Medicare Program; Prospective Payment System for Federally Qualified Health Centers; Changes to Contracting Policies for Rural Health Clinics; and Changes to Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1988 Enforcement Actions for Proficiency Testing Referral, 25435-25482 [2014-09908]
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Vol. 79
Friday,
No. 85
May 2, 2014
Part V
Department of Health and Human Services
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Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Parts 405, 410, et al.
Medicare Program; Prospective Payment System for Federally Qualified
Health Centers; Changes to Contracting Policies for Rural Health Clinics;
and Changes to Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1988
Enforcement Actions for Proficiency Testing Referral; Final Rule
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
42 CFR Parts 405, 410, 491, and 493
[CMS–1443–FC]
RIN 0938–AR62
Medicare Program; Prospective
Payment System for Federally
Qualified Health Centers; Changes to
Contracting Policies for Rural Health
Clinics; and Changes to Clinical
Laboratory Improvement Amendments
of 1988 Enforcement Actions for
Proficiency Testing Referral
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Final rule with comment period.
AGENCY:
This final rule with comment
period implements methodology and
payment rates for a prospective payment
system (PPS) for federally qualified
health center (FQHC) services under
Medicare Part B beginning on October 1,
2014, in compliance with the statutory
requirement of the Affordable Care Act.
In addition, it establishes a policy
which allows rural health clinics (RHCs)
to contract with nonphysician
practitioners when statutory
requirements for employment of nurse
practitioners and physician assistants
are met, and makes other technical and
conforming changes to the RHC and
FQHC regulations. Finally, this final
rule with comment period implements
changes to the Clinical Laboratory
Improvement Amendments (CLIA)
regulations regarding enforcement
actions for proficiency testing (PT)
referrals.
SUMMARY:
Effective Dates: The provisions
of this final rule with comment period
are effective on October 1, 2014, except
for amendments to § 405.2468(b)(1),
§ 491.8(a)(3), § 493.1, § 493.2,
§ 493.1800, and § 493.1840 which are
effective July 1, 2014.
Comment Period: We will consider
comments on the subjects indicated in
sections II.B.1., E.2. and E.4. of this final
rule with comment period received at
one of the addresses provided below, no
later than 5 p.m. on July 1, 2014.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, please refer
to file code CMS–1443–FC. 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):
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DATES:
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1. Electronically. You may submit
electronic comments on this regulation
to https://www.regulations.gov. Follow
the ‘‘Submit a comment’’ instructions.
2. By regular mail. You may mail
written comments to the following
address ONLY: Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, Department of
Health and Human Services, Attention:
CMS–1443–FC, P.O. Box 8013,
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 to the
following address ONLY: Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services,
Department of Health and Human
Services, Attention: CMS–1443–FC,
Mail Stop C4–26–05, 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244–1850.
4. By hand or courier. Alternatively,
you may deliver (by hand or courier)
your written comments ONLY to the
following addresses prior to the close of
the comment period:
a. For delivery in Washington, DC—
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, Department of Health and
Human Services, Room 445–G, Hubert
H. Humphrey Building, 200
Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20201.
(Because access to the interior of the
Hubert H. Humphrey 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. For delivery in Baltimore, MD—
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, Department of Health and
Human Services, 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244–
1850.
If you intend to deliver your comments
to the Baltimore address, call telephone
number (410) 786–7195 in advance to
schedule your arrival with one of our
staff members.
Comments erroneously 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:
Corinne Axelrod, (410) 786–5620 for
FQHCs and RHCs.
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Melissa Singer, (410) 786–0365 for CLIA
Enforcement Actions for Proficiency
Testing Referral.
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 on that Web site to view
public comments.
Comments received timely will also
be available for public inspection as
they are received, generally beginning
approximately 3 weeks after publication
of a document, at the headquarters of
the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, 7500 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, Maryland 21244, Monday
through Friday of each week from 8:30
a.m. to 4 p.m. To schedule an
appointment to view public comments,
phone 1–800–743–3951.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Acronyms
ACS American Community Survey
AI/AN American Indian/Alaskan Native
AIR All-Inclusive Rate
APCP Advanced Primary Care Practice
BLS Bureau of Labor Statistics
CCM Chronic Care Management
CCN CMS Certification Number
CCR Cost-To-Charge Ratio
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CLIA Clinical Laboratory Improvement
Amendments of 1988
CMP Civil Monetary Penalty
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
CNM Certified Nurse Midwife
CP Clinical Psychologist
CR Change Request
CSW Clinical Social Worker
CY Calendar Year
DSMT Diabetes Self-Management Training
EHR Electronic Health Record
E/M Evaluation and Management
FQHC Federally Qualified Health Center
FSHCAA Federally Supported Health
Centers Assistance Act
FTCA Federal Tort Claims Act
GAF Geographic Adjustment Factor
GAO Government Accountability Office
GPCI Geographic Practice Cost Index
HCPCS Healthcare Common Procedure
Coding System
HCRIS Healthcare Cost Report Information
System
HBV Hepatitis B Vaccines
HRSA Health Resources and Services
Administration
IDR Integrated Data Repository
IPPE Initial Preventive Physical Exam
MA Medicare Advantage
MAC Medicare Administrative Contractor
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MCO Managed Care Organization
MEI Medicare Economic Index
MIPPA Medicare Improvements for Patients
and Providers Act
MNT Medical Nutrition Therapy
MSA Metropolitan Statistical Area
NP Nurse Practitioner
OBRA Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act
PA Physician Assistant
PHS Public Health Service
PFS Physician Fee Schedule
PPS Prospective Payment System
PT Proficiency testing
RIA Regulatory Impact Analysis
RHC Rural Health Clinic
SNF Skilled Nursing Facility
UDS Uniform Data System
UPL Upper Payment Limit
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Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary and Background
A. Executive Summary
1. Purpose and Legal Authority
2. Summary of Major Provisions
a. FQHC PPS
b. Other FQHC and RHC Provisions
c. CLIA Enforcement Actions for
Proficiency Testing Referral Provisions
3. Summary of Cost and Benefits
a. For the FQHC PPS
b. For Other FQHC and RHC Changes
c. For the CLIA Enforcement Actions for
Proficiency Testing Referral
B. Overview and Background
1. FQHC Description and General
Information
2. Medicare’s FQHC Coverage and Payment
Benefit
3. Legislation Pertaining to Medicare and
Medicaid Payments for FQHC Services
4. Medicare’s Current Reasonable CostBased Reimbursement Methodology
5. Summary of Requirements under the
Affordable Care Act for the FQHC PPS
and Other Provisions Pertaining to
FQHCs
6. Approach to the FQHC PPS
II. Establishment of the Federally Qualified
Health Center Prospective Payment
System (FQHC PPS)
A. Design and Data Sources for the FQHC
PPS
1. Overview of the PPS Design
2. Medicare FQHC Cost Reports
3. Medicare FQHC Claims
4. Linking Cost Reports and Claims To
Compute the Average Cost per Visit
B. Policy Considerations for Developing
the FQHC PPS Rates and Adjustments
1. Multiple Visits on the Same Day
2. Preventive Laboratory Services and
Technical Components of Other
Preventive Services
3. Vaccine Costs
C. Risk Adjustments
1. Alternative Calculations for Average
Cost per Visit
2. FQHC Geographic Adjustment Factor
3. New Patient or Initial Medicare Visit
4. Other Adjustment Factors Considered
5. Report on PPS Design and Models
D. Base Rate Calculation
E. Implementation
1. Transition Period and Annual
Adjustment
2. Medicare Claims Payment
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3. Beneficiary Coinsurance
4. Waiving Coinsurance for Preventive
Services
5. Cost Reporting
6. Medicare Advantage Organizations
III. Additional Proposed Changes Regarding
FQHCs and RHCs
A Rural Health Clinic Contracting
B. Technical and Conforming Changes
1. Proposed Technical and Conforming
Changes
2. Additional Technical and Conforming
Changes
C. Comments Outside of the Scope of the
Proposed Rule
IV. Clinical Laboratory Improvement
Amendments of 1988 (CLIA)—
Enforcement Actions for Proficiency
Testing Referral
A. Background
B. Proposed and Final Regulatory Changes
V. Other Required Information
A. Requests for Data from the Public
B. Collection of Information Requirements
VI. Waiver of Proposed Rulemaking
VII. Response to Comments
VIII. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
B. Overall Impact
C. Limitations of Our Analysis
D. Anticipated Effects of the FQHC PPS
1. Effects on FQHCs
2. Effects on RHCs
3. Effects on Other Providers and Suppliers
4. Effects on Medicare and Medicaid
Programs
5. Effects on Medicare Beneficiaries
E. Effects of Other Policy Changes
1. Effects of Policy Changes for FQHCs and
RHCs
a. Effects of RHC Contracting Changes
b. Effects of the FQHC and RHC
Conforming Changes
2. Effects of CLIA Changes for Enforcement
Actions for Proficiency Testing Referral
F. Alternatives Considered
G. Accounting Statement and Table
H. Conclusion
Regulations Text
ADDENDUM—FQHC PPS Geographic
Adjustment Factors (FQHC GAFs)
I. Executive Summary and Background
A. Executive Summary
1. Purpose and Legal Authority
Section 10501(i)(3)(A) of the
Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111–148
and Pub. L. 111–152) added section
1834(o) of the Social Security Act (the
Act) to establish a new system of
payment for the costs of federally
qualified health center (FQHC) services
under Medicare Part B (Supplemental
Medical Insurance) based on
prospectively set rates. According to
section 1834(o)(2)(A) of the Act, the
FQHC prospective payment system
(PPS) is to be effective beginning on
October 1, 2014. The primary purpose of
this final rule with comment period is
to implement a methodology and
payment rates for the new FQHC PPS.
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This rule also implements our
proposal to allow RHCs to contract with
non-physician practitioners, consistent
with statutory requirements in section
1861(aa) of the Act that require at least
one nurse practitioner (NP) or physician
assistant (PA) be employed by the RHC,
and makes other technical and
conforming changes to the RHC and
FQHC regulations.
The ‘‘Taking Essential Steps for
Testing Act of 2012’’ (TEST Act) (Pub.
L. 112–202) was enacted on December 4,
2012. The TEST Act amended section
353 of the Public Health Service Act
(PHS Act) to provide the Secretary with
discretion as to which sanctions may be
applied to cases of intentional violation
of the prohibition on proficiency testing
(PT) referrals. This final rule with
comment period adopts changes to the
CLIA regulations to implement the
TEST Act.
2. Summary of the Major Provisions
a. FQHC PPS
In accordance with the provisions of
the Affordable Care Act, we proposed in
the September 23, 2013 Federal Register
(78 FR 58386) to establish a national,
encounter-based prospective payment
rate for all FQHCs, to be determined
based on an average of reasonable costs
of FQHCs in the aggregate, and pay
FQHCs the lesser of their actual charges
for services or a single encounter-based
rate for professional services furnished
per beneficiary per day. As required by
section 1834(o)(1)(A) of the Act, we
proposed to establish payment codes
based on an appropriate description of
FQHC services, and taking into account
the type, intensity, and duration of
services provided by FQHCs. We also
proposed adjustments to the encounterbased payment rate for geographic
differences in the cost of inputs by
applying an adaptation of the
geographic practice cost indices (GPCIs)
used to adjust payments under the
Physician Fee Schedule (PFS). These
provisions are being finalized as
proposed. We also proposed
adjustments when a FQHC furnishes
care to a patient who is new to the
FQHC or to a beneficiary receiving a
comprehensive initial Medicare visit
(that is, an initial preventive physical
examination (IPPE) or an initial annual
wellness visit (AWV)). These provisions
have been revised based on comments
received and are being finalized to allow
the proposed adjustments as well as an
adjustment for subsequent AWVs.
We also proposed not to include
adjustments or exceptions to the single,
encounter-based payment when an
illness or injury occurs subsequent to
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the initial visit, or when mental health,
diabetes self-management training/
medical nutrition therapy (DSMT/
MNT), or the IPPE are furnished on the
same day as the medical visit. These
provisions have been revised based on
the comments received and are being
finalized to allow an exception to the
single, encounter-based payment when
an illness or injury occurs subsequent to
the initial visit, or when a mental health
visit is furnished on the same day as the
medical visit.
We also proposed that coinsurance
would be 20 percent of the lesser of the
actual charge or the PPS rate. Most
preventive services are exempt from
beneficiary coinsurance in accordance
with section 4104 of the Affordable Care
Act. Accordingly, for FQHC claims that
include a mix of preventive and nonpreventive services, we proposed to use
physician office payments under the
Medicare PFS to determine the
proportional amount of coinsurance that
should be waived for payments based
on the PPS encounter rate, and to use
provider-reported charges to determine
the amount of coinsurance that should
be waived for payments based on the
provider’s charge. This provision has
been revised based on comments
received and is being finalized to allow
a simpler method for calculating
coinsurance when there is a mix of
preventive and non-preventive services.
The statute requires implementation
of the FQHC PPS for FQHCs with cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2014. We proposed that
FQHCs would transition into the PPS
based on their cost reporting periods
and that the claims processing system
would maintain the current system and
the PPS until all FQHCs transitioned to
the PPS. We also proposed to transition
the PPS to a calendar year update for all
FQHCs, beginning January 1, 2016, to be
consistent with many of the PFS rates
that are updated on a calendar year
basis. We are finalizing these provisions
as proposed.
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b. Other FQHC and RHC Changes
In addition to our proposals to codify
the statutory requirements for the FQHC
PPS, we proposed to allow RHCs to
contract with non-physician
practitioners, consistent with statutory
requirements that require at least one
NP or PA be employed by the RHC. We
also proposed edits to correct
terminology, clarify policy, and make
other conforming changes for existing
mandates and the new PPS.
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c. CLIA Enforcement Actions for
Proficiency Testing Referral
The ‘‘Taking Essential Steps for
Testing Act of 2012’’ (Pub. L. 112–202)
amended section 353 of the Public
Health Service Act to provide the
Secretary with discretion as to which
sanctions may be applied to cases of
intentional PT referral in lieu of the
automatic revocation of the CLIA
certificate and the subsequent ban
preventing the owner and operator from
owning or operating a CLIA-certified
laboratory for 2 years. Based on this
discretion, we are amending the CLIA
regulations to add three categories of
sanctions for PT referral based on the
severity and extent of the violation.
3. Summary of Cost and Benefits
a. For the FQHC PPS
As required by section 1834(o)(2)(B)(i)
of the Act, initial payment rates
(Medicare and coinsurance) under the
FQHC PPS must equal 100 percent of
the estimated amount of reasonable
costs, as determined without the
application of the current system’s
upper payment limits (UPL) or
productivity standards. In the proposed
rule, we estimated the overall impact,
based on the estimated PPS rate, would
increase total Medicare payments to
FQHCs by approximately 30 percent,
with an annualized cost to the federal
government between $183 million and
$186 million, based on 5 year
discounted flows using 3 percent and 7
percent factors. Based on current data,
our final estimate is an overall impact
of increasing total Medicare payments to
FQHCs by approximately 32 percent,
based on payment at the FQHC PPS.
(Note that this does not take into
account the application of ‘‘lesser of’’
provision in section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the
Act. For more information, see sections
II.E.2 and VII.D.1 of this final rule with
comment period). The annualized cost
to the federal government associated
with the final FQHC PPS is estimated to
be between $200 million and $204
million, based on 5 year discounted
flows using 3 percent and 7 percent
factors. These estimates also reflect the
policy modifications that are noted in
section I.A.2 and discussed in more
detail in sections II.B. and II.C. of this
preamble.
b. For Other FQHC and RHC Changes
We estimated that there would be no
costs associated with the removal of the
contracting restrictions for RHCs or for
technical and conforming regulatory
changes that would be made in
conjunction with the establishment of
the FQHC PPS.
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c. For the CLIA Enforcement Actions for
Proficiency Testing Referral Provisions
We estimated that an average of 6
cases per year may have fit the terms
described in the proposed rule to have
alternative sanctions applied. Based on
experience with laboratories that
engaged in proficiency testing referral in
the past, we estimated that the average
cost experienced by laboratories for
which we imposed a revocation of the
CLIA certificate as a result of a PT
referral violation was $578,000 per
laboratory. We estimated that the
average cost of alternative sanctions,
based on comparable violations for
which alternative sanctions have been
imposed, would be $150,000 per
laboratory. Therefore, we projected that
the aggregate annual savings would be
approximately $2.6 million per year
($578,000 minus $150,000 for 6
laboratories), resulting in net average
savings per affected certificate holder of
$428,000 ($578,000 minus $150,000).
We continue to consider these to be
reasonable estimates.
B. Overview and Background
1. FQHC Description and General
Information
FQHCs are facilities that furnish
services that are typically furnished in
an outpatient clinic setting. They are
currently paid an all-inclusive rate (AIR)
per visit for qualified primary and
preventive health services furnished to
Medicare beneficiaries.
The statutory requirements that
FQHCs must meet to qualify for the
Medicare benefit are in section
1861(aa)(4) of the Act. Based on these
provisions, the following three types of
organizations that are eligible to enroll
in Medicare as FQHCs:
• Health Center Program grantees:
Organizations receiving grants under
section 330 of the PHS Act (42 U.S.C.
254b).
• Health Center Program ‘‘lookalikes’’: Organizations that have been
identified by the Health Resources and
Services Administration (HRSA) as
meeting the requirements to receive a
grant under section 330 of the PHS Act,
but which do not receive section 330
grant funding.
• Outpatient health programs/
facilities operated by a tribe or tribal
organization (under the Indian SelfDetermination Act) or by an urban
Indian organization (under Title V of the
Indian Health Care Improvement Act).
FQHCs are also entities that were
treated by the Secretary for purposes of
Medicare Part B as a comprehensive
federally funded health center as of
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January 1, 1990 (see section
1861(aa)(4)(C) of the Act).
Section 330 Health Centers are the
most common type of FQHC. Originally
known as Neighborhood Health Centers,
they have evolved over the last 45 years
to become an integral component of the
Nation’s health care safety net system,
with more than 1,200 health centers
operating approximately 9,000 delivery
sites that serve more than 21 million
people each year from medically
underserved communities. They include
community health centers (section
330(e) of the PHS Act), migrant health
centers (section 330(g) of the PHS Act),
health care for the homeless (section
330(h) of the PHS Act), and public
housing primary care (section 330(i) of
the PHS Act).
FQHCs may be either not-for-profit or
public organizations. The main purpose
of the FQHC program is to enhance the
provision of primary care services in
underserved urban, rural and tribal
communities. FQHCs that are not
operated by a tribe or tribal organization
are required to be located in or treat
people from a federally-designated
medically underserved area or
medically underserved population and
to comply with all the requirements of
section 330 of the PHS Act. Some of
these section 330 requirements include
offering a sliding fee scale with
discounts adjusted on the basis of the
patient’s ability to pay and being
governed by a board of directors that
represent the individuals being served
by the FQHC and a majority of whom
receive their care at the FQHC.
According to HRSA’s Uniform Data
System (UDS),1 approximately 8 percent
of FQHC patients were Medicare
beneficiaries, 41 percent were Medicaid
recipients, and 36 percent were
uninsured in 2012. The remaining 15
percent were privately insured or had
other public insurance. Medicare and
Medicaid accounted for approximately 9
percent and 47 percent of their total
billing in dollars, respectively.
The Congress has authorized several
programs to assist FQHCs in increasing
access to care for underserved and
special populations. Many FQHCs
receive section 330 grant funds to offset
the costs of uncompensated care and
furnish other services. All FQHCs are
eligible to participate in the 340B Drug
Pricing Program which is a program that
requires drug manufacturers to provide
outpatient drugs to eligible health care
organizations/covered entities at
1 The UDS collects and tracks data such as patient
demographics, services provided, staffing, clinical
indicators, utilization rates, costs, and revenues
from section 330 health centers and health center
look-alikes.
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significantly reduced prices. FQHCs that
receive section 330 grant funds also are
eligible to apply for medical malpractice
coverage under Federally Supported
Health Centers Assistance Act
(FSHCAA) of 1992 (Pub. L. 102–501)
and FSHCAA of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–73
amending section 224 of the PHS Act)
and may be eligible for federal loan
guarantees for capital improvements
when funds for this purpose are
appropriated. Title VIII of the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act (Pub. L.
111–5) appropriated $2 billion for
construction, equipment, health
information technology, and related
improvements to existing section 330
grantees and for the establishment of
new grantees sites. The Affordable Care
Act appropriated an additional $11
billion over a 5-year period ($1.5 billion
for capital improvements and $9.5
billion for support and expansion of the
health centers receiving grant funds
under section 330). HRSA administers
the Health Center grant program and
other programs that assist FQHCs in
increasing access to primary and
preventive health care in underserved
communities.
2. Medicare’s FQHC Coverage and
Payment Benefit
The FQHC coverage and payment
benefit under Medicare began on
October 1, 1991. It was authorized by
section 1861(aa) of the Act (which
amended section 4161 of the Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act (OBRA) of
1990 (Pub. L. 101–508, enacted on
November 5, 1990)) and implemented in
regulations via the June 12, 1992 final
rule with comment period (57 FR
24961) and the April 3, 1996 final rule
(61 FR 14640). Regulations pertaining to
FQHCs are found primarily in Part 405
and Part 491.
FQHC covered services and supplies
include the following:
• Physician, NP, PA, Certified NurseMidwife (CNM), Clinical Psychologist
(CP), and Clinical Social Worker (CSW)
services.
• Services and supplies furnished
incident to a physician, NP, PA, CNM,
CP, or CSW services.
• FQHC covered drugs that are
furnished by a FQHC practitioner.
• Outpatient DSMT and MNT for
beneficiaries with diabetes or renal
disease.
• Statutorily-authorized preventive
services.
• Visiting nurse services to the
homebound in an area where CMS has
determined that there is a shortage of
home health agencies.
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3. Legislation Pertaining to Medicare
and Medicaid Payments for FQHC
Services
FQHCs currently receive cost-based
reimbursement, subject to the UPL and
productivity standards that were
established in 1978 and 1982 for RHCs
(43 FR 8260 and 47 FR 54165,
respectively) and adopted for FQHCs in
1992 and 1996 (57 FR 24967 through
24970 and 61 FR 14650 through 14652,
respectively), for services furnished to
Medicare beneficiaries, and PPS
payment, based on their historical cost
data, for services furnished to Medicaid
recipients (section 1902(bb) of the Act).
The UPL for Medicare FQHC services is
adjusted annually based on the
Medicare Economic Index (MEI), as
described in section 1842(i)(3) of the
Act. Authority to apply productivity
standards is found in section 1833(a)
and 1861(v)(1)(A) of the Act. Section
151(a) of the Medicare Improvements
for Patients and Providers Act (MIPPA)
of 2008 (Pub. L. 110–275, enacted on
July 15, 2008) increased the UPL for
FQHC by $5, effective January 1, 2010.
Section 151(b) of the MIPPA required
the Government Accountability Office
(GAO) to study and report on the effects
and adequacy of the Medicare FQHC
payment structure.
Based on a GAO analysis of 2007
Medicare cost report data, about 72
percent of FQHCs had average costs per
visit that exceeded the UPL, and the
application of productivity standards
reduced Medicare payment for
approximately 7 percent of FQHCs. In
2007, application of the limits and
adjustments currently in place reduced
FQHCs’ submitted costs of services by
approximately $73 million, about 14
percent (Medicare Payments to Federal
Qualified Health Centers, GAO–10–
576R, July 30, 2010).
The Benefits Improvement and
Protection Act of 2000 (Pub. L. 106–554,
enacted December 21, 2000) created
section 1902(bb) of the Act, which
established a PPS for Medicaid
reimbursement. The law also allowed
state Medicaid agencies to establish
their own reimbursement methodology
for FQHCs provided that total
reimbursement would not be less than
the payment under the Medicaid PPS,
and that the FQHC agreed to the
alternative payment methodology. For
beneficiaries enrolled in a managed care
organization (MCO), the MCO pays the
FQHC an agreed upon amount, and the
state Medicaid program pays the FQHC
a wrap-around payment equal to the
difference, if any, between the PPS rate
and the payment from the managed care
organization.
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The Affordable Care Act established a
Medicare PPS for FQHCs. Section
10501(i)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care
Act added section 1834(o) of the Act,
requiring the Medicare FQHC PPS to be
implemented for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2014.
The new PPS for FQHCs is required to
take into account the type, intensity,
and duration of services furnished by
FQHCs and may include adjustments,
including geographic adjustments,
determined appropriate by the
Secretary. A detailed discussion of the
statutory requirements for the Medicare
FQHC PPS is discussed in section I.B.5.
of this final rule with comment period.
4. Medicare’s Current Reasonable CostBased Reimbursement Methodology
FQHCs are paid an AIR per visit for
medically-necessary professional
services that are furnished face-to-face
(one practitioner and one patient) with
a FQHC practitioner (§ 405.2463).
Services and supplies furnished
incident to a FQHC professional service
are included in the AIR and are not
billed as a separate visit. Technical
components such as x-rays, laboratory
tests, and durable medical equipment
are not part of the AIR and are billed
separately to Medicare Part B.
The AIR is calculated by dividing
total allowable costs by the total number
of visits. Allowable costs may include
practitioner compensation, overhead,
equipment, space, supplies, personnel,
and other costs incident to the delivery
of FQHC services. Cost reports are filed
in order to identify all incurred costs
applicable to furnishing covered FQHC
services. Freestanding FQHCs complete
Form CMS–222–92, ‘‘Independent Rural
Health Clinic and Freestanding
Federally Qualified Health Center Cost
Report’’. FQHCs based in a hospital
complete the Worksheet M series of
Form CMS–2552–10, ‘‘Hospital and
Hospital Care Complex Cost Report’’.
FQHCs based in a skilled nursing
facility (SNF) complete the Worksheet I
series of Form CMS–2540–10, ‘‘Skilled
Nursing Facility and Skilled Nursing
Facility Health Care Complex Cost
Report’’. FQHCs based in a home health
agency complete the Worksheet RF
series of Form CMS–1728–94, ‘‘Home
Health Agency Cost Report’’.
Information on these cost report forms
is found in Chapters 29, 40, 41 and 32,
respectively, of the Provider
Reimbursement Manual, Part 2
(Publication 15–2). Per our regulations
at § 413.65(n), only FQHCs that were
operating as provider-based clinics prior
to 1995 and either received funds under
section 330 of the PHS Act or were
determined by CMS to meet the criteria
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to be a look-alike clinic continue to be
eligible to be certified as provider-based
FQHCs. Provider-based designations are
not made for FQHCs that do not already
have this status.
At the beginning of a FQHC’s fiscal
year, the Medicare Administrative
Contractor (MAC) calculates an interim
AIR based on actual costs and visits
from the previous cost reporting period.
For new FQHCs, the interim AIR is
estimated based on a percentage of the
per-visit limit. FQHCs receive payments
throughout the year based on their
interim rate. After the conclusion of the
fiscal year, the cost report is reconciled
and any necessary adjustments in
payments are made.
Allowable costs are subject to tests of
reasonableness, productivity standards,
and an overall payment limit. The
productivity standards require 4,200
visits per full-time equivalent physician
and 2,100 visits per full-time equivalent
non-physician practitioner (NP, PA or
CNM) on an annual basis. If the FQHC
has furnished fewer visits than required
by the productivity standards, the
allowable costs would be divided by the
productivity standards numbers instead
of the actual number of visits.
The payment limit varies based on
whether the FQHC is located in an
urban or rural area (as defined in section
1886(d)(2)(D) of the Act). The 2014
payment limits per visit for urban and
rural FQHCs are $129.02 and $111.67,
respectively. FQHCs with multiple sites
may elect to file a consolidated cost
report (CMS Pub. 100–04, Medicare
Claims Processing Manual, chapter 9,
section 30.8), and if the FQHC has both
urban and rural sites, the MAC applies
a weighted UPL based on the percentage
of urban and rural visits as the
percentage of total site visits. The AIR
is equal to the FQHC’s cost per visit
(adjusted by the productivity standard if
appropriate) or the payment limit,
whichever is less.
Medicare beneficiaries receiving
services at a FQHC are not subject to the
annual Medicare deductible for FQHCcovered services (section 1833(b)(4) of
the Act). Medicare beneficiaries pay a
copayment based on 20 percent of the
charges (section 1866(a)(2)(A)(ii) of the
Act), except for: (1) Mental health
treatment services, which are subject to
the outpatient mental health treatment
limitation until January 1, 2014, when
beneficiary coinsurance is reduced to
the same level as most other Part B
services; (2) FQHC-supplied influenza
and pneumococcal and Hepatitis B
vaccines (HBV); and (3) effective
January 1, 2011, personalized
prevention plan services and any
Medicare covered preventive service
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that is recommended with a grade of A
or B by the U.S. Preventive Services
Task Force.
The administration and payment of
influenza and pneumococcal vaccines is
not included in the AIR. They are paid
at 100 percent of reasonable costs
through the cost report. The cost and
administration of HBV is covered under
the FQHC’s AIR.
5. Summary of Requirements Under the
Affordable Care Act for the FQHC PPS
and Other Provisions Pertaining to
FQHCs
Section 10501(i)(3)(A) of the
Affordable Care Act amended section
1834 of the Act by adding a new
subsection (o), ‘‘Development and
Implementation of Prospective Payment
System’’. Section 1834(o)(1)(A) of the
Act requires that the system include a
process for appropriately describing the
services furnished by FQHCs. Also, the
system must establish payment rates for
specific payment codes based on such
descriptions of services, taking into
account the type, intensity, and
duration of services furnished by
FQHCs. The system may include
adjustments (such as geographic
adjustments) as determined appropriate
by the Secretary of HHS.
Section 1834(o)(1)(B) of the Act
specifies that, by no later than January
1, 2011, FQHCs must begin submitting
information as required by the
Secretary, including the reporting of
services using Healthcare Common
Procedure Coding System (HCPCS)
codes, in order to develop and
implement the PPS.
Section 1834(o)(2)(A) of the Act
requires that the FQHC PPS must be
effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2014.
For such cost reporting periods,
reasonable costs will no longer be the
basis for Medicare payment for services
furnished to beneficiaries at FQHCs.
Section 1834(o)(2)(B)(i) of the Act
requires that the initial PPS rates must
be set so as to equal in the aggregate 100
percent of the estimated amount of
reasonable costs that would have
occurred for the year if the PPS had not
been implemented. This 100 percent
must be calculated prior to application
of copayments, per visit limits, or
productivity adjustments.
Section 1834(o)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act
describes the methods for determining
payments in subsequent years. After the
first year of implementation, the PPS
payment rates must be increased by the
percentage increase in the MEI. After
the second year of implementation, PPS
rates shall be increased by the
percentage increase in a market basket
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of FQHC goods and services as
established through regulations, or, if
not available, the MEI that is published
in the Physician Fee Schedule (PFS)
final rule.
Section 10501(i)(3)(B) of the
Affordable Care Act added section
1833(a)(1)(Z) to the Act to specify that
Medicare payment for FQHC services
under section 1834(o) of the Act shall be
80 percent of the lesser of the actual
charge or the PPS amount determined
under section 1834(o) of the Act.
Section 10501(i)(3)(C) of the
Affordable Care Act added section
1833(a)(3)(B)(i)(II) of the Act to require
that FQHCs that contract with Medicare
Advantage (MA) organizations be paid
at least the same amount they would
have received for the same service
under the FQHC PPS.
Section 10501(i)(2) of the Affordable
Care Act amended the definition of
FQHC services as defined in section
1861(aa)(3)(A) of the Act by replacing
the specific references to services
furnished under section 1861(qq) and
(vv) of the Act (DSMT and MNT
services, respectively) with preventive
services as defined in section
1861(ddd)(3) of the Act, as established
by section 4014(a)(3) of the Affordable
Care Act. These changes were effective
for services furnished on or after
January 1, 2011. Accordingly, in the CY
2011 Medicare PFS final rule (75 FR
73417 through 73419, November 29,
2010) we adopted conforming
regulations by adding a new § 405.2449,
which added the new preventive
services definition to the definition of
FQHC services effective for services
furnished on or after January 1, 2011
(see that rule for a detailed discussion
regarding preventive services covered
under the FQHC benefit and the
requirements for waiving coinsurance
for such services).
Section 1833(b)(4) of the Act
stipulates that the Medicare Part B
deductible shall not apply to FQHC
services. The Affordable Care Act made
no change to this provision; therefore
Medicare will continue to waive the
Part B deductible for all FQHC services
in the FQHC PPS, including preventive
services added by the Affordable Care
Act.
6. Approach to the FQHC PPS
To enhance our understanding of the
services furnished by FQHCs and the
unique role of FQHCs in providing
services to people from medically
underserved areas and populations, we
worked closely with HRSA and others
in the development of the proposed
rule. We are aware of the challenges
facing FQHCs in increasing access to
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health care for underserved populations
and the importance of Medicare
payments to the overall financial
viability of FQHCs. Our goal for the
FQHC PPS is to implement a system in
accordance with the statute whereby
FQHCs are fairly paid for the services
they furnish to Medicare patients in the
least burdensome manner possible, so
that they may continue to furnish
primary and preventive health services
to the communities they serve.
We have evaluated our approach
based on the comments we received to
the proposed rule in the context of
balancing payment requirements,
regulatory burden, and the need for
appropriate accountability and
oversight. We received approximately
100 timely comments on the proposed
FQHC PPS. The following sections
describe the comments we received, our
response to the comments, and the final
decisions on our proposals.
II. Establishment of the Federally
Qualified Health Center Prospective
Payment System (FQHC PPS)
A. Design and Data Sources for the
FQHC PPS
1. Overview of the PPS Design
In developing the new PPS for
FQHCs, we considered the statutory
requirements at section 1834(o)(1)(A) of
the Act requiring that the new PPS take
into account the type, intensity, and
duration of services furnished by
FQHCs, and allows for adjustments,
including geographic adjustments, as
determined appropriate by the
Secretary. The statute also requires us to
‘‘establish payment rates for specific
payment codes based on . . .
appropriate description of services.’’ We
explored several approaches to the
methodology and modeled options for
calculating payment rates and
adjustments under a PPS based on data
from Medicare FQHC cost reports and
Medicare FQHC claims. Each option
was evaluated to determine which
approach would result in the most
appropriate payment structure with the
fewest reporting requirements and least
administrative burden for the FQHCs.
One approach we considered would
align payment for FQHCs with payment
for services typically furnished in
physician offices, making separate
payment for each coded service and
adopting the relative values from the
PFS. While this approach follows
established payment policy for services
furnished in an outpatient clinic setting,
it unbundles a FQHC encounter-based
payment into a fee schedule structure,
which we believe could encourage
excess utilization in the long-term, and
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could increase coding and billing
requirements for FQHCs.
Another approach for the PPS would
be to pay a single encounter-based rate
per beneficiary per day. The encounterbased rate would be based on an average
cost per visit, which would be
calculated by aggregating the data for all
FQHCs and dividing their total costs by
their total visits incurred during a
specified time period. An encounterbased payment rate is consistent with
the agency’s commitment to greater
bundling of services, which gives
FQHCs the flexibility to implement
efficiencies to reduce over-utilization of
services. FQHCs are accustomed to
billing for a single visit, as they are
currently paid through an AIR that is
based on a FQHC’s own average cost per
visit. An encounter-based payment is
also similar to Medicaid payment
systems, and Medicaid constitutes a
large portion of FQHC billing
(approximately 47 percent, compared to
approximately 9 percent for Medicare).
We believe an encounter-based payment
rate (with a few adjustments as
discussed in section II.C. of this final
rule with comment period), for the
FQHC PPS would provide appropriate
payment while remaining
administratively simple.
Also, our analysis of Medicare claims
data supported an encounter-based
payment rate. As discussed in section
II.A.3 of this final rule with comment
period, our analysis determined that
FQHC Medicare claims listed a single
HCPCS code that defined the overall
type of encounter (for example, a midlevel office visit (HCPCS code 99213)).
The vast majority of FQHC encounters
were defined as evaluation and
management (E/M) office visits (HCPCS
codes 99201 through 99215). Other
codes were used more sporadically, and
we believe that the administrative
burden associated with developing and
maintaining a payment system
composed of multiple rates (for
example, a fee schedule) far outweighs
the minor variations in reimbursement.
Therefore, we developed an encounterbased rate, with a few adjustments, as
the basis for payment under the FQHC
PPS. We believe the description of
FQHC services that we proposed in the
proposed rule, and the development of
payment codes that are based on the
costs of groups of FQHC services (as
discussed in section II.E.2. of this final
rule with comment period), meets the
requirement of the statute.
Comment: A large number of
commenters were strongly supportive of
a single, bundled encounter-based PPS
rate, and many noted that this approach
encourages comprehensive and
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integrated care. Some of the commenters
who supported a bundled encounterbased rate also recommended that CMS
develop multiple rates to reflect
additional payment adjustments.
Response: We agree with the
commenters that a bundled encounterbased rate would provide appropriate
payment while remaining
administratively simple. We will
address the recommendations for
additional payment adjustments in
section II.C.4. of this final rule with
comment period.
After consideration of the public
comments received, we are finalizing
our proposal to pay FQHCs using an
encounter-based rate.
2. Medicare FQHC Cost Reports
As required by section 1834(o)(2)(B)(i)
of the Act, initial payment rates
(Medicare and coinsurance) under the
FQHC PPS must equal 100 percent of
the estimated amount of reasonable
costs, as determined without the
application of the current system’s UPLs
or productivity standards that can
reduce a FQHC’s per visit rate. In order
to estimate 100 percent of reasonable
costs for the proposed rule, we obtained
Medicare cost report data for freestanding FQHCs (Form CMS 222–92)
from the March 31, 2013, Healthcare
Cost Report Information System (HCRIS)
quarterly update, and we identified cost
reports with cost reporting periods that
ended between June 30, 2011, and June
30, 2012. We stated in the proposed rule
that we would use the most recent
available data for the final rule.
Therefore, in estimating 100 percent of
reasonable costs for this final rule with
comment period, we used cost report
data from December 31, 2013, HCRIS
quarterly update, and we supplemented
this with data from the three prior
HCRIS quarterly updates (that is,
September 30, 2013, June 30, 2013, and
March 31, 2013). We also obtained
HCRIS data for hospital-based FQHCs
(Form 2552–10) and HHA-based FQHCs
(Form 1728–94), which added data from
provider-based FQHCs. In the expanded
sample that we used for this final rule
with comment period, we identified
cost reports with cost reporting periods
ending between June 30, 2011, and June
30, 2013. We included in our analysis
FQHC costs reports that had allowable
costs (excluding pneumococcal and
influenza vaccines) and Medicare visits,
and we used one cost report for each
FQHC cost reporting entity. (A cost
reporting entity is a FQHC delivery site
that files either an individual or a
consolidated cost report.) For 63 percent
of cost reporting entities, there were
either multiple cost reports available or
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the cost reporting period was not
exactly 1 year. For the remaining 37
percent of cost reporting entities, the
only available cost report covered 1 full
year. Compared to the characteristics of
the cost report data used for the
proposed rule, the significant increase
in the percentage of FQHCs with
multiple cost reports is due mostly to
the expanded time period that we used
for the final rule to identify cost reports
available for analysis. For cost reporting
entities with multiple cost reports
available, we selected the most recent
cost report, unless an earlier cost report
provided us with a better match to the
FQHC claims data that was used to
model potential adjustments. Because
FQHCs with multiple sites can file
consolidated cost reports, we also
ensured that we selected only one cost
report for each delivery site.
As required by statute, we estimated
100 percent of reasonable costs that
would have occurred for this period
prior to the application of copayments,
per visit limits, or productivity
adjustments. We also note that, under
section 1833(c) of the Act, effective
January 1, 2014, outpatient mental
health services are paid on the same
basis as other Part B services. As the
FQHC PPS is to be implemented for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2014, we adjusted the cost
report data to remove the application of
the outpatient mental health limitations
that were in effect when these reported
services were incurred.
For this final rule with comment
period, we used the methodology
described in the proposed rule to
estimate 100 percent of reasonable costs.
After eliminating the current payment
limits, outpatient mental health
limitations, and productivity and
adjustments, we calculated the average
cost per visit for each cost reporting
entity by dividing the total estimated
Medicare costs (excluding vaccines)
reported by the total number of
Medicare visits reported.
In developing the FQHC PPS, section
1834(o)(1)(A) of the Act allows for
adjustments determined appropriate by
the Secretary. Consistent with this
authority, we excluded statistical
outliers from the sample of cost reports
used for the proposed rule. We
identified all cost reporting entities with
an average cost per visit that was greater
than three standard deviations above or
below the geometric mean of the overall
average cost per visit among cost
reporting entities, and we excluded
their data from our sample. We believe
that removing statistical outliers is
consistent with standard practice and
results in a more accurate estimation of
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costs overall. In this final rule with
comment period, we used the same
approach to exclude statistical outliers
from the cost report sample.
Comment: Several commenters
objected to the exclusion of outlier cost
reports and claims in calculating the
base rate. Some of these commenters
opined that the authority in section
1834(o)(1)(A) of the Act, to ‘‘include
adjustments . . . determined
appropriate by the Secretary’’ cannot
override the requirement in section
1834(o)(2)(B) of the Act that the
aggregate amount of initial PPS rates
equal ‘‘100 percent of the estimated
amount of reasonable costs (determined
without the application of a per visit
payment limit or productivity screen).’’
Commenters suggested that the
exclusion of outliers results in a lower
base rate and would not represent all
appropriate costs, such as higher costs
of visits furnished to complex Medicare
patients, or for furnishing costly, but
necessary items, such as expensive
drugs and biologicals, whose costs may
be beyond a FQHC’s control. Some of
the commenters also urged CMS to
compute the base PPS rate without the
exclusion of outliers.
Response: We respectfully disagree
with the assertion that the exclusion of
outliers is inconsistent with statutory
authority. Under section 1834(o)(2)(B) of
the Act, we are required to set the initial
payment rates to equal ‘‘100 percent of
the estimated amount of reasonable
costs.’’ The statute does not require us
to set initial payment rates based on the
inclusion of every cost report or claim
submitted. We analyzed the most
current available FQHC cost report and
claims data, and consistent with
standard practice, trimmed the data for
outliers so that the estimates are not
skewed by unusual data. Outliers were
defined based on two criteria: (1) Cost
reports with an average cost per visit
value more than 3 standard deviations
from the geometric mean of all average
costs per visit; and (2) encounters with
an adjusted charge value more than 3
standard deviations from the geometric
mean of all adjusted charges. This trim
methodology of three standard
deviations from the geometric mean is a
relatively conservative approach, and
the two trims together exclude less than
3 percent of the overall sample. We
believe that removing statistical outliers
results in a more accurate estimation of
costs overall.
Comment: Several commenters from
tribal organizations recommended that
CMS not exclude outliers in calculating
the base rate, as they believe that they
may be disproportionately impacted
because their costs are unusually high.
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Response: Of the approximately 69
tribal FQHCs furnishing services at
approximately 114 separate sites, there
were 8 tribal FQHCs whose costs were
considered statistical outliers. Although
tribal FQHCs have a higher rate of
statistical outliers than non-tribal
FQHCs, the number of tribal FQHCs
whose costs were more than three
standard deviations from the geometric
mean is still quite low. As previously
noted, the statute does not require the
rate to reflect actual costs for each
individual FQHC. The per diem rate
that is established reflects the national
average cost of a FQHC visit.
Comment: A commenter noted that
FQHCs count multiple visits per day on
their cost reports, and FQHCs should be
given a one-time opportunity to adjust
their reported FQHC visits to a per diem
to avoid an undue reduction in the
estimated cost per FQHC visit.
Response: As stated in the proposed
rule, we used the adjusted claims data
to calculate an average cost per diem in
order to accurately capture all costs and
did not rely solely on cost report data.
We used the same approach for this
final rule with comment period.
Comment: Some commenters were
concerned that costs related to
electronic health record (EHR)
implementation would not be
adequately reflected in 2012 cost report
data as many FQHCs adopted EHRs in
2012.
Response: We used the most recent
available data for this final rule, and we
updated our sample to include cost
reports with reporting periods ending
June 30, 2013. We do not believe it is
appropriate to adjust the calculation of
reasonable cost based on anticipated
future costs.
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3. Medicare FQHC Claims
In developing the Medicare FQHC
PPS, section 1834(o)(1)(A) of the Act
requires us to take into account the type,
intensity, and duration of FQHC
services, and allows other adjustments,
such as geographic adjustments. Section
1834(o)(1)(B) of the Act also granted the
Secretary of HHS (the Secretary) the
authority to require FQHCs to submit
such information as may be required in
order to develop and implement the
Medicare FQHC PPS, including the
reporting of services using HCPCS
codes. The provision requires that the
Secretary impose this data collection
submission requirement no later than
January 1, 2011. The requirement for
FQHCs to submit HCPCS codes was
implemented through program
instructions (CMS Change Request (CR)
7038).
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Beginning with dates of service on or
after January 1, 2011, FQHCs are
required to report all pertinent services
furnished and list the appropriate
HCPCS code for each line item along
with revenue code(s) for each FQHC
visit when billing Medicare. The
additional line item(s) and HCPCS code
reporting were for informational and
data gathering purposes to inform
development of the PPS rates and
potential adjustments. Other than for
calculating the amount of coinsurance
to waive for preventive services for
which the coinsurance is waived, these
HCPCS codes are not currently used to
determine current Medicare payment to
FQHCs. We proposed to use the HCPCS
codes in the FQHC claims data to
support the development of the FQHC
PPS rate and adjustments and for
making payment under the PPS.
In order to model potential
adjustments for the proposed rule, we
obtained final action Medicare FQHC
claims (type of bill 73X and 77X) from
the CMS Integrated Data Repository
(IDR) with dates of service between
January 2010 and December 2012. To
model potential adjustments for this
final rule with comment period, we
obtained final action Medicare FQHC
claims from the CMS IDR with dates of
service between January 2011 and
December 2013. Of these claims, only
those with dates of service between
January 1, 2011, and June 30 2013, were
retained for analysis and linking with
Medicare cost reports, as described
further in section II.A.4. of this final
rule with comment period. We excluded
claims that did not list a revenue code
or HCPCS code that represented a faceto-face encounter, as these services
would not qualify for an AIR payment.
We also excluded claim lines with
revenue codes that did not correspond
to FQHC services or that lacked valid
HCPCS codes.
In 2011, approximately 90 percent of
FQHC Medicare claims listed a single
HCPCS code that defined the overall
type of encounter (for example, a midlevel office visit (HCPCS code 99213)).
We found similar reporting trends in
2012 FQHC Medicare claims. For this
final rule with comment period, we
updated our analysis of HCPCS
reporting trends and found they are
relatively similar in 2013 FQHC
Medicare claims. We sought to validate
the completeness of HCPCS reporting by
analyzing coding on primary care
physician claims for PFS data. When
compared, the findings from the
simulated PFS data and actual FQHC
data were similar in the type and
distribution of the reported encounter
code (that is, the HCPCS code that
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represents the visit that qualifies the
FQHC encounter for an AIR payment).
When ancillary services (services that
are not separately billable by a FQHC)
were billed with an office visit code,
both FQHC and analogous primary care
physician office claims demonstrated a
tendency to include only one to two
ancillary services in addition to the
encounter code about 35 percent of the
time, and FQHCs billed only a single
ancillary service about 10 percent of the
time.
We believe that the reporting trends
in the FQHC claims are consistent with
the coding of analogous primary care
physician office claims, thereby
suggesting that the limited number of
ancillary services listed on FQHC claims
appropriately describe the services
furnished during an encounter.
Comment: Commenters supported the
use of the HCPCS codes in the FQHC
claims data to support the development
of the FQHC PPS rate and adjustments
and for making payment under the PPS.
Some commenters recommended that
we incorporate additional payment
adjustments based on the HCPCS codes
in the FQHC claims data.
Response: We agree with the
commenters that it is appropriate to use
the HCPCS codes in the FQHC claims
data to support the development of the
FQHC PPS rate and adjustments and for
making payment under the PFS. We will
address the recommendations for
additional payment adjustments in
section II.C.4. of this final rule with
comment period.
Comment: Some commenters were
concerned that services that were more
recently recognized as payable to
FQHCs would not be reflected in the
claims sample as it did not include
claims with dates of service beyond
June 30, 2012.
Response: We used the most recent
available data for this final rule with
comment period. We updated our
sample to include claims with dates of
service through June 30, 2013, to the
extent that an associated cost report was
included in our cost report sample (as
discussed previously and in section
II.A.2. of this final rule with comment
period).
Comment: A commenter was
concerned that a FQHC market basket of
goods and services would not reflect the
variety of non-billable ancillary services
furnished during a FQHC visit.
Response: Market baskets developed
for other Medicare payment systems
typically utilize cost report data, and the
costs of covered services provided
incident to a billable visit may be
included on the FQHC cost report.
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Comment: Some commenters opined
that the implementation of HCPCS
reporting for FQHCs was confusing,
resulting in claims with significant
errors in line item reporting, and
questioned the credibility of analyses
based on claims submitted in 2011 and
2012.
Response: Since data used for the
proposed rule included final action
claims with dates of service through
June 2012 that were obtained from the
IDR in 2013, we believe that any initial
errors in the coding or adjustment of
claims were corrected or were not
present in the majority of the claims
used for modeling adjustments in the
proposed rule. (see CMS CRs 7038 and
7208, which updated CMS Pub 100–04,
Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 9).
For this final rule with comment period,
we updated our sample to include final
action claims with dates of services
through June 2013, which are even less
likely to have significant coding or
adjustment errors.
After consideration of the public
comments received, we are finalizing
our proposal to use the HCPCS codes in
the FQHC claims data to support the
development of the FQHC PPS rate and
adjustments and for making payment
under the PFS.
4. Linking Cost Reports and Claims To
Compute the Average Cost per Visit
In this final rule with comment period
we used the same methodology
described in the proposed rule in order
to compute the adjusted charges or
‘‘estimated cost’’ for determining the
average cost per visit. We linked claims
to cost reports by delivery site, as
determined by the CMS Certification
Number (CCN) reported on the claim.
Since the HCPCS code reporting
requirement on claims did not go into
effect until January 1, 2011, claims for
earlier dates of service did not include
the detail required to model adjustments
based on type, intensity, or duration of
services. In the sample used for the
proposed rule, cost reports with
reporting periods that began on or after
January 1, 2011, accounted for 81
percent of the sample. In the updated
sample used for this final rule with
comment period, cost reports with
reporting periods that began on or after
January 1, 2011, accounted for 98
percent of the sample. We linked these
cost reports to Medicare FQHC claims
with service dates that matched their
respective cost reporting periods. For
cost reports that were at least 1 full year
in length and with a cost reporting
period that began in 2010, we linked
these cost reports to 2011 Medicare
FQHC claims.
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The linked cost report and claims data
were then used to calculate a cost-tocharge ratio (CCR) for each costreporting entity. To approximate data
not available on the cost report, we
developed these CCRs to convert each
FQHC’s charge data, as found on its
claims, to costs. We calculated an
average cost per visit by dividing the
total allowable costs (excluding
pneumococcal and influenza
vaccinations) by the total number of
visits reported on the cost report. We
calculated an average charge per visit by
dividing the total charges of all visits
(Medicare and non-Medicare) for all
sites under a cost-reporting entity and
dividing that sum by the total number
of visits for that cost-reporting entity.
We calculated a cost-reporting entityspecific CCR by dividing the average
cost per visit (based on cost report data)
by the average charge per visit (based on
claims data). We multiplied the
submitted charges for each claim by
these cost-reporting entity-specific CCRs
to estimate FQHC costs per visit. We
note that other Medicare payment
systems calculate CCRs based on total
costs and total charges reported on
Medicare cost reports, and that this
information is not currently available on
the free-standing FQHC cost report,
Form CMS–222–92.
In developing the FQHC PPS, section
1834(o)(1)(A) of the Act allows for
adjustments determined appropriate by
the Secretary. Consistent with this
authority, we excluded statistical
outliers from the linked claims sample
used for the proposed rule. We
identified visits with estimated costs
that were greater than three standard
deviations above or below the geometric
mean of the overall average estimated
cost per visit, and we excluded those
visits from our sample. We believe that
removing statistical outliers is
consistent with standard practice and
results in a more accurate estimation of
costs overall. For this final rule with
comment period, we used the same
approach to exclude statistical outliers
from the linked claims sample.
After trimming the linked claims data
for outliers, the final data set used for
this final rule with comment period
included 5,468,852 visits from
5,458,632 distinct claims encompassing
6,533,716 claim lines. This included
visits furnished to 1,297,013
beneficiaries at 3,778 delivery sites
under 1,215 cost-reporting entities. For
this final rule with comment period, we
modified the definition of a daily visit
to be consistent with our revised policy
to allow an exception to the per diem
PPS payment for subsequent injury or
illness and mental health services
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furnished on the same day as a medical
visit. Separately payable encounters for
the same beneficiary at the same FQHC
were combined into a single daily visit,
while allowing for a separate medical
visit, mental health visit, and
subsequent illness/injury visit, which
could result in up to three encounters
per beneficiary per day. The final data
set yielded 5,462,670 daily visits.
Comment: A commenter suggested
that using CCRs to measure the cost of
furnishing FQHC services is not
appropriate for FQHCs because certain
types of FQHC care management
services are not captured in the billed
charges; the CCRs would not be uniform
among medical and mental health
services; and the CCRs would be
affected by the pricing strategies of
FQHCs that keep their charges low to
minimize the copayment impact on
uninsured and indigent patients. The
commenter recommended that CMS use
PFS relative value units or other metrics
to adjust FQHC average cost per visit.
Response: We used Medicare cost
report data to measure the aggregate
reasonable cost of furnishing FQHC
services. However, as discussed in the
proposed rule, the cost report data is
insufficient for modeling the types of
adjustments considered for the FQHC
PPS. The CCRs for each cost-reporting
entity were used to approximate data
not available on the cost report and to
convert each FQHC’s charge data, as
found on its claims, to costs. The use of
the CCRs was primarily for modeling
the adjustments and does not
substantially impact our measure of the
aggregate reasonable cost of furnishing
FQHC services. Therefore, in this final
rule with comment period, we plan to
continue to use the CCR to adjust
charges in order to estimate costs.
Comment: A commenter requested
that CMS clarify whether a statistically
significant number of outlier visits were
for FQHCs in a particular state or for a
particular service.
Response: The average range of
outliers based on the adjusted charge for
the encounter was approximately 1.3
percent of FQHC visits, with higher
rates in U.S. territories (4 percent) and
the Pacific census division (3 percent).
Slightly more than 1 percent of all office
visits were outliers.
B. Policy Considerations for Developing
the FQHC PPS Rates and Adjustments
In developing the FQHC PPS rates
and adjustments, we considered existing
payment policies regarding payment for
multiple visits on the same day,
preventive laboratory services and
technical components of other
preventive services, and vaccine costs to
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to receive separate payment for DSMT/
MNT. The ability to bill separately for
Medicare’s IPPE is in manuals only and
1. Multiple Visits on the Same Day
not in regulation, with the manual
The current all-inclusive payment
language noting this is a once in a
system was designed to reimburse
lifetime benefit. There are no statutory
FQHCs for services furnished to
requirements to pay FQHCs separately
Medicare beneficiaries at a rate that
for these services when they occur on
would take into account all costs
the same day as another billable visit.
associated with the provision of services
To determine if these exceptions
(for example, space, supplies,
should be included, updated, or revised
practitioners, etc.) and reflect the
in the new PPS, in the September 23,
aggregate costs of providing services
2013 proposed rule (78 FR 58386) we
over a period of time. In some cases, the discussed that we examined 2011
per visit rate for a specific service is
Medicare FQHC claims data in order to
higher than what would be paid based
determine the frequency of FQHCs
on the PFS, and in some cases it is lower billing for more than one visit per day
than what would be paid based on the
for a beneficiary. We then analyzed the
PFS, but at the end of the reporting year potential financial impact on FQHCs
when the cost report is settled, the
and the potential impact on access to
Medicare payment is typically higher
care if billing for more than 1 visit per
for FQHCs than if the services were
day for these specific situations was no
billed separately on the PFS.
longer permitted. We also considered
The all-inclusive payment system was several alternative options, such as an
also designed to minimize reporting
adjustment of the per visit rate when
requirements, and as such, it reflects all multiple visits occur in the same day, or
the services that a FQHC furnishes in a
the establishment of a separate per visit
single day to an individual beneficiary,
rate for subsequent visit due to illness
regardless of the length or complexity of or injury, mental health services,
the visit or the number or type of
DSMT/MNT, or IPPE.
practitioners seen. This includes
In the September 23, 2013 proposed
situations where a FQHC patient has a
rule (78 FR 58386) proposed rule, we
medically-necessary face-to-face visit
discussed that an analysis of data from
with a FQHC practitioner, and is then
Medicare FQHC claims with dates of
seen by another FQHC practitioner,
service between January 1, 2011 and
including a specialist, for further
June 30, 2012, indicated that it is
evaluation of the same condition on the uncommon for FQHCs to bill more than
same day, or is then seen by another
one visit per day for the same
FQHC practitioner (including a
beneficiary (less than 0.5 percent of all
specialist) for evaluation of a different
visits), even though the ability to do so
condition on the same day. Except for
has been in place since 1992 for
certain preventive services that have
subsequent illness/injury, since 1996 for
coinsurance requirements waived,
mental health services, and since 2007
FQHCs have not been required to
for DSMT/MNT. Even allowing for any
submit coding of each service in order
underreporting in the data, it is clear
to determine Medicare payment.
that billing multiple visits on the same
Although the all-inclusive payment
day for an individual is a rare event, and
system was designed to provide
we stated that eliminating the ability to
enhanced reimbursement that reflects
do so would not significantly impact
the costs associated with a visit in a
either the FQHC payment or a
single day by a Medicare beneficiary, an beneficiary’s access to care. We also
exception to the one encounter payment suggested this policy would also
per day policy was made for situations
simplify billing by removing the need
when a patient comes into the FQHC for for modifier 59, which signifies that the
a medically-necessary visit, and after
conditions being treated are totally
leaving the FQHC, has a medical issue
unrelated and services are furnished at
that was not present at the visit earlier
separate times of the day, and the
that day, such as an injury or
subsequent claims review that occurs
when modifier 59 appears on a claim.
unexpected onset of illness. In these
Because the data show that multiple
situations, the FQHC has been permitted
visits rarely occur on the same day, we
to be paid separately for two visits on
determined that the level of effort
the same day for the same beneficiary.
required to develop an adjustment or a
In the April 3, 1996 final rule (61 FR
separate rate for each of these services
14640), we revised the regulations to
when furnished on the same day as a
allow separate payment for mental
medical visit would not be justified.
health services furnished on the same
day as a medical visit. The CY 2007 PFS Therefore, in the proposed rule, we
proposed to revise § 405.2463(b) to
final rule (71 FR 69624) subsequently
remove the exception to the single
revised the regulations to allow FQHCs
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determine potential interactions with
the implementation of the FQHC PPS.
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encounter payment per day for FQHCs
paid under the proposed PPS and we
stated that this policy is consistent with
an all-inclusive methodology and
reasonable cost principles and would
simplify billing and payment
procedures. Thus, the proposed PPS
encounter rate reflected a daily (per
diem) rate and resulted in a slightly
higher payment than one calculated
based on multiple encounters on the
same day.
Based on the Medicare claims data
furnished by FQHCs that indicates
minimal incidence of multiple visits
billed on the same day, we concluded
in the proposed rule that not including
these exceptions in the PPS would not
significantly impact total payment or
access to care. However, because we
understand that there may be many
possible reasons why the rate of billing
for more than one visit per day has been
low (for example, difficulty in
scheduling more than one type of visit
on the same day) and that FQHCs can
furnish integrated, patient-centered
health care services in a variety of ways,
we asked for comments to address
whether there are factors that we have
not considered, particularly in regards
to the provision of mental health
services, and whether this change
would impact access to these services or
the integration of services in
underserved communities.
We received many comments on our
proposal not to include these exceptions
in the new PPS for FQHCs. None of the
commenters were supportive of the
proposal.
Comment: Some commenters said that
we should continue to allow mental
health or other visits to be furnished on
the same day as a medical visit because
their patients have transportation,
mobility, work, or childcare issues.
Response: We wish to clarify that we
did not propose to prohibit mental
health visits from occurring on the same
day as a medical visit. We did propose
not to include an exception to the per
diem payment system to allow for
multiple billing when mental health (or
subsequent illness/injury, DSMT/MNT
or IPPE) is furnished on the same as a
medical visit, as discussed later.
Comment: Some commenters
suggested that if we do not allow
separate billing for mental health
services that are furnished on the same
day as a medical service, we should
instead develop an adjustment that
would increase the PPS per diem base
payment rate when a mental health visit
occurs on the same day as another
billable visit. Other commenters
suggested an adjustment for mental
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health, behavioral health, DSMT, and
MNT.
Response: As we discussed in earlier,
we did not propose to include
adjustments to the PPS per diem
payment rate except for new patient and
initial Medicare visits. While we
considered an adjustment for mental
health services and DSMT/MNT, our
analysis of the claims data did not
support such adjustments. Also,
including additional adjustments would
result in a lower PPS rate, which would
impact FQHC payments for all visits.
Comment: Some commenters
acknowledged that the incidence of
Medicare billing for more than 1 visit
per beneficiary per day in FQHCs is
extremely low, but argued that their
FQHC often billed multiple visits on the
same day, particularly for mental health
visits that occur on the same day as a
medical visit, and that this proposal
would have a significant impact on their
FQHC payments and their patient’s
access to care.
Response: Based on our analysis of
national Medicare claims data, we
believe there would be a very minimal
impact if the exception allowing
multiple billing on the same day was to
be eliminated, especially for mental
health services. We analyzed the claims
data of the FQHCs that provided the
most detailed comments that they
would be significantly or
disproportionately impacted if they
could not bill separately for mental
health visits that occur on the same day
as a medical visit. A commenter from a
large FQHC in the southeastern part of
the U.S. with more than 23,000 total
visits per year described how they are
a fully integrated primary care FQHC
and every patient has a team of
professionals that includes behavioral
health. Yet a review of the Medicare
claims data for this FQHC showed that
out of a yearly total of more than 23,000
total visits, only 74 mental health visits,
or 0.32 percent, were billed on the same
day as a medical visit. A review of
Medicare claims data for a large FQHC
in the western part of the U.S. showed
that 2.0 percent had a mental health
visit on the same day as another visit,
but of those 2.0 percent, only 0.5
percent of these were billable visits. A
large multisite FQHC in the southern
part of the U.S. stated that as a result of
their integrated model of behavioral care
and same day billing, there was a
reduction in visits to the emergency
room. The claims data for this FQHC
showed a rate of same day billing for
mental health visits of 0.5 percent, and
no evidence was provided to link this to
a reduction in emergency room visits.
While this is slightly higher than the
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average of 0.3 percent, it is still a very
low rate.
We do not know why these and other
FQHCs believe that they are billing
more same-day mental health visits than
indicated by their claims data. Perhaps
the FQHC may be considering all their
patients, not just Medicare beneficiaries
who comprise an average of 8 percent of
all FQHC patients. Another possibility
is that the FQHC may be considering
some behavioral health services that are
beyond the scope of Medicare-covered
services, or are including services
furnished by non-FQHC practitioners.
Based on the claims data and the
information provided in the comments,
we do not agree that removal of the
exceptions to allow for multiple billing
would have a significant impact on the
financial viability of these FQHCs or
reduce access to care for Medicare
beneficiaries.
Comment: Several commenters
acknowledged that their use of the
exception for multiple billing on the
same day was low or non-existent for
Medicare beneficiaries, but wanted us to
retain this exception so that they could
use this to leverage Medicaid in their
state to pay separately for mental health.
Response: We do not believe that
Medicare policy should be determined
in order to influence state Medicaid
policies.
Comment: Some commenters
disputed our data which showed that
only 0.5 percent of all claims were for
multiple same day visits. The
commenters suggested the following
reasons for the low number of multiple
same day visits: FQHCs did not code
correctly; FQHCs did not know they
could bill for multiple visits; FQHC
billing systems are not set up for
multiple billing because other payment
systems do not reimburse for it; and that
the MACs do not allow it.
Response: Section 1834(o)(1)(B) of the
Act, as added by the Affordable Care
Act required FQHCs to utilize HCPCS
codes on their Medicare claims in order
to inform the development of the FQHC
PPS. FQHCs have also been required to
use HCPCS codes for payment purposes
when a preventive service for which
coinsurance is waived is on the same
claim as a service that has a coinsurance
requirement. Other payment systems
may also require HCPCS coding on
claims. We are aware that some FQHCs
have limited experience with coding
and that the coding submitted on
Medicare claims may not have been
accurate or complete in all cases.
However, even if the rate shown in the
claims data was doubled or tripled, the
rate of billing for multiple visits on the
same day would still be extremely low.
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As we stated in the September 23,
2013 proposed rule, the ability to bill for
multiple visits on the same day for
subsequent illness or injury has been
allowed since the beginning of the
FQHC program. We also noted that the
ability to bill for multiple visits on the
same day for mental health services has
been allowed since 1996, and the ability
to bill for multiple visits on the same
day has been allowed for DSMT/MNT
since 2007. While it is possible that
some FQHCs were not aware that this
option existed, we know from the
claims data that mental health, IPPE,
and DSMT/MNT services constitute a
small percentage of a FQHC’s total
Medicare services.
We understand that billing systems
vary among FQHCs and that some
billing systems are more adept at
managing tasks such as multiple sameday billing. However, we believe that if
the inability to bill for multiple visits
presented a significant loss of payment
for a FQHC, the FQHC would have
upgraded its system to allow for this
type of billing. We are also not aware of
any MACs that do not allow for multiple
same day billing for the circumstances
in which they are allowable.
Medicare comprises only 8 percent of
FQHC patient population, and not all
Medicare beneficiaries require mental
health or DSMT/MNT services.
Particularly for mental health services,
it is often difficult to schedule
appointments on the same day as a
medical visit, and most mental health
conditions require ongoing treatment
which would likely be at a frequency
that differs from the need for primary
care visits. Therefore, we would expect
the rate of same day billing to be low,
despite the availability of the
exceptions.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that FQHCs be allowed to bill
separately for other services such as
optometry and dental care when
furnished on the same day as another
visit.
Response: Other services, such as
optometry and dental care, cannot be
billed separately on the same day as
another medical visit under the current
AIR system. We did not propose and we
are not considering expanding the type
of services that can be billed separately
when furnished on the same day as
another visit. The PPS rate and its
adjustments reflect the total cost of
furnishing services to Medicare
beneficiaries.
Comment: Some commenters were
concerned that removing the ability to
bill separately for mental health services
that are furnished on the same day as a
medical visit would create an incentive
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for FQHCs to schedule these encounters
on separate days.
Response: Under both the allinclusive payment system and the PPS
per diem system, there is a risk that a
FQHC could deliberately schedule
patient visits over a period of time in
order to maximize payment. We expect
FQHCs and other providers of care to
Medicare beneficiaries to act in the best
interests of their patients, which
includes scheduling visits in a manner
that maximizes the health and safety of
their patients.
Comment: A few commenters stated
that FQHCs will not be able to continue
working with community mental health
centers if we do not allow separate
billing for mental health services
furnished on the same day as a medical
visit.
Response: Commenters did not
provide enough supporting information
as to why this proposal would
negatively or adversely affect FQHC
relationships with community mental
health centers to allow us to respond
meaningfully to this comment.
Comment: Some commenters
suggested that removing the ability to
bill separately for mental health and
other services is inconsistent with the
Affordable Care Act’s focus on value
over volume.
Many commenters wrote that the
ability to bill separately for mental
health and other visits on the same day
as a primary care visit would help them
to furnish integrated and coordinated
care and would benefit their patients.
Many of them stated that allowing
separate payment for mental health
services furnished on the same day as a
medical visit would provide incentives
to furnish integrated care for Medicare
patients with complex health
conditions. Others were concerned that
not allowing this exception would send
a message that we do not value mental
health care. Commenters also suggested
that people with mental illness are less
likely to return for a mental health visit
if a primary care visit is not also
scheduled, and that furnishing mental
health visits on the same day as a
medical visit helps to increase
compliance with medications.
