Medicare Program; Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities Prospective Payment System-Update for Fiscal Year Beginning October 1, 2014 (FY 2015), 26039-26090 [2014-10306]
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Vol. 79
Tuesday,
No. 87
May 6, 2014
Part III
Department of Health and Human Services
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Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Part 412
Medicare Program; Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities Prospective Payment
System—Update for Fiscal Year Beginning October 1, 2014 (FY 2015);
Proposed Rule
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
42 CFR Part 412
[CMS–1606–P]
RIN 0938–AS08
Medicare Program; Inpatient
Psychiatric Facilities Prospective
Payment System—Update for Fiscal
Year Beginning October 1, 2014 (FY
2015)
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
This proposed rule would
update the prospective payment rates
for Medicare inpatient hospital services
provided by inpatient psychiatric
facilities (IPFs). These changes would be
applicable to IPF discharges occurring
during the fiscal year (FY) beginning
October 1, 2014 through September 30,
2015. This proposed rule would also
address implementation of ICD–10–CM
and ICD–10–PCS codes; propose a new
methodology for updating the cost of
living adjustment (COLA), and propose
new quality measures and reporting
requirements under the IPF quality
reporting program.
DATES: To be assured consideration,
comments must be received at one of
the addresses provided below, no later
than 5 p.m. on June 30, 2014.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Dorothy Myrick or Jana Lindquist, (410)
786–4533, for general information.
Hudson Osgood, (410) 786–7897 or
Bridget Dickensheets, (410) 786–8670,
for information regarding the market
basket and labor-related share.
Theresa Bean, (410) 786–2287, for
information regarding the regulatory
impact analysis.
Rebecca Kliman, (410) 786–9723 or
Jeffrey Buck, (410) 786–0407, for
information regarding the inpatient
psychiatric facility quality reporting
program.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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SUMMARY:
Table of Contents
To assist readers in referencing
sections contained in this document, we
are providing the following table of
contents.
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
C. Summary of Transfers
II. Background
A. Annual Requirements for Updating the
IPF PPS
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B. Overview of the Legislative
Requirements of the IPF PPS
C. General Overview of the IPF PPS
III. Changing the IPF PPS Payment Rate
Update Period From a Rate Year to a
Fiscal Year
IV. Proposed Market Basket for the IPF PPS
A. Background
B. Proposed Development of an IPFSpecific Market Basket
C. Proposed FY 2015 Market Basket Update
D. Proposed Labor-Related Share
V. Proposed Updates to the IPF PPS for FY
Beginning October 1, 2014
A. Determining the Standardized BudgetNeutral Federal Per Diem Base Rate
B. Proposed Update of the Federal Per
Diem Base Rate and Electroconvulsive
Therapy Rate
VI. Proposed Update of the IPF PPS
Adjustment Factors
A. Overview of the IPF PPS Adjustment
Factors
B. Proposed Patient-Level Adjustments
1. Proposed Adjustment for MS–DRG
Assignment
2. Proposed Payment for Comorbid
Conditions
3. Proposed Patient Age Adjustments
4. Proposed Variable Per Diem
Adjustments
C. Facility-Level Adjustments
1. Proposed Wage Index Adjustment
a. Background
b. Proposed Wage Index for FY 2015
c. OMB Bulletins
2. Proposed Adjustment for Rural Location
3. Proposed Teaching Adjustment
a. FTE Intern and Resident Cap Adjustment
b. Temporary Adjustment to the FTE Cap
To Reflect Residents Added Due to
Hospital Closure
c. Temporary Adjustment to FTE Cap To
Reflect Residents Affected By Residency
Program Closure
i. Receiving IPF
ii. IPF That Closed Its Program
4. Proposed Cost of Living Adjustment for
IPFs Located in Alaska and Hawaii
5. Proposed Adjustment for IPFs With a
Qualifying Emergency Department (ED)
D. Other Payment Adjustments and
Policies
1. Proposed Outlier Payments
a. Proposed Update to the Outlier Fixed
Dollar Loss Threshold Amount
b. Proposed Update to IPF Cost-to-Charge
Ratio Ceilings
2. Future Refinements
VII. Secretary’s Recommendations
VIII. Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities Quality
Reporting Program
IX. Collection of Information Requirements
X. Response to Comments
XI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
Addenda
Acronyms
Because of the many terms to which
we refer by acronym in this propose
rule, we are listing the acronyms used
and their corresponding meanings in
alphabetical order below:
BBRA—Medicare, Medicaid and SCHIP
[State Children’s Health Insurance
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Program] Balanced Budget Refinement Act
of 1999 (Pub. L. 106–113)
CBSA—Core-Based Statistical Area
CCR—Cost-to-Charge Ratio
CAH—Critical Access Hospital
DSM–IV–TR Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders Fourth
Edition—Text Revision
DRGs—Diagnosis-Related Groups
FY—Federal Fiscal Year (October 1 through
September 30)
ICD–9–CM—International Classification of
Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical
Modification
ICD–10–CM—International Classification of
Diseases, 10th Revision, Clinical
Modification
ICD–10–PCS—International Classification of
Diseases, 10th Revision, Procedure Coding
System
IPFs—Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities
IPFQR—Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities
Quality Reporting
IRFs—Inpatient Rehabilitation Facilities
LTCHs—Long-Term Care Hospitals
MAC—Medicare Administrative Contractor
MedPAR—Medicare Provider Analysis and
Review File
RPL—Rehabilitation, Psychiatric, and LongTerm Care
RY—Rate Year (July 1 through June 30)
TEFRA—Tax Equity and Fiscal
Responsibility Act of 1982 (Pub. L. 97–248)
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose
This proposed rule would update the
prospective payment rates for Medicare
inpatient hospital services provided by
inpatient psychiatric facilities for
discharges occurring during the fiscal
year (FY) beginning October 1, 2014
through September 30, 2015.
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
In this proposed rule, we would
update the IPF PPS, as specified in 42
CFR 412.428. The updates include the
following:
• The FY 2008-based Rehabilitation,
Psychiatric, and Long Term Care (RPL)
market basket update (currently
estimated to be 2.7 percent) would be
adjusted by a 0.3 percentage point
reduction as required by section
1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) of the Social Security
Act (the Act) and a reduction for
economy-wide productivity (currently
estimated to be 0.4 percentage point) as
required by 1886(s)(2)(A)(i) of the Act.
• The FY 2015 per diem rate would
be updated from $713.19 to $727.67.
• The electroconvulsive therapy
payment would be updated from
$307.04 to $313.27.
• The fixed dollar loss threshold
amount would be updated from $10,245
to $10,125 in order to maintain outlier
payments that are 2 percent of total IPF
PPS payments.
• The national urban and rural costto-charge ratio (CCR) ceilings for FY
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2015 would be 1.7049 and 1.8823,
respectively, and the national median
CCR would be 0.6220 for rural IPFs and
0.4700 for urban IPFs. These amounts
are used in the outlier calculation to
determine if an IPF’s CCR is statistically
accurate and for new providers without
an established CCR.
• The cost of living adjustment
factors for IPFs located in Alaska and
Hawaii would be updated using the
approach finalized in the FY 2014
inpatient hospital prospective payment
system (IPPS) final rule (78 FR 50985
through 50987).
In addition:
• We are proposing the ICD–10–CM/
PCS codes that would be eligible for the
MS–DRG and comorbidity payment
adjustments under the IPF PPS. The
effective date of those changes would be
the date when ICD–10–CM becomes the
required medical data code set for use
on Medicare claims.
• We are proposing the ICD–9–CM/
PCS codes that would be eligible for the
MS–DRG and comorbidity payment
adjustments under the IPF PPS.
• We would use the best available
hospital wage index and establish the
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wage index budget-neutrality
adjustment of 1.0003.
• We would retain the 17 percent
payment adjustment for IPFs located in
rural areas, the 1.31 payment
adjustment factor for IPFs with a
qualifying emergency department, the
coefficient value of 0.5150 for the
teaching adjustment, and the MS–DRG
adjustment factors and comorbidity
adjustment factors currently being paid
to IPFs in FY 2014.
C. Summary of Impacts
Provision description
Total transfers
FY 2015 IPF PPS payment rate update.
The overall economic impact of this proposed rule is an estimated $100 million in increased payments to
IPFs during FY 2015.
Provision description
Costs
New quality reporting program requirements.
The total costs in FY 2015 for IPFs as a result of the proposed new quality reporting requirements are estimated to be $33,372,508.
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II. Background
A. Annual Requirements for Updating
the IPF PPS
In November 2004, we implemented
the inpatient psychiatric facilities (IPF)
prospective payment system (PPS) in a
final rule that appeared in the
November 15, 2004 Federal Register (69
FR 66922). In developing the IPF PPS,
in order to ensure that the IPF PPS is
able to account adequately for each
IPF’s case-mix, we performed an
extensive regression analysis of the
relationship between the per diem costs
and certain patient and facility
characteristics to determine those
characteristics associated with
statistically significant cost differences
on a per diem basis. For characteristics
with statistically significant cost
differences, we used the regression
coefficients of those variables to
determine the size of the corresponding
payment adjustments.
In that final rule, we explained that
we believe it is important to delay
updating the adjustment factors derived
from the regression analysis until we
have IPF PPS data that include as much
information as possible regarding the
patient-level characteristics of the
population that each IPF serves.
Therefore, we indicated that we did not
intend to update the regression analysis
and the patient- and facility-level
adjustments until we complete that
analysis. Until that analysis is complete,
we stated our intention to publish a
notice in the Federal Register each
spring to update the IPF PPS (71 FR
27041). We have begun the necessary
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analysis to make refinements to the IPF
PPS using more current data to set the
adjustment factors, however, we are not
proposing those refinements in this
proposed rule. Rather, as explained in
section V.D.3 of this proposed rule, we
expect that in future rulemaking,
possibly for FY 2017, we will be ready
to propose potential refinements.
In the May 6, 2011 IPF PPS final rule
(76 FR 26432), we changed the payment
rate update period to a rate year (RY)
that coincides with a fiscal year (FY)
update. Therefore, update notices are
now published in the Federal Register
in the summer to be effective on October
1. When proposing changes in IPF
payment policy, a proposed rule would
be issued in the spring and the final rule
in the summer in order to be effective
on October 1. For further discussion on
changing the IPF PPS payment rate
update period to a RY that coincides
with a FY, see the IPF PPS final rule
published in the Federal Register on
May 6, 2011 (76 FR 26434 through
26435). For a detailed list of updates to
the IPF PPS, see 42 CFR 412.428.
Our most recent IPF PPS annual
update occurred in an August 1, 2013,
Federal Register notice (78 FR 46734)
(hereinafter referred to as the August
2013 IPF PPS notice) that set forth
updates to the IPF PPS payment rates
for FY 2014. That notice updated the
IPF PPS per diem payment rates that
were published in the August 2012 IPF
PPS notice (77 FR 47224) in accordance
with our established policies.
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B. Overview of the Legislative
Requirements for the IPF PPS
Section 124 of the Medicare,
Medicaid, and SCHIP (State Children’s
Health Insurance Program) Balanced
Budget Refinement Act of 1999 (BBRA)
(Pub. L. 106–113) required the
establishment and implementation of an
IPF PPS. Specifically, section 124 of the
BBRA mandated that the Secretary
develop a per diem PPS for inpatient
hospital services furnished in
psychiatric hospitals and psychiatric
units including an adequate patient
classification system that reflects the
differences in patient resource use and
costs among psychiatric hospitals and
psychiatric units.
Section 405(g)(2) of the Medicare
Prescription Drug, Improvement, and
Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA) (Pub.
L. 108–173) extended the IPF PPS to
distinct part psychiatric units of critical
access hospitals (CAHs).
Section 3401(f) of the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act
(Pub. L. 111–148) as amended by
section 10319(e) of that Act and by
section 1105(d) of the Health Care and
Education Reconciliation Act of 2010
(Pub. L. 111–152) (hereafter referred to
as ‘‘the Affordable Care Act’’) added
subsection (s) to section 1886 of the Act.
Section 1886(s)(1) of the Act titled
‘‘Reference to Establishment and
Implementation of System’’ refers to
section 124 of the BBRA, which relates
to the establishment of the IPF PPS.
Section 1886(s)(2)(A)(i) of the Act
requires the application of the
productivity adjustment described in
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section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act to
the IPF PPS for the RY beginning in
2012 (that is, a RY that coincides with
a FY) and each subsequent RY. For the
RY beginning in 2014 (that is, FY 2015),
the current estimate of the productivity
adjustment would be equal to 0.4
percentage point, which we are
proposing in this FY 2015 proposed
rule.
Section 1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act
requires the application of an ‘‘other
adjustment’’ that reduces any update to
an IPF PPS base rate by percentages
specified in section 1886(s)(3) of the Act
for the RY beginning in 2010 through
the RY beginning in 2019. For the RY
beginning in 2014 (that is, FY 2015),
section 1886(s)(3)(C) of the Act requires
the reduction to be 0.3 percentage point.
We are proposing that reduction in this
FY 2015 IPF PPS proposed rule.
Section 1886(s)(4) of the Act requires
the establishment of a quality data
reporting program for the IPF PPS
beginning in RY 2014. We proposed and
finalized new requirements for quality
reporting for IPFs in the ‘‘Hospital
Inpatient Prospective Payment System
for Acute Care Hospitals and the Long
Term Care Hospital Prospective
Payment System and Fiscal Year 2014
Rates’’ proposed rule published on May
10, 2013 (78 FR 27486, 27734 through
27744) and final rule published on
August 19, 2013 (78 FR 50496, 50887
through 50903).
To implement and periodically
update these provisions, we have
published various proposed and final
rules in the Federal Register. For more
information regarding these rules, see
the CMS Web site at https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/
InpatientPsychFacilPPS/.
C. General Overview of the IPF PPS
The November 2004 IPF PPS final
rule (69 FR 66922) established the IPF
PPS, as required by section 124 of the
BBRA and codified at subpart N of part
412 of the Medicare regulations. The
November 2004 IPF PPS final rule set
forth the per diem Federal rates for the
implementation year (the 18-month
period from January 1, 2005 through
June 30, 2006), and provided payment
for the inpatient operating and capital
costs to IPFs for covered psychiatric
services they furnish (that is, routine,
ancillary, and capital costs, but not costs
of approved educational activities, bad
debts, and other services or items that
are outside the scope of the IPF PPS).
Covered psychiatric services include
services for which benefits are provided
under the fee-for-service Part A
(Hospital Insurance Program) of the
Medicare program.
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The IPF PPS established the Federal
per diem base rate for each patient day
in an IPF derived from the national
average daily routine operating,
ancillary, and capital costs in IPFs in FY
2002. The average per diem cost was
updated to the midpoint of the first year
under the IPF PPS, standardized to
account for the overall positive effects of
the IPF PPS payment adjustments, and
adjusted for budget-neutrality.
The Federal per diem payment under
the IPF PPS is comprised of the Federal
per diem base rate described above and
certain patient- and facility-level
payment adjustments that were found in
the regression analysis to be associated
with statistically significant per diem
cost differences.
The patient-level adjustments include
age, DRG assignment, comorbidities,
and variable per diem adjustments to
reflect higher per diem costs in the early
days of an IPF stay. Facility-level
adjustments include adjustments for the
IPF’s wage index, rural location,
teaching status, a cost-of-living
adjustment for IPFs located in Alaska
and Hawaii, and the presence of a
qualifying emergency department (ED).
The IPF PPS provides additional
payment policies for: Outlier cases;
interrupted stays; and a per treatment
adjustment for patients who undergo
electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). During
the IPF PPS mandatory 3-year transition
period, stop-loss payments were also
provided; however, since the transition
ended in 2008, these payments are no
longer available.
A complete discussion of the
regression analysis that established the
IPF PPS adjustment factors appears in
the November 2004 IPF PPS final rule
(69 FR 66933 through 66936).
Section 124 of the BBRA did not
specify an annual rate update strategy
for the IPF PPS and was broadly written
to give the Secretary discretion in
establishing an update methodology.
Therefore, in the November 2004 IPF
PPS final rule, we implemented the IPF
PPS using the following update strategy:
• Calculate the final Federal per diem
base rate to be budget-neutral for the 18month period of January 1, 2005
through June 30, 2006.
• Use a July 1 through June 30 annual
update cycle.
• Allow the IPF PPS first update to be
effective for discharges on or after July
1, 2006 through June 30, 2007.
III. Changing the IPF PPS Payment Rate
Update Period From a Rate Year to a
Fiscal Year
Prior to RY 2012, the IPF PPS was
updated on a July 1 through June 30
annual update cycle. Effective with RY
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2012, we switched the IPF PPS payment
rate update from a rate year that begins
on July 1 and ends on June 30 to a
period that coincides with a fiscal year.
In order to transition from a RY to a FY,
the IPF PPS RY 2012 covered a 15month period from July 1 through
September 30. As proposed and
finalized, after RY 2012, the rate year
update period for the IPF PPS payment
rates and other policy changes begin on
October 1 through September 30.
Therefore, the update cycle for FY 2015
will be October 1, 2014 through
September 30, 2015.
For further discussion of the 15month market basket update for RY
2012 and changing the payment rate
update period from a RY to a FY, we
refer readers to the RY 2012 IPF PPS
proposed rule (76 FR 4998) and the RY
2012 IPF PPS final rule (76 FR 26432).
IV. Proposed Market Basket for the IPF
PPS
A. Background
The input price index (that is, the
market basket) that was used to develop
the IPF PPS was the Excluded Hospital
with Capital market basket. This market
basket was based on 1997 Medicare cost
report data and included data for
Medicare participating IPFs, inpatient
rehabilitation facilities (IRFs), long-term
care hospitals (LTCHs), cancer
hospitals, and children’s hospitals.
Although ‘‘market basket’’ technically
describes the mix of goods and services
used in providing hospital care, this
term is also commonly used to denote
the input price index (that is, cost
category weights and price proxies
combined) derived from that market
basket. Accordingly, the term ‘‘market
basket’’ as used in this document refers
to a hospital input price index.
Beginning with the May 2006 IPF PPS
final rule (71 FR 27046 through 27054),
IPF PPS payments were updated using
a FY 2002-based market basket
reflecting the operating and capital cost
structures for IRFs, IPFs, and LTCHs
(hereafter referred to as the
Rehabilitation, Psychiatric, and LongTerm Care (RPL) market basket).
We excluded cancer and children’s
hospitals from the RPL market basket
because these hospitals are not
reimbursed through a PPS; rather, their
payments are based entirely on
reasonable costs subject to rate-ofincrease limits established under the
authority of section 1886(b) of the Act,
which are implemented in regulations at
§ 413.40. Moreover, the FY 2002 cost
structures for cancer and children’s
hospitals are noticeably different than
the cost structures of the IRFs, IPFs, and
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LTCHs. A complete discussion of the FY
2002-based RPL market basket appears
in the May 2006 IPF PPS final rule (71
FR 27046 through 27054).
In the RY 2012 IPF PPS proposed rule
(76 FR 4998) and final rule (76 FR
26432), we proposed and finalized the
use of a rebased and revised FY 2008based RPL market basket to update IPF
payments.
B. Development of an IPF-Specific
Market Basket
In the May 1, 2009 IPF PPS notice (74
FR 20362), we expressed our interest in
exploring the possibility of creating a
stand-alone, or IPF-specific market
basket that reflects the cost structures of
only IPF providers. We noted that, of
the available options, one would be to
join the Medicare cost report data from
freestanding IPF providers with data
from hospital-based IPF providers. We
indicated that an examination of the
Medicare cost report data comparing
freestanding and hospital-based IPFs
revealed considerable differences
between the two with respect to cost
levels and cost structures. At that time,
we stated that we were unable to fully
explain the differences in costs between
freestanding and hospital-based IPF
providers. As a result, we felt that
further research was required and we
solicited public comments for
additional information that might help
explain the reasons for the variations in
costs and cost structures, as indicated
by the cost report data (74 FR 20376).
We summarized the public comments
we received and our responses in the
April 2010 IPF PPS notice (75 FR 23111
through 23113).
Since the April 2010 IPF PPS notice
was published, we have made
significant progress on the development
of a stand-alone, or IPF-specific, market
basket. Our research has focused on
addressing several concerns regarding
the use of the hospital-based IPF
Medicare cost report data in the
calculation of the major market basket
cost weights. As discussed above, one
concern is the cost level differences for
hospital-based IPFs relative to
freestanding IPFs that were not readily
explained by the specific characteristics
of the individual providers and the
patients that they serve (for example,
case mix, urban/rural status, teaching
status). Furthermore, we are concerned
about the variability in the cost report
data among these hospital-based IPF
providers and the potential impact on
the market basket cost weights. These
concerns led us to consider whether it
is appropriate to use the universe of IPF
providers to derive an IPF-specific
market basket.
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Recently, we have investigated the
use of regression analysis to evaluate the
effect of including hospital-based IPF
Medicare cost report data in the
calculation of cost distributions. We
created preliminary regression models
to try to explain variations in costs per
day across both freestanding and
hospital-based IPFs. These models were
intended to capture the effects of
facility-level and patient-level
characteristics (for example, wage
index, urban/rural status, ownership
status, length-of-stay, occupancy rate,
case mix, and Medicare utilization) on
IPF costs per day. Using the results from
the preliminary regression analyses, we
identified smaller subsets of hospitalbased and freestanding IPF providers
where the predicted costs per day using
the regression model closely matched
the actual costs per day for each IPF. We
then derived different sets of cost
distributions using (1) these subsets of
IPF providers and (2) the entire universe
of freestanding and hospital-based IPF
providers (including those IPFs for
which the variability in cost levels
remains unexplained). After comparing
these sets of cost distributions, the
differences were not substantial enough
for us to conclude that the inclusion of
those IPF providers with unexplained
variability in costs in the calculation of
the cost distributions is a major cause
for concern.
Another concern with incorporating
the hospital-based IPF data in the
derivation of an IPF-specific market
basket is the complexity of the Medicare
cost report data for these providers. The
freestanding IPFs independently submit
a Medicare cost report for their
facilities, making it relatively
straightforward to obtain the cost
categories necessary to determine the
major market basket cost weights.
However, cost report data submitted for
a hospital-based IPF are embedded in
the Medicare cost report submitted for
the entire hospital facility in which the
IPF is located. Therefore, adjustments
would have to be made to obtain cost
weights that represent just the hospitalbased IPF (as opposed to the hospital as
a whole). For example, ancillary costs
for services such as clinic services,
drugs charged to patients, and
emergency services for the entire
hospital would need to be appropriately
converted to a value that only represents
the hospital-based IPF unit’s cost. The
preliminary method we have developed
to allocate these costs is complex and
still needs to be fully evaluated before
we are ready to propose an IPF-specific
market basket that would reflect both
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hospital-based and freestanding IPF
data.
We would also note that our current
preliminary data show higher labor
costs for IPFs than observed for the
2008-based RPL market basket. This
increase is driven primarily by higher
compensation cost as a percent of total
costs for IPFs. In our ongoing research,
we are also evaluating the differences in
salary costs as a percent of total costs for
both hospital-based and freestanding
IPFs. Salary costs are historically the
largest component of the market baskets.
Based on our review of the data reported
on the applicable Medicare cost reports,
our initial findings (using the
preliminary allocation method as
discussed above) have shown that the
hospital-based IPF salary costs as a
percent of total costs tend to be lower
than those of freestanding IPFs. We are
still evaluating the methods for deriving
salary costs as a percent of total costs
and need to further investigate the
percentage of ancillary costs that should
be appropriately allocated to the IPF
salary costs for the hospital-based IPF,
as discussed above.
Also, effective for cost reports
beginning on or after May 1, 2010, we
finalized a revised Hospital and
Hospital Health Care Complex Cost
Report, Form CMS 2552–10, (74 FR
31738). The report is available for
download from the CMS Web site at
https://www.cms.gov/Research-StatisticsData-and-Systems/Files-for-Order/
CostReports/Hospital-2010-form.html.
The revised Hospital and Hospital
Health Care Complex Cost Report
includes a new worksheet (Worksheet
S–3, part V) that identifies the contract
labor costs and benefit costs for the
hospital/hospital care complex and is
applicable to sub-providers and units.
Our analysis of Worksheet S–3, part V
shows significant underreporting of this
data with fewer than 20 freestanding IPF
providers reporting it. We encourage
providers to submit this data so we can
use it to calculate benefits and contract
labor cost weights for the market basket.
In the absence of this data, we will
likely use the 2008-based RPL market
basket methodology (76 FR 5003) to
calculate the IPF benefit cost weight.
This methodology calculates the ratio of
the IPPS benefit cost weight to the IPPS
salary cost weight and applies this ratio
to the IPF salary cost weight in order to
estimate the IPF benefit cost weight. For
contract labor, in the absence of IPFspecific data, we will use a similar
methodology.
For the reasons discussed above,
while we believe we have made
significant progress on the development
of an IPF-specific market basket, we
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believe that further research is required
at this time. As a result, we are not
proposing an IPF-specific market basket
for FY 2015. We plan to complete our
research during the remainder of this
year and, provided that we are prepared
to draw conclusions from our research,
may propose an IPF-specific market
basket for the FY 2016 rulemaking
cycle. We welcome public comments on
the preliminary findings discussed
above.
C. Proposed FY 2015 Market Basket
Update
The proposed FY 2015 update for the
IPF PPS using the FY 2008-based RPL
market basket and IHS Global Insight’s
first quarter 2014 forecast of the market
basket components is 2.7 percent (prior
to the application of statutory
adjustments). IHS Global Insight, Inc.
(IGI) is a nationally recognized
economic and financial forecasting firm
that contracts with CMS to forecast the
components of the market baskets.
As previously described in section
I.B, section 1886(s)(2)(A)(i) of the Act
requires the application of the
productivity adjustment described in
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act to
the IPF PPS for the RY beginning in
2012 and each subsequent RY. The
statute defines the productivity
adjustment to be equal to the 10-year
moving average of changes in annual
economy-wide private nonfarm business
multifactor productivity (MFP) (as
projected by the Secretary for the 10year period ending with the applicable
FY, year, cost reporting period, or other
annual period) (the ‘‘MFP adjustment’’).
The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
publishes the official measure of private
non-farm business MFP. We refer
readers to the BLS Web site at https://
www.bls.gov/mfp to obtain the BLS
historical published MFP data. The MFP
adjustment for FY 2015 applicable to
the IPF PPS is derived using a
projection of MFP that is currently
produced by IGI. For a detailed
description of the model currently used
by IGI to project MFP, as well as a
description of how the MFP adjustment
is calculated, we refer readers to the FY
2012 IPPS/LTCH final rule (76 FR 51690
through 51692). Based on IGI’s first
quarter 2014 forecast, the proposed
productivity adjustment for FY 2015 is
0.4 percentage point. Section
1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act also requires
the application of an ‘‘other adjustment’’
that reduces any update to an IPF PPS
base rate by percentages specified in
section 1886(s)(3) of the Act for rate
years beginning in 2010 through the RY
beginning in 2019. For the RY beginning
in 2014 (that is, FY 2015), the reduction
is 0.3 percentage point. We are
proposing to implement the
productivity adjustment and ‘‘other
adjustment’’ in this FY 2015 IPF PPS
proposed rule.
In summary, we propose to base the
FY 2015 market basket update, which is
used to determine the applicable
percentage increase for the IPF
payments, on the most recent estimate
of the FY 2008-based RPL market basket
(currently estimated to be 2.7 percent
based on IGI’s first quarter 2014
forecast). We propose to then reduce
this percentage increase by the current
estimate of the MFP adjustment for FY
2015 of 0.4 percentage point (the 10year moving average of MFP for the
period ending FY 2015 based on IGI’s
first quarter 2014 forecast). Following
application of the MFP, we propose to
further reduce the applicable percentage
increase by 0.3 percentage point, as
required by section 1886(s)(3) of the
Act. The current estimate of the
proposed FY 2015 IPF update is 2.0
percent (2.7 percent market basket
update, less 0.4 percentage point MFP
adjustment, less 0.3 percentage point
‘‘other’’ adjustment). Furthermore, we
also are proposing that if more recent
data are subsequently available (for
example, a more recent estimate of the
market basket and MFP adjustment), we
would use such data, if appropriate, to
determine the FY 2015 market basket
update and MFP adjustment in the final
rule.
D. Proposed Labor-Related Share
Due to variations in geographic wage
levels and other labor-related costs, we
believe that payment rates under the IPF
PPS should continue to be adjusted by
a geographic wage index, which would
apply to the labor-related portion of the
Federal per diem base rate (hereafter
referred to as the labor-related share).
The labor-related share is determined
by identifying the national average
proportion of total costs that are related
to, influenced by, or vary with the local
labor market. We classify a cost category
as labor-related if the costs are laborintensive and vary with the local labor
market. Based on our definition of the
labor-related share, we include in the
labor-related share the sum of the
relative importance of Wages and
Salaries, Employee Benefits,
Professional Fees: Labor-related,
Administrative and Business Support
Services, All Other: Labor-related
Services, and a portion of the CapitalRelated cost weight.
Therefore, to determine the proposed
labor-related share for the IPF PPS for
FY 2015, we used the FY 2008-based
RPL market basket cost weights relative
importance to determine the laborrelated share for the IPF PPS. This
estimate of the FY 2015 labor-related
share is based on IGI’s first quarter 2014
forecast, which is the same forecast used
to derive the FY 2015 market basket
update.
Table 1 below shows the FY 2015
relative importance labor-related share
using the FY 2008-based RPL market
basket along with the FY 2014 relative
importance labor-related share.
TABLE 1—PROPOSED FY 2015 RELATIVE IMPORTANCE LABOR-RELATED SHARE AND THE FY 2014 RELATIVE IMPORTANCE
LABOR-RELATED SHARE BASED ON THE FY 2008-BASED RPL MARKET BASKET
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FY 2014 relative
importance laborrelated share 1
Proposed FY 2015
relative importance
labor-related
share 2
Wages and Salaries ................................................................................................................................
Employee Benefits ...................................................................................................................................
Professional Fees: Labor-Related ...........................................................................................................
Administrative and Business Support Services .......................................................................................
All Other: Labor-Related Services ...........................................................................................................
48.394
12.963
2.065
0.415
2.080
48.409
13.016
2.065
0.417
2.070
Subtotal .............................................................................................................................................
Labor-Related Portion of Capital Costs (46%) ........................................................................................
65.917
3.577
65.977
3.561
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TABLE 1—PROPOSED FY 2015 RELATIVE IMPORTANCE LABOR-RELATED SHARE AND THE FY 2014 RELATIVE IMPORTANCE
LABOR-RELATED SHARE BASED ON THE FY 2008-BASED RPL MARKET BASKET—Continued
FY 2014 relative
importance laborrelated share 1
Total Labor-Related Share ........................................................................................................
69.494
Proposed FY 2015
relative importance
labor-related
share 2
69.538
1. Published in the FY 2014 IPF PPS notice (78 FR 46738) and based on IHS Global Insight, Inc.’s second quarter 2013 forecast of the FY
2008-based RPL market basket.
2. Based on IHS Global Insight, Inc.’s first quarter 2014 forecast of the FY 2008-based RPL market basket.
The proposed labor-related share for
FY 2015 is the sum of the FY 2015
relative importance of each labor-related
cost category, and would reflect the
different rates of price change for these
cost categories between the base year
(FY 2008) and FY 2015. The sum of the
relative importance for FY 2015 for
operating costs (Wages and Salaries,
Employee Benefits, Professional Fees:
Labor-Related, Administrative and
Business Support Services, and All
Other: Labor-related Services) is 65.977
percent, as shown in Table 1 above. The
portion of Capital-related cost that is
influenced by the local labor market is
estimated to be 46 percent. Since the
relative importance for Capital-Related
Costs is 7.742 percent of the FY 2008based RPL market basket in FY 2015, we
take 46 percent of 7.742 percent to
determine the labor-related share of
Capital-related cost for FY 2015. The
result is 3.561 percent, which we add to
65.977 percent for the operating cost
amount to determine the total laborrelated share for FY 2015. Therefore, the
proposed labor-related share for the IPF
PPS in FY 2015 is 69.538 percent. This
labor-related share is determined using
the same general methodology as
employed in calculating all previous IPF
labor-related shares (see, for example,
69 FR 66952 through 66953).
Furthermore, we are also proposing that
if more recent data are subsequently
available (for example, a more recent
estimate of the labor-related share), we
would use such data, if appropriate, to
determine the FY 2015 labor-related
share in the final rule. The wage index
and the labor-related share are reflected
in budget-neutrality adjustments.
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V. Proposed Updates to the IPF PPS for
FY 2015 (Beginning October 1, 2014)
The IPF PPS is based on a
standardized Federal per diem base rate
calculated from the IPF average per
diem costs and adjusted for budgetneutrality in the implementation year.
The Federal per diem base rate is used
as the standard payment per day under
the IPF PPS and is adjusted by the
patient-level and facility-level
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adjustments that are applicable to the
IPF stay. A detailed explanation of how
we calculated the average per diem cost
appears in the November 2004 IPF PPS
final rule (69 FR 66926).
A. Determining the Standardized
Budget-Neutral Federal Per Diem Base
Rate
Section 124(a)(1) of the BBRA
required that we implement the IPF PPS
in a budget-neutral manner. In other
words, the amount of total payments
under the IPF PPS, including any
payment adjustments, must be projected
to be equal to the amount of total
payments that would have been made if
the IPF PPS were not implemented.
Therefore, we calculated the budgetneutrality factor by setting the total
estimated IPF PPS payments to be equal
to the total estimated payments that
would have been made under the Tax
Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of
1982 (TEFRA) (Pub. L. 97–248)
methodology had the IPF PPS not been
implemented. A step-by-step
description of the methodology used to
estimate payments under the TEFRA
payment system appears in the
November 2004 IPF PPS final rule (69
FR 66926).
Under the IPF PPS methodology, we
calculated the final Federal per diem
base rate to be budget-neutral during the
IPF PPS implementation period (that is,
the 18-month period from January 1,
2005 through June 30, 2006) using a July
1 update cycle. We updated the average
cost per day to the midpoint of the IPF
PPS implementation period (that is,
October 1, 2005), and this amount was
used in the payment model to establish
the budget-neutrality adjustment.
Next, we standardized the IPF PPS
Federal per diem base rate to account
for the overall positive effects of the IPF
PPS payment adjustment factors by
dividing total estimated payments under
the TEFRA payment system by
estimated payments under the IPF PPS.
Additional information concerning this
standardization can be found in the
November 2004 IPF PPS final rule (69
FR 66932) and the RY 2006 IPF PPS
final rule (71 FR 27045). We then
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reduced the standardized Federal per
diem base rate to account for the outlier
policy, the stop loss provision, and
anticipated behavioral changes. A
complete discussion of how we
calculated each component of the
budget-neutrality adjustment appears in
the November 2004 IPF PPS final rule
(69 FR 66932 through 66933) and in the
May 2006 IPF PPS final rule (71 FR
27044 through 27046). The final
standardized budget-neutral Federal per
diem base rate established for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
January 1, 2005 was calculated to be
$575.95.
The Federal per diem base rate has
been updated in accordance with
applicable statutory requirements and
42 CFR 412.428 through publication of
annual notices or proposed and final
rules. These documents are available on
the CMS Web site at https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/
InpatientPsychFacilPPS/. A detailed
discussion on the standardized budgetneutral Federal per diem base rate and
the electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) rate
appears in the August 2013 IPF PPS
update notice (78 FR 46738 through
46739).
B. Proposed FY 2015 Update of the
Federal Per Diem Base Rate and
Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) Rate
In accordance with section
1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act, which
requires the application of an ‘‘other
adjustment,’’ described in section
1886(s)(3) of the Act (specifically,
section 1886(s)(3)(C)) for RY 2014 that
reduces the update to the IPF PPS base
rate for the FY beginning in Calendar
Year (CY) 2014, we are proposing to
adjust the IPF PPS update by a 0.3
percentage point reduction for FY 2015.
In addition, in accordance with section
1886(s)(2)(A)(i) of the Act, which
requires the application of the
productivity adjustment that reduces
the update to the IPF PPS base rate for
the FY beginning in CY 2014, we are
proposing to adjust the IPF PPS update
by a 0.4 percentage point reduction for
FY 2015.
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The current (that is, FY 2014) Federal
per diem base rate is $713.19 and the
ECT base rate is $307.04. For FY 2015,
we are proposing to apply an update of
2.0 percent (that is the proposed FY
2008-based RPL market basket increase
for FY 2015 of 2.7 percent less the
proposed productivity adjustment of 0.4
percentage point less the 0.3 percentage
point required under
section1886(s)(3)(C) of the Act), and the
wage index budget-neutrality factor of
1.0003 (as discussed in section VI.C.1.
of this proposed rule) to the FY 2014
Federal per diem base rate of $713.19,
yielding a proposed Federal per diem
base rate of $727.67 for FY 2015.
Similarly, we are proposing to apply the
2.0 percent payment update, and the
1.0003 wage index budget-neutrality
factor to the FY 2014 ECT base rate,
yielding a proposed ECT base rate of
$313.27 for FY 2015.
As noted above, section 1886(s)(4) of
the Act requires the establishment of a
quality data reporting program for the
IPF PPS beginning in RY 2014. We
finalized new requirements for quality
reporting for IPFs in the ‘‘Hospital
Inpatient Prospective Payment Systems
for Acute Care Hospitals and the Long
Term Care Hospital Prospective
Payment System and Fiscal Year 2014
Rates’’ proposed rule published on May
10, 2013 (78 FR 27486, 27734 through
27744) and final rule published on
August 19, 2013 (78 FR 50496, 50887
through 50903). Section 1886(s)(4)(A)(i)
of the Act requires that, for RY 2014 and
each subsequent rate year, the Secretary
shall reduce any annual update to a
standard Federal rate for discharges
occurring during the rate year by 2.0
percentage points for any IPF that does
not comply with the quality data
submission requirements with respect to
an applicable year. Therefore, we are
proposing to apply a 2.0 percentage
point reduction to the Federal per diem
base rate and the ECT base rate as
follows:
For IPFs that fail to submit quality
reporting data under the IPFQR
program, we are applying a 0 percent
annual update (that is 2 percent reduced
by 2 percentage points in accordance
with section 1886(s)(4)(A)(ii) of the Act)
and the wage index budget-neutrality
factor of 1.0003 to the FY 2014 Federal
per diem base rate of $713.19, yielding
a Federal per diem base rate of $713.40
for FY 2015.
Similarly, we are applying the 0
percent annual update and the 1.0003
wage index budget-neutrality factor to
the FY 2014 ECT base rate of $307.04,
yielding an ECT base rate of $307.13 for
FY 2015.
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In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (78 FR50496), we adopted two new
measures for the FY 2016 payment
determination and subsequent years for
the IPFQR Program. We also finalized a
request for voluntary information
whereby IPFs will be asked to provide
information on the patient experience of
care survey. For the FY 2016 payment
determination and subsequent years, we
are proposing to add two new measures
to those already adopted for the FY 2016
payment determination and subsequent
years. For the FY 2017 payment
determination and subsequent years, we
are proposing to adopt four new
measures.
VI. Proposed Update of the IPF PPS
Adjustment Factors
A. Overview of the IPF PPS Adjustment
Factors
The IPF PPS payment adjustments
were derived from a regression analysis
of 100 percent of the FY 2002 MedPAR
data file, which contained 483,038
cases. For a more detailed description of
the data file used for the regression
analysis, see the November 2004 IPF
PPS final rule (69 FR 66935 through
66936). While we have since used more
recent claims data to simulate payments
to set the fixed dollar loss threshold
amount for the outlier policy and to
assess the impact of the IPF PPS
updates, we continue to use the
regression-derived adjustment factors
established in 2005 for FY 2015.
As we stated previously, we have
begun an analysis of more current IPF
claims and cost report data however; we
are not proposing refinements to the IPF
PPS in this proposed rule. Once our
analysis is complete, we will propose to
update the adjustment factors in a future
notice of proposed rulemaking.
However, we continue to monitor
claims and payment data independently
from cost report data to assess issues, to
determine whether changes in case-mix
or payment shifts have occurred among
freestanding governmental, non-profit
and private psychiatric hospitals, and
psychiatric units of general hospitals,
and CAHs and other issues of
importance to IPFs.
On April 1, 2014, the Protecting
Access to Medicare Act of 2014 (PAMA)
(Pub. L. 113–93) was enacted. Section
212 of PAMA, titled ‘‘Delay in
Transition from ICD–9 to ICD–10 Code
Sets,’’ provides that ‘‘[t]he Secretary of
Health and Human Services may not,
prior to October 1, 2015, adopt ICD–10
code sets as the standard for code sets
under section 1173(c) of the Social
Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1320d–2(c)) and
§ 162.1002 of title 45, Code of Federal
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Regulations.’’ As of now, the Secretary
has not implemented this provision
under HIPAA. We are proposing the
conversion of ICD–9–CM to ICD–10–
CM/PCS codes for the IPF PPS in this
proposed rule, but in light of PAMA, the
effective date of those changes would be
the date when ICD–10 becomes the
required medical data code set for use
on Medicare claims, whenever that date
may be. Until that time, we will
continue to require use of the ICD–9–
CM codes for reporting the MS–DRG
and comorbidity adjustment factors for
IPF services.
B. Proposed Patient-Level Adjustments
The IPF PPS includes payment
adjustments for the following patientlevel characteristics: Medicare Severity
diagnosis related groups (MS–DRGs)
assignment of the patient’s principal
diagnosis, selected comorbidities,
patient age, and the variable per diem
adjustments.
1. Proposed Adjustment for MS–DRG
Assignment
We believe it is important to maintain
the same diagnostic coding and DRG
classification for IPFs that are used
under the IPPS for providing psychiatric
care. For this reason, when the IPF PPS
was implemented for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after January 1,
2005, we adopted the same diagnostic
code set (ICD–9–CM) and DRG patient
classification system (that is, the CMS
DRGs) that were utilized at the time
under the IPPS. In the May 2008 IPF
PPS notice (73 FR 25709), we discussed
CMS’s effort to better recognize resource
use and the severity of illness among
patients. CMS adopted the new MS–
DRGs for the IPPS in the FY 2008 IPPS
final rule with comment period (72 FR
47130). In the 2008 IPF PPS notice (73
FR 25716) we provided a crosswalk to
reflect changes that were made under
the IPF PPS to adopt the new MS–DRGs.
For a detailed description of the
mapping changes from the original DRG
adjustment categories to the current
MS–DRG adjustment categories, we
refer readers to the May 2008 IPF PPS
notice (73 FR 25714).
The IPF PPS includes payment
adjustments for designated psychiatric
DRGs assigned to the claim based on the
patient’s principal diagnosis. The DRG
adjustment factors were expressed
relative to the most frequently reported
psychiatric DRG in FY 2002, that is,
DRG 430 (psychoses). The coefficient
values and adjustment factors were
derived from the regression analysis.
Mapping the DRGs to the MS–DRGs
resulted in the current 17 IPF–MS–
DRGs, instead of the original 15 DRGs,
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for which the IPF PPS provides an
adjustment. For FY 2015, as we did in
FY 2013 (77 FR 47231) and FY 2014 (78
FR 46741 through 46741), we propose to
make a payment adjustment for
psychiatric diagnoses that group to one
of the 17 MS–IPF–DRGs listed in Table
2. Psychiatric principal diagnoses that
do not group to one of the 17 designated
DRGs would still receive the Federal per
diem base rate and all other applicable
adjustments, but the payment would not
include a DRG adjustment.
In the Standards for Electronic
Transaction final rule, published in the
Federal Register on August 17, 2000 (65
FR 50312), the Department adopted the
International Classification of Diseases,
9th Revision, Clinical Modification
(ICD–9–CM) as the HIPAA designated
code set for reporting diseases, injuries,
impairments, other health related
problems, their manifestations, and
causes of injury. Therefore, on January
1, 2005 when the IPF PPS began, we
used ICD–9–CM as the designated code
set for the IPF PPS. IPF claims with a
principal diagnosis included in Chapter
Five of the ICD–9–CM are paid the
Federal per diem base rate and all other
applicable adjustments, including any
applicable DRG adjustment. However,
as we indicated in the FY 2014 IPF PPS
notice (78 FR 46741), in accordance
with the requirements of the final rule
published in the Federal Register on
September 5, 2012 (77 FR 54664), we
will be discontinuing the use of ICD–9–
CM codes. We are proposing the
conversion of ICD–9–CM to ICD–10–
CM/PCS codes for the IPF PPS in this
proposed rule, but in light of PAMA, the
effective date of those changes would be
the date when ICD–10 becomes the
required medical data code set for use
on Medicare claims. Until that time, we
will continue to require use of the ICD–
9–CM codes for reporting the MS–DRGs
for IPF services. The ICD–10–CM/PCS
coding guidelines are available through
the CMS Web site at:
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/
ICD10/downloads/pcs_2012_
guidelines.pdf and https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Coding/ICD10/
index.html?redirect=/ICD10 or on the
CDC’s Web site at www.cdc.gov/nchs/
data/icd10/10cmguidelines2012.pdf.
Every year, changes to the ICD–10–
CM and the ICD–10–PCS coding system
will be addressed in the IPPS proposed
and final rules. The changes to the
codes are effective October 1 of each
year and must be used by acute care
hospitals as well as other providers to
report diagnostic and procedure
information. The IPF PPS has always
incorporated ICD–9–CM coding changes
made in the annual IPPS update and
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will continue to do so for the ICD–10–
CM and ICD–10–PCS coding changes.
We will continue to publish coding
changes in a Transmittal/Change
Request, similar to how coding changes
are announced by the IPPS and LTCH
PPS. The coding changes relevant to the
IPF PPS are also published in the IPF
PPS proposed and final rules, or in IPF
PPS update notices. In 42 CFR
412.428(e), we indicate that CMS will
publish information pertaining to the
annual update for the IPF PPS, which
includes describing the ICD–9–CM
coding changes and DRG classification
changes discussed in the annual update
to the hospital IPPS regulations. We are
proposing to update 42 CFR 412.428(e)
to indicate that we will describe the
ICD–10–CM coding changes and DRG
classification changes discussed in the
annual update to the hospital IPPS
regulations when ICD–10–CM/PCS
becomes the required medical data code
set for use on Medicare claims.
The ICD–9–CM/PCS coding changes
are reflected in the FY 2015 GROUPER,
Version 32.0, effective for IPPS
discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2014 through September 30, 2015.
The GROUPER Version 32.0 software
package assigns each case to an MS–
DRG on the basis of the diagnosis and
procedure codes and demographic
information (that is, age, sex, and
discharge status). The Medicare Code
Editor (MCE) version 32.0 has also been
converted to use ICD–9–CM/PCS codes
for IPPS discharges on or after October
1, 2014. For additional information on
the GROUPER version 32.0 and the MCE
32.0 see Transmittal-XXXX dated
XXXX.
The IPF PPS has always used the
same GROUPER and MCE as the IPPS.
We have posted a Definitions Manual of
the ICD–10 MS–DRGs Version 31.0–R
(an updated ICD–10 MS–DRGs version
31.0) on the ICD–10 MS–DRG
Conversion Project Web site at: https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/Medicare/Coding/
ICD10/ICD-10-MS-DRG-ConversionProject.html. We also prepared a
document that describes changes made
from Version 31.0 to Version 31.0–R.
We will continue to share ICD–10–MS–
DRG conversion activities with the
public through this Web site.
The MS–DRGs were converted so that
the MS–DRG assignment logic uses
ICD–10–CM/PCS codes directly. When a
provider submits a claim for discharges,
the ICD–10–CM/PCS diagnosis and
procedure codes will be assigned to the
correct MS–DRG. The MS–DRGs were
converted with a single overarching
goal: that MS–DRG assignment for a
given patient record is the same after
ICD–10–CM implementation as it would
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26047
be if the same record had been coded in
ICD–9–CM and submitted prior to ICD–
10–CM/PCS implementation. This goal
is referred to as replication, and every
effort was made to achieve this goal.
The General Equivalence Mappings
(GEMs) were used to assist in converting
the ICD–9–CM-based MS–DRGs to ICD–
10–CM/PCS. The majority of ICD–9–CM
codes (greater than 80 percent) have
straightforward translation alternative(s)
in ICD–10–CM/PCS, where the
diagnoses or procedures classified to a
given ICD–9–CM code are replaced by a
number of (typically more specific)
ICD–10–CM/PCS codes and assigned to
the same MS–DRG as the ICD–9–CM
code they are replacing. Further
information on the assessment of ICD–
10–CM/PCS MS–DRGs and financial
impact can be found on the CMS ICD–
10 Web site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
Medicare/Coding/ICD10/ICD-10-MSDRG-Conversion-Project.html.
Questions concerning the MS–DRGs
should be directed to Patricia E. Brooks,
Co-Chairperson, ICD–10–CM
Coordination and Maintenance
Committee, CMS, Center for Medicare
Management, Hospital and Ambulatory
Policy Group, Division of Acute Care,
patricia.brooks2@cms.hhs.gov, Mailstop
C4–08–06, 7500 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, Maryland 21244–1850.
Use of the General Equivalence
Mappings To Assist in Direct
Conversion
For the FY 2015 update, we are not
making changes to the MS–IPF–DRG
adjustment factors. That is, we do not
intend to re-run the regression analysis
to update the 17 IPF MS–DRG
adjustment factors. The General
Equivalence Mappings (GEMs) were
used to assist in converting the ICD–9–
CM-based MS–DRGs to ICD–10–CM/
PCS. For this update, we are proposing
the ICD–10–CM/PCS codes that would
be used for the MS–DRG payment
adjustment. Further information for the
ICD–10–CM/PCS MS–DRG conversion
project can be found on the CMS ICD–
10–CM Web site at https://
www.cms.hhs.gov/Medicare/Coding/
ICD10/ICD-10-MS-DRG-ConversionProject.html.
We are proposing that the MS–IPF–
DRG adjustment factors (as shown in
Table 2) would continue to be paid for
discharges occurring in FY 2015. The
MS–IPF–DRG adjustment factors would
be updated on October 1, 2014, using
the ICD–9–CM/PCS code set. We are
also proposing the conversion of ICD–9–
CM/PCS codes to ICD–10–CM/PCS
codes for the IPF PPS in this proposed
rule but in light of PAMA, the effective
date of those changes would be the date
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when ICD–10–CM/PCS becomes the
required medical data code set for use
on Medicare claims.
TABLE 2—PROPOSED FY 2015 CURRENT MS–IPF–DRGS APPLICABLE FOR THE PRINCIPAL DIAGNOSIS ADJUSTMENT
MS–DRG
056
057
080
081
876
880
881
882
883
884
885
886
887
894
895
896
897
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
Degenerative nervous system disorders w MCC ...................................................................................
Degenerative nervous system disorders w/o MCC ................................................................................
Nontraumatic stupor & coma w MCC .....................................................................................................
Nontraumatic stupor & coma w/o MCC ..................................................................................................
O.R. Procedure w principal diagnoses of mental illness ........................................................................
Acute adjustment reaction & psychosocial dysfunction ..........................................................................
Depressive neuroses ..............................................................................................................................
Neuroses except depressive ...................................................................................................................
Disorders of personality & impulse control .............................................................................................
Organic disturbances & mental retardation ............................................................................................
Psychoses ...............................................................................................................................................
Behavioral & developmental disorders ...................................................................................................
Other mental disorder diagnoses ............................................................................................................
Alcohol/drug abuse or dependence, left AMA ........................................................................................
Alcohol/drug abuse or dependence w rehabilitation therapy .................................................................
Alcohol/drug abuse or dependence w/o rehabilitation therapy w MCC .................................................
Alcohol/drug abuse or dependence w/o rehabilitation therapy w/o MCC ..............................................
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
2. Proposed Payment for Comorbid
Conditions
The intent of the comorbidity
adjustments is to recognize the
increased costs associated with
comorbid conditions by providing
additional payments for certain
concurrent medical or psychiatric
conditions that are expensive to treat. In
the May 2011 IPF PPS final rule (76 FR
26451 through 26452), we explained
that the IPF PPS includes 17
comorbidity categories and identified
the new, revised, and deleted ICD–9–
CM diagnosis codes that generate a
comorbid condition payment
adjustment under the IPF PPS for RY
2012 (76 FR 26451).
Comorbidities are specific patient
conditions that are secondary to the
patient’s principal diagnosis and that
require treatment during the stay.
Diagnoses that relate to an earlier
episode of care and have no bearing on
the current hospital stay are excluded
and must not be reported on IPF claims.
Comorbid conditions must exist at the
time of admission or develop
subsequently, and affect the treatment
received, length of stay (LOS), or both
treatment and LOS.
For each claim, an IPF may receive
only one comorbidity adjustment within
a comorbidity category, but it may
receive an adjustment for more than one
comorbidity category. Current billing
instructions require IPFs to enter the
full, that is, the complete ICD–9–CM
codes for up to 24 additional diagnoses
if they co-exist at the time of admission
or develop subsequently and impact the
treatment provided. Billing instructions
will require that IPFs enter the full ICD–
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Adjustment
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MS–DRG descriptions
18:39 May 05, 2014
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10–CM/PCS codes. The effective date of
this change would be the date when
ICD–10–CM/PCS becomes the required
medical data code set for use on
Medicare claims.
The comorbidity adjustments were
determined based on the regression
analysis using the diagnoses reported by
IPFs in FY 2002. The principal
diagnoses were used to establish the
DRG adjustments and were not
accounted for in establishing the
comorbidity category adjustments,
except where ICD–9–CM ‘‘code first’’
instructions apply. As we explained in
the May 2011 IPF PPS final rule (76 FR
265451), the ‘‘code first’’ rule applies
when a condition has both an
underlying etiology and a manifestation
due to the underlying etiology. For these
conditions, ICD–9–CM has a coding
convention that requires the underlying
conditions to be sequenced first
followed by the manifestation.
Whenever a combination exists, there is
a ‘‘use additional code’’ note at the
etiology code and a ‘‘code first’’ note at
the manifestation code.
The same principle holds for ICD–10–
CM as for ICD–9–CM. Whenever a
combination exists, there is a ‘‘use
additional code’’ note in the ICD–10–
CM codebook pertaining to the etiology
code, and a ‘‘code first’’ code pertaining
to the manifestation code. We provide a
‘‘code first’’ table in Addendum C of
this proposed rule for reference that
highlights the same or similar
manifestation codes where the ‘‘code
first’’ instructions apply in ICD–10–CM
that were present in ICD–9–CM. In the
‘‘code first’’ table, pertaining to ICD–10–
CM codes F02.80, F02.81 and F05,
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Frm 00010
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
1.05
1.05
1.07
1.07
1.22
1.05
0.99
1.02
1.02
1.03
1.00
0.99
0.92
0.97
1.02
0.88
0.88
where individual examples of possible
etiologies are listed in the codebook, in
the interest of inclusiveness, all ICD–
10–CM examples are included in
addition to the comparable ICD–10–CM
translations of examples listed in the
ICD–9–CM codebook for the same
manifestations. Also, in the interest of
inclusiveness, an ICD–10–CM
manifestation code F45.42 ‘‘Pain
disorder with related psychological
factors’’, is included in the IPF PPS
‘‘code first’’ table even though it
contains a ‘‘code also’’ instruction rather
than a ‘‘code first’’ instruction, but is
included in this version of the table for
information purposes only. The
proposed list of ICD–10–CM codes that
we identified as ‘‘code first’’ can be
located in Addendum C in this
proposed rule.
As discussed in the MS–DRG section,
it is our policy to maintain the same
diagnostic coding set for IPFs that is
used under the IPPS for providing the
same psychiatric care. The 17
comorbidity categories formerly defined
using ICD–9–CM codes have been
converted to ICD–10–CM/PCS. The goal
for converting the comorbidity
categories is referred to as replication,
meaning that the payment adjustment
for a given patient encounter is the same
after ICD–10–CM implementation as it
would be if the same record had been
coded in ICD–9–CM and submitted
prior to ICD–10–CM/PCS
implementation. All conversion efforts
were made with the intent of achieving
this goal. The effective date of this
change would be the date when ICD–
10–CM/PCS becomes the required
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medical data code set for use on
Medicare claims.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Direct Conversion of Comorbidity
Categories
We converted the ICD–9–CM codes
for the IPF PPS Comorbidity Payment
Adjustment Categories to ICD–10–CM/
PCS codes. When an IPF submits a
claim for discharges the ICD–10–CM/
PCS codes would be assigned to the
correct comorbidity categories. The
same method of direct conversion to
ICD–10–CM/PCS for replication of ICD–
9–CM based payment applications has
been implemented by policy groups
throughout CMS to convert applications
to ICD–10–CM/PCS, including the MS–
DRGs.
Use of the General Equivalence
Mappings To Assist in Direct
Conversion
As with the other policy groups
mentioned above, the General
Equivalence Mappings (GEMs) were
used to assist in converting ICD–9–CMbased applications to ICD–10–CM/PCS.
Further information concerning the
GEMs can be found on the CMS ICD–10
Web site at: https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Coding/ICD10/2014-ICD-10CM-and-GEMs.html.
The majority of ICD–9–CM codes
(greater than 80 percent) have
straightforward translation alternative(s)
in ICD–10–CM/PCS, where the
diagnoses or procedures classified to a
given ICD–9–CM code are replaced by a
number of possibly more specific ICD–
10–CM/PCS codes, and those ICD–10–
CM/PCS codes capture the intent of the
payment policy.
In rare instances, ICD–10–CM has
discontinued an area of detail in the
classification. For example, this is the
case with the concept of ‘‘malignant
hypertension’’ in the Cardiac Conditions
comorbidity category. Malignant
hypertension is no longer classified
separately in codes that specify heart
failure, such as ICD–9–CM code 404.03
Hypertensive heart and chronic kidney
disease, malignant, with heart failure
and with chronic kidney disease stage V
or end-stage renal disease. This code, in
the Cardiac Conditions comorbidity
category, has no corresponding code in
the ICD–10–CM Cardiac Conditions
comorbidity category. Instead, all subtypes of hypertension in the presence of
heart disease or chronic kidney disease
are classified to a single code in ICD–
10–CM that specifies the level of heart
and kidney function, such as I13.2
Hypertensive heart and chronic kidney
disease with heart failure and with stage
5 chronic kidney disease, or end stage
renal disease. Discussed below are the
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comorbidity categories where the
crosswalk between ICD–9–CM and ICD–
10–CM diagnosis codes is less than
straightforward. For instance, in some
cases, the use of combination codes in
one code set is represented as two
separate codes in the other code set.
Conversion of Gangrene and
Uncontrolled Diabetes Mellitus With or
Without Complications Comorbidity
Categories
In the Gangrene comorbidity category,
there are new ICD–10–CM combination
codes not present in ICD–9–CM.
Therefore, we are proposing to include
many more ICD–10–CM codes in the
comorbidity definitions than were
included using ICD–9–CM codes so that
the comorbidity category using ICD–10–
CM codes is a complete and accurate
replication of the category using ICD–9–
CM codes.
The ICD–9–CM version of the
comorbidity category Uncontrolled
Diabetes Mellitus With or Without
Complications contains combination
codes with extra information that is not
relevant to the clinical intent of the
category. All patients with uncontrolled
diabetes are eligible for the payment
adjustment, regardless of whether they
have additional diabetic complications.
The diagnosis of uncontrolled diabetes
is coded separately in ICD–10–CM. As
a result, only two ICD–10–CM codes are
needed to achieve complete and
accurate replication of the comorbidity
category definition using ICD–9–CM
codes.
Conversion of the Gangrene
Comorbidity Category
Currently, two ICD–9–CM codes are
used for the Gangrene comorbidity
category: 440.24 Atherosclerosis of
native arteries of the extremities with
gangrene and 785.4 Gangrene.
The first code, 440.24, is a
combination code and specifies patients
with underlying peripheral vascular
disease and a current acute
manifestation of gangrene. This is the
only ICD–9–CM combination code that
specifies gangrene in addition to the
underlying cause. Also, a number of
ICD–10–CM codes exist for gangrene
and they are all included in the ICD–10–
CM comorbidity category. The ICD–10–
CM codes specify anatomic site in more
detail. An example is given below:
• I70.261 Atherosclerosis of native
arteries of extremities with gangrene,
right leg
• I70.262 Atherosclerosis of native
arteries of extremities with gangrene,
left leg
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26049
• I70.263 Atherosclerosis of native
arteries of extremities with gangrene,
bilateral legs
• I70.268 Atherosclerosis of native
arteries of extremities with gangrene,
other extremity
In addition, many ICD–10–CM codes
specify gangrene in combination with
diabetes. We propose to include these
codes in the comorbidity category to
ensure that a patient with diabetes
complicated by gangrene receives the
same payment adjustment for the
condition when it is coded in ICD–10 as
if it had been coded in ICD–9–CM.
Conversion of the Uncontrolled Diabetes
Mellitus With or Without Complications
Comorbidity Category
Where ICD–9–CM uses combination
codes for uncontrolled diabetes, ICD–
10–CM classifies diabetes that is out of
control in a separate, standalone code.
Unlike ICD–9–CM, ICD–10–CM does not
have additional codes that specify out of
control diabetes in combination with a
complication such as, for example,
diabetic chronic kidney disease. The
result is that the comorbidity category
Uncontrolled Diabetes Mellitus With or
Without Complications is simpler to
define using ICD–10–CM codes than
ICD–9–CM codes.
ICD–10–CM has changed the
classification of a diagnosis of
uncontrolled diabetes in two ways that
affect conversion of the Uncontrolled
Diabetes comorbidity category:
1. ICD–10–CM no longer uses the term
‘‘uncontrolled’’ in reference to diabetes.
2. ICD–10–CM classifies diabetes that
is poorly controlled in a separate,
standalone code.
ICD–10–CM does not use the term
‘‘uncontrolled’’ in codes that classify
diabetes patients. Instead, ICD–10–CM
codes specify diabetes ‘‘with
hyperglycemia’’ as the new terminology
for classifying patients whose diabetes
is ‘‘poorly controlled’’ or ‘‘inadequately
controlled’’ or ‘‘out of control.’’ We
believe these are appropriate codes to
capture the intent of the Uncontrolled
Diabetes comorbidity category.
Therefore, to ensure that all patients
who qualified for the Uncontrolled
Diabetes comorbidity payment
adjustment using ICD–9–CM codes will
also qualify for the payment adjustment
using ICD–10–CM codes, we propose
that two ICD–10–CM codes specifying
diabetes with hyperglycemia will be
used for the payment adjustment for
Uncontrolled Diabetes Mellitus With or
Without Complications: E10.65 Type 1
diabetes mellitus with hyperglycemia,
and E11.65 Type 2 diabetes mellitus
with hyperglycemia.
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emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Other Differences Between ICD–9–CM
and ICD–10–CM Affecting Conversion
of Comorbidity Categories
Two other comorbidity categories in
the IPF PPS required careful review and
additional formatting of the
corresponding ICD–10–CM codes in
order to replicate the clinical intent of
the comorbidity category. In the Drug
and/or Alcohol Induced Mental
Disorders comorbidity category and the
Poisoning comorbidity category,
significant structural changes in the way
that comparable codes are classified in
ICD–10–CM made it more difficult to
list the diagnoses in ICD–10–CM code
ranges, as was possible in ICD–9–CM.
Because comparable codes are not
classified contiguously in the ICD–10–
CM classification scheme, the resulting
proposed list of codes for this
comorbidity category is much longer
than the comorbidity category using
ICD–9–CM codes.
Conversion of the Drug and/or Alcohol
Induced Mental Disorders Comorbidity
Category
ICD–10–CM has changed the
classification of applicable conditions in
two ways that affect conversion of the
Drug and/or Alcohol Induced Mental
Disorders comorbidity category:
1. ICD–10–CM does not use the term
‘‘pathological’’ in reference to drug or
alcohol intoxication, rather it only uses
the phrase ‘‘with intoxication.’’
2. ICD–10–CM contains separate,
detailed codes for specific drug-induced
manifestations of mental disorder. ICD–
10–CM codes specify the particular drug
and whether the pattern of use is
documented as use, abuse, or
dependence.
First, this comorbidity category
currently contains ICD–9–CM code
292.2 Pathological drug intoxication. To
ensure that all patients who qualified
for the comorbidity payment adjustment
under ICD–9–CM code 292.2 will also
qualify under the ICD–10–CM version of
the same comorbidity category, we
propose that the 89 ICD–10–CM codes
specifying ‘‘with intoxication’’ qualify
for the payment adjustment. An
example of the ICD–10–CM codes for a
diagnosis of cocaine abuse with current
intoxication is provided below. All of
these codes would be eligible for the
payment adjustment.
• F14.120 Cocaine abuse with
intoxication, uncomplicated
• F14.121 Cocaine abuse with
intoxication with delirium
• F14.122 Cocaine abuse with
intoxication with perceptual
disturbance
• F14.129 Cocaine abuse with
intoxication, unspecified
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Next, ICD–10–CM contains separate,
detailed codes by drug for specific druginduced manifestations of mental
disorder, such as drug-induced
psychotic disorder with hallucinations.
What was a single code in ICD–9–CM,
292.12 Drug-induced psychotic disorder
with hallucinations, maps to 24
comparable codes in ICD–10–CM. We
propose to include all of these more
specific ICD–10–CM codes in the
comorbidity category. We believe they
are necessary for replication of the
clinical intent of the comorbidity
category so that all patients with a druginduced psychotic disorder with
hallucinations coded on the claim are
eligible for the payment adjustment.
Because the ICD–10–CM codes are not
listed contiguously in the classification,
they cannot be formatted as a range of
codes and therefore must be listed as
single codes in the comorbidity category
definition.
The situation described above is
similar for ICD–9–CM code 292.0 Drug
withdrawal. ICD–10–CM contains
separate, detailed codes by drug
specifying that the patient is in
withdrawal. We propose to include all
of these more specific ICD–10–CM
codes in the comorbidity category. We
believe they are necessary for
replication of the clinical intent of the
comorbidity category, so that all
patients with a drug withdrawal code on
the claim are eligible for the payment
adjustment. Likewise, because the ICD–
10–CM drug withdrawal codes are not
listed contiguously in the classification,
they cannot be formatted as a range of
codes and so must be listed as single
codes in the comorbidity category
definition.
Conversion of the Poisoning
Comorbidity Category
In ICD–10–CM, the Injury and
Poisoning chapter has added an axis of
classification for every injury or
poisoning diagnosis code, which
specifies additional information about
the current encounter. This creates three
unique codes for each injury or
poisoning diagnosis, marked by a
different letter in the seventh character
of the code:
1. The seventh character ‘‘A’’ in the
code indicates that the poisoning is a
current diagnosis in its ‘‘acute phase.’’
2. The seventh character ‘‘D’’ in the
code indicates that the poisoning is no
longer in its ‘‘acute phase,’’ but that the
patient is receiving aftercare for the
earlier poisoning.
3. The seventh character ‘‘S’’ in the
code indicates that the patient no longer
requires care for any aspect of the
poisoning itself, but that the patient is
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Frm 00012
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
receiving care for a late effect of the
poisoning.
The intent of the Poisoning
comorbidity category is to include only
those patients with a current diagnosis
of poisoning. If the intent had been to
include patients requiring only aftercare
for an earlier, resolved case of
poisoning, or for care associated with
late effects of poisoning that occurred
sometime in the past, the comorbidity
category would have included ICD–9–
CM aftercare codes or late effect codes,
but it does not. Only acute poisoning
codes from the ICD–9–CM classification
are included. Therefore, we propose that
the Poisoning comorbidity category only
includes ICD–10–CM poisoning codes
with a seventh character extension ‘‘A,’’
to indicate that the poisoning is
documented as a current diagnosis.
In addition, ICD–10–CM poisoning
codes specify the circumstances of the
poisoning, whether documented as
accidental, self-harm, assault, or
undetermined, as shown in the heroin
poisoning example below. We propose
to include all of these more specific
ICD–10–CM codes in the comorbidity
category for replication of the clinical
intent of the comorbidity category so
that all patients with a current diagnosis
of poisoning coded on the claim would
be eligible for the payment adjustment,
as shown in the heroin poisoning
example below:
• T40.1X1A Poisoning by heroin,
accidental (unintentional), initial
encounter
• T40.1X2A Poisoning by heroin,
intentional self-harm, initial
encounter
• T40.1X3A Poisoning by heroin,
assault, initial encounter
• T40.1X4A Poisoning by heroin,
undetermined, initial encounter
ICD–10–CM classifies poisoning by
substance, alongside separate codes for
adverse effect or underdosing of the
same substance. Because the poisoning
codes are not listed contiguously in the
classification, they cannot be formatted
as a range of codes and therefore must
be listed as single codes in the
comorbidity category definition.
Proposed Elimination of Codes for
Nonspecific Conditions Based on Side
of the Body (Laterality)
We believe that highly descriptive
coding provides the best and clearest
way to document a patient’s condition
and the appropriateness of the
admission and treatment in an IPF.
Therefore, whenever possible, we
believe that the most specific code that
describes a medical disease, condition,
or injury should be used to document
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the patient’s diagnoses. Generally,
‘‘unspecified’’ codes are used when they
most accurately reflect what is known
about the patient’s condition at the time
of that particular encounter (for
example, there is a lack of information
about a specific type of organism
causing an illness). However, site of
illness at the time of the medical
encounter is an important determinant
in assessing a patient’s principal or
secondary diagnosis. For this reason, we
believe that specific diagnosis codes
that narrowly identify anatomical sites
where disease, injury, or condition exist
should be used when coding patients’
diagnoses whenever these codes are
available. Furthermore, on the same
note, we believe that one should also
code to the highest specificity (use the
full ICD–10–CM/PCS code).
In accordance with these principles,
we propose to remove site unspecified
codes from the IPF PPS ICD–10–CM/
PCS codes in instances in which more
specific codes are available as the
clinician should be able to identify a
more specific diagnosis based on
clinical assessment at the medical
encounter. For example, the initial
GEMS translation included non-specific
codes such as ICD–10–CM code C44.111
‘‘Basal Cell carcinoma of skin of
unspecified eyelid, including canthus.’’
Under our proposal:
C44.111 Basal Cell Carcinoma of
skin of unspecified eyelid would not be
accepted.
C44.112 Basal Cell Carcinoma of
skin right eyelid would be accepted.
C44.119 Basal Cell Carcinoma of
skin left eyelid would be accepted.
26051
We are proposing to remove these
non-specific codes whenever a more
specific diagnosis could be identified by
the clinician performing the assessment.
For the example code C44.111, we are
proposing to delete this code because
the clinician should be able to identify
which eye had the basal cell carcinoma,
and therefore would report the
condition using the code that specifies
the right or left eye.
We are proposing to remove a total of
153 ICD–10–CM site unspecified codes
involving the following comorbidity
categories: Oncology -93 ICD–10–CM
codes, Gangrene-6 ICD–10–CM codes
and Severe Musculoskeletal and
Connective Tissue—54 ICD–10–CM
codes. The site unspecified IPF PPS
ICD–10–CM codes that we are proposing
to remove are listed below in Tables 3
through 5.
TABLE 3—PROPOSED SITE UNSPECIFIED ICD–10–CM CODES TO BE REMOVED FROM THE ONCOLOGY TREATMENT
COMORBIDITY CATEGORY
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
ICD–10–CM
Diagnosis
Code title
C40.00 ..............
C40.10 ..............
C40.20 ..............
C40.30 ..............
C40.80 ..............
