we
are unable to address those provisions in this proposed rule.
Therefore, the proposed policies and payment rates in this proposed
rule do not reflect the new
[[Page 23860]]
legislation. We plan to issue separate documents in the Federal
Register addressing the provisions of Public Law 111-148, as amended,
that affect our proposed policies and payment rates for FY 2011 under
the IPPS and the LTCH PPS. In addition, we plan to issue further
instructions implementing the provisions of Public Law 111-148, as
amended, that affect the policies and payment rates for FY 2010 under
the IPPS and for RY 2010 under the LTCH PPS.
C. Major Content of This Proposed Rule
In this proposed rule, we are setting forth proposed changes to the
Medicare IPPS for operating costs and for capital-related costs of
acute care hospitals in FY 2011. We also are setting forth proposed
changes relating to payments for IME costs and payments to certain
hospitals and units that continue to be excluded from the IPPS and paid
on a reasonable cost basis.
In addition, in this proposed rule, we are setting forth proposed
changes to the payment rates, factors, and other payment rate policies
under the LTCH PPS for FY 2011. We note that because the annual update
of payment rates for the LTCH PPS will now take place on the same
schedule and in the same publication as for the IPPS, for the sake of
clarity, in section VII.D. of this proposed rule, we are proposing to
use ``fiscal year (FY)'' instead of ``rate year (RY) when referring to
updates and changes to the LTCH PPS to be effective October 1, 2010.
Therefore, throughout this proposed rule, we are using the phrase
``fiscal year (FY)'' in referring to proposed updates and changes to
the LTCH PPS.
Below is a summary of the major changes that we are proposing to
make:
1. Proposed Changes to MS-DRG Classifications and Recalibrations of
Relative Weights
In section II. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we included--
Proposed changes to MS-DRG classifications based on our
yearly review.
Proposed application of the documentation and coding
adjustment to hospital-specific rates for FY 2011 resulting from
implementation of the MS-DRG system.
A discussion of the Research Triangle International, Inc.
(RTI) and RAND Corporation reports and recommendations relating to
charge compression.
Proposed recalibrations of the MS-DRG relative weights.
We also presented a listing and discussion of hospital-acquired
conditions (HACs), including infections, that are subject to the
statutorily required quality adjustment in MS-DRG payments for FY 2011.
We discuss the FY 2011 status of two new technologies approved for
add-on payments for FY 2010 and presented our evaluation and analysis
of the FY 2011 applicants for add-on payments for high-cost new medical
services and technologies (including public input, as directed by Pub.
L. 108-173, obtained in a town hall meeting).
2. Proposed Changes to the Hospital Wage Index for Acute Care Hospitals
In section III. of the preamble to this proposed rule, we are
proposing revisions to the wage index for acute care hospitals and the
annual update of the wage data. Specific issues addressed include the
following:
Budget neutrality for the rural floor and imputed floor.
Changes to titles and principal cities of CBSA
designations.
The proposed FY 2011 wage index update using wage data
from cost reporting periods beginning in FY 2007.
Analysis and implementation of the proposed FY 2011
occupational mix adjustment to the wage index for acute care hospitals,
including discussion of the 2010 occupational mix survey.
Proposed revisions to the wage index for acute care
hospitals based on hospital redesignations and reclassifications.
The proposed adjustment to the wage index for acute care
hospitals for FY 2011 based on commuting patterns of hospital employees
who reside in a county and work in a different area with a higher wage
index.
The timetable for reviewing and verifying the wage data
used to compute the proposed FY 2011 hospital wage index.
Determination of the labor-related share for the proposed
FY 2011 wage index.
3. Other Decisions and Proposed Changes to the IPPS for Operating Costs
and GME Costs
In section IV. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we discussed
a number of the provisions of the regulations in 42 CFR parts 412, 413,
and 489, including the following:
The reporting of hospital quality data as a condition for
receiving the full annual payment update increase.
Payment for transfer cases from Medicare participating
hospitals to nonparticipating hospitals and CAHs.
A change to the definition criteria for MDHs.
The proposed updated national and regional case-mix values
and discharges for purposes of determining RRC status.
The statutorily required IME adjustment factor for FY
2011.
The proposed policy change relating to the determination
of the SSI ratio of the Medicare fraction in the formula for
determining the payment adjustments for disproportionate share
hospitals.
A proposed clarification of ``approved medical residency
programs'' policies relating to payment for IME and direct GME and our
proposal to accept the electronic submission of Medicare GME
affiliation agreements.
Proposed policy change for payments for services furnished
by certified registered nurse anesthetists (CRNAs) in rural hospitals
and CAHs.
Discussion of the status of the Rural Community Hospital
Demonstration Program.
4. Proposed FY 2011 Policy Governing the IPPS for Capital-Related Costs
In section V. of the preamble to this proposed rule, we discussed
the proposed payment policy requirements for capital-related costs and
capital payments to hospitals for FY 2011 and the proposed MS-DRG
documentation and coding adjustment for FY 2011.
5. Proposed Changes to the Payment Rates for Certain Excluded
Hospitals: Rate-of-Increase Percentages
In section VI. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discussed--
Proposed changes to payments to excluded hospitals.
Proposed changes relating to the election by CAHs of the
optional method of payment for outpatient services
Proposed clarification of the policies on costs of
provider taxes as allowable costs for CAHs.
6. Proposed Changes to the