Response: We agree with commenters
about the importance of promoting and
furnishing coordinated and integrated
care, which can be especially
challenging in underserved areas. Based
on Medicare claims data and the
comments we received, there is no
evidence that access to care would be
reduced if exceptions to the per diem
PPS are not allowed.
However, we agree that separate
payment for mental health services
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furnished on the same day as a medical
visit has the potential to increase access
to mental health services in underserved
areas and that this would help to
demonstrate the value of mental health
services, especially in areas where need
is high and utilization is low. We
acknowledge that FQHCs furnish
services to underserved and vulnerable
populations that often have had
difficulty accessing mental health
services, and that commenters
overwhelmingly support separate
payment for mental health services
furnished on the same day as a medical
visit. Therefore, in this final rule with
comment period, we are modifying our
original proposal to allow an exception
to the per diem payment system so that
FQHCs can bill separately for mental
health services that are furnished on the
same day as a medical visit.
We will also allow an exception to the
per diem payment system to allow
FQHCs to bill separately when an
illness or injury occurs on the same day
in which a FQHC visit has already
occurred. This exception is available for
situations where a Medicare beneficiary
has a FQHC visit, leaves the FQHC, and
later in the day has an illness or injury
that was not present during the initial
visit. While it does not happen often,
when it does occur we believe the
FQHC should be able to bill separately
because it is a unique situation that
could not be planned or anticipated and
the FQHC would not benefit from the
economies of scale that can occur when
multiple medical issues are addressed
in the same visit.
We do not believe that the
circumstances that justify allowing same
day billing for a subsequent injury or
illness or a mental health visit that
occurs on the same day as a medical
visit also applies to DSMT/MNT. A
DSMT/MNT visit is part of the broad
category of primary care services that
are included in the services of a FQHC
and are part of the PPS per diem
payment. Visits with multiple
practitioners that occur on the same
day, including visits for different
conditions or visits with a specialist
physician, are not separately payable in
a FQHC under the all-inclusive payment
methodology or the PPS methodology.
We do not see any reason why these
DSMT/MNT visits should be considered
differently. Additionally, the cost of a
DSMT/MNT visit is far lower than the
cost of a medical or mental health visit,
so it would not be justified to pay
separately for those visits at the PPS
rate. We also did not include IPPE as a
separately billable visit, because we are
already allowing an adjustment to the
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PPS rate for a new patient or initial
Medicare visit.
We are allowing the exception to the
per diem PPS payment for mental health
services that occur on the same day as
a medical visit to promote access to
these services in FQHCs. While this may
also contribute to the coordination of
care, this alone will not achieve the
goals of the Affordable Care Act to
furnish integrated and coordinated
services. Instead, we believe that these
goals may be supported through an
adaptation of the Chronic Care
Management (CCM) services program
that will be implemented for physicians
billing under the PFS in 2015. We
encourage FQHCs to review the CCM
information in the CY 2014 PFS final
rule with comment period titled,
‘‘Medicare Program; Revisions to
Payment Policies under the Physician
Fee Schedule, Clinical Laboratory Fee
Schedule & Other Revisions to Part B for
CY 2014’’ (December 10, 2013 (78 FR
74230)) and submit comments to us on
how the CCM services payment could
be adapted for FQHCs in CY 2015 to
promote integrated and coordinated care
in FQHCs. We also invite RHCs to
submit comments on how CCM services
could be adapted for RHCs in CY 2015
to promote integrated and coordinated
care.
In this final rule with comment
period, we are modifying our proposal
not to allow an exception to the per
diem PPS payment for subsequent
injury or illness and for mental health
services furnished on the same day as a
medical visit, and we invite public
comments on this modification. We are
adopting as final our proposal not to
allow an exception to the per diem PPS
for DSMT/MNT or IPPE.
2. Preventive Laboratory Services and
Technical Components of Other
Preventive Services
The core services of the FQHC benefit
are generally billed under the
professional component. The benefit
categories for laboratory services and
diagnostic tests generally are not within
the scope of the FQHC benefit, as
defined under section 1861(aa) of the
Act. For services that can be split into
professional and technical components,
we have instructed FQHCs to bill the
professional component as part of the
AIR, and separately bill the Part B MAC
under different identification for the
technical portion of the service on a Part
B practitioner claim (for example, Form
CMS–1500). If the FQHC operates a
laboratory, is enrolled under Medicare
Part B as a supplier, and meets all
applicable Medicare requirements
related to billing for laboratory services,
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it may be able to bill as a supplier
furnishing laboratory services under
Medicare Part B. When FQHCs
separately bill these services, they are
instructed to adjust their cost reports
and carve out the cost of associated
space, equipment, supplies, facility
overhead, and personnel for these
services.
As part of the implementation of the
FQHC benefit, we used our regulatory
authority to enumerate preventive
primary services, as defined in
§ 405.2448, which may be paid for when
furnished by FQHCs (57 FR 24980, June
12, 1992, as amended by 61 FR 14657,
April 3, 1996). These preventive
primary services include a number of
laboratory tests, such as cholesterol
screening, stool testing for occult blood,
dipstick urinalysis, tuberculosis testing
for high risk patients, and thyroid
function tests. The preventive services
added to the FQHC benefit pursuant to
the Affordable Care Act, as defined by
section 1861(ddd)(3) of the Act and
codified in § 405.2449, include
laboratory tests and diagnostic services,
such as screening mammography,
diabetes screening tests, and
cardiovascular screening blood tests.
Professional services or professional
components of primary preventive
services (as defined in § 405.2448) and
preventive services (as defined in
§ 405.2449) are billed as part of the AIR.
The preventive laboratory tests and
technical components of other
preventive tests are not paid under the
AIR and FQHCs are instructed to bill
separately for these services. We did not
propose a change in billing procedures,
and we did not propose to include
payment for these services under the
FQHC PPS. We noted this payment
structure simplifies billing procedures
as laboratory tests and technical
components of diagnostic services are
always billed separately to Part B and
are not included as part of the FQHC’s
encounter rate. (Note that both the
professional and technical components
of FQHC primary preventive services
and preventive services remain covered
under Part B).
An analysis of FQHC claims indicates
that FQHCs are listing some preventive
laboratory tests and diagnostic services
on their all-inclusive rate claims. In
2011 through 2012, less than 5 percent
of Medicare FQHC claims listed HCPCS
codes related to laboratory tests or
diagnostic services. For purposes of
modeling adjustments to the FQHC PPS
rate, we considered excluding these line
items from the encounter charge and
proportionately reducing the costreporting entity’s related cost report
data. However, it was not always clear
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whether the line item charges for these
laboratory tests or diagnostic services
were included in the total charge for the
claim or were listed for informational
purposes only. As such, we chose not to
adjust the claims or cost report data
based on the presence of the related
HCPCS codes on the claims. As part of
the implementation of the FQHC PPS,
we plan to clarify the appropriate billing
procedures through program
instruction.
Comment: Most commenters were
supportive of our intent to clarify
appropriate billing procedures through
program instruction, and some
commenters suggested that we also use
rulemaking to resolve issues concerning
Medicare billing. Many of these
commenters requested greater clarity on
billing for the technical components of
FQHC services separately under Part B.
Response: As we stated in the
proposed rule, we plan to clarify the
appropriate billing procedures for
technical components of FQHC services
and other billing issues through
program instruction, and we do not
believe that clarifications to billing
procedures require rulemaking.
Comment: A commenter disagreed
with our conclusion that laboratory
services and diagnostic tests are by
definition excluded from the FQHC
benefit. The commenter noted that
preventive primary health services and
preventive services, as defined in
section 1861(aa)(3) of the Act and
codified in § 405.2448 and § 405.2449 of
the regulations, include a variety of
screening tests, and neither the statute
nor the regulations exclude the
technical components of these tests
from the FQHC benefit.
Response: We respectfully disagree
with this commenter and maintain that
the benefit categories for laboratory
services and diagnostic tests generally
are not within the scope of the FQHC
benefit, as defined under section
1861(aa)(3) of the Act. We also maintain
that both the professional and technical
components of FQHC primary
preventive services and preventive
services, as defined in section
1861(aa)(3) of the Act and codified in
§ 405.2448 and § 405.2449 of the
regulations, are covered under the
FQHC benefit. Laboratory tests and
diagnostic services that do not meet the
statutory and regulatory definitions of
FQHC primary and preventive services,
and are not otherwise specified in the
statute or regulations as within the
scope of the FQHC benefit, are not
covered under the FQHC benefit. We
agree with the commenter that neither
the statute nor the regulations
specifically exclude the technical
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components of these tests. We also note
that the FQHC regulations do not
distinguish between the technical and
professional components of primary or
preventive services. As a matter of our
payment policy, we believe that
laboratory tests and diagnostic services
that do not meet the statutory and
regulatory definitions of FQHC primary
preventive and preventive services, and
are not otherwise specified in the statute
or regulations as within the scope of the
FQHC benefit, are not covered under the
FQHC benefit. As a matter of policy, we
believe the payment structure simplifies
billing procedures as laboratory tests
and technical components of diagnostic
services are always billed separately to
Part B and are never included as part of
the FQHC’s encounter rate. We note that
this payment structure does not change
the scope of the FQHC benefit.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that FQHCs be allowed to
bill all Medicare Part B services on an
institutional claim, including technical
components such as x-rays, laboratory
tests, and durable medical equipment
which will not be paid as part of the
FQHC PPS and would be billed
separately to Medicare Part B.
Response: To distinguish services that
are not paid as part of the encounter
rate, we believe that the current billing
requirements for billing services
separately to Medicare Part B on a Part
B practitioner claim are more
appropriate for most services. We note
that the telehealth originating site
facility fee will continue to be billed
separately on an institutional claim.
After consideration of the public
comments received, we plan to clarify
the appropriate billing procedures
through program instruction, as
proposed.
3. Vaccine Costs
Section 1834(o)(2)(B)(i) of the Act
requires that the initial PPS rates must
be set so as to equal in the aggregate 100
percent of the estimated amount of
reasonable costs that would have
occurred for the year if the PPS had not
been implemented. This 100 percent
must be calculated prior to application
of copayments, per visit limits, or
productivity adjustments. We believe
that this language directed us to develop
a PPS to pay for items currently paid
under the AIR.
The administration and payment of
influenza and pneumococcal vaccines is
not included in the AIR. They are paid
at 100 percent of reasonable costs
through the cost report. The cost and
administration of HBV is covered under
the FQHC’s AIR when furnished as part
of an otherwise qualifying encounter.
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We did not propose any changes to this
payment structure, rather, we stated that
we would continue to pay for the costs
of the influenza and pneumococcal
vaccines and their administration
through the cost report, and other
Medicare-covered vaccines as part of the
encounter rate. The costs of hepatitis B
vaccine and its administration were
included in the calculation of
reasonable costs used to develop the
FQHC PPS rates, and we would
continue paying for these services under
the FQHC PPS when furnished as part
of an otherwise qualifying encounter.
Comment: A few commenters
requested clarification regarding
coverage and payment for vaccines
recommended by the Advisory
Committee on Immunization Practices
(ACIP) of the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) that are typically
covered and paid under Medicare Part
D. They believe that these vaccines,
when furnished by FQHCs, should be
covered and paid separately by Part D
plans and should not be covered and
paid for as part of a FQHC encounter.
Response: Under section 1862(a)(7) of
the Act, as codified at 42 CFR 411.15(e)
of our regulations, immunizations other
than pneumococcal, influenza, and HBV
are generally excluded from Medicare
Part B coverage. Section 4161(a)(3)(C) of
OBRA ’90 (Pub. L. 101–508) amended
section 1862(a) of the Act to specify that
the FQHC benefit can include
preventive primary health services, as
described in section 1861(aa)(3)(B) of
the Act, that would otherwise be
excluded from Part B under section
1862(a)(7) of the Act. Preventive
primary services, as defined in
§ 405.2448, describes which services
may be paid for when furnished by
FQHCs. (See the June 12, 1992 (57 FR
4980) and April 3, 1996 (61 FR 4657)
final rules). These preventive primary
services include immunizations (see
§ 405.2448(b)(8)). This means that when
FQHCs furnish ACIP-recommended
vaccines, they are covered and paid for
under Part B as part of the FQHC
benefit, and are excluded from Part D.
Except for pneumococcal and
influenza vaccines and their
administration, which are paid at 100
percent of reasonable cost, payments to
FQHCs for covered FQHC services
furnished to Medicare beneficiaries are
made on the basis of an AIR per covered
visit. The charges for other Medicarecovered vaccines and their
administration when furnished by a
FQHC can be included as line items for
an otherwise qualifying encounter, and
payment for these other Medicarecovered vaccines would be included in
the AIR. However, an encounter cannot
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be billed if vaccine administration is the
only service the FQHC provides. For
more information on how to bill under
the AIR for services furnished incident
to a FQHC encounter, see CMS Pub.
100–04, Medicare Claims Processing
Manual, chapter 9.
Section 10501(i)(3)(A) of the
Affordable Care Act did not amend the
coverage requirements applicable to the
FQHC benefit. We did not propose to
remove immunizations from the
preventive primary services set out at
§ 405.2448, and immunizations
furnished by FQHCs after
implementation of the PPS will
continue to be covered under Part B as
part of the FQHC benefit. We proposed
to continue to pay for the costs of the
influenza and pneumococcal vaccines
and their administration through the
cost report, and other Medicare-covered
vaccines as part of the encounter rate.
As part of the implementation of the
FQHC PPS, we plan to update the
appropriate billing procedures through
program instruction.
We note that under 1860D–2(e)(2)(B)
of the Act, a drug prescribed to a Part
D eligible individual that would
otherwise be a covered Part D drug is
excluded from Part D coverage if
payment for such drug, as so prescribed
and dispensed or administered, is
available under Part A or B for that
individual. Consequently, vaccines
furnished by FQHCs and covered under
Part B as part of the FQHC benefit in
accordance with § 405.2448(b)(8) are not
covered or payable under Part D. For
more information on the exclusion from
Part D of drugs covered under Part B,
see CMS Pub. 100–18, Medicare
Prescription Drug Benefit Manual,
Chapter 6. Section 20.2.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS apply a
consistent approach to payment for
vaccines covered under Part B, which
commenters asserted would ensure
broad access for Medicare beneficiaries.
These commenters recommended that
CMS pay for the cost and administration
of the HBV at 100 percent of reasonable
cost through the cost report. A
commenter recommended that influenza
and pneumococcal vaccines should be
billed at time of service, either with or
without an encounter, and be paid using
the national MAC fees, with an annual
reconciliation on the cost report
between the payments and the
reasonable costs of these vaccines. This
commenter wished to reduce the time
between vaccine administration and
payment and to document on individual
patient claims that these vaccines were
furnished. However, most commenters
supported our proposal to continue to
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reimburse influenza and pneumococcal
vaccines through the cost report.
Response: As discussed in the
preamble to the April 3, 1996 FQHC
final rule (61 FR 14651), section
1833(a)(3) of the Act specifies that
services described in section
1861(s)(10)(A) of the Act are exempt
from payment at 80 percent of
reasonable costs and payment to RHCs
and FQHCs for influenza and
pneumococcal vaccines and their
administration is at 100 percent of
reasonable cost. Consistent with section
1833(a)(3) of the Act, we used our
regulatory authority to codify at
§ 405.2466(b)(1)(iv) that for RHCs and
FQHCs, payment for pneumococcal and
influenza vaccine and their
administration is 100 percent of
Medicare reasonable cost paid as part of
the annual reconciliation through the
cost report (61 FR 14657, April 3, 1996).
Payment for all other Medicare-covered
vaccines is included in the AIR, and we
proposed to continue to pay for all other
Medicare-covered vaccines as part of the
encounter rate under the FQHC PPS. We
note that HBV is described in section
1861(s)(10)(B) of the Act, and we do not
believe that the statute directs us to
change the payment structure to pay for
HBV at 100 percent of reasonable cost
through the cost report.
We considered the commenter’s
request to pay for influenza and
pneumococcal vaccines billed at time of
service with an annual reconciliation
between these payments and reasonable
costs and we do not believe this would
be necessary. FQHCs are accustomed to
reporting and receiving payment for the
reasonable costs for these vaccines and
their administration through the annual
cost report, and we believe that an
annual reconciliation between vaccine
fee amounts and reasonable costs would
create an additional administrative
burden for FQHCs and MACs. We also
note that as of January 1, 2011, FQHCs
have been required to report
pneumococcal and influenza vaccines
and their administration on a patient
claim with the appropriate HCPCS and
revenue codes when furnished during a
billable visit.
After consideration of the public
comments received, we are finalizing
these provisions as proposed. We will
continue to pay for the administration
and payment of influenza and
pneumococcal vaccines at 100 percent
of reasonable costs through the cost
report, and we will continue to pay for
other Medicare-covered vaccines under
the FQHC PPS as part of the encounter
rate when furnished as part of an
otherwise qualifying encounter.
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C. Risk Adjustments
Section 1834(o)(1)(A) of the Act
provides that the FQHC PPS may
include adjustments, including
geographic adjustments, that are
determined appropriate by the
Secretary. We proposed the following
adjustments.
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1. Alternative Calculations for Average
Cost per Visit
For the proposed rule, we used the
claims data to calculate an average cost
per visit by dividing the total estimated
costs ($788,547,531) by the total number
of daily visits (5,223,512).
Proposed average cost per daily visit =
$788,547,531/5,223,512 = $150.96
For this final rule with comment
period, we modified the definition of a
daily visit, as discussed in section
II.A.4. of this final rule with comment
period and consistent with the policy
discussed in section II.B.1. of this final
rule with comment period, which
allows an exception to the per diem PPS
payment for subsequent injury or illness
and mental health services furnished on
the same day as a medical visit.
Separately payable encounters for the
same beneficiary at the same FQHC
were combined into a single daily visit,
while allowing for a separate medical
visit, mental health visit, and
subsequent illness/injury visit, which
allows for up to three encounters for
beneficiary per day.
For this final rule with comment
period, we used the updated claims data
to calculate an average cost per visit by
dividing the total estimated costs
($846,058,100) by the total number of
daily visits (5,462,670).
Final average cost per daily visit =
$846,058,100/5,462,670 = $154.88
In the proposed rule, we also
examined how the average cost per visit
would differ under current policy,
which allows separate payment for
subsequent illness or injury, mental
health services, DSMT/MNT or IPPE
when they occur on the same day as an
otherwise billable visit. While the total
estimated cost was the same
($788,547,531), the total number of
visits in the denominator (5,245,961)
did not combine multiple visits on the
same day of service into 1 daily visit.
Proposed average cost per visit =
$788,547,531/5,245,961 = $150.32
For this final rule with comment
period, we used the updated final data
set to examine how the average cost per
visit would differ under current policy.
While the total estimated cost was the
same ($846,058,100), the total number
of visits in the denominator (5,468,852)
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did not combine multiple visits on the
same day of service.
Final average cost per visit =
$846,058,100/5,468,852 = $154.70
In the proposed rule, we also derived
an average cost per visit from the cost
reports by dividing the total estimated
Medicare costs (excluding vaccines)
reported ($832,387,663) by the total
number of Medicare visits reported
(5,374,217). Unlike the previous
calculations based on claims data, the
variables derived from the cost reports
summarize total costs and visits by cost
reporting entity and could not be
trimmed of individual visits with outlier
values. Also, we noted that the total
number of Medicare visits reported on
the cost reports reflects current policy
which allows for multiple visits on the
same day of service, and we could not
calculate an average cost per daily visit
using only cost report data.
Proposed average cost per visit from
cost report data = $832,387,663/
5,374,217 = $154.89
For this final rule with comment
period, we used the current data set to
update the average cost per visit derived
from the cost reports by dividing the
total estimated Medicare costs
(excluding vaccines) reported
($897,330,363) by the total number of
Medicare visits reported (5,634,602).
Final average cost per visit from cost
report data = $897,330,363/
5,634,602 = $159.25
Consistent with our proposal to
remove the exception to the single
encounter payment per day, we
proposed to use the average cost per
daily visit of $150.96, as calculated
based on adjusted claims data, as the
PPS rate prior to any risk adjustment.
We noted that the alternative
calculations yield an average cost per
visit that differs from $150.96 by less
than 3 percent. We also noted that these
calculations were derived based on the
cost report and claims data available
during our development of the proposed
rule and were subject to change in the
final rule based on more current data.
For this final rule with comment
period, consistent with our policy to
allow an exception to the per diem PPS
payment for subsequent injury and
mental health services furnished on the
same day as a medical visit, we will use
the average cost per daily visit of
$154.88, as calculated above based on
adjusted claims data, as the final PPS
rate prior to any risk adjustment. We
note that the alternative calculations
yield an average cost per visit that
differs from $154.88 by less than 3
percent.
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2. FQHC Geographic Adjustment Factor
We proposed to adjust the FQHC PPS
rate for geographic differences and to
make this adjustment to the cost of
inputs by applying an adaptation of the
GPCIs used to adjust payment under the
PFS. Established in section 1848(e) of
the Act, GPCIs adjust payments for
geographic variation in the costs of
furnishing services and consist of three
component GPCIs: The physician work
GPCI, the practice expense GPCI, and
the malpractice insurance GPCI.
Since FQHCs furnish services that are
analogous to those furnished by
physicians in outpatient clinic settings,
we believe it would be consistent to
apply geographic adjustments similar to
those applied to services furnished
under the PFS. We calculated a FQHC
geographic adjustment factor (FQHC
GAF) for each encounter based on the
delivery site’s locality using the
proposed CY 2014 work and practice
expense GPCIs and the proposed cost
share weights for the CY 2014 GPCI
update, as published in the CY 2014
PFS proposed rule on July 19, 2013 (78
FR 43282).
For modeling geographic adjustments
for the FQHC PPS proposed rule, we did
not use the proposed CY 2015 work and
practice expense GPCIs that also were
published in the CY 2014 PFS proposed
rule. We noted that the FQHC GAFs are
subject to change in the final FQHC PPS
rule based on more current data,
including the finalized PFS GPCI and
cost share weight values.
We excluded the PFS malpractice
GPCI from the calculation of the FQHC
GAF, as FQHCs that receive section 330
grant funds are eligible to apply for
medical malpractice coverage under
FSHCAA of 1992 and FSHCAA of 1995.
Without the cost share weight for the
malpractice GPCI, the sum of the
proposed PFS work and PE cost share
weights (0.50866 and 0.44839,
respectively) is less than one. In
calculating the FQHC GAFs, prior to
applying the proposed work and PE cost
share weights to the GPCIs, we scaled
these proposed cost share weights so
they would total 100 percent while still
retaining weights relative to each other
(0.53149 and 0.46851, respectively).
We calculated each locality’s FQHC
GAF as follows:
Geographic adjustment factor =
(0.53149 × Work GPCI) + (0.46851 ×
PE GPCI)
We included the FQHC GAF
adjustment when modeling all other
potential adjustments. We proposed to
apply the FQHC GAF based on where
the services are furnished, and we noted
the FQHC GAF may vary among FQHCs
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that are part of the same organization.
The list of proposed FQHC GAFs by
locality was included in the Addendum
of the proposed rule and as a
downloadable file at https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/FQHCPPS/
index.html.
Comment: Commenters were
supportive of a FQHC GAF adjustment,
but some suggested changes to the
proposed FQHC GAFs. Some
commenters suggested that the rural
FQHC GAFs may not reflect the actual
cost of furnishing FQHC services in
rural areas, and they requested that we
increase the rural FQHC GAFs. Some of
these commenters believe that the
factors influencing costs for urban
versus rural providers are not identical
for FQHCs and physician practices.
Among the concerns raised by these
commenters are that a rural FQHC’s
operating costs (such as utilities and
transportation costs) may be higher than
similar costs of FQHCs in urban areas;
predominantly rural FQHCs often have
fewer sites than urban FQHCs and
benefit less from economies of scale;
and FQHCs located in rural areas may
incur additional costs if they offer
payment incentives in order to recruit
and retain qualified physicians and nonphysician practitioners.
Response: Since FQHCs furnish
services that are analogous to those
furnished by physicians in outpatient
clinic settings, we proposed to adapt the
PFS GPCIs to calculate the FQHC GAFs,
as we believe it would be consistent to
apply geographic adjustments similar to
those applied to services furnished
under the PFS. As discussed in the CY
2014 PFS final rule with comment
period, we used updated Bureau of
Labor Statistics (BLS) Occupational
Employment Statistics data to calculate
the work GPCI and purchased services
index of the PE GPCI and updated U.S.
Census Bureau American Community
Survey (ACS) data to calculate the rent
component (which includes utilities) of
the PE GPCI. Given their reliability,
public availability, level of detail and
national scope with sufficient data
coverage in both urban and rural areas,
we believe that the ACS and BLS data
are the most appropriate sources for
measuring geographic cost differences
in operating a medical practice. (See our
discussion in the CY 2014 PFS final rule
with comment period (78 FR 74380
through 74381)). We believe that the
data used to develop the PFS GPCIs are
reflective of the costs of furnishing
FQHC services, including the
geographic variation in the costs of
furnishing FQHC services in rural areas.
Moreover, we do not have a
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comprehensive national source that
would provide us with a basis for
adjusting the FQHC GAFs for rural areas
independently of the PFS GPCIs while
meeting data selection criteria similar to
the criteria used for selecting the PFS
GPCI sources. We also note that as
discussed later in this section, many
rural areas would see a substantial
decrease in payment amounts if they
were no longer grouped with urban
areas.
Comment: A commenter was
concerned that FQHCs with multiple
delivery sites with different costs may
be penalized if accommodation for these
different sites is not taken into account.
Response: We proposed to apply the
FQHC GAF based on where the services
are furnished. Therefore, for FQHCs
with multiple delivery sites in different
areas, the FQHC GAF may vary
depending on the delivery site.
Comment: A commenter was
concerned that application of the FQHC
GAF reduces its PPS rate below the
proposed base rate, which is below its
cost of furnishing FQHC services.
Response: Under the FQHC PPS,
Medicare payment for FQHC services is
based on 100 percent of aggregate
reasonable costs, not on an individual
FQHC’s costs. While the FQHC GAF
will vary by locality, we note that the
fully implemented, geographically
adjusted PPS rate for all FQHCs will be
approximately 32 percent higher, based
on payment at the FQHC PPS rate, when
compared to current payments to
FQHCs.
Comment: A commenter noted that
FQHC lookalikes do not have access to
malpractice coverage under the Federal
Tort Claims Act (FTCA) and therefore
incur malpractice expense. The
commenter requested that CMS
incorporate a malpractice adjustment in
the FQHC GAFs for FQHC lookalikes, or
otherwise recognize malpractice
expense under the FQHC PPS.
Response: FQHCs that receive section
330 grant funds are the predominant
type of FQHC, with more than 1,100
centers operating approximately 8,900
delivery sites. These FQHCs are eligible
to apply for medical malpractice
coverage under the FTCA. In
comparison, there were 93 look-alikes in
2012, according to HRSA’s UDS. The
PPS rate is based on aggregate costs, and
assumes that not all FQHCs have the
same costs. It would not be feasible to
develop separate PPS rates for FQHCs
based on differences in malpractice or
any other costs. We excluded the PFS
malpractice GPCI from the calculation
of the FQHC GAF as the geographic
variation in malpractice costs is not
relevant for the majority of FQHCs that
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are eligible to apply for medical
malpractice coverage under the FTCA.
We note that FQHCs are required to
report professional liability insurance
on Worksheet A of the FQHC cost report
(Form CMS–222), and malpractice
expense was recognized as a component
of the reasonable costs used to calculate
the FQHC PPS rates.
Comment: A commenter disagreed
with our adaptation of the PFS GPCIs
and recommended that we adjust the
FQHC PPS rate for geographic
differences based on Metropolitan
Statistical Areas (MSAs). The
commenter believes that use of the
current PFS locality structure would
result in underpayment for FQHC
services furnished in several California
counties.
Response: As previously noted,
because FQHCs furnish services that are
analogous to those furnished by
physicians in outpatient clinic settings,
we believe it would be consistent to
apply geographic adjustments similar to
those applied to services furnished
under the PFS. Moreover, by adapting
the PFS GPCIs for the FQHC PPS, the
accuracy of FQHC payments also
benefits from the ongoing assessment,
evaluation, and updates to the PFS
GPCIs, including the periodic review
and adjustment of GPCIs as mandated
by section 1848(e)(1)(C) of the Act.
We note that adjusting the FQHC PPS
rate for geographic differences based on
MSAs could result in significant
reductions in payment for rural FQHCs
when compared to geographically
adjusted payments using the current
PFS locality configuration. As discussed
in the CY 2014 PFS final rule with
comment period, published in the
Federal Register on December 10, 2013
(78 FR 74230), a MSA-based locality
structure would expand the number of
PFS payment localities, and many rural
areas would see substantial decreases in
their GPCI values given that they would
no longer be grouped together with
higher cost counties (78 FR 74380
through 74391). If the PFS locality
structure or GPCI values changed, we
would make corresponding changes to
the FQHC localities and FQHC GAFs.
As other methodologies emerge for
geographic payment adjustment under
the PFS, they may also eventually apply
to the new FQHC PPS.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that after the first year of
implementation, we use a market basket
approach to adjust payments based on
geographic locations. The commenter
suggested that we revise the FQHC cost
report to capture additional wage data
that, in conjunction with HRSA’s UDS
data, could be used to develop a wage
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index to adjust the PPS rate based on
reported salary differentials.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s interest in developing a
wage index for the FQHC PPS. We
believe that a FQHC GAF based on the
PFS GPCIs is appropriate for FQHC
services, as an FQHC’s employment mix
and scope and delivery of services are
generally similar to a physician’s
practice. We note that a FQHC GAF
based solely on a wage index, which is
a relative measure of geographic
differences in wage levels, would not
reflect the relative cost difference in the
full mix of goods and services
comprising the PFS practice expense
GPCIs (for example, purchased services,
office rent, equipment, supplies, and
other miscellaneous expenses). We do
not believe that the additional reporting
burden suggested by the commenter, or
the additional administrative burden of
collecting and validating the type of
data needed for a reliable FQHC wage
index, would justify the potential
incremental benefit of using a FQHCspecific wage index in calculating the
FQHC GAFs.
Comment: A commenter asked why
we did not use the CY 2015 GPCI values
to calculate the FQHC GAFs.
Response: For modeling geographic
adjustments for the FQHC PPS proposed
rule, we used the CY 2014 work and
practice expense GPCIs published in the
CY 2014 PFS proposed rule. We noted
that the FQHC GAFs could be subject to
change in the final FQHC PPS rule
based on more current data, including
the finalized PFS GPCI and cost share
weight values.
As discussed in the CY 2014 PFS final
rule with comment period (78 FR 74380
through 74391), the CY 2015 PFS GPCI
values reflect our most current updates
of the underlying data sources and
represent our best estimates of the
geographic variation in the costs of
furnishing physician services. In
contrast, the CY 2014 GPCI values
partially reflect the updates to the
underlying data and MEI cost weights.
Therefore, we will use the CY 2015
GPCI values, as published in the CY
2014 final rule with comment period, to
model the geographic adjustments for
the FQHC PPS rates as they represent
the most current data. We note that the
PFS cost share weights were finalized as
proposed, and we will use the relative
weights of the PFS work and PE GPCIs,
as proposed and finalized, to calculate
each locality’s FQHC GAF.
For payments under the FQHC PPS,
we believe it most appropriate to apply
geographic adjustments consistent with
those applied to services furnished
under the PFS during the same period.
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Therefore, the FQHC GAFs and cost
share weights will be updated in
conjunction with updates to the PFS
GPCIs, which would maintain
consistency between the geographic
adjustments applied to the PFS and the
FQHC PPS in the same period. We note
that the FQHC GAFs for October 1
through December 31, 2014, will be
adapted from the CY 2014 PFS GPCIs
applicable during that same period.
Subsequent updates to the FQHC GAFs
will be made in conjunction with
updates to the PFS GPCIs for the same
period.
We have considered the public
comments we received, and are
finalizing the FQHC GAF provisions as
proposed, with some modifications. As
proposed, we are revising § 405.2462 to
require that payments under the FQHC
PPS will be adjusted for geographic
differences by applying an adaptation of
the work and practice expense GPCIs
used to adjust payment under the PFS.
We are modifying § 405.2462 to specify
that the FQHC GAFs used for payment
will be adapted from the GPCIs used to
adjust payment under the PFS for that
same period.
For modeling geographic adjustments
for the FQHC PPS proposed rule, we did
not use the proposed CY 2014 work and
practice expense GPCIs that were
published in the CY 2014 PFS proposed
rule. Instead, for modeling the
geographic adjustments for this FQHC
PPS final rule, we used the final CY
2015 work and practice expense GPCIs
and cost shares that were published in
the CY 2014 PFS final rule with
comment period as the CY 2015 GPCI
values represent the most recent fully
implemented GPCI update and therefore
more current data. More information on
how we modeled the FQHC PPS
geographic adjustment is discussed in
section II.D. of this final rule with
comment period.
3. New Patient or Initial Medicare Visit
Based on an analysis of claims data,
we found that the estimated cost per
encounter was approximately 33
percent higher when a FQHC furnished
care to a patient that was new to the
FQHC or to a beneficiary receiving a
comprehensive initial Medicare visit
(that is, an IPPE or an initial AWV). We
proposed to adjust the encounter rate to
reflect the 33 percent increase in costs
when FQHCs furnish care to new
patients or when they furnish a
comprehensive initial Medicare visit,
which could account for the greater
intensity and resource use associated
with these types of services. Our
proposed risk adjustment factor was
1.3333.
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Comment: Commenters supported the
proposed adjustments, but some
recommended that we also apply the
adjustment factor to subsequent AWVs.
Commenters recommended that we
allow an adjustment for subsequent
AWVs in addition to initial AWVs in
order to support the goal of improving
health outcomes and increasing access
to subsequent AWVs. Commenters also
believe that the subsequent AWV is
similar to the increased intensity of the
IPPE and initial AWV, in terms of both
the duration of the visits and the
number of ancillary services furnished.
Response: Subsequent AWV is a very
small percent of total FQHC visits
(approximately 0.25 percent), but the
claims data suggest that subsequent
AWV is significantly more costly than
most other FQHC visits. The claims data
also suggest that subsequent AWV is
somewhat less costly than an IPPE or
initial AWV, which is consistent with
the comparatively reduced level of
required physician work associated with
the subsequent AWV. As previously
noted, our goal for the FQHC PPS is to
implement a system in accordance with
the statute whereby FQHCs are fairly
paid for the services they furnish to
Medicare patients in the least
burdensome manner possible. Rather
than establish a separate adjustment for
subsequent AWV, we will add the
subsequent AWV to the proposed
adjustment for new patient or initial
Medicare visit. Based on current FQHC
data, the composite group of new
patient visits, IPPEs, initial AWVs, and
subsequent AWVs is associated with
34.16 percent higher estimated costs
than other visits.
In this final rule with comment
period, we are modifying our proposal,
and we will adjust the encounter rate to
reflect the 34.16 increase in costs when
FQHCs furnish care to new patients or
when they furnish an IPPE, initial AWV,
or subsequent AWV, which could
account for the greater intensity and
resource use associated with these types
of services. Our composite risk
adjustment factor for these types of
visits is 1.3416.
4. Other Adjustment Factors Considered
We considered multiple other
adjustments such as demographics (age
and sex), clinical conditions, duration of
the encounter, etc. However, we found
many of these other adjustments to have
limited impact on costs or to be too
complex and largely unnecessary for the
FQHC PPS.
We calculated whether there were
differences in resource use for mental
health visits and preventive care visits
when compared to medical care visits
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using mathematical modeling
techniques. We found that mental
health encounters had approximately 1
percent lower estimated costs per visit
relative to medical care visits, and we
did not consider this a sufficient basis
for proposing a payment adjustment. We
found that preventive care encounters
had approximately 18 percent higher
estimated costs per visit. This difference
in resource use declined to an 8 percent
higher estimated cost per visit after
adjusting for the FQHC GAF and the
proposed 1.3333 risk adjustment factor
for a patient that is new to the FQHC or
for a beneficiary receiving a
comprehensive initial Medicare visit
(that is, an IPPE or an initial AWV),
indicating that a significant amount of
preventive care visits were IPPEs or
initial AWVs. We did not propose a
payment reduction for preventive care
encounters and we noted that a
significant amount of the more costly
preventive care encounters would
otherwise be recognized and paid for
with the proposed 1.3333 risk
adjustment factor for a beneficiary
receiving a comprehensive initial
Medicare visit.
We considered patient age and sex as
potential adjustment factors as these
demographic characteristics have the
advantage of being objectively defined.
However, both of these characteristics
had a limited association with estimated
costs, which did not support the use of
these demographic characteristics as
potential adjustment factors.
We tested for an association between
commonly reported clinical conditions
and the estimated cost per visit. A
number of clinical conditions were
found to be associated with
approximately 5 to 10 percent higher
costs per visit, but we are concerned
that claims might not include all
potentially relevant secondary
diagnoses, and that we would need to
consider how to minimize the
complexity of such an adjustment with
a limited number of clinically
meaningful groupings.
We considered the duration of
encounters (in minutes) as a potential
adjustment factor. Many of the E/M
codes commonly seen on FQHC claims
are associated with average or typical
times, and there was a strong
association between these associated
times and the estimated cost per
encounter. However, these minutes are
guidelines that reflect the face-to-face
time between the FQHC practitioner and
the beneficiary for that E/M service, and
they would not indicate the total
duration of the FQHC encounter.
Moreover, many of the codes used to
describe the face-to-face visit that
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qualifies an encounter, such as a
subsequent AWV, are not associated
with average or typical times.
We considered adjusting payment
based on the types of services furnished
during a FQHC encounter. Our analysis
of FQHC claims data indicates that
information regarding ancillary services
provided by FQHCs appears to be
limited. As a result, there is a risk that
adjustments for the types of services
being provided would be based on
incomplete information and result in
payments under the PPS that do not
accurately reflect the cost of providing
those services.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS address the
special circumstances facing Indian
health providers by considering the
inclusion of a low-volume upward
adjustment, a population-density
adjustment, and a service-mix
adjustment to the PPS rate. These
commenters stated that a volume
adjustment is necessary because lowvolume tribal FQHCs find it more
difficult to spread their costs across
their patient base, and are less likely to
obtain volume discounts and benefit
from economies of scale. They also
stated that many tribal FQHCs in rural
areas furnish less complex or lower
intensity services than urban providers,
resulting in different payment-to-cost
ratios that result in reimbursement
inequities.
Response: We appreciate the
challenges that tribal FQHCs face in
furnishing services, especially in rural
and isolated areas, and the significant
health disparities that remain for AI/AN
populations. We also understand that
providers in isolated and rural areas,
including tribal FQHCs, may have fewer
patients than providers in more densely
populated areas, and may not be able to
offer as full of a range or level of
complexity in their services as other
providers, or benefit from the economies
of scale that providers with higher
volume or in more densely populated
areas may have. In developing the PPS
rate, we considered various possible
adjustments, including a low-volume
adjustment. When analyzing Medicare
claims data, lower overall FQHC volume
was found to be associated with higher
estimated costs (see ‘‘Results of
Research on the Design of a Medicare
Prospective Payment System for
Federally Qualified Health Centers’’ by
Arbor Research Collaborative for
Health). However, we did not propose to
include a low-volume adjustment,
because we believe that the PPS rate,
along with adjustments for new and
initial visits and AWV, will provide
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25453
appropriate reimbursement for the costs
of services provided.
Comment: Commenters were
generally supportive of a single base rate
with a geographic adjustment and an
adjustment for new patients and initial
Medicare visits. Some commenters
recommended additional adjustments,
such as: high acuity of patients; visit
characteristics; multiple chronic
conditions; encounters with more than
two HCPCS codes on the claim; unique
geographical differences among FQHCs;
and dual eligible beneficiaries.
Response: As discussed in the
proposed rule, FQHC claims data
regarding secondary diagnoses and
ancillary services appears to be limited.
As a result, there is a risk that the
recommended adjustments, such as
increased payments for high acuity,
multiple chronic conditions, or
encounters with multiple HCPCS, could
be based on incomplete information.
Our analyses of clinical conditions,
encounter duration, and types of
service, which considered the same or
similar types of adjustments, found that
these adjustments had limited impact
on costs or were too complex for the
FQHC PPS. Our analysis of more current
data continues to support these
conclusions. As discussed in section
II.C.2. of this final rule with comment
period, we believe it is appropriate to
adjust for geographic differences among
FQHCs using the GAF.
We tested for an association between
dual eligibility and the estimated cost
per visit. On average, the estimated cost
of a FQHC visit was 4 percent higher
among dual eligible beneficiaries. After
applying the GAF and the new patient/
initial visit adjustment to the model, the
estimated cost of a FQHC visit was, on
average, 0.4 percent higher among dual
eligible beneficiaries. We do not believe
that this slight variation in estimated
cost justifies the added complexity of an
additional payment adjustment for dual
eligible beneficiaries.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that CMS include an
upward adjustment for FQHCs that
provide significant ‘‘enabling services.’’
The commenter believes that nonclinical services provided to patients to
support care delivery, enhance health
literacy, or facilitate access to care can
reduce health disparities and improve
outcomes for FQHC patients.
Response: While FQHCs, including
look-alikes, are required by section 330
of the PHS Act to provide services that
enable individuals to use the required
primary health services that they
provide, these services are not part of
the Medicare FQHC benefit.
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Comment: Some commenters believe
that the PPS payment methodology
removes incentives to provide fewer,
more intensive visits and recommended
that CMS increase payments to highperforming FQHCs that furnish efficient,
integrated care. Some commenters
recommended that CMS encourage
expanded access to care, the
development of medical homes, and
horizontal networks of care by applying
upward adjustments to FQHCs that offer
value-added services, such as a broader
scope of services, expanded hours, or
teaching health centers.
Response: While we appreciate the
suggestions, neither the cost report nor
the claims data contains sufficient
information to assess the validity of
commenters’ claims with respect to
these types of adjustments. Moreover,
the types of adjustments suggested by
these commenters are beyond the scope
of the FQHC PPS methodology.
However, we are taking steps to foster
innovation in how FQHCs deliver
services to Medicare beneficiaries. For
example, the FQHC Advanced Primary
Care Practice (APCP) Demonstration,
operated by CMS in partnership with
HRSA, is designed to evaluate the effect
of the advanced primary care practice
model in improving care, promoting
health, and reducing the cost of care
provided to Medicare beneficiaries
served by FQHCs. This demonstration is
being conducted in accordance with the
Secretary’s demonstration authority
under section 1115A, which facilitates
the development and expansion of
successful payment models. For more
information on the FQHC APCP, see
https://www.fqhcmedicalhome.com/.
Comment: A commenter noted that
CMS did not include data from
provider-based FQHCs in its costs
calculations, asserted that providerbased FQHCs experience higher costs
than freestanding FQHCs, and urged
CMS to add an adjustment to ensure
payments to provider-based FQHCs
recognize their differential costs.
Response: As discussed in section
II.A.2. of this final rule with comment
period, in developing the rates for this
final rule with comment period, we
included data from provider-based
FQHCs in calculating the PPS rate.
Under the FQHC PPS, Medicare
payment for FQHC services is not based
on an individual FQHC’s costs. The cost
report and claims data do not support
an adjustment for provider-based
FQHCs. While the average cost per visit
is somewhat higher for provider-based
FQHCs than for freestanding FQHCs,
none of the provider-based FQHCs were
identified as outliers based on the
average cost per visit from the cost
reports, and only 0.4 percent of the
encounters in the claims were identified
as outliers based on estimated costs.
5. Report on PPS Design and Models
We contracted with Arbor Research
for Collaborative Health to assist us in
designing a PPS for FQHCs. Arbor
Research modeled options for
calculating payment rates and
adjustments under a PPS based on data
from Medicare FQHC cost reports and
Medicare FQHC claims. A report
detailing the options modeled in the
development of the PPS was made
available at https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-ServicePayment/FQHCPPS/.
D. Base Rate Calculation
We calculated a proposed base rate for
the FQHC PPS by adjusting the average
cost per visit to account for the
proposed adjustment factors. We
calculated a proposed average payment
multiplier using the average FQHC GAF
(0.9944) multiplied by the average risk
adjustment for non-new patient/initial
visits (1.0), as weighted by the percent
of encounters that represented non new
patient/initial visits (0.9722), and we
added this to the average FQHC GAF
(0.9944) multiplied by the average risk
adjustment for new patient/initial visits
(1.3333), as weighted by the percent of
encounters that represented new
patient/initial visits (0.0278):
Proposed average payment multiplier =
0.9721(1.00)(0.9944) +
0.0279(1.3333)(0.9944) = 1.0036
We calculated a proposed base rate
amount by multiplying the reciprocal of
the average payment multiplier by the
average cost per visit. Using the average
cost per daily visit:
Proposed base rate per daily visit =
$150.96 × (1/1.0036) = $150.42
The proposed base rate per daily visit
of $150.42 reflected costs through June
30, 2012, and did not include an
adjustment for price inflation. As the
FQHC PPS is to be implemented
beginning October 1, 2014, we proposed
to update the base rate to account for the
price inflation through September 30,
2014, as measured by the MEI as
finalized in the CY 2011 PFS final rule
(75 FR 73262 through 73270). The MEI
is an index reflecting the weightedaverage annual price change for various
inputs involved in furnishing
physicians’ services. The MEI is a fixedweight input price index, with an
adjustment for the change in economywide, private nonfarm business
multifactor productivity.
We proposed to inflate the base rate
by approximately 1.8 percent, reflecting
the growth in the MEI from July 1, 2012
through September 30, 2014. We also
proposed to use a forecasted MEI update
of 1.7 percent for the 15-month period
of October 1, 2014, through December
31, 2015, to calculate the first year’s
base payment amount under the PPS.
We also proposed if more recent data
became available (for example, a more
recent estimate of the FY 2006-based
MEI), we would use such data, if
appropriate, to determine the 15-month
FQHC PPS update factor for the final
rule.
TABLE 1—PROPOSED BASE RATE PER DAILY VISIT
Average
payment
multiplier
Average cost
per daily visit
Estimated
base rate without adjustment
for price
inflation
MEI Update
factor
MEI-Adjusted
base payment
rate
$788,547,531 ...........................................
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Total estimated costs
Daily
encounters
5,223,512
1.0036
$150.96
$150.42
1.0364
$155.90
Proposed MEI-adjusted base payment
rate = $150.96 × (1/1.0036) × 1.0364
= $155.90
Thus, we proposed a base payment
rate of $155.90 per beneficiary per visit
for the proposed FQHC PPS. We noted
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that this base rate is subject to change
in the final rule based on more current
data.
Proposed payments to FQHCs were
calculated as follows:
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Proposed base payment rate × FQHC
GAF = Proposed PPS payment
In calculating the proposed payment,
the proposed base payment rate was
$155.90, and the FQHC GAF was based
on the locality of the delivery site.
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If the patient is new to the FQHC, or
the FQHC is furnishing an initial
comprehensive Medicare visit, we
proposed that the payment would be
calculated as follows:
Proposed base payment rate × FQHC
GAF × 1.3333 = Proposed PPS
payment
In calculating the proposed payment,
1.3333 represented the risk adjustment
factor applied to the PPS payment when
FQHCs furnish care to new patients or
when they furnish a comprehensive
initial Medicare visit.
To calculate the FQHC base rate for
this final rule with comment period, we
used updated data, the finalized
adjustment factors, the finalized
definition of a daily visit (as discussed
in sections II.A.4. and II.B.1. of this final
rule with comment period), and the
finalized adjustment for a new patient,
IPPE, initial AWV, and subsequent
AWV (as discussed in section II.C.3. of
this final rule with comment period).
We calculated a final base rate for the
FQHC PPS by adjusting the average cost
per visit to account for the finalized
adjustment factors. We calculated a final
average payment multiplier using the
average final FQHC GAF (0.9961)
multiplied by the average risk
adjustment for non-new patient/IPPE/
AWV (1.0), as weighted by the percent
of encounters that represented non-new
patient/IPPE/AWV (0.9683), and we
added this to the average final FQHC
GAF (0.9961) multiplied by the average
risk adjustment for new patient/IPPE/
AWV (1.3416), as weighted by the
percent of encounters that represented
new patient/IPPE/AWV (0.0317):
Final average payment multiplier =
0.9683(1.00)(0.9961) +
0.0317(1.3416)(0.9961) = 1.0069
We calculated a final base rate
amount by multiplying the reciprocal of
the final average payment multiplier by
the final average cost per visit. Using the
average cost per daily visit:
Final base rate per daily visit = $154.88
× (1/1.0069) = $153.82
We did not receive any comments on
our use of the MEI to update the FQHC
base rate. Our final data set reflects cost
25455
reporting periods ending between June
30, 2011, and June 30, 2013. Given that
the updated cost data typically has a
midpoint that is close to the middle of
2012, we are continuing to use June 30,
2012, as the starting point for inflating
prices forward. We are finalizing our
proposal to update the FQHC base rate
per daily visit for inflation using the
growth as measured by the MEI from
July 2012 through December 2015. The
estimated base rate of $153.82 per diem
is inflated through FY 2014 using the
historical MEI market basket increase of
1.8 percent. For the 15-month period
October 1, 2014 through December 31,
2015, we apply an update of 1.3 percent
as measured by the 4th quarter 2013
forecast of the MEI, the most recent
forecast available at the time. The
adjusted base payment that reflects the
MEI historical updates and forecasted
updates to the MEI is $158.85. This
payment rate incorporates a combined
MEI update factor of 1.0327 that trends
dollars forward from July 1, 2012
through December 31, 2015.
TABLE 2—FINAL BASE RATE PER DAILY VISIT
Total estimated costs
Daily
encounters
Average
payment
multiplier
Average cost
per daily visit
Estimated
base rate without adjustment
for price
inflation
MEI Update
factor
MEI-Adjusted
base payment
rate
$846,058,100 ...........................................
5,462,670
1.0069
$154.88
$153.82
1.0327
$158.85
Final MEI-adjusted base payment rate =
$154.88 × (1/1.0069) × 1.0327 =
$158.85
Thus, we are finalizing a base
payment rate of $158.85 per beneficiary
per day for the FQHC PPS, based on
current data and the finalized policies.
Payments to FQHCs were calculated
as follows:
Base payment rate × FQHC GAF =
PPS payment
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In calculating the payment, the base
payment rate was $158.85, and the
FQHC GAF was based on the locality of
the delivery site.
If the patient is new to the FQHC, or
the FQHC is furnishing an IPPE, initial
AWV, or subsequent AWV, payment
would be calculated as follows:
Base payment rate × FQHC GAF ×
1.3416 = PPS payment
In calculating the payment, 1.3416
represents the risk adjustment factor
applied to the PPS payment when
FQHCs furnish care to new patients or
when they furnish an IPPE, initial AWV,
or subsequent AWV (see discussion in
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section II.C.3. of this final rule with
comment period).
E. Implementation
1. Transition Period and Annual
Adjustment
Section 1834(o)(2) of the Act requires
implementation of the FQHC PPS for
FQHCs with cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2014.
Cost reporting periods are typically 12
months, and usually do not exceed 13
months. Therefore, we expect that all
FQHCs would be transitioned to the PPS
by the end of 2015, or 15 months after
the October 1, 2014 implementation
date.
FQHCs would transition into the PPS
based on their cost reporting periods.
We noted that a change in cost reporting
periods that is made primarily to
maximize payment would not be
acceptable under established cost
reporting policy (see § 413.24(f)(3) of the
regulations and the Provider
Reimbursement Manual Part I, section
2414, and Part II, section 102.3). The
claims processing system will maintain
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the current system and the PPS until all
FQHCs have transitioned to the PPS.
We proposed to transition the PPS to
a calendar year update for all FQHCs,
beginning January 1, 2016, because
many of the PFS files we proposed to
use are updated on a calendar year
basis. Section 1834(o)(2)(B)(ii)(I) of the
Act requires us to adjust the FQHC PPS
rate by the percentage increase in the
MEI for the first year after
implementation. However, while
transitioning the PPS to a calendar year,
we proposed to defer the first MEI
statutory adjustment to the PPS rate
from October 1, 2015 to December 31,
2016, because the proposed base
payment rate incorporates a forecasted
percentage increase in the MEI through
December 31, 2015.
Comment: Many commenters
requested that FQHCs be permitted to
transition into the FQHC PPS beginning
on October 1, 2014, even if that is not
the beginning of their cost reporting
period.
Response: As we stated in the
proposed rule, a change in cost
reporting periods that is made primarily
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to maximize payment would not be
acceptable under established cost
reporting policy. This principle has
been applied uniformly to the
implementation of all new prospective
payment systems in Medicare. The
MACs do not have the discretion to
transition a FQHC at a time other than
their cost reporting period except when
a FQHC has a change of ownership
resulting in a different cost reporting
period, or otherwise has good cause.
Good cause is not met if it is determined
that the reason is to maximize
reimbursement.
Comment: Many commenters
requested that we create a FQHCspecific market basket beginning in
2016 for the annual update to the PPS
rate. These commenters opined that a
FQHC-specific market basket would
more accurately reflect the actual costs
of FQHC services than using the MEI. A
commenter requested that the FQHC
market basket take into account changes
in the scope of services that FQHC
furnish.
Response: We will continue to assess
the feasibility of developing a FQHCspecific market basket and will provide
notification of our intentions in
subsequent rulemaking.
We did not receive any comments on
our proposal to transition the PPS to a
calendar year update for all FQHCs,
beginning January 1, 2016. Therefore,
we are finalizing this provision as
proposed.
2. Medicare Claims Payment
We noted that claims processing
systems would need to be revised
through program instruction to
accommodate the new rate and
associated adjustments. Medicare
currently pays 80 percent of the AIR for
all FQHC claims, except for mental
health services that are subject to the
mental health payment limit. Section
1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act requires that
Medicare payment under the FQHC PPS
shall be 80 percent of the lesser of the
provider’s actual charge or the PPS rate.
In the proposed rule, we stated that we
were considering several revisions to
the claims processing system. These
include revisions to reject claims in
which the qualifying visit described a
service that is outside of the FQHC
benefit, such as inpatient hospital E/M
services or group sessions of DSMT/
MNT; revisions to reject line items for
technical components such as x-rays,
laboratory tests, and durable medical
equipment which will not be paid as
part of the FQHC PPS and would be
billed separately to Medicare Part B; and
revisions to allow for the informational
reporting of influenza and
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pneumococcal vaccines and their
administration, while excluding the line
item charges, as these items would
continue to be paid through the cost
report.
Comment: Commenters identified the
‘‘lesser of’’ provision in section
1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act as their most
significant concern with the proposed
rule. This provision requires that
Medicare payment for FQHC services
furnished under the PPS to equal ‘‘80
percent of the lesser of the actual charge
or the amount determined under’’
section 1834(o) of the Act. Many
commenters were concerned that paying
FQHCs the lesser of the actual charge or
the PPS rate will routinely underpay
FQHCs and undermine the purpose of
the PPS. These commenters believe the
PPS would be inappropriately
comparing a per diem rate for a typical
bundle of services with a charge or sum
of charges for individual services. Some
FQHCs also claim that they keep their
charges low across all payers because
they serve an underserved population,
which will cap their Medicare FQHC
payments at these low charge rates.
Commenters recommended that if the
‘‘lesser of’’ provision must be
implemented, it would be more
appropriate for Medicare to compare the
PPS rate to the FQHC’s average charge
per visit from the prior year, trended
forward by the MEI or a FQHC-specific
inflationary factor.
Response: We appreciate the
information and perspectives provided
by the commenters and will address
each of these points individually.
Comment: Commenters opined that
CMS lack the statutory authority to
implement the ‘‘lesser of’’ provision
because section 1833(a)(1) of the Act
generally excludes FQHC services, and
that even if we determine that CMS has
the authority to apply the ‘‘lesser of’’
provision, the statutory deficiencies
would allow CMS to be flexible in
implementing this provision.
Response: We respectfully disagree
with commenters that the statutory basis
of the ‘‘lesser of’’ provision is not clear.
We find the language in section
1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act, which states
‘‘with respect to Federally qualified
health center services for which
payment is made under section 1834(o)
of the Act, the amounts paid shall be 80
percent of the lesser of the actual charge
or the amount determined under such
section’’ to be clear, and we believe that
placement of this provision in section
1833(a)(1) of the Act does not
undermine its authority.
Comment: Commenters noted that
due to the ‘‘lesser of’’ provision, initial
payments under the PPS would be less
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than 100 percent of the estimated
amount of reasonable costs, and this
does not meet the budget neutrality
requirement in the Affordable Care Act.
Response: We respectfully disagree
with commenters that we should have
factored the ‘‘lesser of’’ provision into
our budget neutrality calculations.
Section 1834(o)(2)(B)(i) of the Act
requires us to calculate a PPS rate that,
when multiplied by our estimates of
services, will yield 100 percent of
estimated reasonable costs. Although we
must apply the ‘‘lesser of’’ provision in
section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act when
paying FQHCs under the PPS, section
1834(o)(2)(B)(i) of the Act specifies that
the estimated aggregate amount of
prospective payment rates is to be
determined prior to the application of
section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act.
Comment: Commenters asserted that
CMS did not provide sufficient
information about the ‘‘lesser of’’
provision in the proposed rule, such as
defining the term ‘‘charge’’ or providing
an analysis of the effect of the ‘‘lesser
of’’ provision on FQHC payments under
the PPS. Commenters urged CMS to
clarify implementation details in the
final rule and to give the public another
opportunity to comment after
publishing this information.
Commenters requested that CMS grant a
2- to 3-year moratorium on the ‘‘lesser
of’’ provision, while beginning to pay
the PPS rates as of October 1, 2014.
Response: We believe the statutory
language in section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the
Act requiring a comparison with the
provider’s ‘‘actual charge’’ is
straightforward. Moreover, the
regulatory principles of reasonable cost
reimbursement in § 413.53(b) already
defines ‘‘charges’’ as ‘‘the regular rates
for various services that are charged to
both beneficiaries and other paying
patients who receive the services.’’ We
did not include all the implementation
details in the proposed rule because
claims processing instructions are not
typically subject to regulatory notice
and comment.
The proposed rule modeled the
impact of the PPS using the estimated
PPS rate, and did not model the overall
impact of the ‘‘lesser of’’ provision
because FQHCs control their own
pricing structures, and we have limited
information to accurately project actual
FQHC charges. Therefore, we believe it
would have been inappropriate to
publish an analysis demonstrating the
impact of the ‘‘lesser of’’ provision.
Comment: Some commenters claimed
that FQHCs keep their charges low
across all payers because they serve an
underserved population. A few
commenters asserted that the costs of
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integrated care furnished to
beneficiaries are not adequately
reflected in the HCPCS codes and
charges billed to Medicare. Commenters
were concerned that, in order to receive
the higher payments under the PPS,
FQHCs would be forced to raise their
charges, which would increase the
coinsurance liability for patients who do
not qualify for a sliding fee schedule
discount.
Response: Most FQHCs are subject to
the requirements in the section
330(k)(3)(G) of the PHS Act, which
states that FQHCs prepare ‘‘a schedule
of fees or payments for the provision of
its services consistent with locally
prevailing rates or charges and designed
to cover its reasonable costs of operation
and has prepared a corresponding
schedule of discounts to be applied to
the payment of such fees or payments,
which discounts are adjusted on the
basis of the patient’s ability to pay.’’
FQHCs can adjust their charges
within the broad parameters established
by the PHS Act and HRSA guidance,
and the application of a sliding fee scale
can subsidize an eligible patient’s outof-pocket liability. The commenter is
correct that coinsurance liability
generally increases when charges
increase, and that this is a consideration
for FQHCs when setting charges. We
also note that, under certain
circumstances, FQHCs may waive
coinsurance amounts for Medicare and
Medicaid beneficiaries (see for example,
section 1128B(b)(3)(D) of the Act and
§ 1001.952(k)(2) of the regulations).
Also, most FQHCs are subject to the
statutory and regulatory requirements of
the Health Center Program (section 330
of the PHS Act; 42 CFR Part 51c; and 42
CFR 56.201 through 56.604), which,
among other requirements, mandates
that they may collect no more than a
‘‘nominal fee’’ from individuals whose
annual income is at or below 100
percent of the Federal Poverty Level.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that we apply the ‘‘lesser
of’’ provision at the aggregate level
through an annual reconciliation on the
Medicare cost report of aggregate
payments with aggregate charges. These
commenters noted that this aggregate
approach averages out lower charges for
low intensity services with higher
charges for high intensity services.
Some commenters suggested that we
conduct an annual reconciliation on the
Medicare cost report to determine
whether aggregate PPS payments
exceeded or fell short of aggregate
allowable costs, using costs as a proxy
for actual charges.
Response: We believe that the
statutory language in section
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1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act requiring a
comparison with the provider’s ‘‘actual
charge’’ is straightforward, and a
comparison of aggregate payments with
aggregate charges would be inconsistent
with the plain reading of the statutory
language that implies a claims level
comparison. We also were not
persuaded that costs are a reasonable
proxy for charges. We note that in
general, a Medicare PPS is a method of
paying providers based on a
predetermined, fixed amount that is not
subject to annual reconciliation.
Payments under a Medicare PPS for
other provider types are not subject to
annual reconciliation with a provider’s
charge, and an annual reconciliation of
costs for providers paid under a
Medicare PPS is generally limited to
amounts paid outside the applicable
PPS.
Comment: Many commenters believe
that the proposed PPS would
inappropriately compare a per diem rate
for a typical bundle of services with a
charge or sum of charges for individual
services furnished on the same day,
which commenters described as an
‘‘apples to oranges’’ comparison.
Commenters asserted that comparing
the bundled rate to the sum of
individual charges would routinely
yield underpayment and make it
difficult for FQHCs to meet their
obligation under section 330 of the PHS
Act that requires health centers to
collect adequate payment from
government programs, including
Medicare. Commenters recommended
that if the ‘‘lesser of’’ provision must be
implemented, it would be more
appropriate for CMS to implement the
‘‘lesser of’’ provision in a way that
ensures parity between the rate(s) and
charges to which they are compared.
Commenters suggested that CMS
compare the PPS rate to the FQHC’s
average charge per visit, as determined
on an annual basis and trended forward
by an applicable inflation factor (for
example, the MEI or a FQHC-specific
inflationary index).
A commenter suggested that FQHCs
should be allowed to bill all-inclusive
rate charges under the FQHC PPS. This
commenter noted that the proposed PPS
rate is based on cost report data that are
not adequately reflected in the HCPCS
codes and charges billed to Medicare,
and the commenter believes it would be
appropriate for FQHCs to bill an allinclusive rate. The commenter
suggested that it would be appropriate
for FQHCs to set the charge for a
Medicare visit at the higher of its
Medicare or Medicaid PPS rate to avoid
a reimbursement loss from application
of the ‘‘lesser of’’ provision. This
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25457
commenter also suggested that ancillary
services should be billed and paid by
Medicare over and above the allinclusive PPS rates.
Response: Most Medicare payment
systems that have a ‘‘lesser of’’
provision in section 1833(a)(1) of the
Act are paid on a fee basis for each item
or service. While unbundling the PPS
rate to pay separately for individual
services would address the ‘‘apples-tooranges’’ concern, we note that most of
the commenters recommending that we
compare the PPS rate with the FQHC’s
average charge also supported our
proposal to offer a single, bundled,
encounter-based rate for payment with
some adjustments, as discussed earlier.
We believe that the proposed FQHC PPS
encounter-based rate, which would be
similar across all encounters, is a
significantly different payment structure
than other payment systems subject to a
‘‘lesser of’’ comparison with actual
charges. We acknowledge that a
comparison of a service-specific charge
to an encounter-based payment does not
apply the ‘‘apples-to-apples’’
comparisons of similar ‘‘lesser of’’
provisions included in section
1833(a)(1) of the Act.
We considered modifying our
proposal and adopting the
recommendation of many commenters
to pay FQHCs based on the lesser of the
FQHC’s average Medicare charge per
diem or the PPS rate. We agree that such
an approach would be responsive to
commenters seeking parity in the
comparison between the bundled PPS
rate and the charges. However, we
believe that the statutory language in
section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act
requiring a comparison with the
provider’s ‘‘actual charge’’ is
straightforward, and a comparison with
the FQHC’s average charge from a prior
period would be inconsistent with the
plain reading of the statutory language.
We believe we can be responsive to
commenters seeking parity in the
comparison between the bundled PPS
rate and the charges, while allowing
direct interpretation of the statutory
requirements of section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of
the Act, by establishing a new set of
HCPCS G-codes for FQHCs to report an
established Medicare patient visit, a
new or initial patient visit and an IPPE
or AWV. As authorized by section
1834(o)(2)(C) of the Act, we shall
establish and implement by program
instruction the payment codes to be
used under the FQHC PPS. We would
define these G-codes in program
instruction to describe a FQHC visit in
accordance with the regulatory
definitions of a Medicare FQHC visit.
Each FQHC would establish a charge to
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the beneficiary with which to bill
Medicare for the encounters. Consistent
with longstanding policy, the use of
these payment codes does not dictate to
providers how to set their charges. A
FQHC would set the charge for a
specific payment code pursuant to its
own determination of what would be
appropriate for the services normally
provided and the population served at
that FQHC, based on the description of
services associated with the G-code. The
charge for a specific payment code
would reflect the sum of regular rates
charged to both beneficiaries and other
paying patients for a typical bundle of
services that would be furnished per
diem to a Medicare beneficiary. We
would continue to require detailed
HCPCS coding with the associated line
item charges for data gathering (for
example, providing information about
the ancillary services furnished), to
support the application of adjustments
for new patients, IPPE, and AWV, and
to facilitate the waiving of coinsurance
for preventive services.
FQHCs will be required to use these
payment codes when billing Medicare
under the PPS. Medicare would pay
FQHCs based on 80 percent of the lesser
of the actual charge reported for the
specific payment code or the PPS rate
on each claim (and beneficiary
coinsurance would be 20 percent of the
lesser of the actual charge for the G-code
or the PPS rate), which allows for direct
interpretation of the statute by
comparing the PPS rate to the FQHC’s
actual charge for a Medicare visit. In
order to ease administrative burden and
in compliance with § 413.53, the FQHC
may choose to use these specific
payment codes for its entire patient
base. We acknowledge that other payors
may have requirements that would
preclude FQHCs from using these
payment codes, and we suggest that
FQHCs be mindful of the differences in
required billing methodologies and
coding conventions when submitting
claims to other payors.
Although we did not propose to
establish HCPCS G-codes for FQHCs to
report and bill for Medicare visits, we
believe that comparing the PPS per
diem rate to a FQHC’s charge for a per
diem visit (as defined by the specific
payment codes) would be responsive to
commenters seeking parity in the
comparison between the bundled rate
and the charges, and would also be
responsive to commenters concerns
regarding meeting the requirements of
section 330(k)(3)(F) of the PHS Act,
which requires section 330 grantees to
make every reasonable effort to collect
appropriate reimbursement for its costs
in providing health services from
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government programs, including
Medicare. Establishment of these Gcodes would also be responsive to the
commenter that suggested that FQHCs
should be allowed to bill all-inclusive
rate charges under the FQHC PPS. Since
the G-codes would describe FQHC visits
as a per diem, encounter-based visit in
accordance with Medicare regulations,
we also note that the charges established
for these Medicare visits might not
directly affect the charges for nonMedicare patients.
In setting its charges for these
Medicare FQHC visits, a FQHC would
have to comply with established cost
reporting rules in § 413.53 which
specify that charges must reflect the
regular rates for various services that are
charged to both beneficiaries and other
paying patients who receive the
services. We anticipate that each FQHC
would establish charges for the
Medicare FQHC visits that would reflect
the sum of regular rates charged to both
beneficiaries and other paying patients
for a typical bundle of services that the
FQHC would furnish per diem to a
Medicare beneficiary. We note that
establishing Medicare per diem rates
that are substantially in excess of the
usual rates charged to other paying
patients for a similar bundle of services
could be subject to section 1128(b)(6) of
the Act, as codified in § 1001.701.
We disagree with the commenter’s
suggestion that ancillary services should
be billed and paid by Medicare over and
above the all-inclusive PPS rate because
the costs of these ancillary services were
included in the reasonable costs used to
calculate the PPS rates.
