Expanded Access to Non-VA Care Through the Veterans Choice Program, 65571-65587 [2014-26316]
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 214 / Wednesday, November 5, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
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TABLE 3—HOLDING SCENARIO—MANEUVERS—Continued
Configuration
CG
Trim speed
Maneuver
Landing flaps, gear down
Optional (aft range) .......
VREF (Minimum AFM speed) ...........
• Level, 40° banked turn,
• Bank-to-bank rapid roll, 30°–30°,
• Speed-brake extension, retraction (if approved),
• Deceleration to alpha-max (1 knot/second deceleration rate, wings level, power off).
TABLE 4—APPROACH/LANDING SCENARIO—MANEUVERS
Test
condition
Ice accretion
thickness (*)
Configuration
CG
Trim speed
Flaps up, gear up ..
Optional (aft range)
Holding ...................
No specific test.
1 .................
First 13 mm (0.5
inch).
Additional 6.3 mm
(0.25 in) (19 mm
(0.75 in) total).
First intermediate
flaps, gear up.
Optional (aft range)
Minimum AFM
speed.
2 .................
Additional 6.3 mm
(0.25 in) (25 mm
(1.00 in) total).
First intermediate
flaps, gear up (as
applicable).
Optional (aft range)
Minimum AFM
speed.
3 .................
Additional 6.3 mm
(0.25 in) (31 mm
(1.25 in) total).
Landing flaps, gear
down).
Optional (aft range)
VREF (Minimum
AFM speed).
• Level 40° banked turn,
• Bank-to-bank rapid roll, 30°–30°,
• Speed brake extension and retraction
(if approved),
• 1kt/s Level deceleration until the deceleration is stopped due to alphafloor triggering.
• Bank-to-bank rapid roll, 30°–30°,
• Speed brake extension and retraction
(if approved),
• 1kt/s Level deceleration until the deceleration is stopped due to alphafloor triggering.
• Bank-to-bank rapid roll, 30°–30°,
• Speed brake extension and retraction
(if approved),
• Bank to 40°
• Deceleration to alpha-max.
Maneuver
(*) The indicated thickness is that obtained on the parts of the unprotected airfoil with the highest collection efficiency.
8. In lieu of AC 25–25, 3. v., Failure
conditions, § 25.1309, the following guidance
is made for (2)(d):
(2) Acceptable Test Program
(d) In the configurations listed below, trim
the airplane at the minimum AFM speed.
Decrease speed to the minimum steady
achievable speed, plus 1 second and
demonstrate prompt recovery using the same
recovery maneuver as for the noncontaminated airplane. It is acceptable for
stall warning to be provided by a different
means (for example, by the behavior of the
airplane) for failure cases not considered
probable.
1 High lift devices retracted configuration:
Straight/Power Off.
2 Landing configuration: Straight/Power
Off.
Issued in Renton, Washington.
Michael Kaszycki,
Acting Manager, Transport Airplane
Directorate, Aircraft Certification Service.
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DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS
AFFAIRS
38 CFR Part 17
RIN 2900–AP24
Expanded Access to Non-VA Care
Through the Veterans Choice Program
Department of Veterans Affairs.
Interim final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA) amends its medical
regulations concerning its authority for
eligible veterans to receive care from
non-VA entities and providers. The
Veterans Access, Choice, and
Accountability Act of 2014 directs VA
to establish a program to furnish
hospital care and medical services
through non-VA health care providers to
veterans who either cannot be seen
within the wait-time goals of the
Veterans Health Administration or who
qualify based on their place of residence
(hereafter referred to as the Veterans
Choice Program, or the ‘‘Program’’). The
law also requires VA to publish an
interim final rule establishing this
program. This interim final rule defines
the parameters of the Veterans Choice
SUMMARY:
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Program, and clarifies aspects affecting
veterans and the non-VA providers who
will furnish hospital care and medical
services through the Veterans Choice
Program.
Effective Date: This rule is
effective on November 5, 2014.
Comment date: Comments must be
received on or before March 5, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Written comments may be
submitted by email through https://
www.regulations.gov; by mail or handdelivery to Director, Regulation Policy
and Management (02REG), Department
of Veterans Affairs, 810 Vermont
Avenue NW., Room 1068, Washington,
DC 20420; or by fax to (202) 273–9026.
(This is not a toll-free number.)
Comments should indicate that they are
submitted in response to ‘‘RIN 2900–
AP24, Expanded Access to Non-VA Care
through the Veterans Choice Program.’’
Copies of comments received will be
available for public inspection in the
Office of Regulation Policy and
Management, Room 1068, between the
hours of 8:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.
Monday through Friday (except
holidays). Please call (202) 461–4902 for
an appointment. (This is not a toll-free
number.) In addition, during the
DATES:
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comment period, comments may be
viewed online through the Federal
Docket Management System (FDMS) at
https://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kristin Cunningham, Director, Business
Policy, Chief Business Office (10NB),
Veterans Health Administration,
Department of Veterans Affairs, 810
Vermont Avenue NW., Washington, DC
20420, (202) 382–2508. (This is not a
toll-free number.)
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Executive Summary: Purpose of This
Regulatory Action: We are creating new
regulations to define and authorize the
Veterans Choice Program required by
section 101 of the Veterans Access,
Choice, and Accountability Act of 2014,
as modified by the Department of
Veterans Affairs Expiring Authorities
Act of 2014. Specifically, under this
Program, eligible veterans may elect to
receive hospital care and medical
services from eligible non-VA entities
and providers. The Program does not
modify VA’s previously existing
authorities to furnish care through nonVA providers, but instead enhances
VA’s options to furnish care that is
timely and available in veterans’
communities.
Summary of the Major Provisions of
this Regulatory Action: This interim
final rule—
• Modifies VA’s existing copayment
regulations to clarify that a copayment
of $0 is owed at the time of service for
eligible veterans receiving care or
services through the Program. VA will
determine the copayment amount after
the provider bills VA for the cost of
furnished care, and veterans may be
liable for some or all of the copayment
amount at that time. Copayment rates
will not exceed those currently
established in regulation.
• Establishes the scope of the
Program, including the types of care and
services that are covered. By law, the
Program is authorized to run until
August 7, 2017, or until the Veterans
Choice Fund established by the Act is
exhausted.
• Defines key terms used throughout
the regulation. These terms include
episode of care, which is limited to 60
days but includes follow-up
appointments and ancillary and
specialty services; health-care plan,
which includes any insurance plan or
contract or agreement other than
Medicare, Medicaid, or TRICARE;
residence, which is a legal residence or
personal domicile; VA medical facility,
which includes VA hospitals,
community-based outpatient clinics,
and VA health care centers; and the
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wait-time goals of the Veterans Health
Administration, which are to furnish
care within 30 days of either the date
that an appointment is deemed
clinically appropriate by a VA health
care provider, or if no such clinical
determination has been made, the date
a veteran prefers to be seen.
• Defines eligibility criteria for
veterans to participate in the Program.
In general, veterans must have been
enrolled in the VA health care system
on or before August 1, 2014, or must be
within 5 years of post-combat
separation. Veterans must also either be
unable to schedule an appointment
within the wait-time goals of the
Veterans Health Administration or
qualify based on their place of
residence. Veterans may qualify based
on their place of residence if they live
more than 40 miles from the closest VA
medical facility; if they reside in a state
without a VA medical facility that
provides hospital care, emergency
medical services, and surgical care rated
by the Secretary as having a surgical
complexity of standard, and they reside
more than 20 miles from a medical
facility that offers these services in
another state; or, with certain
exceptions, if they reside 40 miles or
less from a VA medical facility and
must travel by air, boat, or ferry, or face
an unusual or excessive burden in
traveling to a VA medical facility
because of geographical challenges.
• Explains the process for authorizing
non-VA care under the Program. Eligible
veterans may elect to receive VA or nonVA care. If they elect to receive non-VA
care, they may select the provider who
will furnish their care, if that provider
is eligible.
• Describes the effect of the Program
on other benefits and services available
to veterans. In general, the Program does
not affect a veteran’s eligibility for
hospital care or medical services under
the medical benefits package. VA will
pay for and fill prescriptions written by
non-VA providers under the Program to
the extent such prescriptions are
covered by the VA medical benefits
package. VA will reimburse veterans’
copayments or cost-shares required by
their other health-care plan to the extent
authorized by law, and VA will
calculate veterans’ VA copayments as
described above. VA will also reimburse
veterans for travel to receive care under
the Program if the veteran is otherwise
eligible to participate in VA’s
beneficiary travel program.
• Identifies the start date for eligible
veterans under the Program. VA is
phasing in implementation of the
Program to ensure it has the necessary
resources in place to furnish hospital
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care and medical services to eligible
veterans.
• Defines eligibility criteria for nonVA health care entities and providers to
participate in the Program. Eligible nonVA entities and providers must enter
into an agreement with VA to furnish
care, and must be participating in the
Medicare program, be a Federallyqualified health center, or be a part of
the Department of Defense or the Indian
Health Service. Non-VA entities or
providers must be accessible to the
veteran, meaning they must be able to
provide timely care, must have the
necessary qualifications to furnish the
care, and must be within a reasonable
distance of the veteran’s residence.
Eligible non-VA entities and providers
must maintain at least the same or
similar credentials and licenses as VA
providers, and must submit information
verifying compliance with this
requirement annually.
• Establishes payment rates and
methodologies for reimbursing
participating non-VA health care
entities and providers furnishing care
and services through the Program.
Except for in highly rural areas, VA may
not pay an eligible entity or provider
more than the applicable Medicare rate
under Title XVIII of the Social Security
Act for hospital care or medical services
furnished under the Program. When
there are no Medicare rates available,
VA will follow its usual methodology
for calculating payments to the extent
such methodology is consistent with the
Act. VA is a secondary payer for care
furnished for a nonservice-connected
disability if the veteran has another
health-care plan. VA will only pay for
authorized care where an actual
encounter with a health care provider
occurs. Veterans must seek
authorization from VA before receiving
care.
• Establishes a claims processing
system to receive requests for payment
and to provide accurate and timely
payments for claims received under the
Program. This system will be managed
by the Veterans Health Administration’s
Chief Business Office.
Costs and Benefits: As further detailed
in the Regulatory Impact Analysis,
which can be found as a supporting
document at https://www.regulations.gov
and is available on VA’s Web site at
https://www.va.gov/orpm/, by following
the link for ‘‘VA Regulations Published
From FY 2004 Through Fiscal Year to
Date,’’ the interim final rule will affect
eligible veterans and eligible non-VA
health care entities and providers.
Eligible veterans may elect to receive, at
VA expense, care from a non-VA
provider of their choice that is eligible
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and accessible to them. These providers
generally will either be able to provide
care sooner than VA could or are
located closer to the eligible veteran’s
residence than a VA medical facility.
The Program is authorized to run for 3
years, or until resources appropriated in
the Veterans Choice Fund are
exhausted, and is intended as a shortterm solution to expand access to care
while VA enhances its capacity to
furnish care in a timely and accessible
manner. Participating eligible non-VA
health care entities and providers will
receive payment for furnishing
authorized hospital care and medical
services to eligible veterans under the
Program.
General Discussion: On August 7,
2014, the President signed into law the
Veterans Access, Choice, and
Accountability Act of 2014 (‘‘the Act,’’
Public Law 113–146, 128 Stat. 1754).
Further technical revisions to the Act
were made on September 26, 2014,
when the President signed into law the
Department of Veterans Affairs Expiring
Authorities Act of 2014 (Pub. L. 113–
175, 128 Stat. 1901, 1906). Section 101
of the Act creates the Veterans Choice
Program (‘‘the Program’’). Section 101
requires the Secretary to furnish
hospital care and medical services to
certain eligible veterans through
agreements with identified eligible
entities or providers. Sec. 101(a)(1)(A),
Public Law 113–146, 128 Stat. 1754.
Delivery of such care through non-VA
health care providers will be at the
election of eligible veterans. This
interim final rulemaking primarily
restates these mandates and
prescriptions in a regulatory framework,
and provides guidance where Congress’
instructions were not clearly executable
on the face of the law. Congress directed
VA to publish interim final regulations
concerning this program within 90 days
of enactment. Sec. 101(n), Public Law
113–146, 128 Stat. 1754. This
rulemaking complies with that mandate.
Nothing in this rulemaking modifies
VA’s existing authority to furnish nonVA care, such as under 38 U.S.C. 1703,
1725, 1728, 8111, or 8153. The
requirements of those statutes and their
implementing regulations continue to
apply, and VA will use those authorities
when appropriate. Any veteran
currently receiving non-VA care who is
eligible for the Program will be provided
the opportunity to elect to participate in
the Program or to continue being
provided care under VA’s other
authorities. As discussed below, there
are some differences between the
Program and other non-VA care.
VA is making changes to several other
regulations as part of this rulemaking.
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Specifically, VA is amending 38 CFR
17.108, 17.110, and 17.111 concerning
copayment responsibilities for hospital
care and medical services. Section 101(j)
of the Act requires an eligible veteran to
pay a copayment at the time of the
appointment to the non-VA provider if
such veteran would be required to pay
a copayment for the receipt of hospital
care or medical services at a VA medical
facility. Under current practice, when
veterans receive non-VA care, VA
copayment obligations are not
calculated until the end of the billing
process. Consistent with this practice,
VA is exercising its authority to
establish copayment rates under 38
U.S.C. 1710(f) to revise its copayment
regulations at §§ 17.108, 17.110, and
17.111 to state that veterans who receive
hospital care and medical services
under the Program are subject to a VA
copayment of $0 at the time of service,
and that their copayment liability will
be determined after the authorized care
is furnished, but will be no greater than
the amounts already specified in
§§ 17.108, 17.110, or 17.111.
Currently, no veterans are charged a
VA copayment at the time of their
appointment. This is true whether such
care is furnished by a VA or non-VA
provider. Under current practice, if a
veteran has other health insurance, any
payment by the other health insurance
is first applied against the veteran’s VA
copayment liability, and if the third
party payment is equal to or greater than
the veteran’s copayment liability, the
veteran owes no VA copayment. Even if
a veteran does not have other health
insurance, VA does not bill the veteran
for the applicable copayment until after
the appointment. This VA practice has
been followed for years but has never
been prescribed in regulation.
For many veterans with other healthcare plans, the experience under the
Program will be the same as they would
experience receiving non-VA care under
another authority. Payments made by
the veteran’s health-care plan are
generally enough to extinguish the VA
copayment liability in full, and to the
extent this happens under the Program,
these veterans would owe no VA
copayment. If the other health-care plan
does not pay enough to cover the
amount of the VA copayment, the
veteran will be liable for the balance.
VA is making changes to §§ 17.108,
17.110, and 17.111 to make the veteran’s
experience under the Program more like
the veteran’s experience in VA facilities
and under other non-VA care authorities
described above. Specifically, VA is
establishing the copayment amount
under these authorities at $0 at the time
of service and, consistent with
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§§ 17.108, 17.110, and 17.111, as
amended, VA will notify non-VA
providers that the VA copayment
amount required at the time of service
is $0. This ensures that VA’s
implementation of section 101(j), which
states that non-VA entities and
providers will collect at the time of
furnishing care or services any
copayment that would be required for
the receipt of the care or services at a
medical facility of the Department, is
consistent with VA practice under
existing non-VA care authorities and
addresses a number of practical
challenges, as described below.
While VA will authorize care in
advance of an appointment, VA may not
be able to determine the veteran’s
copayment liability until after VA
receives a report of what specific
services were furnished by the non-VA
provider. For care provided by VA,
there are specific copayment rates for
different types of appointments.
However, this coding practice is not
necessarily consistent with the practices
used by other health care providers.
Thus, VA cannot accurately assess a
veteran’s potential copayment liability
before care is actually furnished by the
non-VA provider. When VA has
received a report of what services were
provided, it can then determine the
proper copayment amounts for those
services in accordance with §§ 17.108,
17.110, and 17.111. Establishing the
copayment amount at $0 at the time of
services will ensure that VA is
consistently determining the copayment
responsibilities for eligible veterans.
This is also consistent with section
101(j)(1) of the Act, which provides that
the Secretary must require a copayment
from eligible veterans ‘‘only if such
eligible veteran would be required to
pay a copayment for the receipt of such
care or services at a medical facility of
the Department.’’ These changes to
§§ 17.108, 17.110, and 17.111 will
ensure that veterans are only liable for
copayments they would have paid if the
care or services had been provided in a
VA facility or under the standard nonVA care program. We believe it is better
to ensure that veterans are liable only
for an appropriate copayment amount
that is determined after the appointment
than to institute a blanket requirement
at the point of service that may result in
either additional billing to the veteran
or reimbursement to the veteran.
Billing the veteran at the end of the
billing process is also consistent with
VA’s practice under existing non-VA
care authorities. The difficulty in
determining the appropriate copayment
is present in the standard non-VA care
program, but is not an issue because
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when VA uses its existing authorities to
pay for non-VA care, VA is the primary
payer and can determine liabilities after
the care is furnished. Thus, VA has
resolved this issue through the standard
non-VA care program administratively
by calculating the copayment at the end
of the billing process. This is a more
efficient mechanism than assigning a
copayment upfront that could be wrong
and later determining that either
reimbursement or further collections are
needed.
VA is modifying § 17.108(b)(1) to note
that copayments will be determined as
set forth in paragraphs (b)(2), (b)(3), and
a new (b)(4) of that section. The new
paragraph (b)(4) provides that under the
Program, the copayment amount is $0 at
the time of service, and that the
copayment liability will be determined
at the end of the billing process. VA is
revising § 17.108(c)(1) to include an
exception as set forth in a new (c)(4) of
that section. VA is also making a minor
technical adjustment to paragraphs
(b)(1) and (c)(1) to include care pursuant
to a contract, provider agreement, or
sharing agreement consistent with the
authorized forms of agreement under
the Act. The new paragraph (c)(4)
includes the same language as the new
paragraph (b)(4). VA also is modifying
§§ 17.110(b) and 17.111(b) in a similar
way. The changes to § 17.110 provide
that veterans will owe a copayment of
$0 at the time they fill a prescription,
and the changes to § 17.111 read the
same as those in § 17.108. VA notes that
under the Program, only services that
are considered hospital care and
medical services may be furnished.
Section 17.111 authorizes both
institutional and non-institutional care,
but only non-institutional care is
considered part of hospital care or
medical services under § 17.38(a)(1)(xi).