C40.90 ..............
C43.10 ..............
C43.20 ..............
C43.60 ..............
C43.70 ..............
C44.101 ............
C44.111 ............
C44.121 ............
C44.191 ............
C44.201 ............
C44.211 ............
C44.221 ............
C44.601 ............
C44.611 ............
C44.621 ............
C44.691 ............
C44.701 ............
C44.711 ............
C44.721 ............
C44.791 ............
C47.10 ..............
C47.20 ..............
C49.10 ..............
C49.20 ..............
C4A.10 ..............
C4A.20 ..............
C4A.60 ..............
C4A.70 ..............
C50.019 ............
C50.029 ............
C50.119 ............
C50.129 ............
C50.219 ............
C50.229 ............
C50.319 ............
C50.329 ............
C50.419 ............
C50.429 ............
C50.519 ............
C50.529 ............
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Malignant neoplasm of scapula and long bones of unspecified upper limb.
Malignant neoplasm of short bones of unspecified upper limb.
Malignant neoplasm of long bones of unspecified lower limb.
Malignant neoplasm of short bones of unspecified lower limb.
Malignant neoplasm of overlapping sites of bone and articular cartilage of unspecified limb.
Malignant neoplasm of unspecified bones and articular cartilage of unspecified limb.
Malignant melanoma of unspecified eyelid, including canthus.
Malignant melanoma of unspecified ear and external auricular canal.
Malignant melanoma of unspecified upper limb, including shoulder.
Malignant melanoma of unspecified lower limb, including hip.
Unspecified malignant neoplasm of skin of unspecified eyelid, including canthus.
Basal cell carcinoma of skin of unspecified eyelid, including canthus.
Squamous cell carcinoma of skin of unspecified eyelid, including canthus.
Other specified malignant neoplasm of skin of unspecified eyelid, including canthus.
Unspecified malignant neoplasm of skin of unspecified ear and external auricular canal.
Basal cell carcinoma of skin of unspecified ear and external auricular canal.
Squamous cell carcinoma of skin of unspecified ear and external auricular canal.
Unspecified malignant neoplasm of skin of unspecified upper limb, including shoulder.
Basal cell carcinoma of skin of unspecified upper limb, including shoulder.
Squamous cell carcinoma of skin of unspecified upper limb, including shoulder.
Other specified malignant neoplasm of skin of unspecified upper limb, including shoulder.
Unspecified malignant neoplasm of skin of unspecified lower limb, including hip.
Basal cell carcinoma of skin of unspecified lower limb, including hip.
Squamous cell carcinoma of skin of unspecified lower limb, including hip.
Other specified malignant neoplasm of skin of unspecified lower limb, including hip.
Malignant neoplasm of peripheral nerves of unspecified upper limb, including shoulder.
Malignant neoplasm of peripheral nerves of unspecified lower limb, including hip.
Malignant neoplasm of connective and soft tissue of unspecified upper limb, including shoulder.
Malignant neoplasm of connective and soft tissue of unspecified lower limb, including hip.
Merkel cell carcinoma of unspecified eyelid, including canthus.
Merkel cell carcinoma of unspecified ear and external auricular canal.
Merkel cell carcinoma of unspecified upper limb, including shoulder.
Merkel cell carcinoma of unspecified lower limb, including hip.
Malignant neoplasm of nipple and areola, unspecified female breast.
Malignant neoplasm of nipple and areola, unspecified male breast.
Malignant neoplasm of central portion of unspecified female breast.
Malignant neoplasm of central portion of unspecified male breast.
Malignant neoplasm of upper-inner quadrant of unspecified female breast.
Malignant neoplasm of upper-inner quadrant of unspecified male breast.
Malignant neoplasm of lower-inner quadrant of unspecified female breast.
Malignant neoplasm of lower-inner quadrant of unspecified male breast.
Malignant neoplasm of upper-outer quadrant of unspecified female breast.
Malignant neoplasm of upper-outer quadrant of unspecified male breast.
Malignant neoplasm of lower-outer quadrant of unspecified female breast.
Malignant neoplasm of lower-outer quadrant of unspecified male breast.
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TABLE 3—PROPOSED SITE UNSPECIFIED ICD–10–CM CODES TO BE REMOVED FROM THE ONCOLOGY TREATMENT
COMORBIDITY CATEGORY—Continued
ICD–10–CM
Diagnosis
Code title
C50.619 ............
C50.629 ............
C50.819 ............
C50.829 ............
C50.919 ............
C50.929 ............
C69.00 ..............
C69.10 ..............
C69.50 ..............
C69.60 ..............
C69.80 ..............
C69.90 ..............
C76.40 ..............
C76.50 ..............
D03.10 ..............
D03.20 ..............
D03.60 ..............
D03.70 ..............
D04.10 ..............
D04.20 ..............
D04.60 ..............
D04.70 ..............
D05.00 ..............
D05.10 ..............
D05.80 ..............
D05.90 ..............
D09.20 ..............
D16.00 ..............
D16.10 ..............
D16.20 ..............
D16.30 ..............
D17.20 ..............
D21.10 ..............
D21.20 ..............
D22.10 ..............
D22.20 ..............
D22.60 ..............
D22.70 ..............
D23.10 ..............
D23.20 ..............
D23.60 ..............
D23.70 ..............
D24.9 ................
D31.00 ..............
D31.50 ..............
D31.60 ..............
D31.90 ..............
D48.60 ..............
Malignant neoplasm of axillary tail of unspecified female breast.
Malignant neoplasm of axillary tail of unspecified male breast.
Malignant neoplasm of overlapping sites of unspecified female breast.
Malignant neoplasm of overlapping sites of unspecified male breast.
Malignant neoplasm of unspecified site of unspecified female breast.
Malignant neoplasm of unspecified site of unspecified male breast.
Malignant neoplasm of unspecified conjunctiva.
Malignant neoplasm of unspecified cornea.
Malignant neoplasm of unspecified lacrimal gland and duct.
Malignant neoplasm of unspecified orbit.
Malignant neoplasm of overlapping sites of unspecified eye and adnexa.
Malignant neoplasm of unspecified site of unspecified eye.
Malignant neoplasm of unspecified upper limb.
Malignant neoplasm of unspecified lower limb.
Melanoma in situ of unspecified eyelid, including canthus.
Melanoma in situ of unspecified ear and external auricular canal.
Melanoma in situ of unspecified upper limb, including shoulder.
Melanoma in situ of unspecified lower limb, including hip.
Carcinoma in situ of skin of unspecified eyelid, including canthus.
Carcinoma in situ of skin of unspecified ear and external auricular canal.
Carcinoma in situ of skin of unspecified upper limb, including shoulder.
Carcinoma in situ of skin of unspecified lower limb, including hip.
Lobular carcinoma in situ of unspecified breast.
Intraductal carcinoma in situ of unspecified breast.
Other specified type of carcinoma in situ of unspecified breast.
Unspecified type of carcinoma in situ of unspecified breast.
Carcinoma in situ of unspecified eye.
Benign neoplasm of scapula and long bones of unspecified upper limb.
Benign neoplasm of short bones of unspecified upper limb.
Benign neoplasm of long bones of unspecified lower limb.
Benign neoplasm of short bones of unspecified lower limb.
Benign lipomatous neoplasm of skin and subcutaneous tissue of unspecified limb.
Benign neoplasm of connective and other soft tissue of unspecified upper limb, including shoulder.
Benign neoplasm of connective and other soft tissue of unspecified lower limb, including hip.
Melanocytic nevi of unspecified eyelid, including canthus.
Melanocytic nevi of unspecified ear and external auricular canal.
Melanocytic nevi of unspecified upper limb, including shoulder.
Melanocytic nevi of unspecified lower limb, including hip.
Other benign neoplasm of skin of unspecified eyelid, including canthus.
Other benign neoplasm of skin of unspecified ear and external auricular canal.
Other benign neoplasm of skin of unspecified upper limb, including shoulder.
Other benign neoplasm of skin of unspecified lower limb, including hip.
Benign neoplasm of unspecified breast.
Benign neoplasm of unspecified conjunctiva.
Benign neoplasm of unspecified lacrimal gland and duct.
Benign neoplasm of unspecified site of unspecified orbit.
Benign neoplasm of unspecified part of unspecified eye.
Neoplasm of uncertain behavior of unspecified breast.
TABLE 4—PROPOSED SITE UNSPECIFIED ICD–10–CM CODES TO BE REMOVED FROM THE GANGRENE COMORBIDITY
CATEGORY
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
ICD10
I70269
I70369
I70469
I70569
I70669
I70769
ICD10 Description
...............
...............
...............
...............
...............
...............
Atherosclerosis
Atherosclerosis
Atherosclerosis
Atherosclerosis
Atherosclerosis
Atherosclerosis
of
of
of
of
of
of
native arteries of extremities with gangrene, unspecified extremity.
unspecified type of bypass graft(s) of the extremities with gangrene, unspecified extremity.
autologous vein bypass graft(s) of the extremities with gangrene, unspecified extremity.
nonautologous biological bypass graft(s) of the extremities with gangrene, unspecified extremity.
nonbiological bypass graft(s) of the extremities with gangrene, unspecified extremity.
other type of bypass graft(s) of the extremities with gangrene, unspecified extremity.
TABLE 5—PROPOSED SITE UNSPECIFIED ICD–10–CM CODES TO BE REMOVED FROM THE SEVERE MUSCULOSKELETAL
AND CONNECTIVE TISSUE DISEASES CATEGORY
ICD10
ICD10 Description
M8600 ...............
M86019 .............
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Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis, unspecified site.
Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis, unspecified shoulder.
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TABLE 5—PROPOSED SITE UNSPECIFIED ICD–10–CM CODES TO BE REMOVED FROM THE SEVERE MUSCULOSKELETAL
AND CONNECTIVE TISSUE DISEASES CATEGORY—Continued
ICD10
ICD10 Description
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
M86029 .............
M86039 .............
M86049 .............
M86059 .............
M86069 .............
M86079 .............
M8610 ...............
M86119 .............
M86129 .............
M86139 .............
M86149 .............
M86159 .............
M86169 .............
M86179 .............
M8620 ...............
M86219 .............
M86229 .............
M86239 .............
M86249 .............
M86259 .............
M86269 .............
M86279 .............
M8630 ...............
M86319 .............
M86329 .............
M86339 .............
M86349 .............
M86359 .............
M86369 .............
M86379 .............
M8640 ...............
M86419 .............
M86429 .............
M86439 .............
M86449 .............
M86459 .............
M86469 .............
M86479 .............
M8650 ...............
M86519 .............
M86529 .............
M86539 .............
M86549 .............
M86559 .............
M86569 .............
M8660 ...............
M86619 .............
M86629 .............
M86639 .............
M86649 .............
M86679 .............
M868x9 .............
Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis, unspecified humerus.
Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis, unspecified radius and ulna.
Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis, unspecified hand.
Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis, unspecified femur.
Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis, unspecified tibia and fibula.
Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis, unspecified ankle and foot.
Other acute osteomyelitis, unspecified site.
Other acute osteomyelitis, unspecified shoulder.
Other acute osteomyelitis, unspecified humerus.
Other acute osteomyelitis, unspecified radius and ulna.
Other acute osteomyelitis, unspecified hand.
Other acute osteomyelitis, unspecified femur.
Other acute osteomyelitis, unspecified tibia and fibula.
Other acute osteomyelitis, unspecified ankle and foot.
Subacute osteomyelitis, unspecified site.
Subacute osteomyelitis, unspecified shoulder.
Subacute osteomyelitis, unspecified humerus.
Subacute osteomyelitis, unspecified radius and ulna.
Subacute osteomyelitis, unspecified hand.
Subacute osteomyelitis, unspecified femur.
Subacute osteomyelitis, unspecified tibia and fibula.
Subacute osteomyelitis, unspecified ankle and foot.
Chronic multifocal osteomyelitis, unspecified site.
Chronic multifocal osteomyelitis, unspecified shoulder.
Chronic multifocal osteomyelitis, unspecified humerus.
Chronic multifocal osteomyelitis, unspecified radius and ulna.
Chronic multifocal osteomyelitis, unspecified hand.
Chronic multifocal osteomyelitis, unspecified femur.
Chronic multifocal osteomyelitis, unspecified tibia and fibula.
Chronic multifocal osteomyelitis, unspecified ankle and foot.
Chronic osteomyelitis with draining sinus, unspecified site.
Chronic osteomyelitis with draining sinus, unspecified shoulder.
Chronic osteomyelitis with draining sinus, unspecified humerus.
Chronic osteomyelitis with draining sinus, unspecified forearm.
Chronic osteomyelitis with draining sinus, unspecified hand.
Chronic osteomyelitis with draining sinus, unspecified femur.
Chronic osteomyelitis with draining sinus, unspecified lower leg.
Chronic osteomyelitis with draining sinus, unspecified ankle and foot.
Other chronic hematogenous osteomyelitis, unspecified site.
Other chronic hematogenous osteomyelitis, unspecified shoulder.
Other chronic hematogenous osteomyelitis, unspecified humerus.
Other chronic hematogenous osteomyelitis, unspecified forearm.
Other chronic hematogenous osteomyelitis, unspecified hand.
Other chronic hematogenous osteomyelitis, unspecified femur.
Other chronic hematogenous osteomyelitis, unspecified lower leg.
Other chronic osteomyelitis, unspecified site.
Other chronic osteomyelitis, unspecified shoulder.
Other chronic osteomyelitis, unspecified upper arm.
Other chronic osteomyelitis, unspecified forearm.
Other chronic osteomyelitis, unspecified hand.
Other chronic osteomyelitis, unspecified ankle and foot.
Other osteomyelitis, unspecified sites.
There are some site unspecified ICD–
10–CM codes that we are not proposing
to remove. In the case where the site
unspecified code is the only available
ICD–10–CM code, that is when a
laterality code (site specific code) is not
available, the site unspecified code will
not be removed and it would be
appropriate to submit that code.
Currently, IPFs are receiving the
comorbidity adjustment using the ICD–
9–CM diagnosis codes for the
comorbidity categories shown in Table
6 below.
TABLE 6—FY 2014 CURRENT DIAGNOSIS CODES AND ADJUSTMENT FACTORS FOR COMORBIDITY CATEGORIES
Adjustment
factor
Description of comorbidity
ICD–9–CM Diagnoses codes
Developmental Disabilities .........................
Coagulation Factor Deficits ........................
Tracheostomy .............................................
317, 3180, 3181, 3182, and 319 ....................................................................................
2860 through 2864 ..........................................................................................................
51900 through 51909 and V440 .....................................................................................
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TABLE 6—FY 2014 CURRENT DIAGNOSIS CODES AND ADJUSTMENT FACTORS FOR COMORBIDITY CATEGORIES—
Continued
Adjustment
factor
Description of comorbidity
ICD–9–CM Diagnoses codes
Renal Failure, Acute ..................................
5845 through 5849, 63630, 63631, 63632, 63730, 63731, 63732, 6383, 6393, 66932,
66934, 9585.
40301, 40311, 40391, 40402, 40412, 40413, 40492, 40493, 5853, 5854, 5855, 5856,
5859,586, V4511, V4512, V560, V561, and V562.
1400 through 2399 with a radiation therapy code 92.21–92.29 or chemotherapy code
99.25.
25002, 25003, 25012, 25013, 25022, 25023, 25032, 25033, 25042, 25043, 25052,
25053, 25062, 25063, 25072, 25073, 25082, 25083, 25092, and 25093.
260 through 262 ..............................................................................................................
3071, 30750, 31203, 31233, and 31234 ........................................................................
01000 through 04110, 042, 04500 through 05319, 05440 through 05449, 0550
through 0770, 0782 through 07889, and 07950 through 07959.
2910, 2920, 29212, 2922, 30300, and 30400 ................................................................
1.11
3910, 3911, 3912, 40201, 40403, 4160, 4210, 4211, and 4219 ...................................
44024 and 7854 ..............................................................................................................
49121, 4941, 5100, 51883, 51884, V4611, V4612, V4613 and V4614 .........................
56960 through 56969, 9975, and V441 through V446 ...................................................
6960, 7100, 73000 through 73009, 73010 through 73019, and 73020 through 73029
1.11
1.10
1.12
1.08
1.09
96500 through 96509, 9654, 9670 through 9699, 9770, 9800 through 9809, 9830
through 9839, 986, 9890 through 9897.
1.11
Renal Failure, Chronic ...............................
Oncology Treatment ...................................
Uncontrolled Diabetes-Mellitus with or
without complications.
Severe Protein Calorie Malnutrition ...........
Eating and Conduct Disorders ...................
Infectious Disease ......................................
Drug and/or Alcohol Induced Mental Disorders.
Cardiac Conditions .....................................
Gangrene ...................................................
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ...
Artificial Openings—Digestive and Urinary
Severe Musculoskeletal and Connective
Tissue Diseases.
Poisoning ....................................................
For FY 2015, we are proposing to
apply the 17 comorbidity categories for
which we provide an adjustment as
shown in Table 6 above. We are also
proposing the ICD–10–CM/PCS codes
and adjustment factors shown in Table
7 below, as well as, the removal of 153
site unspecified ICD–10–CM codes in
Tables 3 through 5 above. However, the
effective date of those changes would be
1.11
1.07
1.05
1.13
1.12
1.07
1.03
the date when ICD–10–CM/PCS
becomes the required medical data code
set for use on Medicare claims.
TABLE 7—FY 2015 DIAGNOSIS CODES AND ADJUSTMENT FACTORS FOR COMORBIDITY CATEGORIES
Adjustment
factor
Description of comorbidity
ICD–10–CM Diagnoses codes
Developmental Disabilities .........................
Coagulation Factor Deficits ........................
Tracheostomy .............................................
Renal Failure, Acute ..................................
Renal Failure, Chronic ...............................
F70 through F79 .............................................................................................................
D66 through D682 ..........................................................................................................
J9500 through J9509, and Z930 ....................................................................................
N170 through N179, O0482, O0732, O084 O904, and T795XXA .................................
I120, I1311 through I132, N183 through N19, Z4901 through Z4931, Z9115, and
Z992.
C000 through C866, C882 through C964, C96A, C96Z, C969 through D471, D473,
D47Z1 through D47Z9, D479 through D499, K317, K635, Q8500, and Q8501
through Q8509, with a radiation therapy code from ICD–10–PCS tables 08H
through 0YH with a sixth character device value 1 Radioactive Element, ICD–10–
PCS table CW7, ICD–10–PCS tables D00 through DW0, ICD–10–PCS tables D01
through DW1, tables D0Y through DWY, or a chemotherapy code from ICD–10–
PCS table 3E0 with a sixth character substance value 0 Antineoplastic and a seventh character qualifier 5 Other Antineoplastic.
E1065 and E1165 ...........................................................................................................
Oncology Treatment ...................................
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Uncontrolled Diabetes-Mellitus with or
without complications.
Severe Protein Calorie Malnutrition ...........
Eating and Conduct Disorders ...................
Infectious Disease ......................................
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E40 through E43 .............................................................................................................
F5000 through F5002, F509, F631, F6381, and F911 ..................................................
A150 through A269, A280 through A329, A35 through A439, A46 through A480,
A482 through A488, A491, A70 through A740, A7489, A800 through A99, B0050
through B0059, B010 through B0229, B03 through B069, B08010 through B0809,
B0820 through B2799, B330 through B333, B338, B341, B471 through B479,
B950 through B955, B958, B9730 through B9739, G032, I673, J020, J0300,
J0301, J202, K9081, L081, L444, M60009, and R1111.
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TABLE 7—FY 2015 DIAGNOSIS CODES AND ADJUSTMENT FACTORS FOR COMORBIDITY CATEGORIES—Continued
Adjustment
factor
Description of comorbidity
ICD–10–CM Diagnoses codes
Drug and/or Alcohol Induced Mental Disorders.
Alcohol dependence with intoxication and/or withdrawal F10121, F10220 through
F10229, F10231, and F10921. Drug withdrawal F1193, F1123, F13230 through
F13239, F13930 through F13939, F1423, F1523, F1593, F17203, F17213,
F17223, F17293, F19230 through F19239, and F19930 through F19939. Drug-induced psychotic disorder with hallucinations F11251, F11151, F11951, F12151,
F12251, F13151, F12951, F13251, F13951, F14151, F14251, F14951, F15151,
F15251, F15951, F16151, F16251, F16951, F18151, F18251, F18951, F19151,
F19251, and F19951. Drug intoxication F11220 through F11229, F11920 through
F11929, F12120 through F12129, F12220 through F12229, F12920 through
F12929, F13120 through F13129, F13220 through F13229, F13920 through
F13929, F14120 through F14129, F14220 through F14229, F14920 through
F14929, F15120 through F15129, F15220 through F15229, F15920 through
F15929, F16120 through F16129, F16220 through F16229, F16920 through
F16929, F18120 through F18129, F18220 through F18229, F18920 through
F18929, F19120 through F19129, F19220 through F19229, F19230 through
F19239, and F19920 through F19929. Opioid dependence not listed above F1120,
F1124, F11250, F11259, F11281 through F11288, F1129.
I010 through I012, I110, I270, I330 through I339, and I39 ............................................
E0852, E0952, E1052, E1152, E1352, I70261 through I70269, I70361 through
I70369, I70461 through I70469, I70561 through I70569, I70661 through I70669,
I70761 through I70769, I7301, and I96.
J441, J470 through J471, J860, J95850, J9610 through J9622, and Z9911 through
Z9912.
K9400 through K9419, N990, N99520 through N99538, N9981, N9989, and Z931
through Z936.
L4050 through L4059, M320 through M329, M4620 through M4628, and M8600
through M869.
Note: Only includes the codes below with seventh character A specifying initial encounter. T391X1 through T391X4, T400X1 through T400X4, T401X1 through
T401X4, T402X1 through T402X4, T403X1 through T403X4, T404X1 through
T404X4, T40601 through T40604, T40691 through T40694, T407X1 through
T407X4, T408X1 through T408X4, T40901 through T40904, T40991 through
T40994, T410X1 through T410X4, T411X1 through T411X4, T41201 through
T41204, T41291 through T41294, T413X1 through T413X4, T4141X through
T4144X, T423X1 through T423X4, T424X1 through T424X4, T426X1 through
T426X4, T4271X through T4274X, T428X1 through T428X4, T43011 through
T43014, T43021 through T43024, T431X1 through T431X4, T43201 through
T43204, T43211 through T43214, T43221 through T43224, T43291 through
T43294, T433X1 through T433X4, T434X1 through T434X4, T43501 through
T43504, T43591 through T43594, T43601 through T43604, T43611 through
T43614, T43621 through T43624, T43631 through T43634, T43691 through
T43694, T438X1 through T438X4, T4391X through T4394X, T505X1 through
T505X4, T510X1 through T5194X, T510X1 through T510X4, T5391X through
T5394X, T540X1 through T5494X, T550X1 through T551X4, T560X1 through
T560X4, T571X1 through T571X4, T5801X through T5804X, T5811X through
T5814X, T582X1 through T582X4, T588X1 through T588X4, T5891X through
T5894X, T600X1 through T600X4, T601X1 through T601X4, T602X1 through
T602X4, T6041X through T6094X, T63001 through T6394X, T6401X through
T6484X, T650X1 through T650X4, T651X1 through T651X4.
Cardiac Conditions .....................................
Gangrene ...................................................
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ...
Artificial Openings—Digestive and Urinary
Severe Musculoskeletal and Connective
Tissue Diseases.
Poisoning ....................................................
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
3. Proposed Patient Age Adjustments
As explained in the November 2004
IPF PPS final rule (69 FR 66922), we
analyzed the impact of age on per diem
cost by examining the age variable (that
is, the range of ages) for payment
adjustments.
In general, we found that the cost per
day increases with age. The older age
groups are more costly than the under
45 age group, the differences in per
diem cost increase for each successive
age group, and the differences are
statistically significant.
For FY 2015, we are proposing to
continue to use the patient age
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adjustments currently in effect as shown
in Table 8 below.
TABLE 8—AGE GROUPINGS AND
ADJUSTMENT FACTORS
Adjustment
factor
Age
Under 45 ...................................
45 and under 50 .......................
50 and under 55 .......................
55 and under 60 .......................
60 and under 65 .......................
65 and under 70 .......................
70 and under 75 .......................
75 and under 80 .......................
80 and over ..............................
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1.01
1.02
1.04
1.07
1.10
1.13
1.15
1.17
1.03
1.11
1.10
1.12
1.08
1.09
1.11
4. Proposed Variable Per Diem
Adjustments
We explained in the November 2004
IPF PPS final rule (69 FR 66946) that the
regression analysis indicated that per
diem cost declines as the LOS increases.
The variable per diem adjustments to
the Federal per diem base rate account
for ancillary and administrative costs
that occur disproportionately in the first
days after admission to an IPF.
We used a regression analysis to
estimate the average differences in per
diem cost among stays of different
lengths. As a result of this analysis, we
established variable per diem
adjustments that begin on day 1 and
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decline gradually until day 21 of a
patient’s stay. For day 22 and thereafter,
the variable per diem adjustment
remains the same each day for the
remainder of the stay. However, the
adjustment applied to day 1 depends
upon whether the IPF has a qualifying
emergency department (ED). If an IPF
has a qualifying ED, it receives a 1.31
adjustment factor for day 1 of each stay.
If an IPF does not have a qualifying ED,
it receives a 1.19 adjustment factor for
day 1 of the stay. The ED adjustment is
explained in more detail in section
VII.C.5 of this proposed rule.
For FY 2015, we are proposing to
continue to use the variable per diem
adjustment factors currently in effect as
shown in Table 9 below. A complete
discussion of the variable per diem
adjustments appears in the November
2004 IPF PPS final rule (69 FR 66946).
TABLE 9—VARIABLE PER DIEM
ADJUSTMENTS
Day-of-stay
Adjustment
factor
Day 1—IPF Without a Qualifying ED ................................
Day 1—IPF With a Qualifying
ED .........................................
Day 2 ........................................
Day 3 ........................................
Day 4 ........................................
Day 5 ........................................
Day 6 ........................................
Day 7 ........................................
Day 8 ........................................
Day 9 ........................................
Day 10 ......................................
Day 11 ......................................
Day 12 ......................................
Day 13 ......................................
Day 14 ......................................
Day 15 ......................................
Day 16 ......................................
Day 17 ......................................
Day 18 ......................................
Day 19 ......................................
Day 20 ......................................
Day 21 ......................................
After Day 21 .............................
1.19
1.31
1.12
1.08
1.05
1.04
1.02
1.01
1.01
1.00
1.00
0.99
0.99
0.99
0.99
0.98
0.97
0.97
0.96
0.95
0.95
0.95
0.92
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
C. Facility-Level Adjustments
The IPF PPS includes facility-level
adjustments for the wage index, IPFs
located in rural areas, teaching IPFs,
cost of living adjustments for IPFs
located in Alaska and Hawaii, and IPFs
with a qualifying ED.
1. Proposed Wage Index Adjustment
a. Background
As discussed in the May 2006 IPF PPS
final rule (71 FR 27061) and in the May
2008 (73 FR 25719) and May 2009 IPF
PPS notices (74 FR 20373), in order to
provide an adjustment for geographic
wage levels, the labor-related portion of
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an IPF’s payment is adjusted using an
appropriate wage index. Currently, an
IPF’s geographic wage index value is
determined based on the actual location
of the IPF in an urban or rural area as
defined in § 412.64(b)(1)(ii)(A) and (C).
b. Proposed Wage Index for FY 2015
Since the inception of the IPF PPS, we
have used the pre-reclassified, pre-floor
hospital wage index in developing a
wage index to be applied to IPFs
because there is not an IPF-specific
wage index available and we believe
that IPFs generally compete in the same
labor market as acute care hospitals so
the pre-reclassified, pre-floor inpatient
acute care hospital wage index should
be reflective of labor costs of IPFs. As
discussed in the May 2006 IPF PPS final
rule for FY 2007 (71 FR 27061 through
27067), under the IPF PPS, the wage
index is calculated using the IPPS wage
index for the labor market area in which
the IPF is located, without taking into
account geographic reclassifications,
floors, and other adjustments made to
the wage index under the IPPS. For a
complete description of these IPPS wage
index adjustments, please see the CY
2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53365 through 53374). We are proposing
to continue that practice for FY 2015.
We apply the wage index adjustment
to the labor-related portion of the
Federal rate, which is currently
estimated to be 69.538 percent. This
percentage reflects the labor-related
relative importance of the FY 2008based RPL market basket for FY 2015
(see section V.C. of this proposed rule).
Changes to the wage index are made
in a budget-neutral manner so that
updates do not increase expenditures.
For FY 2015, we are proposing to apply
the most recent hospital wage index
(that is, the FY 2014 pre-floor, prereclassified hospital wage index which
is the most appropriate index as it best
reflects the variation in local labor costs
of IPFs in the various geographic areas)
using the most recent hospital wage data
(that is, data from hospital cost reports
for the cost reporting period beginning
during FY 2010), and applying an
adjustment in accordance with our
budget-neutrality policy. This policy
requires us to estimate the total amount
of IPF PPS payments for FY 2014 using
the labor-related share and the wage
indices from FY 2014 divided by the
total estimated IPF PPS payments for FY
2015 using the labor-related share and
wage indices from FY 2015. The
estimated payments are based on FY
2013 IPF claims, inflated to the
appropriate FY. This quotient is the
wage index budget-neutrality factor, and
it is applied in the update of the Federal
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per diem base rate for FY 2015 in
addition to the market basket described
in section VI.B. of this proposed rule.
The wage index budget-neutrality factor
for FY 2015 is 1.0003. The wage index
applicable for FY 2015 appears in Table
1 and Table 2 in Addendum B of this
proposed rule.
In the May 2006 IPF PPS final rule for
RY 2007 (71 FR 27061–27067), we
adopted the changes discussed in the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) Bulletin No. 03–04 (June 6,
2003), which announced revised
definitions for Metropolitan Statistical
Areas (MSAs), and the creation of
Micropolitan Statistical Areas and
Combined Statistical Areas. In adopting
the OMB Core-Based Statistical Area
(CBSA) geographic designations, we did
not provide a separate transition for the
CBSA-based wage index since the IPF
PPS was already in a transition period
from TEFRA payments to PPS
payments.
As was the case in FY 2014, for FY
2015, we will continue to use the CBSA
geographic designations. The updated
FY 2015 CBSA-based wage index values
are presented in Tables 1 and 2 in
Addendum B of this proposed rule. A
complete discussion of the CBSA labor
market definitions appears in the May
2006 IPF PPS final rule (71 FR 27061
through 27067).
In keeping with established IPF PPS
wage index policy, we propose to use
the FY 2014 pre-floor, pre-reclassified
hospital wage index (which is based on
data collected from hospital cost reports
submitted by hospitals for cost reporting
periods beginning during FY 2010) to
adjust IPF PPS payments beginning
October 1, 2014.
c. OMB Bulletins
OMB publishes bulletins regarding
CBSA changes, including changes to
CBSA numbers and titles. In the May
2008 IPF PPS notice, we incorporated
the CBSA nomenclature changes
published in the most recent OMB
bulletin that applies to the hospital
wage index used to determine the
current IPF PPS wage index and stated
that we expect to continue to do the
same for all the OMB CBSA
nomenclature changes in future IPF PPS
rules and notices, as necessary (73 FR
25721). The OMB bulletins may be
accessed online at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/omb/bullentins/
index.html.
In accordance with our established
methodology, we have historically
adopted any CBSA changes that are
published in the OMB bulletin that
corresponds with the hospital wage
index used to determine the IPF PPS
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wage index. For FY 2015, we use the FY
2014 pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital
wage index to adjust the IPF PPS
payments. On February 28, 2013, OMB
issued OMB Bulletin No. 13–01, which
establishes revised delineations of
statistical areas based on OMB
standards published in the Federal
Register on June 28, 2010 and 2010
Census Bureau data. Because the FY
2014 pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital
wage index was finalized prior to the
issuance of this Bulletin, the FY 2014
pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage
index does not reflect OMB’s new area
delineations based on the 2010 Census
and, thus, the FY 2015 IPF PPS wage
index will not reflect the OMB changes.
CMS intends to propose changes to
the hospital wage index based on this
OMB Bulletin in the FY 2015 IPPS/
LTCH PPS proposed rule, as stated in
the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed
rule (78 FR 27552 through 27553).
Therefore, we anticipate that the OMB
Bulletin changes will be reflected in the
FY 2015 hospital wage index. Because
we base the IPF PPS wage index on the
hospital wage index from the prior year,
we anticipate that the OMB Bulletin
changes would be reflected in the FY
2016 IPPS PPS wage index.
2. Proposed Adjustment for Rural
Location
In the November 2004 IPF PPS final
rule, we provided a 17 percent payment
adjustment for IPFs located in a rural
area. This adjustment was based on the
regression analysis, which indicated
that the per diem cost of rural facilities
was 17 percent higher than that of urban
facilities after accounting for the
influence of the other variables included
in the regression. For FY 2015, we are
proposing to apply a 17 percent
payment adjustment for IPFs located in
a rural area as defined at
§ 412.64(b)(1)(ii)(C). A complete
discussion of the adjustment for rural
locations appears in the November 2004
IPF PPS final rule (69 FR 66954).
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
3. Proposed Teaching Adjustment
In the November 2004 IPF PPS final
rule, we implemented regulations at
§ 412.424(d)(1)(iii) to establish a facilitylevel adjustment for IPFs that are, or are
part of, teaching hospitals. The teaching
adjustment accounts for the higher
indirect operating costs experienced by
hospitals that participate in graduate
medical education (GME) programs. The
payment adjustments are made based on
the ratio of the number of full-time
equivalent (FTE) interns and residents
training in the IPF and the IPF’s average
daily census.
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Medicare makes direct GME payments
(for direct costs such as resident and
teaching physician salaries, and other
direct teaching costs) to all teaching
hospitals including those paid under a
PPS, and those paid under the TEFRA
rate-of-increase limits. These direct
GME payments are made separately
from payments for hospital operating
costs and are not part of the IPF PPS.
The direct GME payments do not
address the estimated higher indirect
operating costs teaching hospitals may
face.
The results of the regression analysis
of FY 2002 IPF data established the
basis for the payment adjustments
included in the November 2004 IPF PPS
final rule. The results showed that the
indirect teaching cost variable is
significant in explaining the higher
costs of IPFs that have teaching
programs. We calculated the teaching
adjustment based on the IPF’s ‘‘teaching
variable,’’ which is one plus the ratio of
the number of FTE residents training in
the IPF (subject to limitations described
below) to the IPF’s average daily census
(ADC).
We established the teaching
adjustment in a manner that limited the
incentives for IPFs to add FTE residents
for the purpose of increasing their
teaching adjustment. We imposed a cap
on the number of FTE residents that
may be counted for purposes of
calculating the teaching adjustment. The
cap limits the number of FTE residents
that teaching IPFs may count for the
purpose of calculating the IPF PPS
teaching adjustment, not the number of
residents teaching institutions can hire
or train. We calculated the number of
FTE residents that trained in the IPF
during a ‘‘base year’’ and used that FTE
resident number as the cap. An IPF’s
FTE resident cap is ultimately
determined based on the final
settlement of the IPF’s most recent cost
report filed before November 15, 2004
(that is, the publication date of the IPF
PPS final rule).
In the regression analysis, the
logarithm of the teaching variable had a
coefficient value of 0.5150. We
converted this cost effect to a teaching
payment adjustment by treating the
regression coefficient as an exponent
and raising the teaching variable to a
power equal to the coefficient value. We
note that the coefficient value of 0.5150
was based on the regression analysis
holding all other components of the
payment system constant. A complete
discussion of how the teaching
adjustment was calculated appears in
the November 2004 IPF PPS final rule
(69 FR 66954 through 66957) and the
May 2008 IPF PPS notice (73 FR 25721).
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26057
As with other adjustment factors
derived through the regression analysis,
we do not plan to rerun the regression
analysis until we analyze IPF PPS data.
Therefore, in this proposed rule, for FY
2015, we are proposing to retain the
coefficient value of 0.5150 for the
teaching adjustment to the Federal per
diem base rate.
a. FTE Intern and Resident Cap
Adjustment
CMS had been asked by the IPF
industry to reconsider the original IPF
teaching policy and permit a temporary
increase in the FTE resident cap when
an IPF increases the number of FTE
residents it trains due to the acceptance
of displaced residents (residents that are
training in an IPF or a program before
the IPF or program closed) when
another IPF closes or closes its medical
residency training program.
To help us assess how many IPFs had
been, or were expected to be adversely
affected by their inability to adjust their
caps under § 412.424(d)(1)(iii) and
under these situations, we specifically
requested public comment from IPFs in
the May 1, 2009 IPF PPS notice (74 FR
20376 through 20377). A summary of
the comments and our responses can be
reviewed in the April 30, 2010 IPF PPS
notice (75 FR 23106 through 23117). All
of the commenters recommended that
CMS modify the IPF PPS teaching
adjustment policy, supporting a policy
change that would permit the IPF PPS
residency cap to be temporarily adjusted
when that IPF trains displaced residents
due to closure of an IPF or closure of an
IPF’s medical residency training
program(s). The commenters
recommended a temporary resident cap
adjustment policy similar to the policies
applied in similar contexts for acute
care hospitals.
We agreed with the commenters so, in
the May 6, 2011 IPF PPS final rule (76
FR 26455), we adopted the temporary
resident cap adjustment policies
described below, similar to the
temporary adjustments to the FTE cap
used for acute care hospitals.
b. Temporary Adjustment to the FTE
Cap To Reflect Residents Added Due to
Hospital Closure
In the May 6, 2011 IPF PPS final rule
(76 FR 26455), we added a new
§ 412.424(d)(1)(iii)(F)(1) to allow a
temporary adjustment to an IPF’s FTE
cap to reflect residents added because of
another IPF’s closure on or after July 1,
2011, to be effective for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after July 1,
2011. For purposes of this policy, we
adopted the IPPS definition of ‘‘closure
of a hospital’’ in 42 CFR 413.79(h) to
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mean the IPF terminates its Medicare
provider agreement as specified in 42
CFR 489.52. The regulations permit an
adjustment to an IPF’s FTE cap if the
IPF meets the following criteria: (1) The
IPF is training displaced residents from
another IPF that closed on or after July
1, 2011; and (2) no later than 60 days
after the hospital first begins training
the displaced residents, the IPF that is
training the displaced residents from the
closed IPF submits a request for a
temporary adjustment to its FTE cap to
its Medicare Administrative Contractor
(MAC), and documents that the IPF is
eligible for this temporary adjustment to
its FTE cap by identifying the residents
who have come from the closed IPF and
have caused the requesting IPF to
exceed its cap, (or the IPF may already
be over its cap) and specifies the length
of time that the adjustment is needed.
After the displaced residents leave the
IPF’s training program or complete their
residency program, the IPF’s cap would
revert to its original level. Further, the
total amount of temporary cap
adjustments that can be distributed to
all receiving hospitals cannot exceed the
cap amount of the IPF that closed.
c. Temporary Adjustment to FTE To Cap
Reflect Residents Affected by Residency
Program Closure
In the May 6, 2011 final rule (76 FR
26455), we added a new
§ 412.424(d)(1)(iii)(F)(2) providing that
if an IPF that ceases training residents
in a residency training program(s) agrees
to temporarily reduce its FTE cap, we
would allow another IPF to receive a
temporary adjustment to its FTE cap to
reflect residents added because of the
closure of another IPF’s residency
training program. For purposes of this
policy on closed residency programs,
we apply the IPPS definition of ‘‘closure
of a hospital residency training
program’’ to mean that the hospital
ceases to offer training for residents in
a particular approved medical residency
training program as specified in
§ 413.79(h). The methodology for
adjusting the caps for the ‘‘receiving
IPF’’ and the ‘‘IPF that closed its
program’’ is described below.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
i. Receiving IPF
The regulations at
§ 412.424(d)(1)(iii)(F)(2)(i) allow an IPF
to receive a temporary adjustment to its
FTE cap to reflect residents added
because of the closure of another IPF’s
residency training program for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
July 1, 2011 if—
• The IPF is training additional
residents from the residency training
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program of an IPF that closed its
program on or after July 1, 2011.
• No later than 60 days after the IPF
begins to train the residents, the IPF
submits to its MAC a request for a
temporary adjustment to its FTE cap,
documents that the IPF is eligible for
this temporary adjustment by
identifying the residents who have come
from another IPF’s closed program and
have caused the IPF to exceed its cap,
(or the IPF may already be in excess of
its cap), specifies the length of time the
adjustment is needed, and submits to its
MAC a copy of the FTE cap reduction
statement by the IPF closing the
residency training program.
ii. IPF That Closed Its Program
The regulations at
§ 412.424(d)(1)(iii)(F)(2)(ii) provide that
an IPF that agrees to train residents who
have been displaced by the closure of
another IPF’s resident teaching program
may receive a temporary FTE cap
adjustment only if the IPF that closed a
program:
• Temporarily reduces its FTE cap
based on the number of FTE residents
in each program year, training in the
program at the time of the program’s
closure.
• No later than 60 days after the
residents who were in the closed
program begin training at another IPF,
submits to its MAC a statement signed
and dated by its representative that
specifies that it agrees to the temporary
reduction in its FTE cap to allow the IPF
training the displaced residents to
obtain a temporary adjustment to its
cap; identifies the residents who were
training at the time of the program’s
closure; identifies the IPFs to which the
residents are transferring once the
program closes; and specifies the
reduction for the applicable program
years.
A complete discussion on the
temporary adjustment to the FTE cap to
reflect residents added due to hospital
closure and by residency program
appears in the January 27, 2011 IPF PPS
proposed rule (76 FR 5018 through
5020) and the May 6, 2011 IPF PPS final
rule (76 FR 26453 through 26456).
4. Proposed Cost of Living Adjustment
for IPFs Located in Alaska and Hawaii
The IPF PPS includes a payment
adjustment for IPFs located in Alaska
and Hawaii based upon the county in
which the IPF is located. As we
explained in the November 2004 IPF
PPS final rule, the FY 2002 data
demonstrated that IPFs in Alaska and
Hawaii had per diem costs that were
disproportionately higher than other
IPFs. Other Medicare PPSs (for example,
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the IPPS and LTCH PPS) adopted a cost
of living adjustment (COLA) to account
for the cost differential of care furnished
in Alaska and Hawaii.
We analyzed the effect of applying a
COLA to payments for IPFs located in
Alaska and Hawaii. The results of our
analysis demonstrated that a COLA for
IPFs located in Alaska and Hawaii
would improve payment equity for
these facilities. As a result of this
analysis, we provided a COLA in the
November 2004 IPF PPS final rule.
A COLA for IPFs located in Alaska
and Hawaii is made by multiplying the
nonlabor-related portion of the Federal
per diem base rate by the applicable
COLA factor based on the COLA area in
which the IPF is located.
The COLA factors are published on
the Office of Personnel Management
(OPM) Web site (https://www.opm.gov/
oca/cola/rates.asp).
We note that the COLA areas for
Alaska are not defined by county as are
the COLA areas for Hawaii. In 5 CFR
591.207, the OPM established the
following COLA areas:
• City of Anchorage, and 80-kilometer
(50-mile) radius by road, as measured
from the Federal courthouse;
• City of Fairbanks, and 80-kilometer
(50-mile) radius by road, as measured
from the Federal courthouse;
• City of Juneau, and 80-kilometer
(50-mile) radius by road, as measured
from the Federal courthouse;
• Rest of the State of Alaska.
As stated in the November 2004 IPF
PPS final rule, we update the COLA
factors according to updates established
by the OPM. However, sections 1911
through 1919 of the Nonforeign Area
Retirement Equity Assurance Act, as
contained in subtitle B of title XIX of the
National Defense Authorization Act
(NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2010 (Pub. L.
111–84, October 28, 2009), transitions
the Alaska and Hawaii COLAs to
locality pay. Under section 1914 of
Public Law 111–84, locality pay is being
phased in over a 3-year period
beginning in January 2010, with COLA
rates frozen as of the date of enactment,
October 28, 2009, and then
proportionately reduced to reflect the
phase-in of locality pay.
When we published the proposed
COLA factors in the January 2011 IPF
PPS proposed rule (76 FR 4998), we
inadvertently selected the FY 2010
COLA rates which had been reduced to
account for the phase-in of locality pay.
We did not intend to propose the
reduced COLA rates because that would
have understated the adjustment. Since
the 2009 COLA rates did not reflect the
phase-in of locality pay, we finalized
the FY 2009 COLA rates for RY 2010
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through RY 2014 and indicated our
intent to address the COLA in FY 2015.
Currently, IPFs located in Alaska and
Hawaii receive the updated COLA
factors based on the COLA area in
which the IPF is located as shown in
Table 10 below.
TABLE 10—COLA FACTORS FOR ALASKA AND HAWAII IPFS
Cost of living
adjustment
factor
Area
Alaska:
City of Anchorage and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by road ...............................................................................................
City of Fairbanks and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by road ................................................................................................
City of Juneau and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by road ....................................................................................................
Rest of Alaska ........................................................................................................................................................................
Hawaii:
City and County of Honolulu ..................................................................................................................................................
County of Hawaii ....................................................................................................................................................................
County of Kauai ......................................................................................................................................................................
County of Maui and County of Kalawao ................................................................................................................................
1.23
1.23
1.23
1.25
1.25
1.18
1.25
1.25
(The above factors are based on data obtained from the U.S. Office of Personnel Management Web site at: https://www.opm.gov/oca/cola/
rates.asp.)
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH final rule
(77 FR 53700 through 53701), CMS
established a methodology for FY 2014
to update the COLA factors for Alaska
and Hawaii. Under that methodology,
we use a comparison of the growth in
the Consumer Price Indices (CPIs) in
Anchorage, Alaska and Honolulu,
Hawaii relative to the growth in the
overall CPI as published by the Bureau
of Labor Statistics (BLS) to update the
COLA factors for all areas in Alaska and
Hawaii, respectively. As discussed in
the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH proposed rule
(77 FR 28145), because BLS publishes
CPI data for only Anchorage, Alaska and
Honolulu, Hawaii, our methodology for
updating the COLA factors uses a
comparison of the growth in the CPIs for
those cities relative to the growth in the
overall CPI to update the COLA factors
for all areas in Alaska and Hawaii,
respectively. We believe that the relative
price differences between these cities
and the United States (as measured by
the CPIs mentioned above) are generally
appropriate proxies for the relative price
differences between the ‘‘other areas’’ of
Alaska and Hawaii and the United
States.
The CPIs for ‘‘All Items’’ that BLS
publishes for Anchorage, Alaska,
Honolulu, Hawaii, and for the average
U.S. city are based on a different mix of
commodities and services than is
reflected in the nonlabor-related share
of the IPPS market basket. As such,
under the methodology we established
to update the COLA factors, we
calculated a ‘‘reweighted CPI’’ using the
CPI for commodities and the CPI for
services for each of the geographic areas
to mirror the composition of the IPPS
market basket nonlabor-related share.
The current composition of BLS’ CPI for
‘‘All Items’’ for all of the respective
areas is approximately 40 percent
commodities and 60 percent services.
However, the nonlabor-related share of
the IPPS market basket is comprised of
60 percent commodities and 40 percent
services. Therefore, under the
methodology established for FY 2014 in
the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule,
we created reweighted indexes for
Anchorage, Alaska, Honolulu, Hawaii,
and the average U.S. city using the
respective CPI commodities index and
CPI services index and applying the
approximate 60/40 weights from the
IPPS market basket. This approach is
appropriate because we would continue
to make a COLA for hospitals located in
Alaska and Hawaii by multiplying the
nonlabor-related portion of the
standardized amount by a COLA factor.
Under the COLA factor update
methodology established in the FY 2014
IPPS/LTCH final rule, we adjust
payments made to hospitals located in
Alaska and Hawaii by incorporating a
25-percent cap on the CPI-updated
COLA factors. We note that OPM’s
COLA factors were calculated with a
statutorily mandated cap of 25 percent,
and since at least 1984, we have
exercised our discretionary authority to
adjust Alaska and Hawaii payments by
incorporating this cap. In keeping with
this historical policy, we would
continue to use such a cap, as our
proposal is based on OPM’s COLA
factors. We believe this approach is
appropriate because our CPI-updated
COLA factors use the 2009 OPM COLA
factors as a basis.
We believe it is appropriate to adopt
the same methodology for the COLA
factors applied under the IPPS because
IPFs are hospitals with a similar mix of
commodities and services. In addition,
we think it is appropriate to have a
consistent policy approach with that of
other hospitals in Alaska and Hawaii.
Therefore, we are proposing to adopt the
cost of living adjustment factors shown
in Table 11 below for IPFs located in
Alaska and Hawaii.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
TABLE 11—COST-OF-LIVING ADJUSTMENT FACTORS: ALASKA AND HAWAII HOSPITALS AREA COLA FACTOR
Cost of living
adjustment
factor
Area
Alaska:
City of Anchorage and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by road ...............................................................................................
City of Fairbanks and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by road ................................................................................................
City of Juneau and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by road ....................................................................................................
Rest of Alaska ........................................................................................................................................................................
Hawaii:
City and County of Honolulu ..................................................................................................................................................
County of Hawaii ....................................................................................................................................................................
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1.23
1.23
1.23
1.25
1.25
1.19
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TABLE 11—COST-OF-LIVING ADJUSTMENT FACTORS: ALASKA AND HAWAII HOSPITALS AREA COLA FACTOR—Continued
Cost of living
adjustment
factor
Area
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
County of Kauai ......................................................................................................................................................................
County of Maui and County of Kalawao ................................................................................................................................
5. Proposed Adjustment for IPFs With a
Qualifying Emergency Department (ED)
The IPF PPS includes a facility-level
adjustment for IPFs with qualifying EDs.
We provide an adjustment to the
Federal per diem base rate to account
for the costs associated with
maintaining a full-service ED. The
adjustment is intended to account for
ED costs incurred by a freestanding
psychiatric hospital with a qualifying
ED or a distinct part psychiatric unit of
an acute care hospital or a CAH for
preadmission services otherwise
payable under the Medicare Outpatient
Prospective Payment System (OPPS)
furnished to a beneficiary on the date of
the beneficiary’s admission to the
hospital and during the day
immediately preceding the date of
admission to the IPF (see § 413.40(c)(2))
and the overhead cost of maintaining
the ED. This payment is a facility-level
adjustment that applies to all IPF
admissions (with one exception
described below), regardless of whether
a particular patient receives
preadmission services in the hospital’s
ED.
The ED adjustment is incorporated
into the variable per diem adjustment
for the first day of each stay for IPFs
with a qualifying ED. That is, IPFs with
a qualifying ED receive an adjustment
factor of 1.31 as the variable per diem
adjustment for day 1 of each stay. If an
IPF does not have a qualifying ED, it
receives an adjustment factor of 1.19 as
the variable per diem adjustment for day
1 of each patient stay.
The ED adjustment is made on every
qualifying claim except as described
below. As specified in
§ 412.424(d)(1)(v)(B), the ED adjustment
is not made when a patient is
discharged from an acute care hospital
or CAH and admitted to the same
hospital’s or CAH’s psychiatric unit. We
clarified in the November 2004 IPF PPS
final rule (69 FR 66960) that an ED
adjustment is not made in this case
because the costs associated with ED
services are reflected in the DRG
payment to the acute care hospital or
through the reasonable cost payment
made to the CAH.
Therefore, when patients are
discharged from an acute care hospital
or CAH and admitted to the same
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1.25
D. Other Payment Adjustments and
Policies
provide an incentive under the IPF per
diem payment system to increase LOS
in order to receive additional payments.
After establishing the loss sharing
ratios, we determined the current fixed
dollar loss threshold amount of $10,245
through payment simulations designed
to compute a dollar loss beyond which
payments are estimated to meet the 2
percent outlier spending target. Each
year when we update the IPF PPS, we
simulate payments using the latest
available data to compute the fixed
dollar loss threshold so that outlier
payments represent 2 percent of total
projected IPF PPS payments.
1. Outlier Payments
The IPF PPS includes an outlier
adjustment to promote access to IPF
care for those patients who require
expensive care and to limit the financial
risk of IPFs treating unusually costly
patients. In the November 2004 IPF PPS
final rule, we implemented regulations
at § 412.424(d)(3)(i) to provide a percase payment for IPF stays that are
extraordinarily costly. Providing
additional payments to IPFs for
extremely costly cases strongly
improves the accuracy of the IPF PPS in
determining resource costs at the patient
and facility level. These additional
payments reduce the financial losses
that would otherwise be incurred in
treating patients who require more
costly care and, therefore, reduce the
incentives for IPFs to under-serve these
patients.
We make outlier payments for
discharges in which an IPF’s estimated
total cost for a case exceeds a fixed
dollar loss threshold amount
(multiplied by the IPF’s facility-level
adjustments) plus the Federal per diem
payment amount for the case.
In instances when the case qualifies
for an outlier payment, we pay 80
percent of the difference between the
estimated cost for the case and the
adjusted threshold amount for days 1
through 9 of the stay (consistent with
the median LOS for IPFs in FY 2002),
and 60 percent of the difference for day
10 and thereafter. We established the 80
percent and 60 percent loss sharing
ratios because we were concerned that
a single ratio established at 80 percent
(like other Medicare PPSs) might
a. Proposed Update to the Outlier Fixed
Dollar Loss Threshold Amount
In accordance with the update
methodology described in § 412.428(d),
we propose to update the fixed dollar
loss threshold amount used under the
IPF PPS outlier policy. Based on the
regression analysis and payment
simulations used to develop the IPF
PPS, we established a 2 percent outlier
policy which strikes an appropriate
balance between protecting IPFs from
extraordinarily costly cases while
ensuring the adequacy of the Federal
per diem base rate for all other cases
that are not outlier cases.
Based on an analysis of the latest
available data (that is, FY 2013 IPF
claims) and rate increases, we believe it
is necessary to update the fixed dollar
loss threshold amount in order to
maintain an outlier percentage that
equals 2 percent of total estimated IPF
PPS payments.
In the May 2006 IPF PPS final rule (71
FR 27072), we describe the process by
which we calculate the outlier fixed
dollar loss threshold amount. We are
not proposing changes to this process
for FY 2015. We begin by simulating
aggregate payments with and without an
outlier policy, and applying an iterative
process to determine an outlier fixed
dollar loss threshold amount that will
result in estimated outlier payments
being equal to 2 percent of total
estimated payments under the
simulation. Based on this process, using
the FY 2013 claims data, we estimate
that IPF outlier payments as a
percentage of total estimated payments
are approximately 1.9 percent in FY
hospital or CAH’s psychiatric unit, the
IPF receives the 1.19 adjustment factor
as the variable per diem adjustment for
the first day of the patient’s stay in the
IPF.
For FY 2015, we are proposing to
retain the 1.31 adjustment factor for
IPFs with qualifying EDs. A complete
discussion of the steps involved in the
calculation of the ED adjustment factor
appears in the November 2004 IPF PPS
final rule (69 FR 66959 through 66960)
and the May 2006 IPF PPS final rule (71
FR 27070 through 27072).
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2014. Thus, we propose to update the
FY 2015 IPF outlier threshold amount to
ensure that estimated FY 2015 outlier
payments are approximately 2 percent
of total estimated IPF payments. The
outlier fixed dollar loss threshold
amount of $10,245 for FY 2014 would
be changed to $10,125 for FY 2015 to
increase estimated outlier payments and
thereby maintain estimated outlier
payments at 2 percent of total estimated
aggregate IPF payments for FY 2015.
b. Proposed Update to IPF Cost-toCharge Ratio Ceilings
Under the IPF PPS, an outlier
payment is made if an IPF’s cost for a
stay exceeds a fixed dollar loss
threshold amount plus the IPF PPS
amount. In order to establish an IPF’s
cost for a particular case, we multiply
the IPF’s reported charges on the
discharge bill by its overall cost-tocharge ratio (CCR). This approach to
determining an IPF’s cost is consistent
with the approach used under the IPPS
and other PPSs. In the June 2003 IPPS
final rule (68 FR 34494), we
implemented changes to the IPPS policy
used to determine CCRs for acute care
hospitals because we became aware that
payment vulnerabilities resulted in
inappropriate outlier payments. Under
the IPPS, we established a statistical
measure of accuracy for CCRs in order
to ensure that aberrant CCR data did not
result in inappropriate outlier
payments.
As we indicated in the November
2004 IPF PPS final rule (69 FR 66961),
because we believe that the IPF outlier
policy is susceptible to the same
payment vulnerabilities as the IPPS, we
adopted a method to ensure the
statistical accuracy of CCRs under the
IPF PPS. Specifically, we adopted the
following procedure in the November
2004 IPF PPS final rule: We calculated
two national ceilings, one for IPFs
located in rural areas and one for IPFs
located in urban areas. We computed
the ceilings by first calculating the
national average and the standard
deviation of the CCR for both urban and
rural IPFs using the most recent CCRs
entered in the CY 2014 Provider
Specific File.
To determine the rural and urban
ceilings, we multiplied each of the
standard deviations by 3 and added the
result to the appropriate national CCR
average (either rural or urban). The
upper threshold CCR for IPFs in FY
2015 is 1.8823 for rural IPFs, and 1.7049
for urban IPFs, based on CBSA-based
geographic designations. If an IPF’s CCR
is above the applicable ceiling, the ratio
is considered statistically inaccurate
and we assign the appropriate national
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(either rural or urban) median CCR to
the IPF.
We apply the national CCRs to the
following situations:
++ New IPFs that have not yet
submitted their first Medicare cost
report. We continue to use these
national CCRs until the facility’s actual
CCR can be computed using the first
tentatively or final settled cost report.
++ IPFs whose overall CCR is in
excess of 3 standard deviations above
the corresponding national geometric
mean (that is, above the ceiling).
++ Other IPFs for which the MAC
obtains inaccurate or incomplete data
with which to calculate a CCR.
We are not proposing to make any
changes to the application of the
national CCRs or to the procedures for
updating the CCR ceilings in FY 2015.
However, we are proposing to update
the FY 2015 national median and
ceiling CCRs for urban and rural IPFs
based on the CCRs entered in the latest
available IPF PPS Provider Specific File.
Specifically, for FY 2015, and to be used
in each of the three situations listed
above, using the most recent CCRs
entered in the CY 2014 Provider
Specific File we estimate the national
median CCR of 0.6220 for rural IPFs and
the national median CCR of 0.4700 for
urban IPFs. These calculations are based
on the IPF’s location (either urban or
rural) using the CBSA-based geographic
designations.
A complete discussion regarding the
national median CCRs appears in the
November 2004 IPF PPS final rule (69
FR 66961 through 66964).
2. Future Refinements
For RY 2012, we identified several
areas of concern for future refinement
and we invited comments on these
issues in our RY 2012 proposed and
final rules. For further discussion of
these issues and to review the public
comments, we refer readers to the RY
2012 IPF PPS proposed rule (76 FR
4998) and final rule (76 FR 26432).
As we have indicated throughout this
proposed rule, we have delayed making
refinements to the IPF PPS until we
have completed a thorough analysis of
IPF PPS data on which to base those
refinements. Specifically, we explained
that we will delay updating the
adjustment factors derived from the
regression analysis until we have IPF
PPS data that include as much
information as possible regarding the
patient-level characteristics of the
population that each IPF serves. We
have begun the necessary analysis to
better understand IPF industry practices
so that we may refine the IPF PPS as
appropriate. Using more recent data, we
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plan to re-run the regression analyses
and the patient-and facility-level
adjustments. While we are not
proposing refinements in this proposed
rule, we expect that in the rulemaking
for FY 2017 we will be ready to present
the results of our analysis.
VII. Secretary’s Recommendations
Section 1886(e)(4)(A) of the Act
requires the Secretary, taking into
consideration the recommendations of
the Medicare Payment Advisory
Committee (MedPAC), to recommend
update factors for inpatient hospital
services (including IPFs) for each FY
that take into account the amounts
necessary for the efficient and effective
delivery of medically appropriate and
necessary care of high quality. Section
1886(e)(5) of the Act requires the
Secretary to publish the recommended
and final update factors in the Federal
Register.
In the past, the Secretary’s
recommendations and a discussion
about the MedPAC recommendations
for the IPF PPS were included in the
IPPS proposed and final rules. The
market basket update for the IPF PPS
was also included in the IPPS proposed
and final rules, as well as in the IPF PPS
annual update.
Beginning in FY 2013, however, we
have only published the market basket
update for the IPF PPS in the annual IPF
PPS FY update and not in the IPPS
proposed and final rules. In addition,
for any years in which MedPAC makes
recommendations for the IPF PPS, those
recommendations will be addressed in
the IPF PPS update.
MedPAC did not make any
recommendations for the IPF PPS for FY
2015. For the update to the IPF PPS
standard Federal rate for FY 2015, see
section IV B. of this proposed rule.
VIII. Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities
Quality Reporting (IPFQR) Program
1. Statutory Authority
Section 1886(s)(4) of the Act, as added
and amended by sections 3401(f) and
10322(a) of the Affordable Care Act,
requires the Secretary to implement a
quality reporting program for inpatient
psychiatric hospitals and psychiatric
units. Section 1886(s)(4)(A)(i) of the Act
requires that, for rate year (RY) 2014 and
each subsequent rate year, the Secretary
shall reduce any annual update to a
standard Federal rate for discharges
occurring during the rate year by 2.0
percentage points for any inpatient
psychiatric hospital or psychiatric unit
that does not comply with quality data
submission requirements with respect to
an applicable rate year.
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As noted above, section
1886(s)(4)(A)(i) of the Act uses the term
‘‘rate year.’’ Beginning with the annual
update of the inpatient psychiatric
facility prospective payment system
(IPF PPS) that took effect on July 1, 2011
(RY 2012), we aligned the IPF PPS
update with the annual update of the
ICD–9–CM codes, which are effective on
October 1 of each year. The change
allows for annual payment updates and
the ICD–9–CM coding update to occur
on the same schedule and appear in the
same Federal Register document, thus
making updating rules more
administratively efficient. To reflect the
change to the annual payment rate
update cycle, we revised the regulations
at 42 CFR 412.402 to specify that,
beginning October 1, 2012, the rate year
update period would be the 12-month
period of October 1 through September
30, which we refer to as a fiscal year
(FY) (76 FR 26435). For more
information regarding this terminology
change, we refer readers to section III.
of the RY 2012 IPF PPS final rule (76 FR
26434 through 26435).
As provided in section
1886(s)(4)(A)(ii) of the Act, the
application of the reduction for failure
to report under section 1886(s)(4)(A)(i)
of the Act may result in an annual
update of less than 0.0 percent for a
fiscal year, and may result in payment
rates under section 1886(s)(1) of the Act
being less than the payment rates for the
preceding year. In addition, section
1886(s)(4)(B) of the Act requires that the
application of the reduction to a
standard Federal rate update be
noncumulative across fiscal years. Thus,
any reduction applied under section
1886(s)(4)(A) of the Act will apply only
with respect to the fiscal year rate
involved and the Secretary shall not
take into account the reduction in
computing the payment amount under
the system described in section
1886(s)(1) of the Act for subsequent
years.
Section 1886(s)(4)(C) of the Act
requires that, for FY 2014 (October 1,
2013, through September 30, 2014) and
each subsequent year, each psychiatric
hospital and psychiatric unit shall
submit to the Secretary data on quality
measures as specified by the Secretary.
The data shall be submitted in a form
and manner, and at a time, specified by
the Secretary. Under section
1886(s)(4)(D)(i) of the Act, measures
selected for the quality reporting
program must have been endorsed by
the entity with a contract under section
1890(a) of the Act. The National Quality
Forum (NQF) currently holds this
contract.
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Section 1886(s)(4)(D)(ii) of the Act
provides that, in the case of a specified
area or medical topic determined
appropriate by the Secretary for which
a feasible and practical measure has not
been endorsed by the entity with a
contract under section 1890(a) of the
Act, the Secretary may specify a
measure that is not so endorsed as long
as due consideration is given to
measures that have been endorsed or
adopted by a consensus organization
identified by the Secretary. Pursuant to
section 1886(s)(4)(D)(iii) of the Act, the
Secretary shall publish the measures
applicable to the FY 2014 IPFQR
Program no later than October 1, 2012.
Section 1886(s)(4)(E) of the Act
requires the Secretary to establish
procedures for making public the data
submitted by inpatient psychiatric
hospitals and psychiatric units under
the IPFQR Program. These procedures
must ensure that a facility has the
opportunity to review its data prior to
the data being made public. The
Secretary must report quality measures
that relate to services furnished by the
psychiatric hospitals and units on the
CMS Web site.
2. Application of the Payment Update
Reduction for Failure To Report for the
FY 2015 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
Beginning in FY 2014, section
1886(s)(4)(A)(i) of the Act requires the
application of a 2.0 percentage point
reduction to the applicable annual
update to a Federal standard rate for
those psychiatric hospitals and
psychiatric units that fail to comply
with the quality reporting requirements
implemented in accordance with
section 1886(s)(4)(C) of the Act, as
detailed below. The application of the
reduction may result in an annual
update for a fiscal year that is less than
0.0 percent and in payment rates for a
fiscal year being less than the payment
rates for the preceding fiscal year.
Pursuant to section 1886(s)(4)(B) of the
Act, any such reduction is not
cumulative and will apply only to the
fiscal year involved. In the FY 2013
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53678), we adopted requirements
regarding the application of the
payment reduction to the annual update
of the standard Federal rate for failure
to report data on measures selected for
the FY 2014 payment determination and
subsequent years and added new
regulatory text at 42 CFR 412.424 to
codify these requirements.
3. Covered Entities
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (77 FR 53645), we established that
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the IPFQR Program’s quality reporting
requirements cover those psychiatric
hospitals and psychiatric units paid
under Medicare’s IPF PPS (42 CFR
412.404(b)). Generally, psychiatric
hospitals and psychiatric units within
acute care and critical access hospitals
that treat Medicare patients are paid
under the IPF PPS. For more
information on the application of, and
exceptions to, payments under the IPF
PPS, we refer readers to section IV. of
the November 15, 2004 IPF PPS final
rule (69 FR 66926). As we noted in the
FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77
FR 53645), we use the term ‘‘inpatient
psychiatric facility’’ (IPF) to refer to
both inpatient psychiatric hospitals and
psychiatric units. This usage follows the
terminology that we have used in the
past in our IPF PPS regulations (42 CFR
412.402).
4. Considerations in Selecting Quality
Measures
In implementing the IPFQR Program,
our overarching objective is to support
the HHS National Quality Strategy
(NQS) and CMS Quality Strategy’s goal
for better health care for individuals,
better health for populations, and lower
costs for health care services. More
information on the CMS Quality
Strategy can be found at https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/QualityInitiatives-Patient-AssessmentInstruments/QualityInitiativesGenInfo/
CMS-Quality-Strategy.html.
Implementation of the IPFQR Program
works to achieve the goals of the CMS
Quality Strategy by promoting
transparency around the quality of care
provided at IPFs to support patient
decision-making and drive quality
improvement, as well as to further the
alignment of quality measurement and
improvement goals at IPFs with those of
other health care providers.
For purposes of the IPFQR Program,
section 1886(s)(4)(D)(i) of the Act
requires that any measure specified by
the Secretary must have been endorsed
by the entity with a contract under
section 1890(a) of the Act. However, the
statutory requirements under section
1886(s)(4)(D)(ii) of the Act provide an
exception that, in the case of a specified
area or medical topic determined
appropriate by the Secretary for which
a feasible and practical measure has not
been endorsed by the entity with a
contract under section 1890(a) of the
Act, the Secretary may specify a
measure that is not so endorsed
provided due consideration is given to
measures that have been endorsed or
adopted by a consensus organization
identified by the Secretary.
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We seek to collect data in a manner
that balances the need for information
related to the full spectrum of quality
performance and the need to minimize
the burden of data collection and
reporting. We have focused on measures
that have high impact and support CMS
and HHS priorities for improved quality
and efficiency of care provided by IPFs.
We refer readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53645
through 53646) for a detailed discussion
of the considerations taken into account
for measure development and selection.
Measures proposed for the program
were included in a publicly available
document entitled ‘‘List of Measures
under Consideration for December 1,
2013’’ in compliance with section
1890A(a)(2) of the Act, and they were
reviewed by the MAP in its ‘‘MAP PreRulemaking Report: 2014
Recommendations on Measures for
More than 20 Federal Programs,’’ which
is available on the NQF Web site a
https://www.qualityforum.org/Setting_
Priorities/Partnership/Measure_
Applications_Partnership.aspx. We
considered the input and
recommendations provided by the MAP
in selecting measures to propose for the
IPFQR Program at this time.
5. Quality Measures
a. Proposed Quality Measures for the FY
2016 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (77 FR 53646 through 53652), we
adopted six chart-abstracted IPF quality
measures for the FY 2014 payment
determination and subsequent program
years.
We note that, at the time that we
adopted the measures in the FY 2013
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53258), providers were using ICD–9–CM
codes. We are proposing the conversion
of ICD–9–CM to ICD–10–CM/PCS codes
for the IPF PPS in this proposed rule,
but in light of PAMA, the effective date
of those changes would be the date
when ICD–10 becomes the required
medical data code set for use on
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Medicare claims. We do not anticipate
that this change will have substantive
effects on any measures at this time.
CMS will update the user manual,
discussed further in section V below to
reflect any necessary measure updates.
Generally, measures adopted for the
IPFQR Program will remain in the
Program for all subsequent years, unless
and until specifically stated otherwise
(such as, for example, through removal
or replacement).
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (78 FR 50890 through 50895), we
added one new chart-abstracted
measure for the IPFQR Program:
Alcohol Use Screening (SUB–1) (NQF
#1661). We also added one new claimsbased measure: Follow-Up After
Hospitalization for Mental Illness (FUH)
(NQF #0576). Both measures apply to
the FY 2016 payment determination and
subsequent years, unless and until we
change them through future rulemaking.
The table below sets out the
previously adopted measures.
TABLE 12—PREVIOUSLY ADOPTED QUALITY MEASURES FOR THE IPFQR PROGRAM
National quality strategy priority
NQF No.
Patient Safety ...........................................
Measure ID
Clinical Quality of Care .............................
0640
0641
0552
0560
HBIPS–2
HBIPS–3
HBIPS–4
HBIPS–5
Care Coordination ....................................
1661
0576
0557
0558
SUB–1
FUH
HBIPS–6
HBIPS–7
Measure description
Hours of Physical Restraint Use *
Hours of Seclusion Use *
Patients Discharged on Multiple Antipsychotic Medications *
Patients Discharged on Multiple Antipsychotic Medications with
Appropriate Justification *
Alcohol Use Screening **
Follow-Up After Hospitalization for Mental Illness **
Post-Discharge Continuing Care Plan Created *
Post-Discharge Continuing Care Plan Transmitted to Next Level of
Care Provider Upon Discharge *
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* Quality measures adopted in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule for the FY 2014 payment determination and subsequent years.
** Quality measures adopted in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule for the FY 2016 payment determination and subsequent years.