After consideration of the public
comments received, we are finalizing
our proposal and the revised regulations
at § 405.2462 to pay FQHCs based on
the lesser of the PPS rate or the actual
charge. In response to the public
comments, we will also establish
HCPCS G-codes for FQHCs to report and
bill FQHC visits to Medicare under the
FQHC PPS. Appropriate billing
procedures for the G codes will be made
through program instruction. As we did
not propose the establishment of Gcodes in the proposed rule, nor did we
receive public comments specifically
requesting such codes, we invite
comments on the establishment of Gcodes for FQHCs to report and bill
FQHC visits to Medicare under the
FQHC PPS.
3. Beneficiary Coinsurance
Section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act
requires that FQHCs be paid ‘‘80 percent
of the lesser of the actual charge or the
amount determined under such
section’’. Under the current reasonable
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cost payment system, beneficiary
coinsurance for FQHC services is
assessed based on the FQHC’s charge,
which can be more than coinsurance
based on the AIR, which is based on
costs. An analysis of a sample of FQHC
Medicare claims data for dates of service
between January 1, 2011 through June
30, 2013 indicated that beneficiary
coinsurance based on 20 percent of the
FQHCs’ charges was approximately $29
million higher, or 20 percent more, than
if coinsurance had been assessed based
on 20 percent of the lesser of the
FQHC’s charge or the applicable allinclusive rate.
Section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act
requires that Medicare payment under
the FQHC PPS should be 80 percent of
the lesser of the actual charge or the PPS
rate. Accordingly, we proposed that
coinsurance would be 20 percent of the
lesser of the FQHC’s charge or the PPS
rate. We believe that the proposal to
change the method to determine
coinsurance is consistent with the
statutory change to the FQHC Medicare
payment and is consistent with
statutory language in sections
1866(a)(2)(A) and 1833(a)(3)(A) of the
Act and elsewhere that addresses
coinsurance amounts and Medicare cost
principles. If finalized as proposed, total
payment to the FQHC, including both
Medicare and beneficiary liability,
would not exceed the FQHC’s charge or
the PPS rate (whichever was less).
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that if CMS makes
changes to the coinsurance provisions
in the payment regulation at
§ 405.2462(d) in response to comments
on the ‘‘lesser of’’ provision, CMS
should make corresponding revisions to
the coinsurance regulation at
§ 405.2410.
Response: The coinsurance provisions
in § 405.2462(d) and § 405.2410 have
been updated in this final rule with
comment period.
Comment: Commenters noted that
calculating the amount of coinsurance
to be charged a patient is a significant
administrative responsibility for FQHCs.
Commenters were concerned that a
comparison of the PPS rate with charges
at the point of service would be
administratively complex and
unnecessarily burdensome for FQHCs,
and FQHCs would have difficulty
calculating the beneficiary’s
coinsurance liability at point of service.
Response: We respectfully disagree
that FQHCs would have difficulty
calculating a beneficiary’s coinsurance
liability at point of service. A FQHC will
set its own charge, and we believe the
charge amount is likely to be available
at point of service. We also believe that
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FQHCs will be able to estimate the PPS
rate at time of service. We proposed to
apply a FQHC GAF based on where the
services are furnished, and we proposed
to adjust the encounter rate when
FQHCs furnish care to new patients or
when they furnish a comprehensive
initial Medicare visit. We are finalizing
our proposal to apply a FQHC GAF, and
we are modifying our proposal and will
adjust the encounter rate when FQHCs
furnish new patient visits, IPPEs, or
AWVs. Therefore, each delivery site
would have two geographically adjusted
PPS rates for each period: One rate for
a visit furnished to a patient who is not
new to the FQHC and is not receiving
an IPPE or AWV, and one rate for a new
patient visit, IPPE or AWV that is
eligible for an adjustment. At the point
of service, a FQHC could determine
whether its own charge or its estimate
of the applicable PPS rate (which would
be one of two discrete values) is lower,
and the FQHC could estimate
beneficiary coinsurance at point of
service based on 20 percent of the lesser
amount. We note that the remittance
advice issued by the MAC will continue
to include the coinsurance amount and
will reflect the amount of coinsurance
recognized by Medicare.
Comment: A few commenters wanted
coinsurance to be based on charges,
even when the charges are higher than
the PPS rate. Some also questioned our
legal authority to assess coinsurance at
20 percent of the lesser of the charge or
the PPS rate.
Response: Under the current
reasonable cost payment system,
beneficiary coinsurance for FQHC
services is assessed based on the
FQHC’s charge, and we acknowledge
that the statute makes no specific
provision to revise the coinsurance to be
20 percent of the lesser of the FQHC’s
charge or the PPS rate, although it does
state clearly that CMS is limited to
paying 80 percent of the FQHC’s charge
or the PPS rate, whichever is less. We
continue to believe that the proposal to
change the method to determine
coinsurance is consistent with the
statutory change to the FQHC Medicare
payment and is consistent with
statutory language in sections
1866(a)(2)(A) and 1833(a)(3)(A) of the
Act and elsewhere that addresses
coinsurance amounts and Medicare cost
principles. These sections were not
repealed by the Affordable Care Act and
continue to provide legal authority for
FQHCs to seek coinsurance payments
from Medicare beneficiaries.
After consideration of the public
comments received, we are finalizing
these provisions as proposed and
revising the regulations at § 405.2462(d)
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and § 405.2410(b)(2) that beneficiary
coinsurance for payments under the
FQHC PPS would generally be 20
percent of the lesser of the FQHC’s
charge or the PPS rate. We note that the
proposed revision to
§ 405.2410(b)(1)(ii)(A) regarding the
deductible and coinsurance amount for
RHCs is not being finalized as proposed
as it inadvertently changed the intent of
the regulation and will therefore remain
as stated in the current regulation.
4. Waiving Coinsurance for Preventive
Services
As provided by section 4104 of the
Affordable Care Act, effective January 1,
2011, Medicare waives beneficiary
coinsurance for eligible preventive
services furnished by a FQHC. Medicare
requires detailed HCPCS coding on
FQHC claims to ensure that coinsurance
is not applied to the line item charges
for these preventive services.
For FQHC claims that include a mix
of preventive and non-preventive
services, we proposed that Medicare
contractors compare payment based on
the FQHC’s charge to payments based
on the PPS encounter rate and pay the
lesser amount. However, the current
approach to waiving coinsurance for
preventive services, which relies solely
on FQHC reported charges, would be
insufficient under the FQHC PPS. As
Medicare payment under the FQHC PPS
is required to be 80 percent of the lesser
of the FQHCs charge or the PPS rate, we
also need to determine the coinsurance
waiver for payments based on the PPS
rate.
We considered using the proportion
of the FQHC’s line item charges for
preventive services to total claim
charges to determine, as a proxy, the
proportion of the FQHC PPS rate that
would not be subject to coinsurance.
This approach would preserve the
encounter-based rate while basing the
coinsurance reduction on each FQHC’s
relative assessment of resources for
preventive services. However, the
charge structure among FQHCs varies,
and beneficiary liability for the same
mix of FQHC services could differ
significantly based on the differences in
charge structures.
Where preventive services are coded
on a claim, we proposed to use
payments under the PFS to determine
the proportional amount of coinsurance
that should be waived for payments
based on the PPS encounter rate. While
Part B drugs that are physicianadministered and routine venipuncture
will be paid under the FQHC PPS rate,
we noted that the Medicare Part B rates
for these items are not included in the
PFS payment files. Therefore, when
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25459
determining this proportionality of
payments, we proposed that we would
also consider PFS payment limits for
Part B drugs, as listed in the Medicare
Part B Drug Pricing File, and the
national payment amount for routine
venipuncture (HCPCS 36415). Although
FQHCs might list HCPCS for which we
do not publish a payment rate in these
files, a review of 2011 claims data
indicated that the vast majority of line
items with HCPCS representing services
that will be paid under the FQHC PPS
were priced in these sources. As such,
we believe that referencing only the
payment rates listed in these sources
would be both sufficient and
appropriate for determining the amount
of coinsurance to waive for preventive
services furnished in FQHCs, without
changing the total payment (Medicare
and coinsurance). Since Medicare
payment under the FQHC PPS is
required to be 80 percent of the lesser
of the FQHC’s charges or the PPS rate,
we proposed that we would continue to
use FQHC-reported charges to
determine the amount of coinsurance
that should be waived for payments
based on the FQHC’s charge, and that
total payment to the FQHC, including
both Medicare and beneficiary liability,
would not exceed the lesser of the
FQHC’s charge or the PPS rate.
Our proposed approach for waiving
coinsurance for preventive services
preserves an encounter-based rate, and
the calculation is similar to the current
coinsurance calculation based on
charges. We acknowledged that this
calculation is fairly complex for the
claims processing systems and may also
be difficult for providers to replicate,
and that FQHCs might not know how
much coinsurance would be assessed
before the MAC issues the remittance
advice.
As an alternative approach, we
considered unbundling all services
when a FQHC claim includes a mix of
preventive and non-preventive services,
excluding these types of claims from
calculation of the FQHC base encounter
rate, and use payments under the
Medicare PFS to pay separately for
every service listed on the claim. While
this approach is inconsistent with an
all-inclusive payment, it would simplify
waiving coinsurance for preventive
services and pay preventive services
comparably to PFS settings. However,
the vast majority of FQHC claims list
only one HCPCS, and unbundling all
services introduces coding complexity
that might underpay FQHCs for an
encounter if they do not code all
furnished ancillary services. In addition,
because the cost of these services is
generally lower that other services,
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payment for preventive services under
the PFS will be less, in many cases, than
the FQHC PPS encounter rate.
Instead of unbundling all services
when a FQHC claim includes a mix of
preventive and nonpreventive services,
we considered the use of PFS payment
rates to pay separately for preventive
services billed on the FQHC claim,
while paying for the non-preventive
services under the FQHC PPS rate.
However, this would be problematic
when the preventive services represent
the service that would qualify the claim
as a FQHC encounter (for example,
IPPE, AWV, MNT). Under current
payment policy, the remaining ancillary
services would not be eligible for an
encounter payment without an
additional, qualifying visit on the same
date of service.
We also considered using the dollar
value of the coinsurance that would be
waived under the PFS to reduce the
FQHC encounter-based coinsurance
amount when preventive services
appear on the claim. However, this
could lead to anomalous results, such as
negative coinsurance if the preventive
service(s) would have been paid more
under the PFS than the FQHC PPS rate,
and the amount of coinsurance waived
under the PFS would exceed 20 percent
of the FQHC PPS rate. We also were
concerned that the reduction in
coinsurance would seem insufficient if
the payment rate for the preventive
service(s) was very low under the PFS.
We discussed whether using the
proportionality of PFS payments to
determine the coinsurance waiver
would facilitate the waiving of
coinsurance for preventive services
while preserving the all-inclusive nature
of the encounter-based rate with the
least billing complexity. Therefore, we
proposed that where preventive services
are coded on a claim, we would use
payments under the PFS to determine
the proportional amount of coinsurance
that should be waived for payments
based on the PPS encounter rate, and we
invited public comment on how this
proposal would impact a FQHC’s’
administrative procedures and billing
practices.
Comment: Commenters noted that we
did not specify that Medicare will pay
for the coinsurance waiver, and some
were concerned that our proposals to
waive coinsurance for preventive
services would require FQHCs to forego
20 percent of the total payment amount.
Commenters requested that we clarify
that Medicare will pay 100 percent for
preventive services, with payment for a
visit with a preventive and nonpreventive component equal to the total
payment less the coinsurance assessed.
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Commenters also urged us to specify the
rules for waiving coinsurance in the
regulations text.
Response: Under § 410.152, Medicare
Part B pays 100 percent of the Medicare
payment amount established under the
applicable payment methodology for the
service setting. In the CY 2011 Medicare
PFS final rule (75 FR 73417 through
73419, November 29, 2010) we included
a detailed discussion regarding
preventive services covered under the
FQHC benefit, and we clarified that we
would apply the coinsurance waiver in
the FQHC setting. We implemented the
billing requirements for waiving
coinsurance in the FQHC setting
through program instruction (CMS Pub.
100–04, Medicare Claims Processing
Manual, Chapter 9, Section 120).
Our discussion and proposals in the
FQHC PPS proposed rule were not
intended to change the general
requirements with respect to waiving
coinsurance for preventive services in
the FQHC setting. Medicare will
continue to pay 100 percent for
preventive services furnished in the
FQHC setting as part of a FQHC visit.
Rather, we proposed revisions to the
methodology used to waive coinsurance
for preventive services to ensure that
our operational approach would be
compatible with payments under an allinclusive FQHC PPS encounter-based
system.
We agree that it would be appropriate
to codify the general rules for waiving
coinsurance in the regulations text, and
we will modify the proposed regulatory
text at § 405.2410 and § 405.2462 to
reflect existing requirements that apply
the coinsurance waiver in the FQHC
setting, subject to the billing
requirements of the applicable payment
methodology. However, we believe that
the details of implementation would be
more appropriate to include in program
instruction, and we plan to implement
the procedures for waiving coinsurance
for preventive services furnished by
FQHCs as an update to the billing
requirements for preventive services.
Comment: Commenters requested that
we add information to the Medicare
Claims Processing Manual clarifying the
list of services to which the coinsurance
waiver requirement applies.
Response: A table of services subject
to the coinsurance waiver is available in
CMS Pub. 100–04, Medicare Claims
Processing Manual, Chapter 18, Section
1.2.
Comment: Commenters were
concerned that it would be too complex
and burdensome for FQHCs to calculate
the coinsurance at point of service using
the proposed methodology for claims
with a mix of preventive and non-
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preventive services that would be paid
using the PPS rate. Most commenters
requested that CMS rethink this
calculation to simplify how coinsurance
would be assessed for these types of
claims. Commenters recommended that
CMS completely waive coinsurance and
pay 100 percent of the PPS rate for any
FQHC encounter that includes a
preventive service, whether the
preventive service represented the faceto-face portion of the visit or an
ancillary service. Commenters asserted
that this would be easier to administer
and more consistent with the Congress’s
intent to eliminate barriers to the
provision of preventive services.
Response: While a complete
coinsurance waiver for these types of
claims would be a simple approach, we
do not believe that we have the
authority to waive coinsurance
completely whenever a preventive
service is furnished during a FQHC
encounter without regard to the value of
the preventive service relative to all
other services furnished during the
same encounter.
We agree that the proposed approach
is complex and might be difficult for
providers to replicate. Our own analysis
subsequent to publication of the
proposed rule led us to conclude that
the benefits of the proposed
methodology would be outweighed by
the complexity of the systems changes
and ongoing systems interactions that
would be needed to implement the
methodology as proposed.
We reconsidered the other
methodologies for waiving coinsurance
presented in the proposed rule.
However, we believe that these options
would also be difficult for providers to
replicate at point of service.
We proposed that we would continue
to use FQHC-reported charges to
determine the amount of coinsurance
that should be waived for payments
based on the FQHC’s charge. We
believed that the current approach to
waiving coinsurance for preventive
services, which relies solely on FQHC
reported charges, would be insufficient
under the FQHC PPS for payments
based on the FQHC PPS rate.
In response to commenters that
requested that CMS rethink this
calculation to simplify how coinsurance
would be assessed for these types of
claims, we reconsidered whether the
current approach to waiving
coinsurance for preventive services
when payments are based on the
FQHC’s charge could be adapted to
payments based on the FQHC PPS rate.
After reconsideration of how
coinsurance could be assessed, we now
believe that the current approach is
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feasible and relatively simple to apply
to payments based on the FQHC PPS
rate, with certain modifications.
If we were to apply the current
approach of waiving coinsurance for
preventive services under the new
FQHC PPS, we would subtract the
dollar value of the FQHC’s reported
line-item charge for the preventive
service from the full payment amount,
whether payment is based on the
FQHC’s charge or the PPS rate.
Medicare would pay the FQHC 100
percent of the dollar value of the
FQHC’s reported line-item charge for
the preventive service, up to the total
payment amount. Medicare also would
pay a FQHC 80 percent of the remainder
of the full payment amount, and we
would assess beneficiary coinsurance at
20 percent of the remainder of the full
payment amount. If the reported lineitem charge for the preventive service
equals or exceeds the full payment
amount, we would pay 100 percent of
the full payment amount and the
beneficiary would not be responsible for
any coinsurance.
We believe that the relative simplicity
of this revised methodology is
responsive to commenters that
requested a simpler calculation that
would be easier to replicate at point of
service, and a coinsurance waiver based
on the reported line item charges will be
more transparent to beneficiaries. We
also believe that the similarity to the
current approach for waiving
coinsurance for preventive services will
be simpler for Medicare claims
processing systems to implement.
After consideration of the public
comments received, we will not finalize
the process for calculating the
coinsurance as proposed, and instead
will modify the proposed regulatory text
at § 405.2410 and § 405.2462 based on
the comments received. Specifically, we
will use the current approach to waiving
coinsurance for preventive services,
whether total payment is based on the
FQHC’s charge or the PPS rate, by
subtracting the dollar value of the
FQHC’s reported line-item charge for
the preventive services from the full
payment amount. We will issue further
guidance on the billing procedures
through program instruction. We invite
comments on this approach to waiving
coinsurance for preventive services
based on the dollar value of the FQHC’s
reported line-item charge for preventive
services.
5. Cost Reporting
Under section 1815(a) of the Act,
providers participating in the Medicare
program are required to submit financial
and statistical information to achieve
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settlement of costs relating to health
care services rendered to Medicare
beneficiaries. This information is
required for determining Medicare
payment for FQHC services under Part
405, Subpart X.
Currently, the Medicare cost reporting
forms show the costs incurred and the
total number of visits for FQHC services
during the cost reporting period. Using
this information, the MAC determines
the total payment amount due for
covered services furnished to Medicare
beneficiaries. The MAC compares the
total payment due with the total
payments made for services furnished
during the reporting period. If the total
payment due exceeds the total payments
made, the difference is made up by a
lump sum payment. If the total payment
due is less than the total payments
made, the overpayment is collected.
Under the FQHC PPS, Medicare
payment for FQHC services will be
made based on the lesser of a
predetermined national rate or the
FQHC charge. For services included in
the FQHC per diem payment, Medicare
cost reports would not be used to
reconcile Medicare payments with
FQHC costs. However, the statute does
not exempt FQHCs from submitting cost
reports. In addition, Medicare payments
for the reasonable costs of the influenza
and pneumococcal vaccines and their
administration, allowable graduate
medical education costs, and bad debts
would continue to be determined and
paid through the cost report. We noted
that we are considering revisions to the
cost reporting forms and instructions
that would provide us with information
that would improve the quality of our
cost estimates, such as the reporting of
a FQHC’s overall and Medicare specific
CCR, and the types of cost data that
would facilitate the potential
development of a FQHC market basket
that could be used in base payment
updates after the second year of the PPS.
We noted that we are also exploring
whether we have audit resources to
include FQHCs in the pool of
institutional providers that are subject
to periodic cost report audits.
Comment: A commenter requested
that CMS consider suspending the
required submission of annual cost
reports once all FQHCs have
transitioned to the FQHC PPS.
Response: The statute does not
exempt FQHCs from submitting cost
reports. In addition, we continue to
need cost reports for payments to
FQHCs that are outside of the PPS, to
update our cost estimates, and to
facilitate the potential development of a
FQHC market basket.
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6. Medicare Advantage Organizations
Section 10501(i)(3)(C) of the
Affordable Care Act added section
1833(a)(3)(B)(i)(II) to the Act to require
that FQHCs that contract with MA
organizations be paid at least the same
amount they would have received for
the same service under the FQHC PPS.
This provision ensures FQHCs are paid
at least the Medicare amount for FQHC
services, whether such amount is set by
section 1833(a)(3) of the Act or section
1834(o) of the Act. Consistent with
current policy, if the MA organization
contract rate is lower than the amount
Medicare would otherwise pay for
FQHC services, FQHCs that contract
with MA organizations would receive a
wrap-around payment from Medicare to
cover the difference (see § 422.316). If
the MA organization contract rate is
higher than the amount Medicare would
otherwise pay for FQHC services, there
is no additional payment from
Medicare. We proposed to revise
§ 405.2469 to reflect this provision.
Comment: A few commenters
requested clarification that wrap-around
payments will be established based on
the PPS rate, as modified by any
applicable adjusters, and not based on
the FQHC’s charge, if such charge is less
than the PPS rate.
Response: FQHCs that have a written
contract with a MA organization are
paid by the MA organization at the rate
that is specified in their contract, and
the rate must reflect rates for similar
services furnished outside of a FQHC
setting. If the contracted rate is less than
the Medicare PPS rate, Medicare will
pay the FQHC the difference, referred to
as a wrap-around payment, less any cost
sharing amounts owed by the
beneficiary. The PPS rate is subject to
the FQHC GAF, and may also be
adjusted for a new patient visit or if a
IPPE or AWV is furnished. The
supplemental payment is only paid if
the contracted rate is less than the
adjusted PPS rate.
Comment: Commenters requested that
CMS issue guidance discouraging MA
plans from applying any deductible
under the MA plan to FQHC services.
Response: MA plans are not subject to
section 1833(b)(4) of the Act and
therefore are not required to waive
application of the Medicare deductible
to beneficiaries in FQHCs. Guidance on
this topic is beyond the scope of this
final rule with comment period.
After consideration of the public
comments received, we are finalizing
this provision as proposed.
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III. Additional Proposed Changes
Regarding FQHCs and RHCs
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A. Rural Health Clinic Contracting
Due to the difficulty in recruiting and
retaining physicians in rural areas,
RHCs have had the option of using
physicians who are either RHC
employees or contractors. However, in
order to promote stability and
continuity of care, the Rural Health
Clinic Services Act of 1977 required
RHCs to employ a nurse practitioner
(NP) or physician assistant (PA) (section
1861(aa)(2)(iii) of the Act). We have
interpreted the term ‘‘employ’’ to mean
that the employer issues a W–2 form to
the employee. Section 405.2468(b)(1)
currently states that RHCs are not paid
for services furnished by contracted
individuals other than physicians, and
§ 491.8(a)(3) does not authorize RHCs to
contract with RHC practitioners other
than physicians.
In the more than 30 years since this
legislation was enacted, the health care
environment has changed dramatically,
and RHCs have requested that they be
allowed to enter into contractual
agreements with non-physician RHC
practitioners as well as physicians. To
provide RHCs with greater flexibility in
meeting their staffing requirements, we
proposed to revise § 405.2468(b)(1) by
removing the parenthetical ‘‘RHCs are
not paid for services furnished by
contracted individuals other than
physicians, ’’ and revising § 491.8(a)(3)
to allow non-physician practitioners to
furnish services under contract in RHCs,
when at least one NP or PA is
employed.
The ability to contract with NPs, PAs,
CNMs, CP, and CSWs would provide
RHCs with additional flexibility with
respect to recruiting and retaining nonphysician practitioners. Practitioners
should be employed or contracted to the
RHC in a manner that enhances
continuity and quality of care.
RHCs would still be required, under
section 1861(aa)(2)(iii) of the Act, to
employ a PA or NP. However, as long
as there is at least one NP or PA
employed at all times (subject to the
waiver provision for existing RHCs set
forth at section 1861(aa)(7) of the Act),
a RHC would be free to enter into
contracts with other NPs, PAs, CNM,
CPs or CSWs.
We received approximately 14
comments from individuals, hospitals,
rural health clinics, national
associations, and tribal organizations on
this proposal. Commenters agreed that
this would provide RHCs with
additional flexibility and improve
access to care. Some commenters also
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noted that this would reduce certain
costs.
Comment: A commenter requested
that CMS allow all PAs and NPs who
work at a RHC to do so as contractors
to allow maximum flexibility in the
clinic’s staffing operations.
Response: As previously noted,
section 1861(aa)(2)(iii) of the Act
requires RHCs to employ at least one NP
or PA. We do not have the authority to
remove this requirement. However, we
note that as long as the statutory
requirement that at least one NP or PA
is employed is met, the RHC can
contract with other NPs or PAs.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that we interpret the
word ‘‘employ’’ to mean ‘‘utilize, use, or
engage the services of’’ so that
independent contractors could meet the
statutory requirement that at least one
NP or PA be employed.
Response: We appreciate the
suggestion but since we did not propose
to change our interpretation of the word
‘‘employ’’, this comment is beyond the
scope of this rule. We note however,
that as of the effective date of this
provision of this final rule with
comment period, only one PA or NP
will be required to be in a W–2
relationship with the RHC, and that all
other RHC practitioners can be either
employees or contractors.
After consideration of the public
comments received, we are finalizing
this provision as proposed.
B. Technical and Conforming Changes
1. Proposed Technical and Conforming
Changes
In addition to proposing to codify the
statutory requirements for the FQHC
PPS and to allow RHCs to contract with
non-physician practitioners, we
proposed edits to correct terminology,
clarify policy, and make conforming
changes for existing mandates and the
new PPS. Some of the proposed changes
include the following:
• Removing the terms ‘‘fiscal
intermediary and carriers’’ and
replacing them with ‘‘Medicare
Administrative Contractor’’ or ‘‘MAC’’.
Section 911 of the Medicare
Prescription Drug, Improvement, and
Modernization Act of 2003 established
the MACs to administer the work that
was done by fiscal intermediaries and
carriers in administering Medicare
programs.
• Removing the payment limitations
for treatment of mental psychoneurotic
or personality disorders. This payment
limitation is being phased out and will
no longer be in effect beginning January
1, 2014.
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• Updating the regulations to reflect
section 410 of the Medicare
Modernization Act of 2003 to exclude
RHC and FQHC services furnished by
physicians and certain other specified
types of nonphysician practitioners
from consolidated billing under section
1888(e)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act and allows
such services to be separately billable
under Part B when furnished to a
resident of a SNF during a covered Part
A stay (see the July 30, 2004 final rule
(69 FR 45818 through 45819). This
statutory provision was effective with
services furnished on or after January 1,
2005 and was previously implemented
through program instruction (CMS Pub
100–04, Medicare Claims Processing
Manual, Chapter 6, Section 20.1.1).
We did not receive any comments on
these technical proposals and we are
finalizing these provisions as proposed.
2. Additional Technical and Conforming
Changes
We did not propose the following
changes, but based on our review of the
rule, we make the following clarifying
and editorial changes:
• Updating § 405.501 and § 410.152
to clarify that this provision on the
determination of reasonable charges
continues to apply to FQHCs that are
authorized to bill under the reasonable
cost payment system, and does not
apply to FQHCs that are authorized to
bill under the PPS.
• Updating § 410.152 to clarify that
this provision continues to apply to
FQHCs that are authorized to bill under
the reasonable cost payment system,
and does not apply to FQHCs that are
authorized to bill under the PPS.
• Updating § 405.2468 (f)(4) to reflect
the change in name from ‘‘Medicare +
Choice’’ organization to ‘‘Medicare
Advantage’’ organization.
• Updated § 405.2415(a)(2) and (b) to
clarify that these provisions apply to
FQHCs.
• Updated § 405.2404(b) to make the
references to the Secretary gender
neutral.
C. Comments Outside of the Scope of
the Proposed Rule
Comment: Many commenters
requested that all FQHCs be assigned to
one MAC instead of each FQHC being
assigned to a MAC based on their
geographic location. Commenters
believe that assigning FQHCs to
multiple MACS results in confusion and
inconsistency as each MAC can issue
different instructions concerning the
FQHC benefit and associated billing
requirements.
Response: Section 421.404 describes
how FQHCs as well as other providers
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and suppliers are assigned to a MAC;
changes to the MAC assignments are
beyond the scope of this rule.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that CMS revise the definition
of telehealth so that FQHCs could be
distant site providers of telehealth
services.
Response: Distant site providers of
telehealth services are defined in
section 1834(m) of the Act. We made no
provision relating to telehealth and this
topic is beyond the scope of this rule.
Comment: A commenter requested
that PAs be allowed to individually
enroll as Medicare and Medicaid
providers and bill for their services.
Response: Section 1842(b) of the Act
prohibits PAs from directly billing
Medicare. This topic is beyond the
scope of this rule.
Comment: A commenter requested
that CMS mandate that states pay
FQHCs their full Medicaid encounter
rate for any Medicare-Medicaid
enrollees.
Response: This is currently a state
option and this topic is beyond the
scope of this rule.
IV. Clinical Laboratory Improvement
Amendments of 1988 (CLIA)—
Enforcement Actions for Proficiency
Testing Referral
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A. Background
On October 31, 1988, the Congress
enacted the Clinical Laboratory
Improvement Amendments of 1988
(CLIA), Public Law 100–578. The
purpose of CLIA is to ensure the
accuracy and reliability of laboratory
testing for all Americans. Under this
authority, which was codified at 42
U.S.C. 263a, the Secretary issued
regulations implementing CLIA (see 42
CFR part 493) on February 28, 1992 (57
FR 7002). The regulations specify the
standards and specific conditions that
must be met to achieve and maintain
CLIA certification. CLIA certification is
required for all laboratories, including
but not limited to those that participate
in Medicare and Medicaid, which test
human specimens for the purpose of
providing information for the diagnosis,
prevention, or treatment of any disease
or impairment, or the assessment of
health, of human beings.
The regulations require laboratories
conducting moderate or highcomplexity testing to enroll in an HHSapproved PT program that covers all of
the specialties and subspecialties for
which the laboratory is certified and all
analyses listed in part 493 Subpart I. As
of June 2013, there were 239,922 CLIAcertified laboratories. Of these
laboratories, 35,035 are required to
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enroll in an HHS-approved PT program
and are subject to all PT regulations.
Congress emphasized the importance
of PT when it drafted the CLIA
legislation. For example, in discussing
their motivation in enacting CLIA, the
Committee on Energy and Commerce
noted that it ‘‘focused particularly on
proficiency testing because it is
considered one of the best measures of
laboratory performance’’ and that
proficiency testing ‘‘is arguably the most
important measure, since it reviews
actual test results rather than merely
gauging the potential for good results.’’
(See H.R. Rept. 100–899, at 15 (1988).)
The Committee surmised that, left to
their own devices, some laboratories
would be inclined to treat PT samples
differently than their patient specimens,
as they would know that the laboratory
would be judged based on its
performance in analyzing those
samples. For example, such laboratories
might be expected to perform repeated
tests on the PT sample, use more highly
qualified personnel than are routinely
used for such testing, or send the
samples out to another laboratory for
analysis. As such practices would
undermine the purpose of PT, the
Committee noted that the CLIA statute
was drafted to bar laboratories from
such practices, and to impose
significant penalties on those who elect
to violate those bars (H.R. Rept. 100–
899, at 16 and 24 (1988)).
PT is a valuable tool the laboratory
can use to verify the accuracy and
reliability of its testing. During PT, an
HHS-approved PT program sends
samples to be tested by a laboratory on
a scheduled basis. After testing the PT
samples, the laboratory reports its
results back to the PT program for
scoring. Review and analyses of PT
reports by the laboratory director will
alert the director to areas of testing that
are not performing as expected and may
also indicate subtle shifts or trends that,
over time, could affect patient results.
As there is no on-site, external proctor
for PT testing in a laboratory, the testing
relies in large part on an honor system.
The PT program places heavy reliance
on each laboratory and laboratory
director to self-police their analyses of
PT samples to ensure that the testing is
performed in accordance with the CLIA
requirements. For each PT event,
laboratories are required to attest that
PT samples are tested in the same
manner as patient specimens are tested.
PT samples are to be assessed by
integrating them into the laboratory’s
routine patient workload, and the
testing itself is to be conducted by the
personnel who routinely perform such
testing, using the laboratory’s routine
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methods. The laboratory is barred from
engaging in inter-laboratory
communication pertaining to results
prior to the PT program’s event cut-off
date and must not send the PT samples
or any portion of the PT samples to
another laboratory for testing, even if it
would normally send a patient
specimen to another laboratory for
testing.
Any laboratory that intentionally
refers its PT samples to another
laboratory for analysis risks having its
certification revoked for at least 1 year,
in which case, any owner or operator of
the laboratory risks being prohibited
from owning or operating another
laboratory for 2 years (§ 493.1840(a)(8)
and (b)). The phrase ‘‘intentionally
referred’’ has not been defined by the
statute or regulations, but we have
consistently interpreted this phrase
from the onset of the program to mean
general intent, as in intention to act.
Whether or not acts are authorized or
even known by the laboratory’s
management, a laboratory is responsible
for the acts of its employees. Among
other things, laboratories need to have
procedures in place and train employees
on those procedures to prevent staff
from forwarding PT samples to other
laboratories even in instances in which
they would normally forward a patient
specimen for testing.
In the February 7, 2013 Federal
Register (78 FR 9216), we published a
proposed rule titled Part II—Regulatory
Provisions to Promote Program
Efficiency, Transparency, and Burden
Reduction (hereafter referred to as the
‘‘Burden Reduction proposed rule’’) to
propose reforms to the Medicare and
CLIA regulations that we had identified
as unnecessary, obsolete or excessively
burdensome. In that rule, we proposed
changes to the CLIA PT regulations to
establish policies under which certain
PT referrals by laboratories would
generally not be subject to revocation of
their CLIA certificate or a 2-year
prohibition on laboratory ownership or
operation. To do this, we proposed a
narrow exception in our longstanding
interpretation of what constitutes an
‘‘intentional’’ PT referral.
While that proposed rule was under
development but before its publication,
the Congress enacted the Taking
Essential Steps for Testing Act of 2012
(Pub. L. 112–202, (TEST Act) on
December 4, 2012. The TEST Act
amended section 353 of the PHS Act to
provide the Secretary with discretion as
to which sanctions she would apply to
cases of intentional PT referral.
In the February 7, 2013 Burden
Reduction proposed rule (78 FR 9216),
we stated that we would address the
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TEST Act in future rulemaking, except
that to comply with the TEST Act and
begin to align the CLIA regulations with
the amended CLIA statute, we proposed
to revise the second sentence of
§ 493.801(b)(4) to state that a laboratory
may (as opposed to ‘‘must’’) have its
CLIA certification revoked when we
determine PT samples were
intentionally referred to another
laboratory.
Subsequently, in the September 23,
2013 (78 FR 58386) proposed rule
addressing the FQHC PPS and other
topics, we proposed additional changes
to the CLIA regulations to implement
the TEST Act.
The regulatory changes in this final
rule with comment period will add the
remaining policies and regulatory
changes needed to fully implement the
TEST Act.
B. Proposed and Final Regulatory
Changes
As noted earlier, the TEST Act
provided the Secretary with the
discretion to substitute intermediate
sanctions in lieu of the 2-year
prohibition on the owner and operator
when a CLIA certificate is revoked due
to intentional PT referral, and to
consider imposing alternative sanctions
in lieu of revocation in such cases as
well. The TEST Act provides the
Secretary with the opportunity to frame
policies that will achieve a better
correlation between the nature and
extent of intentional PT referrals at a
given laboratory, and the scope and type
of sanctions or corrective actions that
are imposed on that laboratory and its
owners and operators, as well as any
consequences to other laboratories
owned or operated by those owners and
operators.
As discussed later in this section, we
are finalizing the regulatory changes
proposed in the September 23, 2013
proposed rule, which will divide the
sanctions for PT referral into three
categories based on severity and extent
of the referrals. The first category is for
the most egregious violations,
encompassing cases of repeat PT referral
or cases where a laboratory reports
another laboratory’s test results as its
own. In such cases, we do not believe
that alternative sanctions alone would
be appropriate. Therefore, we proposed
to revoke the CLIA certificate for at least
1 year, ban the owner and operator from
owning or operating a CLIA-certified
laboratory for at least 1 year, and
possibly impose a civil monetary
penalty (CMP).
In keeping with the February 7, 2013
proposed rule (78 FR 9216), we
proposed to define, at § 493.2, a ‘‘repeat
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proficiency testing referral’’ as ‘‘a
second instance in which a proficiency
testing sample, or a portion of a sample,
is referred, for any reason, to another
laboratory for analysis prior to the
laboratory’s proficiency testing program
event cut-off date within the period of
time encompassing the two prior survey
cycles (including initial certification,
recertification, or the equivalent for
laboratories surveyed by an approved
accreditation organization).’’
We believe that a repeat PT referral
warrants revocation of a laboratory’s
CLIA certificate for at least 1 year
because such laboratories have already
been given opportunity to review their
policies, correct their deficiencies,
adhere to regulation and to the
laboratory’s established policy, and
ensure effective training of their
personnel. As there is no on-site,
external proctor for PT testing in a
laboratory, the testing relies in large part
on an honor system. Therefore, when a
PT referral has previously occurred
prior to the event cut-off date within the
two prior survey cycles, we do not
believe that laboratories should be given
additional opportunities to ensure that
they are meeting the CLIA PT
requirements and believe that
revocation of the CLIA certificate should
consequently occur. We also proposed,
in the first category, that the CLIA
certificate be revoked, and the owner
and operator banned from owning or
operating a CLIA-certified laboratory for
at least 1 year, in cases where the PT
sample was referred to another
laboratory, the referring laboratory
received the results from the other
laboratory, and the referring laboratory
reported to the PT program the other
laboratory’s results on or before the
event cut-off date. We noted that PT
programs place heavy reliance on each
laboratory and laboratory director’s
ability to self-police the laboratory’s
analysis of PT samples to ensure that
the testing is performed in accordance
with the CLIA requirements. PT scores
must reflect an individual laboratory’s
performance-reporting results from
another laboratory is deceptive to the
public. These are the most egregious
forms of PT referral and merit the most
severe sanctions.
For example, a laboratory may have
two distinct sites, Laboratory A and
Laboratory B, that operate under
different CLIA numbers, where
Laboratory A has received PT samples
to be tested as part of its enrollment in
PT as required by the CLIA regulations.
If Laboratory A were to refer PT samples
to Laboratory B, receive test results back
at Laboratory A from Laboratory B prior
to the event cutoff date, and report to
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the PT program those results obtained
from Laboratory B, the scores for the PT
event would not reflect the performance
of Laboratory A, but rather the
performance of Laboratory B. Since the
PT scores would actually be reflective of
the accuracy and reliability at
Laboratory B rather than A, the purpose
of the PT would be undermined.
Further, as stated in the CLIA
regulations at § 493.801(a)(4)(ii), the
laboratory must make PT results
available to the public. In this scenario,
any member of the public who sought
to use the reported PT scores to select
a high-quality laboratory would be
deceived by the scores for the results
submitted to the PT program, as they
would expect that they were provided
information about the performance of
Laboratory A when that would not be
the case.
In cases of PT referral where the CLIA
certificate is revoked, the TEST Act
provides the Secretary with discretion
to ban the owner and operator from
owning or operating a CLIA-certified
laboratory for up to 2 years. Prior to the
TEST Act, revocation of a CLIA
certificate for a PT violation always
triggered a 2-year ban on the owner and
operator. Given the severity of
violations involving repeat PT referrals
or the reporting of another laboratory’s
results, we proposed that the laboratory
owner and operator would be banned
from owning or operating a CLIAcertified laboratory for at least 1 year for
any violation within this first category
of sanctions.
We also proposed a second category
of sanctions under which the CLIA
certificate would be suspended or
limited (rather than revoked), in
combination with the imposition of
alternative sanctions. We proposed to
use this approach in those instances in
which a laboratory refers PT samples to
a laboratory that operates under a
different CLIA number before the PT
event close date and, while the
laboratory reports its own results to the
PT program, it receives results from the
second laboratory prior to the event
close date. Such a referral situation
would allow the referring laboratory an
opportunity to confirm, check, or
change its results prior to reporting its
results to the PT program. If, upon
investigation, surveyors determine that
the referral does not constitute a repeat
PT referral, we proposed to suspend or
limit the CLIA certificate for less than 1
year rather than revoke the CLIA
certificate, and proposed that we also
impose alternative sanctions (as an
alternative to revocation of the CLIA
certificate). Further, an alternative
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sanction would always include required
training of staff.
A suspension of the CLIA certificate
means that no testing of human
specimens for health care purposes may
be performed by that laboratory during
the period of suspension. In such cases,
the owner or operator typically
contracts out for laboratory services, or
contracts with another operator to
operate the laboratory under the
contracted laboratory’s CLIA certificate.
In contrast to revocation of the CLIA
certificate and its accompanying ban on
the owner and operator, suspension
usually applies only to the individual
laboratory in question rather than all
laboratories that are under the control of
the owner or operator.
A limitation of the CLIA certificate
means that the laboratory is not
permitted to perform testing or to bill
Medicare or Medicaid for laboratory
work in the specialty or subspecialty
that has been limited, but may continue
to conduct all other testing under its
own CLIA certificate.
In determining whether to suspend or
limit the CLIA certificate, we proposed
to apply the criteria of § 493.1804(d).
For example, we would examine the
extent of the PT referral practice as well
as its duration. If surveyors determine
that, in the previous two survey cycles,
there were prior PT referrals that
occurred but were not cited by CMS,
then the CLIA certificate would always
be suspended rather than just limited.
The duration of the suspension would
reflect the number of samples referred,
the period of time the referrals had been
occurring, the extent of the practice, and
other criteria specified at § 493.1804(d).
Further, for cases in the second
category, we proposed that when the
certificate is suspended or limited,
alternative sanctions would be applied
in addition to the principal sanctions of
suspension or limitation. We proposed
that, at a minimum, the alternative
sanctions would include a CMP to be
determined using the criteria set forth in
§ 493.1834, as well as a directed plan of
correction. Additionally, if the CLIA
certificate is suspended, we proposed to
also impose state on-site monitoring of
the laboratory.
A third category of sanctions was
proposed for those PT referral scenarios
in which the referring laboratory does
not receive test results prior to the event
cut-off date from another laboratory as
a result of the PT referral. We proposed
that in such scenarios, at a minimum,
the laboratory would always be required
to pay a CMP as calculated using the
criteria set forth in § 493.1834, as well
as comply with a directed plan of
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correction. A directed plan of correction
would always include training of staff.
For example, a laboratory may place
PT samples in an area where other
patient specimens are picked up by
courier to take to a reference laboratory.
The reference laboratory courier may
take the PT samples along with the
patients’ specimens. The laboratory
personnel notice that the PT samples are
missing and contact the reference
laboratory to inquire if they have
received the PT samples along with the
patients’ specimens. The reference
laboratory is instructed to discard the
PT samples and not test them since they
were picked up in error. In this case, the
‘‘referring’’ laboratory realized the error,
contacted the receiving laboratory, and
did not receive results back for any of
the PT samples. In this scenario, we
proposed to impose only alternative
sanctions. In determining whether to
impose particular alternative sanctions,
we proposed to rely on the existing
considerations at § 493.1804(c) and (d),
§ 493.1806(c), § 493.1807(b), § 493.1809
and, in the case of civil money
penalties, § 493.1834(d). These current
regulations have proven effective as
enforcement measures over time for
CLIA noncompliance for all
circumstances other than PT referral.
Therefore, we expressed our belief that
these same criteria will be effective in
the imposition of alternative sanctions
for PT referral cases.
In summary, we proposed to amend
§ 493.1840 by revising paragraph (b) to
specify three categories for the
imposition of sanctions for PT referrals.
We believed that these provisions, as
amended, would provide the necessary
detail to fairly and uniformly apply the
discretion granted to the Secretary
under the TEST Act, without being so
specific as to defeat the intent to
provide appropriate flexibility when
taking punitive or remedial action in the
context of a PT referral finding.
We also proposed to make three
conforming changes to the CLIA
regulations at the authority citation for
§ 493 and at § 493.1 and § 493.1800(a)(2)
to include references to the PHS Act as
amended by the TEST Act.
We received 14 timely public
comments on the proposed changes to
the CLIA regulations to implement the
enforcement discretion for PT referral
cases as provided by the TEST Act. The
comments came from a variety of
sources, including laboratory
accreditation organizations, laboratory
professional organizations, medical
societies, health care systems, and a
professional corporation. In general,
commenters supported and favored the
changes to the regulations governing
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enforcement actions for PT referral. The
majority of commenters agreed that the
three categories were reasonable and
would allow CMS to respond to PT
referrals in a measured approach.
However, a few commenters expressed
concern that our proposed approach to
enforcement was too prescriptive and
would not allow for full use of the
discretion afforded by the TEST Act.
Because of the nature and consequences
of the enforcement actions for PT
referral, the seriousness of a PT referral
violation, and the heavy reliance on
each laboratory and laboratory director
to self-police their analysis of PT
samples to ensure that the testing is
performed in accordance with the CLIA
requirements, we developed a
prescriptive framework for enforcement
actions in order to apply sanctions in a
comprehensive, reasonable, and
consistent approach. We respond to
specific comments as follows:
Comment: A few commenters stated
that waived laboratories should be
exempt from penalties associated with
PT referral since they are not required
by law to participate in PT.
Response: While this comment is
outside the scope of this rule, we would
like to clarify that the CLIA statute (42
U.S.C. 263a) states that laboratories
holding a certificate of waiver are only
exempt from subsections (f) and (g) of
the statute. All other subsections apply,
including the prohibition against PT
referral and the statutory consequences
established in subsection (i), which
refers to ‘‘any laboratory’’ that the
Secretary determines has intentionally
referred its PT samples. Therefore, the
statutory requirements under subsection
(i) do apply to waived laboratories that
participate in PT and waived
laboratories are not exempt from the ban
against the referral of PT samples and
the penalties required when PT referral
has been substantiated.
Comment: A commenter questioned
how CMS will ensure regional offices
and state surveyors are consistent in the
application of these changes and the
associated enforcement.
Response: We will continue using the
current process that requires all
suspected PT referral cases to be
reviewed by the CMS Regional Office
and also forwarded to CMS Central
Office for additional review by a team
of experts. The team will continue to
thoroughly review every case to
determine whether the facts support a
determination of PT referral and, if so,
which category of sanctions will be
applied. Written survey and
enforcement guidance and training will
be provided to the regional offices and
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state agencies and will be made publicly
available.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that CMS should develop and adopt a
definition for ‘‘intentional’’ as it applies
to PT referral and add the definition to
§ 493.2 in the CLIA regulations.
Response: While this comment is
outside the scope of this rule, we point
the commenter to the Burden Reduction
proposed rule (78 FR 9216). From the
onset of the CLIA program, we have
consistently interpreted the phrase
‘‘intentionally refers’’ to mean general
intent, as in intention to act. We
proposed the first exception to our
longstanding interpretation of
‘‘intentionally refers’’ in the Burden
Reduction proposed rule. Under that
proposal, a referral would not be
considered ‘‘intentional’’ if our
investigation reveals PT samples were
sent to another laboratory for reflex or
confirmatory testing, the referral is not
a repeat PT referral, and the referral
occurred while acting in full
conformance with the laboratory’s
written, legally accurate, and adequate
standard operating procedure.
Comment: Several commenters
questioned if a repeat PT referral
included multiple analyses on a referred
PT sample or multiple PT samples in
the same PT event.
Response: As stated in the definition
of ‘‘repeat proficiency testing referral,’’
to be considered a repeat PT referral, the
referral must be a second instance in
which a PT sample, or a portion of a
sample, is referred, for any reason, to
another laboratory for analysis prior to
the laboratory’s PT program event cutoff date within the period of time
encompassing the two prior survey
cycles (including initial certification,
recertification, or the equivalent for
laboratories surveyed by an approved
accreditation organization). A single
instance of referral for multiple analyses
on a single PT sample set, or referral for
analyses of multiple samples from the
same PT event, would not be considered
a ‘‘second instance.’’ A second instance
of referral would arise when referral is
made from an entirely different set of PT
samples from an entirely different PT
event sent on a date that is different
from the date of the earlier PT event.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that CMS not revoke a
certificate for a repeat PT referral unless
CMS could determine that the repeat
referral occurred in similar or the same
circumstances to the initial referral.
Response: As stated previously,
except in the most egregious instances
of PT referral where the PT sample was
referred to another laboratory, the
referring laboratory received the results
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from the other laboratory, and the
referring laboratory reported to the PT
program the other laboratory’s results on
or before the event cut-off date, the
laboratory’s CLIA certificate will not be
revoked for a single instance of PT
referral. Such an instance of PT referral
will result in alternative sanctions. This
provides the laboratory an opportunity
to review all policies and procedures
and an opportunity to thoroughly train
all staff to mitigate all chances of a
second instance of PT referral. The
timeframe included in the definition of
a repeat referral has been defined as the
two survey cycles prior to the time of
the PT referral in question. Two survey
cycles generally equates to a 4-year
period on average. This is not a precise
calendar time period but, with respect
to a given laboratory, is carefully
recorded as a matter of actual and
documented survey event dates. We
believe that it is reasonable to expect
laboratories to maintain a heightened
vigilance for this timeframe to ensure
that they do not have any repeated
referrals of PT samples. The narrow
exception to the determination of an
intentional referral described in the
Burden Reduction proposed rule will,
once finalized, be considered a single
instance and will be incorporated in the
determination of whether a repeat PT
referral has taken place.
Comment: Several commenters
questioned whether CMS will finalize
the Burden Reduction proposed rule
which proposed reforms to the Medicare
and CLIA regulations that we identified
as unnecessary, obsolete or excessively
burdensome and questioned how the
September 23, 2013 proposed rule
relates to the Burden Reduction
proposed rule.
Response: In the Burden Reduction
proposed rule, we proposed a narrow
exception to our longstanding
interpretation of what constitutes an
‘‘intentional’’ PT referral. The proposed
narrow exception in the Burden
Reduction rule would work in concert
with the framework described in this
final rule for enforcement for PT referral
to ensure the severity of the sanctions
fits the nature and extent of the PT
referral violation.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern with the first
category of sanctions against the
laboratory and the owner and operator
for the most egregious forms of PT
referral. While the commenters agreed
that the most egregious forms of PT
referral warrant the most serious
sanctions and that the laboratory
director should also be sanctioned, there
was concern about the automatic
prohibition against the laboratory
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owner. Each commenter who raised this
issue expressed concern that a
mandatory 1 year prohibition for
owners, that applies to all laboratories
of that owner, is not reasonable for large
health systems that often own a large
number of laboratories in many
locations. The commenters expressed
concern that patient care may be
impacted if such an owner is prohibited
from obtaining or maintaining a CLIA
certificate for any laboratory that tests
human specimens for health care
purposes. The commenters suggested
that the one year ban for the owner
should be limited to the single
laboratory where the PT referral
occurred.
Response: It is incumbent upon
laboratories to organize in a manner that
allows them to mitigate circumstances
so that when one or more laboratories
are sanctioned, the rest of the laboratory
network is not unduly impacted.
However, we also recognize that there
are benefits to large health systems
organizing in ways to promote
efficiency of care with the least cost to
their patients. We agree that there
should be some discretion in the
regulation to allow for flexibility in the
mandatory 1-year ban against owners of
laboratories that, if barred from
ownership, would create access issues
in the communities in which they serve.
However, when the CLIA certificate is
revoked for the most egregious
violations, encompassing cases of repeat
PT referral or cases where a laboratory
reports another laboratory’s test results
as its own, we believe that the owner
and operator should be banned from
owning or operating a laboratory for at
least 1 year, so we will retain that
sanction. However, in response to
comments, we are adding a provision to
limit the reach of the owner ban for
certain laboratories under the same
ownership as the revoked laboratory if
we find, after review of relevant facts
and circumstances, that patients would
not be at risk if the laboratory were
exempted from the ban, and that there
is no evidence that a laboratory to be
exempted from the ban participated or
was complicit in the PT referral, except
that any laboratory of the owner that
received a PT sample from another
laboratory, and failed to timely report
such receipt to CMS or to a CMSapproved accrediting organization, may
not be exempted from the owner ban. In
assessing whether patients would be
potentially at risk if the laboratory were
exempted from the ban, we will
consider factors including, but not
limited to, the following: The extent to
which staff of the laboratory or
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laboratories that may be exempted from
the owner ban have been adequately
trained, and will promptly have such
training reinforced, regarding PT; the
history of compliance with the CLIA
regulations; evidence of any systemic
quality issues for the laboratory or
laboratories that seek to be exempted
from the owner ban; and the potential
for access to care problems for patients
if the laboratory or laboratories are not
granted an exemption from the owner
ban. We are revising our regulations at
§ 493.1840(b)(1) to incorporate this
exception.
Comment: Several commenters
requested further clarification of when
CMS will limit the suspension or
limitation to the individual laboratory
where the PT referral occurred rather
than suspending or limiting the CLIA
certificate of all of the laboratories
under the control of the owner or
operator. The commenters
recommended that we use a centralized
process to determine whether
suspension or limitation is appropriate
in each case rather than leaving the
decision up to an individual surveyor.
Response: As stated in the September
23, 2013 proposed rule, the CLIA
certificate will be suspended or limited
(rather than revoked), in combination
with alternative sanctions, in those
instances in which a laboratory refers
PT samples to a laboratory that operates
under a different CLIA number before
the PT event close date and, while the
laboratory reports its own results to the
PT program, it receives results from the
second laboratory prior to the event
close date. In contrast to revocation of
the CLIA certificate and its
accompanying ban on the owner and
operator, suspension usually applies
only to the individual laboratory in
question rather than all laboratories that
are under the control of the owner or
operator. Suspension or limitation will
always apply to the laboratory that sent
the PT sample to another laboratory
(that operates under a different CLIA
number) before the PT event close date
and, while the laboratory reports its
own results to the PT program, it
receives results from the second
laboratory prior to the event close date.
We may also suspend or limit the CLIA
certificate of other laboratories operating
under the same owner depending upon
the facts and circumstances of the
individual case. For example, if such a
laboratory received PT samples from
another laboratory and did not report
the receipt of those PT samples to us,
suspension or limitation will also be
considered for that laboratory. As stated
previously, it is incumbent upon
laboratories to organize in a manner to
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mitigate circumstances so that
enforcement against a CLIA certificate
does not unduly impact other
laboratories operating under the same
CLIA number. An exhaustive list of
scenarios cannot be provided since each
case of PT referral is unique and there
is no way to predict every possible
scenario. In determining whether to
suspend or limit the CLIA certificate, we
will examine the extent of the PT
referral practice as well as its duration
and apply the criteria of § 493.1804(d).
We will develop further written
surveyor guidance for the imposition of
the suspension and limitation in PT
referral cases. This guidance will be
publicly available.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern that a CMP will
always be applied to laboratories in PT
referral scenarios in which the referring
laboratory does not receive test results
prior to the event cut-off date from
another laboratory as a result of the PT
referral. Some stated that no sanctions
should be applied in these cases
because they are minor infractions and
this category has no flexibility where it
is most needed.
Response: While PT referrals may
differ in severity and scope, we consider
a PT referral infraction one of the most
serious violations of the CLIA statute
and regulations. PT is a major
component of the CLIA regulations and
plays an integral role in the overall
quality assurance of a laboratory. We
emphasize that there is no on-site,
external proctor for PT in laboratories,
and the testing relies in large part on an
honor system. The PT program places
heavy reliance on each laboratory and
laboratory director to self-police their
analysis of PT samples to ensure that
the testing is performed in accordance
with the CLIA requirements. Because of
these factors, we have determined that
a CMP is always appropriate in those
cases where PT referral has been
substantiated. However, there is no ‘‘one
size fits all’’ CMP for these cases and
there is flexibility in the determination
of the amount of the CMP. The severity
and scope of each case will be evaluated
closely to determine appropriate CMP
amounts in accordance with the
regulation at§ 493.1834, which specifies
the procedures that CMS follows to
impose a CMP and the range of the
penalty amount.
We also note that we received other
comments that were outside the scope
of the September 23, 2013 proposed
rule; and therefore, are not addressed in
this final rule with comment period.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing the proposed
definitions for ‘‘repeat proficiency
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testing referral’’ at § 493.2 and the
changes to § 493.1840, and the three
proposed conforming changes at the
authority citation for Part 493 and at
§ 493.1 and § 493.1800(a)(2) to include
references to the TEST Act. In response
to comments, we are also finalizing the
addition of a new provision at
§ 493.1840(b)(1)(ii) to allow us to except
certain laboratories from the owner ban,
on a laboratory by laboratory basis, if
certain circumstances are met.
V. Other Required Information
A. Requests for Data From the Public
Commenters can gain access to
summarized FQHC data on an expedited
basis by downloading the files listed in
this section, which are available on the
Internet without charge. For detailed
claims data, requestors would follow the
current research request process which
can be found on the Research Data
Assistance Center Web site at https://
www.resdac.org/.
1. FQHC Summary Data. This file
contains data summarized by CCN,
which can be used to model the
proposed methodology and calculate
projected payments and impacts under
the proposed PPS. The data file is
available at https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-ServicePayment/FQHCPPS/.
2. FQHC Proposed GAFs. This file
contains the listed of proposed GAFs by
locality, as published in the Addendum
of this final rule with comment period.
The data file is available at https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/FQHCPPS/
index.html.
3. HCRIS Cost Report Data. The data
included in this file was reported on
Form CMS–222–92. The dataset
includes only the most current version
of each cost report filed with us and
includes cost reports with fiscal year
ending dates on or after September 30,
2009. HCRIS updates this file on a
quarterly basis. The data file is available
at https://www.cms.gov/ResearchStatistics-Data-and-Systems/Files-forOrder/CostReports/HealthClinic.html.
B. Collection of Information
Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995, we are required to provide 30day 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
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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 solicited public comment on the
information collection requirements
(ICRs) regarding the proposed FQHC
rates and adjustments in § 405.2470.
The data that are used in computing
the FQHS PPS rates and adjustments are
derived from the RHC/FQHC cost report
form CMS–222–92, and claims form
UB–04 CMS 1450 (per CMS Pub. 100–
04, Medicare Claims Processing Manual,
Chapter 1). The reporting requirements
for FQHCs are in § 405.2470 of the
Medicare regulations. We noted that
while we were not proposing any new
ICRs, there is currently an OMB
approved information collection request
associated with the RHC/FQHC cost
report which has an OMB control
number of 0938–0107 and an expiration
date of August 31, 2014.
VI. Waiver of Proposed Rulemaking
We ordinarily publish a notice of
proposed rulemaking in the Federal
Register and invite public comment on
the proposed rule. The notice of
proposed rulemaking includes a
reference to the legal authority under
which the rule is proposed, and the
terms and substances of the proposed
rule or a description of the subjects and
issues involved. This procedure can be
waived, however, if an agency finds
good cause that a notice-and-comment
procedure is impracticable,
unnecessary, or contrary to the public
interest and incorporates a statement of
the finding and its reasons in the rule
issued.
In section III.B.2. of this final rule
with comment period, we present
additional technical and conforming
changes. These changes include
specifying that the determination of
reasonable charges continues to apply to
FQHCs under the reasonable cost
payment system and changing the term
‘‘Medicare +Choice’’ to ‘‘Medicare
Advantage.’’ We believe that these
regulatory changes are technical and
conforming in nature, do not change our
payment policies, and provide
clarifications all of which are in the
public’s interest. We note that these
changes do not change our policy and
are technical in nature. As such, we
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believe it unnecessary to provide an
opportunity for public comment on
these non-controversial ministerial
changes.
In section II.E.2. of this final rule with
comment period, we are establishing a
new set of HCPCS G-codes by which
FQHCs are to report their actual charges
to beneficiaries. Consistent with
longstanding policy, the use of these
payment codes does not dictate to
FQHCs how to set their charges. We are
permitting FQHCs to utilize a G-code
that would reflect the sum of regular
rates charged to both beneficiaries and
other paying patients for a typical
bundle of services that would be
furnished per diem to a Medicare
beneficiary. Because section
1834(o)(2)(A) of the Act requires
implementation of the FQHC PPS
beginning on October 1, 2014, it is both
impracticable and contrary to the public
interest to provide an additional period
for public comment before this
methodology is implemented.
Nonetheless, we are soliciting an
additional round of comments with
respect to the G-codes, and will
consider further action if comments
received from the public indicate a need
to amend or revise this component of
implementation.
Therefore, for the reasons stated
previously, we find good cause to waive
the notice of proposed rulemaking for
these technical and conforming changes
to our regulations at §§ 405.501,
405.2468(f)(4), and 410.152, and for our
implantation structure for reporting
charges to Medicare as described in
section II.E.2. of the preamble to this
final rule with comment period.
VII. 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.
VIII. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
This final rule with comment period
is necessary to establish a methodology
and payment rates for a PPS for FQHC
services under Medicare Part B
beginning on October 1, 2014, in
compliance with the statutory
requirements of section 10501(i)(3)(A) of
the Affordable Care Act. This final rule
with comment period is also necessary
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to make—(1) contracting changes for
RHCs; (2) conforming changes to other
policies related to FQHCs and RHCs; (3)
changes to enforcement actions for
improper proficiency testing referrals.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impacts of this
rule as required by Executive Order
12866 on Regulatory Planning and
Review (September 30, 1993), Executive
Order 13563 on Improving Regulation
and Regulatory Review (January 18,
2011), the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA) (September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96–
354), section 1102(b) of the Social
Security Act, section 202 of the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(March 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104–4),
Executive Order 13132 on Federalism
(August 4, 1999) and the Congressional
Review Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct 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). Section 3(f) of Executive Order
12866 defines a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ as an action that is likely to
result in a rule: (1) Having an annual
effect on the economy of $100 million
or more in any 1 year, or adversely and
materially affecting a sector of the
economy, productivity, competition,
jobs, the environment, public health or
safety, or state, local or tribal
governments or communities (also
referred to as ‘‘economically
significant’’); (2) creating a serious
inconsistency or otherwise interfering
with an action taken or planned by
another agency; (3) materially altering
the budgetary impacts of entitlement
grants, user fees, or loan programs or the
rights and obligations of recipients
thereof; or (4) raising novel legal or
policy issues arising out of legal
mandates, the President’s priorities, or
the principles set forth in the Executive
Order.
A regulatory impact analysis (RIA)
must be prepared for major rules with
economically significant effects ($100
million or more in any 1 year). This
final rule with comment period is an
economically significant rule because
we estimate that the FQHC PPS will
increase payments to FQHCs by more
than $100 million in 1 year. We believe
that this regulation would not have a
significant financial impact on RHCs.
We estimate that this rulemaking is
‘‘economically significant’’ as measured
by the $100 million threshold, and
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hence also a major rule under the
Congressional Review Act. Accordingly,
we have prepared a RIA that, to the best
of our ability, presents the costs and
benefits of the rulemaking.
The RFA requires agencies to analyze
options for regulatory relief of small
businesses. For purposes of the RFA,
small entities include small businesses,
nonprofit organizations, and
government jurisdictions. All RHCs and
FQHCs are considered to be small
entities. The great majority of hospitals
and most other health care providers
and suppliers are small entities, either
by being nonprofit organizations or by
meeting the SBA definition of a small
business (having revenues of less than
$7.0 million to $35.5 million in any 1
year). The provisions in this final rule
result in an increase of approximately
32 percent in the Medicare payment to
FQHCs, without taking into account the
application of the ‘‘lesser of’’ provision
discussed earlier, and no financial
impact on RHCs. Individuals and states
are not included in the definition of a
small entity.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act
requires us to prepare a regulatory
impact analysis if a rule may have a
significant impact on the operations of
a substantial number of small rural
hospitals. This analysis must conform to
the provisions of section 604 of the
RFA. For purposes of section 1102(b) of
the Act, we define a small rural hospital
as a hospital that is located outside of
a metropolitan statistical area and has
fewer than 100 beds. As its measure of
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities,
HHS uses a change in revenue of more
than 3 to 5 percent. We have not
prepared an analysis for section 1102(b)
of the Act because we have determined
that this final rule with comment period
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 (UMRA)
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. In 2014, that is
approximately $141 million. This rule
does not include any mandates that
would impose spending costs on state,
local, or tribal governments in the
aggregate, or by the private sector, that
would exceed the threshold of $141
million.
Executive Order 13132 establishes
certain requirements that an agency
must meet when it promulgates a
proposed rule (and subsequent final
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rule) that imposes substantial direct
compliance costs on state and local
governments, preempts state law, or
otherwise has Federalism implications.
This final rule with comment period
would not have a substantial effect on
state and local governments, preempt
state law, or otherwise have Federalism
implications.
This final rule with comment period
is subject to the Congressional Review
Act provisions of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.) and has been
transmitted to the Congress and the
Comptroller General for review.
C. Limitations of Our Analysis
Our quantitative analysis presents the
projected effects of our policy changes,
as well as statutory changes effective on
FQHCs for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2014.
We estimated the effects of individual
policy changes by estimating payments
per visit 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 the
number of visits or the prevalence of
new patients or IPPE and AWVs
furnished to Medicare beneficiaries. To
the extent that there are changes in the
volume and mix of services furnished
by FQHCs, the actual impact on total
Medicare revenues will be different
from those shown in Table 3 (Impact of
the PPS on Payments to FQHCs). In
addition, because we have limited
information to accurately project actual
FQHC charges, Table 3 does not take
into account the application of ‘‘lesser
of’’ provision in section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of
the Act. (For more information, see
sections II.E.2 and VII.D.1 of this final
rule with comment period).
D. Anticipated Effects of the FQHC PPS
1. Effects on FQHCs
As required by section 1834(o)(2)(B)(i)
of the Act, initial payment rates
(Medicare and coinsurance) under the
FQHC PPS must equal 100 percent of
the estimated amount of reasonable
costs, as determined without the
application of the current system’s UPLs
or productivity standards that can
reduce a FQHC’s per visit rate. We will
pay FQHCs a single encounter-based
rate per beneficiary per day, while
allowing for an exception to the per
diem PPS payment for subsequent
injury or illness and mental health
services furnished on the same day as a
medical visit, adjusting for geographic
differences in the cost of inputs by
applying an adaptation of the GPCI used
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25469
to adjust payment under the PFS, and
further adjusting the encounter-based
rate when a FQHC furnishes care to a
patient that is new to the FQHC or to a
beneficiary receiving a IPPE or AWV.
Based on comparisons of the final PPS
rate to the AIRs (as listed on the FQHC
cost reports), the FQHC PPS is estimated
to have an overall impact of increasing
total Medicare payments to FQHCs by
approximately 32 percent. As discussed
in section II.E.2. of this final rule with
comment period, while Medicare
payments under the FQHC PPS shall be
80 percent of the lesser of the actual
charge or the PPS rate, this impact
analysis is based on payment at the PPS
rate does not take into account the
application of ‘‘lesser of’’ provision in
1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act. The FQHC PPS
is effective for cost reports beginning on
or after October 1, 2014. This impact is
fully implemented when all FQHCs are
paid under the FQHC PPS and reflects
the additional payment rate update
based on the MEI for all of 2015 (fiscal
year through the end of the calendar
year). (See section II.D. of this final rule
with comment period for a discussion of
the use of the MEI update to calculate
the first year’s base payment amount
under the FQHC PPS.)
If we apply the ‘‘lesser of’’ provision
in section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act and
assume that FQHCs’ charge structures
would remain the same, approximately
65 percent of FQHCs would be paid less
under the FQHC PPS rate than they are
currently paid. However, FQHCs are
responsible for their own pricing
structures, and we have limited
information to accurately project actual
FQHC charges under the new PPS.
Moreover, our analysis of the potential
impact of the application of the ‘‘lesser
of’’ provision in section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of
the Act compares the applicable per
diem PPS rate with the charge or sum
of charges for the individual HCPCS
codes listed on the claims in our
sample. As discussed in section II.E.2.
of this final rule with comment period,
we are establishing HCPCS G-codes for
FQHCs to report their Medicare FQHC
visits. We will pay FQHCs based on the
lesser of the actual charge reported for
the G-code or the PPS rate on each
claim. FQHCs will need to establish
charges for these G-codes, and we
cannot accurately project the charges
that FQHCs will establish for these Gcodes. Because we have no means to
predict behavioral response on charging
by the FQHC community, in the impact
table (Table 3), we continue to compare
current payments to the PPS rates when
discussing the impact of the FQHC PPS,
which would be the maximum impact
that would be expected after application
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of the ‘‘lesser of’’ provision in section
1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act.
Table 3 shows the impact on cost
reporting entities and their associated
delivery sites of the fully implemented
FQHC PPS payment rates compared to
current payments to FQHCs. The
analysis is based on cost reports from
freestanding and provider-based FQHCs
with cost reporting periods ending
between June 30, 2011, and June 30,
2013. We note that the impact analysis
includes cost reporting entities and
claims encounters that were excluded
from the modeling as statistical outliers
based on estimated costs. A FQHC with
multiple sites has the option of filing a
consolidated cost report, and the sample
used to calculate the impacts reflects
1,240 cost reporting entities that
represent 3,830 delivery sites.