Section 17.1500 Purpose and Scope
Section 17.1500 states the purpose
and scope of the Program authorized by
section 101 of the Act. The Program is
funded with $10 billion in appropriated
resources in the Veterans Choice Fund
through section 802 of the Act. The
Program is authorized to continue until
the date the Veterans Choice Fund is
exhausted or until August 7, 2017,
whichever occurs first. Sec. 101(p),
Public Law 113–146, 128 Stat. 1754.
Section 17.1500(a) cites to the Act but
does not identify specifically the
alternate termination events specified in
the Act. When one of those events
occurs, VA will no longer have
authority to operate this Program.
Absent further amendments to the Act,
the Program will end upon the
occurrence of one of these events, at
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which time VA will issue a direct final
rule to remove this regulation from the
Code of Federal Regulations.
Section 17.1500(b) defines the scope
of the Program as authorizing non-VA
hospital care and medical services to
eligible veterans through agreements
with eligible entities or providers. This
is consistent with section 101(a)(1)(A) of
the Act. Eligible veterans are described
in § 17.1510, and eligible entities or
providers are described in § 17.1530.
The Act authorizes VA to provide
hospital care and medical services to
eligible veterans. VA has defined the
terms hospital care and medical services
through regulation at § 17.38, which
establishes the medical benefits
package. Any care that is covered by the
medical benefits package, including
prescriptions such as prescription
medications or prosthetic devices, may
be furnished through the Program, but
any services for which there are specific
eligibility criteria that must be met to
receive these services (such as dental
care) are still subject to those eligibility
standards.
Section 17.1505 Definitions
Section 17.1505 defines key terms for
the Program.
The term ‘‘appointment’’ is defined in
these regulations as an authorized and
scheduled encounter with a health care
provider for the delivery of hospital care
or medical services. The definition
excludes unscheduled visits and
emergency room visits because they are
not scheduled encounters and cannot be
authorized in advance. The purpose of
the Program is to offer veterans the
option to receive non-VA care if they
cannot obtain a scheduled visit from a
VA provider in a timely or
geographically convenient manner.
There is no indication in the law that it
was intended to authorize unscheduled
non-VA care. Emergency care would,
however, continue to be reimbursed by
VA consistent with 38 CFR 17.120–132
and 17.1000–1008. In short, if a veteran
visits a non-VA health care provider
without seeking authorization from VA
to schedule such an appointment, VA
cannot use Program funds to pay for the
services delivered and cannot provide
reimbursement after the fact.
‘‘Attempt to schedule’’ is defined as
contact with a VA scheduler or VA
health care provider in which a stated
request for an appointment is made. The
contact must be with a VA employee
who is responsible for scheduling
appointments or with a VA health care
provider. This limitation will ensure
that an attempt to schedule only occurs
when an individual contacts someone
who has the capacity to actually
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schedule an appointment or, in the case
of a VA health care provider, ensure that
a scheduler is made aware of the need
for an appointment. There must also be
a statement by the veteran that he or she
is requesting an appointment. If a
veteran does not request an
appointment, he or she would not have
attempted to schedule an appointment.
While VA will apply this standard
liberally, a veteran must indicate a
desire to be seen by a VA health care
provider. The requirement of an attempt
to schedule an appointment is
established under section 101(b)(2)(A)
of the Act as a prerequisite for certain
veteran eligibility under the Program;
that section states that veterans are
eligible under this Program if they
attempt or have attempted to schedule
an appointment with VA but were
unable to do so within the wait-time
goals of the Veterans Health
Administration.
The term ‘‘episode of care’’ is defined
to mean a necessary course of treatment,
including follow-up appointments and
ancillary and specialty services, that
lasts no longer than 60 days from the
date of the first appointment with a nonVA health care provider under the
Program. Section 101(h) of the Act states
that VA must ensure that an eligible
veteran receives hospital care or
medical services, including follow up
care, ‘‘for a period not exceeding 60
days.’’ If an eligible veteran requires
care beyond 60 days, and either the
veteran continues to qualify for the
Program based on residence or if VA
cannot schedule an appointment with
the veteran within the wait-time goals of
the Veterans Health Administration, we
will contact the veteran before the 60
days have expired to determine if the
veteran would like to continue receiving
care from the non-VA health care
provider. If the veteran does, VA will
issue a new authorization for up to
another 60 days.
A ‘‘health-care plan’’ has the same
definition as provided in section
101(e)(4) of the Act. The Act defines a
health-care plan as an insurance policy
or contract, medical or hospital service
agreement not administered by VA,
under which health services for
individuals are provided, or the
expenses of such services are paid,
except that it does not include any such
policy, contract, agreement, or similar
arrangement under the Medicare or
Medicaid programs or TRICARE.
A ‘‘residence’’ is defined as a legal
residence or personal domicile. A
residence cannot be a post office box or
non-residential point of delivery,
because the address of the place a
veteran resides is used to determine
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eligibility under §§ 17.1510(b)(2)–(4).
Sections 101(b)(2)(B)–(D) of the Act
define eligibility based upon travel
distance between a person’s residence
and a VA medical facility, and the
regulatory definition recognizes that a
post office box or other non-residential
point of delivery could not be used to
assess that eligibility criterion.
However, we have added that a
residence may be ‘‘seasonal,’’ and
consequently, a veteran may maintain
more than one residence, but only one
residence at a time. Therefore, if a
veteran lives in more than one location
during a year, the veteran’s residence is
the residence or domicile where the
person is staying at the time the veteran
wants to receive hospital care or
medical services through the Program.
For example, if a veteran lived in New
Hampshire during the summer months
but in Florida during the winter months,
and the veteran was seeking care in
January, the veteran’s residence in
Florida would be used as the basis for
determining his or her eligibility.
Allowing for seasonal or multiple
residences recognizes Congressional
intent to reach, through the Program,
those veterans who have geographical
challenges in reaching a VA medical
facility, without authorizing the use of
Program funds for individuals who in
fact are living near a VA medical facility
at the time that they need an
appointment. Homeless veterans
currently provide an address to VA that
is recorded in the Veterans Health
Information Systems and Technology
Architecture (VistA); this address is
used for other VHA benefits and may be
applied to veterans seeking to
participate in the Program as well. For
example, any homeless veteran who is
residing in a place supported by a
Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD)-VA Supportive
Housing (VASH) voucher can list that
address, and any veteran using one of
our community-based programs like the
Homeless Grant and Per Diem or Health
Care for Homeless Veterans programs
can supply the address of the service
provider.
The term ‘‘schedule’’ is defined to
mean identifying and confirming a date,
time, location, and entity or health care
provider for an appointment, as the term
appointment has been previously
defined.
A ‘‘VA medical facility’’ is defined as
a VA hospital, a VA community-based
outpatient clinic (CBOC), or a VA health
care center. We have included these
types of VA facilities because they
provide medical care or hospital
services that may be provided as part of
the Program. This is consistent with the
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phrase ‘‘medical facility of the
Department,’’ as used in the Act in
section 101(b)(2)(B) and elsewhere. Vet
Centers, or Readjustment Counseling
Service Centers, are not considered a
VA medical facility because they do not
furnish hospital care or medical
services.
The term ‘‘wait-time goals of the
Veterans Health Administration’’ is
defined to mean, unless changed by
further notice in the Federal Register, a
date that is not more than 30 days from
either the date that an appointment is
deemed clinically appropriate by a VA
health care provider, or if no such
clinical determination has been made,
the date a veteran prefers to be seen by
a health care provider capable of
furnishing the hospital care or medical
services required by the veteran. In the
event a VA health care provider
identifies a time range when care must
be provided (e.g., within the next 2
months), VA will use the last clinically
appropriate date for determining
whether or not such care is timely.
Section 101(s)(1) of the Act defines the
wait-time goals of the Veterans Health
Administration as being ‘‘not more than
30 days from the date on which a
veteran requests an appointment for
hospital care or medical services from
[VA].’’ However, section 101(s)(2)
authorizes VA to identify a different
wait-time goal by submitting a report to
Congress within 60 days of the
enactment of the Act, and publishing
that goal in the Federal Register and on
a public Web site. On October 3, 2014,
VA exercised this option and submitted
a report to Congress; on October 17,
2014, VA published in the Federal
Register, and posted notice on its Web
site that it is adopting the definition
contained in this regulation. 79 FR
65219. This definition ensures that
clinical considerations and the
preferences of the veteran are taken into
account. In some cases, the date that a
veteran prefers to be seen for an
appointment may be the date on which
the veteran contacts VA for an
appointment. In other situations,
though, the date the veteran prefers to
receive hospital care or medical services
may not be for some time, such as if the
veteran is traveling, or if the veteran
would prefer to delay care. Defining
‘‘wait-time goals of the Veterans Health
Administration’’ to include a
determination that an appointment is
clinically appropriate acknowledges the
primary reason for the appointment—to
provide clinically appropriate care. For
example, a VA health care provider may
determine that a veteran needs to be
seen, but that such a visit would not be
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clinically useful until a certain time has
passed (e.g., 2 months from the current
appointment). This is a common
scenario in the delivery of health care
across the industry. In such a scenario,
the wait-time goals of the Veterans
Health Administration will be within 30
days of the date identified by a VA
health care provider as clinically
appropriate, even if the veteran requests
to schedule the appointment
immediately. In the event a VA health
care provider identifies a time range
when care must be provided (e.g.,
within the next 2 months), VA will use
the last clinically appropriate date for
determining whether or not such care is
timely. For example, if a provider
determines that a Veteran should be
seen in October, VA will use October 31
as the clinically appropriate date. If no
such clinical determination has been
made, utilizing the preferred date of an
appointment, rather than the date the
veteran contacted VA, better reflects
veterans’ preferences for when they
want to receive care. A veteran can
specify any date, including the date the
veteran contacts VA, as the preferred
date for an appointment. The 30-day
period established by this standard
would begin on that preferred date.
VA believes that it may be necessary
to make further revisions to its
standards for the Program in the future.
Specific metrics may evolve over time,
and the prescribed methods of
measurement today may not provide a
full picture of veterans’ experience in
accessing health care in the future. VA
has contracted with the Institute of
Medicine to independently identify
metrics that may be the basis for further
changes to this standard. VA will
carefully evaluate any recommendations
from the Institute of Medicine or other
sources and determine the most
appropriate means of addressing or
changing the standard, if warranted.
Any such changes to the goals will be
communicated through a report to
Congress, an update to VA’s Web site,
and a publication in the Federal
Register.
Section 17.1510 Eligible Veterans
VA will determine a veteran’s
eligibility to elect to receive non-VA
care through the Program using a twostep process, consistent with the Act’s
structure and the requirements in
section 101(b).
First, the veteran must have enrolled
in the VA health care system under 38
CFR 17.36 on or before August 1, 2014,
or the veteran must be eligible for
hospital care and medical services
under 38 U.S.C. 1710(e)(1)(D) and be a
veteran described in 38 U.S.C.
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1710(e)(3). These requirements are
consistent with the standards
established in sections 101(b)(1)(A)–(B)
of the Act, and are included in
§§ 17.1510(a)(1)–(2). If a veteran meets
either of these requirements, the veteran
then must also meet a criterion
described in § 17.1510(b), and must
provide the information required by
§ 17.1510(d).
Under § 17.1510(b)(1), a veteran is
eligible if the veteran attempts, or has
attempted, to schedule an appointment
with a VA health care provider, but VA
has been unable to schedule an
appointment for the veteran within the
wait-time goals of the Veterans Health
Administration. As these terms are
defined, this would mean that VA is
unable to identify a particular date,
time, location, and entity or health care
provider within 30 days of the date that
the appointment was deemed clinically
necessary by a VA health care provider,
or, if no such clinical determination has
been made, the date that a veteran
prefers to be seen by a health care
provider capable of furnishing the
hospital care or medical services
required by the veteran. This is
consistent with the requirements in the
Act at section 101(b)(2)(A).
Under § 17.1510(b)(2), a veteran is
eligible if the veteran resides more than
40 miles from the VA medical facility
that is closest to the veteran’s residence.
This standard considers the distance
between a veteran’s residence, as
defined in § 17.1505, and any VA
medical facility, even if that facility
cannot provide the care that the veteran
requires. For example, if a veteran needs
cardiac care and lives 10 miles from a
VA community-based outpatient clinic
(CBOC) that only offers primary care
and mental health care, but 50 miles
from a VA medical facility that offers
cardiac care, the veteran would not be
eligible based on his or her proximity to
the CBOC. This interpretation is
consistent with the plain language of the
Act, which refers only to ‘‘the medical
facility of the Department that is closest
to the residence of the veteran,’’ without
allowing VA to consider whether the
facility can actually provide the care
needed by the veteran. Sec. 101(b)(2)(B),
Public Law 113–146, 128 Stat. 1754.
Additionally, the Conference Report
accompanying the legislation states that
veterans are eligible if they live ‘‘within
40 miles of a medical facility,’’ again
without regard to such facility’s ability
to provide the required care. H.R. Rpt.
113–564, p. 55. The use of the general
article ‘‘a’’ demonstrates that Congress
intended for this to refer to any facility,
rather than to a specific facility. Nothing
in the Act modifies or precludes VA
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from using its existing statutory
authorities to furnish non-VA care, such
as under 38 U.S.C. 1703, 1725, 1728,
8111, or 8153. Those statutes and their
implementing regulations continue to
apply, and VA will use those authorities
as appropriate to ensure that veterans
are able to access care.
Under § 17.1510(b)(3), a veteran is
eligible if the veteran’s residence is in
a state without a full-service (meaning
that it provides, on its own and not
through a joint venture, hospital care,
emergency medical services, and
surgical care having a surgical
complexity of standard) VA medical
facility and the veteran lives more than
20 miles from such a facility. This
language is consistent with the
requirements in section 101(b)(2)(C) of
the Act. As of the publication of this
rule, veterans in three states would
qualify under this standard: Alaska,
Hawaii, and New Hampshire. No
veteran residing in Alaska or Hawaii
lives within 20 miles of a full-service
VA medical facility in another state, but
some veterans residing in New
Hampshire do live within 20 miles of a
full-service VA medical facility that is
located in a bordering state. We note
that this specific, special eligibility for
veterans in states without full-service
VA medical facilities further supports
our view that the Act requires VA to
find veterans ineligible who live within
40 miles of a VA medical facility, even
if such facility cannot provide the
specific care required. When read as a
whole, the Act specifically addresses
the ability of a facility to provide care
only in section 101(b)(2)(C). We believe
that, in addition to the arguments
presented earlier in this rulemaking, the
legislative specificity in section
101(b)(2)(C) underscores the absence of
reference to this issue in section
101(b)(2)(B) of the Act.
As noted previously when discussing
the definition of residence, a veteran’s
residence may change throughout the
year but the veteran’s residence at the
time he or she wants to schedule an
appointment will determine his or her
eligibility under this paragraph. In the
prior example we presented, a veteran
who resides in New Hampshire in the
summer and in Florida in the winter
may be eligible under this paragraph
during the summer months, but not
during the winter.
We also note that the term ‘‘surgical
complexity of standard,’’ used in
§ 17.1510(b)(3)(i) and section
101(b)(2)(C)(i)(III) of the Act, is a term
of art coined by VA to describe the
operative complexity of each VA
medical facility with an inpatient
surgical program. The designation of a
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VA medical facility’s surgical
complexity as ‘‘standard’’ is used by VA
to establish infrastructure requirements
and compliance with VA quality
standards. A ‘‘standard’’ designation
refers to a VA facility that has the
appropriate infrastructure to provide at
least the most basic forms of surgical
care. VA has published a list of VA
medical facilities complying with at
least a standard level of surgical care on
the following Web site: www.va.gov/
health/surgery. VA will post notice on
this Web site of any changes to this list
of facilities.
Finally, under paragraph (b)(4) of this
section, a veteran who resides in a
location other than one in Guam,
American Samoa, or the Republic of the
Philippines that is 40 miles or less from
a VA medical facility can be eligible
under two scenarios. First, if the veteran
must travel by air, boat, or ferry to reach
such a VA medical facility, the veteran
is eligible for non-VA care under the
Program. This is consistent with the text
in sections 101(b)(2)(D)(i) and (ii)(I) of
the Act. Second, veterans who reside 40
miles or less from a VA medical facility
are eligible if they face an unusual or
excessive burden in accessing such a
facility due to geographical challenges.
Sec. 101(b)(2)(D)(ii)(II), Public Law 113–
146, 128 Stat. 1754. VA has interpreted
this standard through regulation so that
if the veteran’s travel to the nearest VA
medical facility is impeded by the
presence of a body of water (including
moving and still water) or a geologic
formation that cannot be crossed by
road, the veteran is eligible for non-VA
care under the Program. VA believes
that the emphasis on a geographical
challenge as referring only to naturally
occurring permanent or semi-permanent
conditions is consistent with the plain
meaning of the Act. While VA is able to
take into account other factors, such as
traffic or weather conditions or the
veteran’s health, when making
determinations regarding beneficiary
travel benefits provided under 38 CFR
part 70, the Act does not provide us the
authority to apply these or similar
factors in operating the Program because
it specifically limits eligibility to
geographical challenges without
allowing for environmental or
circumstantial challenges.
Under paragraph (c) of this section, a
veteran who changes his or her
residence and is participating in the
Choice Program must update VA about
the change within 60 days. A veteran’s
residence may be the basis for his or her
eligibility for the Program under
paragraphs (b)(2)–(b)(4) of this section,
so it is essential that VA have current
and accurate information to make an
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eligibility determination. Veterans who
are eligible based on being unable to be
seen within the wait-time goals of the
Veterans Health Administration must
also provide this information so VA can
determine if they would become eligible
based on residence. It is also important
that VA have accurate information about
a veteran’s residence to ensure we can
contact a veteran regarding any issues
and for billing purposes. We believe that
60 days is an appropriate period of time,
as it will allow veterans sufficient
opportunity to submit this information
while ensuring that VA has the ability
to make accurate determinations about
eligibility for the Program.
In addition to meeting the eligibility
criteria under paragraphs (a) and (b) of
this section, a veteran must also provide
to VA information about any health-care
plan under which the veteran is
covered. Section 17.1510(d) requires
that a veteran provide this information
to be able to receive authorized non-VA
care through the Program. This is
consistent with the requirement in the
Act in section 101(e)(1), which states
that before a veteran can receive
hospital care or medical services under
the Program, the veteran must provide
information about other health
insurance. Section 17.1510(d) requires a
veteran to submit information and
updated information to VA within 60
days if the veteran changes health-care
plans. We believe that 60 days is an
appropriate period of time, as it will
allow veterans sufficient time to submit
this information while ensuring that VA
has the ability to provide accurate
information to eligible entities and
providers under the Program.