We note that in the FY 2014 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50896
through 50897 and 50900), we also
adopted for the FY 2016 payment
determination and subsequent years a
voluntary collection of information—
IPF Assessment of Patient Experience of
Care (now renamed Assessment of
Patient Experience of Care), which was
to be collected using a Web-Based
Measures Tool, and which would not
affect an IPF’s FY 2016 payment
determination. We also noted that we
intend to propose to make this a
mandatory measure in future
rulemaking (78 FR 50897), which we do
in this proposed rule.
b. Proposed Quality Measures for the FY
2016 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
We are proposing to add two new
measures to the IPFQR Program to those
already adopted for the FY 2016
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payment determination and subsequent
years: (1) Assessment of Patient
Experience of Care; and (2) Use of an
Electronic Health Record. We are not
proposing to remove or replace any of
the previously adopted measures from
the IPFQR Program for FY 2016. These
two measures will be captured in the
IPF Web-based Measure Tool, which
can be accessed through the QualityNet
home page at: https://
www.qualitynet.org/dcs/
ContentServer?pagename=QnetPublic/
Page/QnetHomepage. The Tool will be
updated so when IPFs submit their data
for FY 2016 (between July 1, 2015 and
August 15, 2015) there will be a place
to provide responses to these two
structural measures.
1. Assessment of Patient Experience of
Care
Improvement of experience of care for
patients, families, and caregivers is one
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of our objectives within the CMS
Quality Strategy and is not currently
addressed in the IPFQR Program.
Surveys of individuals about their
experience in all health care settings
provide important information as to
whether or not high-quality, personcentered care is actually provided and
address elements of service delivery that
matter most to recipients of care.
We included the measure ‘‘Inpatient
Consumer Survey (ICS) Consumer
Evaluation of Inpatient Behavioral
Healthcare Services’’ (NQF #0726) in
our ‘‘List of Measures under
Consideration for December 1, 2102.’’
The measure would have gathered
clients’ evaluation of their inpatient care
based on six domains—outcome,
dignity, rights, treatment, environment,
and empowerment. The MAP provided
input on the measure and supported its
inclusion in the IPFQR Program.
However, we did not propose to adopt
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the measure in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH
PPS proposed rule for several reasons,
including potential reporting and
information collection burdens in a new
program, and compatibility with the
content and format of other similar CMS
beneficiary surveys (78 FR 27740 and 78
FR 50896). We also recognized the
challenges of measuring patient
experience of care, particularly for
involuntary cases and geriatric
psychiatric patients suffering from
dementia. In addition, we recognized
that IPFs may have developed their own
survey instruments, which we wanted
to learn more about prior to requiring
collection of a patient experience of care
survey for the IPFQR (78 FR 50897).
Instead, we indicated our intention to
pursue the adoption of a standardized
measure of patient experience of care for
the IPFQR program in the near future.
In the final rule, in an effort to
proceed cautiously with the selection of
an assessment instrument and collection
protocol, and as an intermediate
measure, we implemented a voluntary
collection of information on whether
IPFs administer a detailed assessment of
patient experience of care using a
standardized collection protocol and a
structured instrument. If the IPFs
answered ‘‘Yes,’’ we also asked them to
indicate the name of the survey that
they administer. We indicated our
intention to propose to change this
request for voluntary information into a
mandatory measure in future
rulemaking. We are now proposing to
make this request a required structural
measure for the FY 2016 payment
determination.
The measure ‘‘Inpatient Psychiatric
Facility Routinely Assesses Patient
Experience of Care’’ (now, ‘‘Assessment
of Patient Experience of Care’’) was
included on our ‘‘List of Measures
under Consideration for December 1,
2013.’’ The measure asks IPFs whether
they routinely assess patient experience
of care using a standardized collection
protocol and a structured instrument.
The MAP supported this measure, but
encouraged its eventual replacement
with a robust survey of patient
experience and a measure based on
consumer-reported information, such as
a CAHPS tool. We believe the reporting
of this measure will begin to provide
information on a priority area of the
HHS National Quality Strategy that is
currently unaddressed in the IPFQR
program, that of patient and family
engagement and experience of care.
Further, the information gathered
through the collection of this measure
will be helpful in the development of a
standardized survey of patient
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assessment of care that we intend to
develop as a successor to this measure.
Because this is a structural measure
that does not depend on systems for
collecting and abstracting individual
patient information, only requires
simple attestation, and does not require
extended time to prepare to report, we
believe that it will not be burdensome
to IPFs. Accordingly, we are proposing
to include it as a mandatory measure for
the FY 2016 payment determination, a
year earlier than for other measures
proposed in this rule that are dependent
on these systems.
The proposed measure is currently
not NQF-endorsed. Section
1886(s)(4)(D)(ii) of the Act authorizes
the Secretary to specify a measure that
is not endorsed by the NQF as long as
due consideration is given to measures
that have been endorsed or adopted by
a consensus organization identified by
the Secretary. We attempted to find
available measures that have been
endorsed or adopted by a consensus
organization and found no other feasible
and practical measures on the topic of
patient experience of care for the IPF
setting. Therefore, we believe that the
Assessment of Patient Experience of
Care proposed measure meets the
measure selection exception
requirement under section
1886(s)(4)(D)(ii) of the Act.
2. Use of an Electronic Health Record
(EHR)
In 2009, as part of the Health
Information Technology for Economic
and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act,
incentives were provided to encourage
eligible hospitals and eligible
professionals to adopt EHR systems. The
widespread adoption of these systems
holds the potential to support multiple
goals of CMS’ quality strategy, including
making care safer and more affordable,
and promoting coordination of care.
One review of over a hundred studies of
the effects of EHRs showed that nearly
all demonstrated positive overall
results.1 These results were most
frequently demonstrated in the areas of
efficiency and effectiveness of care,
patient safety and satisfaction, and
process of care.2
Positive results such as these depend
in part on the ways in which an EHR
system is used. EHRs can facilitate the
use of clinical decision support tools,
physician order entry systems, and
health information exchange. The
1 M.B. Buntin, M.F. Burke, M.C. Hoaglin et al.,
‘‘The Benefits of Health Information Technology: A
Review of the Recent Literature Shows
Predominantly Positive Results,’’ Health Affairs,
March 2011 30(3):464–71.
2 Ibid.
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concept of ‘‘meaningful use’’ of EHRs
captures the goals for which incentive
payments are made. These goals
include: Quality improvement, safety,
and efficiency; health disparities
reduction; patient and family
engagement; care coordination
improvement and population health;
and maintenance of the privacy and
security of patient health information.3
We believe that a measure of the
degree of EHR implementation provides
important information about an element
of IPF service delivery shown to be
associated with the delivery of quality
care. Further, we believe that it provides
useful information to consumers and
others in choosing among different
facilities.
A key issue in EHR adoption and
implementation is the use of this
technology to support health
information exchange. HHS has a
number of initiatives designed to
encourage and support the adoption of
health information technology and
promote nationwide health information
exchange to improve health care. The
Office of the National Coordinator for
Health Information Technology (ONC)
and CMS work to promote the adoption
of health information technology.
Through a number of activities, HHS is
promoting the adoption of ONCcertified electronic health records
(EHRs) developed to support secure,
interoperable health information
exchange. While ONC-certified EHRs
are not yet available for IPFQRs and
other providers who are not eligible for
the Medicare and Medicaid EHR
Incentive Programs, ONC has requested
that the HIT Policy Committee (a
Federal Advisory Committee) explore
the expansion of EHR certification
under the ONC HIT Certification
Program, focusing on EHR certification
criteria needed for long-term and postacute care (including LTCHs), and
behavioral health care providers. ONC
has also proposed a Voluntary 2015
Edition EHR Certification rule (79 FR
10880) that would increase the
flexibility in ONC’s regulatory structure
to more easily accommodate health IT
certification for other types of health
care settings where individual or
institutional health care providers are
not typically eligible to qualify for the
Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive
Programs.
We believe that the use of certified
EHRs by IPFs (and other providers
ineligible for the Medicare and
3 HealthIT.gov, ‘‘EHR Incentives & Certification:
Meaningful Use Definition & Objectives.’’ [Internet
Cited 2014 February 11]. Available from https://
www.healthit.gov/providers-professionals/
meaningful-use-definition-objectives.
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Medicaid EHR Incentive programs) can
effectively and efficiently help
providers improve internal care delivery
practices, support the exchange of
important information across care
partners and during transitions of care,
and could enable the reporting of
electronically specified clinical quality
measures (eCQMs) (as described
elsewhere in this rule). More
information on the proposed rule on
voluntary 2015 Edition EHR
Certification, identification of EHR
certification criteria and development of
standards applicable to IPFQRs can be
found at:
• https://www.healthit.gov/policyresearchers-implementers/standardsand-certification-regulations
• https://www.healthit.gov/facas/
FACAS/health-it-policy-committee/
hitpc-workgroups/certificationadoption
• https://wiki.siframework.org/LCC+
LTPAC+Care+Transition+SWG
• https://wiki.siframework.org/Long
itudinal+Coordination+of+Care
We included the measure, ‘‘IPF Use of
an Electronic Health Record Meeting
Stage 1 or Stage 2 Meaningful Use
Criteria’’ (now, ‘‘Use of an Electronic
Health Record’’) in the ‘‘List of
Measures under Consideration for
December 1, 2013.’’ The measure would
assess the degree to which facilities
employ EHR systems in their service
program and use such systems to
support health information exchange at
times of transitions in care. It is a
structural measure that only requires the
facility to attest to which one of the
following statements best describes the
facility’s highest level typical use of an
EHR system (excluding the billing
system) during the reporting period, and
whether this use includes the exchange
of interoperable health information with
a health information service provider:
a. The facility most commonly used
paper documents or other forms of
information exchange (e.g., email) NOT
involving transfer of health information
using EHR technology at times of
transitions in care.
b. The facility most commonly
exchanged health information using
non-certified EHR technology (i.e., not
certified under the ONC HIT
Certification Program) at times of
transitions in care.
c. The facility most commonly
exchanged health information using
certified EHR technology (certified
under the ONC HIT Certification
Program) at times of transitions in care.
We would also ask IPFs to indicate
whether transfers of health information
at times of transitions in care included
the exchange of interoperable health
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information with a health information
service provider (HISP).
In its 2014 report:
(https://www.qualityforum.org/Work
Area/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&Item
ID=74634), the MAP concluded that it
does not support this measure because
it does not adequately address any
current needs of the program. The MAP
noted that psychiatric hospitals were
excluded from the EHR Incentive
Programs and imposing the measure
criteria is not realistic. The MAP also
expressed concerns about using quality
reporting programs to collect data on
systems and infrastructure and
suggested that the American Hospital
Association’s survey of hospitals may be
a better source for this type of data.
We disagree with the MAP’s
contention that the purpose of this
measure is to collect data on systems
and infrastructure. The purpose of the
measure is to assess the use of processes
for the collection, use, and transmission
of medical information that have been
demonstrated to impact the quality of
care, rather than to collect data on
systems and infrastructure. As we have
described above, many studies
document the benefits of EHR use on
multiple dimensions related to health
care quality, and to multiple goals of
CMS’ quality strategy. Additionally, this
is a structural measure that does not
depend on systems for collecting and
abstracting individual patient
information and, therefore, is not
burdensome on IPFs. Accordingly, we
are proposing to adopt it as a measure
for FY 2016 payment determination, a
year earlier than for other measures
proposed in this rule that are dependent
on such systems.
The Use of an Electronic Health
Record proposed measure is not NQFendorsed. Section 1886(s)(4)(D)(ii) of the
Act authorizes the Secretary to specify
a measure that is not endorsed by the
NQF as long as due consideration is
given to measures that have been
endorsed or adopted by a consensus
organization identified by the Secretary.
We attempted to find available measures
that have been endorsed or adopted by
a consensus organization and found no
other feasible and practical measures on
the topic of the degree to which
facilities employ an EHR system in their
program. Therefore, we believe that the
Use of an Electronic Health Record
proposed measure meets the measure
selection exception requirement under
section 1886(s)(4)(D)(ii) of the Act.
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26065
c. Proposed Quality Measures for the FY
2017 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
We are proposing to add four quality
measures to the IPFQR Program for the
FY 2017 payment determination and
subsequent years: (1) Influenza
Immunization (IMM–2); (2) Influenza
Vaccination Coverage Among
Healthcare Personnel; (3) Tobacco Use
Screening (TOB–1); and (4) Tobacco Use
Treatment Provided or Offered (TOB–2)
and Tobacco Use Treatment (TOB–2a).
1. Influenza Immunization (IMM–2)
(NQF #1659)
Increasing influenza (flu) vaccination
can reduce unnecessary hospitalizations
and secondary complications,
particularly among high risk
populations such as the elderly.4 Each
year, approximately 226,000 people in
the U.S. are hospitalized with
complications from influenza, and
between 3,000 and 49,000 die from the
disease and its complications.5
Vaccination is the most effective
method for preventing influenza virus
infection and its potentially severe
complications, and vaccination is
associated with reductions in influenza
among all age groups.6 The Advisory
Committee on Immunization Practices
(ACIP) recommends seasonal influenza
vaccination for all persons six months of
age and older, thereby stressing the
importance of influenza prevention.
Evidence from a Veteran’s Affairs
locked behavioral psychiatric unit with
26 patients and 40 staff during an
influenza outbreak demonstrates
significant room for improvement in
vaccination rates among IPFs.7 In this
study, 54 percent of the patients had not
been vaccinated, and 36 percent of
nonvaccinated patients manifested
symptoms as compared with 25 percent
of vaccinated patients.8 We believe that
the adoption of a measure that assesses
influenza immunization in the IPF
4 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
‘‘People at High Risk of Developing Flu-Related
Complications.’’ [Internet Cited 2014 February 11].
Available from https://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/
disease/high_risk.htm.
5 Thompson W.W., Shay D.K., Weintraub E.,
Brammer L, Cox N, Anderson L.J., Fukuda.
‘‘Mortality associated with influenza and
respiratory syncytial virus in the United States.’’
JAMA. 2003 January 8; 289 (2): 179–186.
6 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Newsroom press release February 24, 2010. ‘‘CDC’s
Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices
(ACIP) Recommends Universal Annual Influenza
Vaccination.’’ [Internet Cited 2010 March 3].
Available from https://www.cdc/media/pressrel/
2010/r100224.htm.
7 Risa K.J., et al. ‘‘Influenza outbreak management
on a locked behavioral health unit.’’ Am J Infect
Control 2009;37:76–8.
8 Ibid.
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setting not only works toward reducing
the rate of influenza infection, but also
affords consumers and others useful
information in choosing among different
facilities.
We included the Influenza
Immunization (NQF #1659) measure in
the ‘‘List of Measures under
Consideration for December 1, 2013.’’
The Influenza Immunization (IMM–2)
chart-abstracted measure assesses
inpatients, age 6 months and older,
discharged during October, November,
December, January, February, or March,
who are screened for influenza
vaccination status and vaccinated prior
to discharge, if indicated. The
numerator includes discharges that were
screened for influenza vaccine status
and were vaccinated prior to discharge,
if indicated. The denominator includes
inpatients, age 6 months and older,
discharged during October, November,
December, January, February, or March.
The measure excludes patients who:
Expire prior to hospital discharge or
have an organ transplant during the
current hospitalization; have a length of
stay greater than 120 days; are
transferred or discharged to another
acute care hospital; or leave Against
Medical Advice (AMA). We refer
readers to https://
www.qualityforum.org/QPS/1659 for
further technical specifications.
The MAP gave conditional support for
the measure, concluding that it is not
ready for implementation because it
needs more experience or testing. In its
2014 final report, the MAP recognized
that influenza immunization is
important for healthcare personnel and
patients, but cautioned that CDC and
CMS need to collaborate on adjusting
specifications for reporting from
psychiatric units before the measure can
be included in the IPFQR Program. CMS
does not agree with this
recommendation. Given previous
experience with the use of this measure
in inpatient settings and the clarity of
specifications for it, CMS does not
believe that additional experience or
testing is needed before implementing
this measure in IPFs, or that
specifications need to be further
adjusted for these facilities. We also
believe that comments concerning
collaboration with CDC largely apply to
the following measure for influenza
vaccination among healthcare
personnel, which is explained in the
discussion for that measure.
We believe that the IMM–2 proposed
measure meets the measure selection
criterion under section 1886(s)(4)(D)(ii)
of the Act. This section provides that, in
the case of a specified area or medical
topic determined appropriate by the
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Secretary for which a feasible and
practical measure has not been endorsed
by the entity with a contract under
section 1890(a) of the Act, the Secretary
may specify a measure that is not so
endorsed as long as due consideration is
given to measures that have been
endorsed or adopted by a consensus
organization identified by the Secretary.
This measure is not NQF-endorsed in
the IPF setting and we could not find
any other comparable measure that is
specifically endorsed for the IPF setting.
However, we believe that this measure
is appropriate for the assessment of the
quality of care furnished by IPFs for the
reasons discussed above. Further, this
measure has been endorsed by NQF for
the ‘‘Hospital/Acute care facility’’
setting. Although not explicitly
endorsed for use in IPF settings, we
believe that the characteristics of IPFs as
distinct part units of hospitals or
freestanding hospitals are similar
enough to hospitals/acute care facilities
that this measure may be appropriately
used in such facilities. Finally, the
adoption of this measure in the IPFQR
Program aligns with the Hospital
Inpatient Quality Reporting (HIQR)
Program, which also includes this
measure in its measure set.
2. Influenza Vaccination Coverage
Among HealthCare Personnel (NQF
#0431)
Healthcare personnel (HCP) can serve
as vectors for influenza transmission
because they are at risk for both
acquiring influenza from patients and
transmitting it to patients, and HCP
often come to work when ill.9 An early
report of HCP influenza infections
during the 2009 H1N1 influenza
pandemic estimated that 50 percent of
infected HCP had contracted the
influenza virus from patients or
coworkers in the health care setting.10
Influenza virus infection is common
among HCP, with evidence suggesting
that nearly one-quarter of HCP were
infected during influenza season, but
few recalled having influenza.11 While
it is difficult to precisely assess HCP
influenza vaccination rates among IPFs
because of varying state policies
9 Wilde J.A., McMillan J.A., Serwint J, et al.
‘‘Effectiveness of influenza vaccine in healthcare
professionals: A randomized trial.’’ JAMA 1999;
281: 908–913.
10 Harriman K, Rosenberg J, Robinson S, et al.
‘‘Novel influenza A (H1N1) virus infections among
health-care personnel—United States, April-May
2009.’’ Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2009; 58(23): 641–
645.
11 Elder AG, O´Donnell B, McCruden EA, et al.
‘‘Incidence and recall of influenza in a cohort of
Glasgow health-care workers during the 1993–4
epidemic: Results of serum testing and
questionnaire.’’ BMJ. 1996; 313:1241–1242.
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requiring hospitals to collect and report
HCP vaccination coverage rates,
evidence from a Veterans Affairs locked
behavioral psychiatric unit with 26
patients and 40 staff during an influenza
outbreak demonstrates significant room
for improvement.12 In this study, only
55 percent of all staff had been
vaccinated, and 22 percent of
nonvaccinated staff manifested
symptoms as compared with 18 percent
of vaccinated staff.13 We believe that the
adoption of a measure that assesses
influenza vaccination among HCP in the
IPF setting not only works toward
improving the rate at which
nonvaccinated HCPs manifest
symptoms as compared with vaccinated
HCPs, but also affords consumers and
others useful information in choosing
among different facilities.
We included the Influenza
Vaccination Coverage Among
Healthcare Personnel (NQF #0431)
measure in the ‘‘List of Measures under
Consideration for December 1, 2013.’’
The proposed measure assesses the
percentage of HCP who receive the
influenza vaccination. The measure is
designed to ensure that reported HCP
influenza vaccination percentages are
consistent over time within a single
healthcare facility, as well as
comparable across facilities. The
numerator includes HCP in the
denominator population who, during
the time from October 1 (or when the
vaccine became available) through
March 31 of the following year:
a. Received an influenza vaccination
administered at the healthcare facility,
or reported in writing (paper or
electronic) or provided documentation
that influenza vaccination was received
elsewhere; or
b. Were determined to have a medical
contraindication/condition of severe
allergic reaction to eggs or to other
component(s) of the vaccine, or history
of Guillain-Barre Syndrome within 6
weeks after a previous influenza
vaccination; or
c. Declined influenza vaccination; or
d. Had an unknown vaccination status
or did not otherwise fall under any of
the abovementioned numerator
categories.
The denominator includes the
number of HCP working in the
healthcare facility for at least one
working day between October 1 and
March 31 of the following year,
regardless of clinical responsibility or
patient contact, and is calculated
12 Risa K.J., et al. ‘‘Influenza outbreak
management on a locked behavioral health unit.’’
Am J Infect Control 2009;37:76–8.
13 Ibid.
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separately for employees, licensed
independent practitioners, and adult
students/trainees and volunteers. The
measure has no exclusions. We refer
readers to https://
www.qualityforum.org/QPS/0431 and
the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention’s (CDC) Web site (https://
www.cdc.gov/nhsn/PDFs/HPS-manual/
vaccination/HPS-flu-vaccineprotocol.pdf) for further technical
specifications.
The MAP gave conditional support for
the measure, concluding that it is not
ready for implementation because it
needs more experience or testing. In its
2014 report, the MAP recognized that
influenza immunization is important for
healthcare personnel and patients, but
cautioned that CDC and CMS need to
collaborate on adjusting specifications
for reporting from psychiatric units
before the measure can be included in
the IPFQR Program. CMS does not agree
with this recommendation. As
explained for the IMM–2 measure, given
previous experience with the use of this
measure and the clarity of its
specifications, CMS does not believe
that additional experience or testing is
needed before implementing this
measure in IPFs, or that specifications
need to be further adjusted for these
facilities. In response to comments
concerning collaboration with CDC,
CDC and CMS have conferred on this
issue and language has been added to
the description of this measure below
that clarifies that IPFs will use the CDC
National Healthcare Safety Network
(NHSN) infrastructure and protocol to
report the measure for IPFQR Program
purposes. Neither CMS nor CDC
believes that there are any coordination
issues remaining for the implementation
of this measure.
We believe that the Influenza
Vaccination Coverage Among
HealthCare Personnel proposed measure
meets the measure selection criterion
under section 1886(s)(4)(D)(ii) of the
Act. This section provides that, in the
case of a specified area or medical topic
determined appropriate by the Secretary
for which a feasible and practical
measure has not been endorsed by the
entity with a contract under section
1890(a) of the Act, the Secretary may
specify a measure that is not so
endorsed as long as due consideration is
given to measures that have been
endorsed or adopted by a consensus
organization identified by the Secretary.
This measure is not NQF-endorsed in
the IPF setting and we could not find
any other comparable measure that is
specifically endorsed for the IPF setting.
However, we believe that this measure
is appropriate for the assessment of the
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quality of care furnished by IPFs for the
reasons discussed above. Further, this
measure has been endorsed by NQF for
the ‘‘Hospital/Acute care facility’’
setting. Although not explicitly
endorsed for use in IPF settings, we
believe that the characteristics of IPFs as
distinct part units of hospitals or
freestanding hospitals mean that this
measure may be appropriately used in
such facilities.
We propose that IPFs use the CDC
National Healthcare Safety Network
(NHSN) infrastructure and protocol to
report the measure for IPFQR Program
purposes. We propose that IPF reporting
of HCP influenza vaccination summary
data to NHSN would begin for the 2015–
2016 influenza season, from October 1,
2015, to March 31, 2016, with a
reporting deadline of May 15, 2016.
Although the collection period for this
measure extends into the first quarter of
the following calendar year, this
measure data would be included with
other measures that would be required
for FY 2017 payment determination.
Similarly, reporting for subsequent
years would include results for the
influenza season that begins in the last
quarter of the applicable calendar year’s
reporting.
The adoption of this measure in
IPFQR will align with both the HIQR
and HOQR Programs. The Influenza
Vaccination Coverage Among
Healthcare Personnel (HCP) (NQF
#0431) measure was finalized for the
Hospital IQR program in the FY 2012
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR
51636), and the Hospital Outpatient
Quality Reporting (HOQR) in the CY
2014 OPPS/ASC final rule (78 FR
75099), and the Ambulatory Surgical
Center Quality Reporting (ASCQR)
Program in the CY 2013 Hospital
Outpatient Prospective Payment final
rule (77 FR 68495).
We are aware of public concerns
about the burden of separately
collecting healthcare personnel (HCP)
influenza vaccination status across
inpatient and outpatient settings, in
particular, distinguishing between the
inpatient and outpatient setting
personnel for reporting purposes. We
also understand that some are unclear
about how the measure would be
reported to CDC’s NHSN.
We believe reporting a single
vaccination count for each healthcare
facility by each individual facility’s
CMS Certification Number (CCN) would
be less burdensome to IPFs than
requiring them to distinguish between
their inpatient and outpatient
personnel. Therefore, we propose that,
beginning with the 2015–2016 influenza
season, IPFs would collect and report all
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26067
HCP under each individual IPF’s CCN
and submit this single number to CDC’s
NHSN. Using the CCN would simplify
data collection for healthcare facilities
with multiple care settings. For each
CMS CCN, a percentage of the HCP who
received an influenza vaccination
would be calculated and publically
reported, so the public would know
what percentage of the HCP have been
vaccinated in each IPF. We believe this
proposal would provide meaningful
data that would help inform the public
and healthcare facilities while
improving the quality of care. Specific
details on data submission for this
measure can be found in an Operational
Guidance available at: https://
www.cdc.gov/nhsn/acute-care-hospital/
hcp-vaccination/ and at https://
www.cdc.gov/nhsn/acute-care-hospital/
index.html.
3. Tobacco Use Screening (TOB–1)
(NQF #1651)
Tobacco use is currently the single
greatest cause of disease in the U.S.,
accounting for more than 435,000
deaths annually.14 Smoking is a known
cause of multiple cancers, heart disease,
stroke, complications of pregnancy,
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease,
other respiratory problems, poorer
wound healing, and many other
diseases.15 This health issue is
especially important for persons with
mental illness and substance use
disorders. One study has estimated that
these individuals are twice as likely to
smoke as the rest of the population, and
account for nearly half of the total
cigarette consumption in the U.S.16
Tobacco use also creates a heavy cost to
both individuals and society. Smokingattributable health care expenditures are
estimated at $96 billion per year in
direct medical expenses and $97 billion
in lost productivity.17
14 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Annual Smoking-Attributable Mortality, Years of
Potential Life Lost, and Productivity Losses—
United States, 2000–2004.’’ Morb Mortal Wkly Rep.
2008. 57(45): 1226–1228. Available at: https://
www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/
mm5745a3.htm.
15 U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services. ‘‘The health consequences of smoking: A
report of the Surgeon General.’’ Atlanta, GA, U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center
for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health
Promotion, Office on Smoking and Health, 2004.
16 Lasser K, Boyd JW, Woolhandler S,
Himmelstein, D.U., McCormick D, Bor D.H.
Smoking and mental illness: A population-based
prevalence study. JAMA. 2000;284(20):2606–2610.
17 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
‘‘Best Practices for Comprehensive Tobacco Control
Programs—2007.’’ Atlanta, GA, Department of
Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, National Center for Chronic
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Strong and consistent evidence
demonstrates that timely tobacco
dependence interventions for patients
using tobacco can significantly reduce
the risk of suffering from tobacco-related
disease, as well as provide improved
health outcomes for those already
suffering from a tobacco-related
disease.18 Research demonstrates that
tobacco users hospitalized with
psychiatric illnesses who enter into
treatment can successfully overcome
their tobacco dependence.19 Evidence
also suggests that tobacco cessation
treatment does not increase, and may
even decrease, the risk of
rehospitalization for tobacco users
hospitalized with psychiatric
illnesses.20 Research further
demonstrates that effective tobacco
cessation support across the care
continuum can be provided with only a
minimal additional effort and without
harm to the mental health recovery
process.21 We believe that the adoption
of a measure that assesses tobacco use
screening among patients of IPFs
encourages the uptake of tobacco
cessation treatment and its attendant
benefits. We further believe that the
reporting of this measure would afford
consumers and others useful
information in choosing among different
facilities.
The Tobacco Use Screening (TOB–1)
chart-abstracted proposed measure
assesses hospitalized patients who are
screened within the first three days of
admission for tobacco use (cigarettes,
smokeless tobacco, pipe, and cigar)
within the previous 30 days. The
numerator includes the number of
patients who were screened for tobacco
use status within the first 3 days of
admission. The denominator includes
the number of hospitalized inpatients 18
years of age and older. The measure
excludes patients who: Are less than 18
years of age; are cognitively impaired;
have a duration of stay less than or
equal to 3 days, or greater than 120
days; or have Comfort Measures Only
documented.
We refer readers to: https://
www.jointcommission.org/
Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Office on
Smoking and Health, 2007.
18 U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services. ‘‘The health consequences of smoking: A
report of the Surgeon General.’’ Atlanta, GA, U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center
for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health
Promotion, Office on Smoking and Health, 2004.
19 Prochaska, J.J., et al. ‘‘Efficacy of Initiating
Tobacco Dependence Treatment in Inpatient
Psychiatry: A Randomized Controlled Trial.’’ Am.
J. Pub. Health. 2013 August 15; e1–e9.
20 Ibid.
21 Ibid.
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specifications_manual_for_national_
hospital_inpatient_quality_
measures.aspx for further details on
measure specifications.
In the ‘‘List of Measure under
Consideration for December 1, 2013,’’
we originally proposed a similar
measure to that proposed here, which
was ‘‘Preventive Care & Screening:
Tobacco Use: Screening & Cessation
Intervention (NQF 0028).’’ However, the
MAP determined that this measure did
not meet the needs of the program and
instead recommended we adopt an
alternate measure from the Joint
Commissions suite of measures for
inpatient settings, which we are now
proposing. This measure, and the
following one (TOB–2 and 2a), best
reflect the activities encompassed by the
original NQF 0028 measure.
The proposed measure was NQFendorsed on March 7, 2014, and meets
the measure selection criterion under
section 1886(s)(4)(D)(i) of the Act.
4. Tobacco Use Treatment Provided or
Offered (TOB–2) and Tobacco Use
Treatment (TOB–2a) (NQF #1654)
As stated in our discussion of the
proposed TOB–1 measure, tobacco use
is currently the single greatest cause of
disease in the U.S. We also indicated
that research demonstrates that timely
tobacco cessation treatment for
hospitalized tobacco users with
psychiatric illnesses may decrease the
risk of rehospitalization, have only a
minimal additional effort, and not harm
the mental health recovery process. We
believe that the adoption of a measure
that assesses tobacco use screening
treatment among IPFs encourages the
uptake of tobacco cessation treatment
and its attendant benefits. We further
believe that the reporting of this
measure would afford consumers and
others useful information in choosing
among different facilities.
The Tobacco Use Treatment Provided
or Offered (TOB–2) and Tobacco Use
Treatment (TOB–2a) chart-abstracted
proposed measure is reported as an
overall rate that includes all patients to
whom tobacco use treatment was
provided, or offered and refused, and a
second rate, a subset of the first, which
includes only those patients who
received tobacco use treatment. The
overall rate, TOB–2, assesses patients
identified as tobacco product users
within the past 30 days who receive or
refuse practical counseling to quit, and
receive or refuse Food and Drug
Administration (FDA)-approved
cessation medications during the first 3
days following admission. The
numerator includes the number of
patients who received or refused
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
practical counseling to quit, and
received or refused FDA-approved
cessation medications during the first 3
days after admission.
The second rate, TOB–2a, assesses
patients who received counseling and
medication, as well as those who
received counseling and had reason for
not receiving the medication during the
first 3 days following admission. The
numerator includes the number of
patients who received practical
counseling to quit and received FDAapproved cessation medications during
the first 3 days after admission.
The denominator for both TOB–2 and
TOB–2a includes the number of
hospitalized inpatients 18 years of age
and older identified as current tobacco
users. The measure excludes patients
who: Are less than 18 years of age; are
cognitively impaired; are not current
tobacco users; refused or were not
screened for tobacco use during the
hospital stay; have a duration of stay
less than or equal to 3 days, or greater
than 120 days; or have Comfort
Measures Only documented.
We refer readers to:https://
www.jointcommission.org/
specifications_manual_for_national_
hospital_inpatient_quality_
measures.aspx for further details on
measure specifications.
As with the proposed TOB–1
measure, and for the same reasons, we
are proposing this measure on the
recommendation of the MAP.
The proposed measure was NQFendorsed on March 7, 2014, and meets
the measure selection criteria under
section 1886(s)(4)(D)(i) of the Act. We
also note that we are not proposing to
adopt at this time two other tobacco
treatment measures that are part of the
set from which TOB–1, TOB–2 and
TOB2a are taken. This is because the
two measures we are proposing best
encompass the activities that we
originally proposed to measure through
the use of the NQF 0028 measure, and
best assess activities demonstrated to
produce positive results in tobacco use
reduction. Additionally, we believe that
the other measures represent a
significantly greater collection and
reporting burden. We welcome
comments on this choice as well as any
other alternatives for measurement of
this area.
d. Summary of Proposed Measures
In addition to the eight measures that
we previously finalized for the IPFQR
Program, we are proposing two
additional new measures for reporting
for the FY 2016 payment determination
and subsequent years. We are also
proposing four additional new measures
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for the FY 2017 payment determination
and subsequent years. The tables below
list the proposed new measures for the
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FY 2016 and FY 2017 payment
determinations and subsequent years.
TABLE 13—PROPOSED NEW QUALITY MEASURES FOR THE IPFQR PROGRAM FOR FY 2016 PAYMENT DETERMINATION
AND SUBSEQUENT YEARS
National quality strategy priority
NQF No.
Measure ID
Patient- and Caregiver-Centered Experience of Care ....
Effective Communication and Coordination of Care ......
N/A ..............
N/A ..............
N/A ..............
N/A ..............
Measure description
Assessment of Patient Experience of Care.
Use of an Electronic Health Record.
TABLE 14—PROPOSED NEW QUALITY MEASURES FOR THE IPFQR PROGRAM FOR FY 2017 PAYMENT DETERMINATION
AND SUBSEQUENT YEARS
National quality strategy priority
NQF No.
Measure ID
Measure description
Population/Community Health .........................................
Population/Community Health .........................................
1659 ............
0431 ............
IMM–2 .........
N/A ..............
Clinical Quality of Care ...................................................
Clinical Quality of Care ...................................................
1651 ............
1654 ............
TOB–1 .........
TOB–2 .........
TOB–2a
Influenza Immunization.
Influenza Vaccination Coverage Among Healthcare
Personnel.
Tobacco Use Screening.
Tobacco Use Treatment Provided or Offered and Tobacco Use Treatment.
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We welcome public comments on the
Assessment of Patient Experience of
Care, Use of an Electronic Health
Record, IMM–2, Influenza Vaccination
Coverage Among Healthcare Personnel,
TOB–1, and TOB–2 proposed measures.
e. Additional Proposed Procedural
Requirements for the FY 2017 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
In addition to the quality measures
that we have described above, we are
proposing that IPFs must, beginning
with reporting for the FY 2017 payment
determination, submit to CMS aggregate
population counts for Medicare and
non-Medicare discharges by age group,
diagnostic group, and quarter, and
sample size counts for measures for
which sampling is performed (as is
allowed for in HBIPS–4–7, and SUB–1).
These requirements are separate from
those described under subsection c of
the section entitled ‘‘Form, Manner, and
Timing of Quality Data Submission.’’
That subsection describes the
population, sample size, and minimum
reporting case threshold requirements
for individual measures, while this
section describes the collection of
general population and sampling data
that will assist in determining
compliance with those requirements.
We believe that it is vital for IPFs to
accurately determine and submit to
CMS their population and sampling size
data in order for CMS to assess IPFs’
data reporting completeness for their
total population, both Medicare and
non-Medicare. In addition to helping us
better assess the quality and
completeness of measure data, we
expect that this information will
improve our ability to assess the
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relevance and impact of potential future
measures. For example, understanding
that the size of subgroups of patients
addressed by a particular measure varies
greatly over time could be helpful in
assessing the stability of reported
measure values, and subsequent
decisions concerning measure retention.
Similarly, better understanding of the
size of particular subgroups in the
overall population will assist us in
making choices among potential future
measures specific to a particular
subgroup (e.g., those with depression).
We further propose that the form,
manner, and timing of this submission
would follow the policies discussed at
section VIII. of this preamble, and that
failure to provide this information
would be subject to the 2.0 percentage
point reduction in the annual update for
any IPF that does not comply with
quality data submission requirements,
pursuant to section 1886(s)(4)(A)(i) of
the Act.
f. Maintenance of Technical
Specifications for Quality Measures
We will provide a user manual that
will contain links to measure
specifications, data abstraction
information, data submission
information, a data submission
mechanism known as the Web-based
Measures Tool, and other information
necessary for IPFs to participate in the
IPFQR Program. This manual will be
posted on the QualityNet Web site at:
https://www.qualitynet.org/dcs/Content
Server?c=Page&pagename=Qnet
Public%2FPage%2FQnetTier2&cid=
1228772250192. We will maintain the
technical specifications for the quality
measures by updating this manual
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periodically and including detailed
instructions for IPFs to use when
collecting and submitting data on the
required measures. These updates will
be accompanied by notifications to
IPFQR Program participants, providing
sufficient time between the change and
effective dates in order to allow users to
incorporate changes and updates to the
measure specifications into data
collection systems.
Many of the quality measures used in
different Medicare and Medicaid
reporting programs are endorsed by the
National Quality Forum (NQF). As part
of its regular maintenance process for
endorsed performance measures, the
NQF requires measure stewards to
submit annual measure maintenance
updates and undergo maintenance of
endorsement review every 3 years. In
the measure maintenance process, the
measure steward (owner/developer) is
responsible for updating and
maintaining the currency and relevance
of the measure and will confirm existing
or minor specification changes with
NQF on an annual basis. NQF solicits
information from measure stewards for
annual reviews, and it reviews measures
for continued endorsement in a specific
3-year cycle.
We note that NQF’s annual or
triennial maintenance processes for
endorsed measures may result in the
NQF requiring updates to the measures
in order to maintain endorsement status.
We believe that it is important to have
in place a subregulatory process to
incorporate nonsubstantive updates
required by the NQF into the measure
specifications we have adopted for the
HAC Reduction Program, so that these
measures remain up-to-date.
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The NQF regularly maintains its
endorsed measures through annual and
triennial reviews, which may result in
the NQF making updates to the
measures. We believe that it is
important to have in place a
subregulatory process to incorporate
non-substantive updates required by the
NQF into the measure specifications we
have adopted for the IPFQR Program so
that these measures remain up-to-date.
We also recognize that some changes the
NQF might require to its endorsed
measures are substantive in nature and
might not be appropriate for adoption
using a subregulatory process.
Therefore, in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (77 FR 53503 through
53505), we finalized a policy under
which we will use a subregulatory
process to make only non-substantive
updates to measures used for the IPFQR
Program (77 FR 53653). With respect to
what constitutes substantive versus nonsubstantive changes, we expect to make
this determination on a case-by-case
basis. Examples of non-substantive
changes to measures might include
updated diagnosis or procedure codes,
medication updates for categories of
medications, broadening of age ranges,
and exclusions for a measure (such as
the addition of a hospice exclusion to
the 30-day mortality measures). We
believe that non-substantive changes
may include updates to NQF-endorsed
measures based upon changes to
guidelines upon which the measures are
based. As stated in the FY 2013 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule, we will revise the
manual so that it clearly identifies the
updates and provides links to where
additional information on the updates
can be found. We will also post the
updates on the QualityNet Web site at
https://www.QualityNet.org. We will
provide 6 months for facilities to
implement changes where changes to
the data collection systems would be
necessary.
We will continue to use rulemaking to
adopt substantive updates required by
the NQF to the endorsed measures we
have adopted for the IPFQR Program.
Examples of changes that we might
consider to be substantive would be
those in which the changes are so
significant that the measure is no longer
the same measure, or when a standard
of performance assessed by a measure
becomes more stringent (for example:
Changes in acceptable timing of
medication, procedure/process, or test
administration). Another example of a
substantive change would be where the
NQF has extended its endorsement of a
previously endorsed measure to a new
setting, such as extending a measure
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from the inpatient setting to hospice.
These policies regarding what is
considered substantive versus nonsubstantive would apply to all measures
in the IPFQR Program. We also note that
the NQF process incorporates an
opportunity for public comment and
engagement in the measure maintenance
process.
We believe this policy adequately
balances our need to incorporate
technical updates to all IPFQR Program
measures in the most expeditious
manner possible while preserving the
public’s ability to comment on updates
that so fundamentally change an
endorsed measure that it is no longer
the same measure that we originally
adopted. We invite public comments on
this proposal.
6. New Quality Measures for Future
Years
As we have previously indicated, we
seek to develop a comprehensive set of
quality measures to be available for
widespread use for informed decisionmaking and quality improvement in the
inpatient psychiatric facilities setting.
Therefore, through future rulemaking,
we intend to propose new measures that
will help further our goal of achieving
better health care and improved health
for Medicare beneficiaries who obtain
inpatient psychiatric services through
the widespread dissemination and use
of quality information.
As part of the 2013 Measures under
Consideration (https://www.quality
forum.org/Setting_Priorities/
Partnership/Measures_Under_
Consideration_List.aspx), we identified
ten possible measures for the IPFQR
Program. We have proposed four of
these measures for adoption in this
proposed rule. Five of the measures are
currently undergoing testing, and we
anticipate that one or more would be
proposed for adoption in the near
future. These measures are:
• Suicide Risk Screening completed
within one day of admission
• Violence Risk Screening completed
within one day of admission
• Drug Use Screening completed within
one day of admission
• Alcohol Use Screening completed
within one day of admission
• Metabolic Screening
We also are currently planning to
develop a 30-day psychiatric
readmission measure. Similar to
readmission measures currently in use
for other CMS quality reporting
programs such as the Hospital Inpatient
Quality Reporting Program, we envision
that this measure would encompass all
30-day readmissions for discharges from
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IPFs, including readmissions for nonpsychiatric diagnoses. Additionally, we
intend to develop a standardized survey
of patient experience of care tailored for
use in inpatient psychiatric settings, but
also sharing elements with similar
surveys in use in other CMS reporting
programs.
We further anticipate that we will
recommend additional measures for
development or adoption in the future.
We intend to develop a measure set that
effectively assesses IPF quality across
the range of services and diagnoses,
encompasses all of the goals of the CMS
quality strategy, addresses measure gaps
identified by the MAP and others, and
minimizes collection and reporting
burden. Finally, we may propose the
removal of some measures in the future,
should one or more no longer reflect
significant variation in quality among
IPFs, or prove to be less effective than
alternative measures in measuring the
intended focus area.
We welcome public comments on any
aspect of these plans for measure
development, recommendations for
adoption of other measures for the
IPFQR Program, particularly related to
measures of access, or suggestions for
domains or topics for future measure
development.
7. Proposed Public Display and Review
Requirements
Section 1886(s)(4)(E) of the Act
requires the Secretary to establish
procedures for making the data
submitted under the IPFQR Program
available to the public. The statute also
requires that these procedures shall
ensure that an IPF has the opportunity
to review the data that is to be made
public with respect to the IPF prior to
the data being made public.
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (78 FR 50897 through 50898), we
adopted our proposal to change our
policies to better align the IPFQR
Program preview and display periods
with those under the Hospital IQR
Program. For the FY 2014 payment
determination and subsequent years, we
adopted our proposed policy to publicly
display the submitted data on a CMS
Web site in April of each calendar year
following the start of the respective
payment determination year. In other
words, the public display period for the
FY 2014 payment determination would
be April 2014; the public display
periods for the FY 2015 and FY 2016
payment determinations would be April
2015 and April 2016 respectively, and
so forth. We also adopted our proposed
policy that the preview period for the
FY 2014 payment determination and
subsequent years be modified from
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September 20 through October 19 (78
FR 50898) to 30 days, approximately
twelve weeks prior to the public display
of the data. The table below sets out the
public display timeline.
TABLE 15—PUBLIC DISPLAY TIMELINE
Payment determination
(fiscal year)
Reporting period
(calendar year)
2015 ................................................
2016 ................................................
2017 ................................................
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
2013
2013
2013
2014
2014
2014
2014
2015
2015
2015
2015
Although we have listed the public
display timeline only for the FY 2015
through FY 2017 payment
determinations, we wish to clarify that
this policy applies to the FY 2015
payment determination and subsequent
years. We are not proposing any changes
to these policies.
8. Form, Manner, and Timing of Quality
Data Submission
a. Procedural and Submission
Requirements
Section 1886(s)(4)(C) of the Act
requires that, for the FY 2014 payment
determination and subsequent years,
each IPF shall submit to the Secretary
data on quality measures as specified by
the Secretary. Such data shall be
submitted in a form and manner, and at
a time, specified by the Secretary. As
required by section 1886(s)(4)(A) of the
Act, for any IPF that fails to submit
quality data in accordance with section
1886(s)(4)(C) of the Act, the Secretary
will reduce the annual update to a
standard Federal rate for discharges
occurring in such fiscal year by 2.0
percentage points. In the FY 2013 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53655
through 53656), we finalized a policy
requiring that IPFs submit aggregate
data on measures on an annual basis via
the Web-Based Measures Tool found in
the IPF section on the QualityNet Web
Public display
(calendar year)
(April 1, 2013–June 30, 2013) .............................................................................
(July 1, 2013–September 30, 2013).
(October 1, 2013–December 31, 2013).
(January 1, 2014–March 31, 2014) .....................................................................
(April 1, 2014–June 30, 2014).
(July 1, 2014–September 30, 2014).
(October 1, 2014–December 31, 2014).
(January 1, 2015–March 31, 2015) .....................................................................
(April 1, 2015–June 30, 2015).
(July 1, 2015–September 30, 2015).
(October 1, 2015–December 31, 2015).
site. The complete data submission
requirements, submission deadlines,
and data submission mechanism,
known as the Web-Based Measures
Tool, are posted on the QualityNet Web
site at: https://www.qualitynet.org/. The
data input forms on the QualityNet Web
site for submission require aggregate
data for each separate quarter.
Therefore, IPFs need to track and
maintain quarterly records for their
data. In that final rule, we also clarified
that this policy applies to all subsequent
years, unless and until we change our
policy through future rulemaking.
In order to participate in the IPFQR
Program, in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (77 FR 53654 through
53655) and in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (77 FR 50898 through
50899), we required IPFs to comply
with certain procedural requirements.
We refer readers to the FY 2014 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 50898
through 50899) for further details on
specific procedural requirements.
We are not proposing any changes to
this policy.
b. Reporting Periods and Submission
Timeframes
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (77 FR 53655 through 53657), we
established reporting periods and
submission timeframes for the FY 2014,
April 2015.
April 2016.
April 2017.
FY 2015, and FY 2016 payment
determinations, but we did not require
any data validation approach. However,
as we stated in that final rule, we
encourage IPFs to use a validation
method and conduct their own analysis.
In that final rule, we also explained that
the reporting periods for the FY 2014
and FY 2015 payment determinations
were 6 and 9 months, respectively, to
allow us to achieve a 12-month
(calendar year) reporting period for the
FY 2016 payment determination. In the
FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78
FR 50901), we clarified that the policy
we adopted for the FY 2016 payment
determination also applies to the FY
2017 payment determination and
subsequent years unless we change it
through rulemaking. We also indicated
that the submission timeframe is
between July 1 and August 15 of the
calendar year in which the applicable
payment determination year begins.
We are not proposing any changes to
this submission timeframe, which we
finalized in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule for all future payment
determinations. IPFs will have the
opportunity to review and correct data
that they have submitted during the
entirety of July 1–August 15. We have
summarized this information in the
table below.
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TABLE 16—QUALITY REPORTING PERIODS AND SUBMISSION TIMEFRAMES FOR THE FY 2015 PAYMENT DETERMINATION
AND SUBSEQUENT YEARS
Payment determination
(fiscal year)
Reporting period for services provided
(calendar year)
Data submission timeframe
Quality Reporting Periods and Submission Timeframes for the FY 2015 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
FY 2015 ...................................
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Q2 2013 (April 1, 2013–June 30, 2013) ...........................................................
Q3 2013 (July 1, 2013–September 30, 2013).
Q4 2013 (October 1, 2013–December 31, 2013).
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July 1, 2014–August 15, 2014.
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TABLE 16—QUALITY REPORTING PERIODS AND SUBMISSION TIMEFRAMES FOR THE FY 2015 PAYMENT DETERMINATION
AND SUBSEQUENT YEARS—Continued
Payment determination
(fiscal year)
Reporting period for services provided
(calendar year)
FY 2016 ...................................
FY 2017 ...................................
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
2014
2014
2014
2014
2015
2015
2015
2015
Data submission timeframe
(January 1, 2014–March 31, 2014) ...................................................
(April 1, 2014–June 30, 2014).
(July 1, 2014–September 30, 2014).
(October 1, 2014–December 31, 2014).
(January 1, 2015–March 31, 2015) ...................................................
(April 1, 2015–June 30, 2015).
(July 1, 2015–September 30, 2015).
(October 1, 2015–December 31, 2015).
We have adopted the timeframes
discussed above for all future payment
years of the program, and these
timeframes will remain in place unless
and until we change them through
future rulemaking. Therefore, our policy
with respect to reporting timeframes is
that the reporting period is the calendar
year preceding the calendar year in
which the payment determination year
begins. The data submission timeframe
is between July 1 and August 15 of the
calendar year in which the applicable
payment determination year begins. We
will continue to provide charts with the
specific reporting and data submission
timeframes for future years as we
approach those years.
c. Population, Sampling, and Minimum
Case Threshold
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (77 FR 53657 through 53658), for
the FY 2014 payment determination and
subsequent years, we finalized our
proposed policy that participating IPFs
must meet specific population, sample
size, and minimum reporting case
threshold requirements as specified in
TJC’s Specifications Manual. We refer
readers to the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (78 FR 58901 through 58902).
We are not proposing any changes to
this policy. We refer participating IPFs
to TJC’s Specifications Manual (https://
manual.jointcommission.org/bin/view/
Manual/WebHome) for measure-specific
population, sampling, and minimum
case threshold requirements.
July 1, 2015–August 15, 2015.
July 1, 2016–August 15, 2016.
d. Data Accuracy and Completeness
Acknowledgement (DACA)
Requirements
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (77 FR 53658), we finalized our
proposed DACA policy for the FY 2014
payment determination and subsequent
years. We refer readers to that final rule
for further details on DACA policies.
We are not proposing any changes to
the quarterly reporting periods and
DACA deadline. Therefore, we will
continue our adopted policy that the
deadline for submission of the DACA
form is no later than August 15 prior to
the applicable IPFQR Program payment
determination year. The table below
summarizes these policies and
timeframes.
TABLE 17—DACA SUBMISSION DEADLINE
Payment
determination
(fiscal year)
2015 ..................
2016 ..................
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2017 ..................
Reporting period for services provided
(calendar year)
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
2013
2013
2013
2014
2014
2014
2014
2015
2015
2015
2015
(April 1, 2013–June 30, 2013) .....................
(July 1, 2013–September 30, 2013).
(October 1, 2013–December 31, 2013).
(January 1, 2014–March 31, 2014) .............
(April 1, 2014–June 30, 2014).
(July 1, 2014–September 30, 2014).
(October 1, 2014–December 31, 2014).
(January 1, 2015–March 31, 2015) .............
(April 1, 2015–June 30, 2015).
(July 1, 2015–September 30, 2015).
(October 1, 2015–December 31, 2015).
We would like to clarify that the
DACA policies adopted in the FY 2013
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule will continue
to apply for the FY 2014 payment
determination and subsequent years
unless and until we change these
policies through our rulemaking
process.
9. Reconsideration and Appeals
Procedures
Submission
timeframe
DACA
deadline
Public
display
July 1, 2014–August 15, 2014 .......
August 15, 2014
April 2015.
July 1, 2015–August 15, 2015 .......
August 15, 2015
April 2016.
July 1, 2016–August 15, 2016 .......
August 15, 2016
April 2017.
codified at 42 CFR 412.434, whereby
IPFs can request a reconsideration of
their payment update reduction in the
event that an IPF believes that its annual
payment update has been incorrectly
reduced for failure to report quality data
under the IPFQR Program. We refer
readers to that final rule, as well as the
FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78
FR 50903), for further details on the
reconsideration process.
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (77 FR 53658 through 53659), we
adopted a reconsideration process, later
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10. Exceptions to Quality Reporting
Requirements
In our experience with other quality
reporting and/or performance programs,
we have noted occasions where
participants have been unable to submit
required quality data due to
extraordinary circumstances that are not
within their control (for example,
natural disasters). It is our goal to avoid
penalizing IPFs in these circumstances
or unduly increasing their burden
during these times. Therefore, in the FY
2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
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53659 through 53660), we adopted a
policy that, for the FY 2014 payment
determination and subsequent years,
IPFs may request, and we may grant, an
exception with respect to the reporting
of required quality data where
extraordinary circumstances beyond the
control of the IPF may warrant. We wish
to clarify that use of the term
‘‘exception’’ in this proposed rule is
synonymous with the term ‘‘waiver’’ as
used in previous rules. We are in the
process of revising the Extraordinary
Circumstances/Disaster Extension or
Waiver Request form (CMS–10432),
approved under OMB control number
0938–1171. Revisions to the form are
being addressed in the FY 2015
Inpatient Prospective Payment System
(IPPS) rule (RIN 0938–AS11; CMS–
1607–P) in the section entitled
‘‘Hospital IQR Program Extraordinary
Circumstances Extensions or
Exemptions’’. These efforts will work to
facilitate alignment across CMS quality
reporting programs.
When an exception is granted, IPFs
will not incur payment reductions for
failure to comply with IPFQR Program
requirements. This process does not
preclude us from granting exceptions,
including extensions, to IPFs that have
not requested them, should we
determine that an extraordinary
circumstance affects an entire region or
locale. We refer readers to the FY 2013
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53659
through 53660), as well as the FY 2014
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR
50903), for further details on this
process. We are not proposing any
changes to this process.
For the FY 2016 payment
determination and subsequent years, we
are proposing to add an Extraordinary
Circumstances Exception to the IPFQR
Program in order to align with similar
exceptions provided for in other CMS
quality reporting programs. Under this
exception, we are proposing that we
may grant a waiver or extension to IPFs
if we determine that a systemic problem
with one of our data collection systems
directly affects the ability of the IPFs to
submit data. Because we do not
anticipate that these types of systemic
errors will occur often, we do not
anticipate granting a waiver or
extension on this basis frequently. If we
make the determination to grant a
waiver or extension, we are proposing to
communicate this decision through
routine communication channels to
IPFs, vendors, and quality improvement
organizations (QIOs) by means of, for
example, memoranda, emails, and
notices on the QualityNet Web site.
We welcome public comment on this
proposal.
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IX. Collection of Information
Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995, we are required to provide 60day notice in the Federal Register and
solicit public comment before a
collection of information requirement is
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) for review and
approval. In order to fairly evaluate
whether an information collection
should be approved by OMB, section
3506(c)(2)(A) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 requires that we
solicit comment on the following issues:
• The need for the information
collection and its usefulness in carrying
out the proper functions of our agency.
• The accuracy of our estimate of the
information collection burden.
• The quality, utility, and clarity of
the information to be collected.
• Recommendations to minimize the
information collection burden on the
affected public, including automated
collection techniques.
We are soliciting public comment on
each of the section 3506(c)(2)(A)required issues for the following
information collection requirements
(ICRs):
A. ICRs Regarding the Inpatient
Psychiatric Facilities Quality Reporting
(IPFQR) Program
This section IX.A sets out the
estimated burden (hours and cost) for
inpatient psychiatric facilities (IPFs) to
comply with the reporting requirements
proposed in this NPRM. It also restates
the burden estimated in the FY 2013
and FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rules.
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (77 FR 53644), we finalized policies
to implement the IPFQR Program. The
Program implements the statutory
requirements of section 1886(s)(4) of the
Social Security Act, as added by
sections 3401(f) and 10322(a) of the
Affordable Care Act. One program
priority is to help achieve better health
and better health care for individuals
through the collection of valid, reliable,
and relevant measures of quality health
care data. The data will be publicly
posted and, therefore, available for use
in improving health care quality which,
in turn, works to further program goals.
IPFs can use this quality data for many
purposes, including in their risk
management programs, patient safety
and quality improvement initiatives,
and research and development of
mental health programs, among others.
As clarified throughout the FY 2014
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR
50887), policies finalized in prior rules
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26073
will apply to FY 2015 unless and until
we change them through future
rulemaking. The burden on IPFs
includes the time used for chart
abstraction and for personnel training
on the collection of chart-abstracted
data, the aggregation of data, as well as
training for the submission of aggregatelevel data through QualityNet. We note
that, beginning in the FY 2016 payment
determination, as set out in this
proposed rule, we have proposed to
adopt the Assessment of Patient
Experience of Care measure, thereby
removing the request for voluntary
information adopted in the FY 2014
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule.
Based on current participation rates,
we estimate that there will be
approximately 574 fewer IPF facilities
(or 1,626 facilities) nationwide eligible
to participate in the IPFQR Program.
Based on previous measure data
submission, we further estimate that the
average facility submits measure data on
556 cases per year. In total, this
calculates to 904,056 cases (aggregate)
per year.
In section V of this preamble, we are
proposing that, for the FY 2016 payment
determination and subsequent years,
IPFs must submit data on the following
proposed new measures: Assessment of
Patient Experience of Care, and Use of
an Electronic Health Record. Because
both of these measures require only an
annual acknowledgement, we anticipate
a negligible additional burden on IPFs.
In the same section of this preamble,
we are proposing that, for the FY 2017
payment determination and subsequent
years, IPFs must submit aggregate data
on the following proposed new
measures: Influenza Immunization
(IMM–2), Influenza Vaccination
Coverage Among Healthcare Personnel,
Tobacco Use Screening (TOB–1), and
Tobacco Use Treatment Provided or
Offered (TOB–2) and Tobacco Use
Treatment (TOB–2a).
We estimate that the average time
spent for chart abstraction per patient
for each of these proposed measures is
approximately 15 minutes. Assuming an
approximately uniform sampling
methodology, we estimate (based on
prior Program data) that the annual
burden for reporting the IMM–2
measure would be 139 hours per year of
annual effort per facility (556 × 0.25).
This same calculation also applies to the
TOB–1, and TOB–2 and TOB–2a
proposed measures. The Influenza
Vaccination Coverage Among
Healthcare Personnel proposed measure
does not allow sampling; therefore, we
anticipate that the average facility
would be required to abstract
approximately 40 healthcare personnel,
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totaling an annual effort per facility of
10 hours (40 × 0.25). We anticipate no
measurable burden for the Inpatient
Psychiatric Facility Routinely Assesses
Patient Experience of Care measure and
the Use of an Electronic Health Record
measure because both require only
attestation.
In total, for proposed measures, we
estimate an additional 427 hours of
annual effort per facility for the FY 2017
payment determination and subsequent
years. The following table summarizes
the estimated hours (per facility) for
each measure.
TABLE 18—ESTIMATED ANNUAL EFFORT PER FACILITY
Estimated
cases
(per facility)
Measure
Effort
(per case)
Annual effort
(per facility)
Assessment of Patient Experience of Care ..........................................................................
Use of an Electronic Health Record ......................................................................................
IMM–2 ....................................................................................................................................
Influenza Vaccination Coverage Among Healthcare Personnel ...........................................
TOB–1 ....................................................................................................................................
TOB–2, TOB–2a ....................................................................................................................
*0
*0
556
40
556
556
* n/a
* n/a
** 1⁄4
** 1⁄4
** 1⁄4
** 1⁄4
*0
*0
139
10
139
139
Total ................................................................................................................................
..............................
........................
427
* New non-measurable attestation burden.
** Hour.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics wage
estimate for health care workers that are
known to engage in chart abstraction is
$31.71/hour. To account for overhead
and fringe benefits we have doubled this
estimate to $63.42/hour. Considering
the 427 hours of annual effort (per
facility) for the FY 2017 payment
determination and subsequent years, the
annual cost is approximately $27,080.34
(63.42 × 427). Across all 1,626 IPFs, the
aggregate total is $44,032,632.84 (1,626
× 27,080.34).
The estimated burden for training
personnel for data collection and
submission for current and future
measures is 2 hours per facility. The
cost for this training, based on an hourly
rate of $63.42, is $126.84 training costs
for each IPF (63.42 × 2), which totals
$206,241.84 for all facilities (1,626 ×
126.84).
Using an estimated 1,626 IPFs
nationwide that are eligible for
participation in the IPFQR Program, we
estimate that the annual hourly burden
for the collection, submission, and
training of personnel for submitting all
quality measures is approximately 429
hours (per IPF) or 697,554 (aggregate)
per year. The all-inclusive measure cost
for each facility is approximately
$27,207.18 (27,080.34 + 126.84) and for
all facilities we estimate a cost of
$44,238,874.68 (44,032,632.84 +
206,241.84).
In section V of this preamble, for the
FY 2017 payment determination, we are
proposing that IPFs submit to CMS
aggregate population counts for
Medicare and non-Medicare discharges
by age group, diagnostic group, and
quarter, and sample size counts for
measures for which sampling is
performed (as is allowed for in HBIPS–
4 through–7, and SUB–1). We estimate
that it will take each facility
approximately 2.5 hours to comply with
this requirement. The burden across all
1,626 IPFs calculates to 4,065 hours
annually (2.5 × 1,626) at a total of
$257,802.30 (4,065 × 63.42) or $158.55
per IPF (2.5 × 63.42).
The following tables set out the total
estimated burden that IPFs would incur
to comply with the proposed reporting
requirements for both measure and nonmeasure data for the FY 2016 and FY
2017 payment determinations.
TABLE 19—SUMMARY OF BURDEN ESTIMATES (OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET CONTROL NUMBER 0938–1171,
CMS–10432) FOR THE FY 2016 PAYMENT DETERMINATION
Number of
measures
Fiscal year 2016
From this FY 2015 proposed
rule.
Respondents
Facility
burden
(hours)
Total annual
burden
(hours)
Labor cost
of reporting
($/hr)
Total cost
($)
1,626
0
0
0
0
training ....................................
Total .................................
2 (attestation only) ..................
1,626
0
0
0
0
.................................................
1,626
0
0
0
0
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TABLE 20—SUMMARY OF BURDEN ESTIMATES (OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET CONTROL NUMBER 0938–1171,
CMS–10432) FOR THE FY 2017 PAYMENT DETERMINATION
Labor
cost of
reporting
($/hr)
Total annual
burden
(hours)
Fiscal year 2017
Number of
measures
From this FY 2015 proposed rule.
4 ....................................
1,626
427 (139 × 3 + 10)
694,302
63.42
44,032,632.84
2 (attestation only) ........
........................
........................................
0
....................
........................
training ..........................
........................
2
3,252
....................
206,241.84
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Facility burden
(hours)
Respondents
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TABLE 20—SUMMARY OF BURDEN ESTIMATES (OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET CONTROL NUMBER 0938–1171,
CMS–10432) FOR THE FY 2017 PAYMENT DETERMINATION—Continued
Total annual
burden
(hours)
Number of
measures
Subtotal ..................
From this FY 2015 proposed rule.
.......................................
Non-measure data ........
1,626
1,626
429
2.50
697,554
4,065
63.42
63.42
44,238,874.68
257,802.30
Total ................
.......................................
1,626
431.50
701,619
63.42
44,496,676.98
We are not proposing any changes to
the administrative, reporting, or
submission requirements for the
measures previously finalized in the FY
2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53654 through 53657) and the FY 2014
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50898
through 50903), except that we are
removing the Request for Voluntary
Information—IPF Assessment of Patient
Experience of Care section because of
the Assessment of Patient Experience of
Care proposed measure.
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B. Summary of Proposed Burden
Adjustments (OCN 0938–1171, CMS–
10432)
In the FY 2014 final rule (78 FR
50964), we estimated that the annual
hourly burden per IPF for the collection,
submission, and training of personnel
for submitting all quality measures was
approximately 761 hours. This figure
represented an estimate for all
measures, both previously and newly
finalized, in the Program. We further
stated that because we were unable to
estimate how many IPFs will
participate, we could not estimate the
aggregate impact.
Because the estimates we present
herein, including the estimated annual
burden of 431.5 hours per IPF, represent
estimates only for proposed measures
and non-measure data collection and
submission requirements, an accurate
comparison with estimates presented in
the FY 2014 final rule is not possible.
C. ICRs Regarding the Hospital and
Health Care Complex Cost Report
(CMS–2552–10)
This proposed rule would not impose
any new or revised collection of
information requirements associated
with CMS–2552–10 (as discussed under
preamble section IV.B.). Consequently,
the cost report does not require
additional OMB review under the
authority of the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). The
report’s information collection
requirements and burden estimates have
been approved by OMB under OCN
0938–0052.
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Respondents
Facility burden
(hours)
Labor
cost of
reporting
($/hr)
Fiscal year 2017
D. ICRs Regarding Exceptions to Quality
Reporting Requirements
As discussed in section VIII.10 of this
preamble, we are in the process of
revising the Extraordinary
Circumstances/Disaster Extension or
Waiver Request form, currently
approved under OMB control number
0938–1171. Revisions to the form are
being addressed in the FY 2015
Inpatient Prospective Payment System
rule (RIN 0938–AS11, CMS–1607–P). In
that rule we propose to update the
form’s instructions and simplify the
form so that a hospital or facility may
apply for an extension for all applicable
quality reporting programs at the same
time.
E. Submission of PRA-Related
Comments
We have submitted a copy of this
proposed rule to OMB for its review of
the rule’s information collection and
recordkeeping requirements. These
requirements are not effective until they
have been approved by the OMB.
To obtain copies of the supporting
statement and any related forms for the
proposed paperwork collections
referenced above, access CMS’ Web site
at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/CMSForms/CMS-Forms/, or call
the Reports Clearance Office at 410–
786–1326.
We invite public comments on these
potential information collection
requirements. If you comment on these
information collection and
recordkeeping requirements, please
submit your comments electronically as
specified in the ADDRESSES section of
this proposed rule.
PRA-related comments must be
received on/by July 7, 2014.
X. Response to Comments
Because of the large number of public
comments we normally receive on
Federal Register documents, we are not
able to acknowledge or respond to them
individually. We will consider all
comments we receive by the date and
time specified in the DATES section of
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($)
this preamble, and, when we proceed
with a subsequent document, we will
respond to the comments in the
preamble to that document.
XI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
This proposed rule would update the
prospective payment rates for Medicare
inpatient hospital services provided by
IPFs for discharges occurring during the
FY beginning October 1, 2014, through
September 30, 2015. We are applying
the FY 2008-based RPL market basket
increase of 2.7 percent, less the
productivity adjustment of 0.4
percentage point as required by
1886(s)(2)(A)(i) of the Act, and less the
0.3 percentage point required by
sections 1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) and
1886(s)(3)(C) of the Act. In this
proposed rule, we also address the
implementation of the International
Classification of Diseases, 10th
Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD–
10–CM/PCS) for the IPF prospective
payment system, and describe new
quality reporting requirements for the
IPFQR Program.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impact of this
proposed 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
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effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). A regulatory impact analysis
(RIA) must be prepared for a major rules
with economically significant effects
($100 million or more in any 1 year).
This proposed rule is designated as
economically ‘‘significant’’ under
section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866.
We estimate that the total impact of
these changes for FY 2015 payments
compared to FY 2014 payments will be
a net increase of approximately $100
million. This reflects a $95 million
increase from the update to the payment
rates, as well as a $5 million increase as
a result of the update to the outlier
threshold amount. Outlier payments are
estimated to increase from 1.9 percent
in FY 2014 to 2.0 percent in FY 2015.
The RFA requires agencies to analyze
options for regulatory relief of small
entities if a rule has a significant impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. For purposes of the RFA, small
entities include small businesses,
nonprofit organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions. Most IPFs
and most other providers and suppliers
are small entities, either by nonprofit
status or having revenues of $7 million
to $35.5 million or less in any 1 year,
depending on industry classification
(for details, refer to the SBA Small
Business Size Standards found at
https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/
files/Size_Standards_Table.pdf), or
being nonprofit organizations that are
not dominant in their markets.
Because we lack data on individual
hospital receipts, we cannot determine
the number of small proprietary IPFs or
the proportion of IPFs’ revenue derived
from Medicare payments. Therefore, we
assume that all IPFs are considered
small entities. The Department of Health
and Human Services generally uses a
revenue impact of 3 to 5 percent as a
significance threshold under the RFA.
As shown in Table 21, we estimate
that the overall revenue impact of this
proposed rule on all IPFs is to increase
Medicare payments by approximately
2.1 percent. As a result, since the
estimated impact of this proposed rule
is a net increase in revenue across all
categories of IPFs, the Secretary has
determined that this proposed rule
would have a positive revenue impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. MACs are not considered to be
small entities. Individuals and States are
not included in the definition of a small
entity.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the
Social Security 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
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must conform to the provisions of
section 603 of the RFA. For purposes of
section 1102(b) of the Act, we define a
small rural hospital as a hospital that is
located outside of a metropolitan
statistical area and has fewer than 100
beds. As discussed in detail below, the
rates and policies set forth in this
proposed rule would not have an
adverse impact on the rural hospitals
based on the data of the 310 rural units
and 74 rural hospitals in our database of
1,626 IPFs for which data were
available. Therefore, the Secretary has
determined that this proposed rule
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
threshold is approximately $141
million. This proposed rule will not
impose spending costs on state, local, or
tribal governments in the aggregate, or
by the private sector, 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
requirement costs on state and local
governments, preempts state law, or
otherwise has Federalism implications.
As stated above, this proposed rule
would not have a substantial effect on
state and local governments.
C. Anticipated Effects
We discuss the historical background
of the IPF PPS and the impact of this
proposed rule on the Federal Medicare
budget and on IPFs.
1. Budgetary Impact
As discussed in the November 2004
and May 2006 IPF PPS final rules, we
applied a budget neutrality factor to the
Federal per diem and ECT base rates to
ensure that total estimated payments
under the IPF PPS in the
implementation period would equal the
amount that would have been paid if the
IPF PPS had not been implemented. The
budget neutrality factor includes the
following components: outlier
adjustment, stop-loss adjustment, and
the behavioral offset. As discussed in
the May 2008 IPF PPS notice (73 FR
25711), the stop-loss adjustment is no
longer applicable under the IPF PPS.
In accordance with § 412.424(c)(3)(ii),
we indicated that we will evaluate the
accuracy of the budget neutrality
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adjustment within the first 5 years after
implementation of the payment system.
We may make a one-time prospective
adjustment to the Federal per diem and
ECT base rates to account for differences
between the historical data on costbased TEFRA payments (the basis of the
budget neutrality adjustment) and
estimates of TEFRA payments based on
actual data from the first year of the IPF
PPS. As part of that process, we will
reassess the accuracy of all of the factors
impacting budget neutrality. In
addition, as discussed in section VII.C.1
of this proposed rule, we are using the
wage index and labor-related share in a
budget neutral manner by applying a
wage index budget neutrality factor to
the Federal per diem and ECT base
rates.
Therefore, the budgetary impact to the
Medicare program of this proposed rule
will be due to the market basket update
for FY 2015 of 2.7 percent (see section
V.B. of this proposed rule) less the
productivity adjustment of 0.4
percentage point required by section
1886(s)(2)(A)(i) of the Act, less the
‘‘other adjustment’’ of 0.3 percentage
point under sections 1886(s)(2)(A)(ii)
and 1886(s)(3)(C) of the Act, and the
update to the outlier fixed dollar loss
threshold amount.