The following is an explanation of the
information represented in Table 3:
• Column A (Number of costreporting entities): This column shows
the number of cost-reporting entities for
each impact category. Urban/rural status
and census division were determined
based on the geographic location of the
cost reporting entity. Categories for
Medicare volume were defined from
cost report data, based on tertiles for the
percent of total visits that were
identified as Medicare visits. Categories
for total volume were defined from cost
report data, based on tertiles for the total
number of visits for each cost reporting
entity.
• Column B (Number of delivery
sites): This column shows the number of
delivery sites associated with the cost
reporting entities in each impact
category. (Note that delivery sites that
are part of a consolidated cost reporting
entity might not fall into the same
impact category if considered
individually. For example, a cost
reporting entity could include delivery
sites in multiple census division, and
delivery sites were categorized based on
the geographic location of the cost
reporting entity).
• Column C (Number of Medicare
daily visits): This column shows the
number of Medicare daily visits in the
final data set that were used to model
payments under the FQHC PPS. As
discussed in section II.A.4. of this final
rule with comment period and
consistent with the policy discussed in
section II.B.1. of this final rule with
comment period, separately payable
encounters for the same beneficiary at
the same FQHC were combined into a
single daily visit, while allowing for a
separate medical visit, mental health
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visit, and subsequent illness/injury
visit.
• Column D (Effect of statutorily
required changes): This column shows
the estimated fully implemented
combined impact on payments to
FQHCs of changes to the payment
structure that are required by statute.
Removing both the UPL and the
productivity screen is estimated to
increase total Medicare payments to
FQHCs by about 30 percent. The
combined impact in column D also
reflects the FQHC PPS requirement to
calculate payment based on the costs of
all FQHCs, rather than on an individual
FQHC’s costs. We note that the impacts
for column D through H reflect the
growth in the MEI from July 1, 2012
through September 30, 2014, prior to the
application of the forecasted MEI update
for the 15-month period of October 1,
2014 through December 31, 2015.
• Columns E through H (Effects of the
Adjustments to the Average Cost per
Visit): These columns show the
estimated fully implemented impacts on
Medicare payments to FQHCs due to the
policy changes. In developing the
Medicare FQHC PPS, section
10501(i)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care
Act requires us to take into account the
type, intensity, and duration of FQHC
services, and allows other adjustments,
such as geographic adjustments. As we
discussed in section II.A.4. of this final
rule with comment period, the cost
report data are insufficient for modeling
these types of adjustments, so we used
the HCPCS codes in the FQHC claims
data to support the development of the
FQHC PPS rate and adjustments.
• Column E (Effect of daily visit (per
diem) rate): This column shows the
estimated fully implemented impact on
payments to FQHCs of the proposal to
pay a single encounter-based rate per
beneficiary per day, while allowing an
exception to the per diem PPS payment
for subsequent injury or illness and
mental health services furnished on the
same day as a medical visit. As it is
uncommon for FQHCs to bill more than
one visit per day for the same
beneficiary, this adjustment would have
minimal effect on most FQHCs.
• Column F (Effect of new patient/
IPPE/AWV adjustment): This column
shows the estimated fully implemented
impact on payments to FQHCs of the
proposal to adjust the encounter-based
rate by 1.3416 when a FQHC furnished
care to a patient that was new to the
FQHC or to a beneficiary receiving an
IPPE or AWV. As new patient visits,
IPPEs, and AWVs accounted for
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approximately 3 percent of all FQHC
visits, this adjustment would have
limited reduction on the base encounter
rate, after application of budget
neutrality, and a limited redistribution
effect among FQHCs.
• Column G (Effect of the FQHC
GAF): This column shows the estimated
fully implemented impact on payments
to FQHCs of adjusting payments for
geographic differences in costs by
applying an adaptation of the GPCIs
used to adjust payment for physician
work and practice expense under the
PFS.
• Column H (Combined effect of all
PPS adjustments): This column shows
the estimated fully implemented impact
on payments to FQHCs of the
adjustments in columns E through G.
The combined effects of these
adjustments on overall Medicare
payment to FQHCs would be 0.1 percent
as the effects of these adjustments
would be primarily redistributive and
would have minimal impact on
Medicare payments in the aggregate.
While the effect of these various
adjustments was budget neutral within
the model, the impact analysis includes
cost reporting entities and claims
encounters that were excluded from the
modeling as statistical outliers based on
estimated costs.
• Column I (Combined effect of all
policy changes and MEI adjustment):
This column shows the estimated fully
implemented impact on payments to
FQHCs of removing the UPL and
productivity screen in Column D, the
adjustments to the PPS rates in the
preceding columns, and the application
of the forecasted MEI update for the 15month period of October 1, 2014
through December 31, 2015.
Table 3 reflects the impacts on cost
reporting entities and their associated
delivery sites. This table shows both the
impact on payments to FQHCs of the
statutorily required changes to the
payment structure (Column D) and the
redistributive effects of the adjustments
to the average cost per visit (Columns E
through H). Column I reflects the
combined impact on cost reporting
entities of the overall PPS rates and
adjustments and MEI update. This table
does not model application of the
provision that Medicare pay FQHCs the
lesser of the actual charge or the PPS
payment rate; instead, is assumes
payment at the full PPS rate. Actual
payments to FQHCs will depend on the
actual charges they establish under the
PPS.
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TABLE 3—IMPACT OF THE PPS ON PAYMENTS TO FQHCS
(A)
Number of
costreporting
entities
(B)
Number of
delivery
sites
(C)
Number of
medicare
daily visits
(D)
Effect of
statutorily
required
changes
(%)
(E)
Effect of
daily visit
(per diem)
rate
(%)
(F)
Effect of
new
patient/
IPPE/AWV
adjustment
(%)
1,240
3,830
5,585,393
29.9
0.0
0.1
712
373
155
1,945
900
985
2,738,585
1,447,261
1,399,547
24.3
41.9
30.1
0.0
0.1
0.0
413
414
413
1,102
1,403
1,325
897,136
1,857,689
2,830,568
24.8
27.4
33.4
413
414
413
555
983
2,292
450,262
1,387,779
3,747,352
99
111
158
81
200
87
120
107
272
5
255
334
497
214
753
340
332
341
758
6
709,020
452,168
651,546
266,360
1,100,268
379,357
388,565
392,506
1,243,251
2,352
All FQHCs .................................................
Urban/rural Status:
Urban .................................................
Rural ...................................................
Mixed rural-urban ...............................
Medicare Volume:
Low (<6.9% of total visits) .................
Medium (6.9%–13.2% of total visits)
High (>13.2% of total visits) ..............
Total Volume:
Low (<17,340 total visits) ...................
Medium (17,340–42,711 total visits) ..
High (>42,711 total visits) ..................
Census Division:
New England ......................................
Middle Atlantic ....................................
East North Central .............................
West North Central ............................
South Atlantic .....................................
East South Central .............................
West South Central ............................
Mountain ............................................
Pacific .................................................
U.S. Territories ...................................
2. Effects on RHCs
While we expect that removing the
restriction on contracting will result in
cost savings for RHCs that employ an
NP or PA and will no longer need to
conduct employment searches to meet
their additional staffing needs, the
financial impact on RHCs is expected be
small and cannot be quantified.
There is no Medicare impact on RHCs
as a result of the implementation of the
FQHC PPS.
3. Effects on Other Providers and
Suppliers
There would be no financial impact
on other providers or suppliers as a
result of the implementation of the
FQHC PPS.
4. Effects on the Medicare and Medicaid
Programs
We estimate that annual Medicare
spending for FQHCs during the first 5
years of implementation would increase
as follows:
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES3
TABLE 4—ESTIMATED INCREASE IN ANNUAL MEDICARE PAYMENTS TO
FQHCS *
Fiscal year
2015
2016
2017
2018
Estimated
increase in
payments
($ in millions)
................................
................................
................................
................................
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170
250
260
280
Jkt 232001
(H)
Combined
effect of all
PPS
adjustments
(%)
(I)
Effect of all
policy
changes
and MEI
adjustment
(%)
0.1
0.1
31.9
0.1
0.0
0.0
3.2
¥3.1
¥2.7
3.3
¥3.1
¥2.7
30.2
39.4
28.3
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.4
0.1
¥0.1
3.5
0.6
¥1.3
3.9
0.7
¥1.4
31.4
30.1
33.3
33.6
31.8
28.8
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.2
0.2
0.0
¥0.1
¥1.4
0.6
0.1
¥1.1
0.6
35.6
32.1
31.4
27.4
25.9
31.3
31.6
32.1
37.3
30.5
31.3
27.2
43.9
¥0.1
¥0.1
0.0
¥0.1
0.1
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.1
0.1
¥0.1
0.2
0.1
0.1
¥0.1
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.0
1.5
2.2
3.6
¥3.2
¥5.3
¥3.0
¥6.9
¥5.0
¥2.1
7.5
¥1.1
2.1
3.7
¥3.2
¥5.3
¥3.0
¥6.9
¥4.8
¥1.6
7.6
0.5
32.0
32.5
28.9
26.4
29.9
29.6
26.1
31.0
38.7
46.5
(G)
Effect of
FQHC
GAF
(%)
TABLE 4—ESTIMATED INCREASE IN AN- increased by the percentage increase in
NUAL MEDICARE PAYMENTS TO the MEI. After the second year of
implementation, PPS rates will be
FQHCS *—Continued
increased by the percentage increase in
a market basket of FQHC goods and
services as established through
Fiscal year
regulations, or, if not available, the MEI.
While we will consider the merits of
2019 ................................
300 estimating a FQHC market basket for use
in base payment updates after the
* These impacts do not take into account the
application of ‘‘lesser of’’ provision in section second year of the PPS, payment
1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act. (For more informa- estimates were updated annually by the
tion, see sections II.E.2 and VII.D.1 of this MEI for purposes of this analysis.
final rule with comment period).
There is no financial impact on the
As discussed in section II.E.2. of this
Medicaid program as a result of the
final rule comment period, while
implementation of the Medicare FQHC
Medicare payments under the FQHC
PPS.
PPS shall be 80 percent of the lesser of
5. Effects on Medicare Beneficiaries
the actual charge or the PPS rate, this
table is based on payment at the PPS
Coinsurance under the FQHC PPS
rate does not take into account the
would be 20 percent of the lesser of the
application of ‘‘lesser of’’ provision in
1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act because we have FQHC’s charge or the PPS rate. Under
limited information to accurately project the current reasonable cost payment
actual FQHC charges. We intend for the system, beneficiary coinsurance for
estimated aggregate payment rates under FQHC services is assessed based on the
FQHC’s charge, which can be more than
the FQHC PPS to equal 100 percent of
coinsurance based on the AIR. An
the estimated amount of reasonable
analysis of a sample of FQHC claims
costs, as determined without the
application of the current system’s UPLs data for dates of service between
January 1, 2011 through June 30, 2013
or productivity standards. We note that
indicated that beneficiary coinsurance
the estimated increase in payments for
based on 20 percent of the FQHC’s
FY 2015 is smaller than for subsequent
charges was approximately $29 million
years because FQHCs will be
higher, or 20 percent more, than if
transitioning into the PPS throughout
coinsurance had been assessed based on
FY 2015 based on their own cost
20 percent of the lesser of the FQHC’s
reporting periods.
After the first year of implementation, charge or the applicable all-inclusive
the PPS payment rates must be
rate.
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Estimated
increase in
payments
($ in millions)
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Based on comparisons of the final PPS
rate to the AIRs, the FQHC PPS is
estimated to have an overall impact of
increasing total Medicare payments to
FQHCs by approximately 32 percent,
prior to taking into account the impact
of the ‘‘lesser of’’ provision. This overall
32 percent increase translates to a 32
percent increase to beneficiary
coinsurance if it were currently assessed
based on the FQHC’s AIR and if, under
the PPS, it would always be assessed
based on the PPS rate. Because the
charge structure among FQHCs varies,
and beneficiary liability for the same
mix of FQHC services could differ
significantly based on the differences in
charge structures, we have insufficient
data to estimate the change to
beneficiary coinsurance due to the
FQHC PPS.
E. Effects of Other Policy Changes
1. Effects of Policy Changes for FQHC’s
and RHC’s
a. Effects of RHC Contracting Changes
Removal of the restrictions on RHCs
contracting with nonphysician
practitioners when the statutory
requirement to employ an NP or a PA
is met will provide RHCs with greater
flexibility in meeting their staffing
requirements. The ability to contract
with NPs, PAs, CNMs, CP, and CSWs
will provide RHCs with additional
flexibility with respect to recruiting and
retaining non-physician practitioners,
which may result in increasing access to
care in rural areas. There is no cost to
the federal government and we cannot
estimate a cost savings for RHCs.
b. Effects of the FQHC and RHC
Conforming Changes
There are no costs associated with the
clarifying, technical, and conforming
changes to the FQHC and RHC
regulations.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES3
2. Effects of CLIA Changes for
Enforcement Actions for Proficiency
Testing Referral
As discussed in section IV. of this
final rule with comment period, we
have made a number of clarifications
and changes pertaining to the
regulations governing adverse actions
for PT referral under CLIA, which, in
combination with other actions
implement the TEST Act and will
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Jkt 232001
ensure conformance between the TEST
Act and our regulations. The TEST Act
provides the Secretary with the
discretion to apply alternative sanctions
in lieu of potential principal sanctions
in cases of intentional PT referral.
Alternative sanctions may include any
combination of civil money penalties,
directed plan of correction (such as
required remedial training of staff),
temporary suspension of Medicare or
Medicaid payments, or state onsite
monitoring.
From 2007 through 2011 there were
41 cases of cited, intentional PT referral.
Of these 41 cases (averaging
approximately 8 per year), we estimate
that 28 (or approximately 6 per year on
average) may have fit the terms of this
rule to have alternative sanctions
applied. Based on discussions with the
most recently affected laboratories that
were cited for PT violations, we
estimate that the average cost of the
sanctions applicable under current
regulations is approximately $578,400
per laboratory. The largest single type of
cost is the expense to the laboratory or
hospital to contract out for management
of the laboratory, and to pay laboratory
director fees, due to the 2-year ban that
prohibits the owner and operator from
owning or operating a CLIA-certified
laboratory in accordance with
revocation of the CLIA certificate. We
have not included legal expenses in this
cost estimate, as it is not possible to
estimate the extent to which laboratories
may still appeal the imposition of the
alternative sanctions in this proposed
rule. If the expense of alternative
sanctions averaged $150,000 per
laboratory, we estimate the annual fiscal
savings of the changes to average
approximately $2.6 million ($578,400
minus $150,000 for 6 laboratories).
While the total savings may not be large,
the savings to the individual laboratory
or hospital that is affected can be
significant. However, we note that the
$2.6 million estimate may overstate or
understate the provision’s savings to
laboratories. For example, if under
current regulations the prior
management is fired instead of being
reassigned to other duties for the 2-year
period, some of the costs of paying for
the new management’s salaries, benefits
and training may be able to be drawn
from funding that had previously been
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
earmarked to pay those expenses for
their predecessors. That is, the costs
associated with the new employee could
be offset by the savings gained when the
former employee is terminated. Any
such offset will result in lower savings
than was estimated earlier. However,
there are also unknowns that may result
in larger savings than estimated earlier.
For example, we have no data on
whether terminated management
historically received severance
packages. If they did, those savings
would have to be added to the savings
we noted earlier. Such changes in
severance payments would represent
transfer effects of the proposed rule,
rather than net social costs or benefits.
In general, it is only to the extent that
new laboratory directors put forth more
effort than temporarily-banned
laboratory directors (due, for example,
to the need to familiarize themselves
with laboratories they have not
previously operated) or that support
staff put forth more effort to make the
new management arrangements than
they would addressing alternative
sanctions that society’s resources would
be freed for other uses by the new
provision; thus, a comprehensive
estimate of laboratory savings would
represent some combination of transfers
and net social benefits. While we
recognize these potential inaccuracies in
our estimates, we lack data to account
for these considerations.
F. Alternatives Considered
This final rule with comment period
contains a range of policies, including
some provisions related to specific
statutory provisions. The preceding
sections of this rule provide
descriptions of the statutory provisions
that are addressed, identifies those
policies when discretion has been
exercised, presents rationale for our
final policies and, where relevant,
alternatives that were considered.
G. Accounting Statement and Table
As required by OMB Circular A–4
(available at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars_
a004_a-4/), we have prepared an
accounting statement table showing the
classification of the impacts associated
with implementation of this final rule
with comment period.
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TABLE 5—ACCOUNTING STATEMENT: CLASSIFICATION OF ESTIMATED EXPENDITURES UNDER THE FQHC PPS
Units
Category
Estimates
Discount rate
(%)
Year dollar
Transfers
Federal Annualized Monetized Transfers (in millions) .............................
From Whom to Whom ..............................................................................
H. Conclusion
The previous analysis, together with
the remainder of this preamble,
provides our Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis and a Regulatory Impact
Analysis.
In accordance with the provisions of
Executive Order 12866, this regulation
was reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget.
200
204
[Amended]
List of Subjects
2. Section 405.501(b) is amended by
removing the phrase ‘‘Federally
qualified health centers and’’ and
adding in its place the phrase ‘‘FQHCs
that are authorized to bill under a
reasonable cost system, and’’.
■ 3. Section 405.2400 is revised as
follows:
42 CFR Part 405
§ 405.2400
Administrative practice and
procedure, Health facilities, Health
professions, Kidney diseases, Medical
devices, Medicare, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Rural
areas, and X-rays.
Subpart X is based on the provisions
of the following sections of the Act:
(a) Section 1833—Amounts of
payment for supplementary medical
insurance services.
(b) Section 1861(aa)—Rural health
clinic services and Federally qualified
health center services covered by the
Medicare program.
(c) Section 1834(o)—Federally
qualified health center prospective
payment system beginning October 1,
2014.
■ 4. In § 405.2401, paragraph (b) is
amended as follows:
■ A. Removing the definition of ‘‘Act’’.
■ B. Revising the definition of
‘‘Allowable costs’’.
■ C. Removing the definition of
‘‘Carrier’’.
■ D. Adding the definitions of ‘‘Certified
nurse midwife (CNM),’’ ‘‘Clinical
psychologist (CP)’’, and ‘‘Clinical social
worker (CSW)’’ in alphabetical order.
■ E. Revising the definitions of
‘‘Coinsurance’’ and ‘‘Deductible’’.
■ F. Adding the definitions of
‘‘Employee’’ and ‘‘HRSA’’ in
alphabetical order.
■ G. Revising paragraphs (1) through (3)
of the definition of ‘‘Federally qualified
health center (FQHC)’’.
■ H. Removing the definition of
‘‘Intermittent nursing care’’.
■ I. Adding the definition of ‘‘Medicare
Administrative Contractor (MAC)’’ in
alphabetical order.
■ J. Removing the definitions of ‘‘Nursemidwife’’, ‘‘Nurse practitioner and
physician assistant’’, and Part-time
nursing care’’.
42 CFR Part 410
Health facilities, Health professions,
Kidney diseases, Laboratories,
Medicare, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Rural areas, X-rays.
42 CFR Part 491
Grant programs—health, Health
facilities, Medicaid, Medicare,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Rural areas.
42 CFR Part 493
Administrative practice and
procedure, Grant programs—health,
Health facilities, Laboratories, Medicaid,
Medicare, Penalties, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services amends 42 CFR
Chapter IV as set forth below:
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES3
PART 405—FEDERAL HEALTH
INSURANCE FOR THE AGED AND
DISABLED
1. The authority citation for part 405
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Secs. 205(a), 1102, 1861,
1862(a), 1869, 1871, 1874, 1881, and 1886(k)
of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 405(a),
1302, 1395x, 1395y(a), 1395ff, 1395hh,
1395kk, 1395rr and 1395ww(k)), and sec. 353
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Jkt 232001
■
PO 00000
Basis.
Frm 00039
Fmt 4701
7
3
2014–2018
2014–2018
Federal Government to FQHCs that receive payments under
Medicare.
of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C.
263a).
§ 405.501
2014
2014
Period
covered
Sfmt 4700
K. Adding the definitions of ‘‘Nurse
practitioner (NP)’’, ‘‘Physician assistant
(PA)’’ and ‘‘Prospective payment system
(PPS)’’ in alphabetical order.
■ L. Revising the definitions of
‘‘Reporting period’’ and ‘‘Rural health
clinic’’.
■ M. In the definition of ‘‘Visiting nurse
services,’’ removing the phrase
‘‘registered nurse’’ and adding in its
place the phrase ‘‘registered
professional nurse’’.
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
§ 405.2401
Scope and definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
Allowable costs means costs that are
incurred by a RHC or FQHC that is
authorized to bill based on reasonable
costs and are reasonable in amount and
proper and necessary for the efficient
delivery of RHC and FQHC services.
*
*
*
*
*
Certified nurse midwife (CNM) means
an individual who meets the applicable
education, training, and other
requirements of § 410.77(a) of this
chapter.
Clinical psychologist (CP) means an
individual who meets the applicable
education, training, and other
requirements of § 410.71(d) of this
chapter.
Clinical social worker (CSW) means
an individual who meets the applicable
education, training, and other
requirements of § 410.73(a) of this
chapter.
Coinsurance means that portion of the
RHC’s charge for covered services or
that portion of the FQHC’s charge or
PPS rate for covered services for which
the beneficiary is liable (in addition to
the deductible, where applicable).
*
*
*
*
*
Deductible means the amount
incurred by the beneficiary during a
calendar year as specified in § 410.160
and § 410.161 of this chapter.
Employee means any individual who,
under the common law rules that apply
in determining the employer-employee
relationship (as applied for purposes of
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02MYR3
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 85 / Friday, May 2, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
section 3121(d)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986), is considered to
be employed by, or an employee of, an
entity. (Application of these common
law rules is discussed in 20 CFR
404.1007 and 26 CFR 31.3121(d)–1(c).)
Federally qualified health center
(FQHC) * * *
(1) Is receiving a grant under section
330 of the Public Health Service (PHS)
Act, or is receiving funding from such
a grant under a contract with the
recipient of such a grant and meets the
requirements to receive a grant under
section 330 of the PHS Act;
(2) Is determined by the HRSA to
meet the requirements for receiving
such a grant;
(3) Was treated by CMS, for purposes
of Medicare Part B, as a comprehensive
federally funded health center as of
January 1, 1990; or
*
*
*
*
*
HRSA means the Health Resources
and Services Administration.
*
*
*
*
*
Medicare Administrative Contractor
(MAC) means an organization that has a
contract with the Secretary to
administer the benefits covered by this
subpart as described in § 421.404 of this
chapter.
Nurse practitioner (NP) means
individuals who meet the applicable
education, training, and other
requirements of § 410.75(b) of this
chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
Physician assistant (PA) means an
individual who meet the applicable
education, training, and other
requirements of § 410.74(c) of this
chapter.
Prospective payment system (PPS)
means a method of payment in which
Medicare payment is made based on a
predetermined, fixed amount.
Reporting period generally means a
period of 12 consecutive months
specified by the MAC as the period for
which a RHC or FQHC must report
required costs and utilization
information. The first and last reporting
periods may be less than 12 months.
Rural health clinic (RHC) means a
facility that has—
(1) Been determined by the Secretary
to meet the requirements of section
1861(aa)(2) of the Act and part 491 of
this chapter concerning RHC services
and conditions for approval; and
(2) Filed an agreement with CMS that
meets the requirements in § 405.2402 to
provide RHC services under Medicare.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. Section 405.2402 is amended as
follows:
■ A. Revising the section heading.
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Jkt 232001
B. Revising paragraphs (b)
introductory text and (c) introductory
text.
■ C. Revising paragraph (d).
■ D. Removing paragraph (e).
■ E. Redesignating paragraph (f) as
paragraph (e).
■ F. Revising newly redesignated
paragraph (e).
The revisions read as follows:
■
§ 405.2402 Rural health clinic basic
requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Acceptance of the clinic as
qualified to furnish RHC services. If the
Secretary, after reviewing the survey
agency or accrediting organization
recommendation, as applicable, and
other evidence relating to the
qualifications of the clinic, determines
that the clinic meets the requirements of
this subpart and of part 491 of this
chapter, the clinic is provided with—
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Filing of agreement by the clinic.
If the clinic wishes to participate in the
program, it must—
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Acceptance by the Secretary. If the
Secretary accepts the agreement filed by
the clinic, the Secretary returns to the
clinic one copy of the agreement with a
notice of acceptance specifying the
effective date.
(e) Appeal rights. If CMS declines to
enter into an agreement or if CMS
terminates an agreement, the clinic is
entitled to a hearing in accordance with
§ 498.3(b)(5) and (6) of this chapter.
■ 6. Section 405.2403 is amended as
follows:
■ A. Revising the section heading.
■ B. Amending paragraphs (a)
introductory text and (a)(2) by removing
the term ‘‘rural health clinic’’ and by
adding in its place the term ‘‘RHC’’.
■ C. Amending paragraph (a)(3)(ii)(B) by
removing the term ‘‘rural health
clinic’s’’ and adding in its place the
term ‘‘RHC’s’’.
■ D. Amending paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2),
(a)(3)(i), (a)(4)(i), and (a)(4)(ii) by
removing the term ‘‘clinic’’ and adding
in its place the term ‘‘RHC’’.
The revision reads as follow:
§ 405.2403 Rural health clinic content and
terms of the agreement with the Secretary.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 7. Section 405.2404 is amended as
follows:
■ A. Revising the section heading.
■ B. Amending the heading of
paragraph (a), and paragraphs (b)(1)
introductory text, (b)(2), (b)(3), (c), and
(e) introductory text, by removing the
term ‘‘rural health clinic’’ each time it
appears and by adding in its place the
term ‘‘RHC’’.
PO 00000
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Fmt 4701
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C. Amending paragraphs (a)(1),
(a)(2)(i), (a)(2)(ii)(A), and (a)(3) by
removing the term ‘‘clinic’’ each time it
appears and adding in its place the term
‘‘RHC’’.
■ D. Amending paragraph (a)(2)(i) by
removing the term ‘‘clinic’s’’ and adding
in its place the term ‘‘RHC’s’’.
■ E. Amending (a)(2)(ii) introductory
text by removing the phrase ‘‘if he
determines’’ and adding in its place ‘‘if
the Secretary determines’’.
■ F. Amending paragraph (a)(3) by
removing the phrase ‘‘that shall be
deemed’’ and adding in its place the
phrase ‘‘the Secretary deems it’’.
■ G. Amending paragraph (b)(1)
introductory text by removing the term
‘‘he’’ and adding in its place the phrase
‘‘he or she’’.
■ H. Amending paragraph (b)(1)(i) by
removing ‘‘; or’’ and adding in its place
‘‘;’’.
■ I. Amending paragraph (b)(2) by
removing the phrase ‘‘The Secretary will
give’’ and adding in its place the phrase
‘‘The Secretary gives’’.
■ J. Revising paragraph (d).
The revisions read as follows:
■
§ 405.2404 Termination of rural health
clinic agreements.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Notice to the public. Prompt notice
of the date and effect of termination
must be given to the public, through
publication in local newspapers by
either of the following:
(1) The RHC, after the Secretary has
approved or set a termination date.
(2) The Secretary, when he or she has
terminated the agreement.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 8. Section 405.2410 is amended as
follows:
■ A. In paragraph (a)(1), removing the
term ‘‘rural health clinic’’ and adding in
its place the term ‘‘RHC’’.
■ B. In paragraph (a)(2), removing the
term ‘‘Federally qualified health center’’
and adding in its place the term
‘‘FQHC’’.
■ C. Revising paragraph (b).
The revision reads as follows:
§ 405.2410 Application of Part B
deductible and coinsurance.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Application of coinsurance. Except
for preventive services for which
Medicare pays 100 percent under
§ 410.152(l) of this chapter, a
beneficiary’s responsibility is either of
the following:
(1) For RHCs and FQHCs that are
authorized to bill on the basis of the
reasonable cost system—
(i) A coinsurance amount that does
not exceed 20 percent of the RHC’s or
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FQHC’s reasonable customary charge for
the covered service; and
(ii)(A) The beneficiary’s deductible
and coinsurance amount for any one
item or service furnished by the RHC
may not exceed a reasonable amount
customarily charged by the RHC for that
particular item or service; or
(B) For any one item or service
furnished by a FQHC, a coinsurance
amount that does not exceed 20 percent
of a reasonable customary charge by the
FQHC for that particular item or service.
(2) For FQHCs authorized to bill
under the PPS, a coinsurance amount
which is 20 percent of the lesser of—
(i) The FQHC’s actual charge; or
(ii) The FQHC PPS rate for the
covered service.
■ 9. Section 405.2411 is amended as
follows:
■ A. Revising paragraph (a) introductory
text.
■ B. In paragraphs (a)(1) through (a)(3),
removing ‘‘;’’ and adding in its place
‘‘.’’.
■ C. Revising paragraphs (a)(4) and (5).
■ D. Adding a new paragraph (a)(6).
■ E. Revising paragraph (b).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
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§ 405.2411
Scope of benefits.
(a) The following RHC and FQHC
services are reimbursable under this
subpart:
*
*
*
*
*
(4) Services and supplies furnished as
incident to a nurse practitioner,
physician assistant, certified nurse
midwife, clinical psychologist, or
clinical social worker service.
(5) Visiting nurse services when
provided in accordance with 1861(aa)(1)
of the Act and § 405.2416.
(6) Clinical psychologist and clinical
social worker services as specified in
§ 405.2450.
(b) RHC and FQHC services are—
(1) Covered when furnished in a RHC,
FQHC, or other outpatient setting,
including a patient’s place of residence;
(2) Covered when furnished during a
Part A stay in a skilled nursing facility
only when provided by a physician,
nurse practitioner, physician assistant,
certified nurse midwife or clinical
psychologist employed or under
contract with the RHC or FQHC at the
time the services are furnished; and
(3) Not covered in a—
(i) Hospital as defined in section
1861(e) of the Act; or
(ii) Critical access hospital as defined
in section 1861(mm)(1) of the Act.
■ 10. Section 405.2412 is revised to read
as follows:
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§ 405.2412
Physicians’ services.
Physicians’ services are professional
services that are furnished by either of
the following:
(a) By a physician at the RHC or
FQHC.
(b) Outside of the RHC or FQHC by a
physician whose agreement with the
RHC or FQHC provides that he or she
will be paid by the RHC or FQHC for
such services and certification and cost
reporting requirements are met.
§ 405.2413
[Amended]
11. Section 405.2413 is amended as
follows:
■ A. Amending paragraph (a)(2) by
removing the term ‘‘rural health
clinic’s’’ and by adding in its place the
term ‘‘RHC’s or FQHC’s’’.
■ B. Amending paragraph (a)(6) by
removing the term ‘‘clinic’s’’ and by
adding in its place the term ‘‘RHC’s or
‘‘FQHC’s’’ and by removing the term
‘‘clinic’’ and by adding in its place the
term ‘‘RHC’’.
■ 12. Section 405.2414 is amended as
follows:
■ A. Revising the section heading and
paragraphs (a) introductory text and
(a)(1).
■ B. In paragraphs (a)(2) and (3),
removing ‘‘;’’ and adding in its place
‘‘.’’.
■ C. Revising paragraph (a)(4).
■ D. In paragraph (a)(5), removing the
phrase ‘‘They would’’ and adding in its
place the phrase ‘‘The services would’’.
■ E. In paragraph (c), removing the
phrase ‘‘physician assistants, nurse
midwives or specialized nurse
practitioners’’ and adding in its place
the phrase ‘‘physician assistants or
certified nurse midwives’’.
The revisions read as follows:
■
§ 405.2414 Nurse practitioner, physician
assistant, and certified nurse midwife
services.
(a) Professional services are payable
under this subpart if the services meet
all of the following:
(1) Furnished by a nurse practitioner,
physician assistant, or certified nurse
midwife who is employed by, or
receives compensation from, the RHC or
FQHC.
*
*
*
*
*
(4) Are of a type which the nurse
practitioner, physician assistant or
certified nurse midwife who furnished
the service is legally permitted to
perform by the State in which the
service is rendered.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 13. Section 405.2415 is revised to read
as follows:
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§ 405.2415 Services and supplies incident
to nurse practitioner, physician assistant,
certified nurse midwife, clinical
psychologist, or clinical social worker
services.
(a) Services and supplies incident to
a nurse practitioner, physician assistant,
certified nurse midwife, clinical
psychologist, or clinical social worker
service are payable under this subpart if
the service or supply is all of the
following:
(1) Of a type commonly furnished in
physicians’ offices.
(2) Of a type commonly rendered
either without charge or included in the
RHC’s or FQHC’s bill.
(3) Furnished as an incidental,
although integral part of professional
services furnished by a nurse
practitioner, physician assistant,
certified nurse midwife, clinical
psychologist, or clinical social worker.
(4) Furnished in accordance with
applicable State law.
(5) Furnished under the direct
supervision of a physician, nurse
practitioner, physician assistant,
certified nurse midwife, clinical
psychologist or clinical social worker.
(6) In the case of a service, furnished
by a member of the RHC’s health care
staff who is an employee of the RHC.
(b) The direct supervision
requirement is met in the case of any of
the following persons only if the person
is permitted to supervise these services
under the written policies governing the
RHC or FQHC:
(1) Nurse practitioner.
(2) Physician assistant.
(3) Certified nurse midwife.
(4) Clinical psychologist.
(5) Clinical social worker.
(c) Only drugs and biologicals which
cannot be self-administered are
included within the scope of this
benefit.
■ 14. Section 405.2416 is amended as
follows:
■ A. Revising paragraphs (a)
introductory text and (a)(1).
■ B. In paragraph (a)(2), removing ‘‘;’’
and adding in its place ‘‘.’’.
■ C. Revising paragraphs (a)(3) and (4).
■ D. Revising paragraphs (b)
introductory text and (b)(1).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 405.2416
Visiting nurse services.
(a) Visiting nurse services are covered
if the services meet all of the following:
(1) The RHC or FQHC is located in an
area in which the Secretary has
determined that there is a shortage of
home health agencies.
*
*
*
*
*
(3) The services are furnished by a
registered professional nurse or licensed
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practical nurse that is employed by, or
receives compensation for the services
from the RHC or FQHC.
(4) The services are furnished under
a written plan of treatment that is both
of the following:
(i)(A) Established and reviewed at
least every 60 days by a supervising
physician of the RHC or FQHC; or
(B)(1) Established by a nurse
practitioner, physician assistant or
certified nurse midwife; and
(2) Reviewed at least every 60 days by
a supervising physician.
(ii) Signed by the supervising
physician, nurse practitioner, physician
assistant or certified nurse midwife of
the RHC or FQHC.
(b) The nursing care covered by this
section includes the following:
(1) Services that must be performed
by a registered professional nurse or
licensed practical nurse if the safety of
the patient is to be assured and the
medically desired results achieved.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 405.2417
[Amended]
15. Section 405.2417 is amended as
follows:
■ A. In the introductory text, removing
the phrase ‘‘rural health clinic’’ and
adding in its place ‘‘RHC or FQHC’’
■ B. In paragraph (a), removing the
phrase ‘‘rural health clinic’’ and adding
in its place ‘‘RHC or FQHC’’, and
removing ‘‘;’’ and adding in its place
‘‘.’’.
■ C. In paragraph (b), removing ‘‘; or’’
and adding in its place ‘‘.’’.
■ 16. Section 405.2430 is amended as
follows:
■ A. Revising paragraphs (a)(1)
introductory text, (a)(1)(i), and (a)(1)(ii).
■ B. In paragraph (a)(4), removing the
phrase ‘‘Federally qualified health
center’’ and adding in its place the term
‘‘FQHC’’.
■ C. Revising paragraph (b).
■ D. Removing paragraph (c).
■ E. Redesignating paragraph (d) as
paragraph (c).
The revisions read as follows:
■
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§ 405.2430
Basic requirements.
(a) * * *
(1) In response to a request from an
entity that wishes to participate in the
Medicare program, CMS enters into an
agreement with an entity when all of the
following occur:
(i) HRSA approves the entity as
meeting the requirements of section 330
of the PHS Act.
(ii) The entity assures CMS that it
meets the requirements specified in this
subpart and part 491 of this chapter, as
described in § 405.2434(a).
*
*
*
*
*
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(b) Prior HRSA FQHC determination.
An entity applying to become a FQHC
must do the following:
(1) Be determined by HRSA as
meeting the applicable requirements of
the PHS Act, as specified in
§ 405.2401(b).
(2) Receive approval by HRSA as a
FQHC under section 330 of the PHS Act
(42 U.S.C. 254b).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 17. Section 405.2434 is amended as
follows:
■ A. In the introductory text, removing
the phrase ‘‘Federally qualified health
center’’ and adding in its place the term
‘‘FQHC’’.
■ B. In paragraph (a)(1) by removing the
phrase ‘‘Federally qualified health
center’’ and adding in its place the term
‘‘FQHC’’ each time it appears.
■ C. In paragraph (a)(2) by removing the
term ‘‘Centers’’ and adding in its place
the term ‘‘FQHCs’’.
■ D. Revising paragraphs (b), (c)(1), and
(c)(4).
■ E. In paragraph (c)(3) by removing the
phrase ‘‘Federally qualified health
center’’ and adding in its place the term
‘‘FQHC’’ each time it appears.
■ F. In paragraphs (d)(1), (d)(3)
introductory text, (e)(1), (e)(2), and (e)(3)
by removing the phrase ‘‘Federally
qualified health center’’ each time it
appears and adding in its place the term
‘‘FQHC’’.
■ G. In paragraphs (d)(3)(ii) and (e)(2) by
removing the phrase ‘‘Federally
qualified health center’s’’ and adding in
its place the term ‘‘FQHC’s’’ .
The revisions read as follows:
§ 405.2434 Content and terms of the
agreement.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Effective date of agreement. The
effective date of the agreement is
determined in accordance with the
provisions of § 489.13 of this chapter.
(c) * * *
(1) For non-FQHC services that are
billed to Part B, the beneficiary is
responsible for payment of a
coinsurance amount which is 20 percent
of the amount of Part B payment made
to the FQHC for the covered services.
*
*
*
*
*
(4) The FQHC may charge the
beneficiary for items and services that
are not FQHC services. If the item or
service is covered under Medicare Part
B, the FQHC may not charge the
beneficiary more than 20 percent of the
Part B payment amount.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 405.2436
[Amended]
18. Section 405.2436 is amended as
follows:
■
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A. In paragraphs (a) introductory text,
(a)(2), (b)(1)(i), (b)(2)(i), (b)(3), (c)(1)
introductory text, (c)(2), (c)(3), and (d)
by removing the phrase ‘‘Federally
qualified health center’’ each time it
appears and adding in its place the term
‘‘FQHC’’.
■ B. In paragraphs (b)(1) introductory
text, (b)(1)(ii), (b)(2) introductory text,
and (d) by removing the phrase
‘‘Federally qualified health center’s’’
and adding in its place the term
‘‘FQHC’s’’.
■ 19. Section 405.2440 is amended by
revising the introductory text to read as
follows.
■
§ 405.2440 Conditions for reinstatement
after termination by CMS.
When CMS has terminated an
agreement with a FQHC, CMS does not
enter into another agreement with the
FQHC to participate in the Medicare
program unless CMS—
*
*
*
*
*
§ 405.2442
[Amended]
20. Section 405.2442 is amended as
follows:
■ A. In paragraph (a) introductory text
by removing the phrase ‘‘Federally
qualified health center’’ each time it
appears and adding in its place the term
‘‘FQHC’’.
■ B. In paragraph (b) by removing the
phrase ‘‘Federally qualified health
center’s’’ and adding in its place the
term ‘‘FQHC’s’’.
■
§ 405.2444
[Amended]
21. Section 405.2444 is amended as
follows:
■ A. In paragraph (c) by removing the
phrase ‘‘Federally qualified health
center’’ and adding in its place the term
‘‘FQHC’’.
■ B. In paragraphs (a)(2), (b), and (c) by
removing the term ‘‘center’’ each time it
appears, and by adding in its place the
term ‘‘FQHC’’.
■ 22. Section 405.2446 is amended as
follows:
■ A. Revising paragraphs (a), (b)(2), (3),
(4), and (6).
■ B. Removing paragraph (b)(8).
■ C. Redesignating paragraphs (b)(9) and
(10) as (b)(8) and (9), respectively.
■ D. In paragraphs (c) and (d), removing
the phrase ‘‘Federally qualified health
center’’ and adding in its place the term
‘‘FQHC’’.
The revisions read as follows:
■
§ 405.2446
Scope of services.
(a) For purposes of this section, the
terms rural health clinic and RHC when
they appear in the cross references in
paragraph (b) of this section also mean
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Federally qualified health centers and
FQHCs.
(b) * * *
(2) Services and supplies furnished as
incident to a physician’s professional
service, as specified in § 405.2413.
(3) Nurse practitioner, physician
assistant or certified nurse midwife
services as specified in § 405.2414.
(4) Services and supplies furnished as
incident to a nurse practitioner,
physician assistant, or certified nurse
midwife service, as specified in
§ 405.2415.
*
*
*
*
*
(6) Services and supplies furnished as
incident to a clinical psychologist or
clinical social worker service, as
specified in § 405.2452.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 23. Section 405.2448 is amended as
follows:
■ A. Revising paragraphs (a)
introductory text, (a)(1) and (2).
■ B. Removing paragraph (a)(3).
■ C. Redesignating paragraph (a)(4) as
(a)(3).
■ D. In paragraph (b) introductory text
by removing the phrase ‘‘Federally
qualified health centers’’ and adding in
its place the term ‘‘FQHCs’’.
■ E. In paragraph (d) by removing the
phrase ‘‘a Federally qualified health
center service, but may be provided at
a Federally qualified health center if the
center’’ and adding in its place the
phrase ‘‘a FQHC service, but may be
provided at a FQHC if the FQHC’’.
The revisions read as follows:
§ 405.2448
Preventive primary services.
(a) Preventive primary services are
those health services that—
(1) A FQHC is required to provide as
preventive primary health services
under section 330 of the PHS Act; and
(2) Are furnished—
(i) By a or under the direct
supervision of a physician, nurse
practitioner, physician assistant,
certified nurse midwife, clinical
psychologist or clinical social worker; or
(ii) By a member of the FQHC’s health
care staff who is an employee of the
FQHC or by a physician under
arrangements with the FQHC.
*
*
*
*
*
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§ 405.2449
[Amended]
24. Section 405.2449 is amended as
follows:
■ A. In the introductory text by
removing the phrase ‘‘Federally
qualified health center’’ and adding in
its place the term ‘‘FQHC’’.
■ B. In paragraph (b) by removing ‘‘;
and’’ and adding in its place ‘‘.’’.
■
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§ 405.2452
[Amended]
25. Section 405.2452 is amended as
follows:
■ A. In paragraph (a)(2), by removing
the phrase ‘‘Federally qualified health
center’s’’ and adding in its place the
term ‘‘FQHC’s’’.
■ B. In paragraph (a)(6), removing the
term ‘‘center’’ and adding in its place
the term ‘‘FQHC’’.
■ C. In paragraph (b), by removing the
phrase ‘‘federally qualified health
center’’ and adding in its place the term
‘‘FQHC’’.
■ 26. Section 405.2460 is revised to read
as follows:
■
§ 405.2460 Applicability of general
payment exclusions.
The payment conditions, limitations,
and exclusions set out in subpart C of
this part, part 410 and part 411 of this
chapter are applicable to payment for
services provided by RHCs and FQHCs,
except that preventive primary services,
as defined in § 405.2448, are statutorily
authorized for FQHCs and not excluded
by the provisions of section 1862(a) of
the Act.
■ 27. Section 405.2462 is revised to read
as follows:
§ 405.2462
services.
Payment for RHC and FQHC
(a) Payment to provider-based RHCs
and FQHCs that are authorized to bill
under the reasonable cost system. A
RHC or FQHC that is authorized to bill
under the reasonable cost system is paid
in accordance with parts 405 and 413 of
this subchapter, as applicable, if the
RHC or FQHC is—
(1) An integral and subordinate part of
a hospital, skilled nursing facility or
home health agency participating in
Medicare (that is, a provider of
services); and
(2) Operated with other departments
of the provider under common
licensure, governance and professional
supervision.
(b) Payment to independent RHCs and
freestanding FQHCs that are authorized
to bill under the reasonable cost system.
(1) RHCs and FQHCs that are authorized
to bill under the reasonable cost system
are paid on the basis of an all-inclusive
rate for each beneficiary visit for
covered services. This rate is
determined by the MAC, in accordance
with this subpart and general
instructions issued by CMS.
(2) The amount payable by the MAC
for a visit is determined in accordance
with paragraphs (e)(1) and (2) of this
section.
(c) Payment to FQHCs that are
authorized to bill under the prospective
payment system. A FQHC that is
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25477
authorized to bill under the prospective
payment system is paid a single, per
diem rate based on the prospectively set
rate for each beneficiary visit for
covered services. This rate is adjusted
for the following:
(1) Geographic differences in cost
based on the Geographic Practice Cost
Indices (GPCIs) in accordance with
section 1848(e) of the Act and 42 CFR
414.2 and 414.26 are used to adjust
payment under the physician fee
schedule during the same period,
limited to only the work and practice
expense GPCIs.
(2) Furnishing of care to a beneficiary
that is a new patient with respect to the
FQHC, including all sites that are part
of the FQHC. A new patient is one that
has not been treated by the FQHC’s
organization within the previous 3
years.
(3) Furnishing of care to a beneficiary
receiving a comprehensive initial
Medicare visit (that is an initial
preventive physical examination or an
initial annual wellness visit) or a
subsequent annual wellness visit.
(d)(1) Except for preventive services
for which Medicare pays 100 percent
under § 410.152(l) of this chapter,
Medicare pays—
(i) 80 percent of the all-inclusive rate
for FQHCs that are authorized to bill
under the reasonable cost system; and
(ii) 80 percent of the lesser of the
FQHC’s actual charge or the PPS
encounter rate for FQHCs authorized to
bill under the PPS.
(2) No deductible is applicable to
FQHC services.
(e) For RHCs visits, payment is made
in accordance with one of the following:
(1) If the deductible has been fully
met by the beneficiary prior to the RHC
visit, Medicare pays 80 percent of the
all-inclusive rate.
(2) If the deductible has not been fully
met by the beneficiary before the visit,
and the amount of the RHC’s reasonable
customary charge for the services that is
applied to the deductible is less than the
all-inclusive rate, the amount applied to
the deductible is subtracted from the allinclusive rate and 80 percent of the
remainder, if any, is paid to the RHC.
(3) If the deductible has not been fully
met by the beneficiary before the visit,
and the amount of the RHC’s reasonable
customary charge for the services that is
applied to the deductible is equal to or
exceeds the all-inclusive rate, no
payment is made to the RHC.
(f) To receive payment, the FQHC or
RHC must do all of the following:
(1) Furnish services in accordance
with the requirements of subpart X of
part 405 of this chapter and subpart A
of part 491 of this chapter.
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(2) File a request for payment on the
form and manner prescribed by CMS.
■ 28. Section 405.2463 is revised to read
as follows:
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§ 405.2463
What constitutes a visit.
(a) Visit—General. (1) For RHCs, a
visit is either of the following:
(i) Face-to-face encounter between a
RHC patient and one of the following:
(A) Physician.
(B) Physician assistant.
(C) Nurse practitioner.
(D) Certified nurse midwife.
(E) Visiting registered professional or
licensed practical nurse.
(G) Clinical psychologist.
(H) Clinical social worker.
(ii) Qualified transitional care
management service.
(2) For FQHCs, a visit is either of the
following:
(i) A visit as described in paragraph
(a)(1)(i) of this section.
(ii) A face-to-face encounter between
a patient and either of the following:
(A) A qualified provider of medical
nutrition therapy services as defined in
part 410, subpart G, of this chapter.
(B) A qualified provider of outpatient
diabetes self-management training
services as defined in part 410, subpart
H, of this chapter.
(b) Visit—Medical. (1) A medical visit
is a face-to-face encounter between a
RHC or FQHC patient and one of the
following:
(i) Physician.
(ii) Physician assistant.
(iii) Nurse practitioner.
(iv) Certified nurse midwife.
(v) Visiting registered professional or
licensed practical nurse.
(2) A medical visit for a FQHC patient
may be either of the following:
(i) Medical nutrition therapy visit.
(ii) Diabetes outpatient selfmanagement training visit.
(3) Visit—Mental health. A mental
health visit is a face-to-face encounter
between a RHC or FQHC patient and
one of the following:
(i) Clinical psychologist.
(ii) Clinical social worker.
(iii) Other RHC or FQHC practitioner,
in accordance with paragraph (b)(1) of
this section, for mental health services.
(c) Visit—Multiple. (1) For RHCs and
FQHCs that are authorized to bill under
the reasonable cost system, encounters
with more than one health professional
and multiple encounters with the same
health professional that take place on
the same day and at a single location
constitute a single visit, except when
the patient—
(i) Suffers an illness or injury
subsequent to the first visit that requires
additional diagnosis or treatment on the
same day;
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(ii) Has a medical visit and a mental
health visit on the same day; or
(iii) Has an initial preventive physical
exam visit and a separate medical or
mental health visit on the same day.
(2) For RHCs and FQHCs that are
authorized to bill under the reasonable
cost system, Medicare pays RHCs and
FQHCs for more than 1 visit per day
when the conditions in paragraph (c)(1)
of this section are met.
(3) For FQHCs that are authorized to
bill under the reasonable cost system,
Medicare pays for more than 1 visit per
day when a DSMT or MNT visit is
furnished on the same day as a visit
described in paragraph (c)(1) of this
section are met.
(4) For FQHCs billing under the
prospective payment system, Medicare
pays for more than 1 visit per day when
the patient—
(i) Suffers an illness or injury
subsequent to the first visit that requires
additional diagnosis or treatment on the
same day; or
(ii) Has a medical visit and a mental
health visit on the same day.
29. Section 405.2464 is revised to read
as follows:
■
§ 405.2464
Payment rate.
(a) Determination of the payment rate
for RHCs and FQHCs that are
authorized to bill on the basis of
reasonable cost. (1) An all-inclusive rate
is determined by the MAC at the
beginning of the cost reporting period.
(2) The rate is determined by dividing
the estimated total allowable costs by
estimated total visits for RHC or FQHC
services.
(3) The rate determination is subject
to any tests of reasonableness that may
be established in accordance with this
subpart.
(4) The MAC, during each reporting
period, periodically reviews the rate to
assure that payments approximate
actual allowable costs and visits and
adjusts the rate if:
(i) There is a significant change in the
utilization of services;
(ii) Actual allowable costs vary
materially from allowable costs; or
(iii) Other circumstances arise which
warrant an adjustment.
(5) The RHC or FQHC may request the
MAC to review the rate to determine
whether adjustment is required.
(b) Determination of the payment rate
for FQHCs billing under the prospective
payment system. (1) A per diem rate is
calculated by CMS by dividing total
FQHC costs by total FQHC daily
encounters to establish an average per
diem cost.
(2) The per diem rate is adjusted as
follows:
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(i) For geographic differences in the
cost of inputs according to
§ 405.2462(c)(1).
(ii) When the FQHC furnishes services
to a new patient, as defined in
§ 405.2462(c)(2).
(iii) When a beneficiary receives
either of the following:
(A) A comprehensive initial Medicare
visit (that is, an initial preventive
physical examination or an initial
annual wellness visit).
(B) A subsequent annual wellness
visit.
■ 30. Section 405.2466 is amended to
read as follows:
■ A. By revising paragraph (a) and
paragraph (b) heading.
■ B. In paragraph (b)(1) introductory
text by removing the term
‘‘intermediary’’ and by adding in its
place the term ‘‘MAC’’.
■ C. In paragraphs (b)(1)(i), and (b)(1)(ii)
by removing the term ‘‘rural health
clinic’’ each time it appears and by
adding in its place the term ‘‘RHC’’ and
by removing the term ‘‘Federally
qualified health center’’ and by adding
in its place the term ‘‘FQHC’’.
■ D. Revising paragraph (b)(1)(iii).
■ E. In paragraph (b)(1)(iv) by removing
the term ‘‘rural health clinics’’ and by
adding in its place the term ‘‘RHCs’’.
■ F. In paragraphs (b)(1) introductory
text, (b)(2), (c)(1), (c)(2), and (d)(2) by
removing the word ‘‘clinic’’ each time it
appears and by adding in its place the
term ‘‘RHC’’.
■ G. In paragraphs (b)(1) introductory
text, (b)(2), (c)(1), (c)(2), and (d)(2) by
removing the word ‘‘center’’ each time
it appears and by adding in its place the
term ‘‘FQHC’’.
■ H. Revising paragraphs (c)
introductory text and (d)(1).
■ I. In paragraph (d)(2) by removing the
term ‘‘intermediary’’ each time it
appears and by adding in its place the
term ‘‘MAC’’.
The revisions read as follows:
§ 405.2466
Annual reconciliation.
(a) General. Payments made to RHCs
or FQHCs that are authorized to bill
under the reasonable cost system during
a reporting period are subject to annual
reconciliation to assure that those
payments do not exceed or fall short of
the allowable costs attributable to
covered services furnished to Medicare
beneficiaries during that period.
(b) Calculation of reconciliation for
RHCs or FQHCs that are authorized to
bill under the reasonable cost system.
(1) * * *
(iii) The total payment due the RHC
is 80 percent of the amount calculated
by subtracting the amount of deductible
incurred by beneficiaries that is
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attributable to RHC services from the
cost of these services. FQHC services are
not subject to a deductible and the
payment computation for FQHCs does
not include a reduction related to the
deductible.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Notice of program reimbursement.
The MAC notifies the RHC or FQHC that
is authorized to bill under the
reasonable-cost system:
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) Underpayments. If the total
reimbursement due the RHC or FQHC
that is authorized to bill under the
reasonable cost system exceeds the
payments made for the reporting period,
the MAC makes a lump-sum payment to
the RHC or FQHC to bring total
payments into agreement with total
reimbursement due the RHC or FQHC.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 31. Add § 405.2467 to read as follows:
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES3
§ 405.2467
PPS.
Requirements of the FQHC
(a) Cost reporting. For cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2014, FQHCs are paid the lesser of their
actual charges or the FQHC PPS rate
that does all of the following:
(1) Includes a process for
appropriately describing the services
furnished by FQHCs.
(2) Establishes payment rates for
specific payment codes based on such
appropriate descriptions of services.
(3) Takes into account the type,
intensity and duration of services
furnished by FQHCs.
(4) May include adjustments (such as
geographic adjustments) determined by
the Secretary.
(b) HCPCS coding. FQHCs are
required to submit HCPCS codes in
reporting services furnished.
(c) Initial payments. (1) Beginning
October 1, 2014, for the first 15 months
of the PPS, the estimated aggregate
amount of PPS rates is equal to 100
percent of the estimated amount of
reasonable costs that would have
occurred for that period if the PPS had
not been implemented.
(2) Payment rate is calculated based
on the reasonable cost system, prior to
productivity adjustments and any
payment limitations.
(d) Payments in subsequent years. (1)
Beginning January 1, 2016, PPS
payment rates will be increased by the
percentage increase in the Medicare
economic index.
(2) Beginning January 1, 2017, PPS
rates will be increased by the percentage
increase in a market basket of FQHC
goods and services as established
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through regulations, or, if not available,
the Medicare economic index.
■ 32. Section 405.2468 is amended by:
■ A. In paragraph (a) by removing the
term ‘‘intermediary’’ and by adding in
its place the term ‘‘MAC’’.
■ B. In the headings of paragraphs (b)
and (c), by removing the term ‘‘rural
health clinic’’ and by adding in its place
the term ‘‘RHC’’.
■ C. In the heading of paragraph (b) by
removing the term ‘‘Federally qualified
health center’’ and by adding in its
place the term ‘‘FQHC’’.
■ D. In paragraphs (b)(4), (b)(5),
(d)(2)(iv), and (d)(2)(v) by removing the
word ‘‘clinic’’ each time it appears and
by adding in its place the term ‘‘RHC’’.
■ E. In paragraphs (b)(4), (b)(5),
(d)(2)(iv), (d)(2)(v) by removing the
word ‘‘center’’ each time it appears and
by adding in its place the term ‘‘FQHC’’.
■ F. Revising paragraphs (b)(1), (c) and
(d)(1).
■ G. In paragraph (f)(4) by removing the
term ‘‘Medicare +Choice’’ and adding in
its place the term ‘‘Medicare
Advantage’’.
The revisions read as follows:
§ 405.2468
Allowable costs.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) Compensation for the services of a
physician, physician assistant, nurse
practitioner, certified nurse-midwife,
visiting registered professional or
licensed practical nurse, clinical
psychologist, and clinical social worker
who owns, is employed by, or furnishes
services under contract to a FQHC or
RHC.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Tests of reasonableness of cost and
utilization. Tests of reasonableness
authorized by sections 1833(a) and
1861(v)(1)(A) of the Act may be
established by CMS or the MAC with
respect to direct or indirect overall
costs, costs of specific items and
services, or costs of groups of items and
services. For RHCs and FQHCs that are
authorized to bill under the reasonable
cost system, these tests include, but are
not limited to, screening guidelines and
payment limits.
(d) * * *
(1) Costs in excess of amounts
established by the guidelines are not
included unless the RHC or FQHC that
is authorized to bill under the
reasonable cost system provides
reasonable justification satisfactory to
the MAC.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 33. Section 405.2469 is revised to read
as follows:
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§ 405.2469
25479
FQHC supplemental payments.
(a) Eligibility for supplemental
payments. FQHCs under contract
(directly or indirectly) with MA
organizations are eligible for
supplemental payments for FQHC
services furnished to enrollees in MA
plans offered by the MA organization to
cover the difference, if any, between
their payments from the MA plan and
what they would receive either:
(1) Under the reasonable cost payment
system if the FQHC is authorized to bill
under the reasonable cost payment
system, or
(2) The PPS rate if the FQHC is
authorized to bill under the PPS.
(b) Calculation of supplemental
payment. The supplemental payment
for FQHC covered services provided to
Medicare patients enrolled in MA plans
is based on the difference between—
(1) Payments received by the FQHC
from the MA plan as determined on a
per visit basis and the FQHCs allinclusive cost-based per visit rate as set
forth in this subpart, less any amount
the FQHC may charge as described in
section 1857(e)(3)(B) of the Act; or
(2) Payments received by the FQHC
from the MA plan as determined on a
per visit basis and the FQHC PPS rate
as set forth in this subpart, less any
amount the FQHC may charge as
described in section 1857(e)(3)(B) of the
Act.
(c) Financial incentives. Any financial
incentives provided to FQHCs under
their MA contracts, such as risk pool
payments, bonuses, or withholds, are
prohibited from being included in the
calculation of supplemental payments
due to the FQHC.
(d) Per visit supplemental payment. A
supplemental payment required under
this section is made to the FQHC when
a covered face-to-face encounter occurs
between a MA enrollee and a
practitioner as set forth in § 405.2463.
§ 405.2470
[Amended]
34. Section 405.2470 is amended by:
A. In paragraphs (a)(1), (b)(1), (c)(3),
(c)(4), and (c)(5) by removing the term
‘‘intermediary’’, and by adding in its
place the term ‘‘MAC’’.
■ B. In paragraph (b)(2), by removing the
term ‘‘intermediary’s’’ and by adding in
its place the term ‘‘MAC’s’’.
■ C. In paragraphs (a) introductory text,
(c)(1), (c)(2)(i), and (c)(2)(ii) by removing
the term ‘‘rural health clinic’’ and by
adding in its place the term ‘‘RHC’’.
■ D. In paragraphs (a) introductory text,
(c)(1), (c)(2)(i), and (c)(2)(ii) by removing
the term ‘‘Federally qualified health
center’’ and by adding in its place the
term ‘‘FQHC’’.
■
■
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E. In paragraphs (b)(1), (b)(2), (c)(1),
(c)(2) introductory text, (c)(3), (c)(4),
(c)(5), and (c)(6) by removing the term
‘‘clinic’’ each time it appears and by
adding in its place the term ‘‘RHC’’.
■ F. In paragraphs (b)(1), (b)(2), (c)(1),
(c)(2) introductory text, (c)(3), (c)(4),
(c)(5) and (c)(6) by removing the term
‘‘center’’ each time it appears and by the
term ‘‘FQHC’’.
■ 35. Section 405.2472 is amended by
revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
■
§ 405.2472
Beneficiary appeals.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) The beneficiary is dissatisfied with
a MAC’s determination denying a
request for payment made on his or her
behalf by a RHC or FQHC;
*
*
*
*
*
or may furnish services under contract
to the clinic or center. In the case of a
clinic, at least one physician assistant or
nurse practitioner must be an employee
of the clinic.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 493—LABORATORY
REQUIREMENTS
40. The authority citation for part 493
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: Sec. 353 of the Public Health
Service Act, secs. 1102, 1861(e), the sentence
following sections 1861(s)(11) through
1861(s)(16) of the Social Security Act (42
U.S.C. 263a, 1302, 1395x(e), the sentence
following 1395x(s)(11) through 1395x(s)(16)),
and the Pub. L. 112–202 amendments to 42
U.S.C. 263a.
41. Section 493.1 is amended by
revising the second sentence to read as
follows:
■
PART 410—SUPPLEMENTARY
MEDICAL INSURANCE (SMI)
BENEFITS
§ 493.1
36. The authority citation for part 410
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Sec. 1102, 1834, 1871, 1881,
and 1893 of the Social Security Act (42
U.S.C. 1302, 1395m, 1395hh, and 1395ddd).
37. Section 410.152 is amended by
revising paragraph (f) to read as follows:
■
§ 410.152
Amounts of payment.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Amount of payment: Rural health
clinic (RHC) and Federally qualified
health center (FQHC) services. Medicare
Part B pays, for services by a
participating RHC or FQHC that is
authorized to bill under the reasonable
cost system, 80 percent of the costs
determined under subpart X of part 405
of this chapter, to the extent those costs
are reasonable and related to the cost of
furnishing RHC or FQHC services or
reasonable on the basis of other tests
specified by CMS.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 491—CERTIFICATION OF
CERTAIN HEALTH FACILITIES
38. The authority citation for part 491
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 1302); and sec. 353 of the
Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 263a).
39. Section 491.8 is amended by
revising paragraph (a)(3) to read as
follows:
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES3
■
§ 491.8
Staffing and staff responsibilities.
(a) * * *
(3) The physician assistant, nurse
practitioner, nurse-midwife, clinical
social worker or clinical psychologist
member of the staff may be the owner
or an employee of the clinic or center,
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Basis and scope.
* * * It implements sections 1861(e)
and (j), the sentence following section
1861(s)(13), and 1902(a)(9) of the Social
Security Act, and section 353 of the
Public Health Service Act, as amended
by section 2 of the Taking Essential
Steps for Testing Act of 2012. * * *
■ 42. Section 493.2 is amended by
adding the definition of ‘‘Repeat
proficiency testing referral’’ in
alphabetical order, to read as follows:
§ 493.2
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Repeat proficiency testing referral
means a second instance in which a
proficiency testing sample, or a portion
of a sample, is referred, for any reason,
to another laboratory for analysis prior
to the laboratory’s proficiency testing
program event cut-off date within the
period of time encompassing the two
prior survey cycles (including initial
certification, recertification, or the
equivalent for laboratories surveyed by
an approved accreditation organization).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 43. Section 493.1800 is amended by
revising paragraph (a)(2) introductory
text to read as follows:
§ 493.1800
Basis and scope.
(a) * * *
(2) The Clinical Laboratory
Improvement Act of 1967 (section 353
of the Public Health Service Act) as
amended by CLIA 1988, as amended by
section 2 of the Taking Essential Steps
for Testing Act of 2012—
*
*
*
*
*
■ 44. Section 493.1840 is amended by
revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:
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§ 493.1840 Suspension, limitation, or
revocation of any type of CLIA certificate.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Adverse action based on improper
referrals in proficiency testing. If CMS
determines that a laboratory has
intentionally referred its proficiency
testing samples to another laboratory for
analysis, CMS does one of the following:
(1)(i) Revokes the laboratory’s CLIA
certificate for at least 1 year, prohibits
the owner and operator from owning or
operating a CLIA-certified laboratory for
at least 1 year, and may impose a civil
money penalty in accordance with
§ 493.1834(d), if CMS determines that—
(A) A proficiency testing referral is a
repeat proficiency testing referral as
defined at § 493.2; or
(B) On or before the proficiency
testing event close date, a laboratory
reported proficiency testing results
obtained from another laboratory to the
proficiency testing program.
(ii) Following the revocation of a
CLIA certificate in accordance with
paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section, CMS
may exempt a laboratory owner from the
generally applicable prohibition on
owning or operating a CLIA-certified
laboratory under paragraph (a)(8) of this
section on a laboratory-by-laboratory
basis if CMS finds, after review of the
relevant facts and circumstances, that
there is no evidence that—
(A) Patients would be put at risk as a
result of the owner being exempted from
the ban on a laboratory-by-laboratory
basis;
(B) The laboratory for which the
owner is to be exempted from the
general ownership ban participated in
or was otherwise complicit in the PT
referral of the laboratory that resulted in
the revocation; and
(C) The laboratory for which the
owner is to be exempted from the
general ownership ban received a PT
sample from another laboratory in the
prior two survey cycles, and failed to
immediately report such receipt to CMS
or to the appropriate CMS-approved
accrediting organization.
(2) Suspends or limits the CLIA
certificate for less than 1 year based on
the criteria in § 493.1804(d) and
imposes alternative sanctions as
appropriate, in accordance with
§ 493.1804(c) and (d), § 493.1806(c),
§ 493.1807(b), § 493.1809 and, in the
case of civil money penalties,
§ 493.1834(d), when CMS determines
that paragraph (b)(1)(i)(A) or (B) of this
section does not apply but that the
laboratory obtained test results for the
proficiency testing samples from
another laboratory on or before the
proficiency testing event close date.
Among other possibilities, alternative
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sanctions will always include a civil
money penalty and a directed plan of
correction that includes required
training of staff.
(3) Imposes alternative sanctions in
accordance with § 493.1804(c) and (d),
§ 493.1806(c), § 493.1807(b), § 493.1809
and, in the case of civil money
penalties, § 493.1834(d), when CMS
determines that paragraph (b)(1)(i) or (2)
of this section do not apply, and a PT
referral has occurred, but no test results
are received prior to the event close date
by the referring laboratory from the
laboratory that received the referral.
Among other possibilities, alternative
sanctions will always include a civil
money penalty and a directed plan of
correction that includes required
training of staff.
*
*
*
*
*
Dated: April 3, 2014.
Marilyn Tavenner,
Administrator, Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services.
Approved: April 9, 2014.
Kathleen Sebelius,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
Note: The following Addendum will not
appear in the Code of Federal Regulations.
Addendum: FQHC Geographic
Adjustment Factors (FQHC GAFs)
As described in section II.C.2. of this
final rule with comment period, we
used the CY 2015 GPCI values and cost
share weights, as published in the CY
2014 PFS final rule with comment
period, to model the geographic
adjustments for the FQHC PPS rates.
The FQHC GAFs that will be used for
payment under the FQHC PPS will be
adapted from the GPCIs used to adjust
payment under the PFS for that same
period.
The 2014 FQHC GAFs in the
following table are adapted from the CY
2014 PFS GPCIs, as finalized in the CY
2014 PFS final rule with comment
period. The 2014 FQHC GAFs are the
values that will be used to adjust
payment under the FQHC PPS for the
period of October 1 through December
31, 2014. The 2014 FQHC GAFs in the
following table do not reflect the 1.0
floor on the PFS work GPCI that is
effective from January 1, 2014, through
March 31, 2014, which was authorized
by the Pathway for SGR Reform Act of
2013.
The 2015 FQHC GAFs in the
following table are adapted from the CY
2015 PFS GPCIs, as finalized in the CY
2014 PFS final rule with comment
period. The 2015 FQHC GAFs listed
were used to model the geographic
adjustments for the FQHC PPS rates.
Under current law and regulation, these
same values would be used to adjust
payments under the FQHC PPS during
CY 2015.
We note that updates to the PFS
GPCIs due to changes in law or
implemented through regulation would
also apply to the FQHC GAFs, such as
changes to the CY 2015 PFS GPCIs that
may be included in the final CY 2015
PFS rule. The FQHC GAFs would be recalculated and updated through
program instruction so that they remain
consistent with the PFS GPCIs.