Under § 17.1510(e), VA will calculate
distance between a veteran’s residence
and the nearest VA medical facility
using a straight-line distance, rather
than the driving distance. The
Conference Report accompanying the
final bill provides strong support for
this interpretation, as it states, ‘‘In
calculating the distance from a nearest
VA medical facility, it is the Conferees’
expectation that VA will use geodesic
distance, or the shortest distance
between two points.’’ H.R. Rpt. 113–
564, p. 55. The shortest distance
between two points is a straight line, so
a veteran who is outside of a 40 mile
radius of a VA medical facility would be
eligible under this provision. VA
understands that actual travel distances
may be longer than 40 miles for some
veterans who reside within the 40 mile
radius based on the layout of roads or
other factors, and to the extent that such
travel is due to geographic challenges,
these veterans may be eligible for the
Program under § 17.1510(b)(4). These
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veterans may also be eligible to receive
non-VA care under another authority.
Section 17.1515 Authorizing Non-VA
Care
Section 17.1515 describes the process
and requirements for authorizing nonVA care under this Program.
Paragraph (a) states that eligible
veterans may choose between
scheduling an appointment with a VA
health care provider, being placed on an
electronic waiting list for a VA
appointment, or receiving authorized
non-VA hospital care or medical
services from an eligible entity or
provider. Section 101(c) of the Act
provides that eligible veterans can make
an election to have the Secretary
schedule an appointment for the veteran
with a VA health care provider, place
him or her on an electronic waiting list,
or authorize non-VA care. If a veteran
elects to receive VA care and VA is able
to schedule an appointment for the
veteran, even if such an appointment is
outside of the wait-time goals of the
Veterans Health Administration or is at
a facility more than 40 miles from the
veteran’s residence, we will do so.
Otherwise, we will place a veteran who
elects to receive VA care on an
electronic waiting list. We will continue
to track and report the average length of
time an individual must wait for an
appointment, disaggregated by medical
facility and type of care or services
needed. We will provide this facilitylevel information at the time the veteran
makes his or her choice so the veteran
can make an informed election about
whether to receive hospital care or
medical services from a VA or non-VA
health care provider. Sections
101(c)(1)(A) and (c)(2) require VA to
schedule an appointment for a veteran
or place the veteran on an electronic
waiting list, which must be available to
determine the place of an eligible
veteran on the waiting list and to
determine the average length of time an
individual spends on a waiting list,
disaggregated by medical facility and
type of care or services needed. The Act
clearly specifies that this information
must be provided ‘‘for purposes of
allowing such eligible veteran to make
an informed election.’’ Sec. 101(c)(2)(B),
Public Law 113–146, 128 Stat. 1754.
Additionally, if the veteran elects to
receive care from a non-VA health care
provider, VA will notify the veteran by
the most effective means available, as
identified by the veteran, of the scope of
the authorization for care, thereby
complying with the requirements of
section 101(c)(1)(B)(ii).
Section 17.1515(b) states that eligible
veterans may specify a particular non-
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65577
VA entity or health care provider from
whom they wish to receive care, if the
entity or health care provider is eligible
under § 17.1530. Section 101(a)(2) of the
Act establishes that veterans who are
eligible for the Program based upon the
wait-time standard have the right to
select the specific health care provider
they wish to see, so long as the provider
is eligible under the Act and under
§ 17.1530. The Act does not address
whether or not veterans who are eligible
based upon residence may select a
particular non-VA provider. VA is
filling this gap in the law by providing
these veterans the same opportunity to
select a particular provider as veterans
eligible based upon the wait-time
standard. Eligible veterans may
nevertheless choose not to make such a
selection, and in such a situation, those
veterans will be referred to an eligible
entity or provider identified by VA.
Section 17.1520 Effect on Other
Provisions
Section 17.1520 addresses the effect
of the Program on other provisions and
programs administered by VA.
Paragraph (a) of this section provides
that, generally, eligibility under the
Program does not affect a veteran’s
eligibility for hospital care or medical
services under the medical benefits
package or other benefits addressed in
part 17. If particular services, such as
health care for newborns of veterans
under 38 CFR 17.38(a)(xiv) and dental
benefits under §§ 17.160–17.169, have
unique eligibility standards, only
veterans who are eligible under
§ 17.1510 and meet the eligibility
standards for those services can elect to
receive non-VA care for them. Nothing
in the Act or these regulations waives
the eligibility requirements established
in other statutes or regulations.
The regulation also provides that
notwithstanding any other provision of
this part, VA will cover prescription
medications and other prescriptions
made while furnishing hospital care or
medical services through the Program.
This is consistent with section
101(a)(1)(A) of the Act, which requires
VA to furnish medical services to
eligible veterans under the Program, and
with 38 U.S.C. 1710. VA fills emergency
prescriptions written by non-VA health
care providers, but does not normally
fill prescriptions written by non-VA
providers when veterans receive
authorized non-VA care. However, we
interpret the requirement in section 101
to furnish hospital care and medical
services to include these benefits. The
terms ‘‘hospital care’’ and ‘‘medical
services’’ are defined through the
medical benefits package at 38 CFR
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17.38, which specifically includes
prescription drugs, including over-thecounter drugs and medical and surgical
supplies available under the VA
national formulary system. 38 CFR
17.38(a)(1)(iii). Veterans receiving care
under the Program are eligible because
they either could not be seen within the
wait-time goals of the Veterans Health
Administration or because of their place
of residence. Typically, VA requires
veterans to visit a VA medical facility so
one of our providers can establish that
the prescription is medically needed
and appropriate for the patient.
Imposing such a requirement on
veterans eligible under the Program
would not make sense because their
eligibility is predicated on either being
unable to be seen within a timely
manner or because of difficulties they
face in traveling to a VA medical
facility. We believe this decision is
consistent with section 101(r) of the Act,
which states that nothing in section 101
shall be construed to alter the process
for filling and paying for prescription
medications. This regulation does not
alter how prescriptions are filled or
purchased. VA will pay for
prescriptions, including prescription
drugs, over-the-counter drugs, and
medical and surgical supplies
prescribed by eligible entities and
providers under the Program. However,
VA will only pay for those items that are
on the VA National Formulary, in
accordance with § 17.38(a)(1)(iii), and
eligible veterans will be charged a VA
copayment, if applicable, as with all
other care and services offered under
the Program. If prosthetics are
prescribed as part of the care that is
provided under the Program, VA will
pay for these items as well.
Section 17.1520(b) states that VA will
be liable for any deductibles, costshares, or copayments required by the
health-care plan of an eligible veteran
participating in the Program and owed
to the non-VA provider, to the extent
that such reimbursement does not result
in expenditures by VA for the furnished
care or services that exceed the rates
determined under § 17.1535. Currently,
non-VA providers who accept VA
payments for hospital care or medical
services must accept VA payment as
payment in full and cannot assess any
additional charges. 38 CFR 17.55 and
17.56. By contrast, VA is a secondary
payer under the Program for care and
services related to a nonserviceconnected disability. Under section
101(e)(3)(B)(ii) of the Act, VA is
authorized to pay the cost of care or
services that is not covered by a
veteran’s health-care plan, except that
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VA’s payment may not exceed the rate
established under § 17.1535. We
interpret section 101(e)(3)(B)(ii) to
authorize VA to cover the balance due
the non-VA provider after any payment
by the veteran’s health-care plan and
any payment made by the veteran, and
to be liable for any copayments, costshares, or deductibles required of the
veteran by the other health-care plan, up
to the amount established under
§ 17.1535.
Under the Program, the non-VA
provider is responsible for first billing
the veteran’s other health-care plan, if
the care provided under the Program is
related to a nonservice-connected
disability. Any payment made by a
health-care plan to the non-VA provider
reduces the amount owed by VA as the
secondary payer. If the balance due to
the non-VA provider, after any payment
by the veteran’s health-care plan and
any payment by the veteran, is less than
the rate established under § 17.1535, VA
will, consistent with its authority in
section 101(e)(3)(B)(ii), cover the
veteran’s copayments, cost-shares, or
deductibles required by the health-care
plan. If the veteran paid any such costs
to the non-VA provider, VA will
reimburse the veteran for the paid costs.
To the extent the amount contributed
by the health-care plan would cover the
veteran’s VA copayment obligation, VA
will apply that amount to reduce the
veteran’s VA copayment obligation as
determined under §§ 17.108, 17.110,
and 17.111. In some instances, though,
veterans will still owe a VA copayment.
As is currently the case, to the extent
the veteran qualifies for a hardship
exemption or a waiver of that debt
under §§ 17.104 or 17.105, the veteran
may seek such relief. VA is establishing
a hotline, 1–866–606–8198, that
veterans and health care providers can
call with questions about payments and
liabilities.
Paragraph (c) of this section addresses
the beneficiary travel program
administered under 38 CFR part 70.
This paragraph provides that veterans
who are eligible for beneficiary travel
under part 70 will be reimbursed for
travel to and from the location of the
eligible entity or provider who furnishes
hospital care or medical services for an
authorized appointment under the
Program, even if there is another nonVA health care provider that is closer.
Current regulations governing the
beneficiary travel program at 38 CFR
70.30(b)(2) provide that VA will pay
mileage reimbursement for travel
between a beneficiary’s residence and
the closest non-VA health care provider
that could furnish such care. For
veterans who have the right to select a
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provider of their own choice under
§ 17.1515(b), they may select a provider
who is slightly farther away from their
residence than another non-VA provider
who could furnish the same care. For
veterans who elect non-VA care, VA
may schedule an appointment with an
eligible non-VA entity or provider that
is farther away because that non-VA
provider can see the veteran sooner. We
believe that it is fair and consistent to
provide mileage reimbursement in these
instances. VA has authority under 38
U.S.C. 111(b)(2) to define the parameters
under which it will reimburse eligible
veterans for travel expenses, and VA is
exercising that authority here to help
veterans who obtain non-VA care
through the Program access non-VA
health care entities and providers.
Hence, § 17.1520(c) waives the
requirements of 38 CFR 70.30(b)(2) for
purposes of the Program.
Section 17.1525 Start Date for Eligible
Veterans
Section 17.1525 defines when eligible
veterans may begin receiving hospital
care and medical services through the
Program. VA is phasing in
implementation of the Program for
different categories of eligible veterans
to ensure that VA has the resources in
place to support care for these veterans.
Paragraph (a) of this section identifies
the start date for eligible veterans based
on which criterion in § 17.1510(b) they
meet. In paragraph (a)(1) of this section,
veterans who are eligible based on their
place of residence under 17.1510(b)(2)
through (b)(4) will be able to start
receiving hospital care and medical
services on the date of publication of
this rule. We are starting with this
population because it is more easily
identified and less subject to change
over time than those who are eligible
based on being unable to be seen within
the wait-time goals of the Veterans
Health Administration. Veterans eligible
under 17.1510(b)(1) will be able to start
receiving hospital care and medical
services no later than December 5, 2014.
Paragraph (b) of this section states that
notwithstanding the dates identified in
paragraph (a), VA may publish a Notice
in the Federal Register informing the
public that veterans may receive care
sooner. This will ensure VA has
flexibility so that if we determine we
have the necessary resources in place to
furnish care, we can begin doing so
without further delay.
Section 17.1530 Eligible Entities and
Providers
Section 17.1530 defines requirements
for non-VA entities and health care
providers to be eligible to be reimbursed
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for furnishing hospital care and medical
services to eligible veterans under the
Program. Paragraph (a) of this section
provides that an entity or provider must
be accessible to the veteran and be one
of the four entities specified in section
101(a)(1)(B) of the Act. These include
any health care provider that is
participating in the Medicare program
under title XVIII of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 1395 et seq.), including
any physician furnishing services under
such program; any Federally-qualified
health center (as defined in section
1905(l)(2)(B) of the Social Security Act
(42 U.S.C. 1396d(l)(2)(B)); the
Department of Defense; or the Indian
Health Service. Outpatient health
programs or facilities operated by a tribe
or tribal organization under the Indian
Self-Determination and Education
Assistance Act or by an urban Indian
organization receiving funds under title
V of the Indian Health Care
Improvement Act are defined as
Federally-qualified health centers in
section 1905(l)(2)(B) of the Social
Security Act and would be eligible
providers under section 101(a)(1)(B).
Additionally, the entity or provider
must not be a part of, or an employee
of, VA, or if the provider is an employee
of VA, he or she cannot be acting within
the scope of such employment while
providing hospital care or medical
services through the Program. Many of
VA’s health care providers are also
appointed to other institutions, so if
these health care providers are
furnishing care under this Program, they
must be doing so on non-Department
time and using non-VA resources. The
Act specifically envisions that care
under the Program is provided by nonVA resources, as demonstrated by
section 101(a)(3) of the Act, which
requires VA to coordinate through the
Non-VA Care Coordination Program the
furnishing of care and services under
this Program. Furthermore, non-VA care
is a general term applied throughout VA
to refer to any care furnished by a nonVA entity or health care provider under
any authority or agreement. The title of
section 101 of the Act, ‘‘Expanded
availability of hospital care and medical
services for veterans through use of
agreements with non-Department of
Veterans Affairs entities,’’ also clearly
demonstrates Congress’s intent that any
entity or provider that is a VA resource
should not be eligible to participate in
the Program.
Under § 17.1530(b), an entity or
provider must enter into an agreement
with VA to provide non-VA hospital
care or medical services under the
Program. This requirement is consistent
with section 101(a)(1)(A) of the Act.
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This section of the Act also authorizes
VA to use agreements reached before the
enactment of the Act, so long as such
agreement is with an eligible entity or
provider as defined in section
101(a)(1)(B) of the Act. Agreements may
be formed by contract,
intergovernmental agreement, or a
provider agreement, consistent with
section 101(d)(1)(B) of the Act. Each
form of agreement must be executed by
a duly authorized Department official to
ensure that Federal resources are being
committed by a person with the
authority to do so. As an operational
matter, VA will, to the maximum extent
practicable and consistent with the
requirements of section 101, use
existing sharing agreements, existing
contracts, and other processes available
at VA medical facilities prior to using
provider agreements under this section.
This is consistent with the requirements
of section 101(d)(1)(A), as modified by
section 409 of Public Law 113–175.
Paragraph (c) of § 17.1530 defines
whether an entity or provider is
accessible to a veteran. Under section
101(a)(2) of the Act, a veteran who is
eligible for the Program based on being
unable to schedule an appointment
within the wait-time goals of the
Veterans Health Administration can
only select an entity or provider that is
accessible to the veteran. The broad
intent of the Act is to ensure that
veterans are able to be seen quickly and
close to their home. The Act did not
contemplate, for example, that a veteran
living in New York would have his or
her care in California and travel paid for
by VA. Under the Act, this accessibility
requirement technically only applies to
veterans who are eligible based on being
unable to be seen within the wait-time
goals of the Veterans Health
Administration. However, we believe
the same standard should apply when
any eligible veteran elects to receive
non-VA care under the Program because
it would be unfair to impose an
accessibility requirement to limit the
non-VA entities and providers available
to some veterans but not others. Also, in
those situations when a veteran does not
select a provider, it would be
inconsistent with the purpose of the Act
if VA were able to select a non-VA
provider who was inaccessible to
veterans whose basis for eligibility is
their residence. The factors identified in
§ 17.1530(c)(1)–(3) are intended to
ensure that, as often as possible,
veterans are able to access the care they
need from an entity or provider that can
see them quickly and that is at least as
close as the nearest VA medical facility.
VA will consider several factors when
determining whether an entity or
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provider is accessible. Under
§ 17.1530(c)(1), VA will consider the
length of time an eligible veteran would
have to wait to receive hospital care or
medical services. One of the principal
issues the Act was intended to address
was extended wait times for hospital
care and medical services in VA
facilities. Senate Veterans’ Affairs
Committee Chairman Sanders explained
the purpose of the Program shortly
before the Senate passed an early
version of this bill by saying, ‘‘this
legislation says to veterans that if there
are long wait times, if they cannot get
into a facility in a reasonable time, they
can go out outside of . . . VA.’’ See 160
Cong. Rec. S3591 (June 11, 2014). By
considering the length of time a veteran
would have to wait to receive hospital
care or medical services from a non-VA
entity or provider, VA can ensure that
veterans receive care as quickly as
possible. If a veteran selects a provider
who cannot see the veteran for several
months, VA would probably determine
that provider was inaccessible.
Alternatively, under this standard, there
may be several eligible entities or
providers who could provide care more
quickly than VA could, and in such a
situation, in those instances when an
eligible veteran does not specify a
particular eligible entity or provider, VA
could select the eligible entity or
provider that is able to schedule the
earliest appointment for the eligible
veteran.
Under § 17.1530(c)(2), VA will
consider the qualifications of the entity
or provider to furnish the hospital care
or medical services the veteran requires.
If an entity or provider does not have
the expertise or equipment necessary to
provide the required care or services,
the needed care is not accessible from
that provider, and VA will not authorize
a patient to receive hospital care or
medical services from that entity or
provider. This will ensure that veterans
have access to, and can receive, the care
they need and that appropriated
resources are spent only for services that
actually can be delivered.
Under § 17.1530(c)(3), VA will
consider the distance between the
eligible veteran’s residence and the
entity or provider. Three of the four
bases for eligibility under the Program
focus on the residence of the veteran,
and therefore we believe that travel
distance was a clear concern and focus
of the Act. If a veteran has to travel long
distances to receive care, then these
non-VA providers may be no more
accessible than a VA medical facility
that is more than 40 miles away from
the veteran’s residence.
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VA will consider these factors
together. Sometimes, there may be
several eligible entities or providers that
could deliver care close to the veteran’s
residence, and in such a scenario,
distance likely will not matter. In other
situations, there may only be one
provider near the veteran’s residence,
but this provider either has extended
wait times or lacks the expertise or
equipment to provide the necessary
care. VA will need to balance these
competing interests and the preference
of the veteran to determine whether or
not an entity or provider is accessible.
We will also make accessibility
determinations on a case-by-case basis,
considering each veteran’s specific
needs and ability to travel, as well as
changes in the status of a non-VA entity
or provider. For example, VA might find
a health care provider inaccessible to a
veteran in one month because the
provider cannot see new patients in a
timely manner or because the provider
lacks the qualifications to treat a
particular condition. But the following
month, VA might find that same health
care provider accessible to the same
veteran because the provider’s wait time
has decreased or the provider has
gained expertise through a newly hired
health care provider.