We estimate that the FY 2015 impact
will be a net increase of $100 million in
payments to IPF providers. This reflects
an estimated $95 million increase from
the update to the payment rates and a
$5 million increase due to the update to
the outlier threshold amount to increase
outlier payments from approximately
1.9 percent in FY 2014 to 2.0 percent in
FY 2015. This estimate does not include
the implementation of the required 2
percentage point reduction of the
market basket increase factor for any IPF
that fails to meet the IPF quality
reporting requirements (as discussed in
section 4 below).
2. Impact on Providers
To understand the impact of the
changes to the IPF PPS on providers,
discussed in this proposed rule, it is
necessary to compare estimated
payments under the IPF PPS rates and
factors for FY 2015 versus those under
FY 2014. The estimated payments for
FY 2014 and FY 2015 will be 100
percent of the IPF PPS payment, since
the transition period has ended and
stop-loss payments are no longer paid.
We determined the percent change of
estimated FY 2015 IPF PPS payments to
FY 2014 IPF PPS payments for each
category of IPFs. In addition, for each
category of IPFs, we have included the
estimated percent change in payments
resulting from the update to the outlier
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fixed dollar loss threshold amount, the
labor-related share and wage index
changes for the FY 2015 IPF PPS, and
the market basket update for FY 2015,
as adjusted by the productivity
adjustment according to section
1886(s)(2)(A)(i), and the ‘‘other
adjustment’’ according to sections
1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) and 1886(s)(3)(C) of the
Act.
To illustrate the impacts of the FY
2015 changes in this proposed rule, our
analysis begins with a FY 2014 baseline
simulation model based on FY 2013 IPF
payments inflated to the midpoint of FY
2014 using IHS Global Insight Inc.’s
most recent forecast of the market basket
update (see section IV.C. of this
proposed rule); the estimated outlier
payments in FY 2014; the CBSA
designations for IPFs based on OMB’s
MSA definitions after June 2003; the FY
2013 pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital
wage index; the FY 2014 labor-related
share; and the FY 2014 percentage
amount of the rural adjustment. During
the simulation, the total estimated
outlier payments are maintained at 2
percent of total IPF PPS payments.
Each of the following changes is
added incrementally to this baseline
model in order for us to isolate the
effects of each change:
• The update to the outlier fixed
dollar loss threshold amount.
• The FY 2014 pre-floor, prereclassified hospital wage index and FY
2015 labor-related share.
• The market basket update for FY
2015 of 2.7 percent less the productivity
adjustment of 0.4 percentage point
reduction in accordance with section
1886(s)(2)(A)(i) of the Act and less the
‘‘other adjustment’’ of 0.3 percentage
point in accordance with sections
1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) and 1886(s)(3)(C) of the
Act.
Our final comparison illustrates the
percent change in payments from FY
2014 (that is, October 1, 2013, to
September 30, 2014) to FY 2015 (that is,
October 1, 2014, to September 30, 2015)
including all the changes in this
proposed rule.
TABLE 21—IPF IMPACT TABLE FOR FY 2015
[Projected impacts (% Change in columns 3–6]
Number of
facilities
Outlier
CBSA wage
index &
labor share
Adjusted
market
basket
update 1
Total
percent
change 2
(1)
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Facility by type
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
All Facilities ..........................................................................
Total Urban ..........................................................................
Total Rural ...........................................................................
Urban unit ............................................................................
Urban hospital ......................................................................
Rural unit ..............................................................................
Rural hospital .......................................................................
By Type of Ownership:
Freestanding IPFs
Urban Psychiatric Hospitals
Government ...........................................................
Non-Profit ...............................................................
For-Profit ................................................................
Rural Psychiatric Hospitals
Government ...........................................................
Non-Profit ...............................................................
For-Profit ................................................................
IPF Units
Urban
Government ...........................................................
Non-Profit ...............................................................
For-Profit ................................................................
Rural
Government ...........................................................
Non-Profit ...............................................................
For-Profit ................................................................
By Teaching Status:
Non-teaching .................................................................
Less than 10% interns and residents to beds ..............
10% to 30% interns and residents to beds ..................
More than 30% interns and residents to beds .............
By Region:
New England ................................................................
Mid-Atlantic ...................................................................
South Atlantic ................................................................
East North Central ........................................................
East South Central .......................................................
West North Central .......................................................
West South Central ......................................................
Mountain .......................................................................
Pacific ...........................................................................
By Bed Size:
Psychiatric Hospitals
Beds: 0–24 ............................................................
Beds: 25–49 ..........................................................
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1,626
1,242
384
829
413
310
74
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.0
0.1
0.0
0.0
0.0
¥0.2
0.1
0.0
¥0.1
¥0.3
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.1
2.1
1.9
2.2
2.0
2.0
1.7
129
99
185
0.1
0.1
0.0
0.0
0.2
¥0.2
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.3
1.8
36
13
25
0.1
0.1
0.0
0.3
¥0.1
¥0.8
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.4
1.9
1.2
129
543
157
0.2
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
¥0.1
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.3
2.2
1.9
75
169
66
0.1
0.1
0.1
¥0.1
¥0.1
¥0.1
2.0
2.0
2.0
1.9
1.9
2.0
1,427
108
68
23
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.2
0.0
0.2
0.0
0.5
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.3
2.2
2.7
109
251
234
260
166
143
238
103
122
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.0
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.6
¥0.3
¥0.2
¥0.3
¥0.3
¥0.5
¥0.3
1.0
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.2
2.7
1.7
1.9
1.8
1.8
1.6
1.7
3.1
88
67
0.0
0.0
¥0.3
¥0.1
2.0
2.0
1.7
1.9
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TABLE 21—IPF IMPACT TABLE FOR FY 2015—Continued
[Projected impacts (% Change in columns 3–6]
Facility by type
Number of
facilities
Outlier
CBSA wage
index &
labor share
Adjusted
market
basket
update 1
Total
percent
change 2
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
Beds: 50–75 ..........................................................
Beds: 76 + .............................................................
Psychiatric Units
Beds: 0–24 ............................................................
Beds: 25–49 ..........................................................
Beds: 50–75 ..........................................................
Beds: 76 + .............................................................
88
244
0.0
0.0
¥0.1
0.0
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.0
680
298
102
59
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.0
¥0.1
0.1
0.4
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.1
2.0
2.1
2.6
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
1 This column reflects the payment update impact of the RPL market basket update for FY 2015 of 2.7 percent, a 0.4 percentage point reduction for the productivity adjustment as required by section 1886(s)(2)(A)(i) of the Act, and a 0.3 percentage point reduction in accordance with
sections 1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) and 1886(s)(3)(C) of the Act.
2 Percent changes in estimated payments from FY 2014 to FY 2015 include all of the changes presented in this proposed rule. Note, the products of these impacts may be different from the percentage changes shown here due to rounding effects.
3. Results
Table 21 above displays the results of
our analysis. The table groups IPFs into
the categories listed below based on
characteristics provided in the Provider
of Services (POS) file, the IPF provider
specific file, and cost report data from
HCRIS:
• Facility Type
• Location
• Teaching Status Adjustment
• Census Region
• Size
The top row of the table shows the
overall impact on the 1,626 IPFs
included in this analysis.
In column 3, we present the effects of
the update to the outlier fixed dollar
loss threshold amount. We estimate that
IPF outlier payments as a percentage of
total IPF payments are 1.9 percent in FY
2014. Thus, we are adjusting the outlier
threshold amount in this proposed rule
to set total estimated outlier payments
equal to 2 percent of total payments in
FY 2015. The estimated change in total
IPF payments for FY 2015, therefore,
includes an approximate 0.1 percent
increase in payments because the outlier
portion of total payments is expected to
increase from approximately 1.9 percent
to 2 percent.
The overall impact of this outlier
adjustment update (as shown in column
3 of table 21), across all hospital groups,
is to increase total estimated payments
to IPFs by 0.1 percent. We do not
estimate that any group of IPFs will
experience a decrease in payments from
this update. The largest increase in
payments is estimated to reflect a 0.2
percent increase in payments for urban
government IPF units and IPFs located
in teaching hospitals with an intern and
resident ADC ratio greater than 30
percent.
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In column 4, we present the effects of
the budget-neutral update to the laborrelated share and the wage index
adjustment under the CBSA geographic
area definitions announced by OMB in
June 2003. This is a comparison of the
simulated FY 2015 payments under the
FY 2014 hospital wage index under
CBSA classification and associated
labor-related share to the simulated FY
2014 payments under the FY 2013
hospital wage index under CBSA
classifications and associated laborrelated share. We note that there is no
projected change in aggregate payments
to IPFs, as indicated in the first row of
column 4. However, there will be small
distributional effects among different
categories of IPFs. For example, we
estimate the largest increase in
payments to be a 1.0 percent increase
for IPFs in the Pacific region and the
largest decrease in payments to be a 0.8
percent decrease for rural for-profit
IPFs.
Column 5 shows the estimated effect
of the update to the IPF PPS payment
rates, which includes a 2.7 percent
market basket update less the
productivity adjustment of 0.4
percentage point in accordance with
section 1886(s)(2)(A)(i), and less the 0.3
percentage point in accordance with
section 1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) and
1886(s)(3)(C).
Column 6 compares our estimates of
the total changes reflected in this
proposed rule for FY 2015, to our
payments for FY 2014 (without these
changes). This column reflects all FY
2015 changes relative to FY 2014. The
average estimated increase for all IPFs is
approximately 2.1 percent. This
estimated net increase includes the
effects of the 2.7 percent market basket
update adjusted by the productivity
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adjustment of minus 0.4 percentage
point, as required by section
1886(s)(2)(A)(i) of the Act and the
‘‘other adjustment’’ of minus 0.3
percentage point, as required by
sections 1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) and
1886(s)(3)(C) of the Act. It also includes
the overall estimated 0.1 percent
increase in estimated IPF outlier
payments from the update to the outlier
fixed dollar loss threshold amount.
Since we are making the updates to the
IPF labor-related share and wage index
in a budget-neutral manner, they will
not affect total estimated IPF payments
in the aggregate. However, they will
affect the estimated distribution of
payments among providers.
Overall, no IPFs are estimated to
experience a net decrease in payments
as a result of the updates in this
proposed rule. IPFs in urban areas will
experience a 2.1 percent increase and
IPFs in rural areas will experience a 1.9
percent increase. The largest payment
increase is estimated at 3.1 percent for
IPFs in the Pacific region. This is due to
the larger than average positive effect of
the CBSA wage index and labor-related
share update for IPFs in this category.
4. Effects of Updates to the IPF QRP
As discussed in section V.B. of this
proposed rule and in accordance with
section 1886(s)(4)(A)(ii) of the Act, we
will implement a 2 percentage point
reduction in the FY 2015 increase factor
for IPFs that have failed to report the
required quality reporting data to us
during the most recent IPF quality
reporting period. In section V.B. of this
proposed rule, we discuss how the 2
percentage point reduction will be
applied. Only a few IPFs received the 2
percentage point reduction in the FY
2014 increase factor for failure to meet
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program requirements, and we would
anticipate that even fewer IPFs would
receive the reduction for FY 2015 as
IPFs become more familiar with the
requirements. Thus, we estimate that
this policy will have a negligible impact
on overall IPF payments for FY 2015.
For the FY 2016 payment
determination, we estimate no
additional burden on IPFs as a result of
proposed changes in reporting
requirements. For the FY 2017 payment
determination, we estimate an
additional annual burden across all
1,626 IPFs of 701,619 hours, with a total
Program cost of $44,496,677. This
estimate includes an estimated 3,252
hours annually for training, at an
estimated annual cost of $206,241. It
also includes an estimated 4,065 hours
annually, at an estimated annual cost of
$257,802, for IPFs to submit to CMS
aggregate population counts for
Medicare and non-Medicare discharges
by age group, diagnostic group, and
quarter, and sample size counts for
measures for which sampling is
performed. Further discussion of these
figures can be found in section IX.
For the FY 2017 payment
determination, the applicable reporting
period is calendar year (CY) 2015.
Assuming that reporting costs are
uniformly distributed across the year,
three-quarters of those costs would have
been incurred in FY 2015, which ends
26079
on September 30, 2015. Therefore, the
estimated FY 2015 burden for IPFs
would be three-quarters of $44,496,677,
or approximately $33,372,508.
We intend to closely monitor the
effects of this new quality reporting
program on IPF providers and help
facilitate successful reporting outcomes
through ongoing stakeholder education,
national trainings, and a technical help
desk.
transition ICD–9–CM codes to ICD–10–
CM codes. Additionally, for the IPFQR
Program, alternatives were not
considered because the Program, as
designed, best achieves quality
reporting goals for the inpatient
psychiatric care setting, while
minimizing associated reporting
burdens on IPFs. Lastly, sections VIII.1.
and VIII.4. discuss other benefits and
objectives of the Program.
5. Effect on Beneficiaries
Under the IPF PPS, IPFs will receive
payment based on the average resources
consumed by patients for each day. We
do not expect changes in the quality of
care or access to services for Medicare
beneficiaries under the FY 2015 IPF PPS
but we continue to expect that paying
prospectively for IPF services would
enhance the efficiency of the Medicare
program.
E. Accounting Statement
D. Alternatives Considered
The statute does not specify an update
strategy for the IPF PPS and is broadly
written to give the Secretary discretion
in establishing an update methodology.
Therefore, we are updating the IPF PPS
using the methodology published in the
November 2004 IPF PPS final rule. No
alternative policy options were
considered in this proposed rule since
this proposed rule simply provides an
update to the rates for FY 2015 and
As required by OMB Circular A–4
(available at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars_
a004_a-4), in Table 22 below, we have
prepared an accounting statement
showing the classification of the
expenditures associated with the
provisions of this proposed rule. The
costs for data submission presented in
Table 22 are calculated in section IX,
which also discusses the benefits of data
collection. This table provides our best
estimate of the increase in Medicare
payments under the IPF PPS as a result
of the changes presented in this
proposed rule and based on the data for
1,626 IPFs in our database. Furthermore,
we present the estimated costs
associated with updating the IPFQR
program. The increases in Medicare
payments are classified as Federal
transfers to IPF Medicare providers.
TABLE 22—ACCOUNTING STATEMENT: CLASSIFICATION OF ESTIMATED EXPENDITURES
Category
Transfers
Change in Estimated Transfers from FY 2014 IPF PPS to FY 2015 IPF PPS:
Annualized Monetized Transfers ..............................................................
From Whom to Whom? ............................................................................
$100 million.
Federal Government to IPF Medicare Providers
FY 2015 Costs to updating the Quality Reporting Program for IPFs:
Category
Costs
Annualized Monetized Costs for IPFs to Submit Data (Quality Reporting Program).
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
In accordance with the provisions of
Executive Order 12866, this proposed
rule was reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget.
33,372,508
Dated: April 17, 2014.
Marilyn Tavenner,
Administrator, Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services.
Approved: April 24, 2014.
Kathleen Sebelius,
Secretary.
Addendum A—Rate and Adjustment
Factors
Note: The following Addenda will not
appear in the Code of Federal Regulations.
PER DIEM RATE
Federal Per Diem Base Rate ..............................................................................................................................................
Labor Share (0.69538) ........................................................................................................................................................
Non-Labor Share (0.30462) .................................................................................................................................................
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$727.67
506.01
221.66
26080
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PER DIEM RATE APPLYING THE 2 PERCENTAGE POINT REDUCTION
Federal Per Diem Base Rate ..............................................................................................................................................
Labor Share (0.69538) ........................................................................................................................................................
Non-Labor Share (0.30462) .................................................................................................................................................
Fixed Dollar Loss Threshold Amount:
$10,125.
$713.40
496.08
217.32
Wage Index Budget-Neutrality Factor:
1.0003.
FACILITY ADJUSTMENTS
Rural Adjustment Factor ...........................................................................
Teaching Adjustment Factor ....................................................................
Wage Index ..............................................................................................
1.17
0.5150
Pre-reclass Hospital Wage Index (FY2014)
COST OF LIVING ADJUSTMENTS (COLAS)
Cost of living
adjustment
factor
Area
Alaska: .................................................................................................................................................................................................
City of Anchorage and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by road .....................................................................................................
City of Fairbanks and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by road ......................................................................................................
City of Juneau and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by road ..........................................................................................................
Rest of Alaska ..............................................................................................................................................................................
Hawaii:.
City and County of Honolulu ........................................................................................................................................................
County of Hawaii ..........................................................................................................................................................................
County of Kauai ............................................................................................................................................................................
County of Maui and County of Kalawao ......................................................................................................................................
........................
1.23
1.23
1.23
1.25
1.25
1.19
1.25
1.25
PATIENT ADJUSTMENTS
ECT—Per Treatment ...........................................................................................................................................................................
ECT—Per Treatment Applying the 2 Percentage Point Reduction ....................................................................................................
$313.27
$307.13
VARIABLE PER DIEM ADJUSTMENTS
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Adjustment
factor
Day 1—Facility Without a Qualifying Emergency Department ...........................................................................................................
Day 1—Facility With a Qualifying Emergency Department ................................................................................................................
Day 2 ...................................................................................................................................................................................................
Day 3 ...................................................................................................................................................................................................
Day 4 ...................................................................................................................................................................................................
Day 5 ...................................................................................................................................................................................................
Day 6 ...................................................................................................................................................................................................
Day 7 ...................................................................................................................................................................................................
Day 8 ...................................................................................................................................................................................................
Day 9 ...................................................................................................................................................................................................
Day 10 .................................................................................................................................................................................................
Day 11 .................................................................................................................................................................................................
Day 12 .................................................................................................................................................................................................
Day 13 .................................................................................................................................................................................................
Day 14 .................................................................................................................................................................................................
Day 15 .................................................................................................................................................................................................
Day 16 .................................................................................................................................................................................................
Day 17 .................................................................................................................................................................................................
Day 18 .................................................................................................................................................................................................
Day 19 .................................................................................................................................................................................................
Day 20 .................................................................................................................................................................................................
Day 21 .................................................................................................................................................................................................
After Day 21 .........................................................................................................................................................................................
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1.19
1.31
1.12
1.08
1.05
1.04
1.02
1.01
1.01
1.00
1.00
0.99
0.99
0.99
0.99
0.98
0.97
0.97
0.96
0.95
0.95
0.95
0.92
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 87 / Tuesday, May 6, 2014 / Proposed Rules
26081
AGE ADJUSTMENTS
Adjustment
factor
Age (in years)
Under 45 ..............................................................................................................................................................................................
45 and under 50 ..................................................................................................................................................................................
50 and under 55 ..................................................................................................................................................................................
55 and under 60 ..................................................................................................................................................................................
60 and under 65 ..................................................................................................................................................................................
65 and under 70 ..................................................................................................................................................................................
70 and under 75 ..................................................................................................................................................................................
75 and under 80 ..................................................................................................................................................................................
80 and over ..........................................................................................................................................................................................
1.00
1.01
1.02
1.04
1.07
1.10
1.13
1.15
1.17
DRG ADJUSTMENTS
MS–DRG
056
057
080
081
876
880
881
882
883
884
885
886
887
894
895
896
897
Adjustment
factor
MS–DRG Descriptions
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
Degenerative nervous system disorders w MCC .................................................................................................
Degenerative nervous system disorders w/o MCC ..............................................................................................
Nontraumatic stupor & coma w MCC ...................................................................................................................
Nontraumatic stupor & coma w/o MCC ................................................................................................................
O.R. procedure w principal diagnoses of mental illness ......................................................................................
Acute adjustment reaction & psychosocial dysfunction .......................................................................................
Depressive neuroses ............................................................................................................................................
Neuroses except depressive ................................................................................................................................
Disorders of personality & impulse control ...........................................................................................................
Organic disturbances & mental retardation ..........................................................................................................
Psychoses ............................................................................................................................................................
Behavioral & developmental disorders .................................................................................................................
Other mental disorder diagnoses .........................................................................................................................
Alcohol/drug abuse or dependence, left AMA .....................................................................................................
Alcohol/drug abuse or dependence w rehabilitation therapy ...............................................................................
Alcohol/drug abuse or dependence w/o rehabilitation therapy w MCC ...............................................................
Alcohol/drug abuse or dependence w/o rehabilitation therapy w/o MCC ............................................................
1.05
1.07
1.22
1.05
0.99
1.02
1.02
1.03
1.00
0.99
0.92
0.97
1.02
0.88
COMORBIDITY ADJUSTMENTS
Adjustment
factor
Comorbidity
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Developmental Disabilities ...................................................................................................................................................................
Coagulation Factor Deficit ...................................................................................................................................................................
Tracheostomy ......................................................................................................................................................................................
Eating and Conduct Disorders ............................................................................................................................................................
Infectious Diseases ..............................................................................................................................................................................
Renal Failure, Acute ............................................................................................................................................................................
Renal Failure, Chronic .........................................................................................................................................................................
Oncology Treatment ............................................................................................................................................................................
Uncontrolled Diabetes Mellitus ............................................................................................................................................................
Severe Protein Malnutrition .................................................................................................................................................................
Drug/Alcohol Induced Mental Disorders ..............................................................................................................................................
Cardiac Conditions ..............................................................................................................................................................................
Gangrene .............................................................................................................................................................................................
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease .............................................................................................................................................
Artificial Openings—Digestive & Urinary .............................................................................................................................................
Severe Musculoskeletal & Connective Tissue Diseases ....................................................................................................................
Poisoning .............................................................................................................................................................................................
Addendum B—FY 2015 CBSA Wage
Index Tables
In this addendum, we provide the wage
index tables referred to in the preamble to
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this proposed rule. The tables presented
below are as follows:
Table1–FY 2015 Wage Index For Urban
Areas Based on CBSA Labor Market Areas.
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1.04
1.13
1.06
1.12
1.07
1.11
1.11
1.07
1.05
1.13
1.03
1.11
1.10
1.12
1.08
1.09
1.11
Table 2–FY 2015 Wage Index Based On
CBSA Labor Market Areas For Rural Areas.
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26082
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 87 / Tuesday, May 6, 2014 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1—FY 2015 WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS BASED ON CBSA LABOR MARKET AREAS
CBSA Code
Urban area (constituent counties)
10180 ................
10380 ................
Abilene, TX, Callahan County, TX, Jones County, TX, Taylor County, TX .........................................................
´
˜
Aguadilla-Isabela-San Sebastian, PR, Aguada Municipio, PR, Aguadilla Municipio, PR, Anasco Municipio,
´
PR, Isabela Municipio, PR, Lares Municipio, PR, Moca Municipio, PR, Rincon Municipio, PR, San
´
Sebastian Municipio, PR.
Akron, OH, Portage County, OH, Summit County, OH .......................................................................................
Albany, GA, Baker County, GA, Dougherty County, GA, Lee County, GA, Terrell County, GA, Worth County,
GA.
Albany-Schenectady-Troy, NY, Albany County, NY, Rensselaer County, NY, Saratoga County, NY, Schenectady County, NY, Schoharie County, NY.
Albuquerque, NM, Bernalillo County, NM, Sandoval County, NM, Torrance County, NM, Valencia County,
NM.
Alexandria, LA, Grant Parish, LA, Rapides Parish, LA ........................................................................................
Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, PA–NJ, Warren County, NJ, Carbon County, PA, Lehigh County, PA, Northampton County, PA.
Altoona, PA, Blair County, PA ..............................................................................................................................
Amarillo, TX, Armstrong County, TX, Carson County, TX, Potter County, TX, Randall County, TX ..................
Ames, IA, Story County, IA ..................................................................................................................................
Anchorage, AK, Anchorage Municipality, AK, Matanuska-Susitna Borough, AK ................................................
Anderson, IN, Madison County, IN .......................................................................................................................
Anderson, SC, Anderson County, SC ..................................................................................................................
Arbor, MI, Washtenaw County, MI .......................................................................................................................
Anniston-Oxford, AL, Calhoun County, AL ...........................................................................................................
Appleton, WI, Calumet County, WI, Outagamie County, WI ...............................................................................
Asheville, NC, Buncombe County, NC, Haywood County, NC, Henderson County, NC, Madison County, NC
Athens-Clarke County, GA, Clarke County, GA, Madison County, GA, Oconee County, GA, Oglethorpe
County, GA.
Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, GA, Barrow County, GA, Bartow County, GA, Butts County, GA, Carroll
County, GA, Cherokee County, GA, Clayton County, GA, Cobb County, GA, Coweta County, GA, Dawson
County, GA, DeKalb County, GA, Douglas County, GA, Fayette County, GA, Forsyth County, GA, Fulton
County, GA, Gwinnett County, GA, Haralson County, GA, Heard County, GA, Henry County, GA, Jasper
County, GA, Lamar County, GA, Meriwether County, GA, Newton County, GA, Paulding County, GA, Pickens County, GA, Pike County, GA, Rockdale County, GA, Spalding County, GA, Walton County, GA.
Atlantic City-Hammonton, NJ, Atlantic County, NJ ..............................................................................................
Auburn-Opelika, AL, Lee County, AL ...................................................................................................................
Augusta-Richmond County, GA–SC, Burke County, GA, Columbia County, GA, McDuffie County, GA, Richmond County, GA, Aiken County, SC, Edgefield County, SC.
Austin-Round Rock-San Marcos, TX, Bastrop County, TX, Caldwell County, TX, Hays County, TX, Travis
County, TX, Williamson County, TX.
Bakersfield-Delano, CA, Kern County, CA ...........................................................................................................
Baltimore-Towson, MD, Anne Arundel County, MD, Baltimore County, MD, Carroll County, MD, Harford
County, MD, Howard County, MD, Queen Anne’s County, MD, Baltimore City, MD.
Bangor, ME, Penobscot County, ME ...................................................................................................................
Barnstable Town, MA, Barnstable County, MA ....................................................................................................
Baton Rouge, LA, Ascension Parish, LA, East Baton Rouge Parish, LA, East Feliciana Parish, LA, Iberville
Parish, LA, Livingston Parish, LA, Pointe Coupee Parish, LA, St. Helena Parish, LA, West Baton Rouge
Parish, LA, West Feliciana Parish, LA.
Battle Creek, MI, Calhoun County, MI .................................................................................................................
Bay City, MI, Bay County, MI ...............................................................................................................................
Beaumont-Port Arthur, TX, Hardin County, TX, Jefferson County, TX, Orange County, TX ..............................
Bellingham, WA, Whatcom County, WA ..............................................................................................................
Bend, OR, Deschutes County, OR .......................................................................................................................
Bethesda-Rockville-Frederick, MD, Frederick County, MD, Montgomery County, MD .......................................
Billings, MT, Carbon County, MT, Yellowstone County, MT ................................................................................
Binghamton, NY, Broome County, NY, Tioga County, NY ..................................................................................
Birmingham-Hoover, AL, Bibb County, AL, Blount County, AL, Chilton County, AL, Jefferson County, AL, St.
Clair County, AL, Shelby County, AL, Walker County, AL.
Bismarck, ND, Burleigh County, ND, Morton County, ND ...................................................................................
Blacksburg-Christiansburg-Radford, VA, Giles County, VA, Montgomery County, VA, Pulaski County, VA,
Radford City, VA.
Bloomington, IN, Greene County, IN, Monroe County, IN, Owen County, IN .....................................................
Bloomington-Normal, IL, McLean County, IL .......................................................................................................
Boise City-Nampa, ID, Ada County, ID, Boise County, ID, Canyon County, ID, Gem County, ID, Owyhee
County, ID.
Boston-Quincy, MA, Norfolk County, MA, Plymouth County, MA, Suffolk County, MA ......................................
Boulder, CO, Boulder County, CO .......................................................................................................................
Bowling Green, KY, Edmonson County, KY, Warren County, KY .......................................................................
Bremerton-Silverdale, WA, Kitsap County, WA ...................................................................................................
Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk, CT, Fairfield County, CT ......................................................................................
Brownsville-Harlingen, TX, Cameron County, TX ................................................................................................
Brunswick, GA, Brantley County, GA, Glynn County, GA, McIntosh County, GA ..............................................
Buffalo-Niagara Falls, NY, Erie County, NY, Niagara County, NY ......................................................................
Burlington, NC, Alamance County, NC ................................................................................................................
10420 ................
10500 ................
10580 ................
10740 ................
10780 ................
10900 ................
11020
11100
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12020
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12060 ................
12100 ................
12220 ................
12260 ................
12420 ................
12540 ................
12580 ................
12620 ................
12700 ................
12940 ................
12980
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13140
13380
13460
13644
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13820
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0.8225
0.3647
0.8521
0.8713
0.8600
0.9663
0.7788
0.9215
0.9101
0.8302
0.9425
1.2221
0.9654
0.8766
1.0086
0.7402
0.9445
0.8511
0.9244
0.9452
1.2258
0.7771
0.9150
0.9576
1.1579
0.9873
0.9710
1.3007
0.8078
0.9915
0.9486
0.8598
1.1890
1.1807
1.0319
0.8691
0.8602
0.8367
0.7282
0.8319
0.9304
0.9310
0.9259
1.2453
0.9850
0.8573
1.0268
1.3252
0.8179
0.8457
1.0045
0.8529
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 87 / Tuesday, May 6, 2014 / Proposed Rules
26083
TABLE 1—FY 2015 WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS BASED ON CBSA LABOR MARKET AREAS—Continued
CBSA Code
15540
15764
15804
15940
15980
16020
16180
16220
16300
16580
16620
Urban area (constituent counties)
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
16700 ................
16740 ................
16820 ................
16860 ................
16940 ................
16974 ................
17020 ................
17140 ................
17300 ................
17420 ................
17460 ................
17660
17780
17820
17860
17900
................
................
................
................
................
17980 ................
18020 ................
18140 ................
................
................
................
................
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19140
19180
19260
19340
................
................
................
................
19380
19460
19500
19660
19740
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18700
18880
19060
19124
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19804
20020
20100
20220
20260
20500
................
................
................
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20740 ................
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Wage index
Burlington-South Burlington, VT, Chittenden County, VT, Franklin County, VT, Grand Isle County, VT ...........
Cambridge-Newton-Framingham, MA, Middlesex County, MA ...........................................................................
Camden, NJ, Burlington County, NJ, Camden County, NJ, Gloucester County, NJ ..........................................
Canton-Massillon, OH, Carroll County, OH, Stark County, OH ...........................................................................
Cape Coral-Fort Myers, FL, Lee County, FL .......................................................................................................
Cape Girardeau-Jackson, MO–IL, Alexander County, IL, Bollinger County, MO, Cape Girardeau County, MO
Carson City, NV, Carson City, NV .......................................................................................................................
Casper, WY, Natrona County, WY .......................................................................................................................
Cedar Rapids, IA, Benton County, IA, Jones County, IA, Linn County, IA .........................................................
Champaign-Urbana, IL, Champaign County, IL, Ford County, IL, Piatt County, IL ............................................
Charleston, WV, Boone County, WV, Clay County, WV, Kanawha County, WV, Lincoln County, WV, Putnam
County, WV.
Charleston-North Charleston-Summerville, SC, Berkeley County, SC, Charleston County, SC, Dorchester
County, SC.
Charlotte-Gastonia-Rock Hill, NC-SC, Anson County, NC, Cabarrus County, NC, Gaston County, NC, Mecklenburg County, NC, Union County, NC, York County, SC.
Charlottesville, VA, Albemarle County, VA, Fluvanna County, VA, Greene County, VA, Nelson County, VA,
Charlottesville City, VA.
Chattanooga, TN–GA, Catoosa County, GA, Dade County, GA, Walker County, GA, Hamilton County, TN,
Marion County, TN, Sequatchie County, TN.
Cheyenne, WY, Laramie County, WY ..................................................................................................................
Chicago-Naperville-Joliet, IL, Cook County, IL, DeKalb County, IL, DuPage County, IL, Grundy County, IL,
Kane County, IL, Kendall County, IL, McHenry County, IL, Will County, IL.
Chico, CA, Butte County, CA ...............................................................................................................................
Cincinnati-Middletown, OH–KY–IN, Dearborn County, IN, Franklin County, IN, Ohio County, IN, Boone
County, KY, Bracken County, KY, Campbell County, KY, Gallatin County, KY, Grant County, KY, Kenton
County, KY, Pendleton County, KY, Brown County, OH, Butler County, OH, Clermont County, OH, Hamilton County, OH, Warren County, OH.
Clarksville, TN–KY, Christian County, KY, Trigg County, KY, Montgomery County, TN, Stewart County, TN ..
Cleveland, TN, Bradley County, TN, Polk County, TN ........................................................................................
Cleveland-Elyria-Mentor, OH, Cuyahoga County, OH, Geauga County, OH, Lake County, OH, Lorain County, OH, Medina County, OH.
Coeur d’Alene, ID, Kootenai County, ID ..............................................................................................................
College Station-Bryan, TX, Brazos County, TX, Burleson County, TX, Robertson County, TX .........................
Colorado Springs, CO, El Paso County, CO, Teller County, CO ........................................................................
Columbia, MO, Boone County, MO, Howard County, MO ..................................................................................
Columbia, SC, Calhoun County, SC, Fairfield County, SC, Kershaw County, SC, Lexington County, SC,
Richland County, SC, Saluda County, SC.
Columbus, GA–AL, Russell County, AL, Chattahoochee County, GA, Harris County, GA, Marion County,
GA, Muscogee County, GA.
Columbus, IN, Bartholomew County, IN ..............................................................................................................
Columbus, OH, Delaware County, OH, Fairfield County, OH, Franklin County, OH, Licking County, OH,
Madison County, OH, Morrow County, OH, Pickaway County, OH, Union County, OH.
Corpus Christi, TX, Aransas County, TX, Nueces County, TX, San Patricio County, TX ..................................
Corvallis, OR, Benton County, OR .......................................................................................................................
Crestview-Fort Walton Beach-Destin, FL, Okaloosa County, FL .........................................................................
Cumberland, MD–WV, Allegany County, MD, Mineral County, WV ....................................................................
Dallas-Plano-Irving, TX, Collin County, TX, Dallas County, TX, Delta County, TX, Denton County, TX, Ellis
County, TX, Hunt County, TX, Kaufman County, TX, Rockwall County, TX.
Dalton, GA, Murray County, GA, Whitfield County, GA .......................................................................................
Danville, IL, Vermilion County, IL .........................................................................................................................
Danville, VA, Pittsylvania County, VA, Danville City, VA .....................................................................................
Davenport-Moline-Rock Island, IA–IL, Henry County, IL, Mercer County, IL, Rock Island County, IL, Scott
County, IA.
Dayton, OH, Greene County, OH, Miami County, OH, Montgomery County, OH, Preble County, OH .............
Decatur, AL, Lawrence County, AL, Morgan County, AL ....................................................................................
Decatur, IL, Macon County, IL .............................................................................................................................
Deltona-Daytona Beach-Ormond Beach, FL, Volusia County, FL .......................................................................
Denver-Aurora-Broomfield, CO, Adams County, CO, Arapahoe County, CO, Broomfield County, CO, Clear
Creek County, CO, Denver County, CO, Douglas County, CO, Elbert County, CO, Gilpin County, CO, Jefferson County, CO, Park County, CO.
Des Moines-West Des Moines, IA, Dallas County, IA, Guthrie County, IA, Madison County, IA, Polk County,
IA, Warren County, IA.
Detroit-Livonia-Dearborn, MI, Wayne County, MI ................................................................................................
Dothan, AL, Geneva County, AL, Henry County, AL, Houston County, AL ........................................................
Dover, DE, Kent County, DE ................................................................................................................................
Dubuque, IA, Dubuque County, IA .......................................................................................................................
Duluth, MN–WI, Carlton County, MN, St. Louis County, MN, Douglas County, WI ............................................
Durham-Chapel Hill, NC, Chatham County, NC, Durham County, NC, Orange County, NC, Person County,
NC.
Eau Claire, WI, Chippewa County, WI, Eau Claire County, WI ...........................................................................
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0.8683
0.9174
1.0721
1.0111
0.8964
0.9416
0.8119
0.8972
0.9447
0.9209
0.8783
0.9494
1.0418
1.1616
0.9470
0.7802
0.7496
0.9303
0.9064
0.9497
0.9282
0.8196
0.8601
0.8170
0.9818
0.9803
0.8433
1.0596
0.8911
0.8054
0.9831
0.8625
0.9460
0.7888
0.9306
0.9034
0.7165
0.8151
0.8560
1.0395
0.9393
0.9237
0.7108
0.9939
0.8790
1.0123
0.9669
1.0103
26084
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 87 / Tuesday, May 6, 2014 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1—FY 2015 WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS BASED ON CBSA LABOR MARKET AREAS—Continued
CBSA Code
Urban area (constituent counties)
20764 ................
Edison-New Brunswick, NJ, Middlesex County, NJ, Monmouth County, NJ, Ocean County, NJ, Somerset
County, NJ.
El Centro, CA, Imperial County, CA .....................................................................................................................
Elizabethtown, KY, Hardin County, KY, Larue County, KY .................................................................................
Elkhart-Goshen, IN, Elkhart County, IN ...............................................................................................................
Elmira, NY, Chemung County, NY .......................................................................................................................
El Paso, TX, El Paso County, TX ........................................................................................................................
Erie, PA, Erie County, PA ....................................................................................................................................
Eugene-Springfield, OR, Lane County, OR .........................................................................................................
Evansville, IN–KY, Gibson County, IN, Posey County, IN, Vanderburgh County, IN, Warrick County, IN, Henderson County, KY, Webster County, KY.
Fairbanks, AK, Fairbanks North Star Borough, AK ..............................................................................................
Fajardo, PR, Ceiba Municipio, PR, Fajardo Municipio, PR, Luquillo Municipio, PR ...........................................
Fargo, ND–MN, Cass County, ND, Clay County, MN .........................................................................................
Farmington, NM, San Juan County, NM ..............................................................................................................
Fayetteville, NC, Cumberland County, NC, Hoke County, NC ............................................................................
Fayetteville-Springdale-Rogers, AR–MO, Benton County, AR, Madison County, AR, Washington County, AR,
McDonald County, MO.
Flagstaff, AZ, Coconino County, AZ .....................................................................................................................
Flint, MI, Genesee County, MI .............................................................................................................................
Florence, SC, Darlington County, SC, Florence County, SC ..............................................................................
Florence-Muscle Shoals, AL, Colbert County, AL, Lauderdale County, AL ........................................................
Fond du Lac, WI, Fond du Lac County, WI .........................................................................................................
Fort Collins-Loveland, CO, Larimer County, CO ..................................................................................................
Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach-Deerfield, FL, Broward County, FL ................................................................
Fort Smith, AR–OK, Crawford County, AR, Franklin County, AR, Sebastian County, AR, Le Flore County,
OK, Sequoyah County, OK.
Fort Wayne, IN, Allen County, IN, Wells County, IN, Whitley County, IN ...........................................................
Fort Worth-Arlington, TX, Johnson County, TX, Parker County, TX, Tarrant County, TX, Wise County, TX ....
Fresno, CA, Fresno County, CA ..........................................................................................................................
Gadsden, AL, Etowah County, AL .......................................................................................................................
Gainesville, FL, Alachua County, FL, Gilchrist County, FL ..................................................................................
Gainesville, GA, Hall County, GA .........................................................................................................................
Gary, IN, Jasper County, IN, Lake County, IN, Newton County, IN, Porter County, IN .....................................
Glens Falls, NY, Warren County, NY, Washington County, NY ..........................................................................
Goldsboro, NC, Wayne County, NC .....................................................................................................................
Grand Forks, ND–MN, Polk County, MN, Grand Forks County, ND ...................................................................
Grand Junction, CO, Mesa County, CO ...............................................................................................................
Grand Rapids-Wyoming, MI, Barry County, MI, Ionia County, MI, Kent County, MI, Newaygo County, MI ......
Great Falls, MT, Cascade County, MT ................................................................................................................
Greeley, CO, Weld County, CO ...........................................................................................................................
Green Bay, WI, Brown County, WI, Kewaunee County, WI, Oconto County, WI ...............................................
Greensboro-High Point, NC, Guilford County, NC, Randolph County, NC, Rockingham County, NC ...............
Greenville, NC, Greene County, NC, Pitt County, NC .........................................................................................
Greenville-Mauldin-Easley, SC, Greenville County, SC, Laurens County, SC, Pickens County, SC .................
Guayama, PR, Arroyo Municipio, PR, Guayama Municipio, PR, Patillas Municipio, PR ....................................
Gulfport-Biloxi, MS, Hancock County, MS, Harrison County, MS, Stone County, MS ........................................
Hagerstown-Martinsburg, MD–WV, Washington County, MD, Berkeley County, WV, Morgan County, WV ......
Hanford-Corcoran, CA, Kings County, CA ...........................................................................................................
Harrisburg-Carlisle, PA, Cumberland County, PA, Dauphin County, PA, Perry County, PA ..............................
Harrisonburg, VA, Rockingham County, VA, Harrisonburg City, VA ...................................................................
Hartford-West Hartford-East Hartford, CT, Hartford County, CT, Middlesex County, CT, Tolland County, CT
Hattiesburg, MS, Forrest County, MS, Lamar County, MS, Perry County, MS ...................................................
Hickory-Lenoir-Morganton, NC, Alexander County, NC, Burke County, NC, Caldwell County, NC, Catawba
County, NC.
Hinesville-Fort Stewart, GA1, Liberty County, GA, Long County, GA .................................................................
Holland-Grand Haven, MI, Ottawa County, MI ....................................................................................................
Honolulu, HI, Honolulu County, HI .......................................................................................................................
Hot Springs, AR, Garland County, AR .................................................................................................................
Houma-Bayou Cane-Thibodaux, LA, Lafourche Parish, LA, Terrebonne Parish, LA ..........................................
Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown, TX, Austin County, TX, Brazoria County, TX, Chambers County, TX, Fort
Bend County, TX, Galveston County, TX, Harris County, TX, Liberty County, TX, Montgomery County, TX,
San Jacinto County, TX, Waller County, TX.
Huntington-Ashland, WV–KY–OH, Boyd County, KY, Greenup County, KY, Lawrence County, OH, Cabell
County, WV, Wayne County, WV.
Huntsville, AL, Limestone County, AL, Madison County, AL ...............................................................................
Idaho Falls, ID, Bonneville County, ID, Jefferson County, ID ..............................................................................
Indianapolis-Carmel, IN, Boone County, IN, Brown County, IN, Hamilton County, IN, Hancock County, IN,
Hendricks County, IN, Johnson County, IN, Marion County, IN, Morgan County, IN, Putnam County, IN,
Shelby County, IN.
Iowa City, IA, Johnson County, IA, Washington County, IA ................................................................................
Ithaca, NY, Tompkins County, NY .......................................................................................................................
................
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21820
21940
22020
22140
22180
22220
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22380
22420
22500
22520
22540
22660
22744
22900
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23060
23104
23420
23460
23540
23580
23844
24020
24140
24220
24300
24340
24500
24540
24580
24660
24780
24860
25020
25060
25180
25260
25420
25500
25540
25620
25860
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1.0985
0.8848
0.7894
0.9337
0.8725
0.8404
0.7940
1.1723
0.8381
1.0997
0.3728
0.7802
0.9735
0.8601
0.8955
1.2786
1.1238
0.7999
0.7684
0.9477
0.9704
1.0378
0.7561
0.9010
0.9535
1.1768
0.7983
0.9710
0.9253
0.9418
0.8367
0.8550
0.7290
0.9270
0.9091
0.9235
0.9653
0.9587
0.8320
0.9343
0.9604
0.3707
0.8575
0.9234
1.1124
0.9533
0.9090
1.1050
0.7938
0.8492
0.8700
0.8016
1.2321
0.8474
0.7525
0.9915
0.8944
0.8455
0.9312
1.0108
0.9854
0.9326
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 87 / Tuesday, May 6, 2014 / Proposed Rules
26085
TABLE 1—FY 2015 WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS BASED ON CBSA LABOR MARKET AREAS—Continued
CBSA Code
Urban area (constituent counties)
27100 ................
27140 ................
Jackson, MI, Jackson County, MI ........................................................................................................................
Jackson, MS, Copiah County, MS, Hinds County, MS, Madison County, MS, Rankin County, MS, Simpson
County, MS.
Jackson, TN, Chester County, TN, Madison County, TN ....................................................................................
Jacksonville, FL, Baker County, FL, Clay County, FL, Duval County, FL, Nassau County, FL, St. Johns
County, FL.
Jacksonville, NC, Onslow County, NC .................................................................................................................
Janesville, WI, Rock County, WI ..........................................................................................................................
Jefferson City, MO, Callaway County, MO, Cole County, MO, Moniteau County, MO, Osage County, MO .....
Johnson City, TN, Carter County, TN, Unicoi County, TN, Washington County, TN ..........................................
Johnstown, PA, Cambria County, PA ..................................................................................................................
Jonesboro, AR, Craighead County, AR, Poinsett County, AR ............................................................................
Joplin, MO, Jasper County, MO, Newton County, MO ........................................................................................
Kalamazoo-Portage, MI, Kalamazoo County, MI, Van Buren County, MI ...........................................................
Kankakee-Bradley, IL, Kankakee County, IL .......................................................................................................
Kansas City, MO–KS, Franklin County, KS, Johnson County, KS, Leavenworth County, KS, Linn County,
KS, Miami County, KS, Wyandotte County, KS, Bates County, MO, Caldwell County, MO, Cass County,
MO, Clay County, MO, Clinton County, MO, Jackson County, MO, Lafayette County, MO, Platte County,
MO, Ray County, MO.
Kennewick-Pasco-Richland, WA, Benton County, WA, Franklin County, WA ....................................................
Killeen-Temple-Fort Hood, TX, Bell County, TX, Coryell County, TX, Lampasas County, TX ...........................
Kingsport-Bristol-Bristol, TN–VA, Hawkins County, TN, Sullivan County, TN, Bristol City, VA, Scott County,
VA, Washington County, VA.
Kingston, NY, Ulster County, NY .........................................................................................................................
Knoxville, TN, Anderson County, TN, Blount County, TN, Knox County, TN, Loudon County, TN, Union
County, TN.
Kokomo, IN, Howard County, IN, Tipton County, IN ...........................................................................................
La Crosse, WI–MN, Houston County, MN, La Crosse County, WI .....................................................................
Lafayette, IN, Benton County, IN, Carroll County, IN, Tippecanoe County, IN ...................................................
Lafayette, LA, Lafayette Parish, LA, St. Martin Parish, LA ..................................................................................
Lake Charles, LA, Calcasieu Parish, LA, Cameron Parish, LA ...........................................................................
Lake County-Kenosha County, IL–WI, Lake County, IL, Kenosha County, WI ...................................................
Lake Havasu City-Kingman, AZ, Mohave County, AZ .........................................................................................
Lakeland-Winter Haven, FL, Polk County, FL ......................................................................................................
Lancaster, PA, Lancaster County, PA ..................................................................................................................
Lansing-East Lansing, MI, Clinton County, MI, Eaton County, MI, Ingham County, MI .....................................
Laredo, TX, Webb County, TX .............................................................................................................................
Las Cruces, NM, Dona Ana County, NM .............................................................................................................
Las Vegas-Paradise, NV, Clark County, NV ........................................................................................................
Lawrence, KS, Douglas County, KS ....................................................................................................................
Lawton, OK, Comanche County, OK ...................................................................................................................
Lebanon, PA, Lebanon County, PA .....................................................................................................................
Lewiston, ID–WA, Nez Perce County, ID, Asotin County, WA ............................................................................
Lewiston-Auburn, ME, Androscoggin County, ME ...............................................................................................
Lexington-Fayette, KY, Bourbon County, KY, Clark County, KY, Fayette County, KY, Jessamine County, KY,
Scott County, KY, Woodford County, KY.
Lima, OH, Allen County, OH ................................................................................................................................
Lincoln, NE, Lancaster County, NE, Seward County, NE ...................................................................................
Little Rock-North Little Rock-Conway, AR, Faulkner County, AR, Grant County, AR, Lonoke County, AR,
Perry County, AR, Pulaski County, AR, Saline County, AR.
Logan, UT–ID, Franklin County, ID, Cache County, UT ......................................................................................
Longview, TX, Gregg County, TX, Rusk County, TX, Upshur County, TX .........................................................
Longview, WA, Cowlitz County, WA ....................................................................................................................
Los Angeles-Long Beach-Glendale, CA, Los Angeles County, CA .....................................................................
Louisville-Jefferson County, KY–IN, Clark County, IN, Floyd County, IN, Harrison County, IN, Washington
County, IN, Bullitt County, KY, Henry County, KY, Meade County, KY, Nelson County, KY, Oldham County, KY, Shelby County, KY, Spencer County, KY, Trimble County, KY.
Lubbock, TX, Crosby County, TX, Lubbock County, TX .....................................................................................
Lynchburg, VA, Amherst County, VA, Appomattox County, VA, Bedford County, VA, Campbell County, VA,
Bedford City, VA, Lynchburg City, VA.
Macon, GA, Bibb County, GA, Crawford County, GA, Jones County, GA, Monroe County, GA, Twiggs County, GA.
Madera-Chowchilla, CA, Madera County, CA ......................................................................................................
Madison, WI, Columbia County, WI, Dane County, WI, Iowa County, WI ..........................................................
Manchester-Nashua, NH, Hillsborough County, NH ............................................................................................
Manhattan, KS, Geary County, KS, Pottawatomie County, KS, Riley County, KS .............................................
Mankato-North Mankato, MN, Blue Earth County, MN, Nicollet County, MN .....................................................
Mansfield, OH, Richland County, OH ...................................................................................................................
¨
¨
Mayaguez, PR, Hormigueros Municipio, PR, Mayaguez Municipio, PR .............................................................
McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, TX, Hidalgo County, TX ............................................................................................
Medford, OR, Jackson County, OR ......................................................................................................................
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27340
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0.8956
0.7861
0.9071
0.8465
0.7226
0.8450
0.7983
0.7983
0.9959
0.9657
0.9447
0.9459
0.8925
0.7192
0.9066
0.7432
0.9061
1.0205
0.9954
0.8231
0.7765
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0.8283
0.9695
1.0618
0.7586
0.9265
1.1627
0.8664
0.7893
0.8157
0.9215
0.9048
0.8902
0.9158
0.9465
0.8632
0.8754
0.8933
1.0460
1.2417
0.8852
0.8956
0.8771
0.9014
0.8317
1.1414
1.0057
0.7843
0.9277
0.8509
0.3762
0.8393
1.0690
26086
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 87 / Tuesday, May 6, 2014 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1—FY 2015 WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS BASED ON CBSA LABOR MARKET AREAS—Continued
CBSA Code
Urban area (constituent counties)
32820 ................
Memphis, TN–MS–AR, Crittenden County, AR, DeSoto County, MS, Marshall County, MS, Tate County, MS,
Tunica County, MS, Fayette County, TN, Shelby County, TN, Tipton County, TN.
Merced, CA, Merced County, CA .........................................................................................................................
Miami-Miami Beach-Kendall, FL, Miami-Dade County, FL ..................................................................................
Michigan City-La Porte, IN, LaPorte County, IN ..................................................................................................
Midland, TX, Midland County, TX ........................................................................................................................
Milwaukee-Waukesha-West Allis, WI, Milwaukee County, WI, Ozaukee County, WI, Washington County, WI,
Waukesha County, WI.
Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington, MN–WI, Anoka County, MN, Carver County, MN, Chisago County, MN,
Dakota County, MN, Hennepin County, MN, Isanti County, MN, Ramsey County, MN, Scott County, MN,
Sherburne County, MN, Washington County, MN, Wright County, MN, Pierce County, WI, St. Croix County, WI.
Missoula, MT, Missoula County, MT ....................................................................................................................
Mobile, AL, Mobile County, AL .............................................................................................................................
Modesto, CA, Stanislaus County, CA ..................................................................................................................
Monroe, LA, Ouachita Parish, LA, Union Parish, LA ...........................................................................................
Monroe, MI, Monroe County, MI ..........................................................................................................................
Montgomery, AL, Autauga County, AL, Elmore County, AL, Lowndes County, AL, Montgomery County, AL ...
Morgantown, WV, Monongalia County, WV, Preston County, WV ......................................................................
Morristown, TN, Grainger County, TN, Hamblen County, TN, Jefferson County, TN .........................................
Mount Vernon-Anacortes, WA, Skagit County, WA .............................................................................................
Muncie, IN, Delaware County, IN .........................................................................................................................
Muskegon-Norton Shores, MI, Muskegon County, MI .........................................................................................
Myrtle Beach-North Myrtle Beach-Conway, SC, Horry County, SC ....................................................................
Napa, CA, Napa County, CA ................................................................................................................................
Naples-Marco Island, FL, Collier County, FL .......................................................................................................
Nashville-Davidson—Murfreesboro-Franklin, TN, Cannon County, TN, Cheatham County, TN, Davidson
County, TN, Dickson County, TN, Hickman County, TN, Macon County, TN, Robertson County, TN, Rutherford County, TN, Smith County, TN, Sumner County, TN, Trousdale County, TN, Williamson County,
TN, Wilson County, TN.
Nassau-Suffolk, NY, Nassau County, NY, Suffolk County, NY ...........................................................................
Newark-Union, NJ-PA, Essex County, NJ, Hunterdon County, NJ, Morris County, NJ, Sussex County, NJ,
Union County, NJ, Pike County, PA.
New Haven-Milford, CT, New Haven County, CT ................................................................................................
New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, LA, Jefferson Parish, LA, Orleans Parish, LA, Plaquemines Parish, LA, St.
Bernard Parish, LA, St. Charles Parish, LA, St. John the Baptist Parish, LA, St. Tammany Parish, LA.
New York-White Plains-Wayne, NY-NJ, Bergen County, NJ, Hudson County, NJ, Passaic County, NJ, Bronx
County, NY, Kings County, NY, New York County, NY, Putnam County, NY, Queens County, NY, Richmond County, NY, Rockland County, NY, Westchester County, NY.
Niles-Benton Harbor, MI, Berrien County, MI ......................................................................................................
North Port-Bradenton-Sarasota-Venice, FL, Manatee County, FL, Sarasota County, FL ...................................
Norwich-New London, CT, New London County, CT ..........................................................................................
Oakland-Fremont-Hayward, CA, Alameda County, CA, Contra Costa County, CA ............................................
Ocala, FL, Marion County, FL ..............................................................................................................................
Ocean City, NJ, Cape May County, NJ ...............................................................................................................
Odessa, TX, Ector County, TX .............................................................................................................................
Ogden-Clearfield, UT, Davis County, UT, Morgan County, UT, Weber County, UT ...........................................
Oklahoma City, OK, Canadian County, OK, Cleveland County, OK, Grady County, OK, Lincoln County, OK,
Logan County, OK, McClain County, OK, Oklahoma County, OK.
Olympia, WA, Thurston County, WA ....................................................................................................................
Omaha-Council Bluffs, NE–IA, Harrison County, IA, Mills County, IA, Pottawattamie County, IA, Cass County, NE, Douglas County, NE, Sarpy County, NE, Saunders County, NE, Washington County, NE.
Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, FL, Lake County, FL, Orange County, FL, Osceola County, FL, Seminole
County, FL.
Oshkosh-Neenah, WI, Winnebago County, WI ....................................................................................................
Owensboro, KY, Daviess County, KY, Hancock County, KY, McLean County, KY ............................................
Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura, CA, Ventura County, CA ................................................................................
Palm Bay-Melbourne-Titusville, FL, Brevard County, FL .....................................................................................
Palm Coast, FL, Flagler County, FL .....................................................................................................................
Panama City-Lynn Haven-Panama City Beach, FL, Bay County, FL .................................................................
Parkersburg-Marietta-Vienna, WV–OH, Washington County, OH, Pleasants County, WV, Wirt County, WV,
Wood County, WV.
Pascagoula, MS, George County, MS, Jackson County, MS ..............................................................................
Peabody, MA, Essex County, MA ........................................................................................................................
Pensacola-Ferry Pass-Brent, FL, Escambia County, FL, Santa Rosa County, FL .............................................
Peoria, IL, Marshall County, IL, Peoria County, IL, Stark County, IL, Tazewell County, IL, Woodford County,
IL.
Philadelphia, PA, Bucks County, PA, Chester County, PA, Delaware County, PA, Montgomery County, PA,
Philadelphia County, PA.
Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, AZ, Maricopa County, AZ, Pinal County, AZ ............................................................
Pine Bluff, AR, Cleveland County, AR, Jefferson County, AR, Lincoln County, AR ...........................................
32900
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1.3629
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1.2755
1.1268
1.1883
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1.3089
0.8444
0.9428
1.1821
1.7048
0.8425
1.0584
0.9661
0.9170
0.8879
1.1601
0.9756
0.9063
0.9398
0.7790
1.3113
0.8790
0.8174
0.7876
0.7569
0.7542
1.0553
0.7767
0.8434
1.0849
1.0465
0.8069
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 87 / Tuesday, May 6, 2014 / Proposed Rules
26087
TABLE 1—FY 2015 WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS BASED ON CBSA LABOR MARKET AREAS—Continued
CBSA Code
Urban area (constituent counties)
38300 ................
Pittsburgh, PA, Allegheny County, PA, Armstrong County, PA, Beaver County, PA, Butler County, PA, Fayette County, PA, Washington County, PA, Westmoreland County, PA.
Pittsfield, MA, Berkshire County, MA ...................................................................................................................
Pocatello, ID, Bannock County, ID, Power County, ID ........................................................................................
´
Ponce, PR, Juana Dıaz Municipio, PR, Ponce Municipio, PR, Villalba Municipio, PR .......................................
Portland-South Portland-Biddeford, ME, Cumberland County, ME, Sagadahoc County, ME, York County, ME
Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro, OR–WA, Clackamas County, OR, Columbia County, OR, Multnomah County,
OR, Washington County, OR, Yamhill County, OR, Clark County, WA, Skamania County, WA.
Port St. Lucie, FL, Martin County, FL, St. Lucie County, FL ...............................................................................
Poughkeepsie-Newburgh-Middletown, NY, Dutchess County, NY, Orange County, NY ....................................
Prescott, AZ, Yavapai County, AZ .......................................................................................................................
Providence-New Bedford-Fall River, RI–MA, Bristol County, MA, Bristol County, RI, Kent County, RI, Newport County, RI, Providence County, RI, Washington County, RI.
Provo-Orem, UT, Juab County, UT, Utah County, UT ........................................................................................
Pueblo, CO, Pueblo County, CO .........................................................................................................................
Punta Gorda, FL, Charlotte County, FL ...............................................................................................................
Racine, WI, Racine County, WI ............................................................................................................................
Raleigh-Cary, NC, Franklin County, NC, Johnston County, NC, Wake County, NC ..........................................
Rapid City, SD, Meade County, SD, Pennington County, SD .............................................................................
Reading, PA, Berks County, PA ...........................................................................................................................
Redding, CA, Shasta County, CA ........................................................................................................................
Reno-Sparks, NV, Storey County, NV, Washoe County, NV ..............................................................................
Richmond, VA, Amelia County, VA, Caroline County, VA, Charles City County, VA, Chesterfield County, VA,
Cumberland County, VA, Dinwiddie County, VA, Goochland County, VA, Hanover County, VA, Henrico
County, VA, King and Queen County, VA, King William County, VA, Louisa County, VA, New Kent County, VA, Powhatan County, VA, Prince George County, VA, Sussex County, VA, Colonial Heights City, VA,
Hopewell City, VA, Petersburg City, VA, Richmond City, VA.
Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA, Riverside County, CA, San Bernardino County, CA ............................
Roanoke, VA, Botetourt County, VA, Craig County, VA, Franklin County, VA, Roanoke County, VA, Roanoke
City, VA, Salem City, VA.
Rochester, MN, Dodge County, MN, Olmsted County, MN, Wabasha County, MN ...........................................
Rochester, NY, Livingston County, NY, Monroe County, NY, Ontario County, NY, Orleans County, NY,
Wayne County, NY.
Rockford, IL, Boone County, IL, Winnebago County, IL ......................................................................................
Rockingham County-Strafford County, NH, Rockingham County, NH, Strafford County, NH ............................
Rocky Mount, NC, Edgecombe County, NC, Nash County, NC .........................................................................
Rome, GA, Floyd County, GA ..............................................................................................................................
Sacramento-Arden-Arcade-Roseville, CA, El Dorado County, CA, Placer County, CA, Sacramento County,
CA, Yolo County, CA.
Saginaw-Saginaw Township North, MI, Saginaw County, MI ..............................................................................
St. Cloud, MN, Benton County, MN, Stearns County, MN ..................................................................................
St. George, UT, Washington County, UT .............................................................................................................
St. Joseph, MO–KS, Doniphan County, KS, Andrew County, MO, Buchanan County, MO, DeKalb County,
MO.
St. Louis, MO–IL, Bond County, IL, Calhoun County, IL, Clinton County, IL, Jersey County, IL, Macoupin
County, IL, Madison County, IL, Monroe County, IL, St. Clair County, IL, Crawford County, MO, Franklin
County, MO, Jefferson County, MO, Lincoln County, MO, St. Charles County, MO, St. Louis County, MO,
Warren County, MO, Washington County, MO, St. Louis City, MO.
Salem, OR, Marion County, OR, Polk County, OR .............................................................................................
Salinas, CA, Monterey County, CA ......................................................................................................................
Salisbury, MD, Somerset County, MD, Wicomico County, MD ...........................................................................
Salt Lake City, UT, Salt Lake County, UT, Summit County, UT, Tooele County, UT .........................................
San Angelo, TX, Irion County, TX, Tom Green County, TX ................................................................................
San Antonio-New Braunfels, TX, Atascosa County, TX, Bandera County, TX, Bexar County, TX, Comal
County, TX, Guadalupe County, TX, Kendall County, TX, Medina County, TX, Wilson County, TX.
San Diego-Carlsbad-San Marcos, CA, San Diego County, CA ...........................................................................
Sandusky, OH, Erie County, OH ..........................................................................................................................
San Francisco-San Mateo-Redwood City, CA, Marin County, CA, San Francisco County, CA, San Mateo
County, CA.
´
San German-Cabo Rojo, PR, Cabo Rojo Municipio, PR, Lajas Municipio, PR, Sabana Grande Municipio,
´
PR, San German Municipio, PR.
San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, CA, San Benito County, CA, Santa Clara County, CA ................................
38340
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1.1766
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1.1544
1.0161
1.0539
0.9461
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26088
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 87 / Tuesday, May 6, 2014 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1—FY 2015 WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS BASED ON CBSA LABOR MARKET AREAS—Continued
CBSA Code
Urban area (constituent counties)
41980 ................
San Juan-Caguas-Guaynabo, PR, Aguas Buenas Municipio, PR, Aibonito Municipio, PR, Arecibo Municipio,
´
PR, Barceloneta Municipio, PR, Barranquitas Municipio, PR, Bayamon Municipio, PR, Caguas Municipio,
´
˜
PR, Camuy Municipio, PR, Canovanas Municipio, PR, Carolina Municipio, PR, Catano Municipio, PR,
´
Cayey Municipio, PR, Ciales Municipio, PR, Cidra Municipio, PR, Comerıo Municipio, PR, Corozal
Municipio, PR, Dorado Municipio, PR, Florida Municipio, PR, Guaynabo Municipio, PR, Gurabo Municipio,
PR, Hatillo Municipio, PR, Humacao Municipio, PR, Juncos Municipio, PR, Las Piedras Municipio, PR,
´
´
Loıza Municipio, PR, Manatı Municipio, PR, Maunabo Municipio, PR, Morovis Municipio, PR, Naguabo
´
Municipio, PR, Naranjito Municipio, PR, Orocovis Municipio, PR, Quebradillas Municipio, PR, Rıo Grande
Municipio, PR, San Juan Municipio, PR, San Lorenzo Municipio, PR, Toa Alta Municipio, PR, Toa Baja
Municipio, PR, Trujillo Alto Municipio, PR, Vega Alta Municipio, PR, Vega Baja Municipio, PR, Yabucoa
Municipio, PR.
San Luis Obispo-Paso Robles, CA, San Luis Obispo County, CA .....................................................................
Santa Ana-Anaheim-Irvine, CA, Orange County, CA ..........................................................................................
Santa Barbara-Santa Maria-Goleta, CA, Santa Barbara County, CA .................................................................
Santa Cruz-Watsonville, CA, Santa Cruz County, CA .........................................................................................
Santa Fe, NM, Santa Fe County, NM ..................................................................................................................
Santa Rosa-Petaluma, CA, Sonoma County, CA ................................................................................................
Savannah, GA, Bryan County, GA, Chatham County, GA, Effingham County, GA ............................................
Scranton—Wilkes-Barre, PA, Lackawanna County, PA, Luzerne County, PA, Wyoming County, PA ...............
Seattle-Bellevue-Everett, WA, King County, WA, Snohomish County, WA ........................................................
Sebastian-Vero Beach, FL, Indian River County, FL ...........................................................................................
Sheboygan, WI, Sheboygan County, WI ..............................................................................................................
Sherman-Denison, TX, Grayson County, TX .......................................................................................................
Shreveport-Bossier City, LA, Bossier Parish, LA, Caddo Parish, LA, De Soto Parish, LA .................................
Sioux City, IA–NE–SD, Woodbury County, IA, Dakota County, NE, Dixon County, NE, Union County, SD .....
Sioux Falls, SD, Lincoln County, SD, McCook County, SD, Minnehaha County, SD, Turner County, SD ........
South Bend-Mishawaka, IN–MI, St. Joseph County, IN, Cass County, MI .........................................................
Spartanburg, SC, Spartanburg County, SC .........................................................................................................
Spokane, WA, Spokane County, WA ...................................................................................................................
Springfield, IL, Menard County, IL, Sangamon County, IL ..................................................................................
Springfield, MA, Franklin County, MA, Hampden County, MA, Hampshire County, MA ....................................
Springfield, MO, Christian County, MO, Dallas County, MO, Greene County, MO, Polk County, MO, Webster
County, MO.
Springfield, OH, Clark County, OH .......................................................................................................................
State College, PA, Centre County, PA .................................................................................................................
Steubenville-Weirton, OH–WV, Jefferson County, OH, Brooke County, WV, Hancock County, WV .................
Stockton, CA, San Joaquin County, CA ...............................................................................................................
Sumter, SC, Sumter County, SC ..........................................................................................................................
Syracuse, NY, Madison County, NY, Onondaga County, NY, Oswego County, NY ..........................................
Tacoma, WA, Pierce County, WA ........................................................................................................................
Tallahassee, FL, Gadsden County, FL, Jefferson County, FL, Leon County, FL, Wakulla County, FL .............
Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, Hernando County, FL, Hillsborough County, FL, Pasco County, FL,
Pinellas County, FL.
Terre Haute, IN, Clay County, IN, Sullivan County, IN, Vermillion County, IN, Vigo County, IN ........................
Texarkana, TX-Texarkana, AR, Miller County, AR, Bowie County, TX ...............................................................
Toledo, OH, Fulton County, OH, Lucas County, OH, Ottawa County, OH, Wood County, OH .........................
Topeka, KS, Jackson County, KS, Jefferson County, KS, Osage County, KS, Shawnee County, KS,
Wabaunsee County, KS.
Trenton-Ewing, NJ, Mercer County, NJ ...............................................................................................................
Tucson, AZ, Pima County, AZ ..............................................................................................................................
Tulsa, OK, Creek County, OK, Okmulgee County, OK, Osage County, OK, Pawnee County, OK, Rogers
County, OK, Tulsa County, OK, Wagoner County, OK.
Tuscaloosa, AL, Greene County, AL, Hale County, AL, Tuscaloosa County, AL ...............................................
Tyler, TX, Smith County, TX ................................................................................................................................
Utica-Rome, NY, Herkimer County, NY, Oneida County, NY ..............................................................................
Valdosta, GA, Brooks County, GA, Echols County, GA, Lanier County, GA, Lowndes County, GA .................
Vallejo-Fairfield, CA, Solano County, CA .............................................................................................................
Victoria, TX, Calhoun County, TX, Goliad County, TX, Victoria County, TX .......................................................
Vineland-Millville-Bridgeton, NJ, Cumberland County, NJ ...................................................................................
Virginia Beach-Norfolk-Newport News, VA–NC, Currituck County, NC, Gloucester County, VA, Isle of Wight
County, VA, James City County, VA, Mathews County, VA, Surry County, VA, York County, VA, Chesapeake City, VA, Hampton City, VA, Newport News City, VA, Norfolk City, VA, Poquoson City, VA, Portsmouth City, VA, Suffolk City, VA, Virginia Beach City, VA, Williamsburg City, VA.
Visalia-Porterville, CA, Tulare County, CA ...........................................................................................................
Waco, TX, McLennan County, TX ........................................................................................................................
Warner Robins, GA, Houston County, GA ...........................................................................................................
Warren-Troy-Farmington Hills, MI, Lapeer County, MI, Livingston County, MI, Macomb County, MI, Oakland
County, MI, St. Clair County, MI.
42020
42044
42060
42100
42140
42220
42340
42540
42644
42680
43100
43300
43340
43580
43620
43780
43900
44060
44100
44140
44180
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
44220
44300
44600
44700
44940
45060
45104
45220
45300
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
45460
45500
45780
45820
................
................
................
................
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46060 ................
46140 ................
46220
46340
46540
46660
46700
47020
47220
47260
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
47300
47380
47580
47644
................
................
................
................
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0.4356
1.3036
1.2111
1.2825
1.7937
1.0136
1.6679
0.8757
0.8331
1.1733
0.8760
0.9203
0.8723
0.8262
0.9163
0.8275
0.9425
0.8782
1.1174
0.9165
1.0383
0.8440
0.8447
0.9575
0.7598
1.3734
0.7594
0.9897
1.1574
0.8391
0.9075
0.9706
0.7428
0.9013
0.8974
1.0648
0.8953
0.8145
0.8500
0.8526
0.8769
0.7527
1.6286
0.8949
1.0759
0.9121
0.9947
0.8213
0.7732
0.9432
26089
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 87 / Tuesday, May 6, 2014 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1—FY 2015 WAGE INDEX FOR URBAN AREAS BASED ON CBSA LABOR MARKET AREAS—Continued
CBSA Code
Urban area (constituent counties)
47894 ................
Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC–VA–MD–WV, District of Columbia, DC, Calvert County, MD, Charles
County, MD, Prince George’s County, MD, Arlington County, VA, Clarke County, VA, Fairfax County, VA,
Fauquier County, VA, Loudoun County, VA, Prince William County, VA, Spotsylvania County, VA, Stafford
County, VA, Warren County, VA, Alexandria City, VA, Fairfax City, VA, Falls Church City, VA, Fredericksburg City, VA, Manassas City, VA, Manassas Park City, VA, Jefferson County, WV.
Waterloo-Cedar Falls, IA, Black Hawk County, IA, Bremer County, IA, Grundy County, IA ..............................
Wausau, WI, Marathon County, WI ......................................................................................................................
Wenatchee-East Wenatchee, WA, Chelan County, WA, Douglas County, WA ..................................................
West Palm Beach-Boca Raton-Boynton Beach, FL, Palm Beach County, FL ....................................................
Wheeling, WV–OH, Belmont County, OH, Marshall County, WV, Ohio County, WV .........................................
Wichita, KS, Butler County, KS, Harvey County, KS, Sedgwick County, KS, Sumner County, KS ...................
Wichita Falls, TX, Archer County, TX, Clay County, TX, Wichita County, TX ....................................................
Williamsport, PA, Lycoming County, PA ..............................................................................................................
Wilmington, DE–MD–NJ, New Castle County, DE, Cecil County, MD, Salem County, NJ ................................