2014 FQHC
GAF
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES3
Locality name
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
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
Alabama .............................................................................................................................................................
Alaska .................................................................................................................................................................
Arizona ...............................................................................................................................................................
Arkansas ............................................................................................................................................................
Anaheim/Santa Ana, CA ....................................................................................................................................
Los Angeles, CA ................................................................................................................................................
Marin/Napa/Solano, CA .....................................................................................................................................
Oakland/Berkeley, CA ........................................................................................................................................
San Francisco, CA .............................................................................................................................................
San Mateo, CA .................................................................................................................................................
Santa Clara, CA ...............................................................................................................................................
Ventura, CA ......................................................................................................................................................
Rest of California .............................................................................................................................................
Colorado ...........................................................................................................................................................
Connecticut ......................................................................................................................................................
DC + MD/VA Suburbs ......................................................................................................................................
Delaware ..........................................................................................................................................................
Fort Lauderdale, FL .........................................................................................................................................
Miami, FL .........................................................................................................................................................
Rest of Florida ..................................................................................................................................................
Atlanta, GA .......................................................................................................................................................
Rest of Georgia ................................................................................................................................................
Hawaii/Guam ....................................................................................................................................................
Idaho ................................................................................................................................................................
Chicago, IL .......................................................................................................................................................
East St. Louis, IL ..............................................................................................................................................
Suburban Chicago, IL ......................................................................................................................................
Rest of Illinois ...................................................................................................................................................
Indiana ..............................................................................................................................................................
Iowa ..................................................................................................................................................................
Kansas .............................................................................................................................................................
Kentucky ...........................................................................................................................................................
New Orleans, LA ..............................................................................................................................................
Rest of Louisiana .............................................................................................................................................
Southern Maine ................................................................................................................................................
Rest of Maine ...................................................................................................................................................
Baltimore/Surr. Cntys, MD ...............................................................................................................................
Rest of Maryland ..............................................................................................................................................
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25481
E:\FR\FM\02MYR3.SGM
02MYR3
0.933
1.307
0.985
0.920
1.123
1.096
1.154
1.152
1.216
1.210
1.204
1.105
1.053
1.003
1.067
1.121
1.024
1.014
1.017
0.973
1.005
0.940
1.075
0.935
1.033
0.962
1.041
0.944
0.948
0.929
0.933
0.925
0.983
0.930
0.998
0.940
1.059
1.024
2015 FQHC
GAF
0.936
1.316
0.993
0.920
1.120
1.100
1.165
1.154
1.224
1.216
1.209
1.100
1.053
1.005
1.069
1.123
1.021
1.006
1.011
0.971
1.002
0.940
1.077
0.930
1.026
0.961
1.033
0.944
0.948
0.933
0.935
0.926
0.986
0.935
0.994
0.944
1.058
1.025
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2014 FQHC
GAF
Locality name
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
Metropolitan Boston .........................................................................................................................................
Rest of Massachusetts .....................................................................................................................................
Detroit, MI .........................................................................................................................................................
Rest of Michigan ..............................................................................................................................................
Minnesota .........................................................................................................................................................
Mississippi ........................................................................................................................................................
Metropolitan Kansas City, MO .........................................................................................................................
Metropolitan St Louis, MO ...............................................................................................................................
Rest of Missouri ...............................................................................................................................................
Montana ...........................................................................................................................................................
Nebraska ..........................................................................................................................................................
Nevada .............................................................................................................................................................
New Hampshire ................................................................................................................................................
Northern NJ ......................................................................................................................................................
Rest of New Jersey ..........................................................................................................................................
New Mexico ......................................................................................................................................................
Manhattan, NY .................................................................................................................................................
NYC Suburbs/Long I., NY ................................................................................................................................
Poughkpsie/N NYC Suburbs, NY ....................................................................................................................
Queens, NY ......................................................................................................................................................
Rest of New York .............................................................................................................................................
North Carolina ..................................................................................................................................................
North Dakota ....................................................................................................................................................
Ohio ..................................................................................................................................................................
Oklahoma .........................................................................................................................................................
Portland, OR ....................................................................................................................................................
Rest of Oregon .................................................................................................................................................
Metropolitan Philadelphia, PA ..........................................................................................................................
Rest of Pennsylvania .......................................................................................................................................
Puerto Rico ......................................................................................................................................................
Rhode Island ....................................................................................................................................................
South Carolina .................................................................................................................................................
South Dakota ...................................................................................................................................................
Tennessee ........................................................................................................................................................
Austin, TX .........................................................................................................................................................
Beaumont, TX ..................................................................................................................................................
Brazoria, TX .....................................................................................................................................................
Dallas, TX .........................................................................................................................................................
Fort Worth, TX .................................................................................................................................................
Galveston, TX ..................................................................................................................................................
Houston, TX .....................................................................................................................................................
Rest of Texas ...................................................................................................................................................
Utah ..................................................................................................................................................................
Vermont ............................................................................................................................................................
Virginia .............................................................................................................................................................
Virgin Islands ....................................................................................................................................................
Seattle (King Cnty), WA ...................................................................................................................................
Rest of Washington ..........................................................................................................................................
West Virginia ....................................................................................................................................................
Wisconsin .........................................................................................................................................................
Wyoming ..........................................................................................................................................................
[FR Doc. 2014–09908 Filed 4–29–14; 4:15 pm]
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E:\FR\FM\02MYR3.SGM
02MYR3
1.082
1.038
1.010
0.957
1.005
0.916
0.968
0.975
0.905
0.974
0.938
1.026
1.021
1.109
1.071
0.955
1.108
1.124
1.039
1.123
0.966
0.953
0.982
0.959
0.913
1.025
0.975
1.044
0.957
0.808
1.035
0.946
0.974
0.937
1.002
0.942
1.002
1.014
0.995
1.010
1.009
0.953
0.946
0.992
0.986
1.001
1.084
1.004
0.901
0.973
0.989
2015 FQHC
GAF
1.085
1.040
0.996
0.954
1.006
0.914
0.968
0.972
0.903
0.977
0.939
1.027
1.027
1.107
1.072
0.954
1.106
1.122
1.040
1.121
0.967
0.956
0.981
0.953
0.919
1.026
0.978
1.052
0.962
0.816
1.037
0.946
0.976
0.936
1.008
0.947
1.005
1.014
1.000
1.016
1.013
0.957
0.946
0.992
0.987
1.001
1.086
1.005
0.902
0.970
0.992
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 85 (Friday, May 2, 2014)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 25435-25482]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-09908]
[[Page 25435]]
Vol. 79
Friday,
No. 85
May 2, 2014
Part V
Department of Health and Human Services
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Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
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42 CFR Parts 405, 410, et al.
Medicare Program; Prospective Payment System for Federally Qualified
Health Centers; Changes to Contracting Policies for Rural Health
Clinics; and Changes to Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments of
1988 Enforcement Actions for Proficiency Testing Referral; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 79 , No. 85 / Friday, May 2, 2014 / Rules and
Regulations
[[Page 25436]]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Parts 405, 410, 491, and 493
[CMS-1443-FC]
RIN 0938-AR62
Medicare Program; Prospective Payment System for Federally
Qualified Health Centers; Changes to Contracting Policies for Rural
Health Clinics; and Changes to Clinical Laboratory Improvement
Amendments of 1988 Enforcement Actions for Proficiency Testing Referral
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Final rule with comment period.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule with comment period implements methodology and
payment rates for a prospective payment system (PPS) for federally
qualified health center (FQHC) services under Medicare Part B beginning
on October 1, 2014, in compliance with the statutory requirement of the
Affordable Care Act. In addition, it establishes a policy which allows
rural health clinics (RHCs) to contract with nonphysician practitioners
when statutory requirements for employment of nurse practitioners and
physician assistants are met, and makes other technical and conforming
changes to the RHC and FQHC regulations. Finally, this final rule with
comment period implements changes to the Clinical Laboratory
Improvement Amendments (CLIA) regulations regarding enforcement actions
for proficiency testing (PT) referrals.
DATES: Effective Dates: The provisions of this final rule with comment
period are effective on October 1, 2014, except for amendments to Sec.
405.2468(b)(1), Sec. 491.8(a)(3), Sec. 493.1, Sec. 493.2, Sec.
493.1800, and Sec. 493.1840 which are effective July 1, 2014.
Comment Period: We will consider comments on the subjects indicated
in sections II.B.1., E.2. and E.4. of this final rule with comment
period received at one of the addresses provided below, no later than 5
p.m. on July 1, 2014.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, please refer to file code CMS-1443-FC.
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 to https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the ``Submit a
comment'' instructions.
2. By regular mail. You may mail written comments to the following
address ONLY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Department of
Health and Human Services, Attention: CMS-1443-FC, P.O. Box 8013,
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 to
the following address ONLY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services,
Department of Health and Human Services, Attention: CMS-1443-FC, Mail
Stop C4-26-05, 7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
4. By hand or courier. Alternatively, you may deliver (by hand or
courier) your written comments ONLY to the following addresses prior to
the close of the comment period:
a. For delivery in Washington, DC--
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Department of Health and
Human Services, Room 445-G, Hubert H. Humphrey Building, 200
Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20201.
(Because access to the interior of the Hubert H. Humphrey 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. For delivery in Baltimore, MD--
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Department of Health and
Human Services, 7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
If you intend to deliver your comments to the Baltimore address, call
telephone number (410) 786-7195 in advance to schedule your arrival
with one of our staff members.
Comments erroneously 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:
Corinne Axelrod, (410) 786-5620 for FQHCs and RHCs.
Melissa Singer, (410) 786-0365 for CLIA Enforcement Actions for
Proficiency Testing Referral.
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 on that Web site to
view public comments.
Comments received timely will also be available for public
inspection as they are received, generally beginning approximately 3
weeks after publication of a document, at the headquarters of the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, 7500 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, Maryland 21244, Monday through Friday of each week from 8:30
a.m. to 4 p.m. To schedule an appointment to view public comments,
phone 1-800-743-3951.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Acronyms
ACS American Community Survey
AI/AN American Indian/Alaskan Native
AIR All-Inclusive Rate
APCP Advanced Primary Care Practice
BLS Bureau of Labor Statistics
CCM Chronic Care Management
CCN CMS Certification Number
CCR Cost-To-Charge Ratio
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CLIA Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1988
CMP Civil Monetary Penalty
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
CNM Certified Nurse Midwife
CP Clinical Psychologist
CR Change Request
CSW Clinical Social Worker
CY Calendar Year
DSMT Diabetes Self-Management Training
EHR Electronic Health Record
E/M Evaluation and Management
FQHC Federally Qualified Health Center
FSHCAA Federally Supported Health Centers Assistance Act
FTCA Federal Tort Claims Act
GAF Geographic Adjustment Factor
GAO Government Accountability Office
GPCI Geographic Practice Cost Index
HCPCS Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System
HCRIS Healthcare Cost Report Information System
HBV Hepatitis B Vaccines
HRSA Health Resources and Services Administration
IDR Integrated Data Repository
IPPE Initial Preventive Physical Exam
MA Medicare Advantage
MAC Medicare Administrative Contractor
[[Page 25437]]
MCO Managed Care Organization
MEI Medicare Economic Index
MIPPA Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act
MNT Medical Nutrition Therapy
MSA Metropolitan Statistical Area
NP Nurse Practitioner
OBRA Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act
PA Physician Assistant
PHS Public Health Service
PFS Physician Fee Schedule
PPS Prospective Payment System
PT Proficiency testing
RIA Regulatory Impact Analysis
RHC Rural Health Clinic
SNF Skilled Nursing Facility
UDS Uniform Data System
UPL Upper Payment Limit
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary and Background
A. Executive Summary
1. Purpose and Legal Authority
2. Summary of Major Provisions
a. FQHC PPS
b. Other FQHC and RHC Provisions
c. CLIA Enforcement Actions for Proficiency Testing Referral
Provisions
3. Summary of Cost and Benefits
a. For the FQHC PPS
b. For Other FQHC and RHC Changes
c. For the CLIA Enforcement Actions for Proficiency Testing
Referral
B. Overview and Background
1. FQHC Description and General Information
2. Medicare's FQHC Coverage and Payment Benefit
3. Legislation Pertaining to Medicare and Medicaid Payments for
FQHC Services
4. Medicare's Current Reasonable Cost-Based Reimbursement
Methodology
5. Summary of Requirements under the Affordable Care Act for the
FQHC PPS and Other Provisions Pertaining to FQHCs
6. Approach to the FQHC PPS
II. Establishment of the Federally Qualified Health Center
Prospective Payment System (FQHC PPS)
A. Design and Data Sources for the FQHC PPS
1. Overview of the PPS Design
2. Medicare FQHC Cost Reports
3. Medicare FQHC Claims
4. Linking Cost Reports and Claims To Compute the Average Cost
per Visit
B. Policy Considerations for Developing the FQHC PPS Rates and
Adjustments
1. Multiple Visits on the Same Day
2. Preventive Laboratory Services and Technical Components of
Other Preventive Services
3. Vaccine Costs
C. Risk Adjustments
1. Alternative Calculations for Average Cost per Visit
2. FQHC Geographic Adjustment Factor
3. New Patient or Initial Medicare Visit
4. Other Adjustment Factors Considered
5. Report on PPS Design and Models
D. Base Rate Calculation
E. Implementation
1. Transition Period and Annual Adjustment
2. Medicare Claims Payment
3. Beneficiary Coinsurance
4. Waiving Coinsurance for Preventive Services
5. Cost Reporting
6. Medicare Advantage Organizations
III. Additional Proposed Changes Regarding FQHCs and RHCs
A Rural Health Clinic Contracting
B. Technical and Conforming Changes
1. Proposed Technical and Conforming Changes
2. Additional Technical and Conforming Changes
C. Comments Outside of the Scope of the Proposed Rule
IV. Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1988 (CLIA)--
Enforcement Actions for Proficiency Testing Referral
A. Background
B. Proposed and Final Regulatory Changes
V. Other Required Information
A. Requests for Data from the Public
B. Collection of Information Requirements
VI. Waiver of Proposed Rulemaking
VII. Response to Comments
VIII. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
B. Overall Impact
C. Limitations of Our Analysis
D. Anticipated Effects of the FQHC PPS
1. Effects on FQHCs
2. Effects on RHCs
3. Effects on Other Providers and Suppliers
4. Effects on Medicare and Medicaid Programs
5. Effects on Medicare Beneficiaries
E. Effects of Other Policy Changes
1. Effects of Policy Changes for FQHCs and RHCs
a. Effects of RHC Contracting Changes
b. Effects of the FQHC and RHC Conforming Changes
2. Effects of CLIA Changes for Enforcement Actions for
Proficiency Testing Referral
F. Alternatives Considered
G. Accounting Statement and Table
H. Conclusion
Regulations Text
ADDENDUM--FQHC PPS Geographic Adjustment Factors (FQHC GAFs)
I. Executive Summary and Background
A. Executive Summary
1. Purpose and Legal Authority
Section 10501(i)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111-148
and Pub. L. 111-152) added section 1834(o) of the Social Security Act
(the Act) to establish a new system of payment for the costs of
federally qualified health center (FQHC) services under Medicare Part B
(Supplemental Medical Insurance) based on prospectively set rates.
According to section 1834(o)(2)(A) of the Act, the FQHC prospective
payment system (PPS) is to be effective beginning on October 1, 2014.
The primary purpose of this final rule with comment period is to
implement a methodology and payment rates for the new FQHC PPS.
This rule also implements our proposal to allow RHCs to contract
with non-physician practitioners, consistent with statutory
requirements in section 1861(aa) of the Act that require at least one
nurse practitioner (NP) or physician assistant (PA) be employed by the
RHC, and makes other technical and conforming changes to the RHC and
FQHC regulations.
The ``Taking Essential Steps for Testing Act of 2012'' (TEST Act)
(Pub. L. 112-202) was enacted on December 4, 2012. The TEST Act amended
section 353 of the Public Health Service Act (PHS Act) to provide the
Secretary with discretion as to which sanctions may be applied to cases
of intentional violation of the prohibition on proficiency testing (PT)
referrals. This final rule with comment period adopts changes to the
CLIA regulations to implement the TEST Act.
2. Summary of the Major Provisions
a. FQHC PPS
In accordance with the provisions of the Affordable Care Act, we
proposed in the September 23, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR 58386) to
establish a national, encounter-based prospective payment rate for all
FQHCs, to be determined based on an average of reasonable costs of
FQHCs in the aggregate, and pay FQHCs the lesser of their actual
charges for services or a single encounter-based rate for professional
services furnished per beneficiary per day. As required by section
1834(o)(1)(A) of the Act, we proposed to establish payment codes based
on an appropriate description of FQHC services, and taking into account
the type, intensity, and duration of services provided by FQHCs. We
also proposed adjustments to the encounter-based payment rate for
geographic differences in the cost of inputs by applying an adaptation
of the geographic practice cost indices (GPCIs) used to adjust payments
under the Physician Fee Schedule (PFS). These provisions are being
finalized as proposed. We also proposed adjustments when a FQHC
furnishes care to a patient who is new to the FQHC or to a beneficiary
receiving a comprehensive initial Medicare visit (that is, an initial
preventive physical examination (IPPE) or an initial annual wellness
visit (AWV)). These provisions have been revised based on comments
received and are being finalized to allow the proposed adjustments as
well as an adjustment for subsequent AWVs.
We also proposed not to include adjustments or exceptions to the
single, encounter-based payment when an illness or injury occurs
subsequent to
[[Page 25438]]
the initial visit, or when mental health, diabetes self-management
training/medical nutrition therapy (DSMT/MNT), or the IPPE are
furnished on the same day as the medical visit. These provisions have
been revised based on the comments received and are being finalized to
allow an exception to the single, encounter-based payment when an
illness or injury occurs subsequent to the initial visit, or when a
mental health visit is furnished on the same day as the medical visit.
We also proposed that coinsurance would be 20 percent of the lesser
of the actual charge or the PPS rate. Most preventive services are
exempt from beneficiary coinsurance in accordance with section 4104 of
the Affordable Care Act. Accordingly, for FQHC claims that include a
mix of preventive and non-preventive services, we proposed to use
physician office payments under the Medicare PFS to determine the
proportional amount of coinsurance that should be waived for payments
based on the PPS encounter rate, and to use provider-reported charges
to determine the amount of coinsurance that should be waived for
payments based on the provider's charge. This provision has been
revised based on comments received and is being finalized to allow a
simpler method for calculating coinsurance when there is a mix of
preventive and non-preventive services.
The statute requires implementation of the FQHC PPS for FQHCs with
cost reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 2014. We
proposed that FQHCs would transition into the PPS based on their cost
reporting periods and that the claims processing system would maintain
the current system and the PPS until all FQHCs transitioned to the PPS.
We also proposed to transition the PPS to a calendar year update for
all FQHCs, beginning January 1, 2016, to be consistent with many of the
PFS rates that are updated on a calendar year basis. We are finalizing
these provisions as proposed.
b. Other FQHC and RHC Changes
In addition to our proposals to codify the statutory requirements
for the FQHC PPS, we proposed to allow RHCs to contract with non-
physician practitioners, consistent with statutory requirements that
require at least one NP or PA be employed by the RHC. We also proposed
edits to correct terminology, clarify policy, and make other conforming
changes for existing mandates and the new PPS.
c. CLIA Enforcement Actions for Proficiency Testing Referral
The ``Taking Essential Steps for Testing Act of 2012'' (Pub. L.
112-202) amended section 353 of the Public Health Service Act to
provide the Secretary with discretion as to which sanctions may be
applied to cases of intentional PT referral in lieu of the automatic
revocation of the CLIA certificate and the subsequent ban preventing
the owner and operator from owning or operating a CLIA-certified
laboratory for 2 years. Based on this discretion, we are amending the
CLIA regulations to add three categories of sanctions for PT referral
based on the severity and extent of the violation.
3. Summary of Cost and Benefits
a. For the FQHC PPS
As required by section 1834(o)(2)(B)(i) of the Act, initial payment
rates (Medicare and coinsurance) under the FQHC PPS must equal 100
percent of the estimated amount of reasonable costs, as determined
without the application of the current system's upper payment limits
(UPL) or productivity standards. In the proposed rule, we estimated the
overall impact, based on the estimated PPS rate, would increase total
Medicare payments to FQHCs by approximately 30 percent, with an
annualized cost to the federal government between $183 million and $186
million, based on 5 year discounted flows using 3 percent and 7 percent
factors. Based on current data, our final estimate is an overall impact
of increasing total Medicare payments to FQHCs by approximately 32
percent, based on payment at the FQHC PPS. (Note that this does not
take into account the application of ``lesser of'' provision in section
1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act. For more information, see sections II.E.2 and
VII.D.1 of this final rule with comment period). The annualized cost to
the federal government associated with the final FQHC PPS is estimated
to be between $200 million and $204 million, based on 5 year discounted
flows using 3 percent and 7 percent factors. These estimates also
reflect the policy modifications that are noted in section I.A.2 and
discussed in more detail in sections II.B. and II.C. of this preamble.
b. For Other FQHC and RHC Changes
We estimated that there would be no costs associated with the
removal of the contracting restrictions for RHCs or for technical and
conforming regulatory changes that would be made in conjunction with
the establishment of the FQHC PPS.
c. For the CLIA Enforcement Actions for Proficiency Testing Referral
Provisions
We estimated that an average of 6 cases per year may have fit the
terms described in the proposed rule to have alternative sanctions
applied. Based on experience with laboratories that engaged in
proficiency testing referral in the past, we estimated that the average
cost experienced by laboratories for which we imposed a revocation of
the CLIA certificate as a result of a PT referral violation was
$578,000 per laboratory. We estimated that the average cost of
alternative sanctions, based on comparable violations for which
alternative sanctions have been imposed, would be $150,000 per
laboratory. Therefore, we projected that the aggregate annual savings
would be approximately $2.6 million per year ($578,000 minus $150,000
for 6 laboratories), resulting in net average savings per affected
certificate holder of $428,000 ($578,000 minus $150,000). We continue
to consider these to be reasonable estimates.
B. Overview and Background
1. FQHC Description and General Information
FQHCs are facilities that furnish services that are typically
furnished in an outpatient clinic setting. They are currently paid an
all-inclusive rate (AIR) per visit for qualified primary and preventive
health services furnished to Medicare beneficiaries.
The statutory requirements that FQHCs must meet to qualify for the
Medicare benefit are in section 1861(aa)(4) of the Act. Based on these
provisions, the following three types of organizations that are
eligible to enroll in Medicare as FQHCs:
Health Center Program grantees: Organizations receiving
grants under section 330 of the PHS Act (42 U.S.C. 254b).
Health Center Program ``look-alikes'': Organizations that
have been identified by the Health Resources and Services
Administration (HRSA) as meeting the requirements to receive a grant
under section 330 of the PHS Act, but which do not receive section 330
grant funding.
Outpatient health programs/facilities operated by a tribe
or tribal organization (under the Indian Self-Determination Act) or by
an urban Indian organization (under Title V of the Indian Health Care
Improvement Act).
FQHCs are also entities that were treated by the Secretary for
purposes of Medicare Part B as a comprehensive federally funded health
center as of
[[Page 25439]]
January 1, 1990 (see section 1861(aa)(4)(C) of the Act).
Section 330 Health Centers are the most common type of FQHC.
Originally known as Neighborhood Health Centers, they have evolved over
the last 45 years to become an integral component of the Nation's
health care safety net system, with more than 1,200 health centers
operating approximately 9,000 delivery sites that serve more than 21
million people each year from medically underserved communities. They
include community health centers (section 330(e) of the PHS Act),
migrant health centers (section 330(g) of the PHS Act), health care for
the homeless (section 330(h) of the PHS Act), and public housing
primary care (section 330(i) of the PHS Act).
FQHCs may be either not-for-profit or public organizations. The
main purpose of the FQHC program is to enhance the provision of primary
care services in underserved urban, rural and tribal communities. FQHCs
that are not operated by a tribe or tribal organization are required to
be located in or treat people from a federally-designated medically
underserved area or medically underserved population and to comply with
all the requirements of section 330 of the PHS Act. Some of these
section 330 requirements include offering a sliding fee scale with
discounts adjusted on the basis of the patient's ability to pay and
being governed by a board of directors that represent the individuals
being served by the FQHC and a majority of whom receive their care at
the FQHC. According to HRSA's Uniform Data System (UDS),\1\
approximately 8 percent of FQHC patients were Medicare beneficiaries,
41 percent were Medicaid recipients, and 36 percent were uninsured in
2012. The remaining 15 percent were privately insured or had other
public insurance. Medicare and Medicaid accounted for approximately 9
percent and 47 percent of their total billing in dollars, respectively.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The UDS collects and tracks data such as patient
demographics, services provided, staffing, clinical indicators,
utilization rates, costs, and revenues from section 330 health
centers and health center look-alikes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Congress has authorized several programs to assist FQHCs in
increasing access to care for underserved and special populations. Many
FQHCs receive section 330 grant funds to offset the costs of
uncompensated care and furnish other services. All FQHCs are eligible
to participate in the 340B Drug Pricing Program which is a program that
requires drug manufacturers to provide outpatient drugs to eligible
health care organizations/covered entities at significantly reduced
prices. FQHCs that receive section 330 grant funds also are eligible to
apply for medical malpractice coverage under Federally Supported Health
Centers Assistance Act (FSHCAA) of 1992 (Pub. L. 102-501) and FSHCAA of
1995 (Pub. L. 104-73 amending section 224 of the PHS Act) and may be
eligible for federal loan guarantees for capital improvements when
funds for this purpose are appropriated. Title VIII of the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act (Pub. L. 111-5) appropriated $2 billion
for construction, equipment, health information technology, and related
improvements to existing section 330 grantees and for the establishment
of new grantees sites. The Affordable Care Act appropriated an
additional $11 billion over a 5-year period ($1.5 billion for capital
improvements and $9.5 billion for support and expansion of the health
centers receiving grant funds under section 330). HRSA administers the
Health Center grant program and other programs that assist FQHCs in
increasing access to primary and preventive health care in underserved
communities.
2. Medicare's FQHC Coverage and Payment Benefit
The FQHC coverage and payment benefit under Medicare began on
October 1, 1991. It was authorized by section 1861(aa) of the Act
(which amended section 4161 of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act
(OBRA) of 1990 (Pub. L. 101-508, enacted on November 5, 1990)) and
implemented in regulations via the June 12, 1992 final rule with
comment period (57 FR 24961) and the April 3, 1996 final rule (61 FR
14640). Regulations pertaining to FQHCs are found primarily in Part 405
and Part 491.
FQHC covered services and supplies include the following:
Physician, NP, PA, Certified Nurse-Midwife (CNM), Clinical
Psychologist (CP), and Clinical Social Worker (CSW) services.
Services and supplies furnished incident to a physician,
NP, PA, CNM, CP, or CSW services.
FQHC covered drugs that are furnished by a FQHC
practitioner.
Outpatient DSMT and MNT for beneficiaries with diabetes or
renal disease.
Statutorily-authorized preventive services.
Visiting nurse services to the homebound in an area where
CMS has determined that there is a shortage of home health agencies.
3. Legislation Pertaining to Medicare and Medicaid Payments for FQHC
Services
FQHCs currently receive cost-based reimbursement, subject to the
UPL and productivity standards that were established in 1978 and 1982
for RHCs (43 FR 8260 and 47 FR 54165, respectively) and adopted for
FQHCs in 1992 and 1996 (57 FR 24967 through 24970 and 61 FR 14650
through 14652, respectively), for services furnished to Medicare
beneficiaries, and PPS payment, based on their historical cost data,
for services furnished to Medicaid recipients (section 1902(bb) of the
Act). The UPL for Medicare FQHC services is adjusted annually based on
the Medicare Economic Index (MEI), as described in section 1842(i)(3)
of the Act. Authority to apply productivity standards is found in
section 1833(a) and 1861(v)(1)(A) of the Act. Section 151(a) of the
Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act (MIPPA) of 2008
(Pub. L. 110-275, enacted on July 15, 2008) increased the UPL for FQHC
by $5, effective January 1, 2010. Section 151(b) of the MIPPA required
the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to study and report on the
effects and adequacy of the Medicare FQHC payment structure.
Based on a GAO analysis of 2007 Medicare cost report data, about 72
percent of FQHCs had average costs per visit that exceeded the UPL, and
the application of productivity standards reduced Medicare payment for
approximately 7 percent of FQHCs. In 2007, application of the limits
and adjustments currently in place reduced FQHCs' submitted costs of
services by approximately $73 million, about 14 percent (Medicare
Payments to Federal Qualified Health Centers, GAO-10-576R, July 30,
2010).
The Benefits Improvement and Protection Act of 2000 (Pub. L. 106-
554, enacted December 21, 2000) created section 1902(bb) of the Act,
which established a PPS for Medicaid reimbursement. The law also
allowed state Medicaid agencies to establish their own reimbursement
methodology for FQHCs provided that total reimbursement would not be
less than the payment under the Medicaid PPS, and that the FQHC agreed
to the alternative payment methodology. For beneficiaries enrolled in a
managed care organization (MCO), the MCO pays the FQHC an agreed upon
amount, and the state Medicaid program pays the FQHC a wrap-around
payment equal to the difference, if any, between the PPS rate and the
payment from the managed care organization.
[[Page 25440]]
The Affordable Care Act established a Medicare PPS for FQHCs.
Section 10501(i)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care Act added section 1834(o)
of the Act, requiring the Medicare FQHC PPS to be implemented for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 2014. The new PPS
for FQHCs is required to take into account the type, intensity, and
duration of services furnished by FQHCs and may include adjustments,
including geographic adjustments, determined appropriate by the
Secretary. A detailed discussion of the statutory requirements for the
Medicare FQHC PPS is discussed in section I.B.5. of this final rule
with comment period.
4. Medicare's Current Reasonable Cost-Based Reimbursement Methodology
FQHCs are paid an AIR per visit for medically-necessary
professional services that are furnished face-to-face (one practitioner
and one patient) with a FQHC practitioner (Sec. 405.2463). Services
and supplies furnished incident to a FQHC professional service are
included in the AIR and are not billed as a separate visit. Technical
components such as x-rays, laboratory tests, and durable medical
equipment are not part of the AIR and are billed separately to Medicare
Part B.
The AIR is calculated by dividing total allowable costs by the
total number of visits. Allowable costs may include practitioner
compensation, overhead, equipment, space, supplies, personnel, and
other costs incident to the delivery of FQHC services. Cost reports are
filed in order to identify all incurred costs applicable to furnishing
covered FQHC services. Freestanding FQHCs complete Form CMS-222-92,
``Independent Rural Health Clinic and Freestanding Federally Qualified
Health Center Cost Report''. FQHCs based in a hospital complete the
Worksheet M series of Form CMS-2552-10, ``Hospital and Hospital Care
Complex Cost Report''. FQHCs based in a skilled nursing facility (SNF)
complete the Worksheet I series of Form CMS-2540-10, ``Skilled Nursing
Facility and Skilled Nursing Facility Health Care Complex Cost
Report''. FQHCs based in a home health agency complete the Worksheet RF
series of Form CMS-1728-94, ``Home Health Agency Cost Report''.
Information on these cost report forms is found in Chapters 29, 40, 41
and 32, respectively, of the Provider Reimbursement Manual, Part 2
(Publication 15-2). Per our regulations at Sec. 413.65(n), only FQHCs
that were operating as provider-based clinics prior to 1995 and either
received funds under section 330 of the PHS Act or were determined by
CMS to meet the criteria to be a look-alike clinic continue to be
eligible to be certified as provider-based FQHCs. Provider-based
designations are not made for FQHCs that do not already have this
status.
At the beginning of a FQHC's fiscal year, the Medicare
Administrative Contractor (MAC) calculates an interim AIR based on
actual costs and visits from the previous cost reporting period. For
new FQHCs, the interim AIR is estimated based on a percentage of the
per-visit limit. FQHCs receive payments throughout the year based on
their interim rate. After the conclusion of the fiscal year, the cost
report is reconciled and any necessary adjustments in payments are
made.
Allowable costs are subject to tests of reasonableness,
productivity standards, and an overall payment limit. The productivity
standards require 4,200 visits per full-time equivalent physician and
2,100 visits per full-time equivalent non-physician practitioner (NP,
PA or CNM) on an annual basis. If the FQHC has furnished fewer visits
than required by the productivity standards, the allowable costs would
be divided by the productivity standards numbers instead of the actual
number of visits.
The payment limit varies based on whether the FQHC is located in an
urban or rural area (as defined in section 1886(d)(2)(D) of the Act).
The 2014 payment limits per visit for urban and rural FQHCs are $129.02
and $111.67, respectively. FQHCs with multiple sites may elect to file
a consolidated cost report (CMS Pub. 100-04, Medicare Claims Processing
Manual, chapter 9, section 30.8), and if the FQHC has both urban and
rural sites, the MAC applies a weighted UPL based on the percentage of
urban and rural visits as the percentage of total site visits. The AIR
is equal to the FQHC's cost per visit (adjusted by the productivity
standard if appropriate) or the payment limit, whichever is less.
Medicare beneficiaries receiving services at a FQHC are not subject
to the annual Medicare deductible for FQHC-covered services (section
1833(b)(4) of the Act). Medicare beneficiaries pay a copayment based on
20 percent of the charges (section 1866(a)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act),
except for: (1) Mental health treatment services, which are subject to
the outpatient mental health treatment limitation until January 1,
2014, when beneficiary coinsurance is reduced to the same level as most
other Part B services; (2) FQHC-supplied influenza and pneumococcal and
Hepatitis B vaccines (HBV); and (3) effective January 1, 2011,
personalized prevention plan services and any Medicare covered
preventive service that is recommended with a grade of A or B by the
U.S. Preventive Services Task Force.
The administration and payment of influenza and pneumococcal
vaccines is not included in the AIR. They are paid at 100 percent of
reasonable costs through the cost report. The cost and administration
of HBV is covered under the FQHC's AIR.
5. Summary of Requirements Under the Affordable Care Act for the FQHC
PPS and Other Provisions Pertaining to FQHCs
Section 10501(i)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care Act amended section
1834 of the Act by adding a new subsection (o), ``Development and
Implementation of Prospective Payment System''. Section 1834(o)(1)(A)
of the Act requires that the system include a process for appropriately
describing the services furnished by FQHCs. Also, the system must
establish payment rates for specific payment codes based on such
descriptions of services, taking into account the type, intensity, and
duration of services furnished by FQHCs. The system may include
adjustments (such as geographic adjustments) as determined appropriate
by the Secretary of HHS.
Section 1834(o)(1)(B) of the Act specifies that, by no later than
January 1, 2011, FQHCs must begin submitting information as required by
the Secretary, including the reporting of services using Healthcare
Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) codes, in order to develop and
implement the PPS.
Section 1834(o)(2)(A) of the Act requires that the FQHC PPS must be
effective for cost reporting periods beginning on or after October 1,
2014. For such cost reporting periods, reasonable costs will no longer
be the basis for Medicare payment for services furnished to
beneficiaries at FQHCs.
Section 1834(o)(2)(B)(i) of the Act requires that the initial PPS
rates must be set so as to equal in the aggregate 100 percent of the
estimated amount of reasonable costs that would have occurred for the
year if the PPS had not been implemented. This 100 percent must be
calculated prior to application of copayments, per visit limits, or
productivity adjustments.
Section 1834(o)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act describes the methods for
determining payments in subsequent years. After the first year of
implementation, the PPS payment rates must be increased by the
percentage increase in the MEI. After the second year of
implementation, PPS rates shall be increased by the percentage increase
in a market basket
[[Page 25441]]
of FQHC goods and services as established through regulations, or, if
not available, the MEI that is published in the Physician Fee Schedule
(PFS) final rule.
Section 10501(i)(3)(B) of the Affordable Care Act added section
1833(a)(1)(Z) to the Act to specify that Medicare payment for FQHC
services under section 1834(o) of the Act shall be 80 percent of the
lesser of the actual charge or the PPS amount determined under section
1834(o) of the Act.
Section 10501(i)(3)(C) of the Affordable Care Act added section
1833(a)(3)(B)(i)(II) of the Act to require that FQHCs that contract
with Medicare Advantage (MA) organizations be paid at least the same
amount they would have received for the same service under the FQHC
PPS.
Section 10501(i)(2) of the Affordable Care Act amended the
definition of FQHC services as defined in section 1861(aa)(3)(A) of the
Act by replacing the specific references to services furnished under
section 1861(qq) and (vv) of the Act (DSMT and MNT services,
respectively) with preventive services as defined in section
1861(ddd)(3) of the Act, as established by section 4014(a)(3) of the
Affordable Care Act. These changes were effective for services
furnished on or after January 1, 2011. Accordingly, in the CY 2011
Medicare PFS final rule (75 FR 73417 through 73419, November 29, 2010)
we adopted conforming regulations by adding a new Sec. 405.2449, which
added the new preventive services definition to the definition of FQHC
services effective for services furnished on or after January 1, 2011
(see that rule for a detailed discussion regarding preventive services
covered under the FQHC benefit and the requirements for waiving
coinsurance for such services).
Section 1833(b)(4) of the Act stipulates that the Medicare Part B
deductible shall not apply to FQHC services. The Affordable Care Act
made no change to this provision; therefore Medicare will continue to
waive the Part B deductible for all FQHC services in the FQHC PPS,
including preventive services added by the Affordable Care Act.
6. Approach to the FQHC PPS
To enhance our understanding of the services furnished by FQHCs and
the unique role of FQHCs in providing services to people from medically
underserved areas and populations, we worked closely with HRSA and
others in the development of the proposed rule. We are aware of the
challenges facing FQHCs in increasing access to health care for
underserved populations and the importance of Medicare payments to the
overall financial viability of FQHCs. Our goal for the FQHC PPS is to
implement a system in accordance with the statute whereby FQHCs are
fairly paid for the services they furnish to Medicare patients in the
least burdensome manner possible, so that they may continue to furnish
primary and preventive health services to the communities they serve.
We have evaluated our approach based on the comments we received to
the proposed rule in the context of balancing payment requirements,
regulatory burden, and the need for appropriate accountability and
oversight. We received approximately 100 timely comments on the
proposed FQHC PPS. The following sections describe the comments we
received, our response to the comments, and the final decisions on our
proposals.
II. Establishment of the Federally Qualified Health Center Prospective
Payment System (FQHC PPS)
A. Design and Data Sources for the FQHC PPS
1. Overview of the PPS Design
In developing the new PPS for FQHCs, we considered the statutory
requirements at section 1834(o)(1)(A) of the Act requiring that the new
PPS take into account the type, intensity, and duration of services
furnished by FQHCs, and allows for adjustments, including geographic
adjustments, as determined appropriate by the Secretary. The statute
also requires us to ``establish payment rates for specific payment
codes based on . . . appropriate description of services.'' We explored
several approaches to the methodology and modeled options for
calculating payment rates and adjustments under a PPS based on data
from Medicare FQHC cost reports and Medicare FQHC claims. Each option
was evaluated to determine which approach would result in the most
appropriate payment structure with the fewest reporting requirements
and least administrative burden for the FQHCs.
One approach we considered would align payment for FQHCs with
payment for services typically furnished in physician offices, making
separate payment for each coded service and adopting the relative
values from the PFS. While this approach follows established payment
policy for services furnished in an outpatient clinic setting, it
unbundles a FQHC encounter-based payment into a fee schedule structure,
which we believe could encourage excess utilization in the long-term,
and could increase coding and billing requirements for FQHCs.
Another approach for the PPS would be to pay a single encounter-
based rate per beneficiary per day. The encounter-based rate would be
based on an average cost per visit, which would be calculated by
aggregating the data for all FQHCs and dividing their total costs by
their total visits incurred during a specified time period. An
encounter-based payment rate is consistent with the agency's commitment
to greater bundling of services, which gives FQHCs the flexibility to
implement efficiencies to reduce over-utilization of services. FQHCs
are accustomed to billing for a single visit, as they are currently
paid through an AIR that is based on a FQHC's own average cost per
visit. An encounter-based payment is also similar to Medicaid payment
systems, and Medicaid constitutes a large portion of FQHC billing
(approximately 47 percent, compared to approximately 9 percent for
Medicare). We believe an encounter-based payment rate (with a few
adjustments as discussed in section II.C. of this final rule with
comment period), for the FQHC PPS would provide appropriate payment
while remaining administratively simple.
Also, our analysis of Medicare claims data supported an encounter-
based payment rate. As discussed in section II.A.3 of this final rule
with comment period, our analysis determined that FQHC Medicare claims
listed a single HCPCS code that defined the overall type of encounter
(for example, a mid-level office visit (HCPCS code 99213)). The vast
majority of FQHC encounters were defined as evaluation and management
(E/M) office visits (HCPCS codes 99201 through 99215). Other codes were
used more sporadically, and we believe that the administrative burden
associated with developing and maintaining a payment system composed of
multiple rates (for example, a fee schedule) far outweighs the minor
variations in reimbursement. Therefore, we developed an encounter-based
rate, with a few adjustments, as the basis for payment under the FQHC
PPS. We believe the description of FQHC services that we proposed in
the proposed rule, and the development of payment codes that are based
on the costs of groups of FQHC services (as discussed in section
II.E.2. of this final rule with comment period), meets the requirement
of the statute.
Comment: A large number of commenters were strongly supportive of a
single, bundled encounter-based PPS rate, and many noted that this
approach encourages comprehensive and
[[Page 25442]]
integrated care. Some of the commenters who supported a bundled
encounter-based rate also recommended that CMS develop multiple rates
to reflect additional payment adjustments.
Response: We agree with the commenters that a bundled encounter-
based rate would provide appropriate payment while remaining
administratively simple. We will address the recommendations for
additional payment adjustments in section II.C.4. of this final rule
with comment period.
After consideration of the public comments received, we are
finalizing our proposal to pay FQHCs using an encounter-based rate.
2. Medicare FQHC Cost Reports
As required by section 1834(o)(2)(B)(i) of the Act, initial payment
rates (Medicare and coinsurance) under the FQHC PPS must equal 100
percent of the estimated amount of reasonable costs, as determined
without the application of the current system's UPLs or productivity
standards that can reduce a FQHC's per visit rate. In order to estimate
100 percent of reasonable costs for the proposed rule, we obtained
Medicare cost report data for free-standing FQHCs (Form CMS 222-92)
from the March 31, 2013, Healthcare Cost Report Information System
(HCRIS) quarterly update, and we identified cost reports with cost
reporting periods that ended between June 30, 2011, and June 30, 2012.
We stated in the proposed rule that we would use the most recent
available data for the final rule. Therefore, in estimating 100 percent
of reasonable costs for this final rule with comment period, we used
cost report data from December 31, 2013, HCRIS quarterly update, and we
supplemented this with data from the three prior HCRIS quarterly
updates (that is, September 30, 2013, June 30, 2013, and March 31,
2013). We also obtained HCRIS data for hospital-based FQHCs (Form 2552-
10) and HHA-based FQHCs (Form 1728-94), which added data from provider-
based FQHCs. In the expanded sample that we used for this final rule
with comment period, we identified cost reports with cost reporting
periods ending between June 30, 2011, and June 30, 2013. We included in
our analysis FQHC costs reports that had allowable costs (excluding
pneumococcal and influenza vaccines) and Medicare visits, and we used
one cost report for each FQHC cost reporting entity. (A cost reporting
entity is a FQHC delivery site that files either an individual or a
consolidated cost report.) For 63 percent of cost reporting entities,
there were either multiple cost reports available or the cost reporting
period was not exactly 1 year. For the remaining 37 percent of cost
reporting entities, the only available cost report covered 1 full year.
Compared to the characteristics of the cost report data used for the
proposed rule, the significant increase in the percentage of FQHCs with
multiple cost reports is due mostly to the expanded time period that we
used for the final rule to identify cost reports available for
analysis. For cost reporting entities with multiple cost reports
available, we selected the most recent cost report, unless an earlier
cost report provided us with a better match to the FQHC claims data
that was used to model potential adjustments. Because FQHCs with
multiple sites can file consolidated cost reports, we also ensured that
we selected only one cost report for each delivery site.
As required by statute, we estimated 100 percent of reasonable
costs that would have occurred for this period prior to the application
of copayments, per visit limits, or productivity adjustments. We also
note that, under section 1833(c) of the Act, effective January 1, 2014,
outpatient mental health services are paid on the same basis as other
Part B services. As the FQHC PPS is to be implemented for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 2014, we adjusted
the cost report data to remove the application of the outpatient mental
health limitations that were in effect when these reported services
were incurred.
For this final rule with comment period, we used the methodology
described in the proposed rule to estimate 100 percent of reasonable
costs. After eliminating the current payment limits, outpatient mental
health limitations, and productivity and adjustments, we calculated the
average cost per visit for each cost reporting entity by dividing the
total estimated Medicare costs (excluding vaccines) reported by the
total number of Medicare visits reported.
In developing the FQHC PPS, section 1834(o)(1)(A) of the Act allows
for adjustments determined appropriate by the Secretary. Consistent
with this authority, we excluded statistical outliers from the sample
of cost reports used for the proposed rule. We identified all cost
reporting entities with an average cost per visit that was greater than
three standard deviations above or below the geometric mean of the
overall average cost per visit among cost reporting entities, and we
excluded their data from our sample. We believe that removing
statistical outliers is consistent with standard practice and results
in a more accurate estimation of costs overall. In this final rule with
comment period, we used the same approach to exclude statistical
outliers from the cost report sample.
Comment: Several commenters objected to the exclusion of outlier
cost reports and claims in calculating the base rate. Some of these
commenters opined that the authority in section 1834(o)(1)(A) of the
Act, to ``include adjustments . . . determined appropriate by the
Secretary'' cannot override the requirement in section 1834(o)(2)(B) of
the Act that the aggregate amount of initial PPS rates equal ``100
percent of the estimated amount of reasonable costs (determined without
the application of a per visit payment limit or productivity screen).''
Commenters suggested that the exclusion of outliers results in a lower
base rate and would not represent all appropriate costs, such as higher
costs of visits furnished to complex Medicare patients, or for
furnishing costly, but necessary items, such as expensive drugs and
biologicals, whose costs may be beyond a FQHC's control. Some of the
commenters also urged CMS to compute the base PPS rate without the
exclusion of outliers.
Response: We respectfully disagree with the assertion that the
exclusion of outliers is inconsistent with statutory authority. Under
section 1834(o)(2)(B) of the Act, we are required to set the initial
payment rates to equal ``100 percent of the estimated amount of
reasonable costs.'' The statute does not require us to set initial
payment rates based on the inclusion of every cost report or claim
submitted. We analyzed the most current available FQHC cost report and
claims data, and consistent with standard practice, trimmed the data
for outliers so that the estimates are not skewed by unusual data.
Outliers were defined based on two criteria: (1) Cost reports with an
average cost per visit value more than 3 standard deviations from the
geometric mean of all average costs per visit; and (2) encounters with
an adjusted charge value more than 3 standard deviations from the
geometric mean of all adjusted charges. This trim methodology of three
standard deviations from the geometric mean is a relatively
conservative approach, and the two trims together exclude less than 3
percent of the overall sample. We believe that removing statistical
outliers results in a more accurate estimation of costs overall.
Comment: Several commenters from tribal organizations recommended
that CMS not exclude outliers in calculating the base rate, as they
believe that they may be disproportionately impacted because their
costs are unusually high.
[[Page 25443]]
Response: Of the approximately 69 tribal FQHCs furnishing services
at approximately 114 separate sites, there were 8 tribal FQHCs whose
costs were considered statistical outliers. Although tribal FQHCs have
a higher rate of statistical outliers than non-tribal FQHCs, the number
of tribal FQHCs whose costs were more than three standard deviations
from the geometric mean is still quite low. As previously noted, the
statute does not require the rate to reflect actual costs for each
individual FQHC. The per diem rate that is established reflects the
national average cost of a FQHC visit.
Comment: A commenter noted that FQHCs count multiple visits per day
on their cost reports, and FQHCs should be given a one-time opportunity
to adjust their reported FQHC visits to a per diem to avoid an undue
reduction in the estimated cost per FQHC visit.
Response: As stated in the proposed rule, we used the adjusted
claims data to calculate an average cost per diem in order to
accurately capture all costs and did not rely solely on cost report
data. We used the same approach for this final rule with comment
period.
Comment: Some commenters were concerned that costs related to
electronic health record (EHR) implementation would not be adequately
reflected in 2012 cost report data as many FQHCs adopted EHRs in 2012.
Response: We used the most recent available data for this final
rule, and we updated our sample to include cost reports with reporting
periods ending June 30, 2013. We do not believe it is appropriate to
adjust the calculation of reasonable cost based on anticipated future
costs.
3. Medicare FQHC Claims
In developing the Medicare FQHC PPS, section 1834(o)(1)(A) of the
Act requires us to take into account the type, intensity, and duration
of FQHC services, and allows other adjustments, such as geographic
adjustments. Section 1834(o)(1)(B) of the Act also granted the
Secretary of HHS (the Secretary) the authority to require FQHCs to
submit such information as may be required in order to develop and
implement the Medicare FQHC PPS, including the reporting of services
using HCPCS codes. The provision requires that the Secretary impose
this data collection submission requirement no later than January 1,
2011. The requirement for FQHCs to submit HCPCS codes was implemented
through program instructions (CMS Change Request (CR) 7038).
Beginning with dates of service on or after January 1, 2011, FQHCs
are required to report all pertinent services furnished and list the
appropriate HCPCS code for each line item along with revenue code(s)
for each FQHC visit when billing Medicare. The additional line item(s)
and HCPCS code reporting were for informational and data gathering
purposes to inform development of the PPS rates and potential
adjustments. Other than for calculating the amount of coinsurance to
waive for preventive services for which the coinsurance is waived,
these HCPCS codes are not currently used to determine current Medicare
payment to FQHCs. We proposed to use the HCPCS codes in the FQHC claims
data to support the development of the FQHC PPS rate and adjustments
and for making payment under the PPS.
In order to model potential adjustments for the proposed rule, we
obtained final action Medicare FQHC claims (type of bill 73X and 77X)
from the CMS Integrated Data Repository (IDR) with dates of service
between January 2010 and December 2012. To model potential adjustments
for this final rule with comment period, we obtained final action
Medicare FQHC claims from the CMS IDR with dates of service between
January 2011 and December 2013. Of these claims, only those with dates
of service between January 1, 2011, and June 30 2013, were retained for
analysis and linking with Medicare cost reports, as described further
in section II.A.4. of this final rule with comment period. We excluded
claims that did not list a revenue code or HCPCS code that represented
a face-to-face encounter, as these services would not qualify for an
AIR payment. We also excluded claim lines with revenue codes that did
not correspond to FQHC services or that lacked valid HCPCS codes.
In 2011, approximately 90 percent of FQHC Medicare claims listed a
single HCPCS code that defined the overall type of encounter (for
example, a mid-level office visit (HCPCS code 99213)). We found similar
reporting trends in 2012 FQHC Medicare claims. For this final rule with
comment period, we updated our analysis of HCPCS reporting trends and
found they are relatively similar in 2013 FQHC Medicare claims. We
sought to validate the completeness of HCPCS reporting by analyzing
coding on primary care physician claims for PFS data. When compared,
the findings from the simulated PFS data and actual FQHC data were
similar in the type and distribution of the reported encounter code
(that is, the HCPCS code that represents the visit that qualifies the
FQHC encounter for an AIR payment). When ancillary services (services
that are not separately billable by a FQHC) were billed with an office
visit code, both FQHC and analogous primary care physician office
claims demonstrated a tendency to include only one to two ancillary
services in addition to the encounter code about 35 percent of the
time, and FQHCs billed only a single ancillary service about 10 percent
of the time.
We believe that the reporting trends in the FQHC claims are
consistent with the coding of analogous primary care physician office
claims, thereby suggesting that the limited number of ancillary
services listed on FQHC claims appropriately describe the services
furnished during an encounter.
Comment: Commenters supported the use of the HCPCS codes in the
FQHC claims data to support the development of the FQHC PPS rate and
adjustments and for making payment under the PPS. Some commenters
recommended that we incorporate additional payment adjustments based on
the HCPCS codes in the FQHC claims data.
Response: We agree with the commenters that it is appropriate to
use the HCPCS codes in the FQHC claims data to support the development
of the FQHC PPS rate and adjustments and for making payment under the
PFS. We will address the recommendations for additional payment
adjustments in section II.C.4. of this final rule with comment period.
Comment: Some commenters were concerned that services that were
more recently recognized as payable to FQHCs would not be reflected in
the claims sample as it did not include claims with dates of service
beyond June 30, 2012.
Response: We used the most recent available data for this final
rule with comment period. We updated our sample to include claims with
dates of service through June 30, 2013, to the extent that an
associated cost report was included in our cost report sample (as
discussed previously and in section II.A.2. of this final rule with
comment period).
Comment: A commenter was concerned that a FQHC market basket of
goods and services would not reflect the variety of non-billable
ancillary services furnished during a FQHC visit.
Response: Market baskets developed for other Medicare payment
systems typically utilize cost report data, and the costs of covered
services provided incident to a billable visit may be included on the
FQHC cost report.
[[Page 25444]]
Comment: Some commenters opined that the implementation of HCPCS
reporting for FQHCs was confusing, resulting in claims with significant
errors in line item reporting, and questioned the credibility of
analyses based on claims submitted in 2011 and 2012.
Response: Since data used for the proposed rule included final
action claims with dates of service through June 2012 that were
obtained from the IDR in 2013, we believe that any initial errors in
the coding or adjustment of claims were corrected or were not present
in the majority of the claims used for modeling adjustments in the
proposed rule. (see CMS CRs 7038 and 7208, which updated CMS Pub 100-
04, Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 9). For this final rule with
comment period, we updated our sample to include final action claims
with dates of services through June 2013, which are even less likely to
have significant coding or adjustment errors.
After consideration of the public comments received, we are
finalizing our proposal to use the HCPCS codes in the FQHC claims data
to support the development of the FQHC PPS rate and adjustments and for
making payment under the PFS.
4. Linking Cost Reports and Claims To Compute the Average Cost per
Visit
In this final rule with comment period we used the same methodology
described in the proposed rule in order to compute the adjusted charges
or ``estimated cost'' for determining the average cost per visit. We
linked claims to cost reports by delivery site, as determined by the
CMS Certification Number (CCN) reported on the claim. Since the HCPCS
code reporting requirement on claims did not go into effect until
January 1, 2011, claims for earlier dates of service did not include
the detail required to model adjustments based on type, intensity, or
duration of services. In the sample used for the proposed rule, cost
reports with reporting periods that began on or after January 1, 2011,
accounted for 81 percent of the sample. In the updated sample used for
this final rule with comment period, cost reports with reporting
periods that began on or after January 1, 2011, accounted for 98
percent of the sample. We linked these cost reports to Medicare FQHC
claims with service dates that matched their respective cost reporting
periods. For cost reports that were at least 1 full year in length and
with a cost reporting period that began in 2010, we linked these cost
reports to 2011 Medicare FQHC claims.
The linked cost report and claims data were then used to calculate
a cost-to-charge ratio (CCR) for each cost-reporting entity. To
approximate data not available on the cost report, we developed these
CCRs to convert each FQHC's charge data, as found on its claims, to
costs. We calculated an average cost per visit by dividing the total
allowable costs (excluding pneumococcal and influenza vaccinations) by
the total number of visits reported on the cost report. We calculated
an average charge per visit by dividing the total charges of all visits
(Medicare and non-Medicare) for all sites under a cost-reporting entity
and dividing that sum by the total number of visits for that cost-
reporting entity. We calculated a cost-reporting entity-specific CCR by
dividing the average cost per visit (based on cost report data) by the
average charge per visit (based on claims data). We multiplied the
submitted charges for each claim by these cost-reporting entity-
specific CCRs to estimate FQHC costs per visit. We note that other
Medicare payment systems calculate CCRs based on total costs and total
charges reported on Medicare cost reports, and that this information is
not currently available on the free-standing FQHC cost report, Form
CMS-222-92.
In developing the FQHC PPS, section 1834(o)(1)(A) of the Act allows
for adjustments determined appropriate by the Secretary. Consistent
with this authority, we excluded statistical outliers from the linked
claims sample used for the proposed rule. We identified visits with
estimated costs that were greater than three standard deviations above
or below the geometric mean of the overall average estimated cost per
visit, and we excluded those visits from our sample. We believe that
removing statistical outliers is consistent with standard practice and
results in a more accurate estimation of costs overall. For this final
rule with comment period, we used the same approach to exclude
statistical outliers from the linked claims sample.
After trimming the linked claims data for outliers, the final data
set used for this final rule with comment period included 5,468,852
visits from 5,458,632 distinct claims encompassing 6,533,716 claim
lines. This included visits furnished to 1,297,013 beneficiaries at
3,778 delivery sites under 1,215 cost-reporting entities. For this
final rule with comment period, we modified the definition of a daily
visit to be consistent with our revised policy to allow an exception to
the per diem PPS payment for subsequent injury or illness and mental
health services furnished on the same day as a medical visit.
Separately payable encounters for the same beneficiary at the same FQHC
were combined into a single daily visit, while allowing for a separate
medical visit, mental health visit, and subsequent illness/injury
visit, which could result in up to three encounters per beneficiary per
day. The final data set yielded 5,462,670 daily visits.
Comment: A commenter suggested that using CCRs to measure the cost
of furnishing FQHC services is not appropriate for FQHCs because
certain types of FQHC care management services are not captured in the
billed charges; the CCRs would not be uniform among medical and mental
health services; and the CCRs would be affected by the pricing
strategies of FQHCs that keep their charges low to minimize the
copayment impact on uninsured and indigent patients. The commenter
recommended that CMS use PFS relative value units or other metrics to
adjust FQHC average cost per visit.
Response: We used Medicare cost report data to measure the
aggregate reasonable cost of furnishing FQHC services. However, as
discussed in the proposed rule, the cost report data is insufficient
for modeling the types of adjustments considered for the FQHC PPS. The
CCRs for each cost-reporting entity were used to approximate data not
available on the cost report and to convert each FQHC's charge data, as
found on its claims, to costs. The use of the CCRs was primarily for
modeling the adjustments and does not substantially impact our measure
of the aggregate reasonable cost of furnishing FQHC services.
Therefore, in this final rule with comment period, we plan to continue
to use the CCR to adjust charges in order to estimate costs.
Comment: A commenter requested that CMS clarify whether a
statistically significant number of outlier visits were for FQHCs in a
particular state or for a particular service.
Response: The average range of outliers based on the adjusted
charge for the encounter was approximately 1.3 percent of FQHC visits,
with higher rates in U.S. territories (4 percent) and the Pacific
census division (3 percent). Slightly more than 1 percent of all office
visits were outliers.
B. Policy Considerations for Developing the FQHC PPS Rates and
Adjustments
In developing the FQHC PPS rates and adjustments, we considered
existing payment policies regarding payment for multiple visits on the
same day, preventive laboratory services and technical components of
other preventive services, and vaccine costs to
[[Page 25445]]
determine potential interactions with the implementation of the FQHC
PPS.
1. Multiple Visits on the Same Day
The current all-inclusive payment system was designed to reimburse
FQHCs for services furnished to Medicare beneficiaries at a rate that
would take into account all costs associated with the provision of
services (for example, space, supplies, practitioners, etc.) and
reflect the aggregate costs of providing services over a period of
time. In some cases, the per visit rate for a specific service is
higher than what would be paid based on the PFS, and in some cases it
is lower than what would be paid based on the PFS, but at the end of
the reporting year when the cost report is settled, the Medicare
payment is typically higher for FQHCs than if the services were billed
separately on the PFS.
The all-inclusive payment system was also designed to minimize
reporting requirements, and as such, it reflects all the services that
a FQHC furnishes in a single day to an individual beneficiary,
regardless of the length or complexity of the visit or the number or
type of practitioners seen. This includes situations where a FQHC
patient has a medically-necessary face-to-face visit with a FQHC
practitioner, and is then seen by another FQHC practitioner, including
a specialist, for further evaluation of the same condition on the same
day, or is then seen by another FQHC practitioner (including a
specialist) for evaluation of a different condition on the same day.
Except for certain preventive services that have coinsurance
requirements waived, FQHCs have not been required to submit coding of
each service in order to determine Medicare payment.
Although the all-inclusive payment system was designed to provide
enhanced reimbursement that reflects the costs associated with a visit
in a single day by a Medicare beneficiary, an exception to the one
encounter payment per day policy was made for situations when a patient
comes into the FQHC for a medically-necessary visit, and after leaving
the FQHC, has a medical issue that was not present at the visit earlier
that day, such as an injury or unexpected onset of illness. In these
situations, the FQHC has been permitted to be paid separately for two
visits on the same day for the same beneficiary.
In the April 3, 1996 final rule (61 FR 14640), we revised the
regulations to allow separate payment for mental health services
furnished on the same day as a medical visit. The CY 2007 PFS final
rule (71 FR 69624) subsequently revised the regulations to allow FQHCs
to receive separate payment for DSMT/MNT. The ability to bill
separately for Medicare's IPPE is in manuals only and not in
regulation, with the manual language noting this is a once in a
lifetime benefit. There are no statutory requirements to pay FQHCs
separately for these services when they occur on the same day as
another billable visit.
To determine if these exceptions should be included, updated, or
revised in the new PPS, in the September 23, 2013 proposed rule (78 FR
58386) we discussed that we examined 2011 Medicare FQHC claims data in
order to determine the frequency of FQHCs billing for more than one
visit per day for a beneficiary. We then analyzed the potential
financial impact on FQHCs and the potential impact on access to care if
billing for more than 1 visit per day for these specific situations was
no longer permitted. We also considered several alternative options,
such as an adjustment of the per visit rate when multiple visits occur
in the same day, or the establishment of a separate per visit rate for
subsequent visit due to illness or injury, mental health services,
DSMT/MNT, or IPPE.
In the September 23, 2013 proposed rule (78 FR 58386) proposed
rule, we discussed that an analysis of data from Medicare FQHC claims
with dates of service between January 1, 2011 and June 30, 2012,
indicated that it is uncommon for FQHCs to bill more than one visit per
day for the same beneficiary (less than 0.5 percent of all visits),
even though the ability to do so has been in place since 1992 for
subsequent illness/injury, since 1996 for mental health services, and
since 2007 for DSMT/MNT. Even allowing for any underreporting in the
data, it is clear that billing multiple visits on the same day for an
individual is a rare event, and we stated that eliminating the ability
to do so would not significantly impact either the FQHC payment or a
beneficiary's access to care. We also suggested this policy would also
simplify billing by removing the need for modifier 59, which signifies
that the conditions being treated are totally unrelated and services
are furnished at separate times of the day, and the subsequent claims
review that occurs when modifier 59 appears on a claim.
Because the data show that multiple visits rarely occur on the same
day, we determined that the level of effort required to develop an
adjustment or a separate rate for each of these services when furnished
on the same day as a medical visit would not be justified. Therefore,
in the proposed rule, we proposed to revise Sec. 405.2463(b) to remove
the exception to the single encounter payment per day for FQHCs paid
under the proposed PPS and we stated that this policy is consistent
with an all-inclusive methodology and reasonable cost principles and
would simplify billing and payment procedures. Thus, the proposed PPS
encounter rate reflected a daily (per diem) rate and resulted in a
slightly higher payment than one calculated based on multiple
encounters on the same day.
Based on the Medicare claims data furnished by FQHCs that indicates
minimal incidence of multiple visits billed on the same day, we
concluded in the proposed rule that not including these exceptions in
the PPS would not significantly impact total payment or access to care.
However, because we understand that there may be many possible reasons
why the rate of billing for more than one visit per day has been low
(for example, difficulty in scheduling more than one type of visit on
the same day) and that FQHCs can furnish integrated, patient-centered
health care services in a variety of ways, we asked for comments to
address whether there are factors that we have not considered,
particularly in regards to the provision of mental health services, and
whether this change would impact access to these services or the
integration of services in underserved communities.
We received many comments on our proposal not to include these
exceptions in the new PPS for FQHCs. None of the commenters were
supportive of the proposal.
Comment: Some commenters said that we should continue to allow
mental health or other visits to be furnished on the same day as a
medical visit because their patients have transportation, mobility,
work, or childcare issues.
Response: We wish to clarify that we did not propose to prohibit
mental health visits from occurring on the same day as a medical visit.
We did propose not to include an exception to the per diem payment
system to allow for multiple billing when mental health (or subsequent
illness/injury, DSMT/MNT or IPPE) is furnished on the same as a medical
visit, as discussed later.
Comment: Some commenters suggested that if we do not allow separate
billing for mental health services that are furnished on the same day
as a medical service, we should instead develop an adjustment that
would increase the PPS per diem base payment rate when a mental health
visit occurs on the same day as another billable visit. Other
commenters suggested an adjustment for mental
[[Page 25446]]
health, behavioral health, DSMT, and MNT.
Response: As we discussed in earlier, we did not propose to include
adjustments to the PPS per diem payment rate except for new patient and
initial Medicare visits. While we considered an adjustment for mental
health services and DSMT/MNT, our analysis of the claims data did not
support such adjustments. Also, including additional adjustments would
result in a lower PPS rate, which would impact FQHC payments for all
visits.
Comment: Some commenters acknowledged that the incidence of
Medicare billing for more than 1 visit per beneficiary per day in FQHCs
is extremely low, but argued that their FQHC often billed multiple
visits on the same day, particularly for mental health visits that
occur on the same day as a medical visit, and that this proposal would
have a significant impact on their FQHC payments and their patient's
access to care.
Response: Based on our analysis of national Medicare claims data,
we believe there would be a very minimal impact if the exception
allowing multiple billing on the same day was to be eliminated,
especially for mental health services. We analyzed the claims data of
the FQHCs that provided the most detailed comments that they would be
significantly or disproportionately impacted if they could not bill
separately for mental health visits that occur on the same day as a
medical visit. A commenter from a large FQHC in the southeastern part
of the U.S. with more than 23,000 total visits per year described how
they are a fully integrated primary care FQHC and every patient has a
team of professionals that includes behavioral health. Yet a review of
the Medicare claims data for this FQHC showed that out of a yearly
total of more than 23,000 total visits, only 74 mental health visits,
or 0.32 percent, were billed on the same day as a medical visit. A
review of Medicare claims data for a large FQHC in the western part of
the U.S. showed that 2.0 percent had a mental health visit on the same
day as another visit, but of those 2.0 percent, only 0.5 percent of
these were billable visits. A large multisite FQHC in the southern part
of the U.S. stated that as a result of their integrated model of
behavioral care and same day billing, there was a reduction in visits
to the emergency room. The claims data for this FQHC showed a rate of
same day billing for mental health visits of 0.5 percent, and no
evidence was provided to link this to a reduction in emergency room
visits. While this is slightly higher than the average of 0.3 percent,
it is still a very low rate.
We do not know why these and other FQHCs believe that they are
billing more same-day mental health visits than indicated by their
claims data. Perhaps the FQHC may be considering all their patients,
not just Medicare beneficiaries who comprise an average of 8 percent of
all FQHC patients. Another possibility is that the FQHC may be
considering some behavioral health services that are beyond the scope
of Medicare-covered services, or are including services furnished by
non-FQHC practitioners. Based on the claims data and the information
provided in the comments, we do not agree that removal of the
exceptions to allow for multiple billing would have a significant
impact on the financial viability of these FQHCs or reduce access to
care for Medicare beneficiaries.
Comment: Several commenters acknowledged that their use of the
exception for multiple billing on the same day was low or non-existent
for Medicare beneficiaries, but wanted us to retain this exception so
that they could use this to leverage Medicaid in their state to pay
separately for mental health.
Response: We do not believe that Medicare policy should be
determined in order to influence state Medicaid policies.
Comment: Some commenters disputed our data which showed that only
0.5 percent of all claims were for multiple same day visits. The
commenters suggested the following reasons for the low number of
multiple same day visits: FQHCs did not code correctly; FQHCs did not
know they could bill for multiple visits; FQHC billing systems are not
set up for multiple billing because other payment systems do not
reimburse for it; and that the MACs do not allow it.
Response: Section 1834(o)(1)(B) of the Act, as added by the
Affordable Care Act required FQHCs to utilize HCPCS codes on their
Medicare claims in order to inform the development of the FQHC PPS.