Under § 17.1530(d), a non-VA
provider must maintain at least the
same or similar credentials and licenses
as required by VA of its own providers.
This requirement is codified in section
101(i)(1) of the Act, which also provides
further support for the qualification
standard in paragraph (c)(2) of this
section. The agreement VA reaches with
the non-VA entity or provider will
clarify the requirement referenced in
§ 17.1530(d). These requirements will be
the same or similar to the requirements
included in VA policy and are also
available through Veterans Health
Administration (VHA) Handbook
1100.19 and VHA Directive 2012–030,
available online at: https://www.va.gov/
vhapublications/. Non-VA health care
entities or providers must submit
verification of this information to VA at
least once per 12-month period to
continue to remain eligible under this
Program. This requirement is consistent
with section 101(i)(2) of the Act.
For purposes of the Program,
qualifications of non-VA providers will
be set forth in the terms of the
agreement with VA, but, in accordance
with the Act, those terms must specify
requirements that are ‘‘at least the same
or similar credentials and licenses’’ as
those required of VA providers. Sec.
101(i)(1), Public Law 113–146, 128 Stat.
1754. We also note that to the extent
there may be concerns about the
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qualifications of a particular provider,
section 101(a)(1)(B) of the Act requires
that eligible entities and providers of
non-VA care must either be Federal
providers themselves (the Department of
Defense or the Indian Health Service), a
Federally-qualified health center, or be
a participating provider in the Medicare
program. Accordingly, these non-VA
entities and providers have already met
quality standards established in Federal
law.
Entities are not required by the Act to
maintain the same or similar credentials
and licenses as VA providers because
entities are not direct health care
providers. Any entities that are eligible
to provide care through the Program
must ensure that any of their providers
furnishing care and services through the
Program meet these standards. If an
eligible entity has more than one
provider furnishing hospital care or
medical services under this Program,
the entity may submit the information
required by paragraph (d) of this section
on behalf of its providers. This will
reduce the administrative
responsibilities of each provider and VA
by allowing for a consolidated
submission of information.
Although not addressed in the
regulation, eligible entities and
providers furnishing hospital care and
medical services to eligible veterans
through the Program, to the extent
possible, should submit medical records
back to VA in an electronic format. This
will ensure that the veteran’s medical
record is as complete as possible to
provide quality care in a timely manner.
The agreements VA reaches with
eligible entities and providers will
clarify this requirement.
Section 17.1535 Payment Rates and
Methodologies
Section 17.1535 addresses payment
rates and payment methodologies.
Section 17.1535(a) addresses payment
rates. This paragraph states that rates
will be negotiated and set forth in an
agreement between VA and an eligible
entity or provider. This is consistent
with sections 101(d)(1)(A) and (d)(2)(A)
of the Act.
Section 17.1535(a)(1) establishes the
default payment rule that
reimbursement rates under the Program
will not exceed the applicable Medicare
rate under Title XVIII of the Social
Security Act. This limitation is
established in section 101(d)(2)(B)(i) of
the Act.
Section 17.1535(a)(2) states that VA
may pay a rate higher than the default
Medicare rate to an eligible entity or
provider in a highly rural area, so long
as such rate is still determined by VA
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to be fair and reasonable. A highly rural
area is an area located in a county that
has fewer than seven individuals
residing in that county per square mile.
This limited exception to the default
Medicare rate is specifically
contemplated, and narrowly
circumscribed, by section
101(d)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act. The
limitation that such rate be determined
by VA to be fair and reasonable is
necessary to ensure that VA is
committing and using budgetary
resources appropriately.
Section 17.1535(a)(3) addresses
situations where there is no Medicare
rate. As cited above, section 101(d)(2)(B)
of the Act establishes that, except in
highly rural areas, VA must pay the
Medicare rate. However, there are
certain types of care, such as obstetrics/
gynecological and dental care, that are
authorized by the VA medical benefits
package in 38 CFR 17.38 but for which
Medicare does not have established
rates. The Act does not address the
appropriate rate in such a situation.
Because Congress did not address what
rate can be paid when Medicare rates do
not exist, we must fill the gap left by the
law. See Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v NRDC,
467 U.S. 837, 842–843 (1984).
Under § 17.1535(a)(3), VA follows the
process and methodology outlined in
specified paragraphs of 38 CFR 17.55
and 17.56, to the extent these
paragraphs are consistent with the
requirements of section 101 of the Act,
when there are no available rates as
described in § 17.1535(a)(1). Sections
17.55 and 17.56 establish rates for
payment for care provided to veterans
by non-VA providers under different
authorities than the Act. Paragraphs (g)
and (k) of § 17.55 conflict with the Act
and therefore are not applicable to
payments made under the Program and
would not be followed. Section 17.55(g),
for example, states that payment by VA
is payment in full, and the health care
provider or agent may not impose any
additional charge on a veteran or his or
her health care insurer for any inpatient
services for which payment is made by
VA. This is inconsistent with sections
101(e) and 101(j) of the Act, which, as
discussed above, specifically require
billing to a health-care plan and
copayments by a veteran for services
rendered. Section 17.55(k) states that
VA will not pay more than the amount
determined under paragraphs (a)–(j) of
§ 17.55 or the negotiated amount, but
§ 17.1535(a) already establishes a rate
ceiling for payments made under the
Program. Sections 17.55(j) and 17.56(b)
address payment for care furnished in
Alaska, but section 101 of the Act does
not permit us to follow these rates. If the
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Act is further modified by Congress to
provide flexibility to pay different rates,
VA will comply with the new statutory
requirements and will follow any
methodologies in §§ 17.55 and 17.56
that are consistent with those
requirements.
Section 17.1535(b) details payment
responsibilities. Section 17.1535(b)(1)
concerns payments for care related to a
nonservice-connected disability. VA
defines a nonservice-connected
disability consistent with 38 CFR 3.1(l).
This longstanding VA definition is
consistent with section 101(e)(3)(C) of
the Act, as well as the use of that term
in other VA programs. We believe that
using this definition will result in the
same outcomes as the definition
presented in the Act and is more
familiar to the VA staff who will be
administering the Program. VA has
defined the term ‘‘nonserviceconnected’’ at 38 CFR 3.1(l) to refer to
a disability that was not incurred or
aggravated in line of duty in the active
military, naval, or air service. The
Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA)
is responsible for making
determinations about whether a specific
disability is service connected or not,
and any disability that VBA has not
identified as service connected is
considered nonservice connected.
When a veteran is seeking care for a
nonservice-connected disability through
the Program, the health-care plan of the
eligible veteran, if one exists, is
primarily responsible for paying the
eligible entity or provider for authorized
hospital care or medical services that
are furnished to an eligible veteran. This
is consistent with the requirements of
section 101(e)(3)(A) of the Act. The
health-care plan is only responsible to
the extent the care or services are
covered by the health-care plan; this is
again consistent with the language of
section 101(e)(3)(A) of the Act. VA will
be responsible for promptly paying only
the amount that is not covered by the
health-care plan, except VA cannot pay
more than the rate determined under
§ 17.1535(a).
Section 101(e)(3)(B) of the Act defines
when VA is secondarily responsible for
care. The Act states that the eligible
entity or provider is responsible for
seeking reimbursement for the cost of
furnishing hospital care or medical
services from the health-care plan of the
veteran, if applicable, and VA is
responsible for only paying for the VAauthorized service to the extent not
covered by such health-care plan. Under
section 101(d)(2)(C) of the Act, an
eligible entity or provider cannot collect
more than the negotiated rate for the
furnishing of care or services. If a
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veteran is required to make a VA
copayment under section 101(j) of the
Act and § 17.1520(b) of this regulation,
the copayment will be applied to the
rate established by § 17.1535(a). This
will, in turn, reduce VA’s ultimate
liability.
Paragraph (b)(2) of this section
provides that if hospital care or medical
services are being furnished for a
service-connected disability or pursuant
to 38 U.S.C. 1710(e), 1720D, or 1720E,
VA is solely responsible for paying the
eligible entity or provider for such
hospital care or medical services. VA
has defined the term ‘‘serviceconnected’’ at 38 CFR 3.1(k) to mean,
with respect to a disability, that such
disability was incurred or aggravated in
line of duty in the active military, naval,
or air service. VA only has authority to
recover or collect reasonable charges
from a health-care plan when the care
is being furnished for a nonserviceconnected disability, so VA cannot
collect such charges when serviceconnected care is involved. 38 U.S.C.
1729. The Act is silent in terms of
collecting payment for serviceconnected care, so VA believes its
existing authorities should apply here.
The three additional authorities cited,
38 U.S.C. 1710(e), 1720D, and 1720E,
are what VA refers to as special
authorities, which require VA to furnish
care based on certain conditions or
exposures associated with military
service. Excluding hospital care and
medical services furnished under these
authorities from liability by health-care
plans is consistent with VA’s past
practice and with the intent and
language of section 101(e)(3) of the Act.
VA is developing a separate rulemaking
that would specifically restrict the
ability of VA to collect charges from
health-care plans for care provided
under these special authorities. Both
that proposed rulemaking and this
rulemaking are consistent with current
practice.
Paragraph (c) of this section states that
VA will only pay for hospital care or
medical services authorized by VA.
Accordingly, if in the course of
providing authorized care or services
under the Program, the eligible entity or
provider determines that additional
hospital care or medical services are
necessary beyond what VA has
authorized, the eligible entity or
provider must contact VA for
authorization prior to furnishing such
care or services, in order for such care
and services to be paid for by VA under
the Program. Section 101(h) of the Act
requires that, at the election of the
veteran, VA must ensure that a veteran
receives such hospital care or medical
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65581
services through the completion of the
episode of care, including all specialty
and ancillary services deemed necessary
as part of the recommended treatment.
We believe that the language ‘‘deemed
necessary’’ authorizes VA to make such
determinations. This belief is supported
by the Conference Report of the final
bill, which stated, ‘‘When coordinating
care for eligible veterans through the
Non-VA Care Coordination program, the
Department should attempt to ensure
when an appointment is authorized, the
eligible veteran receives care within an
appropriate time period, as defined by
medical necessity as determined by the
referring physician, or a mandatory time
period established by the Secretary
when the request for care is not initiated
by a physician.’’ H.R. Rpt. 113–564, p.
55, (emphasis added). In this context,
the referring physician would be a VA
health care provider. Furthermore, for
non-VA care authorized under other
statutes, VA must periodically review
the necessity for continuing such care.
38 U.S.C. 1703(b). We interpret the
language in section 101(h) of the Act to
impose a similar obligation to ensure
that VA has not entered into an openended commitment. VA will craft
authorizations for non-VA care to
ensure that veterans can receive the
episode of care they need, including
specialty and ancillary service, from
eligible entities and providers. While
some episodes of care may only involve
a single visit, such as a specific
procedure or test, others may involve
multiple visits. VA will authorize only
the care that it deems necessary as part
of the treatment plan; if a non-VA health
care provider believes that additional
services are needed beyond 60 days or
outside the scope of the initial course of
treatment that was authorized, the
health care provider must contact VA
prior to administering such care to
ensure that this care is authorized and
therefore will be paid for by VA. These
provisions are included so that veterans
are not subjected to unapproved
procedures and tests, and so that
appropriated resources are not used for
unapproved care or services.
Also, there must be an actual
encounter with a health care provider,
who is either an employee of an entity
in an agreement with VA or who is
furnishing care through an agreement
the health care provider has entered into
with VA, and such encounter must
occur after an election is made by an
eligible veteran. The encounter may be
virtual through use of telehealth or other
technologies, but the health care
provider must furnish hospital care or
medical services during the
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could have unpredictable negative
health effects.
For the above reasons, the Secretary
issues this rule as an interim final rule.
However, VA will consider and address
comments that are received within 120
days of the date this interim final rule
is published in the Federal Register.
Section 17.1540 Claims Processing
System
Section 17.1540 provides general
requirements for a VA claims processing
system. This is required by section
101(k) of the Act. Paragraph (a) of this
section establishes the claims
processing system within the Chief
Business Office of the Veterans Health
Administration. This is required by
section 101(k)(3) of the Act. The system
will process and pay bills or claims for
authorized hospital care and medical
services furnished to veterans through
the Program, as required by section
101(k)(1).
Paragraph (b) of this section
establishes responsibility for overseeing
the system with the Chief Business
Office of the Veterans Health
Administration. Section 101(k)(3)
requires this assignment of authority.
Paragraph (c) of this section states that
the system will receive requests for
payment from eligible entities and
providers for hospital care or medical
services furnished to eligible veteran,
and that the system will provide
accurate and timely payments for claims
received under the Program. This is
required by section 101(k) and section
105 of the Act.
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appointment. This will ensure that VA
only pays for hospital care or medical
services that were actually furnished,
and is consistent with the Act’s
requirement in section 101(m) that the
Department does not pay for care or
services that were not furnished to an
eligible veteran.
Effect of Rulemaking
Title 38 of the Code of Federal
Regulations, as revised by this interim
final rulemaking, represents VA’s
implementation of its legal authority on
this subject. Other than future
amendments to this regulation or
governing statutes, no contrary guidance
or procedures are authorized. All
existing or subsequent VA guidance
must be read to conform with this
rulemaking if possible or, if not
possible, such guidance is superseded
by this rulemaking.
Administrative Procedure Act
The Secretary of Veterans Affairs
finds that there is good cause under 5
U.S.C. 553(b)(B) and (d)(3) to dispense
with the opportunity for advance notice
and opportunity for public comment
and good cause to publish this rule with
an immediate effective date. Section
101(n) of the Act requires publication of
an interim final rule no later than
November 5, 2014, the date that is 90
days after the date of the enactment of
the law. We interpret this mandate to
mean that, as a matter of law, it is
impracticable and contrary to law and
the public interest to delay this rule for
the purpose of soliciting advance public
comment or to have a delayed effective
date.
VA is making the rule effective for
certain veterans prior to the usual 30
day delay for an interim final rule to
allow VA to begin furnishing hospital
care and medical services immediately
to certain eligible veterans. Delaying
implementation could result in delayed
health care for these veterans, which
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Paperwork Reduction Act
This interim final rule includes a
collection of information under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501–3521) that requires
approval by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB). Accordingly, under
44 U.S.C. 3507(d), VA has submitted a
copy of this rulemaking to OMB for
review.
OMB assigns a control number for
each collection of information it
approves. VA may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
control number. Sections 17.1510(d),
17.1515, and 17.1530 contain a
collection of information under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501–3521). If OMB does not
approve the collection of information as
requested, VA will immediately remove
the provisions containing a collection of
information or take such other action as
is directed by OMB.
Comments on the collection of
information contained in this interim
final rule should be submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget,
Attention: Desk Officer for the
Department of Veterans Affairs, Office
of Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Washington, DC 20503, with copies sent
by mail or hand delivery to the Director,
Regulation Policy and Management
(02REG), Department of Veterans
Affairs, 810 Vermont Avenue NW.,
Room 1068, Washington, DC 20420; fax
to (202) 273–9026; or through
www.Regulations.gov. Comments
should indicate that they are submitted
in response to ‘‘RIN 2900–AP24—
Expanded Access to Non-VA Care
through the Veterans Choice Program.’’
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A comment to OMB is best assured of
having its full effect if OMB receives it
within 30 days of publication. This does
not affect the deadline for the public to
comment on the rule.
VA considers comments by the public
on proposed collections of information
in—
• Evaluating whether the proposed
collections of information are necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of VA, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
• Evaluating the accuracy of VA’s
estimate of the burden of the proposed
collections of information, including the
validity of the methodology and
assumptions used;
• Enhancing the quality, usefulness,
and clarity of the information to be
collected; and
• Minimizing the burden of the
collections of information on those who
are to respond, including through the
use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology,
e.g., permitting electronic submission of
responses.
The amendments to title 38 CFR part
17 contain collections of information
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 for which we are requesting
approval by OMB. These collections of
information are described immediately
following this paragraph, under their
respective titles.
Title: Election to Receive Authorized
Non-VA Care and Selection of Provider
for the Veterans Choice Program.
Summary of collection of information:
Section 17.1515 requires eligible
veterans to notify VA whether the
veteran elects to receive authorized nonVA care through the Veterans Choice
Program, be placed on an electronic
waiting list, or be scheduled for an
appointment with a VA health care
provider. Section 17.1515(b)(1) also
allows eligible veterans to specify a
particular non-VA entity or health care
provider, if that entity or provider meets
certain requirements.
Description of the need for
information and proposed use of
information: The information is
required by the Act. Section 101(c) of
Public Law 113–146 requires an eligible
veteran to make an election to receive
authorized non-VA care through the
Veterans Choice Program, be placed on
an electronic waiting list, or be
scheduled for an appointment with a
VA health care provider. Section
101(a)(2) authorizes certain eligible
veterans to select a non-VA health care
provider, and through regulation at
§ 17.1515(b), all eligible veterans may
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select a non-VA health care provider
that is eligible under § 17.1530. This
information is necessary because VA
must know what the veteran’s choice is
and whom the veteran would like to see
for an appointment.
Description of likely respondents:
Eligible veterans seeking authorization
to receive non-VA care through the
Veterans Choice Program.
Estimated number of respondents per
year: 440,794 eligible persons.
Estimated frequency of responses per
year: 12.64 times per year.
Estimated average burden per
response: 2 minutes.
Estimated total annual reporting and
recordkeeping burden: 185,721 hours.
Title: Health-Care Plan Information
for the Veterans Choice Program.
Summary of collection of information:
Section 17.1510(d) requires eligible
veterans to submit to VA information
about their health-care plan to
participate in the Veterans Choice
Program.
Description of the need for
information and proposed use of
information: The information is
required by the Act. Section 101(e)(1) of
Public Law 113–146 requires an eligible
veteran to provide to the Secretary
information on any health-care plan
under which the eligible veteran is
covered. This information is necessary
because the veteran’s other health-care
plan is primarily responsible for paying
for hospital care or medical services
furnished through the Veterans Choice
Program for a nonservice-connected
disability.
Description of likely respondents:
Eligible veterans seeking authorization
to receive non-VA care through the
Veterans Choice Program.
Estimated number of respondents per
year: 440,794 eligible persons.
Estimated frequency of responses per
year: 1.2 times per year.
Estimated average burden per
response: 10 minutes.
Estimated total annual reporting and
recordkeeping burden: 88,159 hours.