Wilmington, NC, Brunswick County, NC, New Hanover County, NC, Pender County, NC ................................
Winchester, VA–WV, Frederick County, VA, Winchester City, VA, Hampshire County, WV ..............................
Winston-Salem, NC, Davie County, NC, Forsyth County, NC, Stokes County, NC, Yadkin County, NC ..........
Worcester, MA, Worcester County, MA ...............................................................................................................
Yakima, WA, Yakima County, WA .......................................................................................................................
´
˜
Yauco, PR, Guanica Municipio, PR, Guayanilla Municipio, PR, Penuelas Municipio, PR, Yauco Municipio,
PR.
York-Hanover, PA, York County, PA ....................................................................................................................
Youngstown-Warren-Boardman, OH–PA, Mahoning County, OH, Trumbull County, OH, Mercer County, PA
Yuba City, CA, Sutter County, CA, Yuba County, CA .........................................................................................
Yuma, AZ, Yuma County, AZ ...............................................................................................................................
47940
48140
48300
48424
48540
48620
48660
48700
48864
48900
49020
49180
49340
49420
49500
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
................
49620
49660
49700
49740
................
................
................
................
1 At this time, there are no hospitals
located in this urban area on which to base
a wage index.
TABLE 2—FY 2015 WAGE INDEX
BASED ON CBSA LABOR MARKET
AREAS FOR RURAL AREAS
State
code
Nonurban area
Wage
index
1 ..........
2 ..........
3 ..........
4 ..........
5 ..........
6 ..........
7 ..........
8 ..........
10 ........
11 ........
12 ........
13 ........
14 ........
15 ........
16 ........
17 ........
18 ........
19 ........
20 ........
Alabama ......................
Alaska .........................
Arizona ........................
Arkansas .....................
California .....................
Colorado ......................
Connecticut .................
Delaware .....................
Florida .........................
Georgia .......................
Hawaii .........................
Idaho ...........................
Illinois ..........................
Indiana ........................
Iowa .............................
Kansas ........................
Kentucky .....................
Louisiana .....................
Maine ..........................
0.7147
1.3662
0.9166
0.7343
1.2788
0.9802
1.1311
1.0092
0.7985
0.7459
1.0739
0.7605
0.8434
0.8513
0.8434
0.7929
0.7784
0.7585
0.8238
Wage index
TABLE 2—FY 2015 WAGE INDEX
BASED ON CBSA LABOR MARKET
AREAS FOR RURAL AREAS—Continued
State
code
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
Nonurban area
Wage
index
Maryland .....................
Massachusetts ............
Michigan ......................
Minnesota ....................
Mississippi ...................
Missouri .......................
Montana ......................
Nebraska .....................
Nevada ........................
New Hampshire ...........
New Jersey 1 ...............
New Mexico ................
New York ....................
North Carolina .............
North Dakota ...............
Ohio .............................
Oklahoma ....................
Oregon ........................
Pennsylvania ...............
Puerto Rico 1 ...............
Rhode Island 1 .............
South Carolina ............
0.8696
1.3614
0.8270
0.9133
0.7568
0.7775
0.9098
0.8855
0.9781
1.0339
................
0.8922
0.8220
0.8100
0.6785
0.8377
0.7704
0.9435
0.8430
0.4047
................
0.8329
1.0533
0.8331
0.8802
1.0109
0.9597
0.6673
0.8674
0.9537
0.8268
1.0593
0.8862
0.9034
0.8560
1.1584
1.0355
0.3782
0.9540
0.8262
1.1759
0.9674
TABLE 2—FY 2015 WAGE INDEX
BASED ON CBSA LABOR MARKET
AREAS FOR RURAL AREAS—Continued
State
code
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
65
Nonurban area
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
........
South Dakota ..............
Tennessee ..................
Texas ..........................
Utah .............................
Vermont .......................
Virgin Islands ..............
Virginia ........................
Washington .................
West Virginia ...............
Wisconsin ....................
Wyoming .....................
Guam ..........................
Wage
index
0.8164
0.7444
0.7874
0.8732
0.9740
0.7060
0.7758
1.0529
0.7407
0.8904
0.9243
0.9611
1 All counties within the State are classified
as urban, with the exception of Puerto Rico.
Puerto Rico has areas designated as rural;
however, no short-term, acute care hospitals
are located in the area(s) for FY 2015. The
Puerto Rico wage index is the same as FY
2014.
Addendum C
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
IPF CODE FIRST TABLE
Code
Code First Instructions ICD–10–CM (effective October 1, 2014)
F01.50 ..............
F01.51 ..............
F02.80 ..............
Code first the underlying physiological condition or sequelae of cerebrovascular disease
Code first the underlying physiological condition or sequelae of cerebrovascular disease
Code first the underlying physiological condition, such as: A52.17, A81.0–A81.9, E75.00–E75.09, E75.10–E75.19, E75.4,
E83.00–E83.09, G10, G30.0–G30.9, G31.01, G31.09, G31.83, G35, G40.001–G40.319, G40.401–G40.919, G40.A01–
G40.B19, M30.8 This list is a translation of the ICD–9 codes rather than a list of the conditions in the ICD–10 codebook
code first note for category F02.
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 87 / Tuesday, May 6, 2014 / Proposed Rules
IPF CODE FIRST TABLE—Continued
Code
Code First Instructions ICD–10–CM (effective October 1, 2014)
F02.81 ..............
Code first the underlying physiological condition, such as: A52.17, A81.0–A81.9, E75.00–E75.09, E75.10–E75.19, E75.4,
E83.00–E83.09, G10, G30.0–G30.9, G31.01, G31.09, G31.83, G35, G40.001–G40.319, G40.401–G40.919, G40.A01–
G40.B19, M30.8
Code first the underlying physiological condition
Code first the underlying physiological condition, such as: A52.17, A81.0–A81.9, E75.00–E75.09, E75.10–E75.19, E75.4,
E83.00–E83.09, G10, G30.0–G30.9, G31.01, G31.09, G31.83, G35, G40.001–G40.319, G40.401–G40.919, G40.A01–
G40.B19, M30.8
Code first the underlying physiological condition
Code first the underlying physiological condition
Code first the underlying physiological condition
Code first the underlying physiological condition
Code first the underlying physiological condition
Code first the underlying physiological condition
Code first the underlying physiological condition
Code first the underlying physiological condition
Code first the underlying physiological condition
Code first the underlying physiological condition
Code also associated acute or chronic pain
F04 ...................
F05 ...................
F06.0 ................
F06.1 ................
F06.2 ................
F06.30 ..............
F06.31 ..............
F06.32 ..............
F06.33 ..............
F06.34 ..............
F06.4 ................
F06.8 ................
F45.42 ..............
[FR Doc. 2014–10306 Filed 5–1–14; 4:15 pm]
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 87 (Tuesday, May 6, 2014)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 26039-26090]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-10306]
[[Page 26039]]
Vol. 79
Tuesday,
No. 87
May 6, 2014
Part III
Department of Health and Human Services
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
42 CFR Part 412
Medicare Program; Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities Prospective Payment
System--Update for Fiscal Year Beginning October 1, 2014 (FY 2015);
Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 79 , No. 87 / Tuesday, May 6, 2014 / Proposed
Rules
[[Page 26040]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Part 412
[CMS-1606-P]
RIN 0938-AS08
Medicare Program; Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities Prospective
Payment System--Update for Fiscal Year Beginning October 1, 2014 (FY
2015)
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This proposed rule would update the prospective payment rates
for Medicare inpatient hospital services provided by inpatient
psychiatric facilities (IPFs). These changes would be applicable to IPF
discharges occurring during the fiscal year (FY) beginning October 1,
2014 through September 30, 2015. This proposed rule would also address
implementation of ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS codes; propose a new
methodology for updating the cost of living adjustment (COLA), and
propose new quality measures and reporting requirements under the IPF
quality reporting program.
DATES: To be assured consideration, comments must be received at one of
the addresses provided below, no later than 5 p.m. on June 30, 2014.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dorothy Myrick or Jana Lindquist,
(410) 786-4533, for general information.
Hudson Osgood, (410) 786-7897 or Bridget Dickensheets, (410) 786-
8670, for information regarding the market basket and labor-related
share.
Theresa Bean, (410) 786-2287, for information regarding the
regulatory impact analysis.
Rebecca Kliman, (410) 786-9723 or Jeffrey Buck, (410) 786-0407, for
information regarding the inpatient psychiatric facility quality
reporting program.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
To assist readers in referencing sections contained in this
document, we are providing the following table of contents.
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
C. Summary of Transfers
II. Background
A. Annual Requirements for Updating the IPF PPS
B. Overview of the Legislative Requirements of the IPF PPS
C. General Overview of the IPF PPS
III. Changing the IPF PPS Payment Rate Update Period From a Rate
Year to a Fiscal Year
IV. Proposed Market Basket for the IPF PPS
A. Background
B. Proposed Development of an IPF-Specific Market Basket
C. Proposed FY 2015 Market Basket Update
D. Proposed Labor-Related Share
V. Proposed Updates to the IPF PPS for FY Beginning October 1, 2014
A. Determining the Standardized Budget-Neutral Federal Per Diem
Base Rate
B. Proposed Update of the Federal Per Diem Base Rate and
Electroconvulsive Therapy Rate
VI. Proposed Update of the IPF PPS Adjustment Factors
A. Overview of the IPF PPS Adjustment Factors
B. Proposed Patient-Level Adjustments
1. Proposed Adjustment for MS-DRG Assignment
2. Proposed Payment for Comorbid Conditions
3. Proposed Patient Age Adjustments
4. Proposed Variable Per Diem Adjustments
C. Facility-Level Adjustments
1. Proposed Wage Index Adjustment
a. Background
b. Proposed Wage Index for FY 2015
c. OMB Bulletins
2. Proposed Adjustment for Rural Location
3. Proposed Teaching Adjustment
a. FTE Intern and Resident Cap Adjustment
b. Temporary Adjustment to the FTE Cap To Reflect Residents
Added Due to Hospital Closure
c. Temporary Adjustment to FTE Cap To Reflect Residents Affected
By Residency Program Closure
i. Receiving IPF
ii. IPF That Closed Its Program
4. Proposed Cost of Living Adjustment for IPFs Located in Alaska
and Hawaii
5. Proposed Adjustment for IPFs With a Qualifying Emergency
Department (ED)
D. Other Payment Adjustments and Policies
1. Proposed Outlier Payments
a. Proposed Update to the Outlier Fixed Dollar Loss Threshold
Amount
b. Proposed Update to IPF Cost-to-Charge Ratio Ceilings
2. Future Refinements
VII. Secretary's Recommendations
VIII. Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities Quality Reporting Program
IX. Collection of Information Requirements
X. Response to Comments
XI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
Addenda
Acronyms
Because of the many terms to which we refer by acronym in this
propose rule, we are listing the acronyms used and their corresponding
meanings in alphabetical order below:
BBRA--Medicare, Medicaid and SCHIP [State Children's Health
Insurance Program] Balanced Budget Refinement Act of 1999 (Pub. L.
106-113)
CBSA--Core-Based Statistical Area
CCR--Cost-to-Charge Ratio
CAH--Critical Access Hospital
DSM-IV-TR Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
Fourth Edition--Text Revision
DRGs--Diagnosis-Related Groups
FY--Federal Fiscal Year (October 1 through September 30)
ICD-9-CM--International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision,
Clinical Modification
ICD-10-CM--International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision,
Clinical Modification
ICD-10-PCS--International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision,
Procedure Coding System
IPFs--Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities
IPFQR--Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities Quality Reporting
IRFs--Inpatient Rehabilitation Facilities
LTCHs--Long-Term Care Hospitals
MAC--Medicare Administrative Contractor
MedPAR--Medicare Provider Analysis and Review File
RPL--Rehabilitation, Psychiatric, and Long-Term Care
RY--Rate Year (July 1 through June 30)
TEFRA--Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 (Pub. L. 97-
248)
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose
This proposed rule would update the prospective payment rates for
Medicare inpatient hospital services provided by inpatient psychiatric
facilities for discharges occurring during the fiscal year (FY)
beginning October 1, 2014 through September 30, 2015.
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
In this proposed rule, we would update the IPF PPS, as specified in
42 CFR 412.428. The updates include the following:
The FY 2008-based Rehabilitation, Psychiatric, and Long
Term Care (RPL) market basket update (currently estimated to be 2.7
percent) would be adjusted by a 0.3 percentage point reduction as
required by section 1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) of the Social Security Act (the
Act) and a reduction for economy-wide productivity (currently estimated
to be 0.4 percentage point) as required by 1886(s)(2)(A)(i) of the Act.
The FY 2015 per diem rate would be updated from $713.19 to
$727.67.
The electroconvulsive therapy payment would be updated
from $307.04 to $313.27.
The fixed dollar loss threshold amount would be updated
from $10,245 to $10,125 in order to maintain outlier payments that are
2 percent of total IPF PPS payments.
The national urban and rural cost-to-charge ratio (CCR)
ceilings for FY
[[Page 26041]]
2015 would be 1.7049 and 1.8823, respectively, and the national median
CCR would be 0.6220 for rural IPFs and 0.4700 for urban IPFs. These
amounts are used in the outlier calculation to determine if an IPF's
CCR is statistically accurate and for new providers without an
established CCR.
The cost of living adjustment factors for IPFs located in
Alaska and Hawaii would be updated using the approach finalized in the
FY 2014 inpatient hospital prospective payment system (IPPS) final rule
(78 FR 50985 through 50987).
In addition:
We are proposing the ICD-10-CM/PCS codes that would be
eligible for the MS-DRG and comorbidity payment adjustments under the
IPF PPS. The effective date of those changes would be the date when
ICD-10-CM becomes the required medical data code set for use on
Medicare claims.
We are proposing the ICD-9-CM/PCS codes that would be
eligible for the MS-DRG and comorbidity payment adjustments under the
IPF PPS.
We would use the best available hospital wage index and
establish the wage index budget-neutrality adjustment of 1.0003.
We would retain the 17 percent payment adjustment for IPFs
located in rural areas, the 1.31 payment adjustment factor for IPFs
with a qualifying emergency department, the coefficient value of 0.5150
for the teaching adjustment, and the MS-DRG adjustment factors and
comorbidity adjustment factors currently being paid to IPFs in FY 2014.
C. Summary of Impacts
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Provision description Total transfers
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2015 IPF PPS payment rate The overall economic impact of this
update. proposed rule is an estimated $100
million in increased payments to
IPFs during FY 2015.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Provision description Costs
------------------------------------------------------------------------
New quality reporting program The total costs in FY 2015 for IPFs
requirements. as a result of the proposed new
quality reporting requirements are
estimated to be $33,372,508.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Background
A. Annual Requirements for Updating the IPF PPS
In November 2004, we implemented the inpatient psychiatric
facilities (IPF) prospective payment system (PPS) in a final rule that
appeared in the November 15, 2004 Federal Register (69 FR 66922). In
developing the IPF PPS, in order to ensure that the IPF PPS is able to
account adequately for each IPF's case-mix, we performed an extensive
regression analysis of the relationship between the per diem costs and
certain patient and facility characteristics to determine those
characteristics associated with statistically significant cost
differences on a per diem basis. For characteristics with statistically
significant cost differences, we used the regression coefficients of
those variables to determine the size of the corresponding payment
adjustments.
In that final rule, we explained that we believe it is important to
delay updating the adjustment factors derived from the regression
analysis until we have IPF PPS data that include as much information as
possible regarding the patient-level characteristics of the population
that each IPF serves. Therefore, we indicated that we did not intend to
update the regression analysis and the patient- and facility-level
adjustments until we complete that analysis. Until that analysis is
complete, we stated our intention to publish a notice in the Federal
Register each spring to update the IPF PPS (71 FR 27041). We have begun
the necessary analysis to make refinements to the IPF PPS using more
current data to set the adjustment factors, however, we are not
proposing those refinements in this proposed rule. Rather, as explained
in section V.D.3 of this proposed rule, we expect that in future
rulemaking, possibly for FY 2017, we will be ready to propose potential
refinements.
In the May 6, 2011 IPF PPS final rule (76 FR 26432), we changed the
payment rate update period to a rate year (RY) that coincides with a
fiscal year (FY) update. Therefore, update notices are now published in
the Federal Register in the summer to be effective on October 1. When
proposing changes in IPF payment policy, a proposed rule would be
issued in the spring and the final rule in the summer in order to be
effective on October 1. For further discussion on changing the IPF PPS
payment rate update period to a RY that coincides with a FY, see the
IPF PPS final rule published in the Federal Register on May 6, 2011 (76
FR 26434 through 26435). For a detailed list of updates to the IPF PPS,
see 42 CFR 412.428.
Our most recent IPF PPS annual update occurred in an August 1,
2013, Federal Register notice (78 FR 46734) (hereinafter referred to as
the August 2013 IPF PPS notice) that set forth updates to the IPF PPS
payment rates for FY 2014. That notice updated the IPF PPS per diem
payment rates that were published in the August 2012 IPF PPS notice (77
FR 47224) in accordance with our established policies.
B. Overview of the Legislative Requirements for the IPF PPS
Section 124 of the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP (State Children's
Health Insurance Program) Balanced Budget Refinement Act of 1999 (BBRA)
(Pub. L. 106-113) required the establishment and implementation of an
IPF PPS. Specifically, section 124 of the BBRA mandated that the
Secretary develop a per diem PPS for inpatient hospital services
furnished in psychiatric hospitals and psychiatric units including an
adequate patient classification system that reflects the differences in
patient resource use and costs among psychiatric hospitals and
psychiatric units.
Section 405(g)(2) of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement,
and Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA) (Pub. L. 108-173) extended the IPF
PPS to distinct part psychiatric units of critical access hospitals
(CAHs).
Section 3401(f) of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
(Pub. L. 111-148) as amended by section 10319(e) of that Act and by
section 1105(d) of the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of
2010 (Pub. L. 111-152) (hereafter referred to as ``the Affordable Care
Act'') added subsection (s) to section 1886 of the Act.
Section 1886(s)(1) of the Act titled ``Reference to Establishment
and Implementation of System'' refers to section 124 of the BBRA, which
relates to the establishment of the IPF PPS.
Section 1886(s)(2)(A)(i) of the Act requires the application of the
productivity adjustment described in
[[Page 26042]]
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act to the IPF PPS for the RY
beginning in 2012 (that is, a RY that coincides with a FY) and each
subsequent RY. For the RY beginning in 2014 (that is, FY 2015), the
current estimate of the productivity adjustment would be equal to 0.4
percentage point, which we are proposing in this FY 2015 proposed rule.
Section 1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act requires the application of an
``other adjustment'' that reduces any update to an IPF PPS base rate by
percentages specified in section 1886(s)(3) of the Act for the RY
beginning in 2010 through the RY beginning in 2019. For the RY
beginning in 2014 (that is, FY 2015), section 1886(s)(3)(C) of the Act
requires the reduction to be 0.3 percentage point. We are proposing
that reduction in this FY 2015 IPF PPS proposed rule.
Section 1886(s)(4) of the Act requires the establishment of a
quality data reporting program for the IPF PPS beginning in RY 2014. We
proposed and finalized new requirements for quality reporting for IPFs
in the ``Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment System for Acute Care
Hospitals and the Long Term Care Hospital Prospective Payment System
and Fiscal Year 2014 Rates'' proposed rule published on May 10, 2013
(78 FR 27486, 27734 through 27744) and final rule published on August
19, 2013 (78 FR 50496, 50887 through 50903).
To implement and periodically update these provisions, we have
published various proposed and final rules in the Federal Register. For
more information regarding these rules, see the CMS Web site at https://www.cms.hhs.gov/InpatientPsychFacilPPS/.
C. General Overview of the IPF PPS
The November 2004 IPF PPS final rule (69 FR 66922) established the
IPF PPS, as required by section 124 of the BBRA and codified at subpart
N of part 412 of the Medicare regulations. The November 2004 IPF PPS
final rule set forth the per diem Federal rates for the implementation
year (the 18-month period from January 1, 2005 through June 30, 2006),
and provided payment for the inpatient operating and capital costs to
IPFs for covered psychiatric services they furnish (that is, routine,
ancillary, and capital costs, but not costs of approved educational
activities, bad debts, and other services or items that are outside the
scope of the IPF PPS). Covered psychiatric services include services
for which benefits are provided under the fee-for-service Part A
(Hospital Insurance Program) of the Medicare program.
The IPF PPS established the Federal per diem base rate for each
patient day in an IPF derived from the national average daily routine
operating, ancillary, and capital costs in IPFs in FY 2002. The average
per diem cost was updated to the midpoint of the first year under the
IPF PPS, standardized to account for the overall positive effects of
the IPF PPS payment adjustments, and adjusted for budget-neutrality.
The Federal per diem payment under the IPF PPS is comprised of the
Federal per diem base rate described above and certain patient- and
facility-level payment adjustments that were found in the regression
analysis to be associated with statistically significant per diem cost
differences.
The patient-level adjustments include age, DRG assignment,
comorbidities, and variable per diem adjustments to reflect higher per
diem costs in the early days of an IPF stay. Facility-level adjustments
include adjustments for the IPF's wage index, rural location, teaching
status, a cost-of-living adjustment for IPFs located in Alaska and
Hawaii, and the presence of a qualifying emergency department (ED).
The IPF PPS provides additional payment policies for: Outlier
cases; interrupted stays; and a per treatment adjustment for patients
who undergo electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). During the IPF PPS
mandatory 3-year transition period, stop-loss payments were also
provided; however, since the transition ended in 2008, these payments
are no longer available.
A complete discussion of the regression analysis that established
the IPF PPS adjustment factors appears in the November 2004 IPF PPS
final rule (69 FR 66933 through 66936).
Section 124 of the BBRA did not specify an annual rate update
strategy for the IPF PPS and was broadly written to give the Secretary
discretion in establishing an update methodology. Therefore, in the
November 2004 IPF PPS final rule, we implemented the IPF PPS using the
following update strategy:
Calculate the final Federal per diem base rate to be
budget-neutral for the 18-month period of January 1, 2005 through June
30, 2006.
Use a July 1 through June 30 annual update cycle.
Allow the IPF PPS first update to be effective for
discharges on or after July 1, 2006 through June 30, 2007.
III. Changing the IPF PPS Payment Rate Update Period From a Rate Year
to a Fiscal Year
Prior to RY 2012, the IPF PPS was updated on a July 1 through June
30 annual update cycle. Effective with RY 2012, we switched the IPF PPS
payment rate update from a rate year that begins on July 1 and ends on
June 30 to a period that coincides with a fiscal year. In order to
transition from a RY to a FY, the IPF PPS RY 2012 covered a 15-month
period from July 1 through September 30. As proposed and finalized,
after RY 2012, the rate year update period for the IPF PPS payment
rates and other policy changes begin on October 1 through September 30.
Therefore, the update cycle for FY 2015 will be October 1, 2014 through
September 30, 2015.
For further discussion of the 15-month market basket update for RY
2012 and changing the payment rate update period from a RY to a FY, we
refer readers to the RY 2012 IPF PPS proposed rule (76 FR 4998) and the
RY 2012 IPF PPS final rule (76 FR 26432).
IV. Proposed Market Basket for the IPF PPS
A. Background
The input price index (that is, the market basket) that was used to
develop the IPF PPS was the Excluded Hospital with Capital market
basket. This market basket was based on 1997 Medicare cost report data
and included data for Medicare participating IPFs, inpatient
rehabilitation facilities (IRFs), long-term care hospitals (LTCHs),
cancer hospitals, and children's hospitals. Although ``market basket''
technically describes the mix of goods and services used in providing
hospital care, this term is also commonly used to denote the input
price index (that is, cost category weights and price proxies combined)
derived from that market basket. Accordingly, the term ``market
basket'' as used in this document refers to a hospital input price
index.
Beginning with the May 2006 IPF PPS final rule (71 FR 27046 through
27054), IPF PPS payments were updated using a FY 2002-based market
basket reflecting the operating and capital cost structures for IRFs,
IPFs, and LTCHs (hereafter referred to as the Rehabilitation,
Psychiatric, and Long-Term Care (RPL) market basket).
We excluded cancer and children's hospitals from the RPL market
basket because these hospitals are not reimbursed through a PPS;
rather, their payments are based entirely on reasonable costs subject
to rate-of-increase limits established under the authority of section
1886(b) of the Act, which are implemented in regulations at Sec.
413.40. Moreover, the FY 2002 cost structures for cancer and children's
hospitals are noticeably different than the cost structures of the
IRFs, IPFs, and
[[Page 26043]]
LTCHs. A complete discussion of the FY 2002-based RPL market basket
appears in the May 2006 IPF PPS final rule (71 FR 27046 through 27054).
In the RY 2012 IPF PPS proposed rule (76 FR 4998) and final rule
(76 FR 26432), we proposed and finalized the use of a rebased and
revised FY 2008-based RPL market basket to update IPF payments.
B. Development of an IPF-Specific Market Basket
In the May 1, 2009 IPF PPS notice (74 FR 20362), we expressed our
interest in exploring the possibility of creating a stand-alone, or
IPF-specific market basket that reflects the cost structures of only
IPF providers. We noted that, of the available options, one would be to
join the Medicare cost report data from freestanding IPF providers with
data from hospital-based IPF providers. We indicated that an
examination of the Medicare cost report data comparing freestanding and
hospital-based IPFs revealed considerable differences between the two
with respect to cost levels and cost structures. At that time, we
stated that we were unable to fully explain the differences in costs
between freestanding and hospital-based IPF providers. As a result, we
felt that further research was required and we solicited public
comments for additional information that might help explain the reasons
for the variations in costs and cost structures, as indicated by the
cost report data (74 FR 20376). We summarized the public comments we
received and our responses in the April 2010 IPF PPS notice (75 FR
23111 through 23113).
Since the April 2010 IPF PPS notice was published, we have made
significant progress on the development of a stand-alone, or IPF-
specific, market basket. Our research has focused on addressing several
concerns regarding the use of the hospital-based IPF Medicare cost
report data in the calculation of the major market basket cost weights.
As discussed above, one concern is the cost level differences for
hospital-based IPFs relative to freestanding IPFs that were not readily
explained by the specific characteristics of the individual providers
and the patients that they serve (for example, case mix, urban/rural
status, teaching status). Furthermore, we are concerned about the
variability in the cost report data among these hospital-based IPF
providers and the potential impact on the market basket cost weights.
These concerns led us to consider whether it is appropriate to use the
universe of IPF providers to derive an IPF-specific market basket.
Recently, we have investigated the use of regression analysis to
evaluate the effect of including hospital-based IPF Medicare cost
report data in the calculation of cost distributions. We created
preliminary regression models to try to explain variations in costs per
day across both freestanding and hospital-based IPFs. These models were
intended to capture the effects of facility-level and patient-level
characteristics (for example, wage index, urban/rural status, ownership
status, length-of-stay, occupancy rate, case mix, and Medicare
utilization) on IPF costs per day. Using the results from the
preliminary regression analyses, we identified smaller subsets of
hospital-based and freestanding IPF providers where the predicted costs
per day using the regression model closely matched the actual costs per
day for each IPF. We then derived different sets of cost distributions
using (1) these subsets of IPF providers and (2) the entire universe of
freestanding and hospital-based IPF providers (including those IPFs for
which the variability in cost levels remains unexplained). After
comparing these sets of cost distributions, the differences were not
substantial enough for us to conclude that the inclusion of those IPF
providers with unexplained variability in costs in the calculation of
the cost distributions is a major cause for concern.
Another concern with incorporating the hospital-based IPF data in
the derivation of an IPF-specific market basket is the complexity of
the Medicare cost report data for these providers. The freestanding
IPFs independently submit a Medicare cost report for their facilities,
making it relatively straightforward to obtain the cost categories
necessary to determine the major market basket cost weights. However,
cost report data submitted for a hospital-based IPF are embedded in the
Medicare cost report submitted for the entire hospital facility in
which the IPF is located. Therefore, adjustments would have to be made
to obtain cost weights that represent just the hospital-based IPF (as
opposed to the hospital as a whole). For example, ancillary costs for
services such as clinic services, drugs charged to patients, and
emergency services for the entire hospital would need to be
appropriately converted to a value that only represents the hospital-
based IPF unit's cost. The preliminary method we have developed to
allocate these costs is complex and still needs to be fully evaluated
before we are ready to propose an IPF-specific market basket that would
reflect both hospital-based and freestanding IPF data.
We would also note that our current preliminary data show higher
labor costs for IPFs than observed for the 2008-based RPL market
basket. This increase is driven primarily by higher compensation cost
as a percent of total costs for IPFs. In our ongoing research, we are
also evaluating the differences in salary costs as a percent of total
costs for both hospital-based and freestanding IPFs. Salary costs are
historically the largest component of the market baskets. Based on our
review of the data reported on the applicable Medicare cost reports,
our initial findings (using the preliminary allocation method as
discussed above) have shown that the hospital-based IPF salary costs as
a percent of total costs tend to be lower than those of freestanding
IPFs. We are still evaluating the methods for deriving salary costs as
a percent of total costs and need to further investigate the percentage
of ancillary costs that should be appropriately allocated to the IPF
salary costs for the hospital-based IPF, as discussed above.
Also, effective for cost reports beginning on or after May 1, 2010,
we finalized a revised Hospital and Hospital Health Care Complex Cost
Report, Form CMS 2552-10, (74 FR 31738). The report is available for
download from the CMS Web site at https://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Files-for-Order/CostReports/Hospital-2010-form.html. The revised Hospital and Hospital Health Care Complex Cost
Report includes a new worksheet (Worksheet S-3, part V) that identifies
the contract labor costs and benefit costs for the hospital/hospital
care complex and is applicable to sub-providers and units. Our analysis
of Worksheet S-3, part V shows significant underreporting of this data
with fewer than 20 freestanding IPF providers reporting it. We
encourage providers to submit this data so we can use it to calculate
benefits and contract labor cost weights for the market basket. In the
absence of this data, we will likely use the 2008-based RPL market
basket methodology (76 FR 5003) to calculate the IPF benefit cost
weight. This methodology calculates the ratio of the IPPS benefit cost
weight to the IPPS salary cost weight and applies this ratio to the IPF
salary cost weight in order to estimate the IPF benefit cost weight.
For contract labor, in the absence of IPF-specific data, we will use a
similar methodology.
For the reasons discussed above, while we believe we have made
significant progress on the development of an IPF-specific market
basket, we
[[Page 26044]]
believe that further research is required at this time. As a result, we
are not proposing an IPF-specific market basket for FY 2015. We plan to
complete our research during the remainder of this year and, provided
that we are prepared to draw conclusions from our research, may propose
an IPF-specific market basket for the FY 2016 rulemaking cycle. We
welcome public comments on the preliminary findings discussed above.
C. Proposed FY 2015 Market Basket Update
The proposed FY 2015 update for the IPF PPS using the FY 2008-based
RPL market basket and IHS Global Insight's first quarter 2014 forecast
of the market basket components is 2.7 percent (prior to the
application of statutory adjustments). IHS Global Insight, Inc. (IGI)
is a nationally recognized economic and financial forecasting firm that
contracts with CMS to forecast the components of the market baskets.
As previously described in section I.B, section 1886(s)(2)(A)(i) of
the Act requires the application of the productivity adjustment
described in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act to the IPF PPS
for the RY beginning in 2012 and each subsequent RY. The statute
defines the productivity adjustment to be equal to the 10-year moving
average of changes in annual economy-wide private nonfarm business
multifactor productivity (MFP) (as projected by the Secretary for the
10-year period ending with the applicable FY, year, cost reporting
period, or other annual period) (the ``MFP adjustment'').
The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) publishes the official measure
of private non-farm business MFP. We refer readers to the BLS Web site
at https://www.bls.gov/mfp to obtain the BLS historical published MFP
data. The MFP adjustment for FY 2015 applicable to the IPF PPS is
derived using a projection of MFP that is currently produced by IGI.
For a detailed description of the model currently used by IGI to
project MFP, as well as a description of how the MFP adjustment is
calculated, we refer readers to the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH final rule (76 FR
51690 through 51692). Based on IGI's first quarter 2014 forecast, the
proposed productivity adjustment for FY 2015 is 0.4 percentage point.
Section 1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act also requires the application of
an ``other adjustment'' that reduces any update to an IPF PPS base rate
by percentages specified in section 1886(s)(3) of the Act for rate
years beginning in 2010 through the RY beginning in 2019. For the RY
beginning in 2014 (that is, FY 2015), the reduction is 0.3 percentage
point. We are proposing to implement the productivity adjustment and
``other adjustment'' in this FY 2015 IPF PPS proposed rule.
In summary, we propose to base the FY 2015 market basket update,
which is used to determine the applicable percentage increase for the
IPF payments, on the most recent estimate of the FY 2008-based RPL
market basket (currently estimated to be 2.7 percent based on IGI's
first quarter 2014 forecast). We propose to then reduce this percentage
increase by the current estimate of the MFP adjustment for FY 2015 of
0.4 percentage point (the 10-year moving average of MFP for the period
ending FY 2015 based on IGI's first quarter 2014 forecast). Following
application of the MFP, we propose to further reduce the applicable
percentage increase by 0.3 percentage point, as required by section
1886(s)(3) of the Act. The current estimate of the proposed FY 2015 IPF
update is 2.0 percent (2.7 percent market basket update, less 0.4
percentage point MFP adjustment, less 0.3 percentage point ``other''
adjustment). Furthermore, we also are proposing that if more recent
data are subsequently available (for example, a more recent estimate of
the market basket and MFP adjustment), we would use such data, if
appropriate, to determine the FY 2015 market basket update and MFP
adjustment in the final rule.
D. Proposed Labor-Related Share
Due to variations in geographic wage levels and other labor-related
costs, we believe that payment rates under the IPF PPS should continue
to be adjusted by a geographic wage index, which would apply to the
labor-related portion of the Federal per diem base rate (hereafter
referred to as the labor-related share).
The labor-related share is determined by identifying the national
average proportion of total costs that are related to, influenced by,
or vary with the local labor market. We classify a cost category as
labor-related if the costs are labor-intensive and vary with the local
labor market. Based on our definition of the labor-related share, we
include in the labor-related share the sum of the relative importance
of Wages and Salaries, Employee Benefits, Professional Fees: Labor-
related, Administrative and Business Support Services, All Other:
Labor-related Services, and a portion of the Capital-Related cost
weight.
Therefore, to determine the proposed labor-related share for the
IPF PPS for FY 2015, we used the FY 2008-based RPL market basket cost
weights relative importance to determine the labor-related share for
the IPF PPS. This estimate of the FY 2015 labor-related share is based
on IGI's first quarter 2014 forecast, which is the same forecast used
to derive the FY 2015 market basket update.
Table 1 below shows the FY 2015 relative importance labor-related
share using the FY 2008-based RPL market basket along with the FY 2014
relative importance labor-related share.
Table 1--Proposed FY 2015 Relative Importance Labor-Related Share and
the FY 2014 Relative Importance Labor-Related Share Based on the FY 2008-
Based RPL Market Basket
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed FY 2015
FY 2014 relative relative
importance labor- importance labor-
related share \1\ related share \2\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wages and Salaries.............. 48.394 48.409
Employee Benefits............... 12.963 13.016
Professional Fees: Labor-Related 2.065 2.065
Administrative and Business 0.415 0.417
Support Services...............
All Other: Labor-Related 2.080 2.070
Services.......................
---------------------------------------
Subtotal.................... 65.917 65.977
Labor-Related Portion of Capital 3.577 3.561
Costs (46%)....................
---------------------------------------
[[Page 26045]]
Total Labor-Related 69.494 69.538
Share..................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Published in the FY 2014 IPF PPS notice (78 FR 46738) and based on
IHS Global Insight, Inc.'s second quarter 2013 forecast of the FY 2008-
based RPL market basket.
2. Based on IHS Global Insight, Inc.'s first quarter 2014 forecast of
the FY 2008-based RPL market basket.
The proposed labor-related share for FY 2015 is the sum of the FY
2015 relative importance of each labor-related cost category, and would
reflect the different rates of price change for these cost categories
between the base year (FY 2008) and FY 2015. The sum of the relative
importance for FY 2015 for operating costs (Wages and Salaries,
Employee Benefits, Professional Fees: Labor-Related, Administrative and
Business Support Services, and All Other: Labor-related Services) is
65.977 percent, as shown in Table 1 above. The portion of Capital-
related cost that is influenced by the local labor market is estimated
to be 46 percent. Since the relative importance for Capital-Related
Costs is 7.742 percent of the FY 2008-based RPL market basket in FY
2015, we take 46 percent of 7.742 percent to determine the labor-
related share of Capital-related cost for FY 2015. The result is 3.561
percent, which we add to 65.977 percent for the operating cost amount
to determine the total labor-related share for FY 2015. Therefore, the
proposed labor-related share for the IPF PPS in FY 2015 is 69.538
percent. This labor-related share is determined using the same general
methodology as employed in calculating all previous IPF labor-related
shares (see, for example, 69 FR 66952 through 66953). Furthermore, we
are also proposing that if more recent data are subsequently available
(for example, a more recent estimate of the labor-related share), we
would use such data, if appropriate, to determine the FY 2015 labor-
related share in the final rule. The wage index and the labor-related
share are reflected in budget-neutrality adjustments.
V. Proposed Updates to the IPF PPS for FY 2015 (Beginning October 1,
2014)
The IPF PPS is based on a standardized Federal per diem base rate
calculated from the IPF average per diem costs and adjusted for budget-
neutrality in the implementation year. The Federal per diem base rate
is used as the standard payment per day under the IPF PPS and is
adjusted by the patient-level and facility-level adjustments that are
applicable to the IPF stay. A detailed explanation of how we calculated
the average per diem cost appears in the November 2004 IPF PPS final
rule (69 FR 66926).
A. Determining the Standardized Budget-Neutral Federal Per Diem Base
Rate
Section 124(a)(1) of the BBRA required that we implement the IPF
PPS in a budget-neutral manner. In other words, the amount of total
payments under the IPF PPS, including any payment adjustments, must be
projected to be equal to the amount of total payments that would have
been made if the IPF PPS were not implemented. Therefore, we calculated
the budget-neutrality factor by setting the total estimated IPF PPS
payments to be equal to the total estimated payments that would have
been made under the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982
(TEFRA) (Pub. L. 97-248) methodology had the IPF PPS not been
implemented. A step-by-step description of the methodology used to
estimate payments under the TEFRA payment system appears in the
November 2004 IPF PPS final rule (69 FR 66926).
Under the IPF PPS methodology, we calculated the final Federal per
diem base rate to be budget-neutral during the IPF PPS implementation
period (that is, the 18-month period from January 1, 2005 through June
30, 2006) using a July 1 update cycle. We updated the average cost per
day to the midpoint of the IPF PPS implementation period (that is,
October 1, 2005), and this amount was used in the payment model to
establish the budget-neutrality adjustment.
Next, we standardized the IPF PPS Federal per diem base rate to
account for the overall positive effects of the IPF PPS payment
adjustment factors by dividing total estimated payments under the TEFRA
payment system by estimated payments under the IPF PPS. Additional
information concerning this standardization can be found in the
November 2004 IPF PPS final rule (69 FR 66932) and the RY 2006 IPF PPS
final rule (71 FR 27045). We then reduced the standardized Federal per
diem base rate to account for the outlier policy, the stop loss
provision, and anticipated behavioral changes. A complete discussion of
how we calculated each component of the budget-neutrality adjustment
appears in the November 2004 IPF PPS final rule (69 FR 66932 through
66933) and in the May 2006 IPF PPS final rule (71 FR 27044 through
27046). The final standardized budget-neutral Federal per diem base
rate established for cost reporting periods beginning on or after
January 1, 2005 was calculated to be $575.95.
The Federal per diem base rate has been updated in accordance with
applicable statutory requirements and 42 CFR 412.428 through
publication of annual notices or proposed and final rules. These
documents are available on the CMS Web site at https://www.cms.hhs.gov/InpatientPsychFacilPPS/. A detailed discussion on the standardized
budget-neutral Federal per diem base rate and the electroconvulsive
therapy (ECT) rate appears in the August 2013 IPF PPS update notice (78
FR 46738 through 46739).
B. Proposed FY 2015 Update of the Federal Per Diem Base Rate and
Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) Rate
In accordance with section 1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act, which
requires the application of an ``other adjustment,'' described in
section 1886(s)(3) of the Act (specifically, section 1886(s)(3)(C)) for
RY 2014 that reduces the update to the IPF PPS base rate for the FY
beginning in Calendar Year (CY) 2014, we are proposing to adjust the
IPF PPS update by a 0.3 percentage point reduction for FY 2015. In
addition, in accordance with section 1886(s)(2)(A)(i) of the Act, which
requires the application of the productivity adjustment that reduces
the update to the IPF PPS base rate for the FY beginning in CY 2014, we
are proposing to adjust the IPF PPS update by a 0.4 percentage point
reduction for FY 2015.
[[Page 26046]]
The current (that is, FY 2014) Federal per diem base rate is
$713.19 and the ECT base rate is $307.04. For FY 2015, we are proposing
to apply an update of 2.0 percent (that is the proposed FY 2008-based
RPL market basket increase for FY 2015 of 2.7 percent less the proposed
productivity adjustment of 0.4 percentage point less the 0.3 percentage
point required under section1886(s)(3)(C) of the Act), and the wage
index budget-neutrality factor of 1.0003 (as discussed in section
VI.C.1. of this proposed rule) to the FY 2014 Federal per diem base
rate of $713.19, yielding a proposed Federal per diem base rate of
$727.67 for FY 2015. Similarly, we are proposing to apply the 2.0
percent payment update, and the 1.0003 wage index budget-neutrality
factor to the FY 2014 ECT base rate, yielding a proposed ECT base rate
of $313.27 for FY 2015.
As noted above, section 1886(s)(4) of the Act requires the
establishment of a quality data reporting program for the IPF PPS
beginning in RY 2014. We finalized new requirements for quality
reporting for IPFs in the ``Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment
Systems for Acute Care Hospitals and the Long Term Care Hospital
Prospective Payment System and Fiscal Year 2014 Rates'' proposed rule
published on May 10, 2013 (78 FR 27486, 27734 through 27744) and final
rule published on August 19, 2013 (78 FR 50496, 50887 through 50903).
Section 1886(s)(4)(A)(i) of the Act requires that, for RY 2014 and each
subsequent rate year, the Secretary shall reduce any annual update to a
standard Federal rate for discharges occurring during the rate year by
2.0 percentage points for any IPF that does not comply with the quality
data submission requirements with respect to an applicable year.
Therefore, we are proposing to apply a 2.0 percentage point reduction
to the Federal per diem base rate and the ECT base rate as follows:
For IPFs that fail to submit quality reporting data under the IPFQR
program, we are applying a 0 percent annual update (that is 2 percent
reduced by 2 percentage points in accordance with section
1886(s)(4)(A)(ii) of the Act) and the wage index budget-neutrality
factor of 1.0003 to the FY 2014 Federal per diem base rate of $713.19,
yielding a Federal per diem base rate of $713.40 for FY 2015.
Similarly, we are applying the 0 percent annual update and the
1.0003 wage index budget-neutrality factor to the FY 2014 ECT base rate
of $307.04, yielding an ECT base rate of $307.13 for FY 2015.
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR50496), we adopted
two new measures for the FY 2016 payment determination and subsequent
years for the IPFQR Program. We also finalized a request for voluntary
information whereby IPFs will be asked to provide information on the
patient experience of care survey. For the FY 2016 payment
determination and subsequent years, we are proposing to add two new
measures to those already adopted for the FY 2016 payment determination
and subsequent years. For the FY 2017 payment determination and
subsequent years, we are proposing to adopt four new measures.
VI. Proposed Update of the IPF PPS Adjustment Factors
A. Overview of the IPF PPS Adjustment Factors
The IPF PPS payment adjustments were derived from a regression
analysis of 100 percent of the FY 2002 MedPAR data file, which
contained 483,038 cases. For a more detailed description of the data
file used for the regression analysis, see the November 2004 IPF PPS
final rule (69 FR 66935 through 66936). While we have since used more
recent claims data to simulate payments to set the fixed dollar loss
threshold amount for the outlier policy and to assess the impact of the
IPF PPS updates, we continue to use the regression-derived adjustment
factors established in 2005 for FY 2015.
As we stated previously, we have begun an analysis of more current
IPF claims and cost report data however; we are not proposing
refinements to the IPF PPS in this proposed rule. Once our analysis is
complete, we will propose to update the adjustment factors in a future
notice of proposed rulemaking. However, we continue to monitor claims
and payment data independently from cost report data to assess issues,
to determine whether changes in case-mix or payment shifts have
occurred among freestanding governmental, non-profit and private
psychiatric hospitals, and psychiatric units of general hospitals, and
CAHs and other issues of importance to IPFs.
On April 1, 2014, the Protecting Access to Medicare Act of 2014
(PAMA) (Pub. L. 113-93) was enacted. Section 212 of PAMA, titled
``Delay in Transition from ICD-9 to ICD-10 Code Sets,'' provides that
``[t]he Secretary of Health and Human Services may not, prior to
October 1, 2015, adopt ICD-10 code sets as the standard for code sets
under section 1173(c) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1320d-2(c))
and Sec. 162.1002 of title 45, Code of Federal Regulations.'' As of
now, the Secretary has not implemented this provision under HIPAA. We
are proposing the conversion of ICD-9-CM to ICD-10-CM/PCS codes for the
IPF PPS in this proposed rule, but in light of PAMA, the effective date
of those changes would be the date when ICD-10 becomes the required
medical data code set for use on Medicare claims, whenever that date
may be. Until that time, we will continue to require use of the ICD-9-
CM codes for reporting the MS-DRG and comorbidity adjustment factors
for IPF services.
B. Proposed Patient-Level Adjustments
The IPF PPS includes payment adjustments for the following patient-
level characteristics: Medicare Severity diagnosis related groups (MS-
DRGs) assignment of the patient's principal diagnosis, selected
comorbidities, patient age, and the variable per diem adjustments.
1. Proposed Adjustment for MS-DRG Assignment
We believe it is important to maintain the same diagnostic coding
and DRG classification for IPFs that are used under the IPPS for
providing psychiatric care. For this reason, when the IPF PPS was
implemented for cost reporting periods beginning on or after January 1,
2005, we adopted the same diagnostic code set (ICD-9-CM) and DRG
patient classification system (that is, the CMS DRGs) that were
utilized at the time under the IPPS. In the May 2008 IPF PPS notice (73
FR 25709), we discussed CMS's effort to better recognize resource use
and the severity of illness among patients. CMS adopted the new MS-DRGs
for the IPPS in the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with comment period (72 FR
47130). In the 2008 IPF PPS notice (73 FR 25716) we provided a
crosswalk to reflect changes that were made under the IPF PPS to adopt
the new MS-DRGs. For a detailed description of the mapping changes from
the original DRG adjustment categories to the current MS-DRG adjustment
categories, we refer readers to the May 2008 IPF PPS notice (73 FR
25714).
The IPF PPS includes payment adjustments for designated psychiatric
DRGs assigned to the claim based on the patient's principal diagnosis.
The DRG adjustment factors were expressed relative to the most
frequently reported psychiatric DRG in FY 2002, that is, DRG 430
(psychoses). The coefficient values and adjustment factors were derived
from the regression analysis. Mapping the DRGs to the MS-DRGs resulted
in the current 17 IPF-MS-DRGs, instead of the original 15 DRGs,
[[Page 26047]]
for which the IPF PPS provides an adjustment. For FY 2015, as we did in
FY 2013 (77 FR 47231) and FY 2014 (78 FR 46741 through 46741), we
propose to make a payment adjustment for psychiatric diagnoses that
group to one of the 17 MS-IPF-DRGs listed in Table 2. Psychiatric
principal diagnoses that do not group to one of the 17 designated DRGs
would still receive the Federal per diem base rate and all other
applicable adjustments, but the payment would not include a DRG
adjustment.
In the Standards for Electronic Transaction final rule, published
in the Federal Register on August 17, 2000 (65 FR 50312), the
Department adopted the International Classification of Diseases, 9th
Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) as the HIPAA designated code
set for reporting diseases, injuries, impairments, other health related
problems, their manifestations, and causes of injury. Therefore, on
January 1, 2005 when the IPF PPS began, we used ICD-9-CM as the
designated code set for the IPF PPS. IPF claims with a principal
diagnosis included in Chapter Five of the ICD-9-CM are paid the Federal
per diem base rate and all other applicable adjustments, including any
applicable DRG adjustment. However, as we indicated in the FY 2014 IPF
PPS notice (78 FR 46741), in accordance with the requirements of the
final rule published in the Federal Register on September 5, 2012 (77
FR 54664), we will be discontinuing the use of ICD-9-CM codes. We are
proposing the conversion of ICD-9-CM to ICD-10-CM/PCS codes for the IPF
PPS in this proposed rule, but in light of PAMA, the effective date of
those changes would be the date when ICD-10 becomes the required
medical data code set for use on Medicare claims. Until that time, we
will continue to require use of the ICD-9-CM codes for reporting the
MS-DRGs for IPF services. The ICD-10-CM/PCS coding guidelines are
available through the CMS Web site at:
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/downloads/pcs_2012_guidelines.pdf and https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/?redirect=/ICD10 or on the CDC's Web site at www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/icd10/10cmguidelines2012.pdf.
Every year, changes to the ICD-10-CM and the ICD-10-PCS coding
system will be addressed in the IPPS proposed and final rules. The
changes to the codes are effective October 1 of each year and must be
used by acute care hospitals as well as other providers to report
diagnostic and procedure information. The IPF PPS has always
incorporated ICD-9-CM coding changes made in the annual IPPS update and
will continue to do so for the ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS coding changes.
We will continue to publish coding changes in a Transmittal/Change
Request, similar to how coding changes are announced by the IPPS and
LTCH PPS. The coding changes relevant to the IPF PPS are also published
in the IPF PPS proposed and final rules, or in IPF PPS update notices.
In 42 CFR 412.428(e), we indicate that CMS will publish information
pertaining to the annual update for the IPF PPS, which includes
describing the ICD-9-CM coding changes and DRG classification changes
discussed in the annual update to the hospital IPPS regulations. We are
proposing to update 42 CFR 412.428(e) to indicate that we will describe
the ICD-10-CM coding changes and DRG classification changes discussed
in the annual update to the hospital IPPS regulations when ICD-10-CM/
PCS becomes the required medical data code set for use on Medicare
claims.
The ICD-9-CM/PCS coding changes are reflected in the FY 2015
GROUPER, Version 32.0, effective for IPPS discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2014 through September 30, 2015. The GROUPER Version
32.0 software package assigns each case to an MS-DRG on the basis of
the diagnosis and procedure codes and demographic information (that is,
age, sex, and discharge status). The Medicare Code Editor (MCE) version
32.0 has also been converted to use ICD-9-CM/PCS codes for IPPS
discharges on or after October 1, 2014. For additional information on
the GROUPER version 32.0 and the MCE 32.0 see Transmittal-XXXX dated
XXXX.
The IPF PPS has always used the same GROUPER and MCE as the IPPS.
We have posted a Definitions Manual of the ICD-10 MS-DRGs Version 31.0-
R (an updated ICD-10 MS-DRGs version 31.0) on the ICD-10 MS-DRG
Conversion Project Web site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/ICD-10-MS-DRG-Conversion-Project.html. We also prepared a
document that describes changes made from Version 31.0 to Version 31.0-
R. We will continue to share ICD-10-MS-DRG conversion activities with
the public through this Web site.
The MS-DRGs were converted so that the MS-DRG assignment logic uses
ICD-10-CM/PCS codes directly. When a provider submits a claim for
discharges, the ICD-10-CM/PCS diagnosis and procedure codes will be
assigned to the correct MS-DRG. The MS-DRGs were converted with a
single overarching goal: that MS-DRG assignment for a given patient
record is the same after ICD-10-CM implementation as it would be if the
same record had been coded in ICD-9-CM and submitted prior to ICD-10-
CM/PCS implementation. This goal is referred to as replication, and
every effort was made to achieve this goal.
The General Equivalence Mappings (GEMs) were used to assist in
converting the ICD-9-CM-based MS-DRGs to ICD-10-CM/PCS. The majority of
ICD-9-CM codes (greater than 80 percent) have straightforward
translation alternative(s) in ICD-10-CM/PCS, where the diagnoses or
procedures classified to a given ICD-9-CM code are replaced by a number
of (typically more specific) ICD-10-CM/PCS codes and assigned to the
same MS-DRG as the ICD-9-CM code they are replacing. Further
information on the assessment of ICD-10-CM/PCS MS-DRGs and financial
impact can be found on the CMS ICD-10 Web site at: https://www.cms.hhs.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/ICD-10-MS-DRG-Conversion-Project.html.
Questions concerning the MS-DRGs should be directed to Patricia E.
Brooks, Co-Chairperson, ICD-10-CM Coordination and Maintenance
Committee, CMS, Center for Medicare Management, Hospital and Ambulatory
Policy Group, Division of Acute Care, patricia.brooks2@cms.hhs.gov,
Mailstop C4-08-06, 7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, Maryland 21244-
1850.
Use of the General Equivalence Mappings To Assist in Direct Conversion
For the FY 2015 update, we are not making changes to the MS-IPF-DRG
adjustment factors. That is, we do not intend to re-run the regression
analysis to update the 17 IPF MS-DRG adjustment factors. The General
Equivalence Mappings (GEMs) were used to assist in converting the ICD-
9-CM-based MS-DRGs to ICD-10-CM/PCS. For this update, we are proposing
the ICD-10-CM/PCS codes that would be used for the MS-DRG payment
adjustment. Further information for the ICD-10-CM/PCS MS-DRG conversion
project can be found on the CMS ICD-10-CM Web site at https://www.cms.hhs.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/ICD-10-MS-DRG-Conversion-Project.html.
We are proposing that the MS-IPF-DRG adjustment factors (as shown
in Table 2) would continue to be paid for discharges occurring in FY
2015. The MS-IPF-DRG adjustment factors would be updated on October 1,
2014, using the ICD-9-CM/PCS code set. We are also proposing the
conversion of ICD-9-CM/PCS codes to ICD-10-CM/PCS codes for the IPF PPS
in this proposed rule but in light of PAMA, the effective date of those
changes would be the date
[[Page 26048]]
when ICD-10-CM/PCS becomes the required medical data code set for use
on Medicare claims.
Table 2--Proposed FY 2015 Current MS-IPF-DRGS Applicable for the
Principal Diagnosis Adjustment
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adjustment
MS-DRG MS-DRG descriptions factor
------------------------------------------------------------------------
056............................ Degenerative nervous 1.05
system disorders w MCC.
057............................ Degenerative nervous 1.05
system disorders w/o
MCC.
080............................ Nontraumatic stupor & 1.07
coma w MCC.
081............................ Nontraumatic stupor & 1.07
coma w/o MCC.
876............................ O.R. Procedure w 1.22
principal diagnoses of
mental illness.
880............................ Acute adjustment 1.05
reaction &
psychosocial
dysfunction.
881............................ Depressive neuroses.... 0.99
882............................ Neuroses except 1.02
depressive.
883............................ Disorders of 1.02
personality & impulse
control.
884............................ Organic disturbances & 1.03
mental retardation.
885............................ Psychoses.............. 1.00
886............................ Behavioral & 0.99
developmental
disorders.
887............................ Other mental disorder 0.92
diagnoses.
894............................ Alcohol/drug abuse or 0.97
dependence, left AMA.
895............................ Alcohol/drug abuse or 1.02
dependence w
rehabilitation therapy.
896............................ Alcohol/drug abuse or 0.88
dependence w/o
rehabilitation therapy
w MCC.
897............................ Alcohol/drug abuse or 0.88
dependence w/o
rehabilitation therapy
w/o MCC.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Proposed Payment for Comorbid Conditions
The intent of the comorbidity adjustments is to recognize the
increased costs associated with comorbid conditions by providing
additional payments for certain concurrent medical or psychiatric
conditions that are expensive to treat. In the May 2011 IPF PPS final
rule (76 FR 26451 through 26452), we explained that the IPF PPS
includes 17 comorbidity categories and identified the new, revised, and
deleted ICD-9-CM diagnosis codes that generate a comorbid condition
payment adjustment under the IPF PPS for RY 2012 (76 FR 26451).
Comorbidities are specific patient conditions that are secondary to
the patient's principal diagnosis and that require treatment during the
stay. Diagnoses that relate to an earlier episode of care and have no
bearing on the current hospital stay are excluded and must not be
reported on IPF claims. Comorbid conditions must exist at the time of
admission or develop subsequently, and affect the treatment received,
length of stay (LOS), or both treatment and LOS.
For each claim, an IPF may receive only one comorbidity adjustment
within a comorbidity category, but it may receive an adjustment for
more than one comorbidity category. Current billing instructions
require IPFs to enter the full, that is, the complete ICD-9-CM codes
for up to 24 additional diagnoses if they co-exist at the time of
admission or develop subsequently and impact the treatment provided.
Billing instructions will require that IPFs enter the full ICD-10-CM/
PCS codes. The effective date of this change would be the date when
ICD-10-CM/PCS becomes the required medical data code set for use on
Medicare claims.
The comorbidity adjustments were determined based on the regression
analysis using the diagnoses reported by IPFs in FY 2002. The principal
diagnoses were used to establish the DRG adjustments and were not
accounted for in establishing the comorbidity category adjustments,
except where ICD-9-CM ``code first'' instructions apply. As we
explained in the May 2011 IPF PPS final rule (76 FR 265451), the ``code
first'' rule applies when a condition has both an underlying etiology
and a manifestation due to the underlying etiology. For these
conditions, ICD-9-CM has a coding convention that requires the
underlying conditions to be sequenced first followed by the
manifestation. Whenever a combination exists, there is a ``use
additional code'' note at the etiology code and a ``code first'' note
at the manifestation code.
The same principle holds for ICD-10-CM as for ICD-9-CM. Whenever a
combination exists, there is a ``use additional code'' note in the ICD-
10-CM codebook pertaining to the etiology code, and a ``code first''
code pertaining to the manifestation code. We provide a ``code first''
table in Addendum C of this proposed rule for reference that highlights
the same or similar manifestation codes where the ``code first''
instructions apply in ICD-10-CM that were present in ICD-9-CM. In the
``code first'' table, pertaining to ICD-10-CM codes F02.80, F02.81 and
F05, where individual examples of possible etiologies are listed in the
codebook, in the interest of inclusiveness, all ICD-10-CM examples are
included in addition to the comparable ICD-10-CM translations of
examples listed in the ICD-9-CM codebook for the same manifestations.
Also, in the interest of inclusiveness, an ICD-10-CM manifestation code
F45.42 ``Pain disorder with related psychological factors'', is
included in the IPF PPS ``code first'' table even though it contains a
``code also'' instruction rather than a ``code first'' instruction, but
is included in this version of the table for information purposes only.
The proposed list of ICD-10-CM codes that we identified as ``code
first'' can be located in Addendum C in this proposed rule.
As discussed in the MS-DRG section, it is our policy to maintain
the same diagnostic coding set for IPFs that is used under the IPPS for
providing the same psychiatric care. The 17 comorbidity categories
formerly defined using ICD-9-CM codes have been converted to ICD-10-CM/
PCS. The goal for converting the comorbidity categories is referred to
as replication, meaning that the payment adjustment for a given patient
encounter is the same after ICD-10-CM implementation as it would be if
the same record had been coded in ICD-9-CM and submitted prior to ICD-
10-CM/PCS implementation. All conversion efforts were made with the
intent of achieving this goal. The effective date of this change would
be the date when ICD-10-CM/PCS becomes the required
[[Page 26049]]
medical data code set for use on Medicare claims.
Direct Conversion of Comorbidity Categories
We converted the ICD-9-CM codes for the IPF PPS Comorbidity Payment
Adjustment Categories to ICD-10-CM/PCS codes. When an IPF submits a
claim for discharges the ICD-10-CM/PCS codes would be assigned to the
correct comorbidity categories. The same method of direct conversion to
ICD-10-CM/PCS for replication of ICD-9-CM based payment applications
has been implemented by policy groups throughout CMS to convert
applications to ICD-10-CM/PCS, including the MS-DRGs.
Use of the General Equivalence Mappings To Assist in Direct Conversion
As with the other policy groups mentioned above, the General
Equivalence Mappings (GEMs) were used to assist in converting ICD-9-CM-
based applications to ICD-10-CM/PCS. Further information concerning the
GEMs can be found on the CMS ICD-10 Web site at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/2014-ICD-10-CM-and-GEMs.html.
The majority of ICD-9-CM codes (greater than 80 percent) have
straightforward translation alternative(s) in ICD-10-CM/PCS, where the
diagnoses or procedures classified to a given ICD-9-CM code are
replaced by a number of possibly more specific ICD-10-CM/PCS codes, and
those ICD-10-CM/PCS codes capture the intent of the payment policy.
In rare instances, ICD-10-CM has discontinued an area of detail in
the classification. For example, this is the case with the concept of
``malignant hypertension'' in the Cardiac Conditions comorbidity
category. Malignant hypertension is no longer classified separately in
codes that specify heart failure, such as ICD-9-CM code 404.03
Hypertensive heart and chronic kidney disease, malignant, with heart
failure and with chronic kidney disease stage V or end-stage renal
disease. This code, in the Cardiac Conditions comorbidity category, has
no corresponding code in the ICD-10-CM Cardiac Conditions comorbidity
category. Instead, all sub-types of hypertension in the presence of
heart disease or chronic kidney disease are classified to a single code
in ICD-10-CM that specifies the level of heart and kidney function,
such as I13.2 Hypertensive heart and chronic kidney disease with heart
failure and with stage 5 chronic kidney disease, or end stage renal
disease. Discussed below are the comorbidity categories where the
crosswalk between ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes is less than
straightforward. For instance, in some cases, the use of combination
codes in one code set is represented as two separate codes in the other
code set.
Conversion of Gangrene and Uncontrolled Diabetes Mellitus With or
Without Complications Comorbidity Categories
In the Gangrene comorbidity category, there are new ICD-10-CM
combination codes not present in ICD-9-CM. Therefore, we are proposing
to include many more ICD-10-CM codes in the comorbidity definitions
than were included using ICD-9-CM codes so that the comorbidity
category using ICD-10-CM codes is a complete and accurate replication
of the category using ICD-9-CM codes.
The ICD-9-CM version of the comorbidity category Uncontrolled
Diabetes Mellitus With or Without Complications contains combination
codes with extra information that is not relevant to the clinical
intent of the category. All patients with uncontrolled diabetes are
eligible for the payment adjustment, regardless of whether they have
additional diabetic complications. The diagnosis of uncontrolled
diabetes is coded separately in ICD-10-CM. As a result, only two ICD-
10-CM codes are needed to achieve complete and accurate replication of
the comorbidity category definition using ICD-9-CM codes.
Conversion of the Gangrene Comorbidity Category
Currently, two ICD-9-CM codes are used for the Gangrene comorbidity
category: 440.24 Atherosclerosis of native arteries of the extremities
with gangrene and 785.4 Gangrene.
The first code, 440.24, is a combination code and specifies
patients with underlying peripheral vascular disease and a current
acute manifestation of gangrene. This is the only ICD-9-CM combination
code that specifies gangrene in addition to the underlying cause. Also,
a number of ICD-10-CM codes exist for gangrene and they are all
included in the ICD-10-CM comorbidity category. The ICD-10-CM codes
specify anatomic site in more detail. An example is given below:
I70.261 Atherosclerosis of native arteries of extremities with
gangrene, right leg
I70.262 Atherosclerosis of native arteries of extremities with
gangrene, left leg
I70.263 Atherosclerosis of native arteries of extremities with
gangrene, bilateral legs
I70.268 Atherosclerosis of native arteries of extremities with
gangrene, other extremity
In addition, many ICD-10-CM codes specify gangrene in combination
with diabetes. We propose to include these codes in the comorbidity
category to ensure that a patient with diabetes complicated by gangrene
receives the same payment adjustment for the condition when it is coded
in ICD-10 as if it had been coded in ICD-9-CM.
Conversion of the Uncontrolled Diabetes Mellitus With or Without
Complications Comorbidity Category
Where ICD-9-CM uses combination codes for uncontrolled diabetes,
ICD-10-CM classifies diabetes that is out of control in a separate,
standalone code. Unlike ICD-9-CM, ICD-10-CM does not have additional
codes that specify out of control diabetes in combination with a
complication such as, for example, diabetic chronic kidney disease. The
result is that the comorbidity category Uncontrolled Diabetes Mellitus
With or Without Complications is simpler to define using ICD-10-CM
codes than ICD-9-CM codes.
ICD-10-CM has changed the classification of a diagnosis of
uncontrolled diabetes in two ways that affect conversion of the
Uncontrolled Diabetes comorbidity category:
1. ICD-10-CM no longer uses the term ``uncontrolled'' in reference
to diabetes.
2. ICD-10-CM classifies diabetes that is poorly controlled in a
separate, standalone code.
ICD-10-CM does not use the term ``uncontrolled'' in codes that
classify diabetes patients. Instead, ICD-10-CM codes specify diabetes
``with hyperglycemia'' as the new terminology for classifying patients
whose diabetes is ``poorly controlled'' or ``inadequately controlled''
or ``out of control.'' We believe these are appropriate codes to
capture the intent of the Uncontrolled Diabetes comorbidity category.
Therefore, to ensure that all patients who qualified for the
Uncontrolled Diabetes comorbidity payment adjustment using ICD-9-CM
codes will also qualify for the payment adjustment using ICD-10-CM
codes, we propose that two ICD-10-CM codes specifying diabetes with
hyperglycemia will be used for the payment adjustment for Uncontrolled
Diabetes Mellitus With or Without Complications: E10.65 Type 1 diabetes
mellitus with hyperglycemia, and E11.65 Type 2 diabetes mellitus with
hyperglycemia.
[[Page 26050]]
Other Differences Between ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM Affecting Conversion
of Comorbidity Categories
Two other comorbidity categories in the IPF PPS required careful
review and additional formatting of the corresponding ICD-10-CM codes
in order to replicate the clinical intent of the comorbidity category.
In the Drug and/or Alcohol Induced Mental Disorders comorbidity
category and the Poisoning comorbidity category, significant structural
changes in the way that comparable codes are classified in ICD-10-CM
made it more difficult to list the diagnoses in ICD-10-CM code ranges,
as was possible in ICD-9-CM. Because comparable codes are not
classified contiguously in the ICD-10-CM classification scheme, the
resulting proposed list of codes for this comorbidity category is much
longer than the comorbidity category using ICD-9-CM codes.
Conversion of the Drug and/or Alcohol Induced Mental Disorders
Comorbidity Category
ICD-10-CM has changed the classification of applicable conditions
in two ways that affect conversion of the Drug and/or Alcohol Induced
Mental Disorders comorbidity category:
1. ICD-10-CM does not use the term ``pathological'' in reference to
drug or alcohol intoxication, rather it only uses the phrase ``with
intoxication.''
2. ICD-10-CM contains separate, detailed codes for specific drug-
induced manifestations of mental disorder. ICD-10-CM codes specify the
particular drug and whether the pattern of use is documented as use,
abuse, or dependence.
First, this comorbidity category currently contains ICD-9-CM code
292.2 Pathological drug intoxication. To ensure that all patients who
qualified for the comorbidity payment adjustment under ICD-9-CM code
292.2 will also qualify under the ICD-10-CM version of the same
comorbidity category, we propose that the 89 ICD-10-CM codes specifying
``with intoxication'' qualify for the payment adjustment. An example of
the ICD-10-CM codes for a diagnosis of cocaine abuse with current
intoxication is provided below. All of these codes would be eligible
for the payment adjustment.
F14.120 Cocaine abuse with intoxication, uncomplicated
F14.121 Cocaine abuse with intoxication with delirium
F14.122 Cocaine abuse with intoxication with perceptual
disturbance
F14.129 Cocaine abuse with intoxication, unspecified
Next, ICD-10-CM contains separate, detailed codes by drug for
specific drug-induced manifestations of mental disorder, such as drug-
induced psychotic disorder with hallucinations. What was a single code
in ICD-9-CM, 292.12 Drug-induced psychotic disorder with
hallucinations, maps to 24 comparable codes in ICD-10-CM. We propose to
include all of these more specific ICD-10-CM codes in the comorbidity
category. We believe they are necessary for replication of the clinical
intent of the comorbidity category so that all patients with a drug-
induced psychotic disorder with hallucinations coded on the claim are
eligible for the payment adjustment. Because the ICD-10-CM codes are
not listed contiguously in the classification, they cannot be formatted
as a range of codes and therefore must be listed as single codes in the
comorbidity category definition.
The situation described above is similar for ICD-9-CM code 292.0
Drug withdrawal. ICD-10-CM contains separate, detailed codes by drug
specifying that the patient is in withdrawal. We propose to include all
of these more specific ICD-10-CM codes in the comorbidity category. We
believe they are necessary for replication of the clinical intent of
the comorbidity category, so that all patients with a drug withdrawal
code on the claim are eligible for the payment adjustment. Likewise,
because the ICD-10-CM drug withdrawal codes are not listed contiguously
in the classification, they cannot be formatted as a range of codes and
so must be listed as single codes in the comorbidity category
definition.
Conversion of the Poisoning Comorbidity Category
In ICD-10-CM, the Injury and Poisoning chapter has added an axis of
classification for every injury or poisoning diagnosis code, which
specifies additional information about the current encounter. This
creates three unique codes for each injury or poisoning diagnosis,
marked by a different letter in the seventh character of the code:
1. The seventh character ``A'' in the code indicates that the
poisoning is a current diagnosis in its ``acute phase.''
2. The seventh character ``D'' in the code indicates that the
poisoning is no longer in its ``acute phase,'' but that the patient is
receiving aftercare for the earlier poisoning.
3. The seventh character ``S'' in the code indicates that the
patient no longer requires care for any aspect of the poisoning itself,
but that the patient is receiving care for a late effect of the
poisoning.
The intent of the Poisoning comorbidity category is to include only
those patients with a current diagnosis of poisoning. If the intent had
been to include patients requiring only aftercare for an earlier,
resolved case of poisoning, or for care associated with late effects of
poisoning that occurred sometime in the past, the comorbidity category
would have included ICD-9-CM aftercare codes or late effect codes, but
it does not. Only acute poisoning codes from the ICD-9-CM
classification are included. Therefore, we propose that the Poisoning
comorbidity category only includes ICD-10-CM poisoning codes with a
seventh character extension ``A,'' to indicate that the poisoning is
documented as a current diagnosis.
In addition, ICD-10-CM poisoning codes specify the circumstances of
the poisoning, whether documented as accidental, self-harm, assault, or
undetermined, as shown in the heroin poisoning example below. We
propose to include all of these more specific ICD-10-CM codes in the
comorbidity category for replication of the clinical intent of the
comorbidity category so that all patients with a current diagnosis of
poisoning coded on the claim would be eligible for the payment
adjustment, as shown in the heroin poisoning example below:
T40.1X1A Poisoning by heroin, accidental (unintentional),
initial encounter
T40.1X2A Poisoning by heroin, intentional self-harm, initial
encounter
T40.1X3A Poisoning by heroin, assault, initial encounter
T40.1X4A Poisoning by heroin, undetermined, initial encounter
ICD-10-CM classifies poisoning by substance, alongside separate
codes for adverse effect or underdosing of the same substance. Because
the poisoning codes are not listed contiguously in the classification,
they cannot be formatted as a range of codes and therefore must be
listed as single codes in the comorbidity category definition.