FQHCs have also been required to use HCPCS codes for payment purposes
when a preventive service for which coinsurance is waived is on the
same claim as a service that has a coinsurance requirement. Other
payment systems may also require HCPCS coding on claims. We are aware
that some FQHCs have limited experience with coding and that the coding
submitted on Medicare claims may not have been accurate or complete in
all cases. However, even if the rate shown in the claims data was
doubled or tripled, the rate of billing for multiple visits on the same
day would still be extremely low.
As we stated in the September 23, 2013 proposed rule, the ability
to bill for multiple visits on the same day for subsequent illness or
injury has been allowed since the beginning of the FQHC program. We
also noted that the ability to bill for multiple visits on the same day
for mental health services has been allowed since 1996, and the ability
to bill for multiple visits on the same day has been allowed for DSMT/
MNT since 2007. While it is possible that some FQHCs were not aware
that this option existed, we know from the claims data that mental
health, IPPE, and DSMT/MNT services constitute a small percentage of a
FQHC's total Medicare services.
We understand that billing systems vary among FQHCs and that some
billing systems are more adept at managing tasks such as multiple same-
day billing. However, we believe that if the inability to bill for
multiple visits presented a significant loss of payment for a FQHC, the
FQHC would have upgraded its system to allow for this type of billing.
We are also not aware of any MACs that do not allow for multiple same
day billing for the circumstances in which they are allowable.
Medicare comprises only 8 percent of FQHC patient population, and
not all Medicare beneficiaries require mental health or DSMT/MNT
services. Particularly for mental health services, it is often
difficult to schedule appointments on the same day as a medical visit,
and most mental health conditions require ongoing treatment which would
likely be at a frequency that differs from the need for primary care
visits. Therefore, we would expect the rate of same day billing to be
low, despite the availability of the exceptions.
Comment: Some commenters requested that FQHCs be allowed to bill
separately for other services such as optometry and dental care when
furnished on the same day as another visit.
Response: Other services, such as optometry and dental care, cannot
be billed separately on the same day as another medical visit under the
current AIR system. We did not propose and we are not considering
expanding the type of services that can be billed separately when
furnished on the same day as another visit. The PPS rate and its
adjustments reflect the total cost of furnishing services to Medicare
beneficiaries.
Comment: Some commenters were concerned that removing the ability
to bill separately for mental health services that are furnished on the
same day as a medical visit would create an incentive
[[Page 25447]]
for FQHCs to schedule these encounters on separate days.
Response: Under both the all-inclusive payment system and the PPS
per diem system, there is a risk that a FQHC could deliberately
schedule patient visits over a period of time in order to maximize
payment. We expect FQHCs and other providers of care to Medicare
beneficiaries to act in the best interests of their patients, which
includes scheduling visits in a manner that maximizes the health and
safety of their patients.
Comment: A few commenters stated that FQHCs will not be able to
continue working with community mental health centers if we do not
allow separate billing for mental health services furnished on the same
day as a medical visit.
Response: Commenters did not provide enough supporting information
as to why this proposal would negatively or adversely affect FQHC
relationships with community mental health centers to allow us to
respond meaningfully to this comment.
Comment: Some commenters suggested that removing the ability to
bill separately for mental health and other services is inconsistent
with the Affordable Care Act's focus on value over volume.
Many commenters wrote that the ability to bill separately for
mental health and other visits on the same day as a primary care visit
would help them to furnish integrated and coordinated care and would
benefit their patients. Many of them stated that allowing separate
payment for mental health services furnished on the same day as a
medical visit would provide incentives to furnish integrated care for
Medicare patients with complex health conditions. Others were concerned
that not allowing this exception would send a message that we do not
value mental health care. Commenters also suggested that people with
mental illness are less likely to return for a mental health visit if a
primary care visit is not also scheduled, and that furnishing mental
health visits on the same day as a medical visit helps to increase
compliance with medications.
Response: We agree with commenters about the importance of
promoting and furnishing coordinated and integrated care, which can be
especially challenging in underserved areas. Based on Medicare claims
data and the comments we received, there is no evidence that access to
care would be reduced if exceptions to the per diem PPS are not
allowed.
However, we agree that separate payment for mental health services
furnished on the same day as a medical visit has the potential to
increase access to mental health services in underserved areas and that
this would help to demonstrate the value of mental health services,
especially in areas where need is high and utilization is low. We
acknowledge that FQHCs furnish services to underserved and vulnerable
populations that often have had difficulty accessing mental health
services, and that commenters overwhelmingly support separate payment
for mental health services furnished on the same day as a medical
visit. Therefore, in this final rule with comment period, we are
modifying our original proposal to allow an exception to the per diem
payment system so that FQHCs can bill separately for mental health
services that are furnished on the same day as a medical visit.
We will also allow an exception to the per diem payment system to
allow FQHCs to bill separately when an illness or injury occurs on the
same day in which a FQHC visit has already occurred. This exception is
available for situations where a Medicare beneficiary has a FQHC visit,
leaves the FQHC, and later in the day has an illness or injury that was
not present during the initial visit. While it does not happen often,
when it does occur we believe the FQHC should be able to bill
separately because it is a unique situation that could not be planned
or anticipated and the FQHC would not benefit from the economies of
scale that can occur when multiple medical issues are addressed in the
same visit.
We do not believe that the circumstances that justify allowing same
day billing for a subsequent injury or illness or a mental health visit
that occurs on the same day as a medical visit also applies to DSMT/
MNT. A DSMT/MNT visit is part of the broad category of primary care
services that are included in the services of a FQHC and are part of
the PPS per diem payment. Visits with multiple practitioners that occur
on the same day, including visits for different conditions or visits
with a specialist physician, are not separately payable in a FQHC under
the all-inclusive payment methodology or the PPS methodology. We do not
see any reason why these DSMT/MNT visits should be considered
differently. Additionally, the cost of a DSMT/MNT visit is far lower
than the cost of a medical or mental health visit, so it would not be
justified to pay separately for those visits at the PPS rate. We also
did not include IPPE as a separately billable visit, because we are
already allowing an adjustment to the PPS rate for a new patient or
initial Medicare visit.
We are allowing the exception to the per diem PPS payment for
mental health services that occur on the same day as a medical visit to
promote access to these services in FQHCs. While this may also
contribute to the coordination of care, this alone will not achieve the
goals of the Affordable Care Act to furnish integrated and coordinated
services. Instead, we believe that these goals may be supported through
an adaptation of the Chronic Care Management (CCM) services program
that will be implemented for physicians billing under the PFS in 2015.
We encourage FQHCs to review the CCM information in the CY 2014 PFS
final rule with comment period titled, ``Medicare Program; Revisions to
Payment Policies under the Physician Fee Schedule, Clinical Laboratory
Fee Schedule & Other Revisions to Part B for CY 2014'' (December 10,
2013 (78 FR 74230)) and submit comments to us on how the CCM services
payment could be adapted for FQHCs in CY 2015 to promote integrated and
coordinated care in FQHCs. We also invite RHCs to submit comments on
how CCM services could be adapted for RHCs in CY 2015 to promote
integrated and coordinated care.
In this final rule with comment period, we are modifying our
proposal not to allow an exception to the per diem PPS payment for
subsequent injury or illness and for mental health services furnished
on the same day as a medical visit, and we invite public comments on
this modification. We are adopting as final our proposal not to allow
an exception to the per diem PPS for DSMT/MNT or IPPE.
2. Preventive Laboratory Services and Technical Components of Other
Preventive Services
The core services of the FQHC benefit are generally billed under
the professional component. The benefit categories for laboratory
services and diagnostic tests generally are not within the scope of the
FQHC benefit, as defined under section 1861(aa) of the Act. For
services that can be split into professional and technical components,
we have instructed FQHCs to bill the professional component as part of
the AIR, and separately bill the Part B MAC under different
identification for the technical portion of the service on a Part B
practitioner claim (for example, Form CMS-1500). If the FQHC operates a
laboratory, is enrolled under Medicare Part B as a supplier, and meets
all applicable Medicare requirements related to billing for laboratory
services,
[[Page 25448]]
it may be able to bill as a supplier furnishing laboratory services
under Medicare Part B. When FQHCs separately bill these services, they
are instructed to adjust their cost reports and carve out the cost of
associated space, equipment, supplies, facility overhead, and personnel
for these services.
As part of the implementation of the FQHC benefit, we used our
regulatory authority to enumerate preventive primary services, as
defined in Sec. 405.2448, which may be paid for when furnished by
FQHCs (57 FR 24980, June 12, 1992, as amended by 61 FR 14657, April 3,
1996). These preventive primary services include a number of laboratory
tests, such as cholesterol screening, stool testing for occult blood,
dipstick urinalysis, tuberculosis testing for high risk patients, and
thyroid function tests. The preventive services added to the FQHC
benefit pursuant to the Affordable Care Act, as defined by section
1861(ddd)(3) of the Act and codified in Sec. 405.2449, include
laboratory tests and diagnostic services, such as screening
mammography, diabetes screening tests, and cardiovascular screening
blood tests.
Professional services or professional components of primary
preventive services (as defined in Sec. 405.2448) and preventive
services (as defined in Sec. 405.2449) are billed as part of the AIR.
The preventive laboratory tests and technical components of other
preventive tests are not paid under the AIR and FQHCs are instructed to
bill separately for these services. We did not propose a change in
billing procedures, and we did not propose to include payment for these
services under the FQHC PPS. We noted this payment structure simplifies
billing procedures as laboratory tests and technical components of
diagnostic services are always billed separately to Part B and are not
included as part of the FQHC's encounter rate. (Note that both the
professional and technical components of FQHC primary preventive
services and preventive services remain covered under Part B).
An analysis of FQHC claims indicates that FQHCs are listing some
preventive laboratory tests and diagnostic services on their all-
inclusive rate claims. In 2011 through 2012, less than 5 percent of
Medicare FQHC claims listed HCPCS codes related to laboratory tests or
diagnostic services. For purposes of modeling adjustments to the FQHC
PPS rate, we considered excluding these line items from the encounter
charge and proportionately reducing the cost-reporting entity's related
cost report data. However, it was not always clear whether the line
item charges for these laboratory tests or diagnostic services were
included in the total charge for the claim or were listed for
informational purposes only. As such, we chose not to adjust the claims
or cost report data based on the presence of the related HCPCS codes on
the claims. As part of the implementation of the FQHC PPS, we plan to
clarify the appropriate billing procedures through program instruction.
Comment: Most commenters were supportive of our intent to clarify
appropriate billing procedures through program instruction, and some
commenters suggested that we also use rulemaking to resolve issues
concerning Medicare billing. Many of these commenters requested greater
clarity on billing for the technical components of FQHC services
separately under Part B.
Response: As we stated in the proposed rule, we plan to clarify the
appropriate billing procedures for technical components of FQHC
services and other billing issues through program instruction, and we
do not believe that clarifications to billing procedures require
rulemaking.
Comment: A commenter disagreed with our conclusion that laboratory
services and diagnostic tests are by definition excluded from the FQHC
benefit. The commenter noted that preventive primary health services
and preventive services, as defined in section 1861(aa)(3) of the Act
and codified in Sec. 405.2448 and Sec. 405.2449 of the regulations,
include a variety of screening tests, and neither the statute nor the
regulations exclude the technical components of these tests from the
FQHC benefit.
Response: We respectfully disagree with this commenter and maintain
that the benefit categories for laboratory services and diagnostic
tests generally are not within the scope of the FQHC benefit, as
defined under section 1861(aa)(3) of the Act. We also maintain that
both the professional and technical components of FQHC primary
preventive services and preventive services, as defined in section
1861(aa)(3) of the Act and codified in Sec. 405.2448 and Sec.
405.2449 of the regulations, are covered under the FQHC benefit.
Laboratory tests and diagnostic services that do not meet the statutory
and regulatory definitions of FQHC primary and preventive services, and
are not otherwise specified in the statute or regulations as within the
scope of the FQHC benefit, are not covered under the FQHC benefit. We
agree with the commenter that neither the statute nor the regulations
specifically exclude the technical components of these tests. We also
note that the FQHC regulations do not distinguish between the technical
and professional components of primary or preventive services. As a
matter of our payment policy, we believe that laboratory tests and
diagnostic services that do not meet the statutory and regulatory
definitions of FQHC primary preventive and preventive services, and are
not otherwise specified in the statute or regulations as within the
scope of the FQHC benefit, are not covered under the FQHC benefit. As a
matter of policy, we believe the payment structure simplifies billing
procedures as laboratory tests and technical components of diagnostic
services are always billed separately to Part B and are never included
as part of the FQHC's encounter rate. We note that this payment
structure does not change the scope of the FQHC benefit.
Comment: A commenter recommended that FQHCs be allowed to bill all
Medicare Part B services on an institutional claim, including technical
components such as x-rays, laboratory tests, and durable medical
equipment which will not be paid as part of the FQHC PPS and would be
billed separately to Medicare Part B.
Response: To distinguish services that are not paid as part of the
encounter rate, we believe that the current billing requirements for
billing services separately to Medicare Part B on a Part B practitioner
claim are more appropriate for most services. We note that the
telehealth originating site facility fee will continue to be billed
separately on an institutional claim.
After consideration of the public comments received, we plan to
clarify the appropriate billing procedures through program instruction,
as proposed.
3. Vaccine Costs
Section 1834(o)(2)(B)(i) of the Act requires that the initial PPS
rates must be set so as to equal in the aggregate 100 percent of the
estimated amount of reasonable costs that would have occurred for the
year if the PPS had not been implemented. This 100 percent must be
calculated prior to application of copayments, per visit limits, or
productivity adjustments. We believe that this language directed us to
develop a PPS to pay for items currently paid under the AIR.
The administration and payment of influenza and pneumococcal
vaccines is not included in the AIR. They are paid at 100 percent of
reasonable costs through the cost report. The cost and administration
of HBV is covered under the FQHC's AIR when furnished as part of an
otherwise qualifying encounter.
[[Page 25449]]
We did not propose any changes to this payment structure, rather, we
stated that we would continue to pay for the costs of the influenza and
pneumococcal vaccines and their administration through the cost report,
and other Medicare-covered vaccines as part of the encounter rate. The
costs of hepatitis B vaccine and its administration were included in
the calculation of reasonable costs used to develop the FQHC PPS rates,
and we would continue paying for these services under the FQHC PPS when
furnished as part of an otherwise qualifying encounter.
Comment: A few commenters requested clarification regarding
coverage and payment for vaccines recommended by the Advisory Committee
on Immunization Practices (ACIP) of the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) that are typically covered and paid under Medicare
Part D. They believe that these vaccines, when furnished by FQHCs,
should be covered and paid separately by Part D plans and should not be
covered and paid for as part of a FQHC encounter.
Response: Under section 1862(a)(7) of the Act, as codified at 42
CFR 411.15(e) of our regulations, immunizations other than
pneumococcal, influenza, and HBV are generally excluded from Medicare
Part B coverage. Section 4161(a)(3)(C) of OBRA '90 (Pub. L. 101-508)
amended section 1862(a) of the Act to specify that the FQHC benefit can
include preventive primary health services, as described in section
1861(aa)(3)(B) of the Act, that would otherwise be excluded from Part B
under section 1862(a)(7) of the Act. Preventive primary services, as
defined in Sec. 405.2448, describes which services may be paid for
when furnished by FQHCs. (See the June 12, 1992 (57 FR 4980) and April
3, 1996 (61 FR 4657) final rules). These preventive primary services
include immunizations (see Sec. 405.2448(b)(8)). This means that when
FQHCs furnish ACIP-recommended vaccines, they are covered and paid for
under Part B as part of the FQHC benefit, and are excluded from Part D.
Except for pneumococcal and influenza vaccines and their
administration, which are paid at 100 percent of reasonable cost,
payments to FQHCs for covered FQHC services furnished to Medicare
beneficiaries are made on the basis of an AIR per covered visit. The
charges for other Medicare-covered vaccines and their administration
when furnished by a FQHC can be included as line items for an otherwise
qualifying encounter, and payment for these other Medicare-covered
vaccines would be included in the AIR. However, an encounter cannot be
billed if vaccine administration is the only service the FQHC provides.
For more information on how to bill under the AIR for services
furnished incident to a FQHC encounter, see CMS Pub. 100-04, Medicare
Claims Processing Manual, chapter 9.
Section 10501(i)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care Act did not amend the
coverage requirements applicable to the FQHC benefit. We did not
propose to remove immunizations from the preventive primary services
set out at Sec. 405.2448, and immunizations furnished by FQHCs after
implementation of the PPS will continue to be covered under Part B as
part of the FQHC benefit. We proposed to continue to pay for the costs
of the influenza and pneumococcal vaccines and their administration
through the cost report, and other Medicare-covered vaccines as part of
the encounter rate. As part of the implementation of the FQHC PPS, we
plan to update the appropriate billing procedures through program
instruction.
We note that under 1860D-2(e)(2)(B) of the Act, a drug prescribed
to a Part D eligible individual that would otherwise be a covered Part
D drug is excluded from Part D coverage if payment for such drug, as so
prescribed and dispensed or administered, is available under Part A or
B for that individual. Consequently, vaccines furnished by FQHCs and
covered under Part B as part of the FQHC benefit in accordance with
Sec. 405.2448(b)(8) are not covered or payable under Part D. For more
information on the exclusion from Part D of drugs covered under Part B,
see CMS Pub. 100-18, Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter
6. Section 20.2.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS apply a consistent
approach to payment for vaccines covered under Part B, which commenters
asserted would ensure broad access for Medicare beneficiaries. These
commenters recommended that CMS pay for the cost and administration of
the HBV at 100 percent of reasonable cost through the cost report. A
commenter recommended that influenza and pneumococcal vaccines should
be billed at time of service, either with or without an encounter, and
be paid using the national MAC fees, with an annual reconciliation on
the cost report between the payments and the reasonable costs of these
vaccines. This commenter wished to reduce the time between vaccine
administration and payment and to document on individual patient claims
that these vaccines were furnished. However, most commenters supported
our proposal to continue to reimburse influenza and pneumococcal
vaccines through the cost report.
Response: As discussed in the preamble to the April 3, 1996 FQHC
final rule (61 FR 14651), section 1833(a)(3) of the Act specifies that
services described in section 1861(s)(10)(A) of the Act are exempt from
payment at 80 percent of reasonable costs and payment to RHCs and FQHCs
for influenza and pneumococcal vaccines and their administration is at
100 percent of reasonable cost. Consistent with section 1833(a)(3) of
the Act, we used our regulatory authority to codify at Sec.
405.2466(b)(1)(iv) that for RHCs and FQHCs, payment for pneumococcal
and influenza vaccine and their administration is 100 percent of
Medicare reasonable cost paid as part of the annual reconciliation
through the cost report (61 FR 14657, April 3, 1996). Payment for all
other Medicare-covered vaccines is included in the AIR, and we proposed
to continue to pay for all other Medicare-covered vaccines as part of
the encounter rate under the FQHC PPS. We note that HBV is described in
section 1861(s)(10)(B) of the Act, and we do not believe that the
statute directs us to change the payment structure to pay for HBV at
100 percent of reasonable cost through the cost report.
We considered the commenter's request to pay for influenza and
pneumococcal vaccines billed at time of service with an annual
reconciliation between these payments and reasonable costs and we do
not believe this would be necessary. FQHCs are accustomed to reporting
and receiving payment for the reasonable costs for these vaccines and
their administration through the annual cost report, and we believe
that an annual reconciliation between vaccine fee amounts and
reasonable costs would create an additional administrative burden for
FQHCs and MACs. We also note that as of January 1, 2011, FQHCs have
been required to report pneumococcal and influenza vaccines and their
administration on a patient claim with the appropriate HCPCS and
revenue codes when furnished during a billable visit.
After consideration of the public comments received, we are
finalizing these provisions as proposed. We will continue to pay for
the administration and payment of influenza and pneumococcal vaccines
at 100 percent of reasonable costs through the cost report, and we will
continue to pay for other Medicare-covered vaccines under the FQHC PPS
as part of the encounter rate when furnished as part of an otherwise
qualifying encounter.
[[Page 25450]]
C. Risk Adjustments
Section 1834(o)(1)(A) of the Act provides that the FQHC PPS may
include adjustments, including geographic adjustments, that are
determined appropriate by the Secretary. We proposed the following
adjustments.
1. Alternative Calculations for Average Cost per Visit
For the proposed rule, we used the claims data to calculate an
average cost per visit by dividing the total estimated costs
($788,547,531) by the total number of daily visits (5,223,512).
Proposed average cost per daily visit = $788,547,531/5,223,512 =
$150.96
For this final rule with comment period, we modified the definition
of a daily visit, as discussed in section II.A.4. of this final rule
with comment period and consistent with the policy discussed in section
II.B.1. of this final rule with comment period, which allows an
exception to the per diem PPS payment for subsequent injury or illness
and mental health services furnished on the same day as a medical
visit. Separately payable encounters for the same beneficiary at the
same FQHC were combined into a single daily visit, while allowing for a
separate medical visit, mental health visit, and subsequent illness/
injury visit, which allows for up to three encounters for beneficiary
per day.
For this final rule with comment period, we used the updated claims
data to calculate an average cost per visit by dividing the total
estimated costs ($846,058,100) by the total number of daily visits
(5,462,670).
Final average cost per daily visit = $846,058,100/5,462,670 = $154.88
In the proposed rule, we also examined how the average cost per
visit would differ under current policy, which allows separate payment
for subsequent illness or injury, mental health services, DSMT/MNT or
IPPE when they occur on the same day as an otherwise billable visit.
While the total estimated cost was the same ($788,547,531), the total
number of visits in the denominator (5,245,961) did not combine
multiple visits on the same day of service into 1 daily visit.
Proposed average cost per visit = $788,547,531/5,245,961 = $150.32
For this final rule with comment period, we used the updated final
data set to examine how the average cost per visit would differ under
current policy. While the total estimated cost was the same
($846,058,100), the total number of visits in the denominator
(5,468,852) did not combine multiple visits on the same day of service.
Final average cost per visit = $846,058,100/5,468,852 = $154.70
In the proposed rule, we also derived an average cost per visit
from the cost reports by dividing the total estimated Medicare costs
(excluding vaccines) reported ($832,387,663) by the total number of
Medicare visits reported (5,374,217). Unlike the previous calculations
based on claims data, the variables derived from the cost reports
summarize total costs and visits by cost reporting entity and could not
be trimmed of individual visits with outlier values. Also, we noted
that the total number of Medicare visits reported on the cost reports
reflects current policy which allows for multiple visits on the same
day of service, and we could not calculate an average cost per daily
visit using only cost report data.
Proposed average cost per visit from cost report data = $832,387,663/
5,374,217 = $154.89
For this final rule with comment period, we used the current data
set to update the average cost per visit derived from the cost reports
by dividing the total estimated Medicare costs (excluding vaccines)
reported ($897,330,363) by the total number of Medicare visits reported
(5,634,602).
Final average cost per visit from cost report data = $897,330,363/
5,634,602 = $159.25
Consistent with our proposal to remove the exception to the single
encounter payment per day, we proposed to use the average cost per
daily visit of $150.96, as calculated based on adjusted claims data, as
the PPS rate prior to any risk adjustment. We noted that the
alternative calculations yield an average cost per visit that differs
from $150.96 by less than 3 percent. We also noted that these
calculations were derived based on the cost report and claims data
available during our development of the proposed rule and were subject
to change in the final rule based on more current data.
For this final rule with comment period, consistent with our policy
to allow an exception to the per diem PPS payment for subsequent injury
and mental health services furnished on the same day as a medical
visit, we will use the average cost per daily visit of $154.88, as
calculated above based on adjusted claims data, as the final PPS rate
prior to any risk adjustment. We note that the alternative calculations
yield an average cost per visit that differs from $154.88 by less than
3 percent.
2. FQHC Geographic Adjustment Factor
We proposed to adjust the FQHC PPS rate for geographic differences
and to make this adjustment to the cost of inputs by applying an
adaptation of the GPCIs used to adjust payment under the PFS.
Established in section 1848(e) of the Act, GPCIs adjust payments for
geographic variation in the costs of furnishing services and consist of
three component GPCIs: The physician work GPCI, the practice expense
GPCI, and the malpractice insurance GPCI.
Since FQHCs furnish services that are analogous to those furnished
by physicians in outpatient clinic settings, we believe it would be
consistent to apply geographic adjustments similar to those applied to
services furnished under the PFS. We calculated a FQHC geographic
adjustment factor (FQHC GAF) for each encounter based on the delivery
site's locality using the proposed CY 2014 work and practice expense
GPCIs and the proposed cost share weights for the CY 2014 GPCI update,
as published in the CY 2014 PFS proposed rule on July 19, 2013 (78 FR
43282).
For modeling geographic adjustments for the FQHC PPS proposed rule,
we did not use the proposed CY 2015 work and practice expense GPCIs
that also were published in the CY 2014 PFS proposed rule. We noted
that the FQHC GAFs are subject to change in the final FQHC PPS rule
based on more current data, including the finalized PFS GPCI and cost
share weight values.
We excluded the PFS malpractice GPCI from the calculation of the
FQHC GAF, as FQHCs that receive section 330 grant funds are eligible to
apply for medical malpractice coverage under FSHCAA of 1992 and FSHCAA
of 1995. Without the cost share weight for the malpractice GPCI, the
sum of the proposed PFS work and PE cost share weights (0.50866 and
0.44839, respectively) is less than one. In calculating the FQHC GAFs,
prior to applying the proposed work and PE cost share weights to the
GPCIs, we scaled these proposed cost share weights so they would total
100 percent while still retaining weights relative to each other
(0.53149 and 0.46851, respectively).
We calculated each locality's FQHC GAF as follows:
Geographic adjustment factor = (0.53149 x Work GPCI) + (0.46851 x PE
GPCI)
We included the FQHC GAF adjustment when modeling all other
potential adjustments. We proposed to apply the FQHC GAF based on where
the services are furnished, and we noted the FQHC GAF may vary among
FQHCs
[[Page 25451]]
that are part of the same organization. The list of proposed FQHC GAFs
by locality was included in the Addendum of the proposed rule and as a
downloadable file at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/FQHCPPS/.
Comment: Commenters were supportive of a FQHC GAF adjustment, but
some suggested changes to the proposed FQHC GAFs. Some commenters
suggested that the rural FQHC GAFs may not reflect the actual cost of
furnishing FQHC services in rural areas, and they requested that we
increase the rural FQHC GAFs. Some of these commenters believe that the
factors influencing costs for urban versus rural providers are not
identical for FQHCs and physician practices. Among the concerns raised
by these commenters are that a rural FQHC's operating costs (such as
utilities and transportation costs) may be higher than similar costs of
FQHCs in urban areas; predominantly rural FQHCs often have fewer sites
than urban FQHCs and benefit less from economies of scale; and FQHCs
located in rural areas may incur additional costs if they offer payment
incentives in order to recruit and retain qualified physicians and non-
physician practitioners.
Response: Since FQHCs furnish services that are analogous to those
furnished by physicians in outpatient clinic settings, we proposed to
adapt the PFS GPCIs to calculate the FQHC GAFs, as we believe it would
be consistent to apply geographic adjustments similar to those applied
to services furnished under the PFS. As discussed in the CY 2014 PFS
final rule with comment period, we used updated Bureau of Labor
Statistics (BLS) Occupational Employment Statistics data to calculate
the work GPCI and purchased services index of the PE GPCI and updated
U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey (ACS) data to calculate
the rent component (which includes utilities) of the PE GPCI. Given
their reliability, public availability, level of detail and national
scope with sufficient data coverage in both urban and rural areas, we
believe that the ACS and BLS data are the most appropriate sources for
measuring geographic cost differences in operating a medical practice.
(See our discussion in the CY 2014 PFS final rule with comment period
(78 FR 74380 through 74381)). We believe that the data used to develop
the PFS GPCIs are reflective of the costs of furnishing FQHC services,
including the geographic variation in the costs of furnishing FQHC
services in rural areas. Moreover, we do not have a comprehensive
national source that would provide us with a basis for adjusting the
FQHC GAFs for rural areas independently of the PFS GPCIs while meeting
data selection criteria similar to the criteria used for selecting the
PFS GPCI sources. We also note that as discussed later in this section,
many rural areas would see a substantial decrease in payment amounts if
they were no longer grouped with urban areas.
Comment: A commenter was concerned that FQHCs with multiple
delivery sites with different costs may be penalized if accommodation
for these different sites is not taken into account.
Response: We proposed to apply the FQHC GAF based on where the
services are furnished. Therefore, for FQHCs with multiple delivery
sites in different areas, the FQHC GAF may vary depending on the
delivery site.
Comment: A commenter was concerned that application of the FQHC GAF
reduces its PPS rate below the proposed base rate, which is below its
cost of furnishing FQHC services.
Response: Under the FQHC PPS, Medicare payment for FQHC services is
based on 100 percent of aggregate reasonable costs, not on an
individual FQHC's costs. While the FQHC GAF will vary by locality, we
note that the fully implemented, geographically adjusted PPS rate for
all FQHCs will be approximately 32 percent higher, based on payment at
the FQHC PPS rate, when compared to current payments to FQHCs.
Comment: A commenter noted that FQHC lookalikes do not have access
to malpractice coverage under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) and
therefore incur malpractice expense. The commenter requested that CMS
incorporate a malpractice adjustment in the FQHC GAFs for FQHC
lookalikes, or otherwise recognize malpractice expense under the FQHC
PPS.
Response: FQHCs that receive section 330 grant funds are the
predominant type of FQHC, with more than 1,100 centers operating
approximately 8,900 delivery sites. These FQHCs are eligible to apply
for medical malpractice coverage under the FTCA. In comparison, there
were 93 look-alikes in 2012, according to HRSA's UDS. The PPS rate is
based on aggregate costs, and assumes that not all FQHCs have the same
costs. It would not be feasible to develop separate PPS rates for FQHCs
based on differences in malpractice or any other costs. We excluded the
PFS malpractice GPCI from the calculation of the FQHC GAF as the
geographic variation in malpractice costs is not relevant for the
majority of FQHCs that are eligible to apply for medical malpractice
coverage under the FTCA. We note that FQHCs are required to report
professional liability insurance on Worksheet A of the FQHC cost report
(Form CMS-222), and malpractice expense was recognized as a component
of the reasonable costs used to calculate the FQHC PPS rates.
Comment: A commenter disagreed with our adaptation of the PFS GPCIs
and recommended that we adjust the FQHC PPS rate for geographic
differences based on Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs). The
commenter believes that use of the current PFS locality structure would
result in underpayment for FQHC services furnished in several
California counties.
Response: As previously noted, because FQHCs furnish services that
are analogous to those furnished by physicians in outpatient clinic
settings, we believe it would be consistent to apply geographic
adjustments similar to those applied to services furnished under the
PFS. Moreover, by adapting the PFS GPCIs for the FQHC PPS, the accuracy
of FQHC payments also benefits from the ongoing assessment, evaluation,
and updates to the PFS GPCIs, including the periodic review and
adjustment of GPCIs as mandated by section 1848(e)(1)(C) of the Act.
We note that adjusting the FQHC PPS rate for geographic differences
based on MSAs could result in significant reductions in payment for
rural FQHCs when compared to geographically adjusted payments using the
current PFS locality configuration. As discussed in the CY 2014 PFS
final rule with comment period, published in the Federal Register on
December 10, 2013 (78 FR 74230), a MSA-based locality structure would
expand the number of PFS payment localities, and many rural areas would
see substantial decreases in their GPCI values given that they would no
longer be grouped together with higher cost counties (78 FR 74380
through 74391). If the PFS locality structure or GPCI values changed,
we would make corresponding changes to the FQHC localities and FQHC
GAFs. As other methodologies emerge for geographic payment adjustment
under the PFS, they may also eventually apply to the new FQHC PPS.
Comment: A commenter recommended that after the first year of
implementation, we use a market basket approach to adjust payments
based on geographic locations. The commenter suggested that we revise
the FQHC cost report to capture additional wage data that, in
conjunction with HRSA's UDS data, could be used to develop a wage
[[Page 25452]]
index to adjust the PPS rate based on reported salary differentials.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's interest in developing a
wage index for the FQHC PPS. We believe that a FQHC GAF based on the
PFS GPCIs is appropriate for FQHC services, as an FQHC's employment mix
and scope and delivery of services are generally similar to a
physician's practice. We note that a FQHC GAF based solely on a wage
index, which is a relative measure of geographic differences in wage
levels, would not reflect the relative cost difference in the full mix
of goods and services comprising the PFS practice expense GPCIs (for
example, purchased services, office rent, equipment, supplies, and
other miscellaneous expenses). We do not believe that the additional
reporting burden suggested by the commenter, or the additional
administrative burden of collecting and validating the type of data
needed for a reliable FQHC wage index, would justify the potential
incremental benefit of using a FQHC-specific wage index in calculating
the FQHC GAFs.
Comment: A commenter asked why we did not use the CY 2015 GPCI
values to calculate the FQHC GAFs.
Response: For modeling geographic adjustments for the FQHC PPS
proposed rule, we used the CY 2014 work and practice expense GPCIs
published in the CY 2014 PFS proposed rule. We noted that the FQHC GAFs
could be subject to change in the final FQHC PPS rule based on more
current data, including the finalized PFS GPCI and cost share weight
values.
As discussed in the CY 2014 PFS final rule with comment period (78
FR 74380 through 74391), the CY 2015 PFS GPCI values reflect our most
current updates of the underlying data sources and represent our best
estimates of the geographic variation in the costs of furnishing
physician services. In contrast, the CY 2014 GPCI values partially
reflect the updates to the underlying data and MEI cost weights.
Therefore, we will use the CY 2015 GPCI values, as published in the CY
2014 final rule with comment period, to model the geographic
adjustments for the FQHC PPS rates as they represent the most current
data. We note that the PFS cost share weights were finalized as
proposed, and we will use the relative weights of the PFS work and PE
GPCIs, as proposed and finalized, to calculate each locality's FQHC
GAF.
For payments under the FQHC PPS, we believe it most appropriate to
apply geographic adjustments consistent with those applied to services
furnished under the PFS during the same period. Therefore, the FQHC
GAFs and cost share weights will be updated in conjunction with updates
to the PFS GPCIs, which would maintain consistency between the
geographic adjustments applied to the PFS and the FQHC PPS in the same
period. We note that the FQHC GAFs for October 1 through December 31,
2014, will be adapted from the CY 2014 PFS GPCIs applicable during that
same period. Subsequent updates to the FQHC GAFs will be made in
conjunction with updates to the PFS GPCIs for the same period.
We have considered the public comments we received, and are
finalizing the FQHC GAF provisions as proposed, with some
modifications. As proposed, we are revising Sec. 405.2462 to require
that payments under the FQHC PPS will be adjusted for geographic
differences by applying an adaptation of the work and practice expense
GPCIs used to adjust payment under the PFS. We are modifying Sec.
405.2462 to specify that the FQHC GAFs used for payment will be adapted
from the GPCIs used to adjust payment under the PFS for that same
period.
For modeling geographic adjustments for the FQHC PPS proposed rule,
we did not use the proposed CY 2014 work and practice expense GPCIs
that were published in the CY 2014 PFS proposed rule. Instead, for
modeling the geographic adjustments for this FQHC PPS final rule, we
used the final CY 2015 work and practice expense GPCIs and cost shares
that were published in the CY 2014 PFS final rule with comment period
as the CY 2015 GPCI values represent the most recent fully implemented
GPCI update and therefore more current data. More information on how we
modeled the FQHC PPS geographic adjustment is discussed in section
II.D. of this final rule with comment period.
3. New Patient or Initial Medicare Visit
Based on an analysis of claims data, we found that the estimated
cost per encounter was approximately 33 percent higher when a FQHC
furnished care to a patient that was new to the FQHC or to a
beneficiary receiving a comprehensive initial Medicare visit (that is,
an IPPE or an initial AWV). We proposed to adjust the encounter rate to
reflect the 33 percent increase in costs when FQHCs furnish care to new
patients or when they furnish a comprehensive initial Medicare visit,
which could account for the greater intensity and resource use
associated with these types of services. Our proposed risk adjustment
factor was 1.3333.
Comment: Commenters supported the proposed adjustments, but some
recommended that we also apply the adjustment factor to subsequent
AWVs. Commenters recommended that we allow an adjustment for subsequent
AWVs in addition to initial AWVs in order to support the goal of
improving health outcomes and increasing access to subsequent AWVs.
Commenters also believe that the subsequent AWV is similar to the
increased intensity of the IPPE and initial AWV, in terms of both the
duration of the visits and the number of ancillary services furnished.
Response: Subsequent AWV is a very small percent of total FQHC
visits (approximately 0.25 percent), but the claims data suggest that
subsequent AWV is significantly more costly than most other FQHC
visits. The claims data also suggest that subsequent AWV is somewhat
less costly than an IPPE or initial AWV, which is consistent with the
comparatively reduced level of required physician work associated with
the subsequent AWV. As previously noted, our goal for the FQHC PPS is
to implement a system in accordance with the statute whereby FQHCs are
fairly paid for the services they furnish to Medicare patients in the
least burdensome manner possible. Rather than establish a separate
adjustment for subsequent AWV, we will add the subsequent AWV to the
proposed adjustment for new patient or initial Medicare visit. Based on
current FQHC data, the composite group of new patient visits, IPPEs,
initial AWVs, and subsequent AWVs is associated with 34.16 percent
higher estimated costs than other visits.
In this final rule with comment period, we are modifying our
proposal, and we will adjust the encounter rate to reflect the 34.16
increase in costs when FQHCs furnish care to new patients or when they
furnish an IPPE, initial AWV, or subsequent AWV, which could account
for the greater intensity and resource use associated with these types
of services. Our composite risk adjustment factor for these types of
visits is 1.3416.
4. Other Adjustment Factors Considered
We considered multiple other adjustments such as demographics (age
and sex), clinical conditions, duration of the encounter, etc. However,
we found many of these other adjustments to have limited impact on
costs or to be too complex and largely unnecessary for the FQHC PPS.
We calculated whether there were differences in resource use for
mental health visits and preventive care visits when compared to
medical care visits
[[Page 25453]]
using mathematical modeling techniques. We found that mental health
encounters had approximately 1 percent lower estimated costs per visit
relative to medical care visits, and we did not consider this a
sufficient basis for proposing a payment adjustment. We found that
preventive care encounters had approximately 18 percent higher
estimated costs per visit. This difference in resource use declined to
an 8 percent higher estimated cost per visit after adjusting for the
FQHC GAF and the proposed 1.3333 risk adjustment factor for a patient
that is new to the FQHC or for a beneficiary receiving a comprehensive
initial Medicare visit (that is, an IPPE or an initial AWV), indicating
that a significant amount of preventive care visits were IPPEs or
initial AWVs. We did not propose a payment reduction for preventive
care encounters and we noted that a significant amount of the more
costly preventive care encounters would otherwise be recognized and
paid for with the proposed 1.3333 risk adjustment factor for a
beneficiary receiving a comprehensive initial Medicare visit.
We considered patient age and sex as potential adjustment factors
as these demographic characteristics have the advantage of being
objectively defined. However, both of these characteristics had a
limited association with estimated costs, which did not support the use
of these demographic characteristics as potential adjustment factors.
We tested for an association between commonly reported clinical
conditions and the estimated cost per visit. A number of clinical
conditions were found to be associated with approximately 5 to 10
percent higher costs per visit, but we are concerned that claims might
not include all potentially relevant secondary diagnoses, and that we
would need to consider how to minimize the complexity of such an
adjustment with a limited number of clinically meaningful groupings.
We considered the duration of encounters (in minutes) as a
potential adjustment factor. Many of the E/M codes commonly seen on
FQHC claims are associated with average or typical times, and there was
a strong association between these associated times and the estimated
cost per encounter. However, these minutes are guidelines that reflect
the face-to-face time between the FQHC practitioner and the beneficiary
for that E/M service, and they would not indicate the total duration of
the FQHC encounter. Moreover, many of the codes used to describe the
face-to-face visit that qualifies an encounter, such as a subsequent
AWV, are not associated with average or typical times.
We considered adjusting payment based on the types of services
furnished during a FQHC encounter. Our analysis of FQHC claims data
indicates that information regarding ancillary services provided by
FQHCs appears to be limited. As a result, there is a risk that
adjustments for the types of services being provided would be based on
incomplete information and result in payments under the PPS that do not
accurately reflect the cost of providing those services.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS address the
special circumstances facing Indian health providers by considering the
inclusion of a low-volume upward adjustment, a population-density
adjustment, and a service-mix adjustment to the PPS rate. These
commenters stated that a volume adjustment is necessary because low-
volume tribal FQHCs find it more difficult to spread their costs across
their patient base, and are less likely to obtain volume discounts and
benefit from economies of scale. They also stated that many tribal
FQHCs in rural areas furnish less complex or lower intensity services
than urban providers, resulting in different payment-to-cost ratios
that result in reimbursement inequities.
Response: We appreciate the challenges that tribal FQHCs face in
furnishing services, especially in rural and isolated areas, and the
significant health disparities that remain for AI/AN populations. We
also understand that providers in isolated and rural areas, including
tribal FQHCs, may have fewer patients than providers in more densely
populated areas, and may not be able to offer as full of a range or
level of complexity in their services as other providers, or benefit
from the economies of scale that providers with higher volume or in
more densely populated areas may have. In developing the PPS rate, we
considered various possible adjustments, including a low-volume
adjustment. When analyzing Medicare claims data, lower overall FQHC
volume was found to be associated with higher estimated costs (see
``Results of Research on the Design of a Medicare Prospective Payment
System for Federally Qualified Health Centers'' by Arbor Research
Collaborative for Health). However, we did not propose to include a
low-volume adjustment, because we believe that the PPS rate, along with
adjustments for new and initial visits and AWV, will provide
appropriate reimbursement for the costs of services provided.
Comment: Commenters were generally supportive of a single base rate
with a geographic adjustment and an adjustment for new patients and
initial Medicare visits. Some commenters recommended additional
adjustments, such as: high acuity of patients; visit characteristics;
multiple chronic conditions; encounters with more than two HCPCS codes
on the claim; unique geographical differences among FQHCs; and dual
eligible beneficiaries.
Response: As discussed in the proposed rule, FQHC claims data
regarding secondary diagnoses and ancillary services appears to be
limited. As a result, there is a risk that the recommended adjustments,
such as increased payments for high acuity, multiple chronic
conditions, or encounters with multiple HCPCS, could be based on
incomplete information. Our analyses of clinical conditions, encounter
duration, and types of service, which considered the same or similar
types of adjustments, found that these adjustments had limited impact
on costs or were too complex for the FQHC PPS. Our analysis of more
current data continues to support these conclusions. As discussed in
section II.C.2. of this final rule with comment period, we believe it
is appropriate to adjust for geographic differences among FQHCs using
the GAF.
We tested for an association between dual eligibility and the
estimated cost per visit. On average, the estimated cost of a FQHC
visit was 4 percent higher among dual eligible beneficiaries. After
applying the GAF and the new patient/initial visit adjustment to the
model, the estimated cost of a FQHC visit was, on average, 0.4 percent
higher among dual eligible beneficiaries. We do not believe that this
slight variation in estimated cost justifies the added complexity of an
additional payment adjustment for dual eligible beneficiaries.
Comment: A commenter recommended that CMS include an upward
adjustment for FQHCs that provide significant ``enabling services.''
The commenter believes that non-clinical services provided to patients
to support care delivery, enhance health literacy, or facilitate access
to care can reduce health disparities and improve outcomes for FQHC
patients.
Response: While FQHCs, including look-alikes, are required by
section 330 of the PHS Act to provide services that enable individuals
to use the required primary health services that they provide, these
services are not part of the Medicare FQHC benefit.
[[Page 25454]]
Comment: Some commenters believe that the PPS payment methodology
removes incentives to provide fewer, more intensive visits and
recommended that CMS increase payments to high-performing FQHCs that
furnish efficient, integrated care. Some commenters recommended that
CMS encourage expanded access to care, the development of medical
homes, and horizontal networks of care by applying upward adjustments
to FQHCs that offer value-added services, such as a broader scope of
services, expanded hours, or teaching health centers.
Response: While we appreciate the suggestions, neither the cost
report nor the claims data contains sufficient information to assess
the validity of commenters' claims with respect to these types of
adjustments. Moreover, the types of adjustments suggested by these
commenters are beyond the scope of the FQHC PPS methodology. However,
we are taking steps to foster innovation in how FQHCs deliver services
to Medicare beneficiaries. For example, the FQHC Advanced Primary Care
Practice (APCP) Demonstration, operated by CMS in partnership with
HRSA, is designed to evaluate the effect of the advanced primary care
practice model in improving care, promoting health, and reducing the
cost of care provided to Medicare beneficiaries served by FQHCs. This
demonstration is being conducted in accordance with the Secretary's
demonstration authority under section 1115A, which facilitates the
development and expansion of successful payment models. For more
information on the FQHC APCP, see https://www.fqhcmedicalhome.com/.
Comment: A commenter noted that CMS did not include data from
provider-based FQHCs in its costs calculations, asserted that provider-
based FQHCs experience higher costs than freestanding FQHCs, and urged
CMS to add an adjustment to ensure payments to provider-based FQHCs
recognize their differential costs.
Response: As discussed in section II.A.2. of this final rule with
comment period, in developing the rates for this final rule with
comment period, we included data from provider-based FQHCs in
calculating the PPS rate. Under the FQHC PPS, Medicare payment for FQHC
services is not based on an individual FQHC's costs. The cost report
and claims data do not support an adjustment for provider-based FQHCs.
While the average cost per visit is somewhat higher for provider-based
FQHCs than for freestanding FQHCs, none of the provider-based FQHCs
were identified as outliers based on the average cost per visit from
the cost reports, and only 0.4 percent of the encounters in the claims
were identified as outliers based on estimated costs.
5. Report on PPS Design and Models
We contracted with Arbor Research for Collaborative Health to
assist us in designing a PPS for FQHCs. Arbor Research modeled options
for calculating payment rates and adjustments under a PPS based on data
from Medicare FQHC cost reports and Medicare FQHC claims. A report
detailing the options modeled in the development of the PPS was made
available at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/FQHCPPS/.
D. Base Rate Calculation
We calculated a proposed base rate for the FQHC PPS by adjusting
the average cost per visit to account for the proposed adjustment
factors. We calculated a proposed average payment multiplier using the
average FQHC GAF (0.9944) multiplied by the average risk adjustment for
non-new patient/initial visits (1.0), as weighted by the percent of
encounters that represented non new patient/initial visits (0.9722),
and we added this to the average FQHC GAF (0.9944) multiplied by the
average risk adjustment for new patient/initial visits (1.3333), as
weighted by the percent of encounters that represented new patient/
initial visits (0.0278):
Proposed average payment multiplier = 0.9721(1.00)(0.9944) +
0.0279(1.3333)(0.9944) = 1.0036
We calculated a proposed base rate amount by multiplying the
reciprocal of the average payment multiplier by the average cost per
visit. Using the average cost per daily visit:
Proposed base rate per daily visit = $150.96 x (1/1.0036) = $150.42
The proposed base rate per daily visit of $150.42 reflected costs
through June 30, 2012, and did not include an adjustment for price
inflation. As the FQHC PPS is to be implemented beginning October 1,
2014, we proposed to update the base rate to account for the price
inflation through September 30, 2014, as measured by the MEI as
finalized in the CY 2011 PFS final rule (75 FR 73262 through 73270).
The MEI is an index reflecting the weighted-average annual price change
for various inputs involved in furnishing physicians' services. The MEI
is a fixed-weight input price index, with an adjustment for the change
in economy-wide, private nonfarm business multifactor productivity.
We proposed to inflate the base rate by approximately 1.8 percent,
reflecting the growth in the MEI from July 1, 2012 through September
30, 2014. We also proposed to use a forecasted MEI update of 1.7
percent for the 15-month period of October 1, 2014, through December
31, 2015, to calculate the first year's base payment amount under the
PPS. We also proposed if more recent data became available (for
example, a more recent estimate of the FY 2006-based MEI), we would use
such data, if appropriate, to determine the 15-month FQHC PPS update
factor for the final rule.
Table 1--Proposed Base Rate per Daily Visit
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated base
Average rate without MEI-Adjusted
Total estimated costs Daily payment Average cost adjustment for MEI Update base payment
encounters multiplier per daily visit price factor rate
inflation
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$788,547,531...................................... 5,223,512 1.0036 $150.96 $150.42 1.0364 $155.90
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed MEI-adjusted base payment rate = $150.96 x (1/1.0036) x 1.0364
= $155.90
Thus, we proposed a base payment rate of $155.90 per beneficiary
per visit for the proposed FQHC PPS. We noted that this base rate is
subject to change in the final rule based on more current data.
Proposed payments to FQHCs were calculated as follows:
Proposed base payment rate x FQHC GAF = Proposed PPS payment
In calculating the proposed payment, the proposed base payment rate
was $155.90, and the FQHC GAF was based on the locality of the delivery
site.
[[Page 25455]]
If the patient is new to the FQHC, or the FQHC is furnishing an
initial comprehensive Medicare visit, we proposed that the payment
would be calculated as follows:
Proposed base payment rate x FQHC GAF x 1.3333 = Proposed PPS payment
In calculating the proposed payment, 1.3333 represented the risk
adjustment factor applied to the PPS payment when FQHCs furnish care to
new patients or when they furnish a comprehensive initial Medicare
visit.
To calculate the FQHC base rate for this final rule with comment
period, we used updated data, the finalized adjustment factors, the
finalized definition of a daily visit (as discussed in sections II.A.4.
and II.B.1. of this final rule with comment period), and the finalized
adjustment for a new patient, IPPE, initial AWV, and subsequent AWV (as
discussed in section II.C.3. of this final rule with comment period).
We calculated a final base rate for the FQHC PPS by adjusting the
average cost per visit to account for the finalized adjustment factors.
We calculated a final average payment multiplier using the average
final FQHC GAF (0.9961) multiplied by the average risk adjustment for
non-new patient/IPPE/AWV (1.0), as weighted by the percent of
encounters that represented non-new patient/IPPE/AWV (0.9683), and we
added this to the average final FQHC GAF (0.9961) multiplied by the
average risk adjustment for new patient/IPPE/AWV (1.3416), as weighted
by the percent of encounters that represented new patient/IPPE/AWV
(0.0317):
Final average payment multiplier = 0.9683(1.00)(0.9961) +
0.0317(1.3416)(0.9961) = 1.0069
We calculated a final base rate amount by multiplying the
reciprocal of the final average payment multiplier by the final average
cost per visit. Using the average cost per daily visit:
Final base rate per daily visit = $154.88 x (1/1.0069) = $153.82
We did not receive any comments on our use of the MEI to update the
FQHC base rate. Our final data set reflects cost reporting periods
ending between June 30, 2011, and June 30, 2013. Given that the updated
cost data typically has a midpoint that is close to the middle of 2012,
we are continuing to use June 30, 2012, as the starting point for
inflating prices forward. We are finalizing our proposal to update the
FQHC base rate per daily visit for inflation using the growth as
measured by the MEI from July 2012 through December 2015. The estimated
base rate of $153.82 per diem is inflated through FY 2014 using the
historical MEI market basket increase of 1.8 percent. For the 15-month
period October 1, 2014 through December 31, 2015, we apply an update of
1.3 percent as measured by the 4th quarter 2013 forecast of the MEI,
the most recent forecast available at the time. The adjusted base
payment that reflects the MEI historical updates and forecasted updates
to the MEI is $158.85. This payment rate incorporates a combined MEI
update factor of 1.0327 that trends dollars forward from July 1, 2012
through December 31, 2015.
Table 2--Final Base Rate per Daily Visit
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated base
Average rate without MEI-Adjusted
Total estimated costs Daily payment Average cost adjustment for MEI Update base payment
encounters multiplier per daily visit price factor rate
inflation
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$846,058,100...................................... 5,462,670 1.0069 $154.88 $153.82 1.0327 $158.85
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Final MEI-adjusted base payment rate = $154.88 x (1/1.0069) x 1.0327 =
$158.85
Thus, we are finalizing a base payment rate of $158.85 per
beneficiary per day for the FQHC PPS, based on current data and the
finalized policies.
Payments to FQHCs were calculated as follows:
Base payment rate x FQHC GAF = PPS payment
In calculating the payment, the base payment rate was $158.85, and
the FQHC GAF was based on the locality of the delivery site.
If the patient is new to the FQHC, or the FQHC is furnishing an
IPPE, initial AWV, or subsequent AWV, payment would be calculated as
follows:
Base payment rate x FQHC GAF x 1.3416 = PPS payment
In calculating the payment, 1.3416 represents the risk adjustment
factor applied to the PPS payment when FQHCs furnish care to new
patients or when they furnish an IPPE, initial AWV, or subsequent AWV
(see discussion in section II.C.3. of this final rule with comment
period).
E. Implementation
1. Transition Period and Annual Adjustment
Section 1834(o)(2) of the Act requires implementation of the FQHC
PPS for FQHCs with cost reporting periods beginning on or after October
1, 2014. Cost reporting periods are typically 12 months, and usually do
not exceed 13 months. Therefore, we expect that all FQHCs would be
transitioned to the PPS by the end of 2015, or 15 months after the
October 1, 2014 implementation date.
FQHCs would transition into the PPS based on their cost reporting
periods. We noted that a change in cost reporting periods that is made
primarily to maximize payment would not be acceptable under established
cost reporting policy (see Sec. 413.24(f)(3) of the regulations and
the Provider Reimbursement Manual Part I, section 2414, and Part II,
section 102.3). The claims processing system will maintain the current
system and the PPS until all FQHCs have transitioned to the PPS.
We proposed to transition the PPS to a calendar year update for all
FQHCs, beginning January 1, 2016, because many of the PFS files we
proposed to use are updated on a calendar year basis. Section
1834(o)(2)(B)(ii)(I) of the Act requires us to adjust the FQHC PPS rate
by the percentage increase in the MEI for the first year after
implementation. However, while transitioning the PPS to a calendar
year, we proposed to defer the first MEI statutory adjustment to the
PPS rate from October 1, 2015 to December 31, 2016, because the
proposed base payment rate incorporates a forecasted percentage
increase in the MEI through December 31, 2015.
Comment: Many commenters requested that FQHCs be permitted to
transition into the FQHC PPS beginning on October 1, 2014, even if that
is not the beginning of their cost reporting period.
Response: As we stated in the proposed rule, a change in cost
reporting periods that is made primarily
[[Page 25456]]
to maximize payment would not be acceptable under established cost
reporting policy. This principle has been applied uniformly to the
implementation of all new prospective payment systems in Medicare. The
MACs do not have the discretion to transition a FQHC at a time other
than their cost reporting period except when a FQHC has a change of
ownership resulting in a different cost reporting period, or otherwise
has good cause. Good cause is not met if it is determined that the
reason is to maximize reimbursement.
Comment: Many commenters requested that we create a FQHC-specific
market basket beginning in 2016 for the annual update to the PPS rate.
These commenters opined that a FQHC-specific market basket would more
accurately reflect the actual costs of FQHC services than using the
MEI. A commenter requested that the FQHC market basket take into
account changes in the scope of services that FQHC furnish.
Response: We will continue to assess the feasibility of developing
a FQHC-specific market basket and will provide notification of our
intentions in subsequent rulemaking.
We did not receive any comments on our proposal to transition the
PPS to a calendar year update for all FQHCs, beginning January 1, 2016.
Therefore, we are finalizing this provision as proposed.
2. Medicare Claims Payment
We noted that claims processing systems would need to be revised
through program instruction to accommodate the new rate and associated
adjustments. Medicare currently pays 80 percent of the AIR for all FQHC
claims, except for mental health services that are subject to the
mental health payment limit. Section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act requires
that Medicare payment under the FQHC PPS shall be 80 percent of the
lesser of the provider's actual charge or the PPS rate. In the proposed
rule, we stated that we were considering several revisions to the
claims processing system. These include revisions to reject claims in
which the qualifying visit described a service that is outside of the
FQHC benefit, such as inpatient hospital E/M services or group sessions
of DSMT/MNT; revisions to reject line items for technical components
such as x-rays, laboratory tests, and durable medical equipment which
will not be paid as part of the FQHC PPS and would be billed separately
to Medicare Part B; and revisions to allow for the informational
reporting of influenza and pneumococcal vaccines and their
administration, while excluding the line item charges, as these items
would continue to be paid through the cost report.
Comment: Commenters identified the ``lesser of'' provision in
section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act as their most significant concern with
the proposed rule. This provision requires that Medicare payment for
FQHC services furnished under the PPS to equal ``80 percent of the
lesser of the actual charge or the amount determined under'' section
1834(o) of the Act. Many commenters were concerned that paying FQHCs
the lesser of the actual charge or the PPS rate will routinely underpay
FQHCs and undermine the purpose of the PPS. These commenters believe
the PPS would be inappropriately comparing a per diem rate for a
typical bundle of services with a charge or sum of charges for
individual services. Some FQHCs also claim that they keep their charges
low across all payers because they serve an underserved population,
which will cap their Medicare FQHC payments at these low charge rates.
Commenters recommended that if the ``lesser of'' provision must be
implemented, it would be more appropriate for Medicare to compare the
PPS rate to the FQHC's average charge per visit from the prior year,
trended forward by the MEI or a FQHC-specific inflationary factor.
Response: We appreciate the information and perspectives provided
by the commenters and will address each of these points individually.
Comment: Commenters opined that CMS lack the statutory authority to
implement the ``lesser of'' provision because section 1833(a)(1) of the
Act generally excludes FQHC services, and that even if we determine
that CMS has the authority to apply the ``lesser of'' provision, the
statutory deficiencies would allow CMS to be flexible in implementing
this provision.
Response: We respectfully disagree with commenters that the
statutory basis of the ``lesser of'' provision is not clear. We find
the language in section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act, which states ``with
respect to Federally qualified health center services for which payment
is made under section 1834(o) of the Act, the amounts paid shall be 80
percent of the lesser of the actual charge or the amount determined
under such section'' to be clear, and we believe that placement of this
provision in section 1833(a)(1) of the Act does not undermine its
authority.
Comment: Commenters noted that due to the ``lesser of'' provision,
initial payments under the PPS would be less than 100 percent of the
estimated amount of reasonable costs, and this does not meet the budget
neutrality requirement in the Affordable Care Act.
Response: We respectfully disagree with commenters that we should
have factored the ``lesser of'' provision into our budget neutrality
calculations. Section 1834(o)(2)(B)(i) of the Act requires us to
calculate a PPS rate that, when multiplied by our estimates of
services, will yield 100 percent of estimated reasonable costs.
Although we must apply the ``lesser of'' provision in section
1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act when paying FQHCs under the PPS, section
1834(o)(2)(B)(i) of the Act specifies that the estimated aggregate
amount of prospective payment rates is to be determined prior to the
application of section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act.
Comment: Commenters asserted that CMS did not provide sufficient
information about the ``lesser of'' provision in the proposed rule,
such as defining the term ``charge'' or providing an analysis of the
effect of the ``lesser of'' provision on FQHC payments under the PPS.
Commenters urged CMS to clarify implementation details in the final
rule and to give the public another opportunity to comment after
publishing this information. Commenters requested that CMS grant a 2-
to 3-year moratorium on the ``lesser of'' provision, while beginning to
pay the PPS rates as of October 1, 2014.
Response: We believe the statutory language in section
1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act requiring a comparison with the provider's
``actual charge'' is straightforward. Moreover, the regulatory
principles of reasonable cost reimbursement in Sec. 413.53(b) already
defines ``charges'' as ``the regular rates for various services that
are charged to both beneficiaries and other paying patients who receive
the services.'' We did not include all the implementation details in
the proposed rule because claims processing instructions are not
typically subject to regulatory notice and comment.
The proposed rule modeled the impact of the PPS using the estimated
PPS rate, and did not model the overall impact of the ``lesser of''
provision because FQHCs control their own pricing structures, and we
have limited information to accurately project actual FQHC charges.
Therefore, we believe it would have been inappropriate to publish an
analysis demonstrating the impact of the ``lesser of'' provision.
Comment: Some commenters claimed that FQHCs keep their charges low
across all payers because they serve an underserved population. A few
commenters asserted that the costs of
[[Page 25457]]
integrated care furnished to beneficiaries are not adequately reflected
in the HCPCS codes and charges billed to Medicare. Commenters were
concerned that, in order to receive the higher payments under the PPS,
FQHCs would be forced to raise their charges, which would increase the
coinsurance liability for patients who do not qualify for a sliding fee
schedule discount.
Response: Most FQHCs are subject to the requirements in the section
330(k)(3)(G) of the PHS Act, which states that FQHCs prepare ``a
schedule of fees or payments for the provision of its services
consistent with locally prevailing rates or charges and designed to
cover its reasonable costs of operation and has prepared a
corresponding schedule of discounts to be applied to the payment of
such fees or payments, which discounts are adjusted on the basis of the
patient's ability to pay.''
FQHCs can adjust their charges within the broad parameters
established by the PHS Act and HRSA guidance, and the application of a
sliding fee scale can subsidize an eligible patient's out-of-pocket
liability. The commenter is correct that coinsurance liability
generally increases when charges increase, and that this is a
consideration for FQHCs when setting charges. We also note that, under
certain circumstances, FQHCs may waive coinsurance amounts for Medicare
and Medicaid beneficiaries (see for example, section 1128B(b)(3)(D) of
the Act and Sec. 1001.952(k)(2) of the regulations). Also, most FQHCs
are subject to the statutory and regulatory requirements of the Health
Center Program (section 330 of the PHS Act; 42 CFR Part 51c; and 42 CFR
56.201 through 56.604), which, among other requirements, mandates that
they may collect no more than a ``nominal fee'' from individuals whose
annual income is at or below 100 percent of the Federal Poverty Level.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that we apply the ``lesser
of'' provision at the aggregate level through an annual reconciliation
on the Medicare cost report of aggregate payments with aggregate
charges. These commenters noted that this aggregate approach averages
out lower charges for low intensity services with higher charges for
high intensity services. Some commenters suggested that we conduct an
annual reconciliation on the Medicare cost report to determine whether
aggregate PPS payments exceeded or fell short of aggregate allowable
costs, using costs as a proxy for actual charges.
Response: We believe that the statutory language in section
1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act requiring a comparison with the provider's
``actual charge'' is straightforward, and a comparison of aggregate
payments with aggregate charges would be inconsistent with the plain
reading of the statutory language that implies a claims level
comparison. We also were not persuaded that costs are a reasonable
proxy for charges. We note that in general, a Medicare PPS is a method
of paying providers based on a predetermined, fixed amount that is not
subject to annual reconciliation. Payments under a Medicare PPS for
other provider types are not subject to annual reconciliation with a
provider's charge, and an annual reconciliation of costs for providers
paid under a Medicare PPS is generally limited to amounts paid outside
the applicable PPS.
Comment: Many commenters believe that the proposed PPS would
inappropriately compare a per diem rate for a typical bundle of
services with a charge or sum of charges for individual services
furnished on the same day, which commenters described as an ``apples to
oranges'' comparison. Commenters asserted that comparing the bundled
rate to the sum of individual charges would routinely yield
underpayment and make it difficult for FQHCs to meet their obligation
under section 330 of the PHS Act that requires health centers to
collect adequate payment from government programs, including Medicare.
Commenters recommended that if the ``lesser of'' provision must be
implemented, it would be more appropriate for CMS to implement the
``lesser of'' provision in a way that ensures parity between the
rate(s) and charges to which they are compared. Commenters suggested
that CMS compare the PPS rate to the FQHC's average charge per visit,
as determined on an annual basis and trended forward by an applicable
inflation factor (for example, the MEI or a FQHC-specific inflationary
index).
A commenter suggested that FQHCs should be allowed to bill all-
inclusive rate charges under the FQHC PPS. This commenter noted that
the proposed PPS rate is based on cost report data that are not
adequately reflected in the HCPCS codes and charges billed to Medicare,
and the commenter believes it would be appropriate for FQHCs to bill an
all-inclusive rate. The commenter suggested that it would be
appropriate for FQHCs to set the charge for a Medicare visit at the
higher of its Medicare or Medicaid PPS rate to avoid a reimbursement
loss from application of the ``lesser of'' provision. This commenter
also suggested that ancillary services should be billed and paid by
Medicare over and above the all-inclusive PPS rates.
Response: Most Medicare payment systems that have a ``lesser of''
provision in section 1833(a)(1) of the Act are paid on a fee basis for
each item or service. While unbundling the PPS rate to pay separately
for individual services would address the ``apples-to-oranges''
concern, we note that most of the commenters recommending that we
compare the PPS rate with the FQHC's average charge also supported our
proposal to offer a single, bundled, encounter-based rate for payment
with some adjustments, as discussed earlier. We believe that the
proposed FQHC PPS encounter-based rate, which would be similar across
all encounters, is a significantly different payment structure than
other payment systems subject to a ``lesser of'' comparison with actual
charges. We acknowledge that a comparison of a service-specific charge
to an encounter-based payment does not apply the ``apples-to-apples''
comparisons of similar ``lesser of'' provisions included in section
1833(a)(1) of the Act.
We considered modifying our proposal and adopting the
recommendation of many commenters to pay FQHCs based on the lesser of
the FQHC's average Medicare charge per diem or the PPS rate. We agree
that such an approach would be responsive to commenters seeking parity
in the comparison between the bundled PPS rate and the charges.
However, we believe that the statutory language in section
1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act requiring a comparison with the provider's
``actual charge'' is straightforward, and a comparison with the FQHC's
average charge from a prior period would be inconsistent with the plain
reading of the statutory language.
We believe we can be responsive to commenters seeking parity in the
comparison between the bundled PPS rate and the charges, while allowing
direct interpretation of the statutory requirements of section
1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act, by establishing a new set of HCPCS G-codes
for FQHCs to report an established Medicare patient visit, a new or
initial patient visit and an IPPE or AWV. As authorized by section
1834(o)(2)(C) of the Act, we shall establish and implement by program
instruction the payment codes to be used under the FQHC PPS. We would
define these G-codes in program instruction to describe a FQHC visit in
accordance with the regulatory definitions of a Medicare FQHC visit.
Each FQHC would establish a charge to
[[Page 25458]]
the beneficiary with which to bill Medicare for the encounters.
Consistent with longstanding policy, the use of these payment codes
does not dictate to providers how to set their charges. A FQHC would
set the charge for a specific payment code pursuant to its own
determination of what would be appropriate for the services normally
provided and the population served at that FQHC, based on the
description of services associated with the G-code. The charge for a
specific payment code would reflect the sum of regular rates charged to
both beneficiaries and other paying patients for a typical bundle of
services that would be furnished per diem to a Medicare beneficiary. We
would continue to require detailed HCPCS coding with the associated
line item charges for data gathering (for example, providing
information about the ancillary services furnished), to support the
application of adjustments for new patients, IPPE, and AWV, and to
facilitate the waiving of coinsurance for preventive services.
FQHCs will be required to use these payment codes when billing
Medicare under the PPS. Medicare would pay FQHCs based on 80 percent of
the lesser of the actual charge reported for the specific payment code
or the PPS rate on each claim (and beneficiary coinsurance would be 20
percent of the lesser of the actual charge for the G-code or the PPS
rate), which allows for direct interpretation of the statute by
comparing the PPS rate to the FQHC's actual charge for a Medicare
visit. In order to ease administrative burden and in compliance with
Sec. 413.53, the FQHC may choose to use these specific payment codes
for its entire patient base. We acknowledge that other payors may have
requirements that would preclude FQHCs from using these payment codes,
and we suggest that FQHCs be mindful of the differences in required
billing methodologies and coding conventions when submitting claims to
other payors.
Although we did not propose to establish HCPCS G-codes for FQHCs to
report and bill for Medicare visits, we believe that comparing the PPS
per diem rate to a FQHC's charge for a per diem visit (as defined by
the specific payment codes) would be responsive to commenters seeking
parity in the comparison between the bundled rate and the charges, and
would also be responsive to commenters concerns regarding meeting the
requirements of section 330(k)(3)(F) of the PHS Act, which requires
section 330 grantees to make every reasonable effort to collect
appropriate reimbursement for its costs in providing health services
from government programs, including Medicare. Establishment of these G-
codes would also be responsive to the commenter that suggested that
FQHCs should be allowed to bill all-inclusive rate charges under the
FQHC PPS. Since the G-codes would describe FQHC visits as a per diem,
encounter-based visit in accordance with Medicare regulations, we also
note that the charges established for these Medicare visits might not
directly affect the charges for non-Medicare patients.