Title: Submission of Medical Record
Information under the Veterans Choice
Program.
Summary of collection of information:
Participating eligible entities and
providers are required to submit a copy
of any medical record related to hospital
care or medical services furnished
under this Program to an eligible
veteran.
Description of the need for
information and proposed use of
information: The information is
required by the Act. Section 101(l) of
Public Law 113–146, as amended by
section 409 of Public Law 113–175,
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requires VA to ensure that any health
care provider that furnishes care or
services under the Program to an
eligible veteran submits to VA a copy of
any medical record related to the care or
services that were provided. This is
necessary to ensure continuity of care
for the health and well-being of the
veteran.
Description of likely respondents:
Eligible entities and health care
providers furnishing hospital care or
medical services to eligible veterans
through the Veterans Choice Program.
Estimated number of respondents per
year: 187,000 eligible persons.
Estimated frequency of responses per
year: 29.80 times per year.
Estimated average burden per
response: 5 minutes.
Estimated total annual reporting and
recordkeeping burden: 464,428 hours.
Title: Submission of Information on
Credentials and Licenses by Eligible
Entities or Providers.
Summary of collection of information:
Section 17.1530 requires eligible entities
and providers to submit verification that
the entity or provider maintains at least
the same or similar credentials and
licenses as those required of VA’s health
care providers, as determined by the
Secretary.
Description of the need for
information and proposed use of
information: The information is
required by the Act. Section 101(i) of
Public Law 113–146 requires non-VA
entities or providers to maintain the
same or similar credentials and licenses
as those required of health care
providers of the Department, as
determined by the Secretary, and to
submit not less than once per year
verification of such licenses and
credentials maintained by the health
care provider. Under the interim final
rule, an eligible entity may submit this
information on behalf of its providers.
This information is necessary to ensure
that non-VA entities and providers who
are furnishing hospital care and medical
services to eligible veterans are meeting
the same quality standards as VA health
care providers.
Description of likely respondents:
Eligible entities or providers furnishing
hospital care and medical services
through the Veterans Choice Program.
Estimated number of respondents per
year: 187,000 eligible persons.
Estimated frequency of responses per
year: 1 time per year.
Estimated average burden per
response: 5 minutes.
Estimated total annual reporting and
recordkeeping burden: 15,583 hours.
VA is also developing a survey to
understand veteran satisfaction with
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receipt of care under the Veterans
Choice Program. The information is
required by the Act. Section 101(q)(2)(D)
of Public Law 113–146 requires VA to
report to Congress the results of a survey
of eligible veterans who have received
care or services under this Program on
the satisfaction of such eligible veterans
with the care or services they received.
This information is necessary because
VA must report this information to
Congress, and this feedback will help
VA better understand whether veterans
like the Program. A separate notice will
be published in the Federal Register
providing more information about the
planned veteran satisfaction survey.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess the costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, when regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, and other advantages;
distributive impacts; and equity).
Executive Order 13563 (Improving
Regulation and Regulatory Review)
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits,
reducing costs, harmonizing rules, and
promoting flexibility. Executive Order
12866 (Regulatory Planning and
Review) defines a ‘‘significant
regulatory action,’’ requiring review by
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB), unless OMB waives such
review, as ‘‘any regulatory action that is
likely to result in a rule that may: (1)
Have an annual effect on the economy
of $100 million or more or adversely
affect in a material way the economy, a
sector of the economy, productivity,
competition, jobs, the environment,
public health or safety, or State, local,
or tribal governments or communities;
(2) Create a serious inconsistency or
otherwise interfere with an action taken
or planned by another agency; (3)
Materially alter the budgetary impact of
entitlements, grants, user fees, or loan
programs or the rights and obligations of
recipients thereof; or (4) Raise novel
legal or policy issues arising out of legal
mandates, the President’s priorities, or
the principles set forth in this Executive
Order.’’
The economic, interagency,
budgetary, legal, and policy
implications of this regulatory action
have been examined, and it has been
determined that this is an economically
significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866. VA’s regulatory
impact analysis can be found as a
supporting document at https://
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www.regulations.gov, usually within 48
hours after the rulemaking document is
published. Additionally, a copy of the
rulemaking and its regulatory impact
analysis are available on VA’s Web site
at https://www.va.gov/orpm/, by
following the link for ‘‘VA Regulations
Published From FY 2004 Through Fiscal
Year to Date.’’
Congressional Review Act
This regulatory action is a major rule
under the Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. 801–08, because it may result in
an annual effect on the economy of $100
million or more. Although this
regulatory action constitutes a major
rule within the meaning of the
Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C.
804(2), it is not subject to the 60-day
delay in effective date applicable to
major rules under 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(3)
because the Secretary finds that good
cause exists under 5 U.S.C. 808(2) to
make this regulatory action effective on
the date of publication, consistent with
the reasons given for the publication of
this interim final rule. Congress directed
VA to publish an interim final rule
within 90 days of the date of enactment
of the law, and further delay in
expanding access to non-VA care for
eligible veterans could result in the
deterioration of their health.
Accordingly, the Secretary finds that
additional advance notice and public
procedure thereon are impractical,
unnecessary, and contrary to the public
interest. In accordance with 5 U.S.C.
801(a)(1), VA will submit to the
Comptroller General and to Congress a
copy of this regulatory action and VA’s
Regulatory Impact Analysis.
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Unfunded Mandates
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 requires, at 2 U.S.C. 1532, that
agencies prepare an assessment of
anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule that may result in the
expenditure by State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more
(adjusted annually for inflation) in any
1 year. This interim final rule will have
no such effect on State, local, and tribal
governments, or on the private sector.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Secretary hereby certifies that
this interim final rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities as
they are defined in the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601–612. This
interim final rule will not have a
significant economic impact on
participating eligible entities and
providers who enter into agreements
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with VA. To the extent there is any such
impact, it will result in increased
business and revenue for them. We also
do not believe there will be a significant
economic impact on insurance
companies, as claims will only be
submitted for care that will otherwise
have been received whether such care
was authorized under this Program or
not. Therefore, pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
605(b), this rulemaking is exempt from
the initial and final regulatory flexibility
analysis requirements of 5 U.S.C. 603
and 604.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
The Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance numbers and titles for the
programs affected by this document are
as follows: 64.007, Blind Rehabilitation
Centers; 64.008, Veterans Domiciliary
Care; 64.009, Veterans Medical Care
Benefits; 64.010, Veterans Nursing
Home Care; 64.011, Veterans Dental
Care; 64.012, Veterans Prescription
Service; 64.013, Veterans Prosthetic
Appliances; 64.014, Veterans State
Domiciliary Care; 64.015, Veterans State
Nursing Home Care; 64.016, Veterans
State Hospital Care; 64.018, Sharing
Specialized Medical Resources; 64.019,
Veterans Rehabilitation Alcohol and
Drug Dependence; 64.022, Veterans
Home Based Primary Care; and 64.024,
VA Homeless Providers Grant and Per
Diem Program.
Signing Authority
The Secretary of Veterans Affairs, or
designee, approved this document and
authorized the undersigned to sign and
submit the document to the Office of the
Federal Register for publication
electronically as an official document of
the Department of Veterans Affairs. Jose
D. Riojas, Chief of Staff, Department of
Veterans Affairs, approved this
document on October 30, 2014, for
publication.
List of Subjects in 38 CFR Part 17
Administrative practice and
procedure, Alcohol abuse, Alcoholism,
Claims, Day care, Dental health, Drug
abuse, Government contracts, Grant
programs—health, Grant programs—
veterans, Health care, Health facilities,
Health professions, Health records,
Homeless, Mental health programs,
Nursing homes, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Travel and
transportation expenses, Veterans.
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Dated: October 31, 2014.
William F. Russo,
Acting Director, Office of Regulation Policy
& Management, Office of the General Counsel,
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, VA amends 38 CFR part 17 as
follows:
PART 17—MEDICAL
1. The authority citation for part 17
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501, and as noted in
specific sections.
2. Amend § 17.108 by:
a. Revising paragraph (b)(1).
b. Adding paragraph (b)(4).
c. Revising paragraph (c)(1).
d. Adding paragraph (c)(4).
e. Revising the authority citation at
the end of the section.
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
■
■
■
■
■
§ 17.108 Copayments for inpatient hospital
care and outpatient medical care.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Copayments for inpatient hospital
care. (1) Except as provided in
paragraphs (d) or (e) of this section, a
veteran, as a condition of receiving
inpatient hospital care provided by VA
(provided either directly by VA or
obtained by VA by contract, provider
agreement, or sharing agreement), must
agree to pay VA (and is obligated to pay
VA) the applicable copayment, as set
forth in paragraph (b)(2), (b)(3), or (b)(4)
of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(4) For inpatient hospital care
furnished through the Veterans Choice
Program under § 17.1500 through
17.1540, the copayment amount at the
time of furnishing such care or services
by a non-VA entity or provider is $0. VA
will determine and assess the veteran’s
copayment amount at the end of the
billing process, but at no time will a
veteran’s copayment be more than the
amount identified in paragraphs (b)(2)
or (b)(3) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Copayments for outpatient medical
care. (1) Except as provided in
paragraphs (d), (e), or (f) of this section,
a veteran, as a condition for receiving
outpatient medical care provided by VA
(provided either directly by VA or
obtained by VA by contract, provider
agreement, or sharing agreement), must
agree to pay VA (and is obligated to pay
VA) a copayment as set forth in
paragraph (c)(2) or (c)(4) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(4) For outpatient medical care
furnished through the Veterans Choice
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Program under § 17.1500 through
17.1540, the copayment amount at the
time of furnishing such care or services
by a non-VA entity or provider is $0. VA
will determine and assess the veteran’s
copayment amount at the end of the
billing process, but at no time will a
veteran’s copayment be more than the
amount identified in paragraph (c)(2) of
this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501, 1710, 1730A, Sec.
101, Pub. L. 113–146, 128 Stat. 1754)
3. Amend § 17.110 by:
a. Adding paragraph (b)(4).
b. Revising the authority citation at
the end of the section.
The revisions read as follows:
■
■
■
§ 17.110
Copayments for medications.
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(4) For medications furnished through
the Veterans Choice Program under
§ 17.1500 through 17.1540, the
copayment amount at the time the
veteran fills the prescription is $0. VA
will determine and assess the veteran’s
copayment amount at the end of the
billing process, but at no time will a
veteran’s copayment be more than the
amount identified in paragraphs (b)(1)(i)
through (b)(1)(iii) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501, 1710, 1720D,
1722A, 1730A, Sec. 101, Pub. L. 113–146,
128 Stat. 1754)
4. Amend § 17.111 by:
a. Adding paragraph (b)(3).
b. Revising the authority citation at
the end of the section.
The addition and revision read as
follows:
■
■
■
§ 17.111 Copayments for extended care
services.
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*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(3) For hospital care and medical
services considered non-institutional
care furnished through the Veterans
Choice Program under § 17.1500
through 17.1540, the copayment amount
at the time of furnishing such care or
services by a non-VA entity or provider
is $0. VA will determine and assess the
veteran’s copayment amount at the end
of the billing process, but at no time will
a veteran’s copayment be more than the
amount identified in paragraphs (b)(1)
or (b)(2) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 101(28), 501, 1701(7),
1710, 1710B, 1720B, 1720D, 1722A, Sec. 101,
Pub. L. 113–146, 128 Stat. 1754)
5. Add an undesignated center
heading and §§ 17.1500 through 17.1540
to read as follows:
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Sec.
17.1500
17.1505
17.1510
17.1515
17.1520
17.1525
17.1530
17.1535
17.1540
Purpose and scope.
Definitions.
Eligible veterans.
Authorizing non-VA care.
Effect on other provisions.
Start date for eligible veterans.
Eligible entities and providers.
Payment rates and methodologies.
Claims processing system.
Expanded Access to Non-VA Care
Through the Veterans Choice Program
§ 17.1500
*
■
Expanded Access to Non-VA Care
Through the Veterans Choice Program
Purpose and scope.
(a) Purpose. Sections 17.1500 through
17.1540 implement the Veterans Choice
Program, authorized by section 101 of
the Veterans Access, Choice, and
Accountability Act of 2014.
(b) Scope. The Veterans Choice
Program authorizes VA to furnish
hospital care and medical services to
eligible veterans, as defined in
§ 17.1510, through agreements with
eligible entities or providers, as defined
in § 17.1530.
(Authority: Sec. 101, Pub. L. 113–146, 128
Stat. 1754)
§ 17.1505
Definitions.
For purposes of the Veterans Choice
Program under §§ 17.1500 through
17.1540:
Appointment means an authorized
and scheduled encounter with a health
care provider for the delivery of hospital
care or medical services. A visit to an
emergency room or an unscheduled
visit to a clinic is not an appointment.
Attempt to schedule means contact
with a VA scheduler or VA health care
provider in which a stated request by
the veteran for an appointment is made.
Episode of care means a necessary
course of treatment, including follow-up
appointments and ancillary and
specialty services, which lasts no longer
than 60 days from the date of the first
appointment with a non-VA health care
provider.
Health-care plan means an insurance
policy or contract, medical or hospital
service agreement, membership or
subscription contract, or similar
arrangement not administered by the
Secretary of Veterans Affairs, under
which health services for individuals
are provided or the expenses of such
services are paid; and does not include
any such policy, contract, agreement, or
similar arrangement pursuant to title
XVIII or XIX of the Social Security Act
(42 U.S.C. 1395 et seq.) or chapter 55 of
title 10, United States Code.
Residence means a legal residence or
personal domicile, even if such
residence is seasonal. A person may
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maintain more than one residence but
may only have one residence at a time.
If a veteran lives in more than one
location during a year, the veteran’s
residence is the residence or domicile
where the person is staying at the time
the veteran wants to receive hospital
care or medical services through the
Program. A post office box or other nonresidential point of delivery does not
constitute a residence.
Schedule means identifying and
confirming a date, time, location, and
entity or health care provider for an
appointment.
VA medical facility means a VA
hospital, a VA community-based
outpatient clinic, or a VA health care
center. A Vet Center, or Readjustment
Counseling Service Center, is not a VA
medical facility.
Wait-time goals of the Veterans
Health Administration means, unless
changed by further notice in the Federal
Register, a date not more than 30 days
from either:
(1) The date that an appointment is
deemed clinically appropriate by a VA
health care provider. In the event a VA
health care provider identifies a time
range when care must be provided (e.g.,
within the next 2 months), VA will use
the last clinically appropriate date for
determining whether or not such care is
timely.
(2) Or, if no such clinical
determination has been made, the date
that a veteran prefers to be seen for
hospital care or medical services.
(Authority: Sec. 101, Pub. L. 113–146, 128
Stat. 1754)
§ 17.1510
Eligible veterans.
A veteran must meet the eligibility
criteria under both paragraphs (a) and
(b) of this section to be eligible for care
through the Veterans Choice Program. A
veteran must also provide the
information required by paragraphs (c)
and (d) of this section.
(a) A veteran must:
(1) Be enrolled in the VA health care
system under § 17.36 on or before
August 1, 2014; or
(2) Be eligible for hospital care and
medical services under 38 U.S.C.
1710(e)(1)(D) and be a veteran described
in 38 U.S.C. 1710(e)(3).
(b) A veteran must also meet at least
one of the following criteria:
(1) The veteran attempts, or has
attempted, to schedule an appointment
with a VA health care provider, but VA
is unable to schedule an appointment
for the veteran within the wait-time
goals of the Veterans Health
Administration.
(2) The veteran’s residence is more
than 40 miles from the VA medical
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facility that is closest to the veteran’s
residence.
(3) The veteran’s residence is both:
(i) In a state without a VA medical
facility that provides hospital care,
emergency medical services, and
surgical care having a surgical
complexity of standard (VA maintains a
Web site with a list of the facilities that
have been designated with at least a
surgical complexity of standard. That
Web site can be accessed here:
www.va.gov/health/surgery); and
(ii) More than 20 miles from a medical
facility described in paragraph (b)(3)(i)
of this section.
(4) The veteran’s residence is in a
location, other than one in Guam,
American Samoa, or the Republic of the
Philippines, which is 40 miles or less
from a VA medical facility and the
veteran:
(i) Must travel by air, boat, or ferry to
reach such a VA medical facility; or
(ii) Faces an unusual or excessive
burden in traveling to such a VA
medical facility based on the presence
of a body of water (including moving
water and still water) or a geologic
formation that cannot be crossed by
road.
(c) If the veteran changes his or her
residence, the veteran must update VA
about the change within 60 days.
(d) A veteran must provide to VA
information on any health-care plan
under which the veteran is covered
prior to obtaining authorization for care
under the Veterans Choice Program. If
the veteran changes health-care plans,
the veteran must update VA about the
change within 60 days.
(e) For purposes of calculating the
distance between a veteran’s residence
and the nearest VA medical facility
under this section (except for purposes
of calculating a driving route under
paragraph (b)(4)(ii) of this section), VA
will use the straight-line distance
between the nearest VA medical facility
and a veteran’s residence.
(Authority: Sec. 101, Pub. L. 113–146, 128
Stat. 1754)
(The information collection requirements
have been submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget and are pending
OMB approval.)
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§ 17.1515
Authorizing non-VA care.
(a) Electing non-VA care. A veteran
eligible for the Veterans Choice Program
under § 17.1510 may choose to schedule
an appointment with a VA health care
provider, be placed on an electronic
waiting list for VA care, or have VA
authorize the veteran to receive an
episode of care for hospital care or
medical services under 38 CFR 17.38
from an eligible entity or provider.
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(b) Selecting a non-VA provider. An
eligible veteran may specify a particular
non-VA entity or health care provider,
if that entity or health care provider
meets the requirements of § 17.1530. If
an eligible veteran does not specify a
particular eligible entity or provider, VA
will refer the veteran to a specific
eligible entity or provider.
(Authority: Sec. 101, Pub. L. 113–146, 128
Stat. 1754)
(The information collection requirements
have been submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget and are pending
OMB approval.)
§ 17.1520
Effect on other provisions.
(a) General. In general, eligibility
under the Veterans Choice Program does
not affect a veteran’s eligibility for
hospital care or medical services under
the medical benefits package, as defined
in § 17.38, or other benefits addressed in
this part. Notwithstanding any other
provision of this part, VA will pay for
and fill prescriptions written by eligible
providers under § 17.1530 for eligible
veterans under § 17.1510, including
prescriptions for drugs, including overthe-counter drugs and medical and
surgical supplies available under the VA
national formulary system.