Proposed Elimination of Codes for Nonspecific Conditions Based on Side
of the Body (Laterality)
We believe that highly descriptive coding provides the best and
clearest way to document a patient's condition and the appropriateness
of the admission and treatment in an IPF. Therefore, whenever possible,
we believe that the most specific code that describes a medical
disease, condition, or injury should be used to document
[[Page 26051]]
the patient's diagnoses. Generally, ``unspecified'' codes are used when
they most accurately reflect what is known about the patient's
condition at the time of that particular encounter (for example, there
is a lack of information about a specific type of organism causing an
illness). However, site of illness at the time of the medical encounter
is an important determinant in assessing a patient's principal or
secondary diagnosis. For this reason, we believe that specific
diagnosis codes that narrowly identify anatomical sites where disease,
injury, or condition exist should be used when coding patients'
diagnoses whenever these codes are available. Furthermore, on the same
note, we believe that one should also code to the highest specificity
(use the full ICD-10-CM/PCS code).
In accordance with these principles, we propose to remove site
unspecified codes from the IPF PPS ICD-10-CM/PCS codes in instances in
which more specific codes are available as the clinician should be able
to identify a more specific diagnosis based on clinical assessment at
the medical encounter. For example, the initial GEMS translation
included non-specific codes such as ICD-10-CM code C44.111 ``Basal Cell
carcinoma of skin of unspecified eyelid, including canthus.'' Under our
proposal:
C44.111 Basal Cell Carcinoma of skin of unspecified eyelid would
not be accepted.
C44.112 Basal Cell Carcinoma of skin right eyelid would be
accepted.
C44.119 Basal Cell Carcinoma of skin left eyelid would be accepted.
We are proposing to remove these non-specific codes whenever a more
specific diagnosis could be identified by the clinician performing the
assessment. For the example code C44.111, we are proposing to delete
this code because the clinician should be able to identify which eye
had the basal cell carcinoma, and therefore would report the condition
using the code that specifies the right or left eye.
We are proposing to remove a total of 153 ICD-10-CM site
unspecified codes involving the following comorbidity categories:
Oncology -93 ICD-10-CM codes, Gangrene-6 ICD-10-CM codes and Severe
Musculoskeletal and Connective Tissue--54 ICD-10-CM codes. The site
unspecified IPF PPS ICD-10-CM codes that we are proposing to remove are
listed below in Tables 3 through 5.
Table 3--Proposed Site Unspecified ICD-10-CM Codes To Be Removed From
the Oncology Treatment Comorbidity Category
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-CM Diagnosis Code title
------------------------------------------------------------------------
C40.00....................... Malignant neoplasm of scapula and long
bones of unspecified upper limb.
C40.10....................... Malignant neoplasm of short bones of
unspecified upper limb.
C40.20....................... Malignant neoplasm of long bones of
unspecified lower limb.
C40.30....................... Malignant neoplasm of short bones of
unspecified lower limb.
C40.80....................... Malignant neoplasm of overlapping sites
of bone and articular cartilage of
unspecified limb.
C40.90....................... Malignant neoplasm of unspecified bones
and articular cartilage of unspecified
limb.
C43.10....................... Malignant melanoma of unspecified eyelid,
including canthus.
C43.20....................... Malignant melanoma of unspecified ear and
external auricular canal.
C43.60....................... Malignant melanoma of unspecified upper
limb, including shoulder.
C43.70....................... Malignant melanoma of unspecified lower
limb, including hip.
C44.101...................... Unspecified malignant neoplasm of skin of
unspecified eyelid, including canthus.
C44.111...................... Basal cell carcinoma of skin of
unspecified eyelid, including canthus.
C44.121...................... Squamous cell carcinoma of skin of
unspecified eyelid, including canthus.
C44.191...................... Other specified malignant neoplasm of
skin of unspecified eyelid, including
canthus.
C44.201...................... Unspecified malignant neoplasm of skin of
unspecified ear and external auricular
canal.
C44.211...................... Basal cell carcinoma of skin of
unspecified ear and external auricular
canal.
C44.221...................... Squamous cell carcinoma of skin of
unspecified ear and external auricular
canal.
C44.601...................... Unspecified malignant neoplasm of skin of
unspecified upper limb, including
shoulder.
C44.611...................... Basal cell carcinoma of skin of
unspecified upper limb, including
shoulder.
C44.621...................... Squamous cell carcinoma of skin of
unspecified upper limb, including
shoulder.
C44.691...................... Other specified malignant neoplasm of
skin of unspecified upper limb,
including shoulder.
C44.701...................... Unspecified malignant neoplasm of skin of
unspecified lower limb, including hip.
C44.711...................... Basal cell carcinoma of skin of
unspecified lower limb, including hip.
C44.721...................... Squamous cell carcinoma of skin of
unspecified lower limb, including hip.
C44.791...................... Other specified malignant neoplasm of
skin of unspecified lower limb,
including hip.
C47.10....................... Malignant neoplasm of peripheral nerves
of unspecified upper limb, including
shoulder.
C47.20....................... Malignant neoplasm of peripheral nerves
of unspecified lower limb, including
hip.
C49.10....................... Malignant neoplasm of connective and soft
tissue of unspecified upper limb,
including shoulder.
C49.20....................... Malignant neoplasm of connective and soft
tissue of unspecified lower limb,
including hip.
C4A.10....................... Merkel cell carcinoma of unspecified
eyelid, including canthus.
C4A.20....................... Merkel cell carcinoma of unspecified ear
and external auricular canal.
C4A.60....................... Merkel cell carcinoma of unspecified
upper limb, including shoulder.
C4A.70....................... Merkel cell carcinoma of unspecified
lower limb, including hip.
C50.019...................... Malignant neoplasm of nipple and areola,
unspecified female breast.
C50.029...................... Malignant neoplasm of nipple and areola,
unspecified male breast.
C50.119...................... Malignant neoplasm of central portion of
unspecified female breast.
C50.129...................... Malignant neoplasm of central portion of
unspecified male breast.
C50.219...................... Malignant neoplasm of upper-inner
quadrant of unspecified female breast.
C50.229...................... Malignant neoplasm of upper-inner
quadrant of unspecified male breast.
C50.319...................... Malignant neoplasm of lower-inner
quadrant of unspecified female breast.
C50.329...................... Malignant neoplasm of lower-inner
quadrant of unspecified male breast.
C50.419...................... Malignant neoplasm of upper-outer
quadrant of unspecified female breast.
C50.429...................... Malignant neoplasm of upper-outer
quadrant of unspecified male breast.
C50.519...................... Malignant neoplasm of lower-outer
quadrant of unspecified female breast.
C50.529...................... Malignant neoplasm of lower-outer
quadrant of unspecified male breast.
[[Page 26052]]
C50.619...................... Malignant neoplasm of axillary tail of
unspecified female breast.
C50.629...................... Malignant neoplasm of axillary tail of
unspecified male breast.
C50.819...................... Malignant neoplasm of overlapping sites
of unspecified female breast.
C50.829...................... Malignant neoplasm of overlapping sites
of unspecified male breast.
C50.919...................... Malignant neoplasm of unspecified site of
unspecified female breast.
C50.929...................... Malignant neoplasm of unspecified site of
unspecified male breast.
C69.00....................... Malignant neoplasm of unspecified
conjunctiva.
C69.10....................... Malignant neoplasm of unspecified cornea.
C69.50....................... Malignant neoplasm of unspecified
lacrimal gland and duct.
C69.60....................... Malignant neoplasm of unspecified orbit.
C69.80....................... Malignant neoplasm of overlapping sites
of unspecified eye and adnexa.
C69.90....................... Malignant neoplasm of unspecified site of
unspecified eye.
C76.40....................... Malignant neoplasm of unspecified upper
limb.
C76.50....................... Malignant neoplasm of unspecified lower
limb.
D03.10....................... Melanoma in situ of unspecified eyelid,
including canthus.
D03.20....................... Melanoma in situ of unspecified ear and
external auricular canal.
D03.60....................... Melanoma in situ of unspecified upper
limb, including shoulder.
D03.70....................... Melanoma in situ of unspecified lower
limb, including hip.
D04.10....................... Carcinoma in situ of skin of unspecified
eyelid, including canthus.
D04.20....................... Carcinoma in situ of skin of unspecified
ear and external auricular canal.
D04.60....................... Carcinoma in situ of skin of unspecified
upper limb, including shoulder.
D04.70....................... Carcinoma in situ of skin of unspecified
lower limb, including hip.
D05.00....................... Lobular carcinoma in situ of unspecified
breast.
D05.10....................... Intraductal carcinoma in situ of
unspecified breast.
D05.80....................... Other specified type of carcinoma in situ
of unspecified breast.
D05.90....................... Unspecified type of carcinoma in situ of
unspecified breast.
D09.20....................... Carcinoma in situ of unspecified eye.
D16.00....................... Benign neoplasm of scapula and long bones
of unspecified upper limb.
D16.10....................... Benign neoplasm of short bones of
unspecified upper limb.
D16.20....................... Benign neoplasm of long bones of
unspecified lower limb.
D16.30....................... Benign neoplasm of short bones of
unspecified lower limb.
D17.20....................... Benign lipomatous neoplasm of skin and
subcutaneous tissue of unspecified limb.
D21.10....................... Benign neoplasm of connective and other
soft tissue of unspecified upper limb,
including shoulder.
D21.20....................... Benign neoplasm of connective and other
soft tissue of unspecified lower limb,
including hip.
D22.10....................... Melanocytic nevi of unspecified eyelid,
including canthus.
D22.20....................... Melanocytic nevi of unspecified ear and
external auricular canal.
D22.60....................... Melanocytic nevi of unspecified upper
limb, including shoulder.
D22.70....................... Melanocytic nevi of unspecified lower
limb, including hip.
D23.10....................... Other benign neoplasm of skin of
unspecified eyelid, including canthus.
D23.20....................... Other benign neoplasm of skin of
unspecified ear and external auricular
canal.
D23.60....................... Other benign neoplasm of skin of
unspecified upper limb, including
shoulder.
D23.70....................... Other benign neoplasm of skin of
unspecified lower limb, including hip.
D24.9........................ Benign neoplasm of unspecified breast.
D31.00....................... Benign neoplasm of unspecified
conjunctiva.
D31.50....................... Benign neoplasm of unspecified lacrimal
gland and duct.
D31.60....................... Benign neoplasm of unspecified site of
unspecified orbit.
D31.90....................... Benign neoplasm of unspecified part of
unspecified eye.
D48.60....................... Neoplasm of uncertain behavior of
unspecified breast.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 4--Proposed Site Unspecified ICD-10-CM Codes To Be Removed From
the Gangrene Comorbidity Category
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD10 ICD10 Description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
I70269....................... Atherosclerosis of native arteries of
extremities with gangrene, unspecified
extremity.
I70369....................... Atherosclerosis of unspecified type of
bypass graft(s) of the extremities with
gangrene, unspecified extremity.
I70469....................... Atherosclerosis of autologous vein bypass
graft(s) of the extremities with
gangrene, unspecified extremity.
I70569....................... Atherosclerosis of nonautologous
biological bypass graft(s) of the
extremities with gangrene, unspecified
extremity.
I70669....................... Atherosclerosis of nonbiological bypass
graft(s) of the extremities with
gangrene, unspecified extremity.
I70769....................... Atherosclerosis of other type of bypass
graft(s) of the extremities with
gangrene, unspecified extremity.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 5--Proposed Site Unspecified ICD-10-CM Codes To Be Removed From
the Severe Musculoskeletal and Connective Tissue Diseases Category
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD10 ICD10 Description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
M8600........................ Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis,
unspecified site.
M86019....................... Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis,
unspecified shoulder.
[[Page 26053]]
M86029....................... Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis,
unspecified humerus.
M86039....................... Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis,
unspecified radius and ulna.
M86049....................... Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis,
unspecified hand.
M86059....................... Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis,
unspecified femur.
M86069....................... Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis,
unspecified tibia and fibula.
M86079....................... Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis,
unspecified ankle and foot.
M8610........................ Other acute osteomyelitis, unspecified
site.
M86119....................... Other acute osteomyelitis, unspecified
shoulder.
M86129....................... Other acute osteomyelitis, unspecified
humerus.
M86139....................... Other acute osteomyelitis, unspecified
radius and ulna.
M86149....................... Other acute osteomyelitis, unspecified
hand.
M86159....................... Other acute osteomyelitis, unspecified
femur.
M86169....................... Other acute osteomyelitis, unspecified
tibia and fibula.
M86179....................... Other acute osteomyelitis, unspecified
ankle and foot.
M8620........................ Subacute osteomyelitis, unspecified site.
M86219....................... Subacute osteomyelitis, unspecified
shoulder.
M86229....................... Subacute osteomyelitis, unspecified
humerus.
M86239....................... Subacute osteomyelitis, unspecified
radius and ulna.
M86249....................... Subacute osteomyelitis, unspecified hand.
M86259....................... Subacute osteomyelitis, unspecified
femur.
M86269....................... Subacute osteomyelitis, unspecified tibia
and fibula.
M86279....................... Subacute osteomyelitis, unspecified ankle
and foot.
M8630........................ Chronic multifocal osteomyelitis,
unspecified site.
M86319....................... Chronic multifocal osteomyelitis,
unspecified shoulder.
M86329....................... Chronic multifocal osteomyelitis,
unspecified humerus.
M86339....................... Chronic multifocal osteomyelitis,
unspecified radius and ulna.
M86349....................... Chronic multifocal osteomyelitis,
unspecified hand.
M86359....................... Chronic multifocal osteomyelitis,
unspecified femur.
M86369....................... Chronic multifocal osteomyelitis,
unspecified tibia and fibula.
M86379....................... Chronic multifocal osteomyelitis,
unspecified ankle and foot.
M8640........................ Chronic osteomyelitis with draining
sinus, unspecified site.
M86419....................... Chronic osteomyelitis with draining
sinus, unspecified shoulder.
M86429....................... Chronic osteomyelitis with draining
sinus, unspecified humerus.
M86439....................... Chronic osteomyelitis with draining
sinus, unspecified forearm.
M86449....................... Chronic osteomyelitis with draining
sinus, unspecified hand.
M86459....................... Chronic osteomyelitis with draining
sinus, unspecified femur.
M86469....................... Chronic osteomyelitis with draining
sinus, unspecified lower leg.
M86479....................... Chronic osteomyelitis with draining
sinus, unspecified ankle and foot.
M8650........................ Other chronic hematogenous osteomyelitis,
unspecified site.
M86519....................... Other chronic hematogenous osteomyelitis,
unspecified shoulder.
M86529....................... Other chronic hematogenous osteomyelitis,
unspecified humerus.
M86539....................... Other chronic hematogenous osteomyelitis,
unspecified forearm.
M86549....................... Other chronic hematogenous osteomyelitis,
unspecified hand.
M86559....................... Other chronic hematogenous osteomyelitis,
unspecified femur.
M86569....................... Other chronic hematogenous osteomyelitis,
unspecified lower leg.
M8660........................ Other chronic osteomyelitis, unspecified
site.
M86619....................... Other chronic osteomyelitis, unspecified
shoulder.
M86629....................... Other chronic osteomyelitis, unspecified
upper arm.
M86639....................... Other chronic osteomyelitis, unspecified
forearm.
M86649....................... Other chronic osteomyelitis, unspecified
hand.
M86679....................... Other chronic osteomyelitis, unspecified
ankle and foot.
M868x9....................... Other osteomyelitis, unspecified sites.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
There are some site unspecified ICD-10-CM codes that we are not
proposing to remove. In the case where the site unspecified code is the
only available ICD-10-CM code, that is when a laterality code (site
specific code) is not available, the site unspecified code will not be
removed and it would be appropriate to submit that code.
Currently, IPFs are receiving the comorbidity adjustment using the
ICD-9-CM diagnosis codes for the comorbidity categories shown in Table
6 below.
Table 6--FY 2014 Current Diagnosis Codes and Adjustment Factors for
Comorbidity Categories
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adjustment
Description of comorbidity ICD-9-CM Diagnoses codes factor
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Developmental Disabilities....... 317, 3180, 3181, 3182, 1.04
and 319.
Coagulation Factor Deficits...... 2860 through 2864....... 1.13
Tracheostomy..................... 51900 through 51909 and 1.06
V440.
[[Page 26054]]
Renal Failure, Acute............. 5845 through 5849, 1.11
63630, 63631, 63632,
63730, 63731, 63732,
6383, 6393, 66932,
66934, 9585.
Renal Failure, Chronic........... 40301, 40311, 40391, 1.11
40402, 40412, 40413,
40492, 40493, 5853,
5854, 5855, 5856,
5859,586, V4511, V4512,
V560, V561, and V562.
Oncology Treatment............... 1400 through 2399 with a 1.07
radiation therapy code
92.21-92.29 or
chemotherapy code 99.25.
Uncontrolled Diabetes-Mellitus 25002, 25003, 25012, 1.05
with or without complications. 25013, 25022, 25023,
25032, 25033, 25042,
25043, 25052, 25053,
25062, 25063, 25072,
25073, 25082, 25083,
25092, and 25093.
Severe Protein Calorie 260 through 262......... 1.13
Malnutrition.
Eating and Conduct Disorders..... 3071, 30750, 31203, 1.12
31233, and 31234.
Infectious Disease............... 01000 through 04110, 1.07
042, 04500 through
05319, 05440 through
05449, 0550 through
0770, 0782 through
07889, and 07950
through 07959.
Drug and/or Alcohol Induced 2910, 2920, 29212, 2922, 1.03
Mental Disorders. 30300, and 30400.
Cardiac Conditions............... 3910, 3911, 3912, 40201, 1.11
40403, 4160, 4210,
4211, and 4219.
Gangrene......................... 44024 and 7854.......... 1.10
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary 49121, 4941, 5100, 1.12
Disease. 51883, 51884, V4611,
V4612, V4613 and V4614.
Artificial Openings--Digestive 56960 through 56969, 1.08
and Urinary. 9975, and V441 through
V446.
Severe Musculoskeletal and 6960, 7100, 73000 1.09
Connective Tissue Diseases. through 73009, 73010
through 73019, and
73020 through 73029.
Poisoning........................ 96500 through 96509, 1.11
9654, 9670 through
9699, 9770, 9800
through 9809, 9830
through 9839, 986, 9890
through 9897.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
For FY 2015, we are proposing to apply the 17 comorbidity
categories for which we provide an adjustment as shown in Table 6
above. We are also proposing the ICD-10-CM/PCS codes and adjustment
factors shown in Table 7 below, as well as, the removal of 153 site
unspecified ICD-10-CM codes in Tables 3 through 5 above. However, the
effective date of those changes would be the date when ICD-10-CM/PCS
becomes the required medical data code set for use on Medicare claims.
Table 7--FY 2015 Diagnosis Codes and Adjustment Factors for Comorbidity
Categories
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-CM Diagnoses Adjustment
Description of comorbidity codes factor
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Developmental Disabilities....... F70 through F79......... 1.04
Coagulation Factor Deficits...... D66 through D682........ 1.13
Tracheostomy..................... J9500 through J9509, and 1.06
Z930.
Renal Failure, Acute............. N170 through N179, 1.11
O0482, O0732, O084
O904, and T795XXA.
Renal Failure, Chronic........... I120, I1311 through 1.11
I132, N183 through N19,
Z4901 through Z4931,
Z9115, and Z992.
Oncology Treatment............... C000 through C866, C882 1.07
through C964, C96A,
C96Z, C969 through
D471, D473, D47Z1
through D47Z9, D479
through D499, K317,
K635, Q8500, and Q8501
through Q8509, with a
radiation therapy code
from ICD-10-PCS tables
08H through 0YH with a
sixth character device
value 1 Radioactive
Element, ICD-10-PCS
table CW7, ICD-10-PCS
tables D00 through DW0,
ICD-10-PCS tables D01
through DW1, tables D0Y
through DWY, or a
chemotherapy code from
ICD-10-PCS table 3E0
with a sixth character
substance value 0
Antineoplastic and a
seventh character
qualifier 5 Other
Antineoplastic.
Uncontrolled Diabetes-Mellitus E1065 and E1165......... 1.05
with or without complications.
Severe Protein Calorie E40 through E43......... 1.13
Malnutrition.
Eating and Conduct Disorders..... F5000 through F5002, 1.12
F509, F631, F6381, and
F911.
Infectious Disease............... A150 through A269, A280 1.07
through A329, A35
through A439, A46
through A480, A482
through A488, A491, A70
through A740, A7489,
A800 through A99, B0050
through B0059, B010
through B0229, B03
through B069, B08010
through B0809, B0820
through B2799, B330
through B333, B338,
B341, B471 through
B479, B950 through
B955, B958, B9730
through B9739, G032,
I673, J020, J0300,
J0301, J202, K9081,
L081, L444, M60009, and
R1111.
[[Page 26055]]
Drug and/or Alcohol Induced Alcohol dependence with 1.03
Mental Disorders. intoxication and/or
withdrawal F10121,
F10220 through F10229,
F10231, and F10921.
Drug withdrawal F1193,
F1123, F13230 through
F13239, F13930 through
F13939, F1423, F1523,
F1593, F17203, F17213,
F17223, F17293, F19230
through F19239, and
F19930 through F19939.
Drug-induced psychotic
disorder with
hallucinations F11251,
F11151, F11951, F12151,
F12251, F13151, F12951,
F13251, F13951, F14151,
F14251, F14951, F15151,
F15251, F15951, F16151,
F16251, F16951, F18151,
F18251, F18951, F19151,
F19251, and F19951.
Drug intoxication
F11220 through F11229,
F11920 through F11929,
F12120 through F12129,
F12220 through F12229,
F12920 through F12929,
F13120 through F13129,
F13220 through F13229,
F13920 through F13929,
F14120 through F14129,
F14220 through F14229,
F14920 through F14929,
F15120 through F15129,
F15220 through F15229,
F15920 through F15929,
F16120 through F16129,
F16220 through F16229,
F16920 through F16929,
F18120 through F18129,
F18220 through F18229,
F18920 through F18929,
F19120 through F19129,
F19220 through F19229,
F19230 through F19239,
and F19920 through
F19929. Opioid
dependence not listed
above F1120, F1124,
F11250, F11259, F11281
through F11288, F1129.
Cardiac Conditions............... I010 through I012, I110, 1.11
I270, I330 through
I339, and I39.
Gangrene......................... E0852, E0952, E1052, 1.10
E1152, E1352, I70261
through I70269, I70361
through I70369, I70461
through I70469, I70561
through I70569, I70661
through I70669, I70761
through I70769, I7301,
and I96.
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary J441, J470 through J471, 1.12
Disease. J860, J95850, J9610
through J9622, and
Z9911 through Z9912.
Artificial Openings--Digestive K9400 through K9419, 1.08
and Urinary. N990, N99520 through
N99538, N9981, N9989,
and Z931 through Z936.
Severe Musculoskeletal and L4050 through L4059, 1.09
Connective Tissue Diseases. M320 through M329,
M4620 through M4628,
and M8600 through M869.
Poisoning........................ Note: Only includes the 1.11
codes below with
seventh character A
specifying initial
encounter. T391X1
through T391X4, T400X1
through T400X4, T401X1
through T401X4, T402X1
through T402X4, T403X1
through T403X4, T404X1
through T404X4, T40601
through T40604, T40691
through T40694, T407X1
through T407X4, T408X1
through T408X4, T40901
through T40904, T40991
through T40994, T410X1
through T410X4, T411X1
through T411X4, T41201
through T41204, T41291
through T41294, T413X1
through T413X4, T4141X
through T4144X, T423X1
through T423X4, T424X1
through T424X4, T426X1
through T426X4, T4271X
through T4274X, T428X1
through T428X4, T43011
through T43014, T43021
through T43024, T431X1
through T431X4, T43201
through T43204, T43211
through T43214, T43221
through T43224, T43291
through T43294, T433X1
through T433X4, T434X1
through T434X4, T43501
through T43504, T43591
through T43594, T43601
through T43604, T43611
through T43614, T43621
through T43624, T43631
through T43634, T43691
through T43694, T438X1
through T438X4, T4391X
through T4394X, T505X1
through T505X4, T510X1
through T5194X, T510X1
through T510X4, T5391X
through T5394X, T540X1
through T5494X, T550X1
through T551X4, T560X1
through T560X4, T571X1
through T571X4, T5801X
through T5804X, T5811X
through T5814X, T582X1
through T582X4, T588X1
through T588X4, T5891X
through T5894X, T600X1
through T600X4, T601X1
through T601X4, T602X1
through T602X4, T6041X
through T6094X, T63001
through T6394X, T6401X
through T6484X, T650X1
through T650X4, T651X1
through T651X4.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Proposed Patient Age Adjustments
As explained in the November 2004 IPF PPS final rule (69 FR 66922),
we analyzed the impact of age on per diem cost by examining the age
variable (that is, the range of ages) for payment adjustments.
In general, we found that the cost per day increases with age. The
older age groups are more costly than the under 45 age group, the
differences in per diem cost increase for each successive age group,
and the differences are statistically significant.
For FY 2015, we are proposing to continue to use the patient age
adjustments currently in effect as shown in Table 8 below.
Table 8--Age Groupings and Adjustment Factors
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adjustment
Age factor
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under 45................................................... 1.00
45 and under 50............................................ 1.01
50 and under 55............................................ 1.02
55 and under 60............................................ 1.04
60 and under 65............................................ 1.07
65 and under 70............................................ 1.10
70 and under 75............................................ 1.13
75 and under 80............................................ 1.15
80 and over................................................ 1.17
------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. Proposed Variable Per Diem Adjustments
We explained in the November 2004 IPF PPS final rule (69 FR 66946)
that the regression analysis indicated that per diem cost declines as
the LOS increases. The variable per diem adjustments to the Federal per
diem base rate account for ancillary and administrative costs that
occur disproportionately in the first days after admission to an IPF.
We used a regression analysis to estimate the average differences
in per diem cost among stays of different lengths. As a result of this
analysis, we established variable per diem adjustments that begin on
day 1 and
[[Page 26056]]
decline gradually until day 21 of a patient's stay. For day 22 and
thereafter, the variable per diem adjustment remains the same each day
for the remainder of the stay. However, the adjustment applied to day 1
depends upon whether the IPF has a qualifying emergency department
(ED). If an IPF has a qualifying ED, it receives a 1.31 adjustment
factor for day 1 of each stay. If an IPF does not have a qualifying ED,
it receives a 1.19 adjustment factor for day 1 of the stay. The ED
adjustment is explained in more detail in section VII.C.5 of this
proposed rule.
For FY 2015, we are proposing to continue to use the variable per
diem adjustment factors currently in effect as shown in Table 9 below.
A complete discussion of the variable per diem adjustments appears in
the November 2004 IPF PPS final rule (69 FR 66946).
Table 9--Variable Per Diem Adjustments
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adjustment
Day-of-stay factor
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Day 1--IPF Without a Qualifying ED......................... 1.19
Day 1--IPF With a Qualifying ED............................ 1.31
Day 2...................................................... 1.12
Day 3...................................................... 1.08
Day 4...................................................... 1.05
Day 5...................................................... 1.04
Day 6...................................................... 1.02
Day 7...................................................... 1.01
Day 8...................................................... 1.01
Day 9...................................................... 1.00
Day 10..................................................... 1.00
Day 11..................................................... 0.99
Day 12..................................................... 0.99
Day 13..................................................... 0.99
Day 14..................................................... 0.99
Day 15..................................................... 0.98
Day 16..................................................... 0.97
Day 17..................................................... 0.97
Day 18..................................................... 0.96
Day 19..................................................... 0.95
Day 20..................................................... 0.95
Day 21..................................................... 0.95
After Day 21............................................... 0.92
------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Facility-Level Adjustments
The IPF PPS includes facility-level adjustments for the wage index,
IPFs located in rural areas, teaching IPFs, cost of living adjustments
for IPFs located in Alaska and Hawaii, and IPFs with a qualifying ED.
1. Proposed Wage Index Adjustment
a. Background
As discussed in the May 2006 IPF PPS final rule (71 FR 27061) and
in the May 2008 (73 FR 25719) and May 2009 IPF PPS notices (74 FR
20373), in order to provide an adjustment for geographic wage levels,
the labor-related portion of an IPF's payment is adjusted using an
appropriate wage index. Currently, an IPF's geographic wage index value
is determined based on the actual location of the IPF in an urban or
rural area as defined in Sec. 412.64(b)(1)(ii)(A) and (C).
b. Proposed Wage Index for FY 2015
Since the inception of the IPF PPS, we have used the pre-
reclassified, pre-floor hospital wage index in developing a wage index
to be applied to IPFs because there is not an IPF-specific wage index
available and we believe that IPFs generally compete in the same labor
market as acute care hospitals so the pre-reclassified, pre-floor
inpatient acute care hospital wage index should be reflective of labor
costs of IPFs. As discussed in the May 2006 IPF PPS final rule for FY
2007 (71 FR 27061 through 27067), under the IPF PPS, the wage index is
calculated using the IPPS wage index for the labor market area in which
the IPF is located, without taking into account geographic
reclassifications, floors, and other adjustments made to the wage index
under the IPPS. For a complete description of these IPPS wage index
adjustments, please see the CY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53365 through 53374). We are proposing to continue that practice for FY
2015.
We apply the wage index adjustment to the labor-related portion of
the Federal rate, which is currently estimated to be 69.538 percent.
This percentage reflects the labor-related relative importance of the
FY 2008-based RPL market basket for FY 2015 (see section V.C. of this
proposed rule).
Changes to the wage index are made in a budget-neutral manner so
that updates do not increase expenditures. For FY 2015, we are
proposing to apply the most recent hospital wage index (that is, the FY
2014 pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage index which is the most
appropriate index as it best reflects the variation in local labor
costs of IPFs in the various geographic areas) using the most recent
hospital wage data (that is, data from hospital cost reports for the
cost reporting period beginning during FY 2010), and applying an
adjustment in accordance with our budget-neutrality policy. This policy
requires us to estimate the total amount of IPF PPS payments for FY
2014 using the labor-related share and the wage indices from FY 2014
divided by the total estimated IPF PPS payments for FY 2015 using the
labor-related share and wage indices from FY 2015. The estimated
payments are based on FY 2013 IPF claims, inflated to the appropriate
FY. This quotient is the wage index budget-neutrality factor, and it is
applied in the update of the Federal per diem base rate for FY 2015 in
addition to the market basket described in section VI.B. of this
proposed rule. The wage index budget-neutrality factor for FY 2015 is
1.0003. The wage index applicable for FY 2015 appears in Table 1 and
Table 2 in Addendum B of this proposed rule.
In the May 2006 IPF PPS final rule for RY 2007 (71 FR 27061-27067),
we adopted the changes discussed in the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) Bulletin No. 03-04 (June 6, 2003), which announced revised
definitions for Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs), and the creation
of Micropolitan Statistical Areas and Combined Statistical Areas. In
adopting the OMB Core-Based Statistical Area (CBSA) geographic
designations, we did not provide a separate transition for the CBSA-
based wage index since the IPF PPS was already in a transition period
from TEFRA payments to PPS payments.
As was the case in FY 2014, for FY 2015, we will continue to use
the CBSA geographic designations. The updated FY 2015 CBSA-based wage
index values are presented in Tables 1 and 2 in Addendum B of this
proposed rule. A complete discussion of the CBSA labor market
definitions appears in the May 2006 IPF PPS final rule (71 FR 27061
through 27067).
In keeping with established IPF PPS wage index policy, we propose
to use the FY 2014 pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage index
(which is based on data collected from hospital cost reports submitted
by hospitals for cost reporting periods beginning during FY 2010) to
adjust IPF PPS payments beginning October 1, 2014.
c. OMB Bulletins
OMB publishes bulletins regarding CBSA changes, including changes
to CBSA numbers and titles. In the May 2008 IPF PPS notice, we
incorporated the CBSA nomenclature changes published in the most recent
OMB bulletin that applies to the hospital wage index used to determine
the current IPF PPS wage index and stated that we expect to continue to
do the same for all the OMB CBSA nomenclature changes in future IPF PPS
rules and notices, as necessary (73 FR 25721). The OMB bulletins may be
accessed online at https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/bullentins/.
In accordance with our established methodology, we have
historically adopted any CBSA changes that are published in the OMB
bulletin that corresponds with the hospital wage index used to
determine the IPF PPS
[[Page 26057]]
wage index. For FY 2015, we use the FY 2014 pre-floor, pre-reclassified
hospital wage index to adjust the IPF PPS payments. On February 28,
2013, OMB issued OMB Bulletin No. 13-01, which establishes revised
delineations of statistical areas based on OMB standards published in
the Federal Register on June 28, 2010 and 2010 Census Bureau data.
Because the FY 2014 pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage index was
finalized prior to the issuance of this Bulletin, the FY 2014 pre-
floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage index does not reflect OMB's new
area delineations based on the 2010 Census and, thus, the FY 2015 IPF
PPS wage index will not reflect the OMB changes.
CMS intends to propose changes to the hospital wage index based on
this OMB Bulletin in the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, as stated
in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (78 FR 27552 through 27553).
Therefore, we anticipate that the OMB Bulletin changes will be
reflected in the FY 2015 hospital wage index. Because we base the IPF
PPS wage index on the hospital wage index from the prior year, we
anticipate that the OMB Bulletin changes would be reflected in the FY
2016 IPPS PPS wage index.
2. Proposed Adjustment for Rural Location
In the November 2004 IPF PPS final rule, we provided a 17 percent
payment adjustment for IPFs located in a rural area. This adjustment
was based on the regression analysis, which indicated that the per diem
cost of rural facilities was 17 percent higher than that of urban
facilities after accounting for the influence of the other variables
included in the regression. For FY 2015, we are proposing to apply a 17
percent payment adjustment for IPFs located in a rural area as defined
at Sec. 412.64(b)(1)(ii)(C). A complete discussion of the adjustment
for rural locations appears in the November 2004 IPF PPS final rule (69
FR 66954).
3. Proposed Teaching Adjustment
In the November 2004 IPF PPS final rule, we implemented regulations
at Sec. 412.424(d)(1)(iii) to establish a facility-level adjustment
for IPFs that are, or are part of, teaching hospitals. The teaching
adjustment accounts for the higher indirect operating costs experienced
by hospitals that participate in graduate medical education (GME)
programs. The payment adjustments are made based on the ratio of the
number of full-time equivalent (FTE) interns and residents training in
the IPF and the IPF's average daily census.
Medicare makes direct GME payments (for direct costs such as
resident and teaching physician salaries, and other direct teaching
costs) to all teaching hospitals including those paid under a PPS, and
those paid under the TEFRA rate-of-increase limits. These direct GME
payments are made separately from payments for hospital operating costs
and are not part of the IPF PPS. The direct GME payments do not address
the estimated higher indirect operating costs teaching hospitals may
face.
The results of the regression analysis of FY 2002 IPF data
established the basis for the payment adjustments included in the
November 2004 IPF PPS final rule. The results showed that the indirect
teaching cost variable is significant in explaining the higher costs of
IPFs that have teaching programs. We calculated the teaching adjustment
based on the IPF's ``teaching variable,'' which is one plus the ratio
of the number of FTE residents training in the IPF (subject to
limitations described below) to the IPF's average daily census (ADC).
We established the teaching adjustment in a manner that limited the
incentives for IPFs to add FTE residents for the purpose of increasing
their teaching adjustment. We imposed a cap on the number of FTE
residents that may be counted for purposes of calculating the teaching
adjustment. The cap limits the number of FTE residents that teaching
IPFs may count for the purpose of calculating the IPF PPS teaching
adjustment, not the number of residents teaching institutions can hire
or train. We calculated the number of FTE residents that trained in the
IPF during a ``base year'' and used that FTE resident number as the
cap. An IPF's FTE resident cap is ultimately determined based on the
final settlement of the IPF's most recent cost report filed before
November 15, 2004 (that is, the publication date of the IPF PPS final
rule).
In the regression analysis, the logarithm of the teaching variable
had a coefficient value of 0.5150. We converted this cost effect to a
teaching payment adjustment by treating the regression coefficient as
an exponent and raising the teaching variable to a power equal to the
coefficient value. We note that the coefficient value of 0.5150 was
based on the regression analysis holding all other components of the
payment system constant. A complete discussion of how the teaching
adjustment was calculated appears in the November 2004 IPF PPS final
rule (69 FR 66954 through 66957) and the May 2008 IPF PPS notice (73 FR
25721).
As with other adjustment factors derived through the regression
analysis, we do not plan to rerun the regression analysis until we
analyze IPF PPS data. Therefore, in this proposed rule, for FY 2015, we
are proposing to retain the coefficient value of 0.5150 for the
teaching adjustment to the Federal per diem base rate.
a. FTE Intern and Resident Cap Adjustment
CMS had been asked by the IPF industry to reconsider the original
IPF teaching policy and permit a temporary increase in the FTE resident
cap when an IPF increases the number of FTE residents it trains due to
the acceptance of displaced residents (residents that are training in
an IPF or a program before the IPF or program closed) when another IPF
closes or closes its medical residency training program.
To help us assess how many IPFs had been, or were expected to be
adversely affected by their inability to adjust their caps under Sec.
412.424(d)(1)(iii) and under these situations, we specifically
requested public comment from IPFs in the May 1, 2009 IPF PPS notice
(74 FR 20376 through 20377). A summary of the comments and our
responses can be reviewed in the April 30, 2010 IPF PPS notice (75 FR
23106 through 23117). All of the commenters recommended that CMS modify
the IPF PPS teaching adjustment policy, supporting a policy change that
would permit the IPF PPS residency cap to be temporarily adjusted when
that IPF trains displaced residents due to closure of an IPF or closure
of an IPF's medical residency training program(s). The commenters
recommended a temporary resident cap adjustment policy similar to the
policies applied in similar contexts for acute care hospitals.
We agreed with the commenters so, in the May 6, 2011 IPF PPS final
rule (76 FR 26455), we adopted the temporary resident cap adjustment
policies described below, similar to the temporary adjustments to the
FTE cap used for acute care hospitals.
b. Temporary Adjustment to the FTE Cap To Reflect Residents Added Due
to Hospital Closure
In the May 6, 2011 IPF PPS final rule (76 FR 26455), we added a new
Sec. 412.424(d)(1)(iii)(F)(1) to allow a temporary adjustment to an
IPF's FTE cap to reflect residents added because of another IPF's
closure on or after July 1, 2011, to be effective for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after July 1, 2011. For purposes of this
policy, we adopted the IPPS definition of ``closure of a hospital'' in
42 CFR 413.79(h) to
[[Page 26058]]
mean the IPF terminates its Medicare provider agreement as specified in
42 CFR 489.52. The regulations permit an adjustment to an IPF's FTE cap
if the IPF meets the following criteria: (1) The IPF is training
displaced residents from another IPF that closed on or after July 1,
2011; and (2) no later than 60 days after the hospital first begins
training the displaced residents, the IPF that is training the
displaced residents from the closed IPF submits a request for a
temporary adjustment to its FTE cap to its Medicare Administrative
Contractor (MAC), and documents that the IPF is eligible for this
temporary adjustment to its FTE cap by identifying the residents who
have come from the closed IPF and have caused the requesting IPF to
exceed its cap, (or the IPF may already be over its cap) and specifies
the length of time that the adjustment is needed.
After the displaced residents leave the IPF's training program or
complete their residency program, the IPF's cap would revert to its
original level. Further, the total amount of temporary cap adjustments
that can be distributed to all receiving hospitals cannot exceed the
cap amount of the IPF that closed.
c. Temporary Adjustment to FTE To Cap Reflect Residents Affected by
Residency Program Closure
In the May 6, 2011 final rule (76 FR 26455), we added a new Sec.
412.424(d)(1)(iii)(F)(2) providing that if an IPF that ceases training
residents in a residency training program(s) agrees to temporarily
reduce its FTE cap, we would allow another IPF to receive a temporary
adjustment to its FTE cap to reflect residents added because of the
closure of another IPF's residency training program. For purposes of
this policy on closed residency programs, we apply the IPPS definition
of ``closure of a hospital residency training program'' to mean that
the hospital ceases to offer training for residents in a particular
approved medical residency training program as specified in Sec.
413.79(h). The methodology for adjusting the caps for the ``receiving
IPF'' and the ``IPF that closed its program'' is described below.
i. Receiving IPF
The regulations at Sec. 412.424(d)(1)(iii)(F)(2)(i) allow an IPF
to receive a temporary adjustment to its FTE cap to reflect residents
added because of the closure of another IPF's residency training
program for cost reporting periods beginning on or after July 1, 2011
if--
The IPF is training additional residents from the
residency training program of an IPF that closed its program on or
after July 1, 2011.
No later than 60 days after the IPF begins to train the
residents, the IPF submits to its MAC a request for a temporary
adjustment to its FTE cap, documents that the IPF is eligible for this
temporary adjustment by identifying the residents who have come from
another IPF's closed program and have caused the IPF to exceed its cap,
(or the IPF may already be in excess of its cap), specifies the length
of time the adjustment is needed, and submits to its MAC a copy of the
FTE cap reduction statement by the IPF closing the residency training
program.
ii. IPF That Closed Its Program
The regulations at Sec. 412.424(d)(1)(iii)(F)(2)(ii) provide that
an IPF that agrees to train residents who have been displaced by the
closure of another IPF's resident teaching program may receive a
temporary FTE cap adjustment only if the IPF that closed a program:
Temporarily reduces its FTE cap based on the number of FTE
residents in each program year, training in the program at the time of
the program's closure.
No later than 60 days after the residents who were in the
closed program begin training at another IPF, submits to its MAC a
statement signed and dated by its representative that specifies that it
agrees to the temporary reduction in its FTE cap to allow the IPF
training the displaced residents to obtain a temporary adjustment to
its cap; identifies the residents who were training at the time of the
program's closure; identifies the IPFs to which the residents are
transferring once the program closes; and specifies the reduction for
the applicable program years.
A complete discussion on the temporary adjustment to the FTE cap to
reflect residents added due to hospital closure and by residency
program appears in the January 27, 2011 IPF PPS proposed rule (76 FR
5018 through 5020) and the May 6, 2011 IPF PPS final rule (76 FR 26453
through 26456).
4. Proposed Cost of Living Adjustment for IPFs Located in Alaska and
Hawaii
The IPF PPS includes a payment adjustment for IPFs located in
Alaska and Hawaii based upon the county in which the IPF is located. As
we explained in the November 2004 IPF PPS final rule, the FY 2002 data
demonstrated that IPFs in Alaska and Hawaii had per diem costs that
were disproportionately higher than other IPFs. Other Medicare PPSs
(for example, the IPPS and LTCH PPS) adopted a cost of living
adjustment (COLA) to account for the cost differential of care
furnished in Alaska and Hawaii.
We analyzed the effect of applying a COLA to payments for IPFs
located in Alaska and Hawaii. The results of our analysis demonstrated
that a COLA for IPFs located in Alaska and Hawaii would improve payment
equity for these facilities. As a result of this analysis, we provided
a COLA in the November 2004 IPF PPS final rule.
A COLA for IPFs located in Alaska and Hawaii is made by multiplying
the nonlabor-related portion of the Federal per diem base rate by the
applicable COLA factor based on the COLA area in which the IPF is
located.
The COLA factors are published on the Office of Personnel
Management (OPM) Web site (https://www.opm.gov/oca/cola/rates.asp).
We note that the COLA areas for Alaska are not defined by county as
are the COLA areas for Hawaii. In 5 CFR 591.207, the OPM established
the following COLA areas:
City of Anchorage, and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by
road, as measured from the Federal courthouse;
City of Fairbanks, and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by
road, as measured from the Federal courthouse;
City of Juneau, and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by road,
as measured from the Federal courthouse;
Rest of the State of Alaska.
As stated in the November 2004 IPF PPS final rule, we update the
COLA factors according to updates established by the OPM. However,
sections 1911 through 1919 of the Nonforeign Area Retirement Equity
Assurance Act, as contained in subtitle B of title XIX of the National
Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2010 (Pub. L. 111-84,
October 28, 2009), transitions the Alaska and Hawaii COLAs to locality
pay. Under section 1914 of Public Law 111-84, locality pay is being
phased in over a 3-year period beginning in January 2010, with COLA
rates frozen as of the date of enactment, October 28, 2009, and then
proportionately reduced to reflect the phase-in of locality pay.
When we published the proposed COLA factors in the January 2011 IPF
PPS proposed rule (76 FR 4998), we inadvertently selected the FY 2010
COLA rates which had been reduced to account for the phase-in of
locality pay. We did not intend to propose the reduced COLA rates
because that would have understated the adjustment. Since the 2009 COLA
rates did not reflect the phase-in of locality pay, we finalized the FY
2009 COLA rates for RY 2010
[[Page 26059]]
through RY 2014 and indicated our intent to address the COLA in FY
2015. Currently, IPFs located in Alaska and Hawaii receive the updated
COLA factors based on the COLA area in which the IPF is located as
shown in Table 10 below.
TABLE 10--COLA Factors for Alaska and Hawaii IPFs
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost of living
Area adjustment factor
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alaska:
City of Anchorage and 80-kilometer (50-mile) 1.23
radius by road..................................
City of Fairbanks and 80-kilometer (50-mile) 1.23
radius by road..................................
City of Juneau and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius 1.23
by road.........................................
Rest of Alaska................................... 1.25
Hawaii:
City and County of Honolulu...................... 1.25
County of Hawaii................................. 1.18
County of Kauai.................................. 1.25
County of Maui and County of Kalawao............. 1.25
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(The above factors are based on data obtained from the U.S. Office of
Personnel Management Web site at: https://www.opm.gov/oca/cola/rates.asp.)
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH final rule (77 FR 53700 through 53701),
CMS established a methodology for FY 2014 to update the COLA factors
for Alaska and Hawaii. Under that methodology, we use a comparison of
the growth in the Consumer Price Indices (CPIs) in Anchorage, Alaska
and Honolulu, Hawaii relative to the growth in the overall CPI as
published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) to update the COLA
factors for all areas in Alaska and Hawaii, respectively. As discussed
in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH proposed rule (77 FR 28145), because BLS
publishes CPI data for only Anchorage, Alaska and Honolulu, Hawaii, our
methodology for updating the COLA factors uses a comparison of the
growth in the CPIs for those cities relative to the growth in the
overall CPI to update the COLA factors for all areas in Alaska and
Hawaii, respectively. We believe that the relative price differences
between these cities and the United States (as measured by the CPIs
mentioned above) are generally appropriate proxies for the relative
price differences between the ``other areas'' of Alaska and Hawaii and
the United States.
The CPIs for ``All Items'' that BLS publishes for Anchorage,
Alaska, Honolulu, Hawaii, and for the average U.S. city are based on a
different mix of commodities and services than is reflected in the
nonlabor-related share of the IPPS market basket. As such, under the
methodology we established to update the COLA factors, we calculated a
``reweighted CPI'' using the CPI for commodities and the CPI for
services for each of the geographic areas to mirror the composition of
the IPPS market basket nonlabor-related share. The current composition
of BLS' CPI for ``All Items'' for all of the respective areas is
approximately 40 percent commodities and 60 percent services. However,
the nonlabor-related share of the IPPS market basket is comprised of 60
percent commodities and 40 percent services. Therefore, under the
methodology established for FY 2014 in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule, we created reweighted indexes for Anchorage, Alaska, Honolulu,
Hawaii, and the average U.S. city using the respective CPI commodities
index and CPI services index and applying the approximate 60/40 weights
from the IPPS market basket. This approach is appropriate because we
would continue to make a COLA for hospitals located in Alaska and
Hawaii by multiplying the nonlabor-related portion of the standardized
amount by a COLA factor.
Under the COLA factor update methodology established in the FY 2014
IPPS/LTCH final rule, we adjust payments made to hospitals located in
Alaska and Hawaii by incorporating a 25-percent cap on the CPI-updated
COLA factors. We note that OPM's COLA factors were calculated with a
statutorily mandated cap of 25 percent, and since at least 1984, we
have exercised our discretionary authority to adjust Alaska and Hawaii
payments by incorporating this cap. In keeping with this historical
policy, we would continue to use such a cap, as our proposal is based
on OPM's COLA factors. We believe this approach is appropriate because
our CPI-updated COLA factors use the 2009 OPM COLA factors as a basis.
We believe it is appropriate to adopt the same methodology for the
COLA factors applied under the IPPS because IPFs are hospitals with a
similar mix of commodities and services. In addition, we think it is
appropriate to have a consistent policy approach with that of other
hospitals in Alaska and Hawaii. Therefore, we are proposing to adopt
the cost of living adjustment factors shown in Table 11 below for IPFs
located in Alaska and Hawaii.
Table 11--Cost-of-Living Adjustment Factors: Alaska and Hawaii Hospitals
Area COLA Factor
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost of living
Area adjustment factor
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alaska:
City of Anchorage and 80-kilometer (50-mile) 1.23
radius by road..................................
City of Fairbanks and 80-kilometer (50-mile) 1.23
radius by road..................................
City of Juneau and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius 1.23
by road.........................................
Rest of Alaska................................... 1.25
Hawaii:
City and County of Honolulu...................... 1.25
County of Hawaii................................. 1.19
[[Page 26060]]
County of Kauai.................................. 1.25
County of Maui and County of Kalawao............. 1.25
------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. Proposed Adjustment for IPFs With a Qualifying Emergency Department
(ED)
The IPF PPS includes a facility-level adjustment for IPFs with
qualifying EDs. We provide an adjustment to the Federal per diem base
rate to account for the costs associated with maintaining a full-
service ED. The adjustment is intended to account for ED costs incurred
by a freestanding psychiatric hospital with a qualifying ED or a
distinct part psychiatric unit of an acute care hospital or a CAH for
preadmission services otherwise payable under the Medicare Outpatient
Prospective Payment System (OPPS) furnished to a beneficiary on the
date of the beneficiary's admission to the hospital and during the day
immediately preceding the date of admission to the IPF (see Sec.
413.40(c)(2)) and the overhead cost of maintaining the ED. This payment
is a facility-level adjustment that applies to all IPF admissions (with
one exception described below), regardless of whether a particular
patient receives preadmission services in the hospital's ED.
The ED adjustment is incorporated into the variable per diem
adjustment for the first day of each stay for IPFs with a qualifying
ED. That is, IPFs with a qualifying ED receive an adjustment factor of
1.31 as the variable per diem adjustment for day 1 of each stay. If an
IPF does not have a qualifying ED, it receives an adjustment factor of
1.19 as the variable per diem adjustment for day 1 of each patient
stay.
The ED adjustment is made on every qualifying claim except as
described below. As specified in Sec. 412.424(d)(1)(v)(B), the ED
adjustment is not made when a patient is discharged from an acute care
hospital or CAH and admitted to the same hospital's or CAH's
psychiatric unit. We clarified in the November 2004 IPF PPS final rule
(69 FR 66960) that an ED adjustment is not made in this case because
the costs associated with ED services are reflected in the DRG payment
to the acute care hospital or through the reasonable cost payment made
to the CAH.
Therefore, when patients are discharged from an acute care hospital
or CAH and admitted to the same hospital or CAH's psychiatric unit, the
IPF receives the 1.19 adjustment factor as the variable per diem
adjustment for the first day of the patient's stay in the IPF.
For FY 2015, we are proposing to retain the 1.31 adjustment factor
for IPFs with qualifying EDs. A complete discussion of the steps
involved in the calculation of the ED adjustment factor appears in the
November 2004 IPF PPS final rule (69 FR 66959 through 66960) and the
May 2006 IPF PPS final rule (71 FR 27070 through 27072).
D. Other Payment Adjustments and Policies
1. Outlier Payments
The IPF PPS includes an outlier adjustment to promote access to IPF
care for those patients who require expensive care and to limit the
financial risk of IPFs treating unusually costly patients. In the
November 2004 IPF PPS final rule, we implemented regulations at Sec.
412.424(d)(3)(i) to provide a per-case payment for IPF stays that are
extraordinarily costly. Providing additional payments to IPFs for
extremely costly cases strongly improves the accuracy of the IPF PPS in
determining resource costs at the patient and facility level. These
additional payments reduce the financial losses that would otherwise be
incurred in treating patients who require more costly care and,
therefore, reduce the incentives for IPFs to under-serve these
patients.
We make outlier payments for discharges in which an IPF's estimated
total cost for a case exceeds a fixed dollar loss threshold amount
(multiplied by the IPF's facility-level adjustments) plus the Federal
per diem payment amount for the case.
In instances when the case qualifies for an outlier payment, we pay
80 percent of the difference between the estimated cost for the case
and the adjusted threshold amount for days 1 through 9 of the stay
(consistent with the median LOS for IPFs in FY 2002), and 60 percent of
the difference for day 10 and thereafter. We established the 80 percent
and 60 percent loss sharing ratios because we were concerned that a
single ratio established at 80 percent (like other Medicare PPSs) might
provide an incentive under the IPF per diem payment system to increase
LOS in order to receive additional payments.
After establishing the loss sharing ratios, we determined the
current fixed dollar loss threshold amount of $10,245 through payment
simulations designed to compute a dollar loss beyond which payments are
estimated to meet the 2 percent outlier spending target. Each year when
we update the IPF PPS, we simulate payments using the latest available
data to compute the fixed dollar loss threshold so that outlier
payments represent 2 percent of total projected IPF PPS payments.
a. Proposed Update to the Outlier Fixed Dollar Loss Threshold Amount
In accordance with the update methodology described in Sec.
412.428(d), we propose to update the fixed dollar loss threshold amount
used under the IPF PPS outlier policy. Based on the regression analysis
and payment simulations used to develop the IPF PPS, we established a 2
percent outlier policy which strikes an appropriate balance between
protecting IPFs from extraordinarily costly cases while ensuring the
adequacy of the Federal per diem base rate for all other cases that are
not outlier cases.
Based on an analysis of the latest available data (that is, FY 2013
IPF claims) and rate increases, we believe it is necessary to update
the fixed dollar loss threshold amount in order to maintain an outlier
percentage that equals 2 percent of total estimated IPF PPS payments.
In the May 2006 IPF PPS final rule (71 FR 27072), we describe the
process by which we calculate the outlier fixed dollar loss threshold
amount. We are not proposing changes to this process for FY 2015. We
begin by simulating aggregate payments with and without an outlier
policy, and applying an iterative process to determine an outlier fixed
dollar loss threshold amount that will result in estimated outlier
payments being equal to 2 percent of total estimated payments under the
simulation. Based on this process, using the FY 2013 claims data, we
estimate that IPF outlier payments as a percentage of total estimated
payments are approximately 1.9 percent in FY
[[Page 26061]]
2014. Thus, we propose to update the FY 2015 IPF outlier threshold
amount to ensure that estimated FY 2015 outlier payments are
approximately 2 percent of total estimated IPF payments. The outlier
fixed dollar loss threshold amount of $10,245 for FY 2014 would be
changed to $10,125 for FY 2015 to increase estimated outlier payments
and thereby maintain estimated outlier payments at 2 percent of total
estimated aggregate IPF payments for FY 2015.
b. Proposed Update to IPF Cost-to-Charge Ratio Ceilings
Under the IPF PPS, an outlier payment is made if an IPF's cost for
a stay exceeds a fixed dollar loss threshold amount plus the IPF PPS
amount. In order to establish an IPF's cost for a particular case, we
multiply the IPF's reported charges on the discharge bill by its
overall cost-to-charge ratio (CCR). This approach to determining an
IPF's cost is consistent with the approach used under the IPPS and
other PPSs. In the June 2003 IPPS final rule (68 FR 34494), we
implemented changes to the IPPS policy used to determine CCRs for acute
care hospitals because we became aware that payment vulnerabilities
resulted in inappropriate outlier payments. Under the IPPS, we
established a statistical measure of accuracy for CCRs in order to
ensure that aberrant CCR data did not result in inappropriate outlier
payments.
As we indicated in the November 2004 IPF PPS final rule (69 FR
66961), because we believe that the IPF outlier policy is susceptible
to the same payment vulnerabilities as the IPPS, we adopted a method to
ensure the statistical accuracy of CCRs under the IPF PPS.
Specifically, we adopted the following procedure in the November 2004
IPF PPS final rule: We calculated two national ceilings, one for IPFs
located in rural areas and one for IPFs located in urban areas. We
computed the ceilings by first calculating the national average and the
standard deviation of the CCR for both urban and rural IPFs using the
most recent CCRs entered in the CY 2014 Provider Specific File.
To determine the rural and urban ceilings, we multiplied each of
the standard deviations by 3 and added the result to the appropriate
national CCR average (either rural or urban). The upper threshold CCR
for IPFs in FY 2015 is 1.8823 for rural IPFs, and 1.7049 for urban
IPFs, based on CBSA-based geographic designations. If an IPF's CCR is
above the applicable ceiling, the ratio is considered statistically
inaccurate and we assign the appropriate national (either rural or
urban) median CCR to the IPF.
We apply the national CCRs to the following situations:
++ New IPFs that have not yet submitted their first Medicare cost
report. We continue to use these national CCRs until the facility's
actual CCR can be computed using the first tentatively or final settled
cost report.
++ IPFs whose overall CCR is in excess of 3 standard deviations
above the corresponding national geometric mean (that is, above the
ceiling).
++ Other IPFs for which the MAC obtains inaccurate or incomplete
data with which to calculate a CCR.
We are not proposing to make any changes to the application of the
national CCRs or to the procedures for updating the CCR ceilings in FY
2015. However, we are proposing to update the FY 2015 national median
and ceiling CCRs for urban and rural IPFs based on the CCRs entered in
the latest available IPF PPS Provider Specific File. Specifically, for
FY 2015, and to be used in each of the three situations listed above,
using the most recent CCRs entered in the CY 2014 Provider Specific
File we estimate the national median CCR of 0.6220 for rural IPFs and
the national median CCR of 0.4700 for urban IPFs. These calculations
are based on the IPF's location (either urban or rural) using the CBSA-
based geographic designations.
A complete discussion regarding the national median CCRs appears in
the November 2004 IPF PPS final rule (69 FR 66961 through 66964).
2. Future Refinements
For RY 2012, we identified several areas of concern for future
refinement and we invited comments on these issues in our RY 2012
proposed and final rules. For further discussion of these issues and to
review the public comments, we refer readers to the RY 2012 IPF PPS
proposed rule (76 FR 4998) and final rule (76 FR 26432).
As we have indicated throughout this proposed rule, we have delayed
making refinements to the IPF PPS until we have completed a thorough
analysis of IPF PPS data on which to base those refinements.
Specifically, we explained that we will delay updating the adjustment
factors derived from the regression analysis until we have IPF PPS data
that include as much information as possible regarding the patient-
level characteristics of the population that each IPF serves. We have
begun the necessary analysis to better understand IPF industry
practices so that we may refine the IPF PPS as appropriate. Using more
recent data, we plan to re-run the regression analyses and the patient-
and facility-level adjustments. While we are not proposing refinements
in this proposed rule, we expect that in the rulemaking for FY 2017 we
will be ready to present the results of our analysis.
VII. Secretary's Recommendations
Section 1886(e)(4)(A) of the Act requires the Secretary, taking
into consideration the recommendations of the Medicare Payment Advisory
Committee (MedPAC), to recommend update factors for inpatient hospital
services (including IPFs) for each FY that take into account the
amounts necessary for the efficient and effective delivery of medically
appropriate and necessary care of high quality. Section 1886(e)(5) of
the Act requires the Secretary to publish the recommended and final
update factors in the Federal Register.
In the past, the Secretary's recommendations and a discussion about
the MedPAC recommendations for the IPF PPS were included in the IPPS
proposed and final rules. The market basket update for the IPF PPS was
also included in the IPPS proposed and final rules, as well as in the
IPF PPS annual update.
Beginning in FY 2013, however, we have only published the market
basket update for the IPF PPS in the annual IPF PPS FY update and not
in the IPPS proposed and final rules. In addition, for any years in
which MedPAC makes recommendations for the IPF PPS, those
recommendations will be addressed in the IPF PPS update.
MedPAC did not make any recommendations for the IPF PPS for FY
2015. For the update to the IPF PPS standard Federal rate for FY 2015,
see section IV B. of this proposed rule.
VIII. Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities Quality Reporting (IPFQR)
Program
1. Statutory Authority
Section 1886(s)(4) of the Act, as added and amended by sections
3401(f) and 10322(a) of the Affordable Care Act, requires the Secretary
to implement a quality reporting program for inpatient psychiatric
hospitals and psychiatric units. Section 1886(s)(4)(A)(i) of the Act
requires that, for rate year (RY) 2014 and each subsequent rate year,
the Secretary shall reduce any annual update to a standard Federal rate
for discharges occurring during the rate year by 2.0 percentage points
for any inpatient psychiatric hospital or psychiatric unit that does
not comply with quality data submission requirements with respect to an
applicable rate year.
[[Page 26062]]
As noted above, section 1886(s)(4)(A)(i) of the Act uses the term
``rate year.'' Beginning with the annual update of the inpatient
psychiatric facility prospective payment system (IPF PPS) that took
effect on July 1, 2011 (RY 2012), we aligned the IPF PPS update with
the annual update of the ICD-9-CM codes, which are effective on October
1 of each year. The change allows for annual payment updates and the
ICD-9-CM coding update to occur on the same schedule and appear in the
same Federal Register document, thus making updating rules more
administratively efficient. To reflect the change to the annual payment
rate update cycle, we revised the regulations at 42 CFR 412.402 to
specify that, beginning October 1, 2012, the rate year update period
would be the 12-month period of October 1 through September 30, which
we refer to as a fiscal year (FY) (76 FR 26435). For more information
regarding this terminology change, we refer readers to section III. of
the RY 2012 IPF PPS final rule (76 FR 26434 through 26435).
As provided in section 1886(s)(4)(A)(ii) of the Act, the
application of the reduction for failure to report under section
1886(s)(4)(A)(i) of the Act may result in an annual update of less than
0.0 percent for a fiscal year, and may result in payment rates under
section 1886(s)(1) of the Act being less than the payment rates for the
preceding year. In addition, section 1886(s)(4)(B) of the Act requires
that the application of the reduction to a standard Federal rate update
be noncumulative across fiscal years. Thus, any reduction applied under
section 1886(s)(4)(A) of the Act will apply only with respect to the
fiscal year rate involved and the Secretary shall not take into account
the reduction in computing the payment amount under the system
described in section 1886(s)(1) of the Act for subsequent years.
Section 1886(s)(4)(C) of the Act requires that, for FY 2014
(October 1, 2013, through September 30, 2014) and each subsequent year,
each psychiatric hospital and psychiatric unit shall submit to the
Secretary data on quality measures as specified by the Secretary. The
data shall be submitted in a form and manner, and at a time, specified
by the Secretary. Under section 1886(s)(4)(D)(i) of the Act, measures
selected for the quality reporting program must have been endorsed by
the entity with a contract under section 1890(a) of the Act. The
National Quality Forum (NQF) currently holds this contract.
Section 1886(s)(4)(D)(ii) of the Act provides that, in the case of
a specified area or medical topic determined appropriate by the
Secretary for which a feasible and practical measure has not been
endorsed by the entity with a contract under section 1890(a) of the
Act, the Secretary may specify a measure that is not so endorsed as
long as due consideration is given to measures that have been endorsed
or adopted by a consensus organization identified by the Secretary.
Pursuant to section 1886(s)(4)(D)(iii) of the Act, the Secretary shall
publish the measures applicable to the FY 2014 IPFQR Program no later
than October 1, 2012.
Section 1886(s)(4)(E) of the Act requires the Secretary to
establish procedures for making public the data submitted by inpatient
psychiatric hospitals and psychiatric units under the IPFQR Program.
These procedures must ensure that a facility has the opportunity to
review its data prior to the data being made public. The Secretary must
report quality measures that relate to services furnished by the
psychiatric hospitals and units on the CMS Web site.
2. Application of the Payment Update Reduction for Failure To Report
for the FY 2015 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
Beginning in FY 2014, section 1886(s)(4)(A)(i) of the Act requires
the application of a 2.0 percentage point reduction to the applicable
annual update to a Federal standard rate for those psychiatric
hospitals and psychiatric units that fail to comply with the quality
reporting requirements implemented in accordance with section
1886(s)(4)(C) of the Act, as detailed below. The application of the
reduction may result in an annual update for a fiscal year that is less
than 0.0 percent and in payment rates for a fiscal year being less than
the payment rates for the preceding fiscal year. Pursuant to section
1886(s)(4)(B) of the Act, any such reduction is not cumulative and will
apply only to the fiscal year involved. In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (77 FR 53678), we adopted requirements regarding the
application of the payment reduction to the annual update of the
standard Federal rate for failure to report data on measures selected
for the FY 2014 payment determination and subsequent years and added
new regulatory text at 42 CFR 412.424 to codify these requirements.
3. Covered Entities
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53645), we
established that the IPFQR Program's quality reporting requirements
cover those psychiatric hospitals and psychiatric units paid under
Medicare's IPF PPS (42 CFR 412.404(b)). Generally, psychiatric
hospitals and psychiatric units within acute care and critical access
hospitals that treat Medicare patients are paid under the IPF PPS. For
more information on the application of, and exceptions to, payments
under the IPF PPS, we refer readers to section IV. of the November 15,
2004 IPF PPS final rule (69 FR 66926). As we noted in the FY 2013 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53645), we use the term ``inpatient
psychiatric facility'' (IPF) to refer to both inpatient psychiatric
hospitals and psychiatric units. This usage follows the terminology
that we have used in the past in our IPF PPS regulations (42 CFR
412.402).
4. Considerations in Selecting Quality Measures
In implementing the IPFQR Program, our overarching objective is to
support the HHS National Quality Strategy (NQS) and CMS Quality
Strategy's goal for better health care for individuals, better health
for populations, and lower costs for health care services. More
information on the CMS Quality Strategy can be found at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/QualityInitiativesGenInfo/CMS-Quality-Strategy.html.
Implementation of the IPFQR Program works to achieve the goals of the
CMS Quality Strategy by promoting transparency around the quality of
care provided at IPFs to support patient decision-making and drive
quality improvement, as well as to further the alignment of quality
measurement and improvement goals at IPFs with those of other health
care providers.
For purposes of the IPFQR Program, section 1886(s)(4)(D)(i) of the
Act requires that any measure specified by the Secretary must have been
endorsed by the entity with a contract under section 1890(a) of the
Act. However, the statutory requirements under section
1886(s)(4)(D)(ii) of the Act provide an exception that, in the case of
a specified area or medical topic determined appropriate by the
Secretary for which a feasible and practical measure has not been
endorsed by the entity with a contract under section 1890(a) of the
Act, the Secretary may specify a measure that is not so endorsed
provided due consideration is given to measures that have been endorsed
or adopted by a consensus organization identified by the Secretary.
[[Page 26063]]
We seek to collect data in a manner that balances the need for
information related to the full spectrum of quality performance and the
need to minimize the burden of data collection and reporting. We have
focused on measures that have high impact and support CMS and HHS
priorities for improved quality and efficiency of care provided by
IPFs. We refer readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53645 through 53646) for a detailed discussion of the considerations
taken into account for measure development and selection.
Measures proposed for the program were included in a publicly
available document entitled ``List of Measures under Consideration for
December 1, 2013'' in compliance with section 1890A(a)(2) of the Act,
and they were reviewed by the MAP in its ``MAP Pre-Rulemaking Report:
2014 Recommendations on Measures for More than 20 Federal Programs,''
which is available on the NQF Web site a https://www.qualityforum.org/Setting_Priorities/Partnership/Measure_Applications_Partnership.aspx. We considered the input and recommendations provided
by the MAP in selecting measures to propose for the IPFQR Program at
this time.
5. Quality Measures
a. Proposed Quality Measures for the FY 2016 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53646 through
53652), we adopted six chart-abstracted IPF quality measures for the FY
2014 payment determination and subsequent program years.
We note that, at the time that we adopted the measures in the FY
2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53258), providers were using ICD-
9-CM codes. We are proposing the conversion of ICD-9-CM to ICD-10-CM/
PCS codes for the IPF PPS in this proposed rule, but in light of PAMA,
the effective date of those changes would be the date when ICD-10
becomes the required medical data code set for use on Medicare claims.
We do not anticipate that this change will have substantive effects on
any measures at this time. CMS will update the user manual, discussed
further in section V below to reflect any necessary measure updates.
Generally, measures adopted for the IPFQR Program will remain in the
Program for all subsequent years, unless and until specifically stated
otherwise (such as, for example, through removal or replacement).
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50890 through
50895), we added one new chart-abstracted measure for the IPFQR
Program: Alcohol Use Screening (SUB-1) (NQF 1661). We also
added one new claims-based measure: Follow-Up After Hospitalization for
Mental Illness (FUH) (NQF 0576). Both measures apply to the FY
2016 payment determination and subsequent years, unless and until we
change them through future rulemaking.
The table below sets out the previously adopted measures.
Table 12--Previously Adopted Quality Measures for the IPFQR Program
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
National quality strategy priority NQF No. Measure ID Measure description
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Patient Safety............................... 0640 HBIPS-2 Hours of Physical Restraint Use *
0641 HBIPS-3 Hours of Seclusion Use *
Clinical Quality of Care..................... 0552 HBIPS-4 Patients Discharged on Multiple
Antipsychotic Medications *
0560 HBIPS-5 Patients Discharged on Multiple
Antipsychotic Medications with
Appropriate Justification *
1661 SUB-1 Alcohol Use Screening **
0576 FUH Follow-Up After Hospitalization
for Mental Illness **
Care Coordination............................ 0557 HBIPS-6 Post-Discharge Continuing Care
Plan Created *
0558 HBIPS-7 Post-Discharge Continuing Care
Plan Transmitted to Next Level
of Care Provider Upon Discharge
*
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Quality measures adopted in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule for the FY 2014 payment determination and
subsequent years.
** Quality measures adopted in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule for the FY 2016 payment determination and
subsequent years.
We note that in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50896
through 50897 and 50900), we also adopted for the FY 2016 payment
determination and subsequent years a voluntary collection of
information--IPF Assessment of Patient Experience of Care (now renamed
Assessment of Patient Experience of Care), which was to be collected
using a Web-Based Measures Tool, and which would not affect an IPF's FY
2016 payment determination. We also noted that we intend to propose to
make this a mandatory measure in future rulemaking (78 FR 50897), which
we do in this proposed rule.
b. Proposed Quality Measures for the FY 2016 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
We are proposing to add two new measures to the IPFQR Program to
those already adopted for the FY 2016 payment determination and
subsequent years: (1) Assessment of Patient Experience of Care; and (2)
Use of an Electronic Health Record. We are not proposing to remove or
replace any of the previously adopted measures from the IPFQR Program
for FY 2016. These two measures will be captured in the IPF Web-based
Measure Tool, which can be accessed through the QualityNet home page
at: https://www.qualitynet.org/dcs/ContentServer?pagename=QnetPublic/Page/QnetHomepage. The Tool will be updated so when IPFs submit their
data for FY 2016 (between July 1, 2015 and August 15, 2015) there will
be a place to provide responses to these two structural measures.