In setting its charges for these Medicare FQHC visits, a FQHC would
have to comply with established cost reporting rules in Sec. 413.53
which specify that charges must reflect the regular rates for various
services that are charged to both beneficiaries and other paying
patients who receive the services. We anticipate that each FQHC would
establish charges for the Medicare FQHC visits that would reflect the
sum of regular rates charged to both beneficiaries and other paying
patients for a typical bundle of services that the FQHC would furnish
per diem to a Medicare beneficiary. We note that establishing Medicare
per diem rates that are substantially in excess of the usual rates
charged to other paying patients for a similar bundle of services could
be subject to section 1128(b)(6) of the Act, as codified in Sec.
1001.701.
We disagree with the commenter's suggestion that ancillary services
should be billed and paid by Medicare over and above the all-inclusive
PPS rate because the costs of these ancillary services were included in
the reasonable costs used to calculate the PPS rates.
After consideration of the public comments received, we are
finalizing our proposal and the revised regulations at Sec. 405.2462
to pay FQHCs based on the lesser of the PPS rate or the actual charge.
In response to the public comments, we will also establish HCPCS G-
codes for FQHCs to report and bill FQHC visits to Medicare under the
FQHC PPS. Appropriate billing procedures for the G codes will be made
through program instruction. As we did not propose the establishment of
G-codes in the proposed rule, nor did we receive public comments
specifically requesting such codes, we invite comments on the
establishment of G-codes for FQHCs to report and bill FQHC visits to
Medicare under the FQHC PPS.
3. Beneficiary Coinsurance
Section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act requires that FQHCs be paid ``80
percent of the lesser of the actual charge or the amount determined
under such section''. Under the current reasonable cost payment system,
beneficiary coinsurance for FQHC services is assessed based on the
FQHC's charge, which can be more than coinsurance based on the AIR,
which is based on costs. An analysis of a sample of FQHC Medicare
claims data for dates of service between January 1, 2011 through June
30, 2013 indicated that beneficiary coinsurance based on 20 percent of
the FQHCs' charges was approximately $29 million higher, or 20 percent
more, than if coinsurance had been assessed based on 20 percent of the
lesser of the FQHC's charge or the applicable all-inclusive rate.
Section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act requires that Medicare payment
under the FQHC PPS should be 80 percent of the lesser of the actual
charge or the PPS rate. Accordingly, we proposed that coinsurance would
be 20 percent of the lesser of the FQHC's charge or the PPS rate. We
believe that the proposal to change the method to determine coinsurance
is consistent with the statutory change to the FQHC Medicare payment
and is consistent with statutory language in sections 1866(a)(2)(A) and
1833(a)(3)(A) of the Act and elsewhere that addresses coinsurance
amounts and Medicare cost principles. If finalized as proposed, total
payment to the FQHC, including both Medicare and beneficiary liability,
would not exceed the FQHC's charge or the PPS rate (whichever was
less).
Comment: Several commenters recommended that if CMS makes changes
to the coinsurance provisions in the payment regulation at Sec.
405.2462(d) in response to comments on the ``lesser of'' provision, CMS
should make corresponding revisions to the coinsurance regulation at
Sec. 405.2410.
Response: The coinsurance provisions in Sec. 405.2462(d) and Sec.
405.2410 have been updated in this final rule with comment period.
Comment: Commenters noted that calculating the amount of
coinsurance to be charged a patient is a significant administrative
responsibility for FQHCs. Commenters were concerned that a comparison
of the PPS rate with charges at the point of service would be
administratively complex and unnecessarily burdensome for FQHCs, and
FQHCs would have difficulty calculating the beneficiary's coinsurance
liability at point of service.
Response: We respectfully disagree that FQHCs would have difficulty
calculating a beneficiary's coinsurance liability at point of service.
A FQHC will set its own charge, and we believe the charge amount is
likely to be available at point of service. We also believe that
[[Page 25459]]
FQHCs will be able to estimate the PPS rate at time of service. We
proposed to apply a FQHC GAF based on where the services are furnished,
and we proposed to adjust the encounter rate when FQHCs furnish care to
new patients or when they furnish a comprehensive initial Medicare
visit. We are finalizing our proposal to apply a FQHC GAF, and we are
modifying our proposal and will adjust the encounter rate when FQHCs
furnish new patient visits, IPPEs, or AWVs. Therefore, each delivery
site would have two geographically adjusted PPS rates for each period:
One rate for a visit furnished to a patient who is not new to the FQHC
and is not receiving an IPPE or AWV, and one rate for a new patient
visit, IPPE or AWV that is eligible for an adjustment. At the point of
service, a FQHC could determine whether its own charge or its estimate
of the applicable PPS rate (which would be one of two discrete values)
is lower, and the FQHC could estimate beneficiary coinsurance at point
of service based on 20 percent of the lesser amount. We note that the
remittance advice issued by the MAC will continue to include the
coinsurance amount and will reflect the amount of coinsurance
recognized by Medicare.
Comment: A few commenters wanted coinsurance to be based on
charges, even when the charges are higher than the PPS rate. Some also
questioned our legal authority to assess coinsurance at 20 percent of
the lesser of the charge or the PPS rate.
Response: Under the current reasonable cost payment system,
beneficiary coinsurance for FQHC services is assessed based on the
FQHC's charge, and we acknowledge that the statute makes no specific
provision to revise the coinsurance to be 20 percent of the lesser of
the FQHC's charge or the PPS rate, although it does state clearly that
CMS is limited to paying 80 percent of the FQHC's charge or the PPS
rate, whichever is less. We continue to believe that the proposal to
change the method to determine coinsurance is consistent with the
statutory change to the FQHC Medicare payment and is consistent with
statutory language in sections 1866(a)(2)(A) and 1833(a)(3)(A) of the
Act and elsewhere that addresses coinsurance amounts and Medicare cost
principles. These sections were not repealed by the Affordable Care Act
and continue to provide legal authority for FQHCs to seek coinsurance
payments from Medicare beneficiaries.
After consideration of the public comments received, we are
finalizing these provisions as proposed and revising the regulations at
Sec. 405.2462(d) and Sec. 405.2410(b)(2) that beneficiary coinsurance
for payments under the FQHC PPS would generally be 20 percent of the
lesser of the FQHC's charge or the PPS rate. We note that the proposed
revision to Sec. 405.2410(b)(1)(ii)(A) regarding the deductible and
coinsurance amount for RHCs is not being finalized as proposed as it
inadvertently changed the intent of the regulation and will therefore
remain as stated in the current regulation.
4. Waiving Coinsurance for Preventive Services
As provided by section 4104 of the Affordable Care Act, effective
January 1, 2011, Medicare waives beneficiary coinsurance for eligible
preventive services furnished by a FQHC. Medicare requires detailed
HCPCS coding on FQHC claims to ensure that coinsurance is not applied
to the line item charges for these preventive services.
For FQHC claims that include a mix of preventive and non-preventive
services, we proposed that Medicare contractors compare payment based
on the FQHC's charge to payments based on the PPS encounter rate and
pay the lesser amount. However, the current approach to waiving
coinsurance for preventive services, which relies solely on FQHC
reported charges, would be insufficient under the FQHC PPS. As Medicare
payment under the FQHC PPS is required to be 80 percent of the lesser
of the FQHCs charge or the PPS rate, we also need to determine the
coinsurance waiver for payments based on the PPS rate.
We considered using the proportion of the FQHC's line item charges
for preventive services to total claim charges to determine, as a
proxy, the proportion of the FQHC PPS rate that would not be subject to
coinsurance. This approach would preserve the encounter-based rate
while basing the coinsurance reduction on each FQHC's relative
assessment of resources for preventive services. However, the charge
structure among FQHCs varies, and beneficiary liability for the same
mix of FQHC services could differ significantly based on the
differences in charge structures.
Where preventive services are coded on a claim, we proposed to use
payments under the PFS to determine the proportional amount of
coinsurance that should be waived for payments based on the PPS
encounter rate. While Part B drugs that are physician-administered and
routine venipuncture will be paid under the FQHC PPS rate, we noted
that the Medicare Part B rates for these items are not included in the
PFS payment files. Therefore, when determining this proportionality of
payments, we proposed that we would also consider PFS payment limits
for Part B drugs, as listed in the Medicare Part B Drug Pricing File,
and the national payment amount for routine venipuncture (HCPCS 36415).
Although FQHCs might list HCPCS for which we do not publish a payment
rate in these files, a review of 2011 claims data indicated that the
vast majority of line items with HCPCS representing services that will
be paid under the FQHC PPS were priced in these sources. As such, we
believe that referencing only the payment rates listed in these sources
would be both sufficient and appropriate for determining the amount of
coinsurance to waive for preventive services furnished in FQHCs,
without changing the total payment (Medicare and coinsurance). Since
Medicare payment under the FQHC PPS is required to be 80 percent of the
lesser of the FQHC's charges or the PPS rate, we proposed that we would
continue to use FQHC-reported charges to determine the amount of
coinsurance that should be waived for payments based on the FQHC's
charge, and that total payment to the FQHC, including both Medicare and
beneficiary liability, would not exceed the lesser of the FQHC's charge
or the PPS rate.
Our proposed approach for waiving coinsurance for preventive
services preserves an encounter-based rate, and the calculation is
similar to the current coinsurance calculation based on charges. We
acknowledged that this calculation is fairly complex for the claims
processing systems and may also be difficult for providers to
replicate, and that FQHCs might not know how much coinsurance would be
assessed before the MAC issues the remittance advice.
As an alternative approach, we considered unbundling all services
when a FQHC claim includes a mix of preventive and non-preventive
services, excluding these types of claims from calculation of the FQHC
base encounter rate, and use payments under the Medicare PFS to pay
separately for every service listed on the claim. While this approach
is inconsistent with an all-inclusive payment, it would simplify
waiving coinsurance for preventive services and pay preventive services
comparably to PFS settings. However, the vast majority of FQHC claims
list only one HCPCS, and unbundling all services introduces coding
complexity that might underpay FQHCs for an encounter if they do not
code all furnished ancillary services. In addition, because the cost of
these services is generally lower that other services,
[[Page 25460]]
payment for preventive services under the PFS will be less, in many
cases, than the FQHC PPS encounter rate.
Instead of unbundling all services when a FQHC claim includes a mix
of preventive and nonpreventive services, we considered the use of PFS
payment rates to pay separately for preventive services billed on the
FQHC claim, while paying for the non-preventive services under the FQHC
PPS rate. However, this would be problematic when the preventive
services represent the service that would qualify the claim as a FQHC
encounter (for example, IPPE, AWV, MNT). Under current payment policy,
the remaining ancillary services would not be eligible for an encounter
payment without an additional, qualifying visit on the same date of
service.
We also considered using the dollar value of the coinsurance that
would be waived under the PFS to reduce the FQHC encounter-based
coinsurance amount when preventive services appear on the claim.
However, this could lead to anomalous results, such as negative
coinsurance if the preventive service(s) would have been paid more
under the PFS than the FQHC PPS rate, and the amount of coinsurance
waived under the PFS would exceed 20 percent of the FQHC PPS rate. We
also were concerned that the reduction in coinsurance would seem
insufficient if the payment rate for the preventive service(s) was very
low under the PFS.
We discussed whether using the proportionality of PFS payments to
determine the coinsurance waiver would facilitate the waiving of
coinsurance for preventive services while preserving the all-inclusive
nature of the encounter-based rate with the least billing complexity.
Therefore, we proposed that where preventive services are coded on a
claim, we would use payments under the PFS to determine the
proportional amount of coinsurance that should be waived for payments
based on the PPS encounter rate, and we invited public comment on how
this proposal would impact a FQHC's' administrative procedures and
billing practices.
Comment: Commenters noted that we did not specify that Medicare
will pay for the coinsurance waiver, and some were concerned that our
proposals to waive coinsurance for preventive services would require
FQHCs to forego 20 percent of the total payment amount. Commenters
requested that we clarify that Medicare will pay 100 percent for
preventive services, with payment for a visit with a preventive and
non-preventive component equal to the total payment less the
coinsurance assessed. Commenters also urged us to specify the rules for
waiving coinsurance in the regulations text.
Response: Under Sec. 410.152, Medicare Part B pays 100 percent of
the Medicare payment amount established under the applicable payment
methodology for the service setting. In the CY 2011 Medicare PFS final
rule (75 FR 73417 through 73419, November 29, 2010) we included a
detailed discussion regarding preventive services covered under the
FQHC benefit, and we clarified that we would apply the coinsurance
waiver in the FQHC setting. We implemented the billing requirements for
waiving coinsurance in the FQHC setting through program instruction
(CMS Pub. 100-04, Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 9, Section
120).
Our discussion and proposals in the FQHC PPS proposed rule were not
intended to change the general requirements with respect to waiving
coinsurance for preventive services in the FQHC setting. Medicare will
continue to pay 100 percent for preventive services furnished in the
FQHC setting as part of a FQHC visit. Rather, we proposed revisions to
the methodology used to waive coinsurance for preventive services to
ensure that our operational approach would be compatible with payments
under an all-inclusive FQHC PPS encounter-based system.
We agree that it would be appropriate to codify the general rules
for waiving coinsurance in the regulations text, and we will modify the
proposed regulatory text at Sec. 405.2410 and Sec. 405.2462 to
reflect existing requirements that apply the coinsurance waiver in the
FQHC setting, subject to the billing requirements of the applicable
payment methodology. However, we believe that the details of
implementation would be more appropriate to include in program
instruction, and we plan to implement the procedures for waiving
coinsurance for preventive services furnished by FQHCs as an update to
the billing requirements for preventive services.
Comment: Commenters requested that we add information to the
Medicare Claims Processing Manual clarifying the list of services to
which the coinsurance waiver requirement applies.
Response: A table of services subject to the coinsurance waiver is
available in CMS Pub. 100-04, Medicare Claims Processing Manual,
Chapter 18, Section 1.2.
Comment: Commenters were concerned that it would be too complex and
burdensome for FQHCs to calculate the coinsurance at point of service
using the proposed methodology for claims with a mix of preventive and
non-preventive services that would be paid using the PPS rate. Most
commenters requested that CMS rethink this calculation to simplify how
coinsurance would be assessed for these types of claims. Commenters
recommended that CMS completely waive coinsurance and pay 100 percent
of the PPS rate for any FQHC encounter that includes a preventive
service, whether the preventive service represented the face-to-face
portion of the visit or an ancillary service. Commenters asserted that
this would be easier to administer and more consistent with the
Congress's intent to eliminate barriers to the provision of preventive
services.
Response: While a complete coinsurance waiver for these types of
claims would be a simple approach, we do not believe that we have the
authority to waive coinsurance completely whenever a preventive service
is furnished during a FQHC encounter without regard to the value of the
preventive service relative to all other services furnished during the
same encounter.
We agree that the proposed approach is complex and might be
difficult for providers to replicate. Our own analysis subsequent to
publication of the proposed rule led us to conclude that the benefits
of the proposed methodology would be outweighed by the complexity of
the systems changes and ongoing systems interactions that would be
needed to implement the methodology as proposed.
We reconsidered the other methodologies for waiving coinsurance
presented in the proposed rule. However, we believe that these options
would also be difficult for providers to replicate at point of service.
We proposed that we would continue to use FQHC-reported charges to
determine the amount of coinsurance that should be waived for payments
based on the FQHC's charge. We believed that the current approach to
waiving coinsurance for preventive services, which relies solely on
FQHC reported charges, would be insufficient under the FQHC PPS for
payments based on the FQHC PPS rate.
In response to commenters that requested that CMS rethink this
calculation to simplify how coinsurance would be assessed for these
types of claims, we reconsidered whether the current approach to
waiving coinsurance for preventive services when payments are based on
the FQHC's charge could be adapted to payments based on the FQHC PPS
rate. After reconsideration of how coinsurance could be assessed, we
now believe that the current approach is
[[Page 25461]]
feasible and relatively simple to apply to payments based on the FQHC
PPS rate, with certain modifications.
If we were to apply the current approach of waiving coinsurance for
preventive services under the new FQHC PPS, we would subtract the
dollar value of the FQHC's reported line-item charge for the preventive
service from the full payment amount, whether payment is based on the
FQHC's charge or the PPS rate. Medicare would pay the FQHC 100 percent
of the dollar value of the FQHC's reported line-item charge for the
preventive service, up to the total payment amount. Medicare also would
pay a FQHC 80 percent of the remainder of the full payment amount, and
we would assess beneficiary coinsurance at 20 percent of the remainder
of the full payment amount. If the reported line-item charge for the
preventive service equals or exceeds the full payment amount, we would
pay 100 percent of the full payment amount and the beneficiary would
not be responsible for any coinsurance.
We believe that the relative simplicity of this revised methodology
is responsive to commenters that requested a simpler calculation that
would be easier to replicate at point of service, and a coinsurance
waiver based on the reported line item charges will be more transparent
to beneficiaries. We also believe that the similarity to the current
approach for waiving coinsurance for preventive services will be
simpler for Medicare claims processing systems to implement.
After consideration of the public comments received, we will not
finalize the process for calculating the coinsurance as proposed, and
instead will modify the proposed regulatory text at Sec. 405.2410 and
Sec. 405.2462 based on the comments received. Specifically, we will
use the current approach to waiving coinsurance for preventive
services, whether total payment is based on the FQHC's charge or the
PPS rate, by subtracting the dollar value of the FQHC's reported line-
item charge for the preventive services from the full payment amount.
We will issue further guidance on the billing procedures through
program instruction. We invite comments on this approach to waiving
coinsurance for preventive services based on the dollar value of the
FQHC's reported line-item charge for preventive services.
5. Cost Reporting
Under section 1815(a) of the Act, providers participating in the
Medicare program are required to submit financial and statistical
information to achieve settlement of costs relating to health care
services rendered to Medicare beneficiaries. This information is
required for determining Medicare payment for FQHC services under Part
405, Subpart X.
Currently, the Medicare cost reporting forms show the costs
incurred and the total number of visits for FQHC services during the
cost reporting period. Using this information, the MAC determines the
total payment amount due for covered services furnished to Medicare
beneficiaries. The MAC compares the total payment due with the total
payments made for services furnished during the reporting period. If
the total payment due exceeds the total payments made, the difference
is made up by a lump sum payment. If the total payment due is less than
the total payments made, the overpayment is collected.
Under the FQHC PPS, Medicare payment for FQHC services will be made
based on the lesser of a predetermined national rate or the FQHC
charge. For services included in the FQHC per diem payment, Medicare
cost reports would not be used to reconcile Medicare payments with FQHC
costs. However, the statute does not exempt FQHCs from submitting cost
reports. In addition, Medicare payments for the reasonable costs of the
influenza and pneumococcal vaccines and their administration, allowable
graduate medical education costs, and bad debts would continue to be
determined and paid through the cost report. We noted that we are
considering revisions to the cost reporting forms and instructions that
would provide us with information that would improve the quality of our
cost estimates, such as the reporting of a FQHC's overall and Medicare
specific CCR, and the types of cost data that would facilitate the
potential development of a FQHC market basket that could be used in
base payment updates after the second year of the PPS. We noted that we
are also exploring whether we have audit resources to include FQHCs in
the pool of institutional providers that are subject to periodic cost
report audits.
Comment: A commenter requested that CMS consider suspending the
required submission of annual cost reports once all FQHCs have
transitioned to the FQHC PPS.
Response: The statute does not exempt FQHCs from submitting cost
reports. In addition, we continue to need cost reports for payments to
FQHCs that are outside of the PPS, to update our cost estimates, and to
facilitate the potential development of a FQHC market basket.
6. Medicare Advantage Organizations
Section 10501(i)(3)(C) of the Affordable Care Act added section
1833(a)(3)(B)(i)(II) to the Act to require that FQHCs that contract
with MA organizations be paid at least the same amount they would have
received for the same service under the FQHC PPS. This provision
ensures FQHCs are paid at least the Medicare amount for FQHC services,
whether such amount is set by section 1833(a)(3) of the Act or section
1834(o) of the Act. Consistent with current policy, if the MA
organization contract rate is lower than the amount Medicare would
otherwise pay for FQHC services, FQHCs that contract with MA
organizations would receive a wrap-around payment from Medicare to
cover the difference (see Sec. 422.316). If the MA organization
contract rate is higher than the amount Medicare would otherwise pay
for FQHC services, there is no additional payment from Medicare. We
proposed to revise Sec. 405.2469 to reflect this provision.
Comment: A few commenters requested clarification that wrap-around
payments will be established based on the PPS rate, as modified by any
applicable adjusters, and not based on the FQHC's charge, if such
charge is less than the PPS rate.
Response: FQHCs that have a written contract with a MA organization
are paid by the MA organization at the rate that is specified in their
contract, and the rate must reflect rates for similar services
furnished outside of a FQHC setting. If the contracted rate is less
than the Medicare PPS rate, Medicare will pay the FQHC the difference,
referred to as a wrap-around payment, less any cost sharing amounts
owed by the beneficiary. The PPS rate is subject to the FQHC GAF, and
may also be adjusted for a new patient visit or if a IPPE or AWV is
furnished. The supplemental payment is only paid if the contracted rate
is less than the adjusted PPS rate.
Comment: Commenters requested that CMS issue guidance discouraging
MA plans from applying any deductible under the MA plan to FQHC
services.
Response: MA plans are not subject to section 1833(b)(4) of the Act
and therefore are not required to waive application of the Medicare
deductible to beneficiaries in FQHCs. Guidance on this topic is beyond
the scope of this final rule with comment period.
After consideration of the public comments received, we are
finalizing this provision as proposed.
[[Page 25462]]
III. Additional Proposed Changes Regarding FQHCs and RHCs
A. Rural Health Clinic Contracting
Due to the difficulty in recruiting and retaining physicians in
rural areas, RHCs have had the option of using physicians who are
either RHC employees or contractors. However, in order to promote
stability and continuity of care, the Rural Health Clinic Services Act
of 1977 required RHCs to employ a nurse practitioner (NP) or physician
assistant (PA) (section 1861(aa)(2)(iii) of the Act). We have
interpreted the term ``employ'' to mean that the employer issues a W-2
form to the employee. Section 405.2468(b)(1) currently states that RHCs
are not paid for services furnished by contracted individuals other
than physicians, and Sec. 491.8(a)(3) does not authorize RHCs to
contract with RHC practitioners other than physicians.
In the more than 30 years since this legislation was enacted, the
health care environment has changed dramatically, and RHCs have
requested that they be allowed to enter into contractual agreements
with non-physician RHC practitioners as well as physicians. To provide
RHCs with greater flexibility in meeting their staffing requirements,
we proposed to revise Sec. 405.2468(b)(1) by removing the
parenthetical ``RHCs are not paid for services furnished by contracted
individuals other than physicians, '' and revising Sec. 491.8(a)(3) to
allow non-physician practitioners to furnish services under contract in
RHCs, when at least one NP or PA is employed.
The ability to contract with NPs, PAs, CNMs, CP, and CSWs would
provide RHCs with additional flexibility with respect to recruiting and
retaining non-physician practitioners. Practitioners should be employed
or contracted to the RHC in a manner that enhances continuity and
quality of care.
RHCs would still be required, under section 1861(aa)(2)(iii) of the
Act, to employ a PA or NP. However, as long as there is at least one NP
or PA employed at all times (subject to the waiver provision for
existing RHCs set forth at section 1861(aa)(7) of the Act), a RHC would
be free to enter into contracts with other NPs, PAs, CNM, CPs or CSWs.
We received approximately 14 comments from individuals, hospitals,
rural health clinics, national associations, and tribal organizations
on this proposal. Commenters agreed that this would provide RHCs with
additional flexibility and improve access to care. Some commenters also
noted that this would reduce certain costs.
Comment: A commenter requested that CMS allow all PAs and NPs who
work at a RHC to do so as contractors to allow maximum flexibility in
the clinic's staffing operations.
Response: As previously noted, section 1861(aa)(2)(iii) of the Act
requires RHCs to employ at least one NP or PA. We do not have the
authority to remove this requirement. However, we note that as long as
the statutory requirement that at least one NP or PA is employed is
met, the RHC can contract with other NPs or PAs.
Comment: A commenter recommended that we interpret the word
``employ'' to mean ``utilize, use, or engage the services of'' so that
independent contractors could meet the statutory requirement that at
least one NP or PA be employed.
Response: We appreciate the suggestion but since we did not propose
to change our interpretation of the word ``employ'', this comment is
beyond the scope of this rule. We note however, that as of the
effective date of this provision of this final rule with comment
period, only one PA or NP will be required to be in a W-2 relationship
with the RHC, and that all other RHC practitioners can be either
employees or contractors.
After consideration of the public comments received, we are
finalizing this provision as proposed.
B. Technical and Conforming Changes
1. Proposed Technical and Conforming Changes
In addition to proposing to codify the statutory requirements for
the FQHC PPS and to allow RHCs to contract with non-physician
practitioners, we proposed edits to correct terminology, clarify
policy, and make conforming changes for existing mandates and the new
PPS. Some of the proposed changes include the following:
Removing the terms ``fiscal intermediary and carriers''
and replacing them with ``Medicare Administrative Contractor'' or
``MAC''. Section 911 of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement,
and Modernization Act of 2003 established the MACs to administer the
work that was done by fiscal intermediaries and carriers in
administering Medicare programs.
Removing the payment limitations for treatment of mental
psychoneurotic or personality disorders. This payment limitation is
being phased out and will no longer be in effect beginning January 1,
2014.
Updating the regulations to reflect section 410 of the
Medicare Modernization Act of 2003 to exclude RHC and FQHC services
furnished by physicians and certain other specified types of
nonphysician practitioners from consolidated billing under section
1888(e)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act and allows such services to be separately
billable under Part B when furnished to a resident of a SNF during a
covered Part A stay (see the July 30, 2004 final rule (69 FR 45818
through 45819). This statutory provision was effective with services
furnished on or after January 1, 2005 and was previously implemented
through program instruction (CMS Pub 100-04, Medicare Claims Processing
Manual, Chapter 6, Section 20.1.1).
We did not receive any comments on these technical proposals and we
are finalizing these provisions as proposed.
2. Additional Technical and Conforming Changes
We did not propose the following changes, but based on our review
of the rule, we make the following clarifying and editorial changes:
Updating Sec. 405.501 and Sec. 410.152 to clarify that
this provision on the determination of reasonable charges continues to
apply to FQHCs that are authorized to bill under the reasonable cost
payment system, and does not apply to FQHCs that are authorized to bill
under the PPS.
Updating Sec. 410.152 to clarify that this provision
continues to apply to FQHCs that are authorized to bill under the
reasonable cost payment system, and does not apply to FQHCs that are
authorized to bill under the PPS.
Updating Sec. 405.2468 (f)(4) to reflect the change in
name from ``Medicare + Choice'' organization to ``Medicare Advantage''
organization.
Updated Sec. 405.2415(a)(2) and (b) to clarify that these
provisions apply to FQHCs.
Updated Sec. 405.2404(b) to make the references to the
Secretary gender neutral.
C. Comments Outside of the Scope of the Proposed Rule
Comment: Many commenters requested that all FQHCs be assigned to
one MAC instead of each FQHC being assigned to a MAC based on their
geographic location. Commenters believe that assigning FQHCs to
multiple MACS results in confusion and inconsistency as each MAC can
issue different instructions concerning the FQHC benefit and associated
billing requirements.
Response: Section 421.404 describes how FQHCs as well as other
providers
[[Page 25463]]
and suppliers are assigned to a MAC; changes to the MAC assignments are
beyond the scope of this rule.
Comment: A few commenters requested that CMS revise the definition
of telehealth so that FQHCs could be distant site providers of
telehealth services.
Response: Distant site providers of telehealth services are defined
in section 1834(m) of the Act. We made no provision relating to
telehealth and this topic is beyond the scope of this rule.
Comment: A commenter requested that PAs be allowed to individually
enroll as Medicare and Medicaid providers and bill for their services.
Response: Section 1842(b) of the Act prohibits PAs from directly
billing Medicare. This topic is beyond the scope of this rule.
Comment: A commenter requested that CMS mandate that states pay
FQHCs their full Medicaid encounter rate for any Medicare-Medicaid
enrollees.
Response: This is currently a state option and this topic is beyond
the scope of this rule.
IV. Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1988 (CLIA)--
Enforcement Actions for Proficiency Testing Referral
A. Background
On October 31, 1988, the Congress enacted the Clinical Laboratory
Improvement Amendments of 1988 (CLIA), Public Law 100-578. The purpose
of CLIA is to ensure the accuracy and reliability of laboratory testing
for all Americans. Under this authority, which was codified at 42
U.S.C. 263a, the Secretary issued regulations implementing CLIA (see 42
CFR part 493) on February 28, 1992 (57 FR 7002). The regulations
specify the standards and specific conditions that must be met to
achieve and maintain CLIA certification. CLIA certification is required
for all laboratories, including but not limited to those that
participate in Medicare and Medicaid, which test human specimens for
the purpose of providing information for the diagnosis, prevention, or
treatment of any disease or impairment, or the assessment of health, of
human beings.
The regulations require laboratories conducting moderate or high-
complexity testing to enroll in an HHS-approved PT program that covers
all of the specialties and subspecialties for which the laboratory is
certified and all analyses listed in part 493 Subpart I. As of June
2013, there were 239,922 CLIA-certified laboratories. Of these
laboratories, 35,035 are required to enroll in an HHS-approved PT
program and are subject to all PT regulations.
Congress emphasized the importance of PT when it drafted the CLIA
legislation. For example, in discussing their motivation in enacting
CLIA, the Committee on Energy and Commerce noted that it ``focused
particularly on proficiency testing because it is considered one of the
best measures of laboratory performance'' and that proficiency testing
``is arguably the most important measure, since it reviews actual test
results rather than merely gauging the potential for good results.''
(See H.R. Rept. 100-899, at 15 (1988).) The Committee surmised that,
left to their own devices, some laboratories would be inclined to treat
PT samples differently than their patient specimens, as they would know
that the laboratory would be judged based on its performance in
analyzing those samples. For example, such laboratories might be
expected to perform repeated tests on the PT sample, use more highly
qualified personnel than are routinely used for such testing, or send
the samples out to another laboratory for analysis. As such practices
would undermine the purpose of PT, the Committee noted that the CLIA
statute was drafted to bar laboratories from such practices, and to
impose significant penalties on those who elect to violate those bars
(H.R. Rept. 100-899, at 16 and 24 (1988)).
PT is a valuable tool the laboratory can use to verify the accuracy
and reliability of its testing. During PT, an HHS-approved PT program
sends samples to be tested by a laboratory on a scheduled basis. After
testing the PT samples, the laboratory reports its results back to the
PT program for scoring. Review and analyses of PT reports by the
laboratory director will alert the director to areas of testing that
are not performing as expected and may also indicate subtle shifts or
trends that, over time, could affect patient results. As there is no
on-site, external proctor for PT testing in a laboratory, the testing
relies in large part on an honor system. The PT program places heavy
reliance on each laboratory and laboratory director to self-police
their analyses of PT samples to ensure that the testing is performed in
accordance with the CLIA requirements. For each PT event, laboratories
are required to attest that PT samples are tested in the same manner as
patient specimens are tested. PT samples are to be assessed by
integrating them into the laboratory's routine patient workload, and
the testing itself is to be conducted by the personnel who routinely
perform such testing, using the laboratory's routine methods. The
laboratory is barred from engaging in inter-laboratory communication
pertaining to results prior to the PT program's event cut-off date and
must not send the PT samples or any portion of the PT samples to
another laboratory for testing, even if it would normally send a
patient specimen to another laboratory for testing.
Any laboratory that intentionally refers its PT samples to another
laboratory for analysis risks having its certification revoked for at
least 1 year, in which case, any owner or operator of the laboratory
risks being prohibited from owning or operating another laboratory for
2 years (Sec. 493.1840(a)(8) and (b)). The phrase ``intentionally
referred'' has not been defined by the statute or regulations, but we
have consistently interpreted this phrase from the onset of the program
to mean general intent, as in intention to act. Whether or not acts are
authorized or even known by the laboratory's management, a laboratory
is responsible for the acts of its employees. Among other things,
laboratories need to have procedures in place and train employees on
those procedures to prevent staff from forwarding PT samples to other
laboratories even in instances in which they would normally forward a
patient specimen for testing.
In the February 7, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR 9216), we published
a proposed rule titled Part II--Regulatory Provisions to Promote
Program Efficiency, Transparency, and Burden Reduction (hereafter
referred to as the ``Burden Reduction proposed rule'') to propose
reforms to the Medicare and CLIA regulations that we had identified as
unnecessary, obsolete or excessively burdensome. In that rule, we
proposed changes to the CLIA PT regulations to establish policies under
which certain PT referrals by laboratories would generally not be
subject to revocation of their CLIA certificate or a 2-year prohibition
on laboratory ownership or operation. To do this, we proposed a narrow
exception in our longstanding interpretation of what constitutes an
``intentional'' PT referral.
While that proposed rule was under development but before its
publication, the Congress enacted the Taking Essential Steps for
Testing Act of 2012 (Pub. L. 112-202, (TEST Act) on December 4, 2012.
The TEST Act amended section 353 of the PHS Act to provide the
Secretary with discretion as to which sanctions she would apply to
cases of intentional PT referral.
In the February 7, 2013 Burden Reduction proposed rule (78 FR
9216), we stated that we would address the
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TEST Act in future rulemaking, except that to comply with the TEST Act
and begin to align the CLIA regulations with the amended CLIA statute,
we proposed to revise the second sentence of Sec. 493.801(b)(4) to
state that a laboratory may (as opposed to ``must'') have its CLIA
certification revoked when we determine PT samples were intentionally
referred to another laboratory.
Subsequently, in the September 23, 2013 (78 FR 58386) proposed rule
addressing the FQHC PPS and other topics, we proposed additional
changes to the CLIA regulations to implement the TEST Act.
The regulatory changes in this final rule with comment period will
add the remaining policies and regulatory changes needed to fully
implement the TEST Act.
B. Proposed and Final Regulatory Changes
As noted earlier, the TEST Act provided the Secretary with the
discretion to substitute intermediate sanctions in lieu of the 2-year
prohibition on the owner and operator when a CLIA certificate is
revoked due to intentional PT referral, and to consider imposing
alternative sanctions in lieu of revocation in such cases as well. The
TEST Act provides the Secretary with the opportunity to frame policies
that will achieve a better correlation between the nature and extent of
intentional PT referrals at a given laboratory, and the scope and type
of sanctions or corrective actions that are imposed on that laboratory
and its owners and operators, as well as any consequences to other
laboratories owned or operated by those owners and operators.
As discussed later in this section, we are finalizing the
regulatory changes proposed in the September 23, 2013 proposed rule,
which will divide the sanctions for PT referral into three categories
based on severity and extent of the referrals. The first category is
for the most egregious violations, encompassing cases of repeat PT
referral or cases where a laboratory reports another laboratory's test
results as its own. In such cases, we do not believe that alternative
sanctions alone would be appropriate. Therefore, we proposed to revoke
the CLIA certificate for at least 1 year, ban the owner and operator
from owning or operating a CLIA-certified laboratory for at least 1
year, and possibly impose a civil monetary penalty (CMP).
In keeping with the February 7, 2013 proposed rule (78 FR 9216), we
proposed to define, at Sec. 493.2, a ``repeat proficiency testing
referral'' as ``a second instance in which a proficiency testing
sample, or a portion of a sample, is referred, for any reason, to
another laboratory for analysis prior to the laboratory's proficiency
testing program event cut-off date within the period of time
encompassing the two prior survey cycles (including initial
certification, recertification, or the equivalent for laboratories
surveyed by an approved accreditation organization).''
We believe that a repeat PT referral warrants revocation of a
laboratory's CLIA certificate for at least 1 year because such
laboratories have already been given opportunity to review their
policies, correct their deficiencies, adhere to regulation and to the
laboratory's established policy, and ensure effective training of their
personnel. As there is no on-site, external proctor for PT testing in a
laboratory, the testing relies in large part on an honor system.
Therefore, when a PT referral has previously occurred prior to the
event cut-off date within the two prior survey cycles, we do not
believe that laboratories should be given additional opportunities to
ensure that they are meeting the CLIA PT requirements and believe that
revocation of the CLIA certificate should consequently occur. We also
proposed, in the first category, that the CLIA certificate be revoked,
and the owner and operator banned from owning or operating a CLIA-
certified laboratory for at least 1 year, in cases where the PT sample
was referred to another laboratory, the referring laboratory received
the results from the other laboratory, and the referring laboratory
reported to the PT program the other laboratory's results on or before
the event cut-off date. We noted that PT programs place heavy reliance
on each laboratory and laboratory director's ability to self-police the
laboratory's analysis of PT samples to ensure that the testing is
performed in accordance with the CLIA requirements. PT scores must
reflect an individual laboratory's performance-reporting results from
another laboratory is deceptive to the public. These are the most
egregious forms of PT referral and merit the most severe sanctions.
For example, a laboratory may have two distinct sites, Laboratory A
and Laboratory B, that operate under different CLIA numbers, where
Laboratory A has received PT samples to be tested as part of its
enrollment in PT as required by the CLIA regulations. If Laboratory A
were to refer PT samples to Laboratory B, receive test results back at
Laboratory A from Laboratory B prior to the event cutoff date, and
report to the PT program those results obtained from Laboratory B, the
scores for the PT event would not reflect the performance of Laboratory
A, but rather the performance of Laboratory B. Since the PT scores
would actually be reflective of the accuracy and reliability at
Laboratory B rather than A, the purpose of the PT would be undermined.
Further, as stated in the CLIA regulations at Sec. 493.801(a)(4)(ii),
the laboratory must make PT results available to the public. In this
scenario, any member of the public who sought to use the reported PT
scores to select a high-quality laboratory would be deceived by the
scores for the results submitted to the PT program, as they would
expect that they were provided information about the performance of
Laboratory A when that would not be the case.
In cases of PT referral where the CLIA certificate is revoked, the
TEST Act provides the Secretary with discretion to ban the owner and
operator from owning or operating a CLIA-certified laboratory for up to
2 years. Prior to the TEST Act, revocation of a CLIA certificate for a
PT violation always triggered a 2-year ban on the owner and operator.
Given the severity of violations involving repeat PT referrals or the
reporting of another laboratory's results, we proposed that the
laboratory owner and operator would be banned from owning or operating
a CLIA-certified laboratory for at least 1 year for any violation
within this first category of sanctions.
We also proposed a second category of sanctions under which the
CLIA certificate would be suspended or limited (rather than revoked),
in combination with the imposition of alternative sanctions. We
proposed to use this approach in those instances in which a laboratory
refers PT samples to a laboratory that operates under a different CLIA
number before the PT event close date and, while the laboratory reports
its own results to the PT program, it receives results from the second
laboratory prior to the event close date. Such a referral situation
would allow the referring laboratory an opportunity to confirm, check,
or change its results prior to reporting its results to the PT program.
If, upon investigation, surveyors determine that the referral does not
constitute a repeat PT referral, we proposed to suspend or limit the
CLIA certificate for less than 1 year rather than revoke the CLIA
certificate, and proposed that we also impose alternative sanctions (as
an alternative to revocation of the CLIA certificate). Further, an
alternative
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sanction would always include required training of staff.
A suspension of the CLIA certificate means that no testing of human
specimens for health care purposes may be performed by that laboratory
during the period of suspension. In such cases, the owner or operator
typically contracts out for laboratory services, or contracts with
another operator to operate the laboratory under the contracted
laboratory's CLIA certificate. In contrast to revocation of the CLIA
certificate and its accompanying ban on the owner and operator,
suspension usually applies only to the individual laboratory in
question rather than all laboratories that are under the control of the
owner or operator.
A limitation of the CLIA certificate means that the laboratory is
not permitted to perform testing or to bill Medicare or Medicaid for
laboratory work in the specialty or subspecialty that has been limited,
but may continue to conduct all other testing under its own CLIA
certificate.
In determining whether to suspend or limit the CLIA certificate, we
proposed to apply the criteria of Sec. 493.1804(d). For example, we
would examine the extent of the PT referral practice as well as its
duration. If surveyors determine that, in the previous two survey
cycles, there were prior PT referrals that occurred but were not cited
by CMS, then the CLIA certificate would always be suspended rather than
just limited. The duration of the suspension would reflect the number
of samples referred, the period of time the referrals had been
occurring, the extent of the practice, and other criteria specified at
Sec. 493.1804(d).
Further, for cases in the second category, we proposed that when
the certificate is suspended or limited, alternative sanctions would be
applied in addition to the principal sanctions of suspension or
limitation. We proposed that, at a minimum, the alternative sanctions
would include a CMP to be determined using the criteria set forth in
Sec. 493.1834, as well as a directed plan of correction. Additionally,
if the CLIA certificate is suspended, we proposed to also impose state
on-site monitoring of the laboratory.
A third category of sanctions was proposed for those PT referral
scenarios in which the referring laboratory does not receive test
results prior to the event cut-off date from another laboratory as a
result of the PT referral. We proposed that in such scenarios, at a
minimum, the laboratory would always be required to pay a CMP as
calculated using the criteria set forth in Sec. 493.1834, as well as
comply with a directed plan of correction. A directed plan of
correction would always include training of staff.
For example, a laboratory may place PT samples in an area where
other patient specimens are picked up by courier to take to a reference
laboratory. The reference laboratory courier may take the PT samples
along with the patients' specimens. The laboratory personnel notice
that the PT samples are missing and contact the reference laboratory to
inquire if they have received the PT samples along with the patients'
specimens. The reference laboratory is instructed to discard the PT
samples and not test them since they were picked up in error. In this
case, the ``referring'' laboratory realized the error, contacted the
receiving laboratory, and did not receive results back for any of the
PT samples. In this scenario, we proposed to impose only alternative
sanctions. In determining whether to impose particular alternative
sanctions, we proposed to rely on the existing considerations at Sec.
493.1804(c) and (d), Sec. 493.1806(c), Sec. 493.1807(b), Sec.
493.1809 and, in the case of civil money penalties, Sec. 493.1834(d).
These current regulations have proven effective as enforcement measures
over time for CLIA noncompliance for all circumstances other than PT
referral. Therefore, we expressed our belief that these same criteria
will be effective in the imposition of alternative sanctions for PT
referral cases.
In summary, we proposed to amend Sec. 493.1840 by revising
paragraph (b) to specify three categories for the imposition of
sanctions for PT referrals. We believed that these provisions, as
amended, would provide the necessary detail to fairly and uniformly
apply the discretion granted to the Secretary under the TEST Act,
without being so specific as to defeat the intent to provide
appropriate flexibility when taking punitive or remedial action in the
context of a PT referral finding.
We also proposed to make three conforming changes to the CLIA
regulations at the authority citation for Sec. 493 and at Sec. 493.1
and Sec. 493.1800(a)(2) to include references to the PHS Act as
amended by the TEST Act.
We received 14 timely public comments on the proposed changes to
the CLIA regulations to implement the enforcement discretion for PT
referral cases as provided by the TEST Act. The comments came from a
variety of sources, including laboratory accreditation organizations,
laboratory professional organizations, medical societies, health care
systems, and a professional corporation. In general, commenters
supported and favored the changes to the regulations governing
enforcement actions for PT referral. The majority of commenters agreed
that the three categories were reasonable and would allow CMS to
respond to PT referrals in a measured approach. However, a few
commenters expressed concern that our proposed approach to enforcement
was too prescriptive and would not allow for full use of the discretion
afforded by the TEST Act. Because of the nature and consequences of the
enforcement actions for PT referral, the seriousness of a PT referral
violation, and the heavy reliance on each laboratory and laboratory
director to self-police their analysis of PT samples to ensure that the
testing is performed in accordance with the CLIA requirements, we
developed a prescriptive framework for enforcement actions in order to
apply sanctions in a comprehensive, reasonable, and consistent
approach. We respond to specific comments as follows:
Comment: A few commenters stated that waived laboratories should be
exempt from penalties associated with PT referral since they are not
required by law to participate in PT.
Response: While this comment is outside the scope of this rule, we
would like to clarify that the CLIA statute (42 U.S.C. 263a) states
that laboratories holding a certificate of waiver are only exempt from
subsections (f) and (g) of the statute. All other subsections apply,
including the prohibition against PT referral and the statutory
consequences established in subsection (i), which refers to ``any
laboratory'' that the Secretary determines has intentionally referred
its PT samples. Therefore, the statutory requirements under subsection
(i) do apply to waived laboratories that participate in PT and waived
laboratories are not exempt from the ban against the referral of PT
samples and the penalties required when PT referral has been
substantiated.
Comment: A commenter questioned how CMS will ensure regional
offices and state surveyors are consistent in the application of these
changes and the associated enforcement.
Response: We will continue using the current process that requires
all suspected PT referral cases to be reviewed by the CMS Regional
Office and also forwarded to CMS Central Office for additional review
by a team of experts. The team will continue to thoroughly review every
case to determine whether the facts support a determination of PT
referral and, if so, which category of sanctions will be applied.
Written survey and enforcement guidance and training will be provided
to the regional offices and
[[Page 25466]]
state agencies and will be made publicly available.
Comment: Several commenters stated that CMS should develop and
adopt a definition for ``intentional'' as it applies to PT referral and
add the definition to Sec. 493.2 in the CLIA regulations.
Response: While this comment is outside the scope of this rule, we
point the commenter to the Burden Reduction proposed rule (78 FR 9216).
From the onset of the CLIA program, we have consistently interpreted
the phrase ``intentionally refers'' to mean general intent, as in
intention to act. We proposed the first exception to our longstanding
interpretation of ``intentionally refers'' in the Burden Reduction
proposed rule. Under that proposal, a referral would not be considered
``intentional'' if our investigation reveals PT samples were sent to
another laboratory for reflex or confirmatory testing, the referral is
not a repeat PT referral, and the referral occurred while acting in
full conformance with the laboratory's written, legally accurate, and
adequate standard operating procedure.
Comment: Several commenters questioned if a repeat PT referral
included multiple analyses on a referred PT sample or multiple PT
samples in the same PT event.
Response: As stated in the definition of ``repeat proficiency
testing referral,'' to be considered a repeat PT referral, the referral
must be a second instance in which a PT sample, or a portion of a
sample, is referred, for any reason, to another laboratory for analysis
prior to the laboratory's PT program event cut-off date within the
period of time encompassing the two prior survey cycles (including
initial certification, recertification, or the equivalent for
laboratories surveyed by an approved accreditation organization). A
single instance of referral for multiple analyses on a single PT sample
set, or referral for analyses of multiple samples from the same PT
event, would not be considered a ``second instance.'' A second instance
of referral would arise when referral is made from an entirely
different set of PT samples from an entirely different PT event sent on
a date that is different from the date of the earlier PT event.
Comment: A commenter recommended that CMS not revoke a certificate
for a repeat PT referral unless CMS could determine that the repeat
referral occurred in similar or the same circumstances to the initial
referral.
Response: As stated previously, except in the most egregious
instances of PT referral where the PT sample was referred to another
laboratory, the referring laboratory received the results from the
other laboratory, and the referring laboratory reported to the PT
program the other laboratory's results on or before the event cut-off
date, the laboratory's CLIA certificate will not be revoked for a
single instance of PT referral. Such an instance of PT referral will
result in alternative sanctions. This provides the laboratory an
opportunity to review all policies and procedures and an opportunity to
thoroughly train all staff to mitigate all chances of a second instance
of PT referral. The timeframe included in the definition of a repeat
referral has been defined as the two survey cycles prior to the time of
the PT referral in question. Two survey cycles generally equates to a
4-year period on average. This is not a precise calendar time period
but, with respect to a given laboratory, is carefully recorded as a
matter of actual and documented survey event dates. We believe that it
is reasonable to expect laboratories to maintain a heightened vigilance
for this timeframe to ensure that they do not have any repeated
referrals of PT samples. The narrow exception to the determination of
an intentional referral described in the Burden Reduction proposed rule
will, once finalized, be considered a single instance and will be
incorporated in the determination of whether a repeat PT referral has
taken place.
Comment: Several commenters questioned whether CMS will finalize
the Burden Reduction proposed rule which proposed reforms to the
Medicare and CLIA regulations that we identified as unnecessary,
obsolete or excessively burdensome and questioned how the September 23,
2013 proposed rule relates to the Burden Reduction proposed rule.
Response: In the Burden Reduction proposed rule, we proposed a
narrow exception to our longstanding interpretation of what constitutes
an ``intentional'' PT referral. The proposed narrow exception in the
Burden Reduction rule would work in concert with the framework
described in this final rule for enforcement for PT referral to ensure
the severity of the sanctions fits the nature and extent of the PT
referral violation.
Comment: Several commenters expressed concern with the first
category of sanctions against the laboratory and the owner and operator
for the most egregious forms of PT referral. While the commenters
agreed that the most egregious forms of PT referral warrant the most
serious sanctions and that the laboratory director should also be
sanctioned, there was concern about the automatic prohibition against
the laboratory owner. Each commenter who raised this issue expressed
concern that a mandatory 1 year prohibition for owners, that applies to
all laboratories of that owner, is not reasonable for large health
systems that often own a large number of laboratories in many
locations. The commenters expressed concern that patient care may be
impacted if such an owner is prohibited from obtaining or maintaining a
CLIA certificate for any laboratory that tests human specimens for
health care purposes. The commenters suggested that the one year ban
for the owner should be limited to the single laboratory where the PT
referral occurred.
Response: It is incumbent upon laboratories to organize in a manner
that allows them to mitigate circumstances so that when one or more
laboratories are sanctioned, the rest of the laboratory network is not
unduly impacted. However, we also recognize that there are benefits to
large health systems organizing in ways to promote efficiency of care
with the least cost to their patients. We agree that there should be
some discretion in the regulation to allow for flexibility in the
mandatory 1-year ban against owners of laboratories that, if barred
from ownership, would create access issues in the communities in which
they serve. However, when the CLIA certificate is revoked for the most
egregious violations, encompassing cases of repeat PT referral or cases
where a laboratory reports another laboratory's test results as its
own, we believe that the owner and operator should be banned from
owning or operating a laboratory for at least 1 year, so we will retain
that sanction. However, in response to comments, we are adding a
provision to limit the reach of the owner ban for certain laboratories
under the same ownership as the revoked laboratory if we find, after
review of relevant facts and circumstances, that patients would not be
at risk if the laboratory were exempted from the ban, and that there is
no evidence that a laboratory to be exempted from the ban participated
or was complicit in the PT referral, except that any laboratory of the
owner that received a PT sample from another laboratory, and failed to
timely report such receipt to CMS or to a CMS-approved accrediting
organization, may not be exempted from the owner ban. In assessing
whether patients would be potentially at risk if the laboratory were
exempted from the ban, we will consider factors including, but not
limited to, the following: The extent to which staff of the laboratory
or
[[Page 25467]]
laboratories that may be exempted from the owner ban have been
adequately trained, and will promptly have such training reinforced,
regarding PT; the history of compliance with the CLIA regulations;
evidence of any systemic quality issues for the laboratory or
laboratories that seek to be exempted from the owner ban; and the
potential for access to care problems for patients if the laboratory or
laboratories are not granted an exemption from the owner ban. We are
revising our regulations at Sec. 493.1840(b)(1) to incorporate this
exception.
Comment: Several commenters requested further clarification of when
CMS will limit the suspension or limitation to the individual
laboratory where the PT referral occurred rather than suspending or
limiting the CLIA certificate of all of the laboratories under the
control of the owner or operator. The commenters recommended that we
use a centralized process to determine whether suspension or limitation
is appropriate in each case rather than leaving the decision up to an
individual surveyor.
Response: As stated in the September 23, 2013 proposed rule, the
CLIA certificate will be suspended or limited (rather than revoked), in
combination with alternative sanctions, in those instances in which a
laboratory refers PT samples to a laboratory that operates under a
different CLIA number before the PT event close date and, while the
laboratory reports its own results to the PT program, it receives
results from the second laboratory prior to the event close date. In
contrast to revocation of the CLIA certificate and its accompanying ban
on the owner and operator, suspension usually applies only to the
individual laboratory in question rather than all laboratories that are
under the control of the owner or operator. Suspension or limitation
will always apply to the laboratory that sent the PT sample to another
laboratory (that operates under a different CLIA number) before the PT
event close date and, while the laboratory reports its own results to
the PT program, it receives results from the second laboratory prior to
the event close date. We may also suspend or limit the CLIA certificate
of other laboratories operating under the same owner depending upon the
facts and circumstances of the individual case. For example, if such a
laboratory received PT samples from another laboratory and did not
report the receipt of those PT samples to us, suspension or limitation
will also be considered for that laboratory. As stated previously, it
is incumbent upon laboratories to organize in a manner to mitigate
circumstances so that enforcement against a CLIA certificate does not
unduly impact other laboratories operating under the same CLIA number.
An exhaustive list of scenarios cannot be provided since each case of
PT referral is unique and there is no way to predict every possible
scenario. In determining whether to suspend or limit the CLIA
certificate, we will examine the extent of the PT referral practice as
well as its duration and apply the criteria of Sec. 493.1804(d). We
will develop further written surveyor guidance for the imposition of
the suspension and limitation in PT referral cases. This guidance will
be publicly available.
Comment: Several commenters expressed concern that a CMP will
always be applied to laboratories in PT referral scenarios in which the
referring laboratory does not receive test results prior to the event
cut-off date from another laboratory as a result of the PT referral.
Some stated that no sanctions should be applied in these cases because
they are minor infractions and this category has no flexibility where
it is most needed.
Response: While PT referrals may differ in severity and scope, we
consider a PT referral infraction one of the most serious violations of
the CLIA statute and regulations. PT is a major component of the CLIA
regulations and plays an integral role in the overall quality assurance
of a laboratory. We emphasize that there is no on-site, external
proctor for PT in laboratories, and the testing relies in large part on
an honor system. The PT program places heavy reliance on each
laboratory and laboratory director to self-police their analysis of PT
samples to ensure that the testing is performed in accordance with the
CLIA requirements. Because of these factors, we have determined that a
CMP is always appropriate in those cases where PT referral has been
substantiated. However, there is no ``one size fits all'' CMP for these
cases and there is flexibility in the determination of the amount of
the CMP. The severity and scope of each case will be evaluated closely
to determine appropriate CMP amounts in accordance with the regulation
atSec. 493.1834, which specifies the procedures that CMS follows to
impose a CMP and the range of the penalty amount.
We also note that we received other comments that were outside the
scope of the September 23, 2013 proposed rule; and therefore, are not
addressed in this final rule with comment period.
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing the
proposed definitions for ``repeat proficiency testing referral'' at
Sec. 493.2 and the changes to Sec. 493.1840, and the three proposed
conforming changes at the authority citation for Part 493 and at Sec.
493.1 and Sec. 493.1800(a)(2) to include references to the TEST Act.
In response to comments, we are also finalizing the addition of a new
provision at Sec. 493.1840(b)(1)(ii) to allow us to except certain
laboratories from the owner ban, on a laboratory by laboratory basis,
if certain circumstances are met.
V. Other Required Information
A. Requests for Data From the Public
Commenters can gain access to summarized FQHC data on an expedited
basis by downloading the files listed in this section, which are
available on the Internet without charge. For detailed claims data,
requestors would follow the current research request process which can
be found on the Research Data Assistance Center Web site at https://www.resdac.org/.
1. FQHC Summary Data. This file contains data summarized by CCN,
which can be used to model the proposed methodology and calculate
projected payments and impacts under the proposed PPS. The data file is
available at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/FQHCPPS/.
2. FQHC Proposed GAFs. This file contains the listed of proposed
GAFs by locality, as published in the Addendum of this final rule with
comment period. The data file is available at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/FQHCPPS/.
3. HCRIS Cost Report Data. The data included in this file was
reported on Form CMS-222-92. The dataset includes only the most current
version of each cost report filed with us and includes cost reports
with fiscal year ending dates on or after September 30, 2009. HCRIS
updates this file on a quarterly basis. The data file is available at
https://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Files-for-Order/CostReports/HealthClinic.html.
B. Collection of Information Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, we are required to
provide 30-day notice in the Federal Register and solicit public
comment before a collection of information requirement is submitted to
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review and approval. In
order to fairly evaluate whether an information collection should be
approved by OMB, section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the Paperwork
[[Page 25468]]
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 solicited public comment on the information collection
requirements (ICRs) regarding the proposed FQHC rates and adjustments
in Sec. 405.2470.
The data that are used in computing the FQHS PPS rates and
adjustments are derived from the RHC/FQHC cost report form CMS-222-92,
and claims form UB-04 CMS 1450 (per CMS Pub. 100-04, Medicare Claims
Processing Manual, Chapter 1). The reporting requirements for FQHCs are
in Sec. 405.2470 of the Medicare regulations. We noted that while we
were not proposing any new ICRs, there is currently an OMB approved
information collection request associated with the RHC/FQHC cost report
which has an OMB control number of 0938-0107 and an expiration date of
August 31, 2014.
VI. Waiver of Proposed Rulemaking
We ordinarily publish a notice of proposed rulemaking in the
Federal Register and invite public comment on the proposed rule. The
notice of proposed rulemaking includes a reference to the legal
authority under which the rule is proposed, and the terms and
substances of the proposed rule or a description of the subjects and
issues involved. This procedure can be waived, however, if an agency
finds good cause that a notice-and-comment procedure is impracticable,
unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest and incorporates a
statement of the finding and its reasons in the rule issued.
In section III.B.2. of this final rule with comment period, we
present additional technical and conforming changes. These changes
include specifying that the determination of reasonable charges
continues to apply to FQHCs under the reasonable cost payment system
and changing the term ``Medicare +Choice'' to ``Medicare Advantage.''
We believe that these regulatory changes are technical and conforming
in nature, do not change our payment policies, and provide
clarifications all of which are in the public's interest. We note that
these changes do not change our policy and are technical in nature. As
such, we believe it unnecessary to provide an opportunity for public
comment on these non-controversial ministerial changes.
In section II.E.2. of this final rule with comment period, we are
establishing a new set of HCPCS G-codes by which FQHCs are to report
their actual charges to beneficiaries. Consistent with longstanding
policy, the use of these payment codes does not dictate to FQHCs how to
set their charges. We are permitting FQHCs to utilize a G-code that
would reflect the sum of regular rates charged to both beneficiaries
and other paying patients for a typical bundle of services that would
be furnished per diem to a Medicare beneficiary. Because section
1834(o)(2)(A) of the Act requires implementation of the FQHC PPS
beginning on October 1, 2014, it is both impracticable and contrary to
the public interest to provide an additional period for public comment
before this methodology is implemented. Nonetheless, we are soliciting
an additional round of comments with respect to the G-codes, and will
consider further action if comments received from the public indicate a
need to amend or revise this component of implementation.
Therefore, for the reasons stated previously, we find good cause to
waive the notice of proposed rulemaking for these technical and
conforming changes to our regulations at Sec. Sec. 405.501,
405.2468(f)(4), and 410.152, and for our implantation structure for
reporting charges to Medicare as described in section II.E.2. of the
preamble to this final rule with comment period.
VII. 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.
VIII. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
This final rule with comment period is necessary to establish a
methodology and payment rates for a PPS for FQHC services under
Medicare Part B beginning on October 1, 2014, in compliance with the
statutory requirements of section 10501(i)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care
Act. This final rule with comment period is also necessary to make--(1)
contracting changes for RHCs; (2) conforming changes to other policies
related to FQHCs and RHCs; (3) changes to enforcement actions for
improper proficiency testing referrals.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impacts of this rule as required by Executive
Order 12866 on Regulatory Planning and Review (September 30, 1993),
Executive Order 13563 on Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
(January 18, 2011), the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (September 19,
1980, Pub. L. 96-354), section 1102(b) of the Social Security Act,
section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (March 22,
1995; Pub. L. 104-4), Executive Order 13132 on Federalism (August 4,
1999) and the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct 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). Section
3(f) of Executive Order 12866 defines a ``significant regulatory
action'' as an action that is likely to result in a rule: (1) Having an
annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more in any 1 year, or
adversely and materially affecting a sector of the economy,
productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public health or
safety, or state, local or tribal governments or communities (also
referred to as ``economically significant''); (2) creating a serious
inconsistency or otherwise interfering with an action taken or planned
by another agency; (3) materially altering the budgetary impacts of
entitlement grants, user fees, or loan programs or the rights and
obligations of recipients thereof; or (4) raising novel legal or policy
issues arising out of legal mandates, the President's priorities, or
the principles set forth in the Executive Order.
A regulatory impact analysis (RIA) must be prepared for major rules
with economically significant effects ($100 million or more in any 1
year). This final rule with comment period is an economically
significant rule because we estimate that the FQHC PPS will increase
payments to FQHCs by more than $100 million in 1 year. We believe that
this regulation would not have a significant financial impact on RHCs.
We estimate that this rulemaking is ``economically significant'' as
measured by the $100 million threshold, and
[[Page 25469]]
hence also a major rule under the Congressional Review Act.
Accordingly, we have prepared a RIA that, to the best of our ability,
presents the costs and benefits of the rulemaking.
The RFA requires agencies to analyze options for regulatory relief
of small businesses. For purposes of the RFA, small entities include
small businesses, nonprofit organizations, and government
jurisdictions. All RHCs and FQHCs are considered to be small entities.
The great majority of hospitals and most other health care providers
and suppliers are small entities, either by being nonprofit
organizations or by meeting the SBA definition of a small business
(having revenues of less than $7.0 million to $35.5 million in any 1
year). The provisions in this final rule result in an increase of
approximately 32 percent in the Medicare payment to FQHCs, without
taking into account the application of the ``lesser of'' provision
discussed earlier, and no financial impact on RHCs. Individuals and
states are not included in the definition of a small entity.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act requires us to prepare a
regulatory impact analysis if a rule may have a significant impact on
the operations of a substantial number of small rural hospitals. This
analysis must conform to the provisions of section 604 of the RFA. For
purposes of section 1102(b) of the Act, we define a small rural
hospital as a hospital that is located outside of a metropolitan
statistical area and has fewer than 100 beds. As its measure of
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities,
HHS uses a change in revenue of more than 3 to 5 percent. We have not
prepared an analysis for section 1102(b) of the Act because we have
determined that this final rule with comment period 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 (UMRA) 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. In 2014, that
is approximately $141 million. This rule does not include any mandates
that would impose spending costs on state, local, or tribal governments
in the aggregate, or by the private sector, that would exceed the
threshold of $141 million.
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 compliance costs on state
and local governments, preempts state law, or otherwise has Federalism
implications. This final rule with comment period would not have a
substantial effect on state and local governments, preempt state law,
or otherwise have Federalism implications.
This final rule with comment period is subject to the Congressional
Review Act provisions of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996 (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.) and has been transmitted to
the Congress and the Comptroller General for review.
C. Limitations of Our Analysis
Our quantitative analysis presents the projected effects of our
policy changes, as well as statutory changes effective on FQHCs for
cost reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 2014. We
estimated the effects of individual policy changes by estimating
payments per visit 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 the number of
visits or the prevalence of new patients or IPPE and AWVs furnished to
Medicare beneficiaries. To the extent that there are changes in the
volume and mix of services furnished by FQHCs, the actual impact on
total Medicare revenues will be different from those shown in Table 3
(Impact of the PPS on Payments to FQHCs). In addition, because we have
limited information to accurately project actual FQHC charges, Table 3
does not take into account the application of ``lesser of'' provision
in section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act. (For more information, see
sections II.E.2 and VII.D.1 of this final rule with comment period).
D. Anticipated Effects of the FQHC PPS
1. Effects on FQHCs
As required by section 1834(o)(2)(B)(i) of the Act, initial payment
rates (Medicare and coinsurance) under the FQHC PPS must equal 100
percent of the estimated amount of reasonable costs, as determined
without the application of the current system's UPLs or productivity
standards that can reduce a FQHC's per visit rate. We will pay FQHCs a
single encounter-based rate per beneficiary per day, while allowing for
an exception to the per diem PPS payment for subsequent injury or
illness and mental health services furnished on the same day as a
medical visit, adjusting for geographic differences in the cost of
inputs by applying an adaptation of the GPCI used to adjust payment
under the PFS, and further adjusting the encounter-based rate when a
FQHC furnishes care to a patient that is new to the FQHC or to a
beneficiary receiving a IPPE or AWV.
Based on comparisons of the final PPS rate to the AIRs (as listed
on the FQHC cost reports), the FQHC PPS is estimated to have an overall
impact of increasing total Medicare payments to FQHCs by approximately
32 percent. As discussed in section II.E.2. of this final rule with
comment period, while Medicare payments under the FQHC PPS shall be 80
percent of the lesser of the actual charge or the PPS rate, this impact
analysis is based on payment at the PPS rate does not take into account
the application of ``lesser of'' provision in 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act.
The FQHC PPS is effective for cost reports beginning on or after
October 1, 2014. This impact is fully implemented when all FQHCs are
paid under the FQHC PPS and reflects the additional payment rate update
based on the MEI for all of 2015 (fiscal year through the end of the
calendar year). (See section II.D. of this final rule with comment
period for a discussion of the use of the MEI update to calculate the
first year's base payment amount under the FQHC PPS.)
If we apply the ``lesser of'' provision in section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of
the Act and assume that FQHCs' charge structures would remain the same,
approximately 65 percent of FQHCs would be paid less under the FQHC PPS
rate than they are currently paid. However, FQHCs are responsible for
their own pricing structures, and we have limited information to
accurately project actual FQHC charges under the new PPS. Moreover, our
analysis of the potential impact of the application of the ``lesser
of'' provision in section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act compares the
applicable per diem PPS rate with the charge or sum of charges for the
individual HCPCS codes listed on the claims in our sample. As discussed
in section II.E.2. of this final rule with comment period, we are
establishing HCPCS G-codes for FQHCs to report their Medicare FQHC
visits. We will pay FQHCs based on the lesser of the actual charge
reported for the G-code or the PPS rate on each claim. FQHCs will need
to establish charges for these G-codes, and we cannot accurately
project the charges that FQHCs will establish for these G-codes.
Because we have no means to predict behavioral response on charging by
the FQHC community, in the impact table (Table 3), we continue to
compare current payments to the PPS rates when discussing the impact of
the FQHC PPS, which would be the maximum impact that would be expected
after application
[[Page 25470]]
of the ``lesser of'' provision in section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act.
Table 3 shows the impact on cost reporting entities and their
associated delivery sites of the fully implemented FQHC PPS payment
rates compared to current payments to FQHCs. The analysis is based on
cost reports from freestanding and provider-based FQHCs with cost
reporting periods ending between June 30, 2011, and June 30, 2013. We
note that the impact analysis includes cost reporting entities and
claims encounters that were excluded from the modeling as statistical
outliers based on estimated costs. A FQHC with multiple sites has the
option of filing a consolidated cost report, and the sample used to
calculate the impacts reflects 1,240 cost reporting entities that
represent 3,830 delivery sites.
The following is an explanation of the information represented in
Table 3:
Column A (Number of cost-reporting entities): This column
shows the number of cost-reporting entities for each impact category.
Urban/rural status and census division were determined based on the
geographic location of the cost reporting entity. Categories for
Medicare volume were defined from cost report data, based on tertiles
for the percent of total visits that were identified as Medicare
visits. Categories for total volume were defined from cost report data,
based on tertiles for the total number of visits for each cost
reporting entity.
Column B (Number of delivery sites): This column shows the
number of delivery sites associated with the cost reporting entities in
each impact category. (Note that delivery sites that are part of a
consolidated cost reporting entity might not fall into the same impact
category if considered individually. For example, a cost reporting
entity could include delivery sites in multiple census division, and
delivery sites were categorized based on the geographic location of the
cost reporting entity).
Column C (Number of Medicare daily visits): This column
shows the number of Medicare daily visits in the final data set that
were used to model payments under the FQHC PPS. As discussed in section
II.A.4. of this final rule with comment period and consistent with the
policy discussed in section II.B.1. of this final rule with comment
period, separately payable encounters for the same beneficiary at the
same FQHC were combined into a single daily visit, while allowing for a
separate medical visit, mental health visit, and subsequent illness/
injury visit.