(b) Copayments. VA will be liable for
any deductibles, cost-shares, or
copayments required by an eligible
veteran’s health-care plan for hospital
care and medical services furnished
under this Program, to the extent that
such reimbursement does not result in
expenditures by VA for the furnished
care or services in excess of the rate
established under § 17.1535. Veterans
are also liable for a VA copayment for
care furnished under this Program, as
required by §§ 17.108(b)(4), 17.108(c)(4),
17.110(b)(4), and 17.111(b)(3).
(c) Beneficiary travel. For veterans
who are eligible for beneficiary travel
benefits under part 70 of this chapter,
VA will provide beneficiary travel
benefits for travel to and from the
location of the eligible entity or provider
who furnishes hospital care or medical
services for an authorized appointment
under the Veterans Choice Program
without regard to the limitations in
§ 70.30(b)(2) of this chapter.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 111; Sec. 101, Pub. L.
113–146, 128 Stat. 1754)
§ 17.1525
Start date for eligible veterans.
(a) VA will begin furnishing hospital
care and medical services under the
Program authorized by 38 CFR 17.1500
through 17.1540 as follows:
(1) Beginning November 5, 2014, to
Veterans eligible under § 17.1510(b)(2),
(b)(3), or (b)(4).
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Fmt 4700
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(2) Beginning no later than December
5, 2014, to Veterans eligible under
§ 17.1510(b)(1).
(b) If the start date will be earlier than
the date identified in paragraph (a)(2) of
this section, the Secretary will notify the
public of the start date by publishing a
Notice in the Federal Register.
(Authority: Sec. 101, Pub. L. 113–146, 128
Stat. 1754)
§ 17.1530
Eligible entities and providers.
(a) General. An entity or provider is
eligible to deliver care under the
Veterans Choice Program if, in
accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section, it is accessible to the veteran
and is an entity or provider identified in
section 101(a)(1)(B) of the Veterans
Access, Choice, and Accountability Act
of 2014 and is either:
(1) Not a part of, or an employee of,
VA; or
(2) If the provider is an employee of
VA, is not acting within the scope of
such employment while providing
hospital care or medical services
through the Veterans Choice Program.
(b) Agreement. An entity or provider
must enter into an agreement with VA
to provide non-VA hospital care or
medical services to eligible veterans
through one of the following types of
agreements: contracts,
intergovernmental agreements, or
provider agreements. Each form of
agreement must be executed by a duly
authorized Department official.
(c) Accessibility. An entity or provider
may only furnish hospital care or
medical services to an eligible veteran if
the entity or provider is accessible to the
eligible veteran. VA will determine
accessibility by considering the
following factors:
(1) The length of time the eligible
veteran would have to wait to receive
hospital care or medical services from
the entity or provider;
(2) The qualifications of the entity or
provider to furnish the hospital care or
medical services to the eligible veteran;
and
(3) The distance between the eligible
veteran’s residence and the entity or
provider.
(d) Requirements for health care
providers. To be eligible to furnish care
or services under the Veterans Choice
Program, a health care provider must
maintain at least the same or similar
credentials and licenses as those
required of VA’s health care providers,
as determined by the Secretary. The
agreement reached under paragraph (b)
of this section will clarify these
requirements. Eligible health care
providers must submit verification of
such licenses and credentials
E:\FR\FM\05NOR1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 214 / Wednesday, November 5, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
maintained by the provider to VA at
least once per 12-month period. Any
entities that are eligible to provide care
through the Program must ensure that
any of their providers furnishing care
and services through the Program meet
these standards. An eligible entity may
submit this information on behalf of its
providers.
(Authority: Sec. 101, Pub. L. 113–146, 128
Stat. 1754)
(The information collection requirements
have been submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget and are pending
OMB approval.)
rmajette on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with RULES
§ 17.1535 Payment rates and
methodologies.
(a) Payment rates. Payment rates will
be negotiated and set forth in an
agreement between the Secretary and an
eligible entity or provider.
(1) Except as otherwise provided in
this section, payment rates may not
exceed the rates paid by the United
States to a provider of services (as
defined in section 1861(u) of the Social
Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1395x(u)) or a
supplier (as defined in section 1861(d)
of such Act (42 U.S.C. 1395x(d)) under
the Medicare program under title XVIII
of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
1395 et seq.) for the same care or
services. These rates are known as the
‘‘Medicare Fee Schedule’’ for VA
purposes.
(2) For eligible entities or providers in
highly rural areas, the Secretary may
enter into an agreement that includes a
rate greater than the rate defined
paragraph (a)(1) of this section for
hospital care or medical services, so
long as such rate is still determined by
VA to be fair and reasonable. The term
‘‘highly rural area’’ means an area
located in a county that has fewer than
seven individuals residing in that
county per square mile.
(3) When there are no available rates
as described in paragraph (a)(1) of this
section, the Secretary shall, to the extent
consistent with the Veterans Access,
Choice, and Accountability Act of 2014,
follow the process and methodology
outlined in §§ 17.55 and 17.56 and pay
the resulting rate.
(b) Payment responsibilities.
Responsibility for payments will be as
follows.
(1) For a nonservice-connected
disability, as that term is defined at
§ 3.1(l) of this chapter, a health-care
plan of an eligible veteran is primarily
responsible, to the extent such care or
services is covered by the health-care
plan, for paying the eligible entity or
provider for such hospital care or
medical services as are authorized
under §§ 17.1500 through 17.1540 and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:07 Nov 04, 2014
Jkt 235001
furnished to an eligible veteran. VA
shall be responsible for promptly paying
only for costs of the VA-authorized
service not covered by such health-care
plan, including a payment made by the
veteran, except that such payment may
not exceed the rate determined for such
care or services pursuant to paragraph
(a) of this section.
(2) For hospital care or medical
services furnished for a serviceconnected disability, as that term is
defined at § 3.1(k) of this chapter, or
pursuant to 38 U.S.C. 1710(e), 1720D, or
1720E, VA is solely responsible for
paying the eligible entity or provider for
such hospital care or medical services as
are authorized under §§ 17.1500 through
17.1540 and furnished to an eligible
veteran.
(c) Authorized care. VA will only pay
for an episode of care for hospital care
or medical services authorized by VA.
The eligible entity or provider must
contact VA to receive authorization
prior to providing any hospital care or
medical services the eligible non-VA
entity or provider believes are necessary
that are not identified in the
authorization VA submits to the eligible
entity or provider. VA will only pay for
the hospital care or medical services
that are furnished by an eligible entity
or provider. There must be an actual
encounter with a health care provider,
who is either an employee of an entity
in an agreement with VA or who is
furnishing care through an agreement
the health care provider has entered into
with VA, and such encounter must
occur after an election is made by an
eligible veteran.
(Authority: Secs. 101, 105, Pub. L. 113–146,
128 Stat. 1754)
§ 17.1540
Claims processing system.
(a) There is established within the
Chief Business Office of the Veterans
Health Administration a nationwide
claims processing system for processing
and paying bills or claims for authorized
hospital care and medical services
furnished to eligible veterans under
§§ 17.1500 through 17.1540.
(b) The Chief Business Office is
responsible for overseeing the
implementation and maintenance of
such system.
(c) The claims processing system will
receive requests for payment from
eligible entities and providers for
hospital care or medical services
furnished to eligible veterans. The
claims processing system will provide
accurate, timely payments for claims
received in accordance with §§ 17.1500
through 17.1540.
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65587
(Authority: Secs. 101, 105, Pub. L. 113–146,
128 Stat. 1754)
[FR Doc. 2014–26316 Filed 11–4–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R01–OAR–2014–0243; A–1–FRL–
9918–00–Region 1]
Approval and Promulgation of Air
Quality Implementation Plans; Maine;
Volatile Organic Compound
Regulations
Environmental Protection
Agency.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is approving four State
Implementation Plan (SIP) revisions
submitted by the State of Maine. These
revisions establish Reasonably Available
Control Technology (RACT) for two
categories of volatile organic compound
(VOC) sources and revise two existing
VOC RACT regulations previously
approved into Maine’s SIP. The
intended effect of this action is to
approve these requirements into the
Maine SIP. This action is being taken
under the Clean Air Act (CAA).
DATES: This rule is effective on
December 5, 2014.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket
Identification No. EPA–R01–OAR–
2014–0243. All documents in the docket
are listed on the www.regulations.gov
Web site. Although listed in the index,
some information is not publicly
available, i.e., CBI or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
Certain other material, such as
copyrighted material, is not placed on
the Internet and will be publicly
available only in hard copy form.
Publicly available docket materials are
available either electronically through
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, EPA New England Regional
Office, Office of Ecosystem Protection,
Air Quality Planning Unit, 5 Post Office
Square—Suite 100, Boston, MA. EPA
requests that if at all possible, you
contact the contact listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section to
schedule your inspection. The Regional
Office’s official hours of business are
Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to
4:30 p.m., excluding legal holidays.
Copies of the documents relevant to
this action are also available for public
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\05NOR1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 214 (Wednesday, November 5, 2014)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 65571-65587]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-26316]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
38 CFR Part 17
RIN 2900-AP24
Expanded Access to Non-VA Care Through the Veterans Choice
Program
AGENCY: Department of Veterans Affairs.
ACTION: Interim final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) amends its medical
regulations concerning its authority for eligible veterans to receive
care from non-VA entities and providers. The Veterans Access, Choice,
and Accountability Act of 2014 directs VA to establish a program to
furnish hospital care and medical services through non-VA health care
providers to veterans who either cannot be seen within the wait-time
goals of the Veterans Health Administration or who qualify based on
their place of residence (hereafter referred to as the Veterans Choice
Program, or the ``Program''). The law also requires VA to publish an
interim final rule establishing this program. This interim final rule
defines the parameters of the Veterans Choice Program, and clarifies
aspects affecting veterans and the non-VA providers who will furnish
hospital care and medical services through the Veterans Choice Program.
DATES: Effective Date: This rule is effective on November 5, 2014.
Comment date: Comments must be received on or before March 5, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Written comments may be submitted by email through https://www.regulations.gov; by mail or hand-delivery to Director, Regulation
Policy and Management (02REG), Department of Veterans Affairs, 810
Vermont Avenue NW., Room 1068, Washington, DC 20420; or by fax to (202)
273-9026. (This is not a toll-free number.) Comments should indicate
that they are submitted in response to ``RIN 2900-AP24, Expanded Access
to Non-VA Care through the Veterans Choice Program.'' Copies of
comments received will be available for public inspection in the Office
of Regulation Policy and Management, Room 1068, between the hours of
8:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday (except holidays). Please
call (202) 461-4902 for an appointment. (This is not a toll-free
number.) In addition, during the
[[Page 65572]]
comment period, comments may be viewed online through the Federal
Docket Management System (FDMS) at https://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kristin Cunningham, Director, Business
Policy, Chief Business Office (10NB), Veterans Health Administration,
Department of Veterans Affairs, 810 Vermont Avenue NW., Washington, DC
20420, (202) 382-2508. (This is not a toll-free number.)
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Executive Summary: Purpose of This Regulatory Action: We are
creating new regulations to define and authorize the Veterans Choice
Program required by section 101 of the Veterans Access, Choice, and
Accountability Act of 2014, as modified by the Department of Veterans
Affairs Expiring Authorities Act of 2014. Specifically, under this
Program, eligible veterans may elect to receive hospital care and
medical services from eligible non-VA entities and providers. The
Program does not modify VA's previously existing authorities to furnish
care through non-VA providers, but instead enhances VA's options to
furnish care that is timely and available in veterans' communities.
Summary of the Major Provisions of this Regulatory Action: This
interim final rule--
Modifies VA's existing copayment regulations to clarify
that a copayment of $0 is owed at the time of service for eligible
veterans receiving care or services through the Program. VA will
determine the copayment amount after the provider bills VA for the cost
of furnished care, and veterans may be liable for some or all of the
copayment amount at that time. Copayment rates will not exceed those
currently established in regulation.
Establishes the scope of the Program, including the types
of care and services that are covered. By law, the Program is
authorized to run until August 7, 2017, or until the Veterans Choice
Fund established by the Act is exhausted.
Defines key terms used throughout the regulation. These
terms include episode of care, which is limited to 60 days but includes
follow-up appointments and ancillary and specialty services; health-
care plan, which includes any insurance plan or contract or agreement
other than Medicare, Medicaid, or TRICARE; residence, which is a legal
residence or personal domicile; VA medical facility, which includes VA
hospitals, community-based outpatient clinics, and VA health care
centers; and the wait-time goals of the Veterans Health Administration,
which are to furnish care within 30 days of either the date that an
appointment is deemed clinically appropriate by a VA health care
provider, or if no such clinical determination has been made, the date
a veteran prefers to be seen.
Defines eligibility criteria for veterans to participate
in the Program. In general, veterans must have been enrolled in the VA
health care system on or before August 1, 2014, or must be within 5
years of post-combat separation. Veterans must also either be unable to
schedule an appointment within the wait-time goals of the Veterans
Health Administration or qualify based on their place of residence.
Veterans may qualify based on their place of residence if they live
more than 40 miles from the closest VA medical facility; if they reside
in a state without a VA medical facility that provides hospital care,
emergency medical services, and surgical care rated by the Secretary as
having a surgical complexity of standard, and they reside more than 20
miles from a medical facility that offers these services in another
state; or, with certain exceptions, if they reside 40 miles or less
from a VA medical facility and must travel by air, boat, or ferry, or
face an unusual or excessive burden in traveling to a VA medical
facility because of geographical challenges.
Explains the process for authorizing non-VA care under the
Program. Eligible veterans may elect to receive VA or non-VA care. If
they elect to receive non-VA care, they may select the provider who
will furnish their care, if that provider is eligible.
Describes the effect of the Program on other benefits and
services available to veterans. In general, the Program does not affect
a veteran's eligibility for hospital care or medical services under the
medical benefits package. VA will pay for and fill prescriptions
written by non-VA providers under the Program to the extent such
prescriptions are covered by the VA medical benefits package. VA will
reimburse veterans' copayments or cost-shares required by their other
health-care plan to the extent authorized by law, and VA will calculate
veterans' VA copayments as described above. VA will also reimburse
veterans for travel to receive care under the Program if the veteran is
otherwise eligible to participate in VA's beneficiary travel program.
Identifies the start date for eligible veterans under the
Program. VA is phasing in implementation of the Program to ensure it
has the necessary resources in place to furnish hospital care and
medical services to eligible veterans.
Defines eligibility criteria for non-VA health care
entities and providers to participate in the Program. Eligible non-VA
entities and providers must enter into an agreement with VA to furnish
care, and must be participating in the Medicare program, be a
Federally-qualified health center, or be a part of the Department of
Defense or the Indian Health Service. Non-VA entities or providers must
be accessible to the veteran, meaning they must be able to provide
timely care, must have the necessary qualifications to furnish the
care, and must be within a reasonable distance of the veteran's
residence. Eligible non-VA entities and providers must maintain at
least the same or similar credentials and licenses as VA providers, and
must submit information verifying compliance with this requirement
annually.
Establishes payment rates and methodologies for
reimbursing participating non-VA health care entities and providers
furnishing care and services through the Program. Except for in highly
rural areas, VA may not pay an eligible entity or provider more than
the applicable Medicare rate under Title XVIII of the Social Security
Act for hospital care or medical services furnished under the Program.
When there are no Medicare rates available, VA will follow its usual
methodology for calculating payments to the extent such methodology is
consistent with the Act. VA is a secondary payer for care furnished for
a nonservice-connected disability if the veteran has another health-
care plan. VA will only pay for authorized care where an actual
encounter with a health care provider occurs. Veterans must seek
authorization from VA before receiving care.
Establishes a claims processing system to receive requests
for payment and to provide accurate and timely payments for claims
received under the Program. This system will be managed by the Veterans
Health Administration's Chief Business Office.
Costs and Benefits: As further detailed in the Regulatory Impact
Analysis, which can be found as a supporting document at https://www.regulations.gov and is available on VA's Web site at https://www.va.gov/orpm/, by following the link for ``VA Regulations Published
From FY 2004 Through Fiscal Year to Date,'' the interim final rule will
affect eligible veterans and eligible non-VA health care entities and
providers. Eligible veterans may elect to receive, at VA expense, care
from a non-VA provider of their choice that is eligible
[[Page 65573]]
and accessible to them. These providers generally will either be able
to provide care sooner than VA could or are located closer to the
eligible veteran's residence than a VA medical facility. The Program is
authorized to run for 3 years, or until resources appropriated in the
Veterans Choice Fund are exhausted, and is intended as a short-term
solution to expand access to care while VA enhances its capacity to
furnish care in a timely and accessible manner. Participating eligible
non-VA health care entities and providers will receive payment for
furnishing authorized hospital care and medical services to eligible
veterans under the Program.
General Discussion: On August 7, 2014, the President signed into
law the Veterans Access, Choice, and Accountability Act of 2014 (``the
Act,'' Public Law 113-146, 128 Stat. 1754). Further technical revisions
to the Act were made on September 26, 2014, when the President signed
into law the Department of Veterans Affairs Expiring Authorities Act of
2014 (Pub. L. 113-175, 128 Stat. 1901, 1906). Section 101 of the Act
creates the Veterans Choice Program (``the Program''). Section 101
requires the Secretary to furnish hospital care and medical services to
certain eligible veterans through agreements with identified eligible
entities or providers. Sec. 101(a)(1)(A), Public Law 113-146, 128 Stat.
1754. Delivery of such care through non-VA health care providers will
be at the election of eligible veterans. This interim final rulemaking
primarily restates these mandates and prescriptions in a regulatory
framework, and provides guidance where Congress' instructions were not
clearly executable on the face of the law. Congress directed VA to
publish interim final regulations concerning this program within 90
days of enactment. Sec. 101(n), Public Law 113-146, 128 Stat. 1754.
This rulemaking complies with that mandate.
Nothing in this rulemaking modifies VA's existing authority to
furnish non-VA care, such as under 38 U.S.C. 1703, 1725, 1728, 8111, or
8153. The requirements of those statutes and their implementing
regulations continue to apply, and VA will use those authorities when
appropriate. Any veteran currently receiving non-VA care who is
eligible for the Program will be provided the opportunity to elect to
participate in the Program or to continue being provided care under
VA's other authorities. As discussed below, there are some differences
between the Program and other non-VA care.