1. Assessment of Patient Experience of Care
Improvement of experience of care for patients, families, and
caregivers is one of our objectives within the CMS Quality Strategy and
is not currently addressed in the IPFQR Program. Surveys of individuals
about their experience in all health care settings provide important
information as to whether or not high-quality, person-centered care is
actually provided and address elements of service delivery that matter
most to recipients of care.
We included the measure ``Inpatient Consumer Survey (ICS) Consumer
Evaluation of Inpatient Behavioral Healthcare Services'' (NQF
0726) in our ``List of Measures under Consideration for
December 1, 2102.'' The measure would have gathered clients' evaluation
of their inpatient care based on six domains--outcome, dignity, rights,
treatment, environment, and empowerment. The MAP provided input on the
measure and supported its inclusion in the IPFQR Program. However, we
did not propose to adopt
[[Page 26064]]
the measure in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule for several
reasons, including potential reporting and information collection
burdens in a new program, and compatibility with the content and format
of other similar CMS beneficiary surveys (78 FR 27740 and 78 FR 50896).
We also recognized the challenges of measuring patient experience of
care, particularly for involuntary cases and geriatric psychiatric
patients suffering from dementia. In addition, we recognized that IPFs
may have developed their own survey instruments, which we wanted to
learn more about prior to requiring collection of a patient experience
of care survey for the IPFQR (78 FR 50897). Instead, we indicated our
intention to pursue the adoption of a standardized measure of patient
experience of care for the IPFQR program in the near future.
In the final rule, in an effort to proceed cautiously with the
selection of an assessment instrument and collection protocol, and as
an intermediate measure, we implemented a voluntary collection of
information on whether IPFs administer a detailed assessment of patient
experience of care using a standardized collection protocol and a
structured instrument. If the IPFs answered ``Yes,'' we also asked them
to indicate the name of the survey that they administer. We indicated
our intention to propose to change this request for voluntary
information into a mandatory measure in future rulemaking. We are now
proposing to make this request a required structural measure for the FY
2016 payment determination.
The measure ``Inpatient Psychiatric Facility Routinely Assesses
Patient Experience of Care'' (now, ``Assessment of Patient Experience
of Care'') was included on our ``List of Measures under Consideration
for December 1, 2013.'' The measure asks IPFs whether they routinely
assess patient experience of care using a standardized collection
protocol and a structured instrument. The MAP supported this measure,
but encouraged its eventual replacement with a robust survey of patient
experience and a measure based on consumer-reported information, such
as a CAHPS tool. We believe the reporting of this measure will begin to
provide information on a priority area of the HHS National Quality
Strategy that is currently unaddressed in the IPFQR program, that of
patient and family engagement and experience of care. Further, the
information gathered through the collection of this measure will be
helpful in the development of a standardized survey of patient
assessment of care that we intend to develop as a successor to this
measure.
Because this is a structural measure that does not depend on
systems for collecting and abstracting individual patient information,
only requires simple attestation, and does not require extended time to
prepare to report, we believe that it will not be burdensome to IPFs.
Accordingly, we are proposing to include it as a mandatory measure for
the FY 2016 payment determination, a year earlier than for other
measures proposed in this rule that are dependent on these systems.
The proposed measure is currently not NQF-endorsed. Section
1886(s)(4)(D)(ii) of the Act authorizes the Secretary to specify a
measure that is not endorsed by the NQF as long as due consideration is
given to measures that have been endorsed or adopted by a consensus
organization identified by the Secretary. We attempted to find
available measures that have been endorsed or adopted by a consensus
organization and found no other feasible and practical measures on the
topic of patient experience of care for the IPF setting. Therefore, we
believe that the Assessment of Patient Experience of Care proposed
measure meets the measure selection exception requirement under section
1886(s)(4)(D)(ii) of the Act.
2. Use of an Electronic Health Record (EHR)
In 2009, as part of the Health Information Technology for Economic
and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act, incentives were provided to encourage
eligible hospitals and eligible professionals to adopt EHR systems. The
widespread adoption of these systems holds the potential to support
multiple goals of CMS' quality strategy, including making care safer
and more affordable, and promoting coordination of care. One review of
over a hundred studies of the effects of EHRs showed that nearly all
demonstrated positive overall results.\1\ These results were most
frequently demonstrated in the areas of efficiency and effectiveness of
care, patient safety and satisfaction, and process of care.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ M.B. Buntin, M.F. Burke, M.C. Hoaglin et al., ``The Benefits
of Health Information Technology: A Review of the Recent Literature
Shows Predominantly Positive Results,'' Health Affairs, March 2011
30(3):464-71.
\2\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Positive results such as these depend in part on the ways in which
an EHR system is used. EHRs can facilitate the use of clinical decision
support tools, physician order entry systems, and health information
exchange. The concept of ``meaningful use'' of EHRs captures the goals
for which incentive payments are made. These goals include: Quality
improvement, safety, and efficiency; health disparities reduction;
patient and family engagement; care coordination improvement and
population health; and maintenance of the privacy and security of
patient health information.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ HealthIT.gov, ``EHR Incentives & Certification: Meaningful
Use Definition & Objectives.'' [Internet Cited 2014 February 11].
Available from https://www.healthit.gov/providers-professionals/meaningful-use-definition-objectives.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We believe that a measure of the degree of EHR implementation
provides important information about an element of IPF service delivery
shown to be associated with the delivery of quality care. Further, we
believe that it provides useful information to consumers and others in
choosing among different facilities.
A key issue in EHR adoption and implementation is the use of this
technology to support health information exchange. HHS has a number of
initiatives designed to encourage and support the adoption of health
information technology and promote nationwide health information
exchange to improve health care. The Office of the National Coordinator
for Health Information Technology (ONC) and CMS work to promote the
adoption of health information technology. Through a number of
activities, HHS is promoting the adoption of ONC-certified electronic
health records (EHRs) developed to support secure, interoperable health
information exchange. While ONC-certified EHRs are not yet available
for IPFQRs and other providers who are not eligible for the Medicare
and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs, ONC has requested that the HIT
Policy Committee (a Federal Advisory Committee) explore the expansion
of EHR certification under the ONC HIT Certification Program, focusing
on EHR certification criteria needed for long-term and post-acute care
(including LTCHs), and behavioral health care providers. ONC has also
proposed a Voluntary 2015 Edition EHR Certification rule (79 FR 10880)
that would increase the flexibility in ONC's regulatory structure to
more easily accommodate health IT certification for other types of
health care settings where individual or institutional health care
providers are not typically eligible to qualify for the Medicare and
Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs.
We believe that the use of certified EHRs by IPFs (and other
providers ineligible for the Medicare and
[[Page 26065]]
Medicaid EHR Incentive programs) can effectively and efficiently help
providers improve internal care delivery practices, support the
exchange of important information across care partners and during
transitions of care, and could enable the reporting of electronically
specified clinical quality measures (eCQMs) (as described elsewhere in
this rule). More information on the proposed rule on voluntary 2015
Edition EHR Certification, identification of EHR certification criteria
and development of standards applicable to IPFQRs can be found at:
https://www.healthit.gov/policy-researchers-implementers/standards-and-certification-regulations
https://www.healthit.gov/facas/FACAS/health-it-policy-committee/hitpc-workgroups/certificationadoption
https://wiki.siframework.org/LCC+LTPAC+Care+Transition+SWG
https://wiki.siframework.org/Longitudinal+Coordination+of+Care
We included the measure, ``IPF Use of an Electronic Health Record
Meeting Stage 1 or Stage 2 Meaningful Use Criteria'' (now, ``Use of an
Electronic Health Record'') in the ``List of Measures under
Consideration for December 1, 2013.'' The measure would assess the
degree to which facilities employ EHR systems in their service program
and use such systems to support health information exchange at times of
transitions in care. It is a structural measure that only requires the
facility to attest to which one of the following statements best
describes the facility's highest level typical use of an EHR system
(excluding the billing system) during the reporting period, and whether
this use includes the exchange of interoperable health information with
a health information service provider:
a. The facility most commonly used paper documents or other forms
of information exchange (e.g., email) NOT involving transfer of health
information using EHR technology at times of transitions in care.
b. The facility most commonly exchanged health information using
non-certified EHR technology (i.e., not certified under the ONC HIT
Certification Program) at times of transitions in care.
c. The facility most commonly exchanged health information using
certified EHR technology (certified under the ONC HIT Certification
Program) at times of transitions in care.
We would also ask IPFs to indicate whether transfers of health
information at times of transitions in care included the exchange of
interoperable health information with a health information service
provider (HISP).
In its 2014 report:
(https://www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=74634), the MAP concluded that it
does not support this measure because it does not adequately address
any current needs of the program. The MAP noted that psychiatric
hospitals were excluded from the EHR Incentive Programs and imposing
the measure criteria is not realistic. The MAP also expressed concerns
about using quality reporting programs to collect data on systems and
infrastructure and suggested that the American Hospital Association's
survey of hospitals may be a better source for this type of data.
We disagree with the MAP's contention that the purpose of this
measure is to collect data on systems and infrastructure. The purpose
of the measure is to assess the use of processes for the collection,
use, and transmission of medical information that have been
demonstrated to impact the quality of care, rather than to collect data
on systems and infrastructure. As we have described above, many studies
document the benefits of EHR use on multiple dimensions related to
health care quality, and to multiple goals of CMS' quality strategy.
Additionally, this is a structural measure that does not depend on
systems for collecting and abstracting individual patient information
and, therefore, is not burdensome on IPFs. Accordingly, we are
proposing to adopt it as a measure for FY 2016 payment determination, a
year earlier than for other measures proposed in this rule that are
dependent on such systems.
The Use of an Electronic Health Record proposed measure is not NQF-
endorsed. Section 1886(s)(4)(D)(ii) of the Act authorizes the Secretary
to specify a measure that is not endorsed by the NQF as long as due
consideration is given to measures that have been endorsed or adopted
by a consensus organization identified by the Secretary. We attempted
to find available measures that have been endorsed or adopted by a
consensus organization and found no other feasible and practical
measures on the topic of the degree to which facilities employ an EHR
system in their program. Therefore, we believe that the Use of an
Electronic Health Record proposed measure meets the measure selection
exception requirement under section 1886(s)(4)(D)(ii) of the Act.
c. Proposed Quality Measures for the FY 2017 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
We are proposing to add four quality measures to the IPFQR Program
for the FY 2017 payment determination and subsequent years: (1)
Influenza Immunization (IMM-2); (2) Influenza Vaccination Coverage
Among Healthcare Personnel; (3) Tobacco Use Screening (TOB-1); and (4)
Tobacco Use Treatment Provided or Offered (TOB-2) and Tobacco Use
Treatment (TOB-2a).
1. Influenza Immunization (IMM-2) (NQF 1659)
Increasing influenza (flu) vaccination can reduce unnecessary
hospitalizations and secondary complications, particularly among high
risk populations such as the elderly.\4\ Each year, approximately
226,000 people in the U.S. are hospitalized with complications from
influenza, and between 3,000 and 49,000 die from the disease and its
complications.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. ``People at High
Risk of Developing Flu-Related Complications.'' [Internet Cited 2014
February 11]. Available from https://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/disease/high_risk.htm.
\5\ Thompson W.W., Shay D.K., Weintraub E., Brammer L, Cox N,
Anderson L.J., Fukuda. ``Mortality associated with influenza and
respiratory syncytial virus in the United States.'' JAMA. 2003
January 8; 289 (2): 179-186.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vaccination is the most effective method for preventing influenza
virus infection and its potentially severe complications, and
vaccination is associated with reductions in influenza among all age
groups.\6\ The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP)
recommends seasonal influenza vaccination for all persons six months of
age and older, thereby stressing the importance of influenza
prevention. Evidence from a Veteran's Affairs locked behavioral
psychiatric unit with 26 patients and 40 staff during an influenza
outbreak demonstrates significant room for improvement in vaccination
rates among IPFs.\7\ In this study, 54 percent of the patients had not
been vaccinated, and 36 percent of nonvaccinated patients manifested
symptoms as compared with 25 percent of vaccinated patients.\8\ We
believe that the adoption of a measure that assesses influenza
immunization in the IPF
[[Page 26066]]
setting not only works toward reducing the rate of influenza infection,
but also affords consumers and others useful information in choosing
among different facilities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Newsroom press
release February 24, 2010. ``CDC's Advisory Committee on
Immunization Practices (ACIP) Recommends Universal Annual Influenza
Vaccination.'' [Internet Cited 2010 March 3]. Available from https://www.cdc/media/pressrel/2010/r100224.htm.
\7\ Risa K.J., et al. ``Influenza outbreak management on a
locked behavioral health unit.'' Am J Infect Control 2009;37:76-8.
\8\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We included the Influenza Immunization (NQF 1659) measure
in the ``List of Measures under Consideration for December 1, 2013.''
The Influenza Immunization (IMM-2) chart-abstracted measure assesses
inpatients, age 6 months and older, discharged during October,
November, December, January, February, or March, who are screened for
influenza vaccination status and vaccinated prior to discharge, if
indicated. The numerator includes discharges that were screened for
influenza vaccine status and were vaccinated prior to discharge, if
indicated. The denominator includes inpatients, age 6 months and older,
discharged during October, November, December, January, February, or
March. The measure excludes patients who: Expire prior to hospital
discharge or have an organ transplant during the current
hospitalization; have a length of stay greater than 120 days; are
transferred or discharged to another acute care hospital; or leave
Against Medical Advice (AMA). We refer readers to https://www.qualityforum.org/QPS/1659 for further technical specifications.
The MAP gave conditional support for the measure, concluding that
it is not ready for implementation because it needs more experience or
testing. In its 2014 final report, the MAP recognized that influenza
immunization is important for healthcare personnel and patients, but
cautioned that CDC and CMS need to collaborate on adjusting
specifications for reporting from psychiatric units before the measure
can be included in the IPFQR Program. CMS does not agree with this
recommendation. Given previous experience with the use of this measure
in inpatient settings and the clarity of specifications for it, CMS
does not believe that additional experience or testing is needed before
implementing this measure in IPFs, or that specifications need to be
further adjusted for these facilities. We also believe that comments
concerning collaboration with CDC largely apply to the following
measure for influenza vaccination among healthcare personnel, which is
explained in the discussion for that measure.
We believe that the IMM-2 proposed measure meets the measure
selection criterion under section 1886(s)(4)(D)(ii) of the Act. This
section provides that, in the case of a specified area or medical topic
determined appropriate by the Secretary for which a feasible and
practical measure has not been endorsed by the entity with a contract
under section 1890(a) of the Act, the Secretary may specify a measure
that is not so endorsed as long as due consideration is given to
measures that have been endorsed or adopted by a consensus organization
identified by the Secretary.
This measure is not NQF-endorsed in the IPF setting and we could
not find any other comparable measure that is specifically endorsed for
the IPF setting. However, we believe that this measure is appropriate
for the assessment of the quality of care furnished by IPFs for the
reasons discussed above. Further, this measure has been endorsed by NQF
for the ``Hospital/Acute care facility'' setting. Although not
explicitly endorsed for use in IPF settings, we believe that the
characteristics of IPFs as distinct part units of hospitals or
freestanding hospitals are similar enough to hospitals/acute care
facilities that this measure may be appropriately used in such
facilities. Finally, the adoption of this measure in the IPFQR Program
aligns with the Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (HIQR) Program,
which also includes this measure in its measure set.
2. Influenza Vaccination Coverage Among HealthCare Personnel (NQF
0431)
Healthcare personnel (HCP) can serve as vectors for influenza
transmission because they are at risk for both acquiring influenza from
patients and transmitting it to patients, and HCP often come to work
when ill.\9\ An early report of HCP influenza infections during the
2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic estimated that 50 percent of infected HCP
had contracted the influenza virus from patients or coworkers in the
health care setting.\10\ Influenza virus infection is common among HCP,
with evidence suggesting that nearly one-quarter of HCP were infected
during influenza season, but few recalled having influenza.\11\ While
it is difficult to precisely assess HCP influenza vaccination rates
among IPFs because of varying state policies requiring hospitals to
collect and report HCP vaccination coverage rates, evidence from a
Veterans Affairs locked behavioral psychiatric unit with 26 patients
and 40 staff during an influenza outbreak demonstrates significant room
for improvement.\12\ In this study, only 55 percent of all staff had
been vaccinated, and 22 percent of nonvaccinated staff manifested
symptoms as compared with 18 percent of vaccinated staff.\13\ We
believe that the adoption of a measure that assesses influenza
vaccination among HCP in the IPF setting not only works toward
improving the rate at which nonvaccinated HCPs manifest symptoms as
compared with vaccinated HCPs, but also affords consumers and others
useful information in choosing among different facilities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Wilde J.A., McMillan J.A., Serwint J, et al. ``Effectiveness
of influenza vaccine in healthcare professionals: A randomized
trial.'' JAMA 1999; 281: 908-913.
\10\ Harriman K, Rosenberg J, Robinson S, et al. ``Novel
influenza A (H1N1) virus infections among health-care personnel--
United States, April-May 2009.'' Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2009; 58(23):
641-645.
\11\ Elder AG, O[acute]Donnell B, McCruden EA, et al.
``Incidence and recall of influenza in a cohort of Glasgow health-
care workers during the 1993-4 epidemic: Results of serum testing
and questionnaire.'' BMJ. 1996; 313:1241-1242.
\12\ Risa K.J., et al. ``Influenza outbreak management on a
locked behavioral health unit.'' Am J Infect Control 2009;37:76-8.
\13\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We included the Influenza Vaccination Coverage Among Healthcare
Personnel (NQF 0431) measure in the ``List of Measures under
Consideration for December 1, 2013.'' The proposed measure assesses the
percentage of HCP who receive the influenza vaccination. The measure is
designed to ensure that reported HCP influenza vaccination percentages
are consistent over time within a single healthcare facility, as well
as comparable across facilities. The numerator includes HCP in the
denominator population who, during the time from October 1 (or when the
vaccine became available) through March 31 of the following year:
a. Received an influenza vaccination administered at the healthcare
facility, or reported in writing (paper or electronic) or provided
documentation that influenza vaccination was received elsewhere; or
b. Were determined to have a medical contraindication/condition of
severe allergic reaction to eggs or to other component(s) of the
vaccine, or history of Guillain-Barre Syndrome within 6 weeks after a
previous influenza vaccination; or
c. Declined influenza vaccination; or
d. Had an unknown vaccination status or did not otherwise fall
under any of the abovementioned numerator categories.
The denominator includes the number of HCP working in the
healthcare facility for at least one working day between October 1 and
March 31 of the following year, regardless of clinical responsibility
or patient contact, and is calculated
[[Page 26067]]
separately for employees, licensed independent practitioners, and adult
students/trainees and volunteers. The measure has no exclusions. We
refer readers to https://www.qualityforum.org/QPS/0431 and the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) Web site (https://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/PDFs/HPS-manual/vaccination/HPS-flu-vaccine-protocol.pdf) for further technical specifications.
The MAP gave conditional support for the measure, concluding that
it is not ready for implementation because it needs more experience or
testing. In its 2014 report, the MAP recognized that influenza
immunization is important for healthcare personnel and patients, but
cautioned that CDC and CMS need to collaborate on adjusting
specifications for reporting from psychiatric units before the measure
can be included in the IPFQR Program. CMS does not agree with this
recommendation. As explained for the IMM-2 measure, given previous
experience with the use of this measure and the clarity of its
specifications, CMS does not believe that additional experience or
testing is needed before implementing this measure in IPFs, or that
specifications need to be further adjusted for these facilities. In
response to comments concerning collaboration with CDC, CDC and CMS
have conferred on this issue and language has been added to the
description of this measure below that clarifies that IPFs will use the
CDC National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) infrastructure and
protocol to report the measure for IPFQR Program purposes. Neither CMS
nor CDC believes that there are any coordination issues remaining for
the implementation of this measure.
We believe that the Influenza Vaccination Coverage Among HealthCare
Personnel proposed measure meets the measure selection criterion under
section 1886(s)(4)(D)(ii) of the Act. This section provides that, in
the case of a specified area or medical topic determined appropriate by
the Secretary for which a feasible and practical measure has not been
endorsed by the entity with a contract under section 1890(a) of the
Act, the Secretary may specify a measure that is not so endorsed as
long as due consideration is given to measures that have been endorsed
or adopted by a consensus organization identified by the Secretary.
This measure is not NQF-endorsed in the IPF setting and we could
not find any other comparable measure that is specifically endorsed for
the IPF setting. However, we believe that this measure is appropriate
for the assessment of the quality of care furnished by IPFs for the
reasons discussed above. Further, this measure has been endorsed by NQF
for the ``Hospital/Acute care facility'' setting. Although not
explicitly endorsed for use in IPF settings, we believe that the
characteristics of IPFs as distinct part units of hospitals or
freestanding hospitals mean that this measure may be appropriately used
in such facilities.
We propose that IPFs use the CDC National Healthcare Safety Network
(NHSN) infrastructure and protocol to report the measure for IPFQR
Program purposes. We propose that IPF reporting of HCP influenza
vaccination summary data to NHSN would begin for the 2015-2016
influenza season, from October 1, 2015, to March 31, 2016, with a
reporting deadline of May 15, 2016. Although the collection period for
this measure extends into the first quarter of the following calendar
year, this measure data would be included with other measures that
would be required for FY 2017 payment determination. Similarly,
reporting for subsequent years would include results for the influenza
season that begins in the last quarter of the applicable calendar
year's reporting.
The adoption of this measure in IPFQR will align with both the HIQR
and HOQR Programs. The Influenza Vaccination Coverage Among Healthcare
Personnel (HCP) (NQF 0431) measure was finalized for the
Hospital IQR program in the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR
51636), and the Hospital Outpatient Quality Reporting (HOQR) in the CY
2014 OPPS/ASC final rule (78 FR 75099), and the Ambulatory Surgical
Center Quality Reporting (ASCQR) Program in the CY 2013 Hospital
Outpatient Prospective Payment final rule (77 FR 68495).
We are aware of public concerns about the burden of separately
collecting healthcare personnel (HCP) influenza vaccination status
across inpatient and outpatient settings, in particular, distinguishing
between the inpatient and outpatient setting personnel for reporting
purposes. We also understand that some are unclear about how the
measure would be reported to CDC's NHSN.
We believe reporting a single vaccination count for each healthcare
facility by each individual facility's CMS Certification Number (CCN)
would be less burdensome to IPFs than requiring them to distinguish
between their inpatient and outpatient personnel. Therefore, we propose
that, beginning with the 2015-2016 influenza season, IPFs would collect
and report all HCP under each individual IPF's CCN and submit this
single number to CDC's NHSN. Using the CCN would simplify data
collection for healthcare facilities with multiple care settings. For
each CMS CCN, a percentage of the HCP who received an influenza
vaccination would be calculated and publically reported, so the public
would know what percentage of the HCP have been vaccinated in each IPF.
We believe this proposal would provide meaningful data that would help
inform the public and healthcare facilities while improving the quality
of care. Specific details on data submission for this measure can be
found in an Operational Guidance available at: https://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/acute-care-hospital/hcp-vaccination/ and at https://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/acute-care-hospital/.
3. Tobacco Use Screening (TOB-1) (NQF 1651)
Tobacco use is currently the single greatest cause of disease in
the U.S., accounting for more than 435,000 deaths annually.\14\ Smoking
is a known cause of multiple cancers, heart disease, stroke,
complications of pregnancy, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease,
other respiratory problems, poorer wound healing, and many other
diseases.\15\ This health issue is especially important for persons
with mental illness and substance use disorders. One study has
estimated that these individuals are twice as likely to smoke as the
rest of the population, and account for nearly half of the total
cigarette consumption in the U.S.\16\ Tobacco use also creates a heavy
cost to both individuals and society. Smoking-attributable health care
expenditures are estimated at $96 billion per year in direct medical
expenses and $97 billion in lost productivity.\17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Annual Smoking-
Attributable Mortality, Years of Potential Life Lost, and
Productivity Losses--United States, 2000-2004.'' Morb Mortal Wkly
Rep. 2008. 57(45): 1226-1228. Available at: https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5745a3.htm.
\15\ U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. ``The health
consequences of smoking: A report of the Surgeon General.'' Atlanta,
GA, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Chronic Disease
Prevention and Health Promotion, Office on Smoking and Health, 2004.
\16\ Lasser K, Boyd JW, Woolhandler S, Himmelstein, D.U.,
McCormick D, Bor D.H. Smoking and mental illness: A population-based
prevalence study. JAMA. 2000;284(20):2606-2610.
\17\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. ``Best
Practices for Comprehensive Tobacco Control Programs--2007.''
Atlanta, GA, Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Chronic Disease
Prevention and Health Promotion, Office on Smoking and Health, 2007.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 26068]]
Strong and consistent evidence demonstrates that timely tobacco
dependence interventions for patients using tobacco can significantly
reduce the risk of suffering from tobacco-related disease, as well as
provide improved health outcomes for those already suffering from a
tobacco-related disease.\18\ Research demonstrates that tobacco users
hospitalized with psychiatric illnesses who enter into treatment can
successfully overcome their tobacco dependence.\19\ Evidence also
suggests that tobacco cessation treatment does not increase, and may
even decrease, the risk of rehospitalization for tobacco users
hospitalized with psychiatric illnesses.\20\ Research further
demonstrates that effective tobacco cessation support across the care
continuum can be provided with only a minimal additional effort and
without harm to the mental health recovery process.\21\ We believe that
the adoption of a measure that assesses tobacco use screening among
patients of IPFs encourages the uptake of tobacco cessation treatment
and its attendant benefits. We further believe that the reporting of
this measure would afford consumers and others useful information in
choosing among different facilities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. ``The health
consequences of smoking: A report of the Surgeon General.'' Atlanta,
GA, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Chronic Disease
Prevention and Health Promotion, Office on Smoking and Health, 2004.
\19\ Prochaska, J.J., et al. ``Efficacy of Initiating Tobacco
Dependence Treatment in Inpatient Psychiatry: A Randomized
Controlled Trial.'' Am. J. Pub. Health. 2013 August 15; e1-e9.
\20\ Ibid.
\21\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Tobacco Use Screening (TOB-1) chart-abstracted proposed measure
assesses hospitalized patients who are screened within the first three
days of admission for tobacco use (cigarettes, smokeless tobacco, pipe,
and cigar) within the previous 30 days. The numerator includes the
number of patients who were screened for tobacco use status within the
first 3 days of admission. The denominator includes the number of
hospitalized inpatients 18 years of age and older. The measure excludes
patients who: Are less than 18 years of age; are cognitively impaired;
have a duration of stay less than or equal to 3 days, or greater than
120 days; or have Comfort Measures Only documented.
We refer readers to: https://www.jointcommission.org/specifications_manual_for_national_hospital_inpatient_quality_measures.aspx for further details on measure specifications.
In the ``List of Measure under Consideration for December 1,
2013,'' we originally proposed a similar measure to that proposed here,
which was ``Preventive Care & Screening: Tobacco Use: Screening &
Cessation Intervention (NQF 0028).'' However, the MAP determined that
this measure did not meet the needs of the program and instead
recommended we adopt an alternate measure from the Joint Commissions
suite of measures for inpatient settings, which we are now proposing.
This measure, and the following one (TOB-2 and 2a), best reflect the
activities encompassed by the original NQF 0028 measure.
The proposed measure was NQF-endorsed on March 7, 2014, and meets
the measure selection criterion under section 1886(s)(4)(D)(i) of the
Act.
4. Tobacco Use Treatment Provided or Offered (TOB-2) and Tobacco Use
Treatment (TOB-2a) (NQF 1654)
As stated in our discussion of the proposed TOB-1 measure, tobacco
use is currently the single greatest cause of disease in the U.S. We
also indicated that research demonstrates that timely tobacco cessation
treatment for hospitalized tobacco users with psychiatric illnesses may
decrease the risk of rehospitalization, have only a minimal additional
effort, and not harm the mental health recovery process. We believe
that the adoption of a measure that assesses tobacco use screening
treatment among IPFs encourages the uptake of tobacco cessation
treatment and its attendant benefits. We further believe that the
reporting of this measure would afford consumers and others useful
information in choosing among different facilities.
The Tobacco Use Treatment Provided or Offered (TOB-2) and Tobacco
Use Treatment (TOB-2a) chart-abstracted proposed measure is reported as
an overall rate that includes all patients to whom tobacco use
treatment was provided, or offered and refused, and a second rate, a
subset of the first, which includes only those patients who received
tobacco use treatment. The overall rate, TOB-2, assesses patients
identified as tobacco product users within the past 30 days who receive
or refuse practical counseling to quit, and receive or refuse Food and
Drug Administration (FDA)-approved cessation medications during the
first 3 days following admission. The numerator includes the number of
patients who received or refused practical counseling to quit, and
received or refused FDA-approved cessation medications during the first
3 days after admission.
The second rate, TOB-2a, assesses patients who received counseling
and medication, as well as those who received counseling and had reason
for not receiving the medication during the first 3 days following
admission. The numerator includes the number of patients who received
practical counseling to quit and received FDA-approved cessation
medications during the first 3 days after admission.
The denominator for both TOB-2 and TOB-2a includes the number of
hospitalized inpatients 18 years of age and older identified as current
tobacco users. The measure excludes patients who: Are less than 18
years of age; are cognitively impaired; are not current tobacco users;
refused or were not screened for tobacco use during the hospital stay;
have a duration of stay less than or equal to 3 days, or greater than
120 days; or have Comfort Measures Only documented.
We refer readers to:https://www.jointcommission.org/specifications_manual_for_national_hospital_inpatient_quality_measures.aspx for
further details on measure specifications.
As with the proposed TOB-1 measure, and for the same reasons, we
are proposing this measure on the recommendation of the MAP.
The proposed measure was NQF-endorsed on March 7, 2014, and meets
the measure selection criteria under section 1886(s)(4)(D)(i) of the
Act. We also note that we are not proposing to adopt at this time two
other tobacco treatment measures that are part of the set from which
TOB-1, TOB-2 and TOB2a are taken. This is because the two measures we
are proposing best encompass the activities that we originally proposed
to measure through the use of the NQF 0028 measure, and best assess
activities demonstrated to produce positive results in tobacco use
reduction. Additionally, we believe that the other measures represent a
significantly greater collection and reporting burden. We welcome
comments on this choice as well as any other alternatives for
measurement of this area.
d. Summary of Proposed Measures
In addition to the eight measures that we previously finalized for
the IPFQR Program, we are proposing two additional new measures for
reporting for the FY 2016 payment determination and subsequent years.
We are also proposing four additional new measures
[[Page 26069]]
for the FY 2017 payment determination and subsequent years. The tables
below list the proposed new measures for the FY 2016 and FY 2017
payment determinations and subsequent years.
Table 13--Proposed New Quality Measures for the IPFQR Program for FY 2016 Payment Determination and Subsequent
Years
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
National quality strategy priority NQF No. Measure ID Measure description
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Patient- and Caregiver-Centered N/A..................... N/A..................... Assessment of Patient
Experience of Care. Experience of Care.
Effective Communication and N/A..................... N/A..................... Use of an Electronic
Coordination of Care. Health Record.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 14--Proposed New Quality Measures for the IPFQR Program for FY 2017 Payment Determination and Subsequent
Years
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
National quality strategy priority NQF No. Measure ID Measure description
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Population/Community Health......... 1659.................... IMM-2................... Influenza
Immunization.
Population/Community Health......... 0431.................... N/A..................... Influenza Vaccination
Coverage Among
Healthcare Personnel.
Clinical Quality of Care............ 1651.................... TOB-1................... Tobacco Use Screening.
Clinical Quality of Care............ 1654.................... TOB-2................... Tobacco Use Treatment
TOB-2a.................. Provided or Offered
and Tobacco Use
Treatment.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We welcome public comments on the Assessment of Patient Experience
of Care, Use of an Electronic Health Record, IMM-2, Influenza
Vaccination Coverage Among Healthcare Personnel, TOB-1, and TOB-2
proposed measures.
e. Additional Proposed Procedural Requirements for the FY 2017 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
In addition to the quality measures that we have described above,
we are proposing that IPFs must, beginning with reporting for the FY
2017 payment determination, submit to CMS aggregate population counts
for Medicare and non-Medicare discharges by age group, diagnostic
group, and quarter, and sample size counts for measures for which
sampling is performed (as is allowed for in HBIPS-4-7, and SUB-1).
These requirements are separate from those described under subsection c
of the section entitled ``Form, Manner, and Timing of Quality Data
Submission.'' That subsection describes the population, sample size,
and minimum reporting case threshold requirements for individual
measures, while this section describes the collection of general
population and sampling data that will assist in determining compliance
with those requirements. We believe that it is vital for IPFs to
accurately determine and submit to CMS their population and sampling
size data in order for CMS to assess IPFs' data reporting completeness
for their total population, both Medicare and non-Medicare. In addition
to helping us better assess the quality and completeness of measure
data, we expect that this information will improve our ability to
assess the relevance and impact of potential future measures. For
example, understanding that the size of subgroups of patients addressed
by a particular measure varies greatly over time could be helpful in
assessing the stability of reported measure values, and subsequent
decisions concerning measure retention. Similarly, better understanding
of the size of particular subgroups in the overall population will
assist us in making choices among potential future measures specific to
a particular subgroup (e.g., those with depression).
We further propose that the form, manner, and timing of this
submission would follow the policies discussed at section VIII. of this
preamble, and that failure to provide this information would be subject
to the 2.0 percentage point reduction in the annual update for any IPF
that does not comply with quality data submission requirements,
pursuant to section 1886(s)(4)(A)(i) of the Act.
f. Maintenance of Technical Specifications for Quality Measures
We will provide a user manual that will contain links to measure
specifications, data abstraction information, data submission
information, a data submission mechanism known as the Web-based
Measures Tool, and other information necessary for IPFs to participate
in the IPFQR Program. This manual will be posted on the QualityNet Web
site at: https://www.qualitynet.org/dcs/ContentServer?c=Page&pagename=QnetPublic%2FPage%2FQnetTier2&cid=1228772250192. We will maintain the technical specifications for the quality
measures by updating this manual periodically and including detailed
instructions for IPFs to use when collecting and submitting data on the
required measures. These updates will be accompanied by notifications
to IPFQR Program participants, providing sufficient time between the
change and effective dates in order to allow users to incorporate
changes and updates to the measure specifications into data collection
systems.
Many of the quality measures used in different Medicare and
Medicaid reporting programs are endorsed by the National Quality Forum
(NQF). As part of its regular maintenance process for endorsed
performance measures, the NQF requires measure stewards to submit
annual measure maintenance updates and undergo maintenance of
endorsement review every 3 years. In the measure maintenance process,
the measure steward (owner/developer) is responsible for updating and
maintaining the currency and relevance of the measure and will confirm
existing or minor specification changes with NQF on an annual basis.
NQF solicits information from measure stewards for annual reviews, and
it reviews measures for continued endorsement in a specific 3-year
cycle.
We note that NQF's annual or triennial maintenance processes for
endorsed measures may result in the NQF requiring updates to the
measures in order to maintain endorsement status. We believe that it is
important to have in place a subregulatory process to incorporate
nonsubstantive updates required by the NQF into the measure
specifications we have adopted for the HAC Reduction Program, so that
these measures remain up-to-date.
[[Page 26070]]
The NQF regularly maintains its endorsed measures through annual
and triennial reviews, which may result in the NQF making updates to
the measures. We believe that it is important to have in place a
subregulatory process to incorporate non-substantive updates required
by the NQF into the measure specifications we have adopted for the
IPFQR Program so that these measures remain up-to-date. We also
recognize that some changes the NQF might require to its endorsed
measures are substantive in nature and might not be appropriate for
adoption using a subregulatory process. Therefore, in the FY 2013 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53503 through 53505), we finalized a policy
under which we will use a subregulatory process to make only non-
substantive updates to measures used for the IPFQR Program (77 FR
53653). With respect to what constitutes substantive versus non-
substantive changes, we expect to make this determination on a case-by-
case basis. Examples of non-substantive changes to measures might
include updated diagnosis or procedure codes, medication updates for
categories of medications, broadening of age ranges, and exclusions for
a measure (such as the addition of a hospice exclusion to the 30-day
mortality measures). We believe that non-substantive changes may
include updates to NQF-endorsed measures based upon changes to
guidelines upon which the measures are based. As stated in the FY 2013
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we will revise the manual so that it clearly
identifies the updates and provides links to where additional
information on the updates can be found. We will also post the updates
on the QualityNet Web site at https://www.QualityNet.org. We will
provide 6 months for facilities to implement changes where changes to
the data collection systems would be necessary.
We will continue to use rulemaking to adopt substantive updates
required by the NQF to the endorsed measures we have adopted for the
IPFQR Program. Examples of changes that we might consider to be
substantive would be those in which the changes are so significant that
the measure is no longer the same measure, or when a standard of
performance assessed by a measure becomes more stringent (for example:
Changes in acceptable timing of medication, procedure/process, or test
administration). Another example of a substantive change would be where
the NQF has extended its endorsement of a previously endorsed measure
to a new setting, such as extending a measure from the inpatient
setting to hospice. These policies regarding what is considered
substantive versus non-substantive would apply to all measures in the
IPFQR Program. We also note that the NQF process incorporates an
opportunity for public comment and engagement in the measure
maintenance process.
We believe this policy adequately balances our need to incorporate
technical updates to all IPFQR Program measures in the most expeditious
manner possible while preserving the public's ability to comment on
updates that so fundamentally change an endorsed measure that it is no
longer the same measure that we originally adopted. We invite public
comments on this proposal.
6. New Quality Measures for Future Years
As we have previously indicated, we seek to develop a comprehensive
set of quality measures to be available for widespread use for informed
decision-making and quality improvement in the inpatient psychiatric
facilities setting. Therefore, through future rulemaking, we intend to
propose new measures that will help further our goal of achieving
better health care and improved health for Medicare beneficiaries who
obtain inpatient psychiatric services through the widespread
dissemination and use of quality information.
As part of the 2013 Measures under Consideration (https://www.qualityforum.org/Setting_Priorities/Partnership/Measures_Under_Consideration_List.aspx), we identified ten possible measures for the
IPFQR Program. We have proposed four of these measures for adoption in
this proposed rule. Five of the measures are currently undergoing
testing, and we anticipate that one or more would be proposed for
adoption in the near future. These measures are:
Suicide Risk Screening completed within one day of admission
Violence Risk Screening completed within one day of admission
Drug Use Screening completed within one day of admission
Alcohol Use Screening completed within one day of admission
Metabolic Screening
We also are currently planning to develop a 30-day psychiatric
readmission measure. Similar to readmission measures currently in use
for other CMS quality reporting programs such as the Hospital Inpatient
Quality Reporting Program, we envision that this measure would
encompass all 30-day readmissions for discharges from IPFs, including
readmissions for non-psychiatric diagnoses. Additionally, we intend to
develop a standardized survey of patient experience of care tailored
for use in inpatient psychiatric settings, but also sharing elements
with similar surveys in use in other CMS reporting programs.
We further anticipate that we will recommend additional measures
for development or adoption in the future. We intend to develop a
measure set that effectively assesses IPF quality across the range of
services and diagnoses, encompasses all of the goals of the CMS quality
strategy, addresses measure gaps identified by the MAP and others, and
minimizes collection and reporting burden. Finally, we may propose the
removal of some measures in the future, should one or more no longer
reflect significant variation in quality among IPFs, or prove to be
less effective than alternative measures in measuring the intended
focus area.
We welcome public comments on any aspect of these plans for measure
development, recommendations for adoption of other measures for the
IPFQR Program, particularly related to measures of access, or
suggestions for domains or topics for future measure development.
7. Proposed Public Display and Review Requirements
Section 1886(s)(4)(E) of the Act requires the Secretary to
establish procedures for making the data submitted under the IPFQR
Program available to the public. The statute also requires that these
procedures shall ensure that an IPF has the opportunity to review the
data that is to be made public with respect to the IPF prior to the
data being made public.
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50897 through
50898), we adopted our proposal to change our policies to better align
the IPFQR Program preview and display periods with those under the
Hospital IQR Program. For the FY 2014 payment determination and
subsequent years, we adopted our proposed policy to publicly display
the submitted data on a CMS Web site in April of each calendar year
following the start of the respective payment determination year. In
other words, the public display period for the FY 2014 payment
determination would be April 2014; the public display periods for the
FY 2015 and FY 2016 payment determinations would be April 2015 and
April 2016 respectively, and so forth. We also adopted our proposed
policy that the preview period for the FY 2014 payment determination
and subsequent years be modified from
[[Page 26071]]
September 20 through October 19 (78 FR 50898) to 30 days, approximately
twelve weeks prior to the public display of the data. The table below
sets out the public display timeline.
Table 15--Public Display Timeline
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Payment determination (fiscal year) Reporting period (calendar year) Public display (calendar year)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2015.................................. Q2 2013 (April 1, 2013-June 30, 2013)... April 2015.
Q3 2013 (July 1, 2013-September 30,
2013)..
Q4 2013 (October 1, 2013-December 31,
2013)..
2016.................................. Q1 2014 (January 1, 2014-March 31, 2014) April 2016.
Q2 2014 (April 1, 2014-June 30, 2014)...
Q3 2014 (July 1, 2014-September 30,
2014)..
Q4 2014 (October 1, 2014-December 31,
2014)..
2017.................................. Q1 2015 (January 1, 2015-March 31, 2015) April 2017.
Q2 2015 (April 1, 2015-June 30, 2015)...
Q3 2015 (July 1, 2015-September 30,
2015)..
Q4 2015 (October 1, 2015-December 31,
2015)..
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although we have listed the public display timeline only for the FY
2015 through FY 2017 payment determinations, we wish to clarify that
this policy applies to the FY 2015 payment determination and subsequent
years. We are not proposing any changes to these policies.
8. Form, Manner, and Timing of Quality Data Submission
a. Procedural and Submission Requirements
Section 1886(s)(4)(C) of the Act requires that, for the FY 2014
payment determination and subsequent years, each IPF shall submit to
the Secretary data on quality measures as specified by the Secretary.
Such data shall be submitted in a form and manner, and at a time,
specified by the Secretary. As required by section 1886(s)(4)(A) of the
Act, for any IPF that fails to submit quality data in accordance with
section 1886(s)(4)(C) of the Act, the Secretary will reduce the annual
update to a standard Federal rate for discharges occurring in such
fiscal year by 2.0 percentage points. In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (77 FR 53655 through 53656), we finalized a policy requiring
that IPFs submit aggregate data on measures on an annual basis via the
Web-Based Measures Tool found in the IPF section on the QualityNet Web
site. The complete data submission requirements, submission deadlines,
and data submission mechanism, known as the Web-Based Measures Tool,
are posted on the QualityNet Web site at: https://www.qualitynet.org/.
The data input forms on the QualityNet Web site for submission require
aggregate data for each separate quarter. Therefore, IPFs need to track
and maintain quarterly records for their data. In that final rule, we
also clarified that this policy applies to all subsequent years, unless
and until we change our policy through future rulemaking.
In order to participate in the IPFQR Program, in the FY 2013 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53654 through 53655) and in the FY 2014
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 50898 through 50899), we required IPFs
to comply with certain procedural requirements. We refer readers to the
FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 50898 through 50899) for
further details on specific procedural requirements.
We are not proposing any changes to this policy.
b. Reporting Periods and Submission Timeframes
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53655 through
53657), we established reporting periods and submission timeframes for
the FY 2014, FY 2015, and FY 2016 payment determinations, but we did
not require any data validation approach. However, as we stated in that
final rule, we encourage IPFs to use a validation method and conduct
their own analysis. In that final rule, we also explained that the
reporting periods for the FY 2014 and FY 2015 payment determinations
were 6 and 9 months, respectively, to allow us to achieve a 12-month
(calendar year) reporting period for the FY 2016 payment determination.
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50901), we clarified
that the policy we adopted for the FY 2016 payment determination also
applies to the FY 2017 payment determination and subsequent years
unless we change it through rulemaking. We also indicated that the
submission timeframe is between July 1 and August 15 of the calendar
year in which the applicable payment determination year begins.
We are not proposing any changes to this submission timeframe,
which we finalized in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule for all
future payment determinations. IPFs will have the opportunity to review
and correct data that they have submitted during the entirety of July
1-August 15. We have summarized this information in the table below.
Table 16--Quality Reporting Periods and Submission Timeframes for the FY 2015 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Payment determination (fiscal Reporting period for services
year) provided (calendar year) Data submission timeframe
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Quality Reporting Periods and Submission Timeframes for the FY 2015 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2015......................... Q2 2013 (April 1, 2013-June 30, July 1, 2014-August 15, 2014.
2013).
Q3 2013 (July 1, 2013-September
30, 2013)..
Q4 2013 (October 1, 2013-December
31, 2013)..
[[Page 26072]]
FY 2016......................... Q1 2014 (January 1, 2014-March 31, July 1, 2015-August 15, 2015.
2014).
Q2 2014 (April 1, 2014-June 30,
2014)..
Q3 2014 (July 1, 2014-September
30, 2014)..
Q4 2014 (October 1, 2014-December
31, 2014)..
FY 2017......................... Q1 2015 (January 1, 2015-March 31, July 1, 2016-August 15, 2016.
2015).
Q2 2015 (April 1, 2015-June 30,
2015)..
Q3 2015 (July 1, 2015-September
30, 2015)..
Q4 2015 (October 1, 2015-December
31, 2015)..
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We have adopted the timeframes discussed above for all future
payment years of the program, and these timeframes will remain in place
unless and until we change them through future rulemaking. Therefore,
our policy with respect to reporting timeframes is that the reporting
period is the calendar year preceding the calendar year in which the
payment determination year begins. The data submission timeframe is
between July 1 and August 15 of the calendar year in which the
applicable payment determination year begins. We will continue to
provide charts with the specific reporting and data submission
timeframes for future years as we approach those years.
c. Population, Sampling, and Minimum Case Threshold
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53657 through
53658), for the FY 2014 payment determination and subsequent years, we
finalized our proposed policy that participating IPFs must meet
specific population, sample size, and minimum reporting case threshold
requirements as specified in TJC's Specifications Manual. We refer
readers to the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 58901 through
58902). We are not proposing any changes to this policy. We refer
participating IPFs to TJC's Specifications Manual (https://manual.jointcommission.org/bin/view/Manual/WebHome) for measure-
specific population, sampling, and minimum case threshold requirements.
d. Data Accuracy and Completeness Acknowledgement (DACA) Requirements
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53658), we finalized
our proposed DACA policy for the FY 2014 payment determination and
subsequent years. We refer readers to that final rule for further
details on DACA policies.
We are not proposing any changes to the quarterly reporting periods
and DACA deadline. Therefore, we will continue our adopted policy that
the deadline for submission of the DACA form is no later than August 15
prior to the applicable IPFQR Program payment determination year. The
table below summarizes these policies and timeframes.
Table 17--DACA Submission Deadline
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reporting period for
Payment determination services provided Submission DACA deadline Public display
(fiscal year) (calendar year) timeframe
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2015..................... Q2 2013 (April 1, July 1, 2014-August August 15, 2014..... April 2015.
2013-June 30, 2013). 15, 2014.
Q3 2013 (July 1,
2013-September 30,
2013)..
Q4 2013 (October 1,
2013-December 31,
2013)..
2016..................... Q1 2014 (January 1, July 1, 2015-August August 15, 2015..... April 2016.
2014-March 31, 15, 2015.
2014).
Q2 2014 (April 1,
2014-June 30,
2014)..
Q3 2014 (July 1,
2014-September 30,
2014)..
Q4 2014 (October 1,
2014-December 31,
2014)..
2017..................... Q1 2015 (January 1, July 1, 2016-August August 15, 2016..... April 2017.
2015-March 31, 15, 2016.
2015).
Q2 2015 (April 1,
2015-June 30,
2015)..
Q3 2015 (July 1,
2015-September 30,
2015)..
Q4 2015 (October 1,
2015-December 31,
2015)..
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We would like to clarify that the DACA policies adopted in the FY
2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule will continue to apply for the FY 2014
payment determination and subsequent years unless and until we change
these policies through our rulemaking process.
9. Reconsideration and Appeals Procedures
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53658 through
53659), we adopted a reconsideration process, later codified at 42 CFR
412.434, whereby IPFs can request a reconsideration of their payment
update reduction in the event that an IPF believes that its annual
payment update has been incorrectly reduced for failure to report
quality data under the IPFQR Program. We refer readers to that final
rule, as well as the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50903),
for further details on the reconsideration process.
10. Exceptions to Quality Reporting Requirements
In our experience with other quality reporting and/or performance
programs, we have noted occasions where participants have been unable
to submit required quality data due to extraordinary circumstances that
are not within their control (for example, natural disasters). It is
our goal to avoid penalizing IPFs in these circumstances or unduly
increasing their burden during these times. Therefore, in the FY 2013
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
[[Page 26073]]
53659 through 53660), we adopted a policy that, for the FY 2014 payment
determination and subsequent years, IPFs may request, and we may grant,
an exception with respect to the reporting of required quality data
where extraordinary circumstances beyond the control of the IPF may
warrant. We wish to clarify that use of the term ``exception'' in this
proposed rule is synonymous with the term ``waiver'' as used in
previous rules. We are in the process of revising the Extraordinary
Circumstances/Disaster Extension or Waiver Request form (CMS-10432),
approved under OMB control number 0938-1171. Revisions to the form are
being addressed in the FY 2015 Inpatient Prospective Payment System
(IPPS) rule (RIN 0938-AS11; CMS-1607-P) in the section entitled
``Hospital IQR Program Extraordinary Circumstances Extensions or
Exemptions''. These efforts will work to facilitate alignment across
CMS quality reporting programs.
When an exception is granted, IPFs will not incur payment
reductions for failure to comply with IPFQR Program requirements. This
process does not preclude us from granting exceptions, including
extensions, to IPFs that have not requested them, should we determine
that an extraordinary circumstance affects an entire region or locale.
We refer readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53659
through 53660), as well as the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR
50903), for further details on this process. We are not proposing any
changes to this process.
For the FY 2016 payment determination and subsequent years, we are
proposing to add an Extraordinary Circumstances Exception to the IPFQR
Program in order to align with similar exceptions provided for in other
CMS quality reporting programs. Under this exception, we are proposing
that we may grant a waiver or extension to IPFs if we determine that a
systemic problem with one of our data collection systems directly
affects the ability of the IPFs to submit data. Because we do not
anticipate that these types of systemic errors will occur often, we do
not anticipate granting a waiver or extension on this basis frequently.
If we make the determination to grant a waiver or extension, we are
proposing to communicate this decision through routine communication
channels to IPFs, vendors, and quality improvement organizations (QIOs)
by means of, for example, memoranda, emails, and notices on the
QualityNet Web site.
We welcome public comment on this proposal.
IX. Collection of Information Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, we are required to
provide 60-day notice in the Federal Register and solicit public
comment before a collection of information requirement is submitted to
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review and approval. In
order to fairly evaluate whether an information collection should be
approved by OMB, section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 requires that we solicit comment on the following issues:
The need for the information collection and its usefulness
in carrying out the proper functions of our agency.
The accuracy of our estimate of the information collection
burden.
The quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be
collected.
Recommendations to minimize the information collection
burden on the affected public, including automated collection
techniques.
We are soliciting public comment on each of the section
3506(c)(2)(A)-required issues for the following information collection
requirements (ICRs):
A. ICRs Regarding the Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities Quality
Reporting (IPFQR) Program
This section IX.A sets out the estimated burden (hours and cost)
for inpatient psychiatric facilities (IPFs) to comply with the
reporting requirements proposed in this NPRM. It also restates the
burden estimated in the FY 2013 and FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rules.
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53644), we finalized
policies to implement the IPFQR Program. The Program implements the
statutory requirements of section 1886(s)(4) of the Social Security
Act, as added by sections 3401(f) and 10322(a) of the Affordable Care
Act. One program priority is to help achieve better health and better
health care for individuals through the collection of valid, reliable,
and relevant measures of quality health care data. The data will be
publicly posted and, therefore, available for use in improving health
care quality which, in turn, works to further program goals. IPFs can
use this quality data for many purposes, including in their risk
management programs, patient safety and quality improvement
initiatives, and research and development of mental health programs,
among others.
As clarified throughout the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR
50887), policies finalized in prior rules will apply to FY 2015 unless
and until we change them through future rulemaking. The burden on IPFs
includes the time used for chart abstraction and for personnel training
on the collection of chart-abstracted data, the aggregation of data, as
well as training for the submission of aggregate-level data through
QualityNet. We note that, beginning in the FY 2016 payment
determination, as set out in this proposed rule, we have proposed to
adopt the Assessment of Patient Experience of Care measure, thereby
removing the request for voluntary information adopted in the FY 2014
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule.
Based on current participation rates, we estimate that there will
be approximately 574 fewer IPF facilities (or 1,626 facilities)
nationwide eligible to participate in the IPFQR Program. Based on
previous measure data submission, we further estimate that the average
facility submits measure data on 556 cases per year. In total, this
calculates to 904,056 cases (aggregate) per year.
In section V of this preamble, we are proposing that, for the FY
2016 payment determination and subsequent years, IPFs must submit data
on the following proposed new measures: Assessment of Patient
Experience of Care, and Use of an Electronic Health Record. Because
both of these measures require only an annual acknowledgement, we
anticipate a negligible additional burden on IPFs.
In the same section of this preamble, we are proposing that, for
the FY 2017 payment determination and subsequent years, IPFs must
submit aggregate data on the following proposed new measures: Influenza
Immunization (IMM-2), Influenza Vaccination Coverage Among Healthcare
Personnel, Tobacco Use Screening (TOB-1), and Tobacco Use Treatment
Provided or Offered (TOB-2) and Tobacco Use Treatment (TOB-2a).
We estimate that the average time spent for chart abstraction per
patient for each of these proposed measures is approximately 15
minutes. Assuming an approximately uniform sampling methodology, we
estimate (based on prior Program data) that the annual burden for
reporting the IMM-2 measure would be 139 hours per year of annual
effort per facility (556 x 0.25). This same calculation also applies to
the TOB-1, and TOB-2 and TOB-2a proposed measures. The Influenza
Vaccination Coverage Among Healthcare Personnel proposed measure does
not allow sampling; therefore, we anticipate that the average facility
would be required to abstract approximately 40 healthcare personnel,
[[Page 26074]]
totaling an annual effort per facility of 10 hours (40 x 0.25). We
anticipate no measurable burden for the Inpatient Psychiatric Facility
Routinely Assesses Patient Experience of Care measure and the Use of an
Electronic Health Record measure because both require only attestation.
In total, for proposed measures, we estimate an additional 427
hours of annual effort per facility for the FY 2017 payment
determination and subsequent years. The following table summarizes the
estimated hours (per facility) for each measure.
Table 18--Estimated Annual Effort per Facility
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated cases Effort (per Annual effort
Measure (per facility) case) (per facility)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Assessment of Patient Experience of Care..................... * 0 * n/a * 0
Use of an Electronic Health Record........................... * 0 * n/a * 0
IMM-2........................................................ 556 ** \1/4\ 139
Influenza Vaccination Coverage Among Healthcare Personnel.... 40 ** \1/4\ 10
TOB-1........................................................ 556 ** \1/4\ 139
TOB-2, TOB-2a................................................ 556 ** \1/4\ 139
--------------------------------------------------
Total.................................................... ................. .............. 427
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* New non-measurable attestation burden.
** Hour.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics wage estimate for health care
workers that are known to engage in chart abstraction is $31.71/hour.
To account for overhead and fringe benefits we have doubled this
estimate to $63.42/hour. Considering the 427 hours of annual effort
(per facility) for the FY 2017 payment determination and subsequent
years, the annual cost is approximately $27,080.34 (63.42 x 427).
Across all 1,626 IPFs, the aggregate total is $44,032,632.84 (1,626 x
27,080.34).
The estimated burden for training personnel for data collection and
submission for current and future measures is 2 hours per facility. The
cost for this training, based on an hourly rate of $63.42, is $126.84
training costs for each IPF (63.42 x 2), which totals $206,241.84 for
all facilities (1,626 x 126.84).
Using an estimated 1,626 IPFs nationwide that are eligible for
participation in the IPFQR Program, we estimate that the annual hourly
burden for the collection, submission, and training of personnel for
submitting all quality measures is approximately 429 hours (per IPF) or
697,554 (aggregate) per year. The all-inclusive measure cost for each
facility is approximately $27,207.18 (27,080.34 + 126.84) and for all
facilities we estimate a cost of $44,238,874.68 (44,032,632.84 +
206,241.84).
In section V of this preamble, for the FY 2017 payment
determination, we are proposing that IPFs submit to CMS aggregate
population counts for Medicare and non-Medicare discharges by age
group, diagnostic group, and quarter, and sample size counts for
measures for which sampling is performed (as is allowed for in HBIPS-4
through-7, and SUB-1). We estimate that it will take each facility
approximately 2.5 hours to comply with this requirement. The burden
across all 1,626 IPFs calculates to 4,065 hours annually (2.5 x 1,626)
at a total of $257,802.30 (4,065 x 63.42) or $158.55 per IPF (2.5 x
63.42).
The following tables set out the total estimated burden that IPFs
would incur to comply with the proposed reporting requirements for both
measure and non-measure data for the FY 2016 and FY 2017 payment
determinations.
Table 19--Summary of Burden Estimates (Office of Management and Budget Control Number 0938-1171, CMS-10432) for the FY 2016 Payment Determination
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Labor cost
Facility Total annual of
Fiscal year 2016 Number of measures Respondents burden burden (hours) reporting Total cost ($)
(hours) ($/hr)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From this FY 2015 proposed rule.............. 2 (attestation only)........... 1,626 0 0 0 0
training....................... 1,626 0 0 0 0
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total.................................... ............................... 1,626 0 0 0 0
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 20--Summary of Burden Estimates (Office of Management and Budget Control Number 0938-1171, CMS-10432) for the FY 2017 Payment Determination
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Labor cost
Total annual of
Fiscal year 2017 Number of measures Respondents Facility burden (hours) burden (hours) reporting Total cost ($)
($/hr)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From this FY 2015 proposed rule........ 4........................ 1,626 427 (139 x 3 + 10) 694,302 63.42 44,032,632.84
2 (attestation only)..... .............. ....................... 0 ........... ..............
training................. .............. 2 3,252 ........... 206,241.84
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 26075]]
Subtotal........................... ......................... 1,626 429 697,554 63.42 44,238,874.68
From this FY 2015 proposed rule........ Non-measure data......... 1,626 2.50 4,065 63.42 257,802.30
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total.......................... ......................... 1,626 431.50 701,619 63.42 44,496,676.98
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are not proposing any changes to the administrative, reporting,
or submission requirements for the measures previously finalized in the
FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53654 through 53657) and the FY
2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50898 through 50903), except that
we are removing the Request for Voluntary Information--IPF Assessment
of Patient Experience of Care section because of the Assessment of
Patient Experience of Care proposed measure.
B. Summary of Proposed Burden Adjustments (OCN 0938-1171, CMS-10432)
In the FY 2014 final rule (78 FR 50964), we estimated that the
annual hourly burden per IPF for the collection, submission, and
training of personnel for submitting all quality measures was
approximately 761 hours. This figure represented an estimate for all
measures, both previously and newly finalized, in the Program. We
further stated that because we were unable to estimate how many IPFs
will participate, we could not estimate the aggregate impact.
Because the estimates we present herein, including the estimated
annual burden of 431.5 hours per IPF, represent estimates only for
proposed measures and non-measure data collection and submission
requirements, an accurate comparison with estimates presented in the FY
2014 final rule is not possible.
C. ICRs Regarding the Hospital and Health Care Complex Cost Report
(CMS-2552-10)
This proposed rule would not impose any new or revised collection
of information requirements associated with CMS-2552-10 (as discussed
under preamble section IV.B.). Consequently, the cost report does not
require additional OMB review under the authority of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). The report's
information collection requirements and burden estimates have been
approved by OMB under OCN 0938-0052.
D. ICRs Regarding Exceptions to Quality Reporting Requirements
As discussed in section VIII.10 of this preamble, we are in the
process of revising the Extraordinary Circumstances/Disaster Extension
or Waiver Request form, currently approved under OMB control number
0938-1171. Revisions to the form are being addressed in the FY 2015
Inpatient Prospective Payment System rule (RIN 0938-AS11, CMS-1607-P).
In that rule we propose to update the form's instructions and simplify
the form so that a hospital or facility may apply for an extension for
all applicable quality reporting programs at the same time.
E. Submission of PRA-Related Comments
We have submitted a copy of this proposed rule to OMB for its
review of the rule's information collection and recordkeeping
requirements. These requirements are not effective until they have been
approved by the OMB.
To obtain copies of the supporting statement and any related forms
for the proposed paperwork collections referenced above, access CMS'
Web site at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/CMS-Forms/CMS-Forms/,
or call the Reports Clearance Office at 410-786-1326.
We invite public comments on these potential information collection
requirements. If you comment on these information collection and
recordkeeping requirements, please submit your comments electronically
as specified in the ADDRESSES section of this proposed rule.
PRA-related comments must be received on/by July 7, 2014.
X. 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.
XI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
This proposed rule would update the prospective payment rates for
Medicare inpatient hospital services provided by IPFs for discharges
occurring during the FY beginning October 1, 2014, through September
30, 2015. We are applying the FY 2008-based RPL market basket increase
of 2.7 percent, less the productivity adjustment of 0.4 percentage
point as required by 1886(s)(2)(A)(i) of the Act, and less the 0.3
percentage point required by sections 1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) and
1886(s)(3)(C) of the Act. In this proposed rule, we also address the
implementation of the International Classification of Diseases, 10th
Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-10-CM/PCS) for the IPF prospective
payment system, and describe new quality reporting requirements for the
IPFQR Program.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impact of this proposed 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
[[Page 26076]]
effects, distributive impacts, and equity). A regulatory impact
analysis (RIA) must be prepared for a major rules with economically
significant effects ($100 million or more in any 1 year). This proposed
rule is designated as economically ``significant'' under section
3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866.
We estimate that the total impact of these changes for FY 2015
payments compared to FY 2014 payments will be a net increase of
approximately $100 million. This reflects a $95 million increase from
the update to the payment rates, as well as a $5 million increase as a
result of the update to the outlier threshold amount. Outlier payments
are estimated to increase from 1.9 percent in FY 2014 to 2.0 percent in
FY 2015.
The RFA requires agencies to analyze options for regulatory relief
of small entities if a rule has a significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities. For purposes of the RFA, small entities
include small businesses, nonprofit organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions. Most IPFs and most other providers and
suppliers are small entities, either by nonprofit status or having
revenues of $7 million to $35.5 million or less in any 1 year,
depending on industry classification (for details, refer to the SBA
Small Business Size Standards found at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/files/Size_Standards_Table.pdf), or being nonprofit
organizations that are not dominant in their markets.
Because we lack data on individual hospital receipts, we cannot
determine the number of small proprietary IPFs or the proportion of
IPFs' revenue derived from Medicare payments. Therefore, we assume that
all IPFs are considered small entities. The Department of Health and
Human Services generally uses a revenue impact of 3 to 5 percent as a
significance threshold under the RFA.
As shown in Table 21, we estimate that the overall revenue impact
of this proposed rule on all IPFs is to increase Medicare payments by
approximately 2.1 percent. As a result, since the estimated impact of
this proposed rule is a net increase in revenue across all categories
of IPFs, the Secretary has determined that this proposed rule would
have a positive revenue impact on a substantial number of small
entities. MACs are not considered to be small entities. Individuals and
States are not included in the definition of a small entity.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Social Security Act requires us
to prepare a regulatory impact analysis if a rule may have a
significant impact on the operations of a substantial number of small
rural hospitals. This analysis must conform to the provisions of
section 603 of the RFA. For purposes of section 1102(b) of the Act, we
define a small rural hospital as a hospital that is located outside of
a metropolitan statistical area and has fewer than 100 beds. As
discussed in detail below, the rates and policies set forth in this
proposed rule would not have an adverse impact on the rural hospitals
based on the data of the 310 rural units and 74 rural hospitals in our
database of 1,626 IPFs for which data were available. Therefore, the
Secretary has determined that this proposed rule 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
threshold is approximately $141 million. This proposed rule will not
impose spending costs on state, local, or tribal governments in the
aggregate, or by the private sector, 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 requirement costs on state
and local governments, preempts state law, or otherwise has Federalism
implications. As stated above, this proposed rule would not have a
substantial effect on state and local governments.
C. Anticipated Effects
We discuss the historical background of the IPF PPS and the impact
of this proposed rule on the Federal Medicare budget and on IPFs.
1. Budgetary Impact
As discussed in the November 2004 and May 2006 IPF PPS final rules,
we applied a budget neutrality factor to the Federal per diem and ECT
base rates to ensure that total estimated payments under the IPF PPS in
the implementation period would equal the amount that would have been
paid if the IPF PPS had not been implemented. The budget neutrality
factor includes the following components: outlier adjustment, stop-loss
adjustment, and the behavioral offset. As discussed in the May 2008 IPF
PPS notice (73 FR 25711), the stop-loss adjustment is no longer
applicable under the IPF PPS.
In accordance with Sec. 412.424(c)(3)(ii), we indicated that we
will evaluate the accuracy of the budget neutrality adjustment within
the first 5 years after implementation of the payment system. We may
make a one-time prospective adjustment to the Federal per diem and ECT
base rates to account for differences between the historical data on
cost-based TEFRA payments (the basis of the budget neutrality
adjustment) and estimates of TEFRA payments based on actual data from
the first year of the IPF PPS. As part of that process, we will
reassess the accuracy of all of the factors impacting budget
neutrality. In addition, as discussed in section VII.C.1 of this
proposed rule, we are using the wage index and labor-related share in a
budget neutral manner by applying a wage index budget neutrality factor
to the Federal per diem and ECT base rates.
Therefore, the budgetary impact to the Medicare program of this
proposed rule will be due to the market basket update for FY 2015 of
2.7 percent (see section V.B. of this proposed rule) less the
productivity adjustment of 0.4 percentage point required by section
1886(s)(2)(A)(i) of the Act, less the ``other adjustment'' of 0.3
percentage point under sections 1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) and 1886(s)(3)(C) of
the Act, and the update to the outlier fixed dollar loss threshold
amount.
We estimate that the FY 2015 impact will be a net increase of $100
million in payments to IPF providers. This reflects an estimated $95
million increase from the update to the payment rates and a $5 million
increase due to the update to the outlier threshold amount to increase
outlier payments from approximately 1.9 percent in FY 2014 to 2.0
percent in FY 2015. This estimate does not include the implementation
of the required 2 percentage point reduction of the market basket
increase factor for any IPF that fails to meet the IPF quality
reporting requirements (as discussed in section 4 below).
2. Impact on Providers
To understand the impact of the changes to the IPF PPS on
providers, discussed in this proposed rule, it is necessary to compare
estimated payments under the IPF PPS rates and factors for FY 2015
versus those under FY 2014. The estimated payments for FY 2014 and FY
2015 will be 100 percent of the IPF PPS payment, since the transition
period has ended and stop-loss payments are no longer paid. We
determined the percent change of estimated FY 2015 IPF PPS payments to
FY 2014 IPF PPS payments for each category of IPFs. In addition, for
each category of IPFs, we have included the estimated percent change in
payments resulting from the update to the outlier
[[Page 26077]]
fixed dollar loss threshold amount, the labor-related share and wage
index changes for the FY 2015 IPF PPS, and the market basket update for
FY 2015, as adjusted by the productivity adjustment according to
section 1886(s)(2)(A)(i), and the ``other adjustment'' according to
sections 1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) and 1886(s)(3)(C) of the Act.
To illustrate the impacts of the FY 2015 changes in this proposed
rule, our analysis begins with a FY 2014 baseline simulation model
based on FY 2013 IPF payments inflated to the midpoint of FY 2014 using
IHS Global Insight Inc.'s most recent forecast of the market basket
update (see section IV.C. of this proposed rule); the estimated outlier
payments in FY 2014; the CBSA designations for IPFs based on OMB's MSA
definitions after June 2003; the FY 2013 pre-floor, pre-reclassified
hospital wage index; the FY 2014 labor-related share; and the FY 2014
percentage amount of the rural adjustment. During the simulation, the
total estimated outlier payments are maintained at 2 percent of total
IPF PPS payments.
Each of the following changes is added incrementally to this
baseline model in order for us to isolate the effects of each change:
The update to the outlier fixed dollar loss threshold
amount.
The FY 2014 pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage
index and FY 2015 labor-related share.
The market basket update for FY 2015 of 2.7 percent less
the productivity adjustment of 0.4 percentage point reduction in
accordance with section 1886(s)(2)(A)(i) of the Act and less the
``other adjustment'' of 0.3 percentage point in accordance with
sections 1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) and 1886(s)(3)(C) of the Act.
Our final comparison illustrates the percent change in payments
from FY 2014 (that is, October 1, 2013, to September 30, 2014) to FY
2015 (that is, October 1, 2014, to September 30, 2015) including all
the changes in this proposed rule.
Table 21--IPF Impact Table for FY 2015
[Projected impacts (% Change in columns 3-6]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CBSA wage Adjusted
Facility by type Number of Outlier index & labor market basket Total percent
facilities share update \1\ change \2\
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All Facilities.................. 1,626 0.1 0.0 2.0 2.1
Total Urban..................... 1,242 0.1 0.0 2.0 2.1
Total Rural..................... 384 0.1 -0.2 2.0 1.9
Urban unit...................... 829 0.1 0.1 2.0 2.2
Urban hospital.................. 413 0.0 0.0 2.0 2.0
Rural unit...................... 310 0.1 -0.1 2.0 2.0
Rural hospital.................. 74 0.0 -0.3 2.0 1.7
By Type of Ownership:
Freestanding IPFs
Urban Psychiatric Hospitals
Government.............. 129 0.1 0.0 2.0 2.0
Non-Profit.............. 99 0.1 0.2 2.0 2.3
For-Profit.............. 185 0.0 -0.2 2.0 1.8
Rural Psychiatric Hospitals
Government.............. 36 0.1 0.3 2.0 2.4
Non-Profit.............. 13 0.1 -0.1 2.0 1.9
For-Profit.............. 25 0.0 -0.8 2.0 1.2
IPF Units
Urban
Government.............. 129 0.2 0.1 2.0 2.3
Non-Profit.............. 543 0.1 0.1 2.0 2.2
For-Profit.............. 157 0.1 -0.1 2.0 1.9
Rural .............. .............. .............. .............. ..............
Government.............. 75 0.1 -0.1 2.0 1.9
Non-Profit.............. 169 0.1 -0.1 2.0 1.9
For-Profit.............. 66 0.1 -0.1 2.0 2.0
By Teaching Status:
Non-teaching................ 1,427 0.1 0.0 2.0 2.0
Less than 10% interns and 108 0.1 0.2 2.0 2.3
residents to beds..........
10% to 30% interns and 68 0.1 0.0 2.0 2.2
residents to beds..........
More than 30% interns and 23 0.2 0.5 2.0 2.7
residents to beds..........
By Region:
New England................. 109 0.1 0.1 2.0 2.2
Mid-Atlantic................ 251 0.1 0.6 2.0 2.7
South Atlantic.............. 234 0.1 -0.3 2.0 1.7
East North Central.......... 260 0.1 -0.2 2.0 1.9
East South Central.......... 166 0.1 -0.3 2.0 1.8
West North Central.......... 143 0.1 -0.3 2.0 1.8
West South Central.......... 238 0.0 -0.5 2.0 1.6
Mountain.................... 103 0.1 -0.3 2.0 1.7
Pacific..................... 122 0.1 1.0 2.0 3.1
By Bed Size:
Psychiatric Hospitals .............. .............. .............. .............. ..............