Column D (Effect of statutorily required changes): This
column shows the estimated fully implemented combined impact on
payments to FQHCs of changes to the payment structure that are required
by statute. Removing both the UPL and the productivity screen is
estimated to increase total Medicare payments to FQHCs by about 30
percent. The combined impact in column D also reflects the FQHC PPS
requirement to calculate payment based on the costs of all FQHCs,
rather than on an individual FQHC's costs. We note that the impacts for
column D through H reflect the growth in the MEI from July 1, 2012
through September 30, 2014, prior to the application of the forecasted
MEI update for the 15-month period of October 1, 2014 through December
31, 2015.
Columns E through H (Effects of the Adjustments to the
Average Cost per Visit): These columns show the estimated fully
implemented impacts on Medicare payments to FQHCs due to the policy
changes. In developing the Medicare FQHC PPS, section 10501(i)(3)(A) of
the Affordable Care Act requires us to take into account the type,
intensity, and duration of FQHC services, and allows other adjustments,
such as geographic adjustments. As we discussed in section II.A.4. of
this final rule with comment period, the cost report data are
insufficient for modeling these types of adjustments, so we used the
HCPCS codes in the FQHC claims data to support the development of the
FQHC PPS rate and adjustments.
Column E (Effect of daily visit (per diem) rate): This
column shows the estimated fully implemented impact on payments to
FQHCs of the proposal to pay a single encounter-based rate per
beneficiary per day, while allowing an exception to the per diem PPS
payment for subsequent injury or illness and mental health services
furnished on the same day as a medical visit. As it is uncommon for
FQHCs to bill more than one visit per day for the same beneficiary,
this adjustment would have minimal effect on most FQHCs.
Column F (Effect of new patient/IPPE/AWV adjustment): This
column shows the estimated fully implemented impact on payments to
FQHCs of the proposal to adjust the encounter-based rate by 1.3416 when
a FQHC furnished care to a patient that was new to the FQHC or to a
beneficiary receiving an IPPE or AWV. As new patient visits, IPPEs, and
AWVs accounted for approximately 3 percent of all FQHC visits, this
adjustment would have limited reduction on the base encounter rate,
after application of budget neutrality, and a limited redistribution
effect among FQHCs.
Column G (Effect of the FQHC GAF): This column shows the
estimated fully implemented impact on payments to FQHCs of adjusting
payments for geographic differences in costs by applying an adaptation
of the GPCIs used to adjust payment for physician work and practice
expense under the PFS.
Column H (Combined effect of all PPS adjustments): This
column shows the estimated fully implemented impact on payments to
FQHCs of the adjustments in columns E through G. The combined effects
of these adjustments on overall Medicare payment to FQHCs would be 0.1
percent as the effects of these adjustments would be primarily
redistributive and would have minimal impact on Medicare payments in
the aggregate. While the effect of these various adjustments was budget
neutral within the model, the impact analysis includes cost reporting
entities and claims encounters that were excluded from the modeling as
statistical outliers based on estimated costs.
Column I (Combined effect of all policy changes and MEI
adjustment): This column shows the estimated fully implemented impact
on payments to FQHCs of removing the UPL and productivity screen in
Column D, the adjustments to the PPS rates in the preceding columns,
and the application of the forecasted MEI update for the 15-month
period of October 1, 2014 through December 31, 2015.
Table 3 reflects the impacts on cost reporting entities and their
associated delivery sites. This table shows both the impact on payments
to FQHCs of the statutorily required changes to the payment structure
(Column D) and the redistributive effects of the adjustments to the
average cost per visit (Columns E through H). Column I reflects the
combined impact on cost reporting entities of the overall PPS rates and
adjustments and MEI update. This table does not model application of
the provision that Medicare pay FQHCs the lesser of the actual charge
or the PPS payment rate; instead, is assumes payment at the full PPS
rate. Actual payments to FQHCs will depend on the actual charges they
establish under the PPS.
[[Page 25471]]
Table 3--Impact of the PPS on Payments to FQHCs
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(I) Effect
(C) Number (D) Effect (E) Effect (F) Effect (H) of all
(A) Number (B) Number of of of daily of new (G) Effect Combined policy
of cost- of medicare statutorily visit (per patient/ of FQHC effect of changes
reporting delivery daily required diem) rate IPPE/AWV GAF (%) all PPS and MEI
entities sites visits changes (%) (%) adjustment adjustments adjustment
(%) (%) (%)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All FQHCs................................. 1,240 3,830 5,585,393 29.9 0.0 0.1 0.1 0.1 31.9
Urban/rural Status:
Urban................................. 712 1,945 2,738,585 24.3 0.0 0.1 3.2 3.3 30.2
Rural................................. 373 900 1,447,261 41.9 0.1 0.0 -3.1 -3.1 39.4
Mixed rural-urban..................... 155 985 1,399,547 30.1 0.0 0.0 -2.7 -2.7 28.3
Medicare Volume:
Low (<6.9% of total visits)........... 413 1,102 897,136 24.8 0.0 0.4 3.5 3.9 31.4
Medium (6.9%-13.2% of total visits)... 414 1,403 1,857,689 27.4 0.0 0.1 0.6 0.7 30.1
High (>13.2% of total visits)......... 413 1,325 2,830,568 33.4 0.0 -0.1 -1.3 -1.4 33.3
Total Volume:
Low (<17,340 total visits)............ 413 555 450,262 33.6 0.0 0.2 -0.1 0.1 35.6
Medium (17,340-42,711 total visits)... 414 983 1,387,779 31.8 0.0 0.2 -1.4 -1.1 32.1
High (>42,711 total visits)........... 413 2,292 3,747,352 28.8 0.0 0.0 0.6 0.6 31.4
Census Division:
New England........................... 99 255 709,020 27.4 -0.1 -0.1 2.2 2.1 32.0
Middle Atlantic....................... 111 334 452,168 25.9 -0.1 0.2 3.6 3.7 32.5
East North Central.................... 158 497 651,546 31.3 0.0 0.1 -3.2 -3.2 28.9
West North Central.................... 81 214 266,360 31.6 -0.1 0.1 -5.3 -5.3 26.4
South Atlantic........................ 200 753 1,100,268 32.1 0.1 -0.1 -3.0 -3.0 29.9
East South Central.................... 87 340 379,357 37.3 0.0 0.0 -6.9 -6.9 29.6
West South Central.................... 120 332 388,565 30.5 0.0 0.2 -5.0 -4.8 26.1
Mountain.............................. 107 341 392,506 31.3 0.0 0.4 -2.1 -1.6 31.0
Pacific............................... 272 758 1,243,251 27.2 0.1 0.0 7.5 7.6 38.7
U.S. Territories...................... 5 6 2,352 43.9 0.1 1.5 -1.1 0.5 46.5
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Effects on RHCs
While we expect that removing the restriction on contracting will
result in cost savings for RHCs that employ an NP or PA and will no
longer need to conduct employment searches to meet their additional
staffing needs, the financial impact on RHCs is expected be small and
cannot be quantified.
There is no Medicare impact on RHCs as a result of the
implementation of the FQHC PPS.
3. Effects on Other Providers and Suppliers
There would be no financial impact on other providers or suppliers
as a result of the implementation of the FQHC PPS.
4. Effects on the Medicare and Medicaid Programs
We estimate that annual Medicare spending for FQHCs during the
first 5 years of implementation would increase as follows:
Table 4--Estimated Increase in Annual Medicare Payments to FQHCs *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated
increase in
Fiscal year payments ($ in
millions)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2015................................................. 170
2016................................................. 250
2017................................................. 260
2018................................................. 280
2019................................................. 300
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* These impacts do not take into account the application of ``lesser
of'' provision in section 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act. (For more
information, see sections II.E.2 and VII.D.1 of this final rule with
comment period).
As discussed in section II.E.2. of this final rule comment period,
while Medicare payments under the FQHC PPS shall be 80 percent of the
lesser of the actual charge or the PPS rate, this table is based on
payment at the PPS rate does not take into account the application of
``lesser of'' provision in 1833(a)(1)(Z) of the Act because we have
limited information to accurately project actual FQHC charges. We
intend for the estimated aggregate payment rates under the FQHC PPS to
equal 100 percent of the estimated amount of reasonable costs, as
determined without the application of the current system's UPLs or
productivity standards. We note that the estimated increase in payments
for FY 2015 is smaller than for subsequent years because FQHCs will be
transitioning into the PPS throughout FY 2015 based on their own cost
reporting periods.
After the first year of implementation, the PPS payment rates must
be increased by the percentage increase in the MEI. After the second
year of implementation, PPS rates will be increased by the percentage
increase in a market basket of FQHC goods and services as established
through regulations, or, if not available, the MEI. While we will
consider the merits of estimating a FQHC market basket for use in base
payment updates after the second year of the PPS, payment estimates
were updated annually by the MEI for purposes of this analysis.
There is no financial impact on the Medicaid program as a result of
the implementation of the Medicare FQHC PPS.
5. Effects on Medicare Beneficiaries
Coinsurance under the FQHC PPS would be 20 percent of the lesser of
the FQHC's charge or the PPS rate. Under the current reasonable cost
payment system, beneficiary coinsurance for FQHC services is assessed
based on the FQHC's charge, which can be more than coinsurance based on
the AIR. An analysis of a sample of FQHC claims data for dates of
service between January 1, 2011 through June 30, 2013 indicated that
beneficiary coinsurance based on 20 percent of the FQHC's charges was
approximately $29 million higher, or 20 percent more, than if
coinsurance had been assessed based on 20 percent of the lesser of the
FQHC's charge or the applicable all-inclusive rate.
[[Page 25472]]
Based on comparisons of the final PPS rate to the AIRs, the FQHC
PPS is estimated to have an overall impact of increasing total Medicare
payments to FQHCs by approximately 32 percent, prior to taking into
account the impact of the ``lesser of'' provision. This overall 32
percent increase translates to a 32 percent increase to beneficiary
coinsurance if it were currently assessed based on the FQHC's AIR and
if, under the PPS, it would always be assessed based on the PPS rate.
Because the charge structure among FQHCs varies, and beneficiary
liability for the same mix of FQHC services could differ significantly
based on the differences in charge structures, we have insufficient
data to estimate the change to beneficiary coinsurance due to the FQHC
PPS.
E. Effects of Other Policy Changes
1. Effects of Policy Changes for FQHC's and RHC's
a. Effects of RHC Contracting Changes
Removal of the restrictions on RHCs contracting with nonphysician
practitioners when the statutory requirement to employ an NP or a PA is
met will provide RHCs with greater flexibility in meeting their
staffing requirements. The ability to contract with NPs, PAs, CNMs, CP,
and CSWs will provide RHCs with additional flexibility with respect to
recruiting and retaining non-physician practitioners, which may result
in increasing access to care in rural areas. There is no cost to the
federal government and we cannot estimate a cost savings for RHCs.
b. Effects of the FQHC and RHC Conforming Changes
There are no costs associated with the clarifying, technical, and
conforming changes to the FQHC and RHC regulations.
2. Effects of CLIA Changes for Enforcement Actions for Proficiency
Testing Referral
As discussed in section IV. of this final rule with comment period,
we have made a number of clarifications and changes pertaining to the
regulations governing adverse actions for PT referral under CLIA,
which, in combination with other actions implement the TEST Act and
will ensure conformance between the TEST Act and our regulations. The
TEST Act provides the Secretary with the discretion to apply
alternative sanctions in lieu of potential principal sanctions in cases
of intentional PT referral. Alternative sanctions may include any
combination of civil money penalties, directed plan of correction (such
as required remedial training of staff), temporary suspension of
Medicare or Medicaid payments, or state onsite monitoring.
From 2007 through 2011 there were 41 cases of cited, intentional PT
referral. Of these 41 cases (averaging approximately 8 per year), we
estimate that 28 (or approximately 6 per year on average) may have fit
the terms of this rule to have alternative sanctions applied. Based on
discussions with the most recently affected laboratories that were
cited for PT violations, we estimate that the average cost of the
sanctions applicable under current regulations is approximately
$578,400 per laboratory. The largest single type of cost is the expense
to the laboratory or hospital to contract out for management of the
laboratory, and to pay laboratory director fees, due to the 2-year ban
that prohibits the owner and operator from owning or operating a CLIA-
certified laboratory in accordance with revocation of the CLIA
certificate. We have not included legal expenses in this cost estimate,
as it is not possible to estimate the extent to which laboratories may
still appeal the imposition of the alternative sanctions in this
proposed rule. If the expense of alternative sanctions averaged
$150,000 per laboratory, we estimate the annual fiscal savings of the
changes to average approximately $2.6 million ($578,400 minus $150,000
for 6 laboratories). While the total savings may not be large, the
savings to the individual laboratory or hospital that is affected can
be significant. However, we note that the $2.6 million estimate may
overstate or understate the provision's savings to laboratories. For
example, if under current regulations the prior management is fired
instead of being reassigned to other duties for the 2-year period, some
of the costs of paying for the new management's salaries, benefits and
training may be able to be drawn from funding that had previously been
earmarked to pay those expenses for their predecessors. That is, the
costs associated with the new employee could be offset by the savings
gained when the former employee is terminated. Any such offset will
result in lower savings than was estimated earlier. However, there are
also unknowns that may result in larger savings than estimated earlier.
For example, we have no data on whether terminated management
historically received severance packages. If they did, those savings
would have to be added to the savings we noted earlier. Such changes in
severance payments would represent transfer effects of the proposed
rule, rather than net social costs or benefits. In general, it is only
to the extent that new laboratory directors put forth more effort than
temporarily-banned laboratory directors (due, for example, to the need
to familiarize themselves with laboratories they have not previously
operated) or that support staff put forth more effort to make the new
management arrangements than they would addressing alternative
sanctions that society's resources would be freed for other uses by the
new provision; thus, a comprehensive estimate of laboratory savings
would represent some combination of transfers and net social benefits.
While we recognize these potential inaccuracies in our estimates, we
lack data to account for these considerations.
F. Alternatives Considered
This final rule with comment period contains a range of policies,
including some provisions related to specific statutory provisions. The
preceding sections of this rule provide descriptions of the statutory
provisions that are addressed, identifies those policies when
discretion has been exercised, presents rationale for our final
policies and, where relevant, alternatives that were considered.
G. Accounting Statement and Table
As required by OMB Circular A-4 (available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars_a004_a-4/), we have prepared an
accounting statement table showing the classification of the impacts
associated with implementation of this final rule with comment period.
[[Page 25473]]
Table 5--Accounting Statement: Classification of Estimated Expenditures Under the FQHC PPS
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Units
-----------------------------------------------
Category Estimates Discount rate Period
Year dollar (%) covered
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Transfers
Federal Annualized Monetized Transfers (in 200 2014 7 2014-2018
millions)..................................
204 2014 3 2014-2018
---------------------------------------------------------------
From Whom to Whom........................... Federal Government to FQHCs that receive payments under
Medicare.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
H. Conclusion
The previous analysis, together with the remainder of this
preamble, provides our Regulatory Flexibility Analysis and a Regulatory
Impact Analysis.
In accordance with the provisions of Executive Order 12866, this
regulation was reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget.
List of Subjects
42 CFR Part 405
Administrative practice and procedure, Health facilities, Health
professions, Kidney diseases, Medical devices, Medicare, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Rural areas, and X-rays.
42 CFR Part 410
Health facilities, Health professions, Kidney diseases,
Laboratories, Medicare, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Rural
areas, X-rays.
42 CFR Part 491
Grant programs--health, Health facilities, Medicaid, Medicare,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Rural areas.
42 CFR Part 493
Administrative practice and procedure, Grant programs--health,
Health facilities, Laboratories, Medicaid, Medicare, Penalties,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services amends 42 CFR Chapter IV as set forth below:
PART 405--FEDERAL HEALTH INSURANCE FOR THE AGED AND DISABLED
0
1. The authority citation for part 405 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 205(a), 1102, 1861, 1862(a), 1869, 1871, 1874,
1881, and 1886(k) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 405(a),
1302, 1395x, 1395y(a), 1395ff, 1395hh, 1395kk, 1395rr and
1395ww(k)), and sec. 353 of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C.
263a).
Sec. 405.501 [Amended]
0
2. Section 405.501(b) is amended by removing the phrase ``Federally
qualified health centers and'' and adding in its place the phrase
``FQHCs that are authorized to bill under a reasonable cost system,
and''.
0
3. Section 405.2400 is revised as follows:
Sec. 405.2400 Basis.
Subpart X is based on the provisions of the following sections of
the Act:
(a) Section 1833--Amounts of payment for supplementary medical
insurance services.
(b) Section 1861(aa)--Rural health clinic services and Federally
qualified health center services covered by the Medicare program.
(c) Section 1834(o)--Federally qualified health center prospective
payment system beginning October 1, 2014.
0
4. In Sec. 405.2401, paragraph (b) is amended as follows:
0
A. Removing the definition of ``Act''.
0
B. Revising the definition of ``Allowable costs''.
0
C. Removing the definition of ``Carrier''.
0
D. Adding the definitions of ``Certified nurse midwife (CNM),''
``Clinical psychologist (CP)'', and ``Clinical social worker (CSW)'' in
alphabetical order.
0
E. Revising the definitions of ``Coinsurance'' and ``Deductible''.
0
F. Adding the definitions of ``Employee'' and ``HRSA'' in alphabetical
order.
0
G. Revising paragraphs (1) through (3) of the definition of ``Federally
qualified health center (FQHC)''.
0
H. Removing the definition of ``Intermittent nursing care''.
0
I. Adding the definition of ``Medicare Administrative Contractor
(MAC)'' in alphabetical order.
0
J. Removing the definitions of ``Nurse-midwife'', ``Nurse practitioner
and physician assistant'', and Part-time nursing care''.
0
K. Adding the definitions of ``Nurse practitioner (NP)'', ``Physician
assistant (PA)'' and ``Prospective payment system (PPS)'' in
alphabetical order.
0
L. Revising the definitions of ``Reporting period'' and ``Rural health
clinic''.
0
M. In the definition of ``Visiting nurse services,'' removing the
phrase ``registered nurse'' and adding in its place the phrase
``registered professional nurse''.
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 405.2401 Scope and definitions.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
Allowable costs means costs that are incurred by a RHC or FQHC that
is authorized to bill based on reasonable costs and are reasonable in
amount and proper and necessary for the efficient delivery of RHC and
FQHC services.
* * * * *
Certified nurse midwife (CNM) means an individual who meets the
applicable education, training, and other requirements of Sec.
410.77(a) of this chapter.
Clinical psychologist (CP) means an individual who meets the
applicable education, training, and other requirements of Sec.
410.71(d) of this chapter.
Clinical social worker (CSW) means an individual who meets the
applicable education, training, and other requirements of Sec.
410.73(a) of this chapter.
Coinsurance means that portion of the RHC's charge for covered
services or that portion of the FQHC's charge or PPS rate for covered
services for which the beneficiary is liable (in addition to the
deductible, where applicable).
* * * * *
Deductible means the amount incurred by the beneficiary during a
calendar year as specified in Sec. 410.160 and Sec. 410.161 of this
chapter.
Employee means any individual who, under the common law rules that
apply in determining the employer-employee relationship (as applied for
purposes of
[[Page 25474]]
section 3121(d)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986), is considered
to be employed by, or an employee of, an entity. (Application of these
common law rules is discussed in 20 CFR 404.1007 and 26 CFR 31.3121(d)-
1(c).)
Federally qualified health center (FQHC) * * *
(1) Is receiving a grant under section 330 of the Public Health
Service (PHS) Act, or is receiving funding from such a grant under a
contract with the recipient of such a grant and meets the requirements
to receive a grant under section 330 of the PHS Act;
(2) Is determined by the HRSA to meet the requirements for
receiving such a grant;
(3) Was treated by CMS, for purposes of Medicare Part B, as a
comprehensive federally funded health center as of January 1, 1990; or
* * * * *
HRSA means the Health Resources and Services Administration.
* * * * *
Medicare Administrative Contractor (MAC) means an organization that
has a contract with the Secretary to administer the benefits covered by
this subpart as described in Sec. 421.404 of this chapter.
Nurse practitioner (NP) means individuals who meet the applicable
education, training, and other requirements of Sec. 410.75(b) of this
chapter.
* * * * *
Physician assistant (PA) means an individual who meet the
applicable education, training, and other requirements of Sec.
410.74(c) of this chapter.
Prospective payment system (PPS) means a method of payment in which
Medicare payment is made based on a predetermined, fixed amount.
Reporting period generally means a period of 12 consecutive months
specified by the MAC as the period for which a RHC or FQHC must report
required costs and utilization information. The first and last
reporting periods may be less than 12 months.
Rural health clinic (RHC) means a facility that has--
(1) Been determined by the Secretary to meet the requirements of
section 1861(aa)(2) of the Act and part 491 of this chapter concerning
RHC services and conditions for approval; and
(2) Filed an agreement with CMS that meets the requirements in
Sec. 405.2402 to provide RHC services under Medicare.
* * * * *
0
5. Section 405.2402 is amended as follows:
0
A. Revising the section heading.
0
B. Revising paragraphs (b) introductory text and (c) introductory text.
0
C. Revising paragraph (d).
0
D. Removing paragraph (e).
0
E. Redesignating paragraph (f) as paragraph (e).
0
F. Revising newly redesignated paragraph (e).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 405.2402 Rural health clinic basic requirements.
* * * * *
(b) Acceptance of the clinic as qualified to furnish RHC services.
If the Secretary, after reviewing the survey agency or accrediting
organization recommendation, as applicable, and other evidence relating
to the qualifications of the clinic, determines that the clinic meets
the requirements of this subpart and of part 491 of this chapter, the
clinic is provided with--
* * * * *
(c) Filing of agreement by the clinic. If the clinic wishes to
participate in the program, it must--
* * * * *
(d) Acceptance by the Secretary. If the Secretary accepts the
agreement filed by the clinic, the Secretary returns to the clinic one
copy of the agreement with a notice of acceptance specifying the
effective date.
(e) Appeal rights. If CMS declines to enter into an agreement or if
CMS terminates an agreement, the clinic is entitled to a hearing in
accordance with Sec. 498.3(b)(5) and (6) of this chapter.
0
6. Section 405.2403 is amended as follows:
0
A. Revising the section heading.
0
B. Amending paragraphs (a) introductory text and (a)(2) by removing the
term ``rural health clinic'' and by adding in its place the term
``RHC''.
0
C. Amending paragraph (a)(3)(ii)(B) by removing the term ``rural health
clinic's'' and adding in its place the term ``RHC's''.
0
D. Amending paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2), (a)(3)(i), (a)(4)(i), and
(a)(4)(ii) by removing the term ``clinic'' and adding in its place the
term ``RHC''.
The revision reads as follow:
Sec. 405.2403 Rural health clinic content and terms of the agreement
with the Secretary.
* * * * *
0
7. Section 405.2404 is amended as follows:
0
A. Revising the section heading.
0
B. Amending the heading of paragraph (a), and paragraphs (b)(1)
introductory text, (b)(2), (b)(3), (c), and (e) introductory text, by
removing the term ``rural health clinic'' each time it appears and by
adding in its place the term ``RHC''.
0
C. Amending paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2)(i), (a)(2)(ii)(A), and (a)(3) by
removing the term ``clinic'' each time it appears and adding in its
place the term ``RHC''.
0
D. Amending paragraph (a)(2)(i) by removing the term ``clinic's'' and
adding in its place the term ``RHC's''.
0
E. Amending (a)(2)(ii) introductory text by removing the phrase ``if he
determines'' and adding in its place ``if the Secretary determines''.
0
F. Amending paragraph (a)(3) by removing the phrase ``that shall be
deemed'' and adding in its place the phrase ``the Secretary deems it''.
0
G. Amending paragraph (b)(1) introductory text by removing the term
``he'' and adding in its place the phrase ``he or she''.
0
H. Amending paragraph (b)(1)(i) by removing ``; or'' and adding in its
place ``;''.
0
I. Amending paragraph (b)(2) by removing the phrase ``The Secretary
will give'' and adding in its place the phrase ``The Secretary gives''.
0
J. Revising paragraph (d).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 405.2404 Termination of rural health clinic agreements.
* * * * *
(d) Notice to the public. Prompt notice of the date and effect of
termination must be given to the public, through publication in local
newspapers by either of the following:
(1) The RHC, after the Secretary has approved or set a termination
date.
(2) The Secretary, when he or she has terminated the agreement.
* * * * *
0
8. Section 405.2410 is amended as follows:
0
A. In paragraph (a)(1), removing the term ``rural health clinic'' and
adding in its place the term ``RHC''.
0
B. In paragraph (a)(2), removing the term ``Federally qualified health
center'' and adding in its place the term ``FQHC''.
0
C. Revising paragraph (b).
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 405.2410 Application of Part B deductible and coinsurance.
* * * * *
(b) Application of coinsurance. Except for preventive services for
which Medicare pays 100 percent under Sec. 410.152(l) of this chapter,
a beneficiary's responsibility is either of the following:
(1) For RHCs and FQHCs that are authorized to bill on the basis of
the reasonable cost system--
(i) A coinsurance amount that does not exceed 20 percent of the
RHC's or
[[Page 25475]]
FQHC's reasonable customary charge for the covered service; and
(ii)(A) The beneficiary's deductible and coinsurance amount for any
one item or service furnished by the RHC may not exceed a reasonable
amount customarily charged by the RHC for that particular item or
service; or
(B) For any one item or service furnished by a FQHC, a coinsurance
amount that does not exceed 20 percent of a reasonable customary charge
by the FQHC for that particular item or service.
(2) For FQHCs authorized to bill under the PPS, a coinsurance
amount which is 20 percent of the lesser of--
(i) The FQHC's actual charge; or
(ii) The FQHC PPS rate for the covered service.
0
9. Section 405.2411 is amended as follows:
0
A. Revising paragraph (a) introductory text.
0
B. In paragraphs (a)(1) through (a)(3), removing ``;'' and adding in
its place ``.''.
0
C. Revising paragraphs (a)(4) and (5).
0
D. Adding a new paragraph (a)(6).
0
E. Revising paragraph (b).
The revisions and addition read as follows:
Sec. 405.2411 Scope of benefits.
(a) The following RHC and FQHC services are reimbursable under this
subpart:
* * * * *
(4) Services and supplies furnished as incident to a nurse
practitioner, physician assistant, certified nurse midwife, clinical
psychologist, or clinical social worker service.
(5) Visiting nurse services when provided in accordance with
1861(aa)(1) of the Act and Sec. 405.2416.
(6) Clinical psychologist and clinical social worker services as
specified in Sec. 405.2450.
(b) RHC and FQHC services are--
(1) Covered when furnished in a RHC, FQHC, or other outpatient
setting, including a patient's place of residence;
(2) Covered when furnished during a Part A stay in a skilled
nursing facility only when provided by a physician, nurse practitioner,
physician assistant, certified nurse midwife or clinical psychologist
employed or under contract with the RHC or FQHC at the time the
services are furnished; and
(3) Not covered in a--
(i) Hospital as defined in section 1861(e) of the Act; or
(ii) Critical access hospital as defined in section 1861(mm)(1) of
the Act.
0
10. Section 405.2412 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 405.2412 Physicians' services.
Physicians' services are professional services that are furnished
by either of the following:
(a) By a physician at the RHC or FQHC.
(b) Outside of the RHC or FQHC by a physician whose agreement with
the RHC or FQHC provides that he or she will be paid by the RHC or FQHC
for such services and certification and cost reporting requirements are
met.
Sec. 405.2413 [Amended]
0
11. Section 405.2413 is amended as follows:
0
A. Amending paragraph (a)(2) by removing the term ``rural health
clinic's'' and by adding in its place the term ``RHC's or FQHC's''.
0
B. Amending paragraph (a)(6) by removing the term ``clinic's'' and by
adding in its place the term ``RHC's or ``FQHC's'' and by removing the
term ``clinic'' and by adding in its place the term ``RHC''.
0
12. Section 405.2414 is amended as follows:
0
A. Revising the section heading and paragraphs (a) introductory text
and (a)(1).
0
B. In paragraphs (a)(2) and (3), removing ``;'' and adding in its place
``.''.
0
C. Revising paragraph (a)(4).
0
D. In paragraph (a)(5), removing the phrase ``They would'' and adding
in its place the phrase ``The services would''.
0
E. In paragraph (c), removing the phrase ``physician assistants, nurse
midwives or specialized nurse practitioners'' and adding in its place
the phrase ``physician assistants or certified nurse midwives''.
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 405.2414 Nurse practitioner, physician assistant, and certified
nurse midwife services.
(a) Professional services are payable under this subpart if the
services meet all of the following:
(1) Furnished by a nurse practitioner, physician assistant, or
certified nurse midwife who is employed by, or receives compensation
from, the RHC or FQHC.
* * * * *
(4) Are of a type which the nurse practitioner, physician assistant
or certified nurse midwife who furnished the service is legally
permitted to perform by the State in which the service is rendered.
* * * * *
0
13. Section 405.2415 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 405.2415 Services and supplies incident to nurse practitioner,
physician assistant, certified nurse midwife, clinical psychologist, or
clinical social worker services.
(a) Services and supplies incident to a nurse practitioner,
physician assistant, certified nurse midwife, clinical psychologist, or
clinical social worker service are payable under this subpart if the
service or supply is all of the following:
(1) Of a type commonly furnished in physicians' offices.
(2) Of a type commonly rendered either without charge or included
in the RHC's or FQHC's bill.
(3) Furnished as an incidental, although integral part of
professional services furnished by a nurse practitioner, physician
assistant, certified nurse midwife, clinical psychologist, or clinical
social worker.
(4) Furnished in accordance with applicable State law.
(5) Furnished under the direct supervision of a physician, nurse
practitioner, physician assistant, certified nurse midwife, clinical
psychologist or clinical social worker.
(6) In the case of a service, furnished by a member of the RHC's
health care staff who is an employee of the RHC.
(b) The direct supervision requirement is met in the case of any of
the following persons only if the person is permitted to supervise
these services under the written policies governing the RHC or FQHC:
(1) Nurse practitioner.
(2) Physician assistant.
(3) Certified nurse midwife.
(4) Clinical psychologist.
(5) Clinical social worker.
(c) Only drugs and biologicals which cannot be self-administered
are included within the scope of this benefit.
0
14. Section 405.2416 is amended as follows:
0
A. Revising paragraphs (a) introductory text and (a)(1).
0
B. In paragraph (a)(2), removing ``;'' and adding in its place ``.''.
0
C. Revising paragraphs (a)(3) and (4).
0
D. Revising paragraphs (b) introductory text and (b)(1).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 405.2416 Visiting nurse services.
(a) Visiting nurse services are covered if the services meet all of
the following:
(1) The RHC or FQHC is located in an area in which the Secretary
has determined that there is a shortage of home health agencies.
* * * * *
(3) The services are furnished by a registered professional nurse
or licensed
[[Page 25476]]
practical nurse that is employed by, or receives compensation for the
services from the RHC or FQHC.
(4) The services are furnished under a written plan of treatment
that is both of the following:
(i)(A) Established and reviewed at least every 60 days by a
supervising physician of the RHC or FQHC; or
(B)(1) Established by a nurse practitioner, physician assistant or
certified nurse midwife; and
(2) Reviewed at least every 60 days by a supervising physician.
(ii) Signed by the supervising physician, nurse practitioner,
physician assistant or certified nurse midwife of the RHC or FQHC.
(b) The nursing care covered by this section includes the
following:
(1) Services that must be performed by a registered professional
nurse or licensed practical nurse if the safety of the patient is to be
assured and the medically desired results achieved.
* * * * *
Sec. 405.2417 [Amended]
0
15. Section 405.2417 is amended as follows:
0
A. In the introductory text, removing the phrase ``rural health
clinic'' and adding in its place ``RHC or FQHC''
0
B. In paragraph (a), removing the phrase ``rural health clinic'' and
adding in its place ``RHC or FQHC'', and removing ``;'' and adding in
its place ``.''.
0
C. In paragraph (b), removing ``; or'' and adding in its place ``.''.
0
16. Section 405.2430 is amended as follows:
0
A. Revising paragraphs (a)(1) introductory text, (a)(1)(i), and
(a)(1)(ii).
0
B. In paragraph (a)(4), removing the phrase ``Federally qualified
health center'' and adding in its place the term ``FQHC''.
0
C. Revising paragraph (b).
0
D. Removing paragraph (c).
0
E. Redesignating paragraph (d) as paragraph (c).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 405.2430 Basic requirements.
(a) * * *
(1) In response to a request from an entity that wishes to
participate in the Medicare program, CMS enters into an agreement with
an entity when all of the following occur:
(i) HRSA approves the entity as meeting the requirements of section
330 of the PHS Act.
(ii) The entity assures CMS that it meets the requirements
specified in this subpart and part 491 of this chapter, as described in
Sec. 405.2434(a).
* * * * *
(b) Prior HRSA FQHC determination. An entity applying to become a
FQHC must do the following:
(1) Be determined by HRSA as meeting the applicable requirements of
the PHS Act, as specified in Sec. 405.2401(b).
(2) Receive approval by HRSA as a FQHC under section 330 of the PHS
Act (42 U.S.C. 254b).
* * * * *
0
17. Section 405.2434 is amended as follows:
0
A. In the introductory text, removing the phrase ``Federally qualified
health center'' and adding in its place the term ``FQHC''.
0
B. In paragraph (a)(1) by removing the phrase ``Federally qualified
health center'' and adding in its place the term ``FQHC'' each time it
appears.
0
C. In paragraph (a)(2) by removing the term ``Centers'' and adding in
its place the term ``FQHCs''.
0
D. Revising paragraphs (b), (c)(1), and (c)(4).
0
E. In paragraph (c)(3) by removing the phrase ``Federally qualified
health center'' and adding in its place the term ``FQHC'' each time it
appears.
0
F. In paragraphs (d)(1), (d)(3) introductory text, (e)(1), (e)(2), and
(e)(3) by removing the phrase ``Federally qualified health center''
each time it appears and adding in its place the term ``FQHC''.
0
G. In paragraphs (d)(3)(ii) and (e)(2) by removing the phrase
``Federally qualified health center's'' and adding in its place the
term ``FQHC's'' .
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 405.2434 Content and terms of the agreement.
* * * * *
(b) Effective date of agreement. The effective date of the
agreement is determined in accordance with the provisions of Sec.
489.13 of this chapter.
(c) * * *
(1) For non-FQHC services that are billed to Part B, the
beneficiary is responsible for payment of a coinsurance amount which is
20 percent of the amount of Part B payment made to the FQHC for the
covered services.
* * * * *
(4) The FQHC may charge the beneficiary for items and services that
are not FQHC services. If the item or service is covered under Medicare
Part B, the FQHC may not charge the beneficiary more than 20 percent of
the Part B payment amount.
* * * * *
Sec. 405.2436 [Amended]
0
18. Section 405.2436 is amended as follows:
0
A. In paragraphs (a) introductory text, (a)(2), (b)(1)(i), (b)(2)(i),
(b)(3), (c)(1) introductory text, (c)(2), (c)(3), and (d) by removing
the phrase ``Federally qualified health center'' each time it appears
and adding in its place the term ``FQHC''.
0
B. In paragraphs (b)(1) introductory text, (b)(1)(ii), (b)(2)
introductory text, and (d) by removing the phrase ``Federally qualified
health center's'' and adding in its place the term ``FQHC's''.
0
19. Section 405.2440 is amended by revising the introductory text to
read as follows.
Sec. 405.2440 Conditions for reinstatement after termination by CMS.
When CMS has terminated an agreement with a FQHC, CMS does not
enter into another agreement with the FQHC to participate in the
Medicare program unless CMS--
* * * * *
Sec. 405.2442 [Amended]
0
20. Section 405.2442 is amended as follows:
0
A. In paragraph (a) introductory text by removing the phrase
``Federally qualified health center'' each time it appears and adding
in its place the term ``FQHC''.
0
B. In paragraph (b) by removing the phrase ``Federally qualified health
center's'' and adding in its place the term ``FQHC's''.
Sec. 405.2444 [Amended]
0
21. Section 405.2444 is amended as follows:
0
A. In paragraph (c) by removing the phrase ``Federally qualified health
center'' and adding in its place the term ``FQHC''.
0
B. In paragraphs (a)(2), (b), and (c) by removing the term ``center''
each time it appears, and by adding in its place the term ``FQHC''.
0
22. Section 405.2446 is amended as follows:
0
A. Revising paragraphs (a), (b)(2), (3), (4), and (6).
0
B. Removing paragraph (b)(8).
0
C. Redesignating paragraphs (b)(9) and (10) as (b)(8) and (9),
respectively.
0
D. In paragraphs (c) and (d), removing the phrase ``Federally qualified
health center'' and adding in its place the term ``FQHC''.
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 405.2446 Scope of services.
(a) For purposes of this section, the terms rural health clinic and
RHC when they appear in the cross references in paragraph (b) of this
section also mean
[[Page 25477]]
Federally qualified health centers and FQHCs.
(b) * * *
(2) Services and supplies furnished as incident to a physician's
professional service, as specified in Sec. 405.2413.
(3) Nurse practitioner, physician assistant or certified nurse
midwife services as specified in Sec. 405.2414.
(4) Services and supplies furnished as incident to a nurse
practitioner, physician assistant, or certified nurse midwife service,
as specified in Sec. 405.2415.
* * * * *
(6) Services and supplies furnished as incident to a clinical
psychologist or clinical social worker service, as specified in Sec.
405.2452.
* * * * *
0
23. Section 405.2448 is amended as follows:
0
A. Revising paragraphs (a) introductory text, (a)(1) and (2).
0
B. Removing paragraph (a)(3).
0
C. Redesignating paragraph (a)(4) as (a)(3).
0
D. In paragraph (b) introductory text by removing the phrase
``Federally qualified health centers'' and adding in its place the term
``FQHCs''.
0
E. In paragraph (d) by removing the phrase ``a Federally qualified
health center service, but may be provided at a Federally qualified
health center if the center'' and adding in its place the phrase ``a
FQHC service, but may be provided at a FQHC if the FQHC''.
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 405.2448 Preventive primary services.
(a) Preventive primary services are those health services that--
(1) A FQHC is required to provide as preventive primary health
services under section 330 of the PHS Act; and
(2) Are furnished--
(i) By a or under the direct supervision of a physician, nurse
practitioner, physician assistant, certified nurse midwife, clinical
psychologist or clinical social worker; or
(ii) By a member of the FQHC's health care staff who is an employee
of the FQHC or by a physician under arrangements with the FQHC.
* * * * *
Sec. 405.2449 [Amended]
0
24. Section 405.2449 is amended as follows:
0
A. In the introductory text by removing the phrase ``Federally
qualified health center'' and adding in its place the term ``FQHC''.
0
B. In paragraph (b) by removing ``; and'' and adding in its place
``.''.
Sec. 405.2452 [Amended]
0
25. Section 405.2452 is amended as follows:
0
A. In paragraph (a)(2), by removing the phrase ``Federally qualified
health center's'' and adding in its place the term ``FQHC's''.
0
B. In paragraph (a)(6), removing the term ``center'' and adding in its
place the term ``FQHC''.
0
C. In paragraph (b), by removing the phrase ``federally qualified
health center'' and adding in its place the term ``FQHC''.
0
26. Section 405.2460 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 405.2460 Applicability of general payment exclusions.
The payment conditions, limitations, and exclusions set out in
subpart C of this part, part 410 and part 411 of this chapter are
applicable to payment for services provided by RHCs and FQHCs, except
that preventive primary services, as defined in Sec. 405.2448, are
statutorily authorized for FQHCs and not excluded by the provisions of
section 1862(a) of the Act.
0
27. Section 405.2462 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 405.2462 Payment for RHC and FQHC services.
(a) Payment to provider-based RHCs and FQHCs that are authorized to
bill under the reasonable cost system. A RHC or FQHC that is authorized
to bill under the reasonable cost system is paid in accordance with
parts 405 and 413 of this subchapter, as applicable, if the RHC or FQHC
is--
(1) An integral and subordinate part of a hospital, skilled nursing
facility or home health agency participating in Medicare (that is, a
provider of services); and
(2) Operated with other departments of the provider under common
licensure, governance and professional supervision.
(b) Payment to independent RHCs and freestanding FQHCs that are
authorized to bill under the reasonable cost system. (1) RHCs and FQHCs
that are authorized to bill under the reasonable cost system are paid
on the basis of an all-inclusive rate for each beneficiary visit for
covered services. This rate is determined by the MAC, in accordance
with this subpart and general instructions issued by CMS.
(2) The amount payable by the MAC for a visit is determined in
accordance with paragraphs (e)(1) and (2) of this section.
(c) Payment to FQHCs that are authorized to bill under the
prospective payment system. A FQHC that is authorized to bill under the
prospective payment system is paid a single, per diem rate based on the
prospectively set rate for each beneficiary visit for covered services.
This rate is adjusted for the following:
(1) Geographic differences in cost based on the Geographic Practice
Cost Indices (GPCIs) in accordance with section 1848(e) of the Act and
42 CFR 414.2 and 414.26 are used to adjust payment under the physician
fee schedule during the same period, limited to only the work and
practice expense GPCIs.
(2) Furnishing of care to a beneficiary that is a new patient with
respect to the FQHC, including all sites that are part of the FQHC. A
new patient is one that has not been treated by the FQHC's organization
within the previous 3 years.
(3) Furnishing of care to a beneficiary receiving a comprehensive
initial Medicare visit (that is an initial preventive physical
examination or an initial annual wellness visit) or a subsequent annual
wellness visit.
(d)(1) Except for preventive services for which Medicare pays 100
percent under Sec. 410.152(l) of this chapter, Medicare pays--
(i) 80 percent of the all-inclusive rate for FQHCs that are
authorized to bill under the reasonable cost system; and
(ii) 80 percent of the lesser of the FQHC's actual charge or the
PPS encounter rate for FQHCs authorized to bill under the PPS.
(2) No deductible is applicable to FQHC services.
(e) For RHCs visits, payment is made in accordance with one of the
following:
(1) If the deductible has been fully met by the beneficiary prior
to the RHC visit, Medicare pays 80 percent of the all-inclusive rate.
(2) If the deductible has not been fully met by the beneficiary
before the visit, and the amount of the RHC's reasonable customary
charge for the services that is applied to the deductible is less than
the all-inclusive rate, the amount applied to the deductible is
subtracted from the all-inclusive rate and 80 percent of the remainder,
if any, is paid to the RHC.
(3) If the deductible has not been fully met by the beneficiary
before the visit, and the amount of the RHC's reasonable customary
charge for the services that is applied to the deductible is equal to
or exceeds the all-inclusive rate, no payment is made to the RHC.
(f) To receive payment, the FQHC or RHC must do all of the
following:
(1) Furnish services in accordance with the requirements of subpart
X of part 405 of this chapter and subpart A of part 491 of this
chapter.
[[Page 25478]]
(2) File a request for payment on the form and manner prescribed by
CMS.
0
28. Section 405.2463 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 405.2463 What constitutes a visit.
(a) Visit--General. (1) For RHCs, a visit is either of the
following:
(i) Face-to-face encounter between a RHC patient and one of the
following:
(A) Physician.
(B) Physician assistant.
(C) Nurse practitioner.
(D) Certified nurse midwife.
(E) Visiting registered professional or licensed practical nurse.
(G) Clinical psychologist.
(H) Clinical social worker.
(ii) Qualified transitional care management service.
(2) For FQHCs, a visit is either of the following:
(i) A visit as described in paragraph (a)(1)(i) of this section.
(ii) A face-to-face encounter between a patient and either of the
following:
(A) A qualified provider of medical nutrition therapy services as
defined in part 410, subpart G, of this chapter.
(B) A qualified provider of outpatient diabetes self-management
training services as defined in part 410, subpart H, of this chapter.
(b) Visit--Medical. (1) A medical visit is a face-to-face encounter
between a RHC or FQHC patient and one of the following:
(i) Physician.
(ii) Physician assistant.
(iii) Nurse practitioner.
(iv) Certified nurse midwife.
(v) Visiting registered professional or licensed practical nurse.
(2) A medical visit for a FQHC patient may be either of the
following:
(i) Medical nutrition therapy visit.
(ii) Diabetes outpatient self-management training visit.
(3) Visit--Mental health. A mental health visit is a face-to-face
encounter between a RHC or FQHC patient and one of the following:
(i) Clinical psychologist.
(ii) Clinical social worker.
(iii) Other RHC or FQHC practitioner, in accordance with paragraph
(b)(1) of this section, for mental health services.
(c) Visit--Multiple. (1) For RHCs and FQHCs that are authorized to
bill under the reasonable cost system, encounters with more than one
health professional and multiple encounters with the same health
professional that take place on the same day and at a single location
constitute a single visit, except when the patient--
(i) Suffers an illness or injury subsequent to the first visit that
requires additional diagnosis or treatment on the same day;
(ii) Has a medical visit and a mental health visit on the same day;
or
(iii) Has an initial preventive physical exam visit and a separate
medical or mental health visit on the same day.
(2) For RHCs and FQHCs that are authorized to bill under the
reasonable cost system, Medicare pays RHCs and FQHCs for more than 1
visit per day when the conditions in paragraph (c)(1) of this section
are met.
(3) For FQHCs that are authorized to bill under the reasonable cost
system, Medicare pays for more than 1 visit per day when a DSMT or MNT
visit is furnished on the same day as a visit described in paragraph
(c)(1) of this section are met.
(4) For FQHCs billing under the prospective payment system,
Medicare pays for more than 1 visit per day when the patient--
(i) Suffers an illness or injury subsequent to the first visit that
requires additional diagnosis or treatment on the same day; or
(ii) Has a medical visit and a mental health visit on the same day.
0
29. Section 405.2464 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 405.2464 Payment rate.
(a) Determination of the payment rate for RHCs and FQHCs that are
authorized to bill on the basis of reasonable cost. (1) An all-
inclusive rate is determined by the MAC at the beginning of the cost
reporting period.
(2) The rate is determined by dividing the estimated total
allowable costs by estimated total visits for RHC or FQHC services.
(3) The rate determination is subject to any tests of
reasonableness that may be established in accordance with this subpart.
(4) The MAC, during each reporting period, periodically reviews the
rate to assure that payments approximate actual allowable costs and
visits and adjusts the rate if:
(i) There is a significant change in the utilization of services;
(ii) Actual allowable costs vary materially from allowable costs;
or
(iii) Other circumstances arise which warrant an adjustment.
(5) The RHC or FQHC may request the MAC to review the rate to
determine whether adjustment is required.
(b) Determination of the payment rate for FQHCs billing under the
prospective payment system. (1) A per diem rate is calculated by CMS by
dividing total FQHC costs by total FQHC daily encounters to establish
an average per diem cost.
(2) The per diem rate is adjusted as follows:
(i) For geographic differences in the cost of inputs according to
Sec. 405.2462(c)(1).
(ii) When the FQHC furnishes services to a new patient, as defined
in Sec. 405.2462(c)(2).
(iii) When a beneficiary receives either of the following:
(A) A comprehensive initial Medicare visit (that is, an initial
preventive physical examination or an initial annual wellness visit).
(B) A subsequent annual wellness visit.
0
30. Section 405.2466 is amended to read as follows:
0
A. By revising paragraph (a) and paragraph (b) heading.
0
B. In paragraph (b)(1) introductory text by removing the term
``intermediary'' and by adding in its place the term ``MAC''.
0
C. In paragraphs (b)(1)(i), and (b)(1)(ii) by removing the term ``rural
health clinic'' each time it appears and by adding in its place the
term ``RHC'' and by removing the term ``Federally qualified health
center'' and by adding in its place the term ``FQHC''.
0
D. Revising paragraph (b)(1)(iii).
0
E. In paragraph (b)(1)(iv) by removing the term ``rural health
clinics'' and by adding in its place the term ``RHCs''.
0
F. In paragraphs (b)(1) introductory text, (b)(2), (c)(1), (c)(2), and
(d)(2) by removing the word ``clinic'' each time it appears and by
adding in its place the term ``RHC''.
0
G. In paragraphs (b)(1) introductory text, (b)(2), (c)(1), (c)(2), and
(d)(2) by removing the word ``center'' each time it appears and by
adding in its place the term ``FQHC''.
0
H. Revising paragraphs (c) introductory text and (d)(1).
0
I. In paragraph (d)(2) by removing the term ``intermediary'' each time
it appears and by adding in its place the term ``MAC''.
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 405.2466 Annual reconciliation.
(a) General. Payments made to RHCs or FQHCs that are authorized to
bill under the reasonable cost system during a reporting period are
subject to annual reconciliation to assure that those payments do not
exceed or fall short of the allowable costs attributable to covered
services furnished to Medicare beneficiaries during that period.
(b) Calculation of reconciliation for RHCs or FQHCs that are
authorized to bill under the reasonable cost system. (1) * * *
(iii) The total payment due the RHC is 80 percent of the amount
calculated by subtracting the amount of deductible incurred by
beneficiaries that is
[[Page 25479]]
attributable to RHC services from the cost of these services. FQHC
services are not subject to a deductible and the payment computation
for FQHCs does not include a reduction related to the deductible.
* * * * *
(c) Notice of program reimbursement. The MAC notifies the RHC or
FQHC that is authorized to bill under the reasonable-cost system:
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(1) Underpayments. If the total reimbursement due the RHC or FQHC
that is authorized to bill under the reasonable cost system exceeds the
payments made for the reporting period, the MAC makes a lump-sum
payment to the RHC or FQHC to bring total payments into agreement with
total reimbursement due the RHC or FQHC.
* * * * *
0
31. Add Sec. 405.2467 to read as follows:
Sec. 405.2467 Requirements of the FQHC PPS.
(a) Cost reporting. For cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 2014, FQHCs are paid the lesser of their actual
charges or the FQHC PPS rate that does all of the following:
(1) Includes a process for appropriately describing the services
furnished by FQHCs.
(2) Establishes payment rates for specific payment codes based on
such appropriate descriptions of services.
(3) Takes into account the type, intensity and duration of services
furnished by FQHCs.
(4) May include adjustments (such as geographic adjustments)
determined by the Secretary.
(b) HCPCS coding. FQHCs are required to submit HCPCS codes in
reporting services furnished.
(c) Initial payments. (1) Beginning October 1, 2014, for the first
15 months of the PPS, the estimated aggregate amount of PPS rates is
equal to 100 percent of the estimated amount of reasonable costs that
would have occurred for that period if the PPS had not been
implemented.
(2) Payment rate is calculated based on the reasonable cost system,
prior to productivity adjustments and any payment limitations.
(d) Payments in subsequent years. (1) Beginning January 1, 2016,
PPS payment rates will be increased by the percentage increase in the
Medicare economic index.
(2) Beginning January 1, 2017, PPS rates will be increased by the
percentage increase in a market basket of FQHC goods and services as
established through regulations, or, if not available, the Medicare
economic index.
0
32. Section 405.2468 is amended by:
0
A. In paragraph (a) by removing the term ``intermediary'' and by adding
in its place the term ``MAC''.
0
B. In the headings of paragraphs (b) and (c), by removing the term
``rural health clinic'' and by adding in its place the term ``RHC''.
0
C. In the heading of paragraph (b) by removing the term ``Federally
qualified health center'' and by adding in its place the term ``FQHC''.
0
D. In paragraphs (b)(4), (b)(5), (d)(2)(iv), and (d)(2)(v) by removing
the word ``clinic'' each time it appears and by adding in its place the
term ``RHC''.
0
E. In paragraphs (b)(4), (b)(5), (d)(2)(iv), (d)(2)(v) by removing the
word ``center'' each time it appears and by adding in its place the
term ``FQHC''.
0
F. Revising paragraphs (b)(1), (c) and (d)(1).
0
G. In paragraph (f)(4) by removing the term ``Medicare +Choice'' and
adding in its place the term ``Medicare Advantage''.
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 405.2468 Allowable costs.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) Compensation for the services of a physician, physician
assistant, nurse practitioner, certified nurse-midwife, visiting
registered professional or licensed practical nurse, clinical
psychologist, and clinical social worker who owns, is employed by, or
furnishes services under contract to a FQHC or RHC.
* * * * *
(c) Tests of reasonableness of cost and utilization. Tests of
reasonableness authorized by sections 1833(a) and 1861(v)(1)(A) of the
Act may be established by CMS or the MAC with respect to direct or
indirect overall costs, costs of specific items and services, or costs
of groups of items and services. For RHCs and FQHCs that are authorized
to bill under the reasonable cost system, these tests include, but are
not limited to, screening guidelines and payment limits.
(d) * * *
(1) Costs in excess of amounts established by the guidelines are
not included unless the RHC or FQHC that is authorized to bill under
the reasonable cost system provides reasonable justification
satisfactory to the MAC.
* * * * *
0
33. Section 405.2469 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 405.2469 FQHC supplemental payments.
(a) Eligibility for supplemental payments. FQHCs under contract
(directly or indirectly) with MA organizations are eligible for
supplemental payments for FQHC services furnished to enrollees in MA
plans offered by the MA organization to cover the difference, if any,
between their payments from the MA plan and what they would receive
either:
(1) Under the reasonable cost payment system if the FQHC is
authorized to bill under the reasonable cost payment system, or
(2) The PPS rate if the FQHC is authorized to bill under the PPS.
(b) Calculation of supplemental payment. The supplemental payment
for FQHC covered services provided to Medicare patients enrolled in MA
plans is based on the difference between--
(1) Payments received by the FQHC from the MA plan as determined on
a per visit basis and the FQHCs all-inclusive cost-based per visit rate
as set forth in this subpart, less any amount the FQHC may charge as
described in section 1857(e)(3)(B) of the Act; or
(2) Payments received by the FQHC from the MA plan as determined on
a per visit basis and the FQHC PPS rate as set forth in this subpart,
less any amount the FQHC may charge as described in section
1857(e)(3)(B) of the Act.
(c) Financial incentives. Any financial incentives provided to
FQHCs under their MA contracts, such as risk pool payments, bonuses, or
withholds, are prohibited from being included in the calculation of
supplemental payments due to the FQHC.
(d) Per visit supplemental payment. A supplemental payment required
under this section is made to the FQHC when a covered face-to-face
encounter occurs between a MA enrollee and a practitioner as set forth
in Sec. 405.2463.
Sec. 405.2470 [Amended]
0
34. Section 405.2470 is amended by:
0
A. In paragraphs (a)(1), (b)(1), (c)(3), (c)(4), and (c)(5) by removing
the term ``intermediary'', and by adding in its place the term ``MAC''.
0
B. In paragraph (b)(2), by removing the term ``intermediary's'' and by
adding in its place the term ``MAC's''.
0
C. In paragraphs (a) introductory text, (c)(1), (c)(2)(i), and
(c)(2)(ii) by removing the term ``rural health clinic'' and by adding
in its place the term ``RHC''.
0
D. In paragraphs (a) introductory text, (c)(1), (c)(2)(i), and
(c)(2)(ii) by removing the term ``Federally qualified health center''
and by adding in its place the term ``FQHC''.
[[Page 25480]]
0
E. In paragraphs (b)(1), (b)(2), (c)(1), (c)(2) introductory text,
(c)(3), (c)(4), (c)(5), and (c)(6) by removing the term ``clinic'' each
time it appears and by adding in its place the term ``RHC''.
0
F. In paragraphs (b)(1), (b)(2), (c)(1), (c)(2) introductory text,
(c)(3), (c)(4), (c)(5) and (c)(6) by removing the term ``center'' each
time it appears and by the term ``FQHC''.
0
35. Section 405.2472 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read as
follows:
Sec. 405.2472 Beneficiary appeals.
* * * * *
(a) The beneficiary is dissatisfied with a MAC's determination
denying a request for payment made on his or her behalf by a RHC or
FQHC;
* * * * *
PART 410--SUPPLEMENTARY MEDICAL INSURANCE (SMI) BENEFITS
0
36. The authority citation for part 410 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102, 1834, 1871, 1881, and 1893 of the Social
Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395m, 1395hh, and 1395ddd).
0
37. Section 410.152 is amended by revising paragraph (f) to read as
follows:
Sec. 410.152 Amounts of payment.
* * * * *
(f) Amount of payment: Rural health clinic (RHC) and Federally
qualified health center (FQHC) services. Medicare Part B pays, for
services by a participating RHC or FQHC that is authorized to bill
under the reasonable cost system, 80 percent of the costs determined
under subpart X of part 405 of this chapter, to the extent those costs
are reasonable and related to the cost of furnishing RHC or FQHC
services or reasonable on the basis of other tests specified by CMS.
* * * * *
PART 491--CERTIFICATION OF CERTAIN HEALTH FACILITIES
0
38. The authority citation for part 491 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
1302); and sec. 353 of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C.
263a).
0
39. Section 491.8 is amended by revising paragraph (a)(3) to read as
follows:
Sec. 491.8 Staffing and staff responsibilities.
(a) * * *
(3) The physician assistant, nurse practitioner, nurse-midwife,
clinical social worker or clinical psychologist member of the staff may
be the owner or an employee of the clinic or center, or may furnish
services under contract to the clinic or center. In the case of a
clinic, at least one physician assistant or nurse practitioner must be
an employee of the clinic.
* * * * *
PART 493--LABORATORY REQUIREMENTS
0
40. The authority citation for part 493 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: Sec. 353 of the Public Health Service Act, secs.
1102, 1861(e), the sentence following sections 1861(s)(11) through
1861(s)(16) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 263a, 1302,
1395x(e), the sentence following 1395x(s)(11) through 1395x(s)(16)),
and the Pub. L. 112-202 amendments to 42 U.S.C. 263a.
0
41. Section 493.1 is amended by revising the second sentence to read as
follows:
Sec. 493.1 Basis and scope.
* * * It implements sections 1861(e) and (j), the sentence
following section 1861(s)(13), and 1902(a)(9) of the Social Security
Act, and section 353 of the Public Health Service Act, as amended by
section 2 of the Taking Essential Steps for Testing Act of 2012. * * *
0
42. Section 493.2 is amended by adding the definition of ``Repeat
proficiency testing referral'' in alphabetical order, to read as
follows:
Sec. 493.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
Repeat proficiency testing referral means a second instance in
which a proficiency testing sample, or a portion of a sample, is
referred, for any reason, to another laboratory for analysis prior to
the laboratory's proficiency testing program event cut-off date within
the period of time encompassing the two prior survey cycles (including
initial certification, recertification, or the equivalent for
laboratories surveyed by an approved accreditation organization).
* * * * *
0
43. Section 493.1800 is amended by revising paragraph (a)(2)
introductory text to read as follows:
Sec. 493.1800 Basis and scope.
(a) * * *
(2) The Clinical Laboratory Improvement Act of 1967 (section 353 of
the Public Health Service Act) as amended by CLIA 1988, as amended by
section 2 of the Taking Essential Steps for Testing Act of 2012--
* * * * *
0
44. Section 493.1840 is amended by revising paragraph (b) to read as
follows:
Sec. 493.1840 Suspension, limitation, or revocation of any type of
CLIA certificate.
* * * * *
(b) Adverse action based on improper referrals in proficiency
testing. If CMS determines that a laboratory has intentionally referred
its proficiency testing samples to another laboratory for analysis, CMS
does one of the following:
(1)(i) Revokes the laboratory's CLIA certificate for at least 1
year, prohibits the owner and operator from owning or operating a CLIA-
certified laboratory for at least 1 year, and may impose a civil money
penalty in accordance with Sec. 493.1834(d), if CMS determines that--
(A) A proficiency testing referral is a repeat proficiency testing
referral as defined at Sec. 493.2; or
(B) On or before the proficiency testing event close date, a
laboratory reported proficiency testing results obtained from another
laboratory to the proficiency testing program.
(ii) Following the revocation of a CLIA certificate in accordance
with paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section, CMS may exempt a laboratory
owner from the generally applicable prohibition on owning or operating
a CLIA-certified laboratory under paragraph (a)(8) of this section on a
laboratory-by-laboratory basis if CMS finds, after review of the
relevant facts and circumstances, that there is no evidence that--
(A) Patients would be put at risk as a result of the owner being
exempted from the ban on a laboratory-by-laboratory basis;
(B) The laboratory for which the owner is to be exempted from the
general ownership ban participated in or was otherwise complicit in the
PT referral of the laboratory that resulted in the revocation; and
(C) The laboratory for which the owner is to be exempted from the
general ownership ban received a PT sample from another laboratory in
the prior two survey cycles, and failed to immediately report such
receipt to CMS or to the appropriate CMS-approved accrediting
organization.
(2) Suspends or limits the CLIA certificate for less than 1 year
based on the criteria in Sec. 493.1804(d) and imposes alternative
sanctions as appropriate, in accordance with Sec. 493.1804(c) and (d),
Sec. 493.1806(c), Sec. 493.1807(b), Sec. 493.1809 and, in the case
of civil money penalties, Sec. 493.1834(d), when CMS determines that
paragraph (b)(1)(i)(A) or (B) of this section does not apply but that
the laboratory obtained test results for the proficiency testing
samples from another laboratory on or before the proficiency testing
event close date. Among other possibilities, alternative
[[Page 25481]]
sanctions will always include a civil money penalty and a directed plan
of correction that includes required training of staff.
(3) Imposes alternative sanctions in accordance with Sec.
493.1804(c) and (d), Sec. 493.1806(c), Sec. 493.1807(b), Sec.
493.1809 and, in the case of civil money penalties, Sec. 493.1834(d),
when CMS determines that paragraph (b)(1)(i) or (2) of this section do
not apply, and a PT referral has occurred, but no test results are
received prior to the event close date by the referring laboratory from
the laboratory that received the referral. Among other possibilities,
alternative sanctions will always include a civil money penalty and a
directed plan of correction that includes required training of staff.
* * * * *
Dated: April 3, 2014.
Marilyn Tavenner,
Administrator, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
Approved: April 9, 2014.
Kathleen Sebelius,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services.
Note: The following Addendum will not appear in the Code of
Federal Regulations.
Addendum: FQHC Geographic Adjustment Factors (FQHC GAFs)
As described in section II.C.2. of this final rule with comment
period, we used the CY 2015 GPCI values and cost share weights, as
published in the CY 2014 PFS final rule with comment period, to model
the geographic adjustments for the FQHC PPS rates. The FQHC GAFs that
will be used for payment under the FQHC PPS will be adapted from the
GPCIs used to adjust payment under the PFS for that same period.
The 2014 FQHC GAFs in the following table are adapted from the CY
2014 PFS GPCIs, as finalized in the CY 2014 PFS final rule with comment
period. The 2014 FQHC GAFs are the values that will be used to adjust
payment under the FQHC PPS for the period of October 1 through December
31, 2014. The 2014 FQHC GAFs in the following table do not reflect the
1.0 floor on the PFS work GPCI that is effective from January 1, 2014,
through March 31, 2014, which was authorized by the Pathway for SGR
Reform Act of 2013.
The 2015 FQHC GAFs in the following table are adapted from the CY
2015 PFS GPCIs, as finalized in the CY 2014 PFS final rule with comment
period. The 2015 FQHC GAFs listed were used to model the geographic
adjustments for the FQHC PPS rates. Under current law and regulation,
these same values would be used to adjust payments under the FQHC PPS
during CY 2015.
We note that updates to the PFS GPCIs due to changes in law or
implemented through regulation would also apply to the FQHC GAFs, such
as changes to the CY 2015 PFS GPCIs that may be included in the final
CY 2015 PFS rule. The FQHC GAFs would be re-calculated and updated
through program instruction so that they remain consistent with the PFS
GPCIs.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Locality name 2014 FQHC GAF 2015 FQHC GAF
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 Alabama............................... 0.933 0.936
2 Alaska................................ 1.307 1.316
3 Arizona............................... 0.985 0.993
4 Arkansas.............................. 0.920 0.920
5 Anaheim/Santa Ana, CA................. 1.123 1.120
6 Los Angeles, CA....................... 1.096 1.100
7 Marin/Napa/Solano, CA................. 1.154 1.165
8 Oakland/Berkeley, CA.................. 1.152 1.154
9 San Francisco, CA..................... 1.216 1.224
10 San Mateo, CA........................ 1.210 1.216
11 Santa Clara, CA...................... 1.204 1.209
12 Ventura, CA.......................... 1.105 1.100
13 Rest of California................... 1.053 1.053
14 Colorado............................. 1.003 1.005
15 Connecticut.......................... 1.067 1.069
16 DC + MD/VA Suburbs................... 1.121 1.123
17 Delaware............................. 1.024 1.021
18 Fort Lauderdale, FL.................. 1.014 1.006
19 Miami, FL............................ 1.017 1.011
20 Rest of Florida...................... 0.973 0.971
21 Atlanta, GA.......................... 1.005 1.002
22 Rest of Georgia...................... 0.940 0.940
23 Hawaii/Guam.......................... 1.075 1.077
24 Idaho................................ 0.935 0.930
25 Chicago, IL.......................... 1.033 1.026
26 East St. Louis, IL................... 0.962 0.961
27 Suburban Chicago, IL................. 1.041 1.033
28 Rest of Illinois..................... 0.944 0.944
29 Indiana.............................. 0.948 0.948
30 Iowa................................. 0.929 0.933
31 Kansas............................... 0.933 0.935
32 Kentucky............................. 0.925 0.926
33 New Orleans, LA...................... 0.983 0.986
34 Rest of Louisiana.................... 0.930 0.935
35 Southern Maine....................... 0.998 0.994
36 Rest of Maine........................ 0.940 0.944
37 Baltimore/Surr. Cntys, MD............ 1.059 1.058
38 Rest of Maryland..................... 1.024 1.025
[[Page 25482]]
39 Metropolitan Boston.................. 1.082 1.085
40 Rest of Massachusetts................ 1.038 1.040
41 Detroit, MI.......................... 1.010 0.996
42 Rest of Michigan..................... 0.957 0.954
43 Minnesota............................ 1.005 1.006
44 Mississippi.......................... 0.916 0.914
45 Metropolitan Kansas City, MO......... 0.968 0.968
46 Metropolitan St Louis, MO............ 0.975 0.972
47 Rest of Missouri..................... 0.905 0.903
48 Montana.............................. 0.974 0.977
49 Nebraska............................. 0.938 0.939
50 Nevada............................... 1.026 1.027
51 New Hampshire........................ 1.021 1.027
52 Northern NJ.......................... 1.109 1.107
53 Rest of New Jersey................... 1.071 1.072
54 New Mexico........................... 0.955 0.954
55 Manhattan, NY........................ 1.108 1.106
56 NYC Suburbs/Long I., NY.............. 1.124 1.122
57 Poughkpsie/N NYC Suburbs, NY......... 1.039 1.040
58 Queens, NY........................... 1.123 1.121
59 Rest of New York..................... 0.966 0.967
60 North Carolina....................... 0.953 0.956
61 North Dakota......................... 0.982 0.981
62 Ohio................................. 0.959 0.953
63 Oklahoma............................. 0.913 0.919
64 Portland, OR......................... 1.025 1.026
65 Rest of Oregon....................... 0.975 0.978
66 Metropolitan Philadelphia, PA........ 1.044 1.052
67 Rest of Pennsylvania................. 0.957 0.962
68 Puerto Rico.......................... 0.808 0.816
69 Rhode Island......................... 1.035 1.037
70 South Carolina....................... 0.946 0.946
71 South Dakota......................... 0.974 0.976
72 Tennessee............................ 0.937 0.936
73 Austin, TX........................... 1.002 1.008
74 Beaumont, TX......................... 0.942 0.947
75 Brazoria, TX......................... 1.002 1.005
76 Dallas, TX........................... 1.014 1.014
77 Fort Worth, TX....................... 0.995 1.000
78 Galveston, TX........................ 1.010 1.016
79 Houston, TX.......................... 1.009 1.013
80 Rest of Texas........................ 0.953 0.957
81 Utah................................. 0.946 0.946
82 Vermont.............................. 0.992 0.992
83 Virginia............................. 0.986 0.987
84 Virgin Islands....................... 1.001 1.001
85 Seattle (King Cnty), WA.............. 1.084 1.086
86 Rest of Washington................... 1.004 1.005
87 West Virginia........................ 0.901 0.902
88 Wisconsin............................ 0.973 0.970
89 Wyoming.............................. 0.989 0.992
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[FR Doc. 2014-09908 Filed 4-29-14; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P