VA is making changes to several other regulations as part of this
rulemaking. Specifically, VA is amending 38 CFR 17.108, 17.110, and
17.111 concerning copayment responsibilities for hospital care and
medical services. Section 101(j) of the Act requires an eligible
veteran to pay a copayment at the time of the appointment to the non-VA
provider if such veteran would be required to pay a copayment for the
receipt of hospital care or medical services at a VA medical facility.
Under current practice, when veterans receive non-VA care, VA copayment
obligations are not calculated until the end of the billing process.
Consistent with this practice, VA is exercising its authority to
establish copayment rates under 38 U.S.C. 1710(f) to revise its
copayment regulations at Sec. Sec. 17.108, 17.110, and 17.111 to state
that veterans who receive hospital care and medical services under the
Program are subject to a VA copayment of $0 at the time of service, and
that their copayment liability will be determined after the authorized
care is furnished, but will be no greater than the amounts already
specified in Sec. Sec. 17.108, 17.110, or 17.111.
Currently, no veterans are charged a VA copayment at the time of
their appointment. This is true whether such care is furnished by a VA
or non-VA provider. Under current practice, if a veteran has other
health insurance, any payment by the other health insurance is first
applied against the veteran's VA copayment liability, and if the third
party payment is equal to or greater than the veteran's copayment
liability, the veteran owes no VA copayment. Even if a veteran does not
have other health insurance, VA does not bill the veteran for the
applicable copayment until after the appointment. This VA practice has
been followed for years but has never been prescribed in regulation.
For many veterans with other health-care plans, the experience
under the Program will be the same as they would experience receiving
non-VA care under another authority. Payments made by the veteran's
health-care plan are generally enough to extinguish the VA copayment
liability in full, and to the extent this happens under the Program,
these veterans would owe no VA copayment. If the other health-care plan
does not pay enough to cover the amount of the VA copayment, the
veteran will be liable for the balance.
VA is making changes to Sec. Sec. 17.108, 17.110, and 17.111 to
make the veteran's experience under the Program more like the veteran's
experience in VA facilities and under other non-VA care authorities
described above. Specifically, VA is establishing the copayment amount
under these authorities at $0 at the time of service and, consistent
with Sec. Sec. 17.108, 17.110, and 17.111, as amended, VA will notify
non-VA providers that the VA copayment amount required at the time of
service is $0. This ensures that VA's implementation of section 101(j),
which states that non-VA entities and providers will collect at the
time of furnishing care or services any copayment that would be
required for the receipt of the care or services at a medical facility
of the Department, is consistent with VA practice under existing non-VA
care authorities and addresses a number of practical challenges, as
described below.
While VA will authorize care in advance of an appointment, VA may
not be able to determine the veteran's copayment liability until after
VA receives a report of what specific services were furnished by the
non-VA provider. For care provided by VA, there are specific copayment
rates for different types of appointments. However, this coding
practice is not necessarily consistent with the practices used by other
health care providers. Thus, VA cannot accurately assess a veteran's
potential copayment liability before care is actually furnished by the
non-VA provider. When VA has received a report of what services were
provided, it can then determine the proper copayment amounts for those
services in accordance with Sec. Sec. 17.108, 17.110, and 17.111.
Establishing the copayment amount at $0 at the time of services will
ensure that VA is consistently determining the copayment
responsibilities for eligible veterans. This is also consistent with
section 101(j)(1) of the Act, which provides that the Secretary must
require a copayment from eligible veterans ``only if such eligible
veteran would be required to pay a copayment for the receipt of such
care or services at a medical facility of the Department.'' These
changes to Sec. Sec. 17.108, 17.110, and 17.111 will ensure that
veterans are only liable for copayments they would have paid if the
care or services had been provided in a VA facility or under the
standard non-VA care program. We believe it is better to ensure that
veterans are liable only for an appropriate copayment amount that is
determined after the appointment than to institute a blanket
requirement at the point of service that may result in either
additional billing to the veteran or reimbursement to the veteran.
Billing the veteran at the end of the billing process is also
consistent with VA's practice under existing non-VA care authorities.
The difficulty in determining the appropriate copayment is present in
the standard non-VA care program, but is not an issue because
[[Page 65574]]
when VA uses its existing authorities to pay for non-VA care, VA is the
primary payer and can determine liabilities after the care is
furnished. Thus, VA has resolved this issue through the standard non-VA
care program administratively by calculating the copayment at the end
of the billing process. This is a more efficient mechanism than
assigning a copayment upfront that could be wrong and later determining
that either reimbursement or further collections are needed.
VA is modifying Sec. 17.108(b)(1) to note that copayments will be
determined as set forth in paragraphs (b)(2), (b)(3), and a new (b)(4)
of that section. The new paragraph (b)(4) provides that under the
Program, the copayment amount is $0 at the time of service, and that
the copayment liability will be determined at the end of the billing
process. VA is revising Sec. 17.108(c)(1) to include an exception as
set forth in a new (c)(4) of that section. VA is also making a minor
technical adjustment to paragraphs (b)(1) and (c)(1) to include care
pursuant to a contract, provider agreement, or sharing agreement
consistent with the authorized forms of agreement under the Act. The
new paragraph (c)(4) includes the same language as the new paragraph
(b)(4). VA also is modifying Sec. Sec. 17.110(b) and 17.111(b) in a
similar way. The changes to Sec. 17.110 provide that veterans will owe
a copayment of $0 at the time they fill a prescription, and the changes
to Sec. 17.111 read the same as those in Sec. 17.108. VA notes that
under the Program, only services that are considered hospital care and
medical services may be furnished. Section 17.111 authorizes both
institutional and non-institutional care, but only non-institutional
care is considered part of hospital care or medical services under
Sec. 17.38(a)(1)(xi).
Section 17.1500 Purpose and Scope
Section 17.1500 states the purpose and scope of the Program
authorized by section 101 of the Act. The Program is funded with $10
billion in appropriated resources in the Veterans Choice Fund through
section 802 of the Act. The Program is authorized to continue until the
date the Veterans Choice Fund is exhausted or until August 7, 2017,
whichever occurs first. Sec. 101(p), Public Law 113-146, 128 Stat.
1754. Section 17.1500(a) cites to the Act but does not identify
specifically the alternate termination events specified in the Act.
When one of those events occurs, VA will no longer have authority to
operate this Program. Absent further amendments to the Act, the Program
will end upon the occurrence of one of these events, at which time VA
will issue a direct final rule to remove this regulation from the Code
of Federal Regulations.
Section 17.1500(b) defines the scope of the Program as authorizing
non-VA hospital care and medical services to eligible veterans through
agreements with eligible entities or providers. This is consistent with
section 101(a)(1)(A) of the Act. Eligible veterans are described in
Sec. 17.1510, and eligible entities or providers are described in
Sec. 17.1530.
The Act authorizes VA to provide hospital care and medical services
to eligible veterans. VA has defined the terms hospital care and
medical services through regulation at Sec. 17.38, which establishes
the medical benefits package. Any care that is covered by the medical
benefits package, including prescriptions such as prescription
medications or prosthetic devices, may be furnished through the
Program, but any services for which there are specific eligibility
criteria that must be met to receive these services (such as dental
care) are still subject to those eligibility standards.
Section 17.1505 Definitions
Section 17.1505 defines key terms for the Program.
The term ``appointment'' is defined in these regulations as an
authorized and scheduled encounter with a health care provider for the
delivery of hospital care or medical services. The definition excludes
unscheduled visits and emergency room visits because they are not
scheduled encounters and cannot be authorized in advance. The purpose
of the Program is to offer veterans the option to receive non-VA care
if they cannot obtain a scheduled visit from a VA provider in a timely
or geographically convenient manner. There is no indication in the law
that it was intended to authorize unscheduled non-VA care. Emergency
care would, however, continue to be reimbursed by VA consistent with 38
CFR 17.120-132 and 17.1000-1008. In short, if a veteran visits a non-VA
health care provider without seeking authorization from VA to schedule
such an appointment, VA cannot use Program funds to pay for the
services delivered and cannot provide reimbursement after the fact.
``Attempt to schedule'' is defined as contact with a VA scheduler
or VA health care provider in which a stated request for an appointment
is made. The contact must be with a VA employee who is responsible for
scheduling appointments or with a VA health care provider. This
limitation will ensure that an attempt to schedule only occurs when an
individual contacts someone who has the capacity to actually schedule
an appointment or, in the case of a VA health care provider, ensure
that a scheduler is made aware of the need for an appointment. There
must also be a statement by the veteran that he or she is requesting an
appointment. If a veteran does not request an appointment, he or she
would not have attempted to schedule an appointment. While VA will
apply this standard liberally, a veteran must indicate a desire to be
seen by a VA health care provider. The requirement of an attempt to
schedule an appointment is established under section 101(b)(2)(A) of
the Act as a prerequisite for certain veteran eligibility under the
Program; that section states that veterans are eligible under this
Program if they attempt or have attempted to schedule an appointment
with VA but were unable to do so within the wait-time goals of the
Veterans Health Administration.
The term ``episode of care'' is defined to mean a necessary course
of treatment, including follow-up appointments and ancillary and
specialty services, that lasts no longer than 60 days from the date of
the first appointment with a non-VA health care provider under the
Program. Section 101(h) of the Act states that VA must ensure that an
eligible veteran receives hospital care or medical services, including
follow up care, ``for a period not exceeding 60 days.'' If an eligible
veteran requires care beyond 60 days, and either the veteran continues
to qualify for the Program based on residence or if VA cannot schedule
an appointment with the veteran within the wait-time goals of the
Veterans Health Administration, we will contact the veteran before the
60 days have expired to determine if the veteran would like to continue
receiving care from the non-VA health care provider. If the veteran
does, VA will issue a new authorization for up to another 60 days.
A ``health-care plan'' has the same definition as provided in
section 101(e)(4) of the Act. The Act defines a health-care plan as an
insurance policy or contract, medical or hospital service agreement not
administered by VA, under which health services for individuals are
provided, or the expenses of such services are paid, except that it
does not include any such policy, contract, agreement, or similar
arrangement under the Medicare or Medicaid programs or TRICARE.
A ``residence'' is defined as a legal residence or personal
domicile. A residence cannot be a post office box or non-residential
point of delivery, because the address of the place a veteran resides
is used to determine
[[Page 65575]]
eligibility under Sec. Sec. 17.1510(b)(2)-(4). Sections 101(b)(2)(B)-
(D) of the Act define eligibility based upon travel distance between a
person's residence and a VA medical facility, and the regulatory
definition recognizes that a post office box or other non-residential
point of delivery could not be used to assess that eligibility
criterion. However, we have added that a residence may be ``seasonal,''
and consequently, a veteran may maintain more than one residence, but
only one residence at a time. Therefore, if a veteran lives in more
than one location during a year, the veteran's residence is the
residence or domicile where the person is staying at the time the
veteran wants to receive hospital care or medical services through the
Program. For example, if a veteran lived in New Hampshire during the
summer months but in Florida during the winter months, and the veteran
was seeking care in January, the veteran's residence in Florida would
be used as the basis for determining his or her eligibility. Allowing
for seasonal or multiple residences recognizes Congressional intent to
reach, through the Program, those veterans who have geographical
challenges in reaching a VA medical facility, without authorizing the
use of Program funds for individuals who in fact are living near a VA
medical facility at the time that they need an appointment. Homeless
veterans currently provide an address to VA that is recorded in the
Veterans Health Information Systems and Technology Architecture
(VistA); this address is used for other VHA benefits and may be applied
to veterans seeking to participate in the Program as well. For example,
any homeless veteran who is residing in a place supported by a
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)-VA Supportive Housing
(VASH) voucher can list that address, and any veteran using one of our
community-based programs like the Homeless Grant and Per Diem or Health
Care for Homeless Veterans programs can supply the address of the
service provider.
The term ``schedule'' is defined to mean identifying and confirming
a date, time, location, and entity or health care provider for an
appointment, as the term appointment has been previously defined.
A ``VA medical facility'' is defined as a VA hospital, a VA
community-based outpatient clinic (CBOC), or a VA health care center.
We have included these types of VA facilities because they provide
medical care or hospital services that may be provided as part of the
Program. This is consistent with the phrase ``medical facility of the
Department,'' as used in the Act in section 101(b)(2)(B) and elsewhere.
Vet Centers, or Readjustment Counseling Service Centers, are not
considered a VA medical facility because they do not furnish hospital
care or medical services.
The term ``wait-time goals of the Veterans Health Administration''
is defined to mean, unless changed by further notice in the Federal
Register, a date that is not more than 30 days from either the date
that an appointment is deemed clinically appropriate by a VA health
care provider, or if no such clinical determination has been made, the
date a veteran prefers to be seen by a health care provider capable of
furnishing the hospital care or medical services required by the
veteran. In the event a VA health care provider identifies a time range
when care must be provided (e.g., within the next 2 months), VA will
use the last clinically appropriate date for determining whether or not
such care is timely. Section 101(s)(1) of the Act defines the wait-time
goals of the Veterans Health Administration as being ``not more than 30
days from the date on which a veteran requests an appointment for
hospital care or medical services from [VA].'' However, section
101(s)(2) authorizes VA to identify a different wait-time goal by
submitting a report to Congress within 60 days of the enactment of the
Act, and publishing that goal in the Federal Register and on a public
Web site. On October 3, 2014, VA exercised this option and submitted a
report to Congress; on October 17, 2014, VA published in the Federal
Register, and posted notice on its Web site that it is adopting the
definition contained in this regulation. 79 FR 65219. This definition
ensures that clinical considerations and the preferences of the veteran
are taken into account. In some cases, the date that a veteran prefers
to be seen for an appointment may be the date on which the veteran
contacts VA for an appointment. In other situations, though, the date
the veteran prefers to receive hospital care or medical services may
not be for some time, such as if the veteran is traveling, or if the
veteran would prefer to delay care. Defining ``wait-time goals of the
Veterans Health Administration'' to include a determination that an
appointment is clinically appropriate acknowledges the primary reason
for the appointment--to provide clinically appropriate care. For
example, a VA health care provider may determine that a veteran needs
to be seen, but that such a visit would not be clinically useful until
a certain time has passed (e.g., 2 months from the current
appointment). This is a common scenario in the delivery of health care
across the industry. In such a scenario, the wait-time goals of the
Veterans Health Administration will be within 30 days of the date
identified by a VA health care provider as clinically appropriate, even
if the veteran requests to schedule the appointment immediately. In the
event a VA health care provider identifies a time range when care must
be provided (e.g., within the next 2 months), VA will use the last
clinically appropriate date for determining whether or not such care is
timely. For example, if a provider determines that a Veteran should be
seen in October, VA will use October 31 as the clinically appropriate
date. If no such clinical determination has been made, utilizing the
preferred date of an appointment, rather than the date the veteran
contacted VA, better reflects veterans' preferences for when they want
to receive care. A veteran can specify any date, including the date the
veteran contacts VA, as the preferred date for an appointment. The 30-
day period established by this standard would begin on that preferred
date.
VA believes that it may be necessary to make further revisions to
its standards for the Program in the future. Specific metrics may
evolve over time, and the prescribed methods of measurement today may
not provide a full picture of veterans' experience in accessing health
care in the future. VA has contracted with the Institute of Medicine to
independently identify metrics that may be the basis for further
changes to this standard. VA will carefully evaluate any
recommendations from the Institute of Medicine or other sources and
determine the most appropriate means of addressing or changing the
standard, if warranted. Any such changes to the goals will be
communicated through a report to Congress, an update to VA's Web site,
and a publication in the Federal Register.
Section 17.1510 Eligible Veterans
VA will determine a veteran's eligibility to elect to receive non-
VA care through the Program using a two-step process, consistent with
the Act's structure and the requirements in section 101(b).
First, the veteran must have enrolled in the VA health care system
under 38 CFR 17.36 on or before August 1, 2014, or the veteran must be
eligible for hospital care and medical services under 38 U.S.C.
1710(e)(1)(D) and be a veteran described in 38 U.S.C.
[[Page 65576]]
1710(e)(3). These requirements are consistent with the standards
established in sections 101(b)(1)(A)-(B) of the Act, and are included
in Sec. Sec. 17.1510(a)(1)-(2). If a veteran meets either of these
requirements, the veteran then must also meet a criterion described in
Sec. 17.1510(b), and must provide the information required by Sec.
17.1510(d).
Under Sec. 17.1510(b)(1), a veteran is eligible if the veteran
attempts, or has attempted, to schedule an appointment with a VA health
care provider, but VA has been unable to schedule an appointment for
the veteran within the wait-time goals of the Veterans Health
Administration. As these terms are defined, this would mean that VA is
unable to identify a particular date, time, location, and entity or
health care provider within 30 days of the date that the appointment
was deemed clinically necessary by a VA health care provider, or, if no
such clinical determination has been made, the date that a veteran
prefers to be seen by a health care provider capable of furnishing the
hospital care or medical services required by the veteran. This is
consistent with the requirements in the Act at section 101(b)(2)(A).
Under Sec. 17.1510(b)(2), a veteran is eligible if the veteran
resides more than 40 miles from the VA medical facility that is closest
to the veteran's residence. This standard considers the distance
between a veteran's residence, as defined in Sec. 17.1505, and any VA
medical facility, even if that facility cannot provide the care that
the veteran requires. For example, if a veteran needs cardiac care and
lives 10 miles from a VA community-based outpatient clinic (CBOC) that
only offers primary care and mental health care, but 50 miles from a VA
medical facility that offers cardiac care, the veteran would not be
eligible based on his or her proximity to the CBOC. This interpretation
is consistent with the plain language of the Act, which refers only to
``the medical facility of the Department that is closest to the
residence of the veteran,'' without allowing VA to consider whether the
facility can actually provide the care needed by the veteran. Sec.
101(b)(2)(B), Public Law 113-146, 128 Stat. 1754. Additionally, the
Conference Report accompanying the legislation states that veterans are
eligible if they live ``within 40 miles of a medical facility,'' again
without regard to such facility's ability to provide the required care.
H.R. Rpt. 113-564, p. 55. The use of the general article ``a''
demonstrates that Congress intended for this to refer to any facility,
rather than to a specific facility. Nothing in the Act modifies or
precludes VA from using its existing statutory authorities to furnish
non-VA care, such as under 38 U.S.C. 1703, 1725, 1728, 8111, or 8153.
Those statutes and their implementing regulations continue to apply,
and VA will use those authorities as appropriate to ensure that
veterans are able to access care.