Beds: 0-24.............. 88 0.0 -0.3 2.0 1.7
Beds: 25-49............. 67 0.0 -0.1 2.0 1.9
[[Page 26078]]
Beds: 50-75............. 88 0.0 -0.1 2.0 2.0
Beds: 76 +.............. 244 0.0 0.0 2.0 2.0
Psychiatric Units .............. .............. .............. .............. ..............
Beds: 0-24.............. 680 0.1 0.0 2.0 2.1
Beds: 25-49............. 298 0.1 -0.1 2.0 2.0
Beds: 50-75............. 102 0.1 0.1 2.0 2.1
Beds: 76 +.............. 59 0.1 0.4 2.0 2.6
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ This column reflects the payment update impact of the RPL market basket update for FY 2015 of 2.7 percent, a
0.4 percentage point reduction for the productivity adjustment as required by section 1886(s)(2)(A)(i) of the
Act, and a 0.3 percentage point reduction in accordance with sections 1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) and 1886(s)(3)(C) of
the Act.
\2\ Percent changes in estimated payments from FY 2014 to FY 2015 include all of the changes presented in this
proposed rule. Note, the products of these impacts may be different from the percentage changes shown here due
to rounding effects.
3. Results
Table 21 above displays the results of our analysis. The table
groups IPFs into the categories listed below based on characteristics
provided in the Provider of Services (POS) file, the IPF provider
specific file, and cost report data from HCRIS:
Facility Type
Location
Teaching Status Adjustment
Census Region
Size
The top row of the table shows the overall impact on the 1,626 IPFs
included in this analysis.
In column 3, we present the effects of the update to the outlier
fixed dollar loss threshold amount. We estimate that IPF outlier
payments as a percentage of total IPF payments are 1.9 percent in FY
2014. Thus, we are adjusting the outlier threshold amount in this
proposed rule to set total estimated outlier payments equal to 2
percent of total payments in FY 2015. The estimated change in total IPF
payments for FY 2015, therefore, includes an approximate 0.1 percent
increase in payments because the outlier portion of total payments is
expected to increase from approximately 1.9 percent to 2 percent.
The overall impact of this outlier adjustment update (as shown in
column 3 of table 21), across all hospital groups, is to increase total
estimated payments to IPFs by 0.1 percent. We do not estimate that any
group of IPFs will experience a decrease in payments from this update.
The largest increase in payments is estimated to reflect a 0.2 percent
increase in payments for urban government IPF units and IPFs located in
teaching hospitals with an intern and resident ADC ratio greater than
30 percent.
In column 4, we present the effects of the budget-neutral update to
the labor-related share and the wage index adjustment under the CBSA
geographic area definitions announced by OMB in June 2003. This is a
comparison of the simulated FY 2015 payments under the FY 2014 hospital
wage index under CBSA classification and associated labor-related share
to the simulated FY 2014 payments under the FY 2013 hospital wage index
under CBSA classifications and associated labor-related share. We note
that there is no projected change in aggregate payments to IPFs, as
indicated in the first row of column 4. However, there will be small
distributional effects among different categories of IPFs. For example,
we estimate the largest increase in payments to be a 1.0 percent
increase for IPFs in the Pacific region and the largest decrease in
payments to be a 0.8 percent decrease for rural for-profit IPFs.
Column 5 shows the estimated effect of the update to the IPF PPS
payment rates, which includes a 2.7 percent market basket update less
the productivity adjustment of 0.4 percentage point in accordance with
section 1886(s)(2)(A)(i), and less the 0.3 percentage point in
accordance with section 1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) and 1886(s)(3)(C).
Column 6 compares our estimates of the total changes reflected in
this proposed rule for FY 2015, to our payments for FY 2014 (without
these changes). This column reflects all FY 2015 changes relative to FY
2014. The average estimated increase for all IPFs is approximately 2.1
percent. This estimated net increase includes the effects of the 2.7
percent market basket update adjusted by the productivity adjustment of
minus 0.4 percentage point, as required by section 1886(s)(2)(A)(i) of
the Act and the ``other adjustment'' of minus 0.3 percentage point, as
required by sections 1886(s)(2)(A)(ii) and 1886(s)(3)(C) of the Act. It
also includes the overall estimated 0.1 percent increase in estimated
IPF outlier payments from the update to the outlier fixed dollar loss
threshold amount. Since we are making the updates to the IPF labor-
related share and wage index in a budget-neutral manner, they will not
affect total estimated IPF payments in the aggregate. However, they
will affect the estimated distribution of payments among providers.
Overall, no IPFs are estimated to experience a net decrease in
payments as a result of the updates in this proposed rule. IPFs in
urban areas will experience a 2.1 percent increase and IPFs in rural
areas will experience a 1.9 percent increase. The largest payment
increase is estimated at 3.1 percent for IPFs in the Pacific region.
This is due to the larger than average positive effect of the CBSA wage
index and labor-related share update for IPFs in this category.
4. Effects of Updates to the IPF QRP
As discussed in section V.B. of this proposed rule and in
accordance with section 1886(s)(4)(A)(ii) of the Act, we will implement
a 2 percentage point reduction in the FY 2015 increase factor for IPFs
that have failed to report the required quality reporting data to us
during the most recent IPF quality reporting period. In section V.B. of
this proposed rule, we discuss how the 2 percentage point reduction
will be applied. Only a few IPFs received the 2 percentage point
reduction in the FY 2014 increase factor for failure to meet
[[Page 26079]]
program requirements, and we would anticipate that even fewer IPFs
would receive the reduction for FY 2015 as IPFs become more familiar
with the requirements. Thus, we estimate that this policy will have a
negligible impact on overall IPF payments for FY 2015.
For the FY 2016 payment determination, we estimate no additional
burden on IPFs as a result of proposed changes in reporting
requirements. For the FY 2017 payment determination, we estimate an
additional annual burden across all 1,626 IPFs of 701,619 hours, with a
total Program cost of $44,496,677. This estimate includes an estimated
3,252 hours annually for training, at an estimated annual cost of
$206,241. It also includes an estimated 4,065 hours annually, at an
estimated annual cost of $257,802, for IPFs to submit to CMS aggregate
population counts for Medicare and non-Medicare discharges by age
group, diagnostic group, and quarter, and sample size counts for
measures for which sampling is performed. Further discussion of these
figures can be found in section IX.
For the FY 2017 payment determination, the applicable reporting
period is calendar year (CY) 2015. Assuming that reporting costs are
uniformly distributed across the year, three-quarters of those costs
would have been incurred in FY 2015, which ends on September 30, 2015.
Therefore, the estimated FY 2015 burden for IPFs would be three-
quarters of $44,496,677, or approximately $33,372,508.
We intend to closely monitor the effects of this new quality
reporting program on IPF providers and help facilitate successful
reporting outcomes through ongoing stakeholder education, national
trainings, and a technical help desk.
5. Effect on Beneficiaries
Under the IPF PPS, IPFs will receive payment based on the average
resources consumed by patients for each day. We do not expect changes
in the quality of care or access to services for Medicare beneficiaries
under the FY 2015 IPF PPS but we continue to expect that paying
prospectively for IPF services would enhance the efficiency of the
Medicare program.
D. Alternatives Considered
The statute does not specify an update strategy for the IPF PPS and
is broadly written to give the Secretary discretion in establishing an
update methodology. Therefore, we are updating the IPF PPS using the
methodology published in the November 2004 IPF PPS final rule. No
alternative policy options were considered in this proposed rule since
this proposed rule simply provides an update to the rates for FY 2015
and transition ICD-9-CM codes to ICD-10-CM codes. Additionally, for the
IPFQR Program, alternatives were not considered because the Program, as
designed, best achieves quality reporting goals for the inpatient
psychiatric care setting, while minimizing associated reporting burdens
on IPFs. Lastly, sections VIII.1. and VIII.4. discuss other benefits
and objectives of the Program.
E. Accounting Statement
As required by OMB Circular A-4 (available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars_a004_a-4), in Table 22 below, we
have prepared an accounting statement showing the classification of the
expenditures associated with the provisions of this proposed rule. The
costs for data submission presented in Table 22 are calculated in
section IX, which also discusses the benefits of data collection. This
table provides our best estimate of the increase in Medicare payments
under the IPF PPS as a result of the changes presented in this proposed
rule and based on the data for 1,626 IPFs in our database. Furthermore,
we present the estimated costs associated with updating the IPFQR
program. The increases in Medicare payments are classified as Federal
transfers to IPF Medicare providers.
Table 22--Accounting Statement: Classification of Estimated Expenditures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category Transfers
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Change in Estimated Transfers from FY 2014 IPF PPS to FY 2015 IPF PPS:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annualized Monetized Transfers......... $100 million.
From Whom to Whom?..................... Federal Government to IPF
Medicare Providers
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2015 Costs to updating the Quality Reporting Program for IPFs:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category Costs
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annualized Monetized Costs for IPFs to 33,372,508
Submit Data (Quality Reporting
Program).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
In accordance with the provisions of Executive Order 12866, this
proposed rule was reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget.
Dated: April 17, 2014.
Marilyn Tavenner,
Administrator, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
Approved: April 24, 2014.
Kathleen Sebelius,
Secretary.
Note: The following Addenda will not appear in the Code of
Federal Regulations.
Addendum A--Rate and Adjustment Factors
Per Diem Rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Federal Per Diem Base Rate..................... $727.67
Labor Share (0.69538).......................... 506.01
Non-Labor Share (0.30462)...................... 221.66
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 26080]]
Per Diem Rate Applying the 2 Percentage Point Reduction
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Federal Per Diem Base Rate..................... $713.40
Labor Share (0.69538).......................... 496.08
Non-Labor Share (0.30462)...................... 217.32
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fixed Dollar Loss Threshold Amount: $10,125.
Wage Index Budget-Neutrality Factor: 1.0003.
Facility Adjustments
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rural Adjustment Factor................ 1.17
Teaching Adjustment Factor............. 0.5150
Wage Index............................. Pre-reclass Hospital Wage Index
(FY2014)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost of Living Adjustments (COLAs)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost of living
Area adjustment
factor
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alaska:................................................. ..............
City of Anchorage and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius 1.23
by road............................................
City of Fairbanks and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius 1.23
by road............................................
City of Juneau and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by 1.23
road...............................................
Rest of Alaska...................................... 1.25
Hawaii:.................................................
City and County of Honolulu......................... 1.25
County of Hawaii.................................... 1.19
County of Kauai..................................... 1.25
County of Maui and County of Kalawao................ 1.25
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Patient Adjustments
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECT--Per Treatment...................................... $313.27
ECT--Per Treatment Applying the 2 Percentage Point $307.13
Reduction..............................................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Variable Per Diem Adjustments
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adjustment
factor
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Day 1--Facility Without a Qualifying Emergency 1.19
Department.............................................
Day 1--Facility With a Qualifying Emergency Department.. 1.31
Day 2................................................... 1.12
Day 3................................................... 1.08
Day 4................................................... 1.05
Day 5................................................... 1.04
Day 6................................................... 1.02
Day 7................................................... 1.01
Day 8................................................... 1.01
Day 9................................................... 1.00
Day 10.................................................. 1.00
Day 11.................................................. 0.99
Day 12.................................................. 0.99
Day 13.................................................. 0.99
Day 14.................................................. 0.99
Day 15.................................................. 0.98
Day 16.................................................. 0.97
Day 17.................................................. 0.97
Day 18.................................................. 0.96
Day 19.................................................. 0.95
Day 20.................................................. 0.95
Day 21.................................................. 0.95
After Day 21............................................ 0.92
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 26081]]
Age Adjustments
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adjustment
Age (in years) factor
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under 45................................................ 1.00
45 and under 50......................................... 1.01
50 and under 55......................................... 1.02
55 and under 60......................................... 1.04
60 and under 65......................................... 1.07
65 and under 70......................................... 1.10
70 and under 75......................................... 1.13
75 and under 80......................................... 1.15
80 and over............................................. 1.17
------------------------------------------------------------------------
DRG Adjustments
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adjustment
MS-DRG MS-DRG Descriptions factor
------------------------------------------------------------------------
056................... Degenerative nervous system 1.05
057................... disorders w MCC.
Degenerative nervous system
disorders w/o MCC.
080................... Nontraumatic stupor & coma w MCC 1.07
081................... Nontraumatic stupor & coma w/o
MCC.
876................... O.R. procedure w principal 1.22
diagnoses of mental illness.
880................... Acute adjustment reaction & 1.05
psychosocial dysfunction.
881................... Depressive neuroses............. 0.99
882................... Neuroses except depressive...... 1.02
883................... Disorders of personality & 1.02
impulse control.
884................... Organic disturbances & mental 1.03
retardation.
885................... Psychoses....................... 1.00
886................... Behavioral & developmental 0.99
disorders.
887................... Other mental disorder diagnoses. 0.92
894................... Alcohol/drug abuse or 0.97
dependence, left AMA.
895................... Alcohol/drug abuse or dependence 1.02
w rehabilitation therapy.
896................... Alcohol/drug abuse or dependence 0.88
897................... w/o rehabilitation therapy w
MCC.
Alcohol/drug abuse or dependence
w/o rehabilitation therapy w/o
MCC.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comorbidity Adjustments
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adjustment
Comorbidity factor
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Developmental Disabilities.............................. 1.04
Coagulation Factor Deficit.............................. 1.13
Tracheostomy............................................ 1.06
Eating and Conduct Disorders............................ 1.12
Infectious Diseases..................................... 1.07
Renal Failure, Acute.................................... 1.11
Renal Failure, Chronic.................................. 1.11
Oncology Treatment...................................... 1.07
Uncontrolled Diabetes Mellitus.......................... 1.05
Severe Protein Malnutrition............................. 1.13
Drug/Alcohol Induced Mental Disorders................... 1.03
Cardiac Conditions...................................... 1.11
Gangrene................................................ 1.10
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease................... 1.12
Artificial Openings--Digestive & Urinary................ 1.08
Severe Musculoskeletal & Connective Tissue Diseases..... 1.09
Poisoning............................................... 1.11
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Addendum B--FY 2015 CBSA Wage Index Tables
In this addendum, we provide the wage index tables referred to
in the preamble to this proposed rule. The tables presented below
are as follows:
Table1-FY 2015 Wage Index For Urban Areas Based on CBSA Labor
Market Areas.
Table 2-FY 2015 Wage Index Based On CBSA Labor Market Areas For
Rural Areas.
[[Page 26082]]
Table 1--FY 2015 Wage Index for Urban Areas Based on CBSA Labor Market
Areas
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Urban area (constituent
CBSA Code counties) Wage index
------------------------------------------------------------------------
10180...................... Abilene, TX, Callahan 0.8225
County, TX, Jones County,
TX, Taylor County, TX.
10380...................... Aguadilla-Isabela-San 0.3647
Sebasti[aacute]n, PR,
Aguada Municipio, PR,
Aguadilla Municipio, PR,
A[ntilde]asco Municipio,
PR, Isabela Municipio, PR,
Lares Municipio, PR, Moca
Municipio, PR,
Rinc[oacute]n Municipio,
PR, San Sebasti[aacute]n
Municipio, PR.
10420...................... Akron, OH, Portage County, 0.8521
OH, Summit County, OH.
10500...................... Albany, GA, Baker County, 0.8713
GA, Dougherty County, GA,
Lee County, GA, Terrell
County, GA, Worth County,
GA.
10580...................... Albany-Schenectady-Troy, 0.8600
NY, Albany County, NY,
Rensselaer County, NY,
Saratoga County, NY,
Schenectady County, NY,
Schoharie County, NY.
10740...................... Albuquerque, NM, Bernalillo 0.9663
County, NM, Sandoval
County, NM, Torrance
County, NM, Valencia
County, NM.
10780...................... Alexandria, LA, Grant 0.7788
Parish, LA, Rapides
Parish, LA.
10900...................... Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, 0.9215
PA-NJ, Warren County, NJ,
Carbon County, PA, Lehigh
County, PA, Northampton
County, PA.
11020...................... Altoona, PA, Blair County, 0.9101
PA.
11100...................... Amarillo, TX, Armstrong 0.8302
County, TX, Carson County,
TX, Potter County, TX,
Randall County, TX.
11180...................... Ames, IA, Story County, IA. 0.9425
11260...................... Anchorage, AK, Anchorage 1.2221
Municipality, AK,
Matanuska-Susitna Borough,
AK.
11300...................... Anderson, IN, Madison 0.9654
County, IN.
11340...................... Anderson, SC, Anderson 0.8766
County, SC.
11460...................... Arbor, MI, Washtenaw 1.0086
County, MI.
11500...................... Anniston-Oxford, AL, 0.7402
Calhoun County, AL.
11540...................... Appleton, WI, Calumet 0.9445
County, WI, Outagamie
County, WI.
11700...................... Asheville, NC, Buncombe 0.8511
County, NC, Haywood
County, NC, Henderson
County, NC, Madison
County, NC.
12020...................... Athens-Clarke County, GA, 0.9244
Clarke County, GA, Madison
County, GA, Oconee County,
GA, Oglethorpe County, GA.
12060...................... Atlanta-Sandy Springs- 0.9452
Marietta, GA, Barrow
County, GA, Bartow County,
GA, Butts County, GA,
Carroll County, GA,
Cherokee County, GA,
Clayton County, GA, Cobb
County, GA, Coweta County,
GA, Dawson County, GA,
DeKalb County, GA, Douglas
County, GA, Fayette
County, GA, Forsyth
County, GA, Fulton County,
GA, Gwinnett County, GA,
Haralson County, GA, Heard
County, GA, Henry County,
GA, Jasper County, GA,
Lamar County, GA,
Meriwether County, GA,
Newton County, GA,
Paulding County, GA,
Pickens County, GA, Pike
County, GA, Rockdale
County, GA, Spalding
County, GA, Walton County,
GA.
12100...................... Atlantic City-Hammonton, 1.2258
NJ, Atlantic County, NJ.
12220...................... Auburn-Opelika, AL, Lee 0.7771
County, AL.
12260...................... Augusta-Richmond County, GA- 0.9150
SC, Burke County, GA,
Columbia County, GA,
McDuffie County, GA,
Richmond County, GA, Aiken
County, SC, Edgefield
County, SC.
12420...................... Austin-Round Rock-San 0.9576
Marcos, TX, Bastrop
County, TX, Caldwell
County, TX, Hays County,
TX, Travis County, TX,
Williamson County, TX.
12540...................... Bakersfield-Delano, CA, 1.1579
Kern County, CA.
12580...................... Baltimore-Towson, MD, Anne 0.9873
Arundel County, MD,
Baltimore County, MD,
Carroll County, MD,
Harford County, MD, Howard
County, MD, Queen Anne's
County, MD, Baltimore
City, MD.
12620...................... Bangor, ME, Penobscot 0.9710
County, ME.
12700...................... Barnstable Town, MA, 1.3007
Barnstable County, MA.
12940...................... Baton Rouge, LA, Ascension 0.8078
Parish, LA, East Baton
Rouge Parish, LA, East
Feliciana Parish, LA,
Iberville Parish, LA,
Livingston Parish, LA,
Pointe Coupee Parish, LA,
St. Helena Parish, LA,
West Baton Rouge Parish,
LA, West Feliciana Parish,
LA.
12980...................... Battle Creek, MI, Calhoun 0.9915
County, MI.
13020...................... Bay City, MI, Bay County, 0.9486
MI.
13140...................... Beaumont-Port Arthur, TX, 0.8598
Hardin County, TX,
Jefferson County, TX,
Orange County, TX.
13380...................... Bellingham, WA, Whatcom 1.1890
County, WA.
13460...................... Bend, OR, Deschutes County, 1.1807
OR.
13644...................... Bethesda-Rockville- 1.0319
Frederick, MD, Frederick
County, MD, Montgomery
County, MD.
13740...................... Billings, MT, Carbon 0.8691
County, MT, Yellowstone
County, MT.
13780...................... Binghamton, NY, Broome 0.8602
County, NY, Tioga County,
NY.
13820...................... Birmingham-Hoover, AL, Bibb 0.8367
County, AL, Blount County,
AL, Chilton County, AL,
Jefferson County, AL, St.
Clair County, AL, Shelby
County, AL, Walker County,
AL.
13900...................... Bismarck, ND, Burleigh 0.7282
County, ND, Morton County,
ND.
13980...................... Blacksburg-Christiansburg- 0.8319
Radford, VA, Giles County,
VA, Montgomery County, VA,
Pulaski County, VA,
Radford City, VA.
14020...................... Bloomington, IN, Greene 0.9304
County, IN, Monroe County,
IN, Owen County, IN.
14060...................... Bloomington-Normal, IL, 0.9310
McLean County, IL.
14260...................... Boise City-Nampa, ID, Ada 0.9259
County, ID, Boise County,
ID, Canyon County, ID, Gem
County, ID, Owyhee County,
ID.
14484...................... Boston-Quincy, MA, Norfolk 1.2453
County, MA, Plymouth
County, MA, Suffolk
County, MA.
14500...................... Boulder, CO, Boulder 0.9850
County, CO.
14540...................... Bowling Green, KY, Edmonson 0.8573
County, KY, Warren County,
KY.
14740...................... Bremerton-Silverdale, WA, 1.0268
Kitsap County, WA.
14860...................... Bridgeport-Stamford- 1.3252
Norwalk, CT, Fairfield
County, CT.
15180...................... Brownsville-Harlingen, TX, 0.8179
Cameron County, TX.
15260...................... Brunswick, GA, Brantley 0.8457
County, GA, Glynn County,
GA, McIntosh County, GA.
15380...................... Buffalo-Niagara Falls, NY, 1.0045
Erie County, NY, Niagara
County, NY.
15500...................... Burlington, NC, Alamance 0.8529
County, NC.
[[Page 26083]]
15540...................... Burlington-South 1.0130
Burlington, VT, Chittenden
County, VT, Franklin
County, VT, Grand Isle
County, VT.
15764...................... Cambridge-Newton- 1.1146
Framingham, MA, Middlesex
County, MA.
15804...................... Camden, NJ, Burlington 1.0254
County, NJ, Camden County,
NJ, Gloucester County, NJ.
15940...................... Canton-Massillon, OH, 0.8730
Carroll County, OH, Stark
County, OH.
15980...................... Cape Coral-Fort Myers, FL, 0.8683
Lee County, FL.
16020...................... Cape Girardeau-Jackson, MO- 0.9174
IL, Alexander County, IL,
Bollinger County, MO, Cape
Girardeau County, MO.
16180...................... Carson City, NV, Carson 1.0721
City, NV.
16220...................... Casper, WY, Natrona County, 1.0111
WY.
16300...................... Cedar Rapids, IA, Benton 0.8964
County, IA, Jones County,
IA, Linn County, IA.
16580...................... Champaign-Urbana, IL, 0.9416
Champaign County, IL, Ford
County, IL, Piatt County,
IL.
16620...................... Charleston, WV, Boone 0.8119
County, WV, Clay County,
WV, Kanawha County, WV,
Lincoln County, WV, Putnam
County, WV.
16700...................... Charleston-North Charleston- 0.8972
Summerville, SC, Berkeley
County, SC, Charleston
County, SC, Dorchester
County, SC.
16740...................... Charlotte-Gastonia-Rock 0.9447
Hill, NC[dash]SC, Anson
County, NC, Cabarrus
County, NC, Gaston County,
NC, Mecklenburg County,
NC, Union County, NC, York
County, SC.
16820...................... Charlottesville, VA, 0.9209
Albemarle County, VA,
Fluvanna County, VA,
Greene County, VA, Nelson
County, VA,
Charlottesville City, VA.
16860...................... Chattanooga, TN-GA, Catoosa 0.8783
County, GA, Dade County,
GA, Walker County, GA,
Hamilton County, TN,
Marion County, TN,
Sequatchie County, TN.
16940...................... Cheyenne, WY, Laramie 0.9494
County, WY.
16974...................... Chicago-Naperville-Joliet, 1.0418
IL, Cook County, IL,
DeKalb County, IL, DuPage
County, IL, Grundy County,
IL, Kane County, IL,
Kendall County, IL,
McHenry County, IL, Will
County, IL.
17020...................... Chico, CA, Butte County, CA 1.1616
17140...................... Cincinnati-Middletown, OH- 0.9470
KY-IN, Dearborn County,
IN, Franklin County, IN,
Ohio County, IN, Boone
County, KY, Bracken
County, KY, Campbell
County, KY, Gallatin
County, KY, Grant County,
KY, Kenton County, KY,
Pendleton County, KY,
Brown County, OH, Butler
County, OH, Clermont
County, OH, Hamilton
County, OH, Warren County,
OH.
17300...................... Clarksville, TN-KY, 0.7802
Christian County, KY,
Trigg County, KY,
Montgomery County, TN,
Stewart County, TN.
17420...................... Cleveland, TN, Bradley 0.7496
County, TN, Polk County,
TN.
17460...................... Cleveland-Elyria-Mentor, 0.9303
OH, Cuyahoga County, OH,
Geauga County, OH, Lake
County, OH, Lorain County,
OH, Medina County, OH.
17660...................... Coeur d'Alene, ID, Kootenai 0.9064
County, ID.
17780...................... College Station-Bryan, TX, 0.9497
Brazos County, TX,
Burleson County, TX,
Robertson County, TX.
17820...................... Colorado Springs, CO, El 0.9282
Paso County, CO, Teller
County, CO.
17860...................... Columbia, MO, Boone County, 0.8196
MO, Howard County, MO.
17900...................... Columbia, SC, Calhoun 0.8601
County, SC, Fairfield
County, SC, Kershaw
County, SC, Lexington
County, SC, Richland
County, SC, Saluda County,
SC.
17980...................... Columbus, GA-AL, Russell 0.8170
County, AL, Chattahoochee
County, GA, Harris County,
GA, Marion County, GA,
Muscogee County, GA.
18020...................... Columbus, IN, Bartholomew 0.9818
County, IN.
18140...................... Columbus, OH, Delaware 0.9803
County, OH, Fairfield
County, OH, Franklin
County, OH, Licking
County, OH, Madison
County, OH, Morrow County,
OH, Pickaway County, OH,
Union County, OH.
18580...................... Corpus Christi, TX, Aransas 0.8433
County, TX, Nueces County,
TX, San Patricio County,
TX.
18700...................... Corvallis, OR, Benton 1.0596
County, OR.
18880...................... Crestview-Fort Walton Beach- 0.8911
Destin, FL, Okaloosa
County, FL.
19060...................... Cumberland, MD-WV, Allegany 0.8054
County, MD, Mineral
County, WV.
19124...................... Dallas-Plano-Irving, TX, 0.9831
Collin County, TX, Dallas
County, TX, Delta County,
TX, Denton County, TX,
Ellis County, TX, Hunt
County, TX, Kaufman
County, TX, Rockwall
County, TX.
19140...................... Dalton, GA, Murray County, 0.8625
GA, Whitfield County, GA.
19180...................... Danville, IL, Vermilion 0.9460
County, IL.
19260...................... Danville, VA, Pittsylvania 0.7888
County, VA, Danville City,
VA.
19340...................... Davenport-Moline-Rock 0.9306
Island, IA-IL, Henry
County, IL, Mercer County,
IL, Rock Island County,
IL, Scott County, IA.
19380...................... Dayton, OH, Greene County, 0.9034
OH, Miami County, OH,
Montgomery County, OH,
Preble County, OH.
19460...................... Decatur, AL, Lawrence 0.7165
County, AL, Morgan County,
AL.
19500...................... Decatur, IL, Macon County, 0.8151
IL.
19660...................... Deltona-Daytona Beach- 0.8560
Ormond Beach, FL, Volusia
County, FL.
19740...................... Denver-Aurora-Broomfield, 1.0395
CO, Adams County, CO,
Arapahoe County, CO,
Broomfield County, CO,
Clear Creek County, CO,
Denver County, CO, Douglas
County, CO, Elbert County,
CO, Gilpin County, CO,
Jefferson County, CO, Park
County, CO.
19780...................... Des Moines-West Des Moines, 0.9393
IA, Dallas County, IA,
Guthrie County, IA,
Madison County, IA, Polk
County, IA, Warren County,
IA.
19804...................... Detroit-Livonia-Dearborn, 0.9237
MI, Wayne County, MI.
20020...................... Dothan, AL, Geneva County, 0.7108
AL, Henry County, AL,
Houston County, AL.
20100...................... Dover, DE, Kent County, DE. 0.9939
20220...................... Dubuque, IA, Dubuque 0.8790
County, IA.
20260...................... Duluth, MN-WI, Carlton 1.0123
County, MN, St. Louis
County, MN, Douglas
County, WI.
20500...................... Durham-Chapel Hill, NC, 0.9669
Chatham County, NC, Durham
County, NC, Orange County,
NC, Person County, NC.
20740...................... Eau Claire, WI, Chippewa 1.0103
County, WI, Eau Claire
County, WI.
[[Page 26084]]
20764...................... Edison-New Brunswick, NJ, 1.0985
Middlesex County, NJ,
Monmouth County, NJ, Ocean
County, NJ, Somerset
County, NJ.
20940...................... El Centro, CA, Imperial 0.8848
County, CA.
21060...................... Elizabethtown, KY, Hardin 0.7894
County, KY, Larue County,
KY.
21140...................... Elkhart-Goshen, IN, Elkhart 0.9337
County, IN.
21300...................... Elmira, NY, Chemung County, 0.8725
NY.
21340...................... El Paso, TX, El Paso 0.8404
County, TX.
21500...................... Erie, PA, Erie County, PA.. 0.7940
21660...................... Eugene-Springfield, OR, 1.1723
Lane County, OR.
21780...................... Evansville, IN-KY, Gibson 0.8381
County, IN, Posey County,
IN, Vanderburgh County,
IN, Warrick County, IN,
Henderson County, KY,
Webster County, KY.
21820...................... Fairbanks, AK, Fairbanks 1.0997
North Star Borough, AK.
21940...................... Fajardo, PR, Ceiba 0.3728
Municipio, PR, Fajardo
Municipio, PR, Luquillo
Municipio, PR.
22020...................... Fargo, ND-MN, Cass County, 0.7802
ND, Clay County, MN.
22140...................... Farmington, NM, San Juan 0.9735
County, NM.
22180...................... Fayetteville, NC, 0.8601
Cumberland County, NC,
Hoke County, NC.
22220...................... Fayetteville-Springdale- 0.8955
Rogers, AR-MO, Benton
County, AR, Madison
County, AR, Washington
County, AR, McDonald
County, MO.
22380...................... Flagstaff, AZ, Coconino 1.2786
County, AZ.
22420...................... Flint, MI, Genesee County, 1.1238
MI.
22500...................... Florence, SC, Darlington 0.7999
County, SC, Florence
County, SC.
22520...................... Florence-Muscle Shoals, AL, 0.7684
Colbert County, AL,
Lauderdale County, AL.
22540...................... Fond du Lac, WI, Fond du 0.9477
Lac County, WI.
22660...................... Fort Collins-Loveland, CO, 0.9704
Larimer County, CO.
22744...................... Fort Lauderdale-Pompano 1.0378
Beach-Deerfield, FL,
Broward County, FL.
22900...................... Fort Smith, AR-OK, Crawford 0.7561
County, AR, Franklin
County, AR, Sebastian
County, AR, Le Flore
County, OK, Sequoyah
County, OK.
23060...................... Fort Wayne, IN, Allen 0.9010
County, IN, Wells County,
IN, Whitley County, IN.
23104...................... Fort Worth-Arlington, TX, 0.9535
Johnson County, TX, Parker
County, TX, Tarrant
County, TX, Wise County,
TX.
23420...................... Fresno, CA, Fresno County, 1.1768
CA.
23460...................... Gadsden, AL, Etowah County, 0.7983
AL.
23540...................... Gainesville, FL, Alachua 0.9710
County, FL, Gilchrist
County, FL.
23580...................... Gainesville, GA, Hall 0.9253
County, GA.
23844...................... Gary, IN, Jasper County, 0.9418
IN, Lake County, IN,
Newton County, IN, Porter
County, IN.
24020...................... Glens Falls, NY, Warren 0.8367
County, NY, Washington
County, NY.
24140...................... Goldsboro, NC, Wayne 0.8550
County, NC.
24220...................... Grand Forks, ND-MN, Polk 0.7290
County, MN, Grand Forks
County, ND.
24300...................... Grand Junction, CO, Mesa 0.9270
County, CO.
24340...................... Grand Rapids-Wyoming, MI, 0.9091
Barry County, MI, Ionia
County, MI, Kent County,
MI, Newaygo County, MI.
24500...................... Great Falls, MT, Cascade 0.9235
County, MT.
24540...................... Greeley, CO, Weld County, 0.9653
CO.
24580...................... Green Bay, WI, Brown 0.9587
County, WI, Kewaunee
County, WI, Oconto County,
WI.
24660...................... Greensboro-High Point, NC, 0.8320
Guilford County, NC,
Randolph County, NC,
Rockingham County, NC.
24780...................... Greenville, NC, Greene 0.9343
County, NC, Pitt County,
NC.
24860...................... Greenville-Mauldin-Easley, 0.9604
SC, Greenville County, SC,
Laurens County, SC,
Pickens County, SC.
25020...................... Guayama, PR, Arroyo 0.3707
Municipio, PR, Guayama
Municipio, PR, Patillas
Municipio, PR.
25060...................... Gulfport-Biloxi, MS, 0.8575
Hancock County, MS,
Harrison County, MS, Stone
County, MS.
25180...................... Hagerstown-Martinsburg, MD- 0.9234
WV, Washington County, MD,
Berkeley County, WV,
Morgan County, WV.
25260...................... Hanford-Corcoran, CA, Kings 1.1124
County, CA.
25420...................... Harrisburg-Carlisle, PA, 0.9533
Cumberland County, PA,
Dauphin County, PA, Perry
County, PA.
25500...................... Harrisonburg, VA, 0.9090
Rockingham County, VA,
Harrisonburg City, VA.
25540...................... Hartford-West Hartford-East 1.1050
Hartford, CT, Hartford
County, CT, Middlesex
County, CT, Tolland
County, CT.
25620...................... Hattiesburg, MS, Forrest 0.7938
County, MS, Lamar County,
MS, Perry County, MS.
25860...................... Hickory-Lenoir-Morganton, 0.8492
NC, Alexander County, NC,
Burke County, NC, Caldwell
County, NC, Catawba
County, NC.
25980...................... Hinesville-Fort Stewart, 0.8700
GA\1\, Liberty County, GA,
Long County, GA.
26100...................... Holland-Grand Haven, MI, 0.8016
Ottawa County, MI.
26180...................... Honolulu, HI, Honolulu 1.2321
County, HI.
26300...................... Hot Springs, AR, Garland 0.8474
County, AR.
26380...................... Houma-Bayou Cane-Thibodaux, 0.7525
LA, Lafourche Parish, LA,
Terrebonne Parish, LA.
26420...................... Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown, 0.9915
TX, Austin County, TX,
Brazoria County, TX,
Chambers County, TX, Fort
Bend County, TX, Galveston
County, TX, Harris County,
TX, Liberty County, TX,
Montgomery County, TX, San
Jacinto County, TX, Waller
County, TX.
26580...................... Huntington-Ashland, WV-KY- 0.8944
OH, Boyd County, KY,
Greenup County, KY,
Lawrence County, OH,
Cabell County, WV, Wayne
County, WV.
26620...................... Huntsville, AL, Limestone 0.8455
County, AL, Madison
County, AL.
26820...................... Idaho Falls, ID, Bonneville 0.9312
County, ID, Jefferson
County, ID.
26900...................... Indianapolis-Carmel, IN, 1.0108
Boone County, IN, Brown
County, IN, Hamilton
County, IN, Hancock
County, IN, Hendricks
County, IN, Johnson
County, IN, Marion County,
IN, Morgan County, IN,
Putnam County, IN, Shelby
County, IN.
26980...................... Iowa City, IA, Johnson 0.9854
County, IA, Washington
County, IA.
27060...................... Ithaca, NY, Tompkins 0.9326
County, NY.
[[Page 26085]]
27100...................... Jackson, MI, Jackson 0.8944
County, MI.
27140...................... Jackson, MS, Copiah County, 0.8162
MS, Hinds County, MS,
Madison County, MS, Rankin
County, MS, Simpson
County, MS.
27180...................... Jackson, TN, Chester 0.7729
County, TN, Madison
County, TN.
27260...................... Jacksonville, FL, Baker 0.8956
County, FL, Clay County,
FL, Duval County, FL,
Nassau County, FL, St.
Johns County, FL.
27340...................... Jacksonville, NC, Onslow 0.7861
County, NC.
27500...................... Janesville, WI, Rock 0.9071
County, WI.
27620...................... Jefferson City, MO, 0.8465
Callaway County, MO, Cole
County, MO, Moniteau
County, MO, Osage County,
MO.
27740...................... Johnson City, TN, Carter 0.7226
County, TN, Unicoi County,
TN, Washington County, TN.
27780...................... Johnstown, PA, Cambria 0.8450
County, PA.
27860...................... Jonesboro, AR, Craighead 0.7983
County, AR, Poinsett
County, AR.
27900...................... Joplin, MO, Jasper County, 0.7983
MO, Newton County, MO.
28020...................... Kalamazoo-Portage, MI, 0.9959
Kalamazoo County, MI, Van
Buren County, MI.
28100...................... Kankakee-Bradley, IL, 0.9657
Kankakee County, IL.
28140...................... Kansas City, MO-KS, 0.9447
Franklin County, KS,
Johnson County, KS,
Leavenworth County, KS,
Linn County, KS, Miami
County, KS, Wyandotte
County, KS, Bates County,
MO, Caldwell County, MO,
Cass County, MO, Clay
County, MO, Clinton
County, MO, Jackson
County, MO, Lafayette
County, MO, Platte County,
MO, Ray County, MO.
28420...................... Kennewick-Pasco-Richland, 0.9459
WA, Benton County, WA,
Franklin County, WA.
28660...................... Killeen-Temple-Fort Hood, 0.8925
TX, Bell County, TX,
Coryell County, TX,
Lampasas County, TX.
28700...................... Kingsport-Bristol-Bristol, 0.7192
TN-VA, Hawkins County, TN,
Sullivan County, TN,
Bristol City, VA, Scott
County, VA, Washington
County, VA.
28740...................... Kingston, NY, Ulster 0.9066
County, NY.
28940...................... Knoxville, TN, Anderson 0.7432
County, TN, Blount County,
TN, Knox County, TN,
Loudon County, TN, Union
County, TN.
29020...................... Kokomo, IN, Howard County, 0.9061
IN, Tipton County, IN.
29100...................... La Crosse, WI-MN, Houston 1.0205
County, MN, La Crosse
County, WI.
29140...................... Lafayette, IN, Benton 0.9954
County, IN, Carroll
County, IN, Tippecanoe
County, IN.
29180...................... Lafayette, LA, Lafayette 0.8231
Parish, LA, St. Martin
Parish, LA.
29340...................... Lake Charles, LA, Calcasieu 0.7765
Parish, LA, Cameron
Parish, LA.
29404...................... Lake County-Kenosha County, 1.0658
IL-WI, Lake County, IL,
Kenosha County, WI.
29420...................... Lake Havasu City-Kingman, 0.9912
AZ, Mohave County, AZ.
29460...................... Lakeland-Winter Haven, FL, 0.8283
Polk County, FL.
29540...................... Lancaster, PA, Lancaster 0.9695
County, PA.
29620...................... Lansing-East Lansing, MI, 1.0618
Clinton County, MI, Eaton
County, MI, Ingham County,
MI.
29700...................... Laredo, TX, Webb County, TX 0.7586
29740...................... Las Cruces, NM, Dona Ana 0.9265
County, NM.
29820...................... Las Vegas-Paradise, NV, 1.1627
Clark County, NV.
29940...................... Lawrence, KS, Douglas 0.8664
County, KS.
30020...................... Lawton, OK, Comanche 0.7893
County, OK.
30140...................... Lebanon, PA, Lebanon 0.8157
County, PA.
30300...................... Lewiston, ID-WA, Nez Perce 0.9215
County, ID, Asotin County,
WA.
30340...................... Lewiston-Auburn, ME, 0.9048
Androscoggin County, ME.
30460...................... Lexington-Fayette, KY, 0.8902
Bourbon County, KY, Clark
County, KY, Fayette
County, KY, Jessamine
County, KY, Scott County,
KY, Woodford County, KY.
30620...................... Lima, OH, Allen County, OH. 0.9158
30700...................... Lincoln, NE, Lancaster 0.9465
County, NE, Seward County,
NE.
30780...................... Little Rock-North Little 0.8632
Rock-Conway, AR, Faulkner
County, AR, Grant County,
AR, Lonoke County, AR,
Perry County, AR, Pulaski
County, AR, Saline County,
AR.
30860...................... Logan, UT-ID, Franklin 0.8754
County, ID, Cache County,
UT.
30980...................... Longview, TX, Gregg County, 0.8933
TX, Rusk County, TX,
Upshur County, TX.
31020...................... Longview, WA, Cowlitz 1.0460
County, WA.
31084...................... Los Angeles-Long Beach- 1.2417
Glendale, CA, Los Angeles
County, CA.
31140...................... Louisville-Jefferson 0.8852
County, KY-IN, Clark
County, IN, Floyd County,
IN, Harrison County, IN,
Washington County, IN,
Bullitt County, KY, Henry
County, KY, Meade County,
KY, Nelson County, KY,
Oldham County, KY, Shelby
County, KY, Spencer
County, KY, Trimble
County, KY.
31180...................... Lubbock, TX, Crosby County, 0.8956
TX, Lubbock County, TX.
31340...................... Lynchburg, VA, Amherst 0.8771
County, VA, Appomattox
County, VA, Bedford
County, VA, Campbell
County, VA, Bedford City,
VA, Lynchburg City, VA.
31420...................... Macon, GA, Bibb County, GA, 0.9014
Crawford County, GA, Jones
County, GA, Monroe County,
GA, Twiggs County, GA.
31460...................... Madera-Chowchilla, CA, 0.8317
Madera County, CA.
31540...................... Madison, WI, Columbia 1.1414
County, WI, Dane County,
WI, Iowa County, WI.
31700...................... Manchester-Nashua, NH, 1.0057
Hillsborough County, NH.
31740...................... Manhattan, KS, Geary 0.7843
County, KS, Pottawatomie
County, KS, Riley County,
KS.
31860...................... Mankato-North Mankato, MN, 0.9277
Blue Earth County, MN,
Nicollet County, MN.
31900...................... Mansfield, OH, Richland 0.8509
County, OH.
32420...................... Mayag[uuml]ez, PR, 0.3762
Hormigueros Municipio, PR,
Mayag[uuml]ez Municipio,
PR.
32580...................... McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, 0.8393
TX, Hidalgo County, TX.
32780...................... Medford, OR, Jackson 1.0690
County, OR.
[[Page 26086]]
32820...................... Memphis, TN-MS-AR, 0.9038
Crittenden County, AR,
DeSoto County, MS,
Marshall County, MS, Tate
County, MS, Tunica County,
MS, Fayette County, TN,
Shelby County, TN, Tipton
County, TN.
32900...................... Merced, CA, Merced County, 1.2734
CA.
33124...................... Miami-Miami Beach-Kendall, 0.9870
FL, Miami-Dade County, FL.
33140...................... Michigan City-La Porte, IN, 0.9216
LaPorte County, IN.
33260...................... Midland, TX, Midland 1.0049
County, TX.
33340...................... Milwaukee-Waukesha-West 0.9856
Allis, WI, Milwaukee
County, WI, Ozaukee
County, WI, Washington
County, WI, Waukesha
County, WI.
33460...................... Minneapolis-St. Paul- 1.1213
Bloomington, MN-WI, Anoka
County, MN, Carver County,
MN, Chisago County, MN,
Dakota County, MN,
Hennepin County, MN,
Isanti County, MN, Ramsey
County, MN, Scott County,
MN, Sherburne County, MN,
Washington County, MN,
Wright County, MN, Pierce
County, WI, St. Croix
County, WI.
33540...................... Missoula, MT, Missoula 0.9142
County, MT.
33660...................... Mobile, AL, Mobile County, 0.7507
AL.
33700...................... Modesto, CA, Stanislaus 1.3629
County, CA.
33740...................... Monroe, LA, Ouachita 0.7530
Parish, LA, Union Parish,
LA.
33780...................... Monroe, MI, Monroe County, 0.8718
MI.
33860...................... Montgomery, AL, Autauga 0.7475
County, AL, Elmore County,
AL, Lowndes County, AL,
Montgomery County, AL.
34060...................... Morgantown, WV, Monongalia 0.8339
County, WV, Preston
County, WV.
34100...................... Morristown, TN, Grainger 0.6861
County, TN, Hamblen
County, TN, Jefferson
County, TN.
34580...................... Mount Vernon-Anacortes, WA, 1.0652
Skagit County, WA.
34620...................... Muncie, IN, Delaware 0.8743
County, IN.
34740...................... Muskegon-Norton Shores, MI, 1.1076
Muskegon County, MI.
34820...................... Myrtle Beach-North Myrtle 0.8700
Beach-Conway, SC, Horry
County, SC.
34900...................... Napa, CA, Napa County, CA.. 1.5375
34940...................... Naples-Marco Island, FL, 0.9108
Collier County, FL.
34980...................... Nashville-Davidson-- 0.9141
Murfreesboro-Franklin, TN,
Cannon County, TN,
Cheatham County, TN,
Davidson County, TN,
Dickson County, TN,
Hickman County, TN, Macon
County, TN, Robertson
County, TN, Rutherford
County, TN, Smith County,
TN, Sumner County, TN,
Trousdale County, TN,
Williamson County, TN,
Wilson County, TN.
35004...................... Nassau-Suffolk, NY, Nassau 1.2755
County, NY, Suffolk
County, NY.
35084...................... Newark-Union, NJ-PA, Essex 1.1268
County, NJ, Hunterdon
County, NJ, Morris County,
NJ, Sussex County, NJ,
Union County, NJ, Pike
County, PA.
35300...................... New Haven-Milford, CT, New 1.1883
Haven County, CT.
35380...................... New Orleans-Metairie- 0.8752
Kenner, LA, Jefferson
Parish, LA, Orleans
Parish, LA, Plaquemines
Parish, LA, St. Bernard
Parish, LA, St. Charles
Parish, LA, St. John the
Baptist Parish, LA, St.
Tammany Parish, LA.
35644...................... New York-White Plains- 1.3089
Wayne, NY-NJ, Bergen
County, NJ, Hudson County,
NJ, Passaic County, NJ,
Bronx County, NY, Kings
County, NY, New York
County, NY, Putnam County,
NY, Queens County, NY,
Richmond County, NY,
Rockland County, NY,
Westchester County, NY.
35660...................... Niles-Benton Harbor, MI, 0.8444
Berrien County, MI.
35840...................... North Port-Bradenton- 0.9428
Sarasota-Venice, FL,
Manatee County, FL,
Sarasota County, FL.
35980...................... Norwich-New London, CT, New 1.1821
London County, CT.
36084...................... Oakland-Fremont-Hayward, 1.7048
CA, Alameda County, CA,
Contra Costa County, CA.
36100...................... Ocala, FL, Marion County, 0.8425
FL.
36140...................... Ocean City, NJ, Cape May 1.0584
County, NJ.
36220...................... Odessa, TX, Ector County, 0.9661
TX.
36260...................... Ogden-Clearfield, UT, Davis 0.9170
County, UT, Morgan County,
UT, Weber County, UT.
36420...................... Oklahoma City, OK, Canadian 0.8879
County, OK, Cleveland
County, OK, Grady County,
OK, Lincoln County, OK,
Logan County, OK, McClain
County, OK, Oklahoma
County, OK.
36500...................... Olympia, WA, Thurston 1.1601
County, WA.
36540...................... Omaha-Council Bluffs, NE- 0.9756
IA, Harrison County, IA,
Mills County, IA,
Pottawattamie County, IA,
Cass County, NE, Douglas
County, NE, Sarpy County,
NE, Saunders County, NE,
Washington County, NE.
36740...................... Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, 0.9063
FL, Lake County, FL,
Orange County, FL, Osceola
County, FL, Seminole
County, FL.
36780...................... Oshkosh-Neenah, WI, 0.9398
Winnebago County, WI.
36980...................... Owensboro, KY, Daviess 0.7790
County, KY, Hancock
County, KY, McLean County,
KY.
37100...................... Oxnard-Thousand Oaks- 1.3113
Ventura, CA, Ventura
County, CA.
37340...................... Palm Bay-Melbourne- 0.8790
Titusville, FL, Brevard
County, FL.
37380...................... Palm Coast, FL, Flagler 0.8174
County, FL.
37460...................... Panama City-Lynn Haven- 0.7876
Panama City Beach, FL, Bay
County, FL.
37620...................... Parkersburg-Marietta- 0.7569
Vienna, WV-OH, Washington
County, OH, Pleasants
County, WV, Wirt County,
WV, Wood County, WV.
37700...................... Pascagoula, MS, George 0.7542
County, MS, Jackson
County, MS.
37764...................... Peabody, MA, Essex County, 1.0553
MA.
37860...................... Pensacola-Ferry Pass-Brent, 0.7767
FL, Escambia County, FL,
Santa Rosa County, FL.
37900...................... Peoria, IL, Marshall 0.8434
County, IL, Peoria County,
IL, Stark County, IL,
Tazewell County, IL,
Woodford County, IL.
37964...................... Philadelphia, PA, Bucks 1.0849
County, PA, Chester
County, PA, Delaware
County, PA, Montgomery
County, PA, Philadelphia
County, PA.
38060...................... Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, 1.0465
AZ, Maricopa County, AZ,
Pinal County, AZ.
38220...................... Pine Bluff, AR, Cleveland 0.8069
County, AR, Jefferson
County, AR, Lincoln
County, AR.
[[Page 26087]]
38300...................... Pittsburgh, PA, Allegheny 0.8669
County, PA, Armstrong
County, PA, Beaver County,
PA, Butler County, PA,
Fayette County, PA,
Washington County, PA,
Westmoreland County, PA.
38340...................... Pittsfield, MA, Berkshire 1.0920
County, MA.
38540...................... Pocatello, ID, Bannock 0.9754
County, ID, Power County,
ID.
38660...................... Ponce, PR, Juana 0.4594
D[iacute]az Municipio, PR,
Ponce Municipio, PR,
Villalba Municipio, PR.
38860...................... Portland-South Portland- 0.9981
Biddeford, ME, Cumberland
County, ME, Sagadahoc
County, ME, York County,
ME.
38900...................... Portland-Vancouver- 1.1766
Hillsboro, OR-WA,
Clackamas County, OR,
Columbia County, OR,
Multnomah County, OR,
Washington County, OR,
Yamhill County, OR, Clark
County, WA, Skamania
County, WA.
38940...................... Port St. Lucie, FL, Martin 0.9352
County, FL, St. Lucie
County, FL.
39100...................... Poughkeepsie-Newburgh- 1.1544
Middletown, NY, Dutchess
County, NY, Orange County,
NY.
39140...................... Prescott, AZ, Yavapai 1.0161
County, AZ.
39300...................... Providence-New Bedford-Fall 1.0539
River, RI-MA, Bristol
County, MA, Bristol
County, RI, Kent County,
RI, Newport County, RI,
Providence County, RI,
Washington County, RI.
39340...................... Provo-Orem, UT, Juab 0.9461
County, UT, Utah County,
UT.
39380...................... Pueblo, CO, Pueblo County, 0.8215
CO.
39460...................... Punta Gorda, FL, Charlotte 0.8734
County, FL.
39540...................... Racine, WI, Racine County, 0.8903
WI.
39580...................... Raleigh-Cary, NC, Franklin 0.9304
County, NC, Johnston
County, NC, Wake County,
NC.
39660...................... Rapid City, SD, Meade 0.9568
County, SD, Pennington
County, SD.
39740...................... Reading, PA, Berks County, 0.9220
PA.
39820...................... Redding, CA, Shasta County, 1.4990
CA.
39900...................... Reno-Sparks, NV, Storey 1.0326
County, NV, Washoe County,
NV.
40060...................... Richmond, VA, Amelia 0.9723
County, VA, Caroline
County, VA, Charles City
County, VA, Chesterfield
County, VA, Cumberland
County, VA, Dinwiddie
County, VA, Goochland
County, VA, Hanover
County, VA, Henrico
County, VA, King and Queen
County, VA, King William
County, VA, Louisa County,
VA, New Kent County, VA,
Powhatan County, VA,
Prince George County, VA,
Sussex County, VA,
Colonial Heights City, VA,
Hopewell City, VA,
Petersburg City, VA,
Richmond City, VA.
40140...................... Riverside-San Bernardino- 1.1497
Ontario, CA, Riverside
County, CA, San Bernardino
County, CA.
40220...................... Roanoke, VA, Botetourt 0.9195
County, VA, Craig County,
VA, Franklin County, VA,
Roanoke County, VA,
Roanoke City, VA, Salem
City, VA.
40340...................... Rochester, MN, Dodge 1.1662
County, MN, Olmsted
County, MN, Wabasha
County, MN.
40380...................... Rochester, NY, Livingston 0.8749
County, NY, Monroe County,
NY, Ontario County, NY,
Orleans County, NY, Wayne
County, NY.
40420...................... Rockford, IL, Boone County, 0.9751
IL, Winnebago County, IL.
40484...................... Rockingham County-Strafford 1.0172
County, NH, Rockingham
County, NH, Strafford
County, NH.
40580...................... Rocky Mount, NC, Edgecombe 0.8750
County, NC, Nash County,
NC.
40660...................... Rome, GA, Floyd County, GA. 0.8924
40900...................... Sacramento-Arden-Arcade- 1.5498
Roseville, CA, El Dorado
County, CA, Placer County,
CA, Sacramento County, CA,
Yolo County, CA.
40980...................... Saginaw-Saginaw Township 0.8849
North, MI, Saginaw County,
MI.
41060...................... St. Cloud, MN, Benton 1.0658
County, MN, Stearns
County, MN.
41100...................... St. George, UT, Washington 0.9345
County, UT.
41140...................... St. Joseph, MO-KS, Doniphan 0.9834
County, KS, Andrew County,
MO, Buchanan County, MO,
DeKalb County, MO.
41180...................... St. Louis, MO-IL, Bond 0.9336
County, IL, Calhoun
County, IL, Clinton
County, IL, Jersey County,
IL, Macoupin County, IL,
Madison County, IL, Monroe
County, IL, St. Clair
County, IL, Crawford
County, MO, Franklin
County, MO, Jefferson
County, MO, Lincoln
County, MO, St. Charles
County, MO, St. Louis
County, MO, Warren County,
MO, Washington County, MO,
St. Louis City, MO.
41420...................... Salem, OR, Marion County, 1.1148
OR, Polk County, OR.
41500...................... Salinas, CA, Monterey 1.5820
County, CA.
41540...................... Salisbury, MD, Somerset 0.8948
County, MD, Wicomico
County, MD.
41620...................... Salt Lake City, UT, Salt 0.9350
Lake County, UT, Summit
County, UT, Tooele County,
UT.
41660...................... San Angelo, TX, Irion 0.8169
County, TX, Tom Green
County, TX.
41700...................... San Antonio-New Braunfels, 0.8911
TX, Atascosa County, TX,
Bandera County, TX, Bexar
County, TX, Comal County,
TX, Guadalupe County, TX,
Kendall County, TX, Medina
County, TX, Wilson County,
TX.
41740...................... San Diego-Carlsbad-San 1.2213
Marcos, CA, San Diego
County, CA.
41780...................... Sandusky, OH, Erie County, 0.7788
OH.
41884...................... San Francisco-San Mateo- 1.6743
Redwood City, CA, Marin
County, CA, San Francisco
County, CA, San Mateo
County, CA.
41900...................... San Germ[aacute]n-Cabo 0.4550
Rojo, PR, Cabo Rojo
Municipio, PR, Lajas
Municipio, PR, Sabana
Grande Municipio, PR, San
Germ[aacute]n Municipio,
PR.
41940...................... San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa 1.7086
Clara, CA, San Benito
County, CA, Santa Clara
County, CA.
[[Page 26088]]
41980...................... San Juan-Caguas-Guaynabo, 0.4356
PR, Aguas Buenas
Municipio, PR, Aibonito
Municipio, PR, Arecibo
Municipio, PR, Barceloneta
Municipio, PR,
Barranquitas Municipio,
PR, Bayam[oacute]n
Municipio, PR, Caguas
Municipio, PR, Camuy
Municipio, PR,
Can[oacute]vanas
Municipio, PR, Carolina
Municipio, PR,
Cata[ntilde]o Municipio,
PR, Cayey Municipio, PR,
Ciales Municipio, PR,
Cidra Municipio, PR,
Comer[iacute]o Municipio,
PR, Corozal Municipio, PR,
Dorado Municipio, PR,
Florida Municipio, PR,
Guaynabo Municipio, PR,
Gurabo Municipio, PR,
Hatillo Municipio, PR,
Humacao Municipio, PR,
Juncos Municipio, PR, Las
Piedras Municipio, PR,
Lo[iacute]za Municipio,
PR, Manat[iacute]
Municipio, PR, Maunabo
Municipio, PR, Morovis
Municipio, PR, Naguabo
Municipio, PR, Naranjito
Municipio, PR, Orocovis
Municipio, PR,
Quebradillas Municipio,
PR, R[iacute]o Grande
Municipio, PR, San Juan
Municipio, PR, San Lorenzo
Municipio, PR, Toa Alta
Municipio, PR, Toa Baja
Municipio, PR, Trujillo
Alto Municipio, PR, Vega
Alta Municipio, PR, Vega
Baja Municipio, PR,
Yabucoa Municipio, PR.
42020...................... San Luis Obispo-Paso 1.3036
Robles, CA, San Luis
Obispo County, CA.
42044...................... Santa Ana-Anaheim-Irvine, 1.2111
CA, Orange County, CA.
42060...................... Santa Barbara-Santa Maria- 1.2825
Goleta, CA, Santa Barbara
County, CA.
42100...................... Santa Cruz-Watsonville, CA, 1.7937
Santa Cruz County, CA.
42140...................... Santa Fe, NM, Santa Fe 1.0136
County, NM.
42220...................... Santa Rosa-Petaluma, CA, 1.6679
Sonoma County, CA.
42340...................... Savannah, GA, Bryan County, 0.8757
GA, Chatham County, GA,
Effingham County, GA.
42540...................... Scranton--Wilkes-Barre, PA, 0.8331
Lackawanna County, PA,
Luzerne County, PA,
Wyoming County, PA.
42644...................... Seattle-Bellevue-Everett, 1.1733
WA, King County, WA,
Snohomish County, WA.
42680...................... Sebastian-Vero Beach, FL, 0.8760
Indian River County, FL.
43100...................... Sheboygan, WI, Sheboygan 0.9203
County, WI.
43300...................... Sherman-Denison, TX, 0.8723
Grayson County, TX.
43340...................... Shreveport-Bossier City, 0.8262
LA, Bossier Parish, LA,
Caddo Parish, LA, De Soto
Parish, LA.
43580...................... Sioux City, IA-NE-SD, 0.9163
Woodbury County, IA,
Dakota County, NE, Dixon
County, NE, Union County,
SD.
43620...................... Sioux Falls, SD, Lincoln 0.8275
County, SD, McCook County,
SD, Minnehaha County, SD,
Turner County, SD.
43780...................... South Bend-Mishawaka, IN- 0.9425
MI, St. Joseph County, IN,
Cass County, MI.
43900...................... Spartanburg, SC, 0.8782
Spartanburg County, SC.
44060...................... Spokane, WA, Spokane 1.1174
County, WA.
44100...................... Springfield, IL, Menard 0.9165
County, IL, Sangamon
County, IL.
44140...................... Springfield, MA, Franklin 1.0383
County, MA, Hampden
County, MA, Hampshire
County, MA.
44180...................... Springfield, MO, Christian 0.8440
County, MO, Dallas County,
MO, Greene County, MO,
Polk County, MO, Webster
County, MO.
44220...................... Springfield, OH, Clark 0.8447
County, OH.
44300...................... State College, PA, Centre 0.9575
County, PA.
44600...................... Steubenville-Weirton, OH- 0.7598
WV, Jefferson County, OH,
Brooke County, WV, Hancock
County, WV.
44700...................... Stockton, CA, San Joaquin 1.3734
County, CA.
44940...................... Sumter, SC, Sumter County, 0.7594
SC.
45060...................... Syracuse, NY, Madison 0.9897
County, NY, Onondaga
County, NY, Oswego County,
NY.
45104...................... Tacoma, WA, Pierce County, 1.1574
WA.
45220...................... Tallahassee, FL, Gadsden 0.8391
County, FL, Jefferson
County, FL, Leon County,
FL, Wakulla County, FL.
45300...................... Tampa-St. Petersburg- 0.9075
Clearwater, FL, Hernando
County, FL, Hillsborough
County, FL, Pasco County,
FL, Pinellas County, FL.
45460...................... Terre Haute, IN, Clay 0.9706
County, IN, Sullivan
County, IN, Vermillion
County, IN, Vigo County,
IN.
45500...................... Texarkana, TX-Texarkana, 0.7428
AR, Miller County, AR,
Bowie County, TX.
45780...................... Toledo, OH, Fulton County, 0.9013
OH, Lucas County, OH,
Ottawa County, OH, Wood
County, OH.
45820...................... Topeka, KS, Jackson County, 0.8974
KS, Jefferson County, KS,
Osage County, KS, Shawnee
County, KS, Wabaunsee
County, KS.
45940...................... Trenton-Ewing, NJ, Mercer 1.0648
County, NJ.
46060...................... Tucson, AZ, Pima County, AZ 0.8953
46140...................... Tulsa, OK, Creek County, 0.8145
OK, Okmulgee County, OK,
Osage County, OK, Pawnee
County, OK, Rogers County,
OK, Tulsa County, OK,
Wagoner County, OK.
46220...................... Tuscaloosa, AL, Greene 0.8500
County, AL, Hale County,
AL, Tuscaloosa County, AL.
46340...................... Tyler, TX, Smith County, TX 0.8526
46540...................... Utica-Rome, NY, Herkimer 0.8769
County, NY, Oneida County,
NY.
46660...................... Valdosta, GA, Brooks 0.7527
County, GA, Echols County,
GA, Lanier County, GA,
Lowndes County, GA.
46700...................... Vallejo-Fairfield, CA, 1.6286
Solano County, CA.
47020...................... Victoria, TX, Calhoun 0.8949
County, TX, Goliad County,
TX, Victoria County, TX.
47220...................... Vineland-Millville- 1.0759
Bridgeton, NJ, Cumberland
County, NJ.
47260...................... Virginia Beach-Norfolk- 0.9121
Newport News, VA-NC,
Currituck County, NC,
Gloucester County, VA,
Isle of Wight County, VA,
James City County, VA,
Mathews County, VA, Surry
County, VA, York County,
VA, Chesapeake City, VA,
Hampton City, VA, Newport
News City, VA, Norfolk
City, VA, Poquoson City,
VA, Portsmouth City, VA,
Suffolk City, VA, Virginia
Beach City, VA,
Williamsburg City, VA.
47300...................... Visalia-Porterville, CA, 0.9947
Tulare County, CA.
47380...................... Waco, TX, McLennan County, 0.8213
TX.
47580...................... Warner Robins, GA, Houston 0.7732
County, GA.
47644...................... Warren-Troy-Farmington 0.9432
Hills, MI, Lapeer County,
MI, Livingston County, MI,
Macomb County, MI, Oakland
County, MI, St. Clair
County, MI.
[[Page 26089]]
47894...................... Washington-Arlington- 1.0533
Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV,
District of Columbia, DC,
Calvert County, MD,
Charles County, MD, Prince
George's County, MD,
Arlington County, VA,
Clarke County, VA, Fairfax
County, VA, Fauquier
County, VA, Loudoun
County, VA, Prince William
County, VA, Spotsylvania
County, VA, Stafford
County, VA, Warren County,
VA, Alexandria City, VA,
Fairfax City, VA, Falls
Church City, VA,
Fredericksburg City, VA,
Manassas City, VA,
Manassas Park City, VA,
Jefferson County, WV.
47940...................... Waterloo-Cedar Falls, IA, 0.8331
Black Hawk County, IA,
Bremer County, IA, Grundy
County, IA.
48140...................... Wausau, WI, Marathon 0.8802
County, WI.
48300...................... Wenatchee-East Wenatchee, 1.0109
WA, Chelan County, WA,
Douglas County, WA.
48424...................... West Palm Beach-Boca Raton- 0.9597
Boynton Beach, FL, Palm
Beach County, FL.
48540...................... Wheeling, WV-OH, Belmont 0.6673
County, OH, Marshall
County, WV, Ohio County,
WV.
48620...................... Wichita, KS, Butler County, 0.8674
KS, Harvey County, KS,
Sedgwick County, KS,
Sumner County, KS.
48660...................... Wichita Falls, TX, Archer 0.9537
County, TX, Clay County,
TX, Wichita County, TX.
48700...................... Williamsport, PA, Lycoming 0.8268
County, PA.
48864...................... Wilmington, DE-MD-NJ, New 1.0593
Castle County, DE, Cecil
County, MD, Salem County,
NJ.
48900...................... Wilmington, NC, Brunswick 0.8862
County, NC, New Hanover
County, NC, Pender County,
NC.
49020...................... Winchester, VA-WV, 0.9034
Frederick County, VA,
Winchester City, VA,
Hampshire County, WV.
49180...................... Winston-Salem, NC, Davie 0.8560
County, NC, Forsyth
County, NC, Stokes County,
NC, Yadkin County, NC.
49340...................... Worcester, MA, Worcester 1.1584
County, MA.
49420...................... Yakima, WA, Yakima County, 1.0355
WA.
49500...................... Yauco, PR, Gu[aacute]nica 0.3782
Municipio, PR, Guayanilla
Municipio, PR,
Pe[ntilde]uelas Municipio,
PR, Yauco Municipio, PR.
49620...................... York-Hanover, PA, York 0.9540
County, PA.
49660...................... Youngstown-Warren-Boardman, 0.8262
OH-PA, Mahoning County,
OH, Trumbull County, OH,
Mercer County, PA.
49700...................... Yuba City, CA, Sutter 1.1759
County, CA, Yuba County,
CA.
49740...................... Yuma, AZ, Yuma County, AZ.. 0.9674
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ At this time, there are no hospitals located in this urban
area on which to base a wage index.
Table 2--FY 2015 Wage Index Based on CBSA Labor Market Areas for Rural
Areas
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wage
State code Nonurban area index
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1.......................... Alabama......................... 0.7147
2.......................... Alaska.......................... 1.3662
3.......................... Arizona......................... 0.9166
4.......................... Arkansas........................ 0.7343
5.......................... California...................... 1.2788
6.......................... Colorado........................ 0.9802
7.......................... Connecticut..................... 1.1311
8.......................... Delaware........................ 1.0092
10......................... Florida......................... 0.7985
11......................... Georgia......................... 0.7459
12......................... Hawaii.......................... 1.0739
13......................... Idaho........................... 0.7605
14......................... Illinois........................ 0.8434
15......................... Indiana......................... 0.8513
16......................... Iowa............................ 0.8434
17......................... Kansas.......................... 0.7929
18......................... Kentucky........................ 0.7784
19......................... Louisiana....................... 0.7585
20......................... Maine........................... 0.8238
21......................... Maryland........................ 0.8696
22......................... Massachusetts................... 1.3614
23......................... Michigan........................ 0.8270
24......................... Minnesota....................... 0.9133
25......................... Mississippi..................... 0.7568
26......................... Missouri........................ 0.7775
27......................... Montana......................... 0.9098
28......................... Nebraska........................ 0.8855
29......................... Nevada.......................... 0.9781
30......................... New Hampshire................... 1.0339
31......................... New Jersey \1\.................. .........
32......................... New Mexico...................... 0.8922
33......................... New York........................ 0.8220
34......................... North Carolina.................. 0.8100
35......................... North Dakota.................... 0.6785
36......................... Ohio............................ 0.8377
37......................... Oklahoma........................ 0.7704
38......................... Oregon.......................... 0.9435
39......................... Pennsylvania.................... 0.8430
40......................... Puerto Rico \1\................. 0.4047
41......................... Rhode Island \1\................ .........
42......................... South Carolina.................. 0.8329
43......................... South Dakota.................... 0.8164
44......................... Tennessee....................... 0.7444
45......................... Texas........................... 0.7874
46......................... Utah............................ 0.8732
47......................... Vermont......................... 0.9740
48......................... Virgin Islands.................. 0.7060
49......................... Virginia........................ 0.7758
50......................... Washington...................... 1.0529
51......................... West Virginia................... 0.7407
52......................... Wisconsin....................... 0.8904
53......................... Wyoming......................... 0.9243
65......................... Guam............................ 0.9611
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ All counties within the State are classified as urban, with the
exception of Puerto Rico. Puerto Rico has areas designated as rural;
however, no short-term, acute care hospitals are located in the
area(s) for FY 2015. The Puerto Rico wage index is the same as FY
2014.
Addendum C
IPF Code First Table
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Code First Instructions ICD-10-CM (effective
Code October 1, 2014)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
F01.50................... Code first the underlying physiological
condition or sequelae of cerebrovascular
disease
F01.51................... Code first the underlying physiological
condition or sequelae of cerebrovascular
disease
F02.80................... Code first the underlying physiological
condition, such as: A52.17, A81.0-A81.9,
E75.00-E75.09, E75.10-E75.19, E75.4, E83.00-
E83.09, G10, G30.0-G30.9, G31.01, G31.09,
G31.83, G35, G40.001-G40.319, G40.401-
G40.919, G40.A01-G40.B19, M30.8 This list is
a translation of the ICD-9 codes rather than
a list of the conditions in the ICD-10
codebook code first note for category F02.
[[Page 26090]]
F02.81................... Code first the underlying physiological
condition, such as: A52.17, A81.0-A81.9,
E75.00-E75.09, E75.10-E75.19, E75.4, E83.00-
E83.09, G10, G30.0-G30.9, G31.01, G31.09,
G31.83, G35, G40.001-G40.319, G40.401-
G40.919, G40.A01-G40.B19, M30.8
F04...................... Code first the underlying physiological
condition
F05...................... Code first the underlying physiological
condition, such as: A52.17, A81.0-A81.9,
E75.00-E75.09, E75.10-E75.19, E75.4, E83.00-
E83.09, G10, G30.0-G30.9, G31.01, G31.09,
G31.83, G35, G40.001-G40.319, G40.401-
G40.919, G40.A01-G40.B19, M30.8
F06.0.................... Code first the underlying physiological
condition
F06.1.................... Code first the underlying physiological
condition
F06.2.................... Code first the underlying physiological
condition
F06.30................... Code first the underlying physiological
condition
F06.31................... Code first the underlying physiological
condition
F06.32................... Code first the underlying physiological
condition
F06.33................... Code first the underlying physiological
condition
F06.34................... Code first the underlying physiological
condition
F06.4.................... Code first the underlying physiological
condition
F06.8.................... Code first the underlying physiological
condition
F45.42................... Code also associated acute or chronic pain
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[FR Doc. 2014-10306 Filed 5-1-14; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P