Under Sec. 17.1510(b)(3), a veteran is eligible if the veteran's
residence is in a state without a full-service (meaning that it
provides, on its own and not through a joint venture, hospital care,
emergency medical services, and surgical care having a surgical
complexity of standard) VA medical facility and the veteran lives more
than 20 miles from such a facility. This language is consistent with
the requirements in section 101(b)(2)(C) of the Act. As of the
publication of this rule, veterans in three states would qualify under
this standard: Alaska, Hawaii, and New Hampshire. No veteran residing
in Alaska or Hawaii lives within 20 miles of a full-service VA medical
facility in another state, but some veterans residing in New Hampshire
do live within 20 miles of a full-service VA medical facility that is
located in a bordering state. We note that this specific, special
eligibility for veterans in states without full-service VA medical
facilities further supports our view that the Act requires VA to find
veterans ineligible who live within 40 miles of a VA medical facility,
even if such facility cannot provide the specific care required. When
read as a whole, the Act specifically addresses the ability of a
facility to provide care only in section 101(b)(2)(C). We believe that,
in addition to the arguments presented earlier in this rulemaking, the
legislative specificity in section 101(b)(2)(C) underscores the absence
of reference to this issue in section 101(b)(2)(B) of the Act.
As noted previously when discussing the definition of residence, a
veteran's residence may change throughout the year but the veteran's
residence at the time he or she wants to schedule an appointment will
determine his or her eligibility under this paragraph. In the prior
example we presented, a veteran who resides in New Hampshire in the
summer and in Florida in the winter may be eligible under this
paragraph during the summer months, but not during the winter.
We also note that the term ``surgical complexity of standard,''
used in Sec. 17.1510(b)(3)(i) and section 101(b)(2)(C)(i)(III) of the
Act, is a term of art coined by VA to describe the operative complexity
of each VA medical facility with an inpatient surgical program. The
designation of a VA medical facility's surgical complexity as
``standard'' is used by VA to establish infrastructure requirements and
compliance with VA quality standards. A ``standard'' designation refers
to a VA facility that has the appropriate infrastructure to provide at
least the most basic forms of surgical care. VA has published a list of
VA medical facilities complying with at least a standard level of
surgical care on the following Web site: www.va.gov/health/surgery. VA
will post notice on this Web site of any changes to this list of
facilities.
Finally, under paragraph (b)(4) of this section, a veteran who
resides in a location other than one in Guam, American Samoa, or the
Republic of the Philippines that is 40 miles or less from a VA medical
facility can be eligible under two scenarios. First, if the veteran
must travel by air, boat, or ferry to reach such a VA medical facility,
the veteran is eligible for non-VA care under the Program. This is
consistent with the text in sections 101(b)(2)(D)(i) and (ii)(I) of the
Act. Second, veterans who reside 40 miles or less from a VA medical
facility are eligible if they face an unusual or excessive burden in
accessing such a facility due to geographical challenges. Sec.
101(b)(2)(D)(ii)(II), Public Law 113-146, 128 Stat. 1754. VA has
interpreted this standard through regulation so that if the veteran's
travel to the nearest VA medical facility is impeded by the presence of
a body of water (including moving and still water) or a geologic
formation that cannot be crossed by road, the veteran is eligible for
non-VA care under the Program. VA believes that the emphasis on a
geographical challenge as referring only to naturally occurring
permanent or semi-permanent conditions is consistent with the plain
meaning of the Act. While VA is able to take into account other
factors, such as traffic or weather conditions or the veteran's health,
when making determinations regarding beneficiary travel benefits
provided under 38 CFR part 70, the Act does not provide us the
authority to apply these or similar factors in operating the Program
because it specifically limits eligibility to geographical challenges
without allowing for environmental or circumstantial challenges.
Under paragraph (c) of this section, a veteran who changes his or
her residence and is participating in the Choice Program must update VA
about the change within 60 days. A veteran's residence may be the basis
for his or her eligibility for the Program under paragraphs (b)(2)-
(b)(4) of this section, so it is essential that VA have current and
accurate information to make an
[[Page 65577]]
eligibility determination. Veterans who are eligible based on being
unable to be seen within the wait-time goals of the Veterans Health
Administration must also provide this information so VA can determine
if they would become eligible based on residence. It is also important
that VA have accurate information about a veteran's residence to ensure
we can contact a veteran regarding any issues and for billing purposes.
We believe that 60 days is an appropriate period of time, as it will
allow veterans sufficient opportunity to submit this information while
ensuring that VA has the ability to make accurate determinations about
eligibility for the Program.
In addition to meeting the eligibility criteria under paragraphs
(a) and (b) of this section, a veteran must also provide to VA
information about any health-care plan under which the veteran is
covered. Section 17.1510(d) requires that a veteran provide this
information to be able to receive authorized non-VA care through the
Program. This is consistent with the requirement in the Act in section
101(e)(1), which states that before a veteran can receive hospital care
or medical services under the Program, the veteran must provide
information about other health insurance. Section 17.1510(d) requires a
veteran to submit information and updated information to VA within 60
days if the veteran changes health-care plans. We believe that 60 days
is an appropriate period of time, as it will allow veterans sufficient
time to submit this information while ensuring that VA has the ability
to provide accurate information to eligible entities and providers
under the Program.
Under Sec. 17.1510(e), VA will calculate distance between a
veteran's residence and the nearest VA medical facility using a
straight-line distance, rather than the driving distance. The
Conference Report accompanying the final bill provides strong support
for this interpretation, as it states, ``In calculating the distance
from a nearest VA medical facility, it is the Conferees' expectation
that VA will use geodesic distance, or the shortest distance between
two points.'' H.R. Rpt. 113-564, p. 55. The shortest distance between
two points is a straight line, so a veteran who is outside of a 40 mile
radius of a VA medical facility would be eligible under this provision.
VA understands that actual travel distances may be longer than 40 miles
for some veterans who reside within the 40 mile radius based on the
layout of roads or other factors, and to the extent that such travel is
due to geographic challenges, these veterans may be eligible for the
Program under Sec. 17.1510(b)(4). These veterans may also be eligible
to receive non-VA care under another authority.
Section 17.1515 Authorizing Non-VA Care
Section 17.1515 describes the process and requirements for
authorizing non-VA care under this Program.
Paragraph (a) states that eligible veterans may choose between
scheduling an appointment with a VA health care provider, being placed
on an electronic waiting list for a VA appointment, or receiving
authorized non-VA hospital care or medical services from an eligible
entity or provider. Section 101(c) of the Act provides that eligible
veterans can make an election to have the Secretary schedule an
appointment for the veteran with a VA health care provider, place him
or her on an electronic waiting list, or authorize non-VA care. If a
veteran elects to receive VA care and VA is able to schedule an
appointment for the veteran, even if such an appointment is outside of
the wait-time goals of the Veterans Health Administration or is at a
facility more than 40 miles from the veteran's residence, we will do
so. Otherwise, we will place a veteran who elects to receive VA care on
an electronic waiting list. We will continue to track and report the
average length of time an individual must wait for an appointment,
disaggregated by medical facility and type of care or services needed.
We will provide this facility-level information at the time the veteran
makes his or her choice so the veteran can make an informed election
about whether to receive hospital care or medical services from a VA or
non-VA health care provider. Sections 101(c)(1)(A) and (c)(2) require
VA to schedule an appointment for a veteran or place the veteran on an
electronic waiting list, which must be available to determine the place
of an eligible veteran on the waiting list and to determine the average
length of time an individual spends on a waiting list, disaggregated by
medical facility and type of care or services needed. The Act clearly
specifies that this information must be provided ``for purposes of
allowing such eligible veteran to make an informed election.'' Sec.
101(c)(2)(B), Public Law 113-146, 128 Stat. 1754. Additionally, if the
veteran elects to receive care from a non-VA health care provider, VA
will notify the veteran by the most effective means available, as
identified by the veteran, of the scope of the authorization for care,
thereby complying with the requirements of section 101(c)(1)(B)(ii).
Section 17.1515(b) states that eligible veterans may specify a
particular non-VA entity or health care provider from whom they wish to
receive care, if the entity or health care provider is eligible under
Sec. 17.1530. Section 101(a)(2) of the Act establishes that veterans
who are eligible for the Program based upon the wait-time standard have
the right to select the specific health care provider they wish to see,
so long as the provider is eligible under the Act and under Sec.
17.1530. The Act does not address whether or not veterans who are
eligible based upon residence may select a particular non-VA provider.
VA is filling this gap in the law by providing these veterans the same
opportunity to select a particular provider as veterans eligible based
upon the wait-time standard. Eligible veterans may nevertheless choose
not to make such a selection, and in such a situation, those veterans
will be referred to an eligible entity or provider identified by VA.
Section 17.1520 Effect on Other Provisions
Section 17.1520 addresses the effect of the Program on other
provisions and programs administered by VA. Paragraph (a) of this
section provides that, generally, eligibility under the Program does
not affect a veteran's eligibility for hospital care or medical
services under the medical benefits package or other benefits addressed
in part 17. If particular services, such as health care for newborns of
veterans under 38 CFR 17.38(a)(xiv) and dental benefits under
Sec. Sec. 17.160-17.169, have unique eligibility standards, only
veterans who are eligible under Sec. 17.1510 and meet the eligibility
standards for those services can elect to receive non-VA care for them.
Nothing in the Act or these regulations waives the eligibility
requirements established in other statutes or regulations.
The regulation also provides that notwithstanding any other
provision of this part, VA will cover prescription medications and
other prescriptions made while furnishing hospital care or medical
services through the Program. This is consistent with section
101(a)(1)(A) of the Act, which requires VA to furnish medical services
to eligible veterans under the Program, and with 38 U.S.C. 1710. VA
fills emergency prescriptions written by non-VA health care providers,
but does not normally fill prescriptions written by non-VA providers
when veterans receive authorized non-VA care. However, we interpret the
requirement in section 101 to furnish hospital care and medical
services to include these benefits. The terms ``hospital care'' and
``medical services'' are defined through the medical benefits package
at 38 CFR
[[Page 65578]]
17.38, which specifically includes prescription drugs, including over-
the-counter drugs and medical and surgical supplies available under the
VA national formulary system. 38 CFR 17.38(a)(1)(iii). Veterans
receiving care under the Program are eligible because they either could
not be seen within the wait-time goals of the Veterans Health
Administration or because of their place of residence. Typically, VA
requires veterans to visit a VA medical facility so one of our
providers can establish that the prescription is medically needed and
appropriate for the patient. Imposing such a requirement on veterans
eligible under the Program would not make sense because their
eligibility is predicated on either being unable to be seen within a
timely manner or because of difficulties they face in traveling to a VA
medical facility. We believe this decision is consistent with section
101(r) of the Act, which states that nothing in section 101 shall be
construed to alter the process for filling and paying for prescription
medications. This regulation does not alter how prescriptions are
filled or purchased. VA will pay for prescriptions, including
prescription drugs, over-the-counter drugs, and medical and surgical
supplies prescribed by eligible entities and providers under the
Program. However, VA will only pay for those items that are on the VA
National Formulary, in accordance with Sec. 17.38(a)(1)(iii), and
eligible veterans will be charged a VA copayment, if applicable, as
with all other care and services offered under the Program. If
prosthetics are prescribed as part of the care that is provided under
the Program, VA will pay for these items as well.
Section 17.1520(b) states that VA will be liable for any
deductibles, cost-shares, or copayments required by the health-care
plan of an eligible veteran participating in the Program and owed to
the non-VA provider, to the extent that such reimbursement does not
result in expenditures by VA for the furnished care or services that
exceed the rates determined under Sec. 17.1535. Currently, non-VA
providers who accept VA payments for hospital care or medical services
must accept VA payment as payment in full and cannot assess any
additional charges. 38 CFR 17.55 and 17.56. By contrast, VA is a
secondary payer under the Program for care and services related to a
nonservice-connected disability. Under section 101(e)(3)(B)(ii) of the
Act, VA is authorized to pay the cost of care or services that is not
covered by a veteran's health-care plan, except that VA's payment may
not exceed the rate established under Sec. 17.1535. We interpret
section 101(e)(3)(B)(ii) to authorize VA to cover the balance due the
non-VA provider after any payment by the veteran's health-care plan and
any payment made by the veteran, and to be liable for any copayments,
cost-shares, or deductibles required of the veteran by the other
health-care plan, up to the amount established under Sec. 17.1535.
Under the Program, the non-VA provider is responsible for first
billing the veteran's other health-care plan, if the care provided
under the Program is related to a nonservice-connected disability. Any
payment made by a health-care plan to the non-VA provider reduces the
amount owed by VA as the secondary payer. If the balance due to the
non-VA provider, after any payment by the veteran's health-care plan
and any payment by the veteran, is less than the rate established under
Sec. 17.1535, VA will, consistent with its authority in section
101(e)(3)(B)(ii), cover the veteran's copayments, cost-shares, or
deductibles required by the health-care plan. If the veteran paid any
such costs to the non-VA provider, VA will reimburse the veteran for
the paid costs.
To the extent the amount contributed by the health-care plan would
cover the veteran's VA copayment obligation, VA will apply that amount
to reduce the veteran's VA copayment obligation as determined under
Sec. Sec. 17.108, 17.110, and 17.111. In some instances, though,
veterans will still owe a VA copayment. As is currently the case, to
the extent the veteran qualifies for a hardship exemption or a waiver
of that debt under Sec. Sec. 17.104 or 17.105, the veteran may seek
such relief. VA is establishing a hotline, 1-866-606-8198, that
veterans and health care providers can call with questions about
payments and liabilities.
Paragraph (c) of this section addresses the beneficiary travel
program administered under 38 CFR part 70. This paragraph provides that
veterans who are eligible for beneficiary travel under part 70 will be
reimbursed for travel to and from the location of the eligible entity
or provider who furnishes hospital care or medical services for an
authorized appointment under the Program, even if there is another non-
VA health care provider that is closer. Current regulations governing
the beneficiary travel program at 38 CFR 70.30(b)(2) provide that VA
will pay mileage reimbursement for travel between a beneficiary's
residence and the closest non-VA health care provider that could
furnish such care. For veterans who have the right to select a provider
of their own choice under Sec. 17.1515(b), they may select a provider
who is slightly farther away from their residence than another non-VA
provider who could furnish the same care. For veterans who elect non-VA
care, VA may schedule an appointment with an eligible non-VA entity or
provider that is farther away because that non-VA provider can see the
veteran sooner. We believe that it is fair and consistent to provide
mileage reimbursement in these instances. VA has authority under 38
U.S.C. 111(b)(2) to define the parameters under which it will reimburse
eligible veterans for travel expenses, and VA is exercising that
authority here to help veterans who obtain non-VA care through the
Program access non-VA health care entities and providers. Hence, Sec.
17.1520(c) waives the requirements of 38 CFR 70.30(b)(2) for purposes
of the Program.
Section 17.1525 Start Date for Eligible Veterans
Section 17.1525 defines when eligible veterans may begin receiving
hospital care and medical services through the Program. VA is phasing
in implementation of the Program for different categories of eligible
veterans to ensure that VA has the resources in place to support care
for these veterans. Paragraph (a) of this section identifies the start
date for eligible veterans based on which criterion in Sec. 17.1510(b)
they meet. In paragraph (a)(1) of this section, veterans who are
eligible based on their place of residence under 17.1510(b)(2) through
(b)(4) will be able to start receiving hospital care and medical
services on the date of publication of this rule. We are starting with
this population because it is more easily identified and less subject
to change over time than those who are eligible based on being unable
to be seen within the wait-time goals of the Veterans Health
Administration. Veterans eligible under 17.1510(b)(1) will be able to
start receiving hospital care and medical services no later than
December 5, 2014. Paragraph (b) of this section states that
notwithstanding the dates identified in paragraph (a), VA may publish a
Notice in the Federal Register informing the public that veterans may
receive care sooner. This will ensure VA has flexibility so that if we
determine we have the necessary resources in place to furnish care, we
can begin doing so without further delay.
Section 17.1530 Eligible Entities and Providers
Section 17.1530 defines requirements for non-VA entities and health
care providers to be eligible to be reimbursed
[[Page 65579]]
for furnishing hospital care and medical services to eligible veterans
under the Program. Paragraph (a) of this section provides that an
entity or provider must be accessible to the veteran and be one of the
four entities specified in section 101(a)(1)(B) of the Act. These
include any health care provider that is participating in the Medicare
program under title XVIII of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1395 et
seq.), including any physician furnishing services under such program;
any Federally-qualified health center (as defined in section
1905(l)(2)(B) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1396d(l)(2)(B));
the Department of Defense; or the Indian Health Service. Outpatient
health programs or facilities operated by a tribe or tribal
organization under the Indian Self-Determination and Education
Assistance Act or by an urban Indian organization receiving funds under
title V of the Indian Health Care Improvement Act are defined as
Federally-qualified health centers in section 1905(l)(2)(B) of the
Social Security Act and would be eligible providers under section
101(a)(1)(B).
Additionally, the entity or provider must not be a part of, or an
employee of, VA, or if the provider is an employee of VA, he or she
cannot be acting within the scope of such employment while providing
hospital care or medical services through the Program. Many of VA's
health care providers are also appointed to other institutions, so if
these health care providers are furnishing care under this Program,
they must be doing so on non-Department time and using non-VA
resources. The Act specifically envisions that care under the Program
is provided by non-VA resources, as demonstrated by section 101(a)(3)
of the Act, which requires VA to coordinate through the Non-VA Care
Coordination Program the furnishing of care and services under this
Program. Furthermore, non-VA care is a general term applied throughout
VA to refer to any care furnished by a non-VA entity or health care
provider under any authority or agreement. The title of section 101 of
the Act, ``Expanded availability of hospital care and medical services
for veterans through use of agreements with non-Department of Veterans
Affairs entities,'' also clearly demonstrates Congress's intent that
any entity or provider that is a VA resource should not be eligible to
participate in the Program.
Under Sec. 17.1530(b), an entity or provider must enter into an
agreement with VA to provide non-VA hospital care or medical services
under the Program. This requirement is consistent with section
101(a)(1)(A) of the Act. This section of the Act also authorizes VA to
use agreements reached before the enactment of the Act, so long as such
agreement is with an eligible entity or provider as defined in section
101(a)(1)(B) of the Act. Agreements may be formed by contract,
intergovernmental agreement, or a provider agreement, consistent with
section 101(d)(1)(B) of the Act. Each form of agreement must be
executed by a duly authorized Department official to ensure that
Federal resources are being committed by a person with the authority to
do so. As an operational matter, VA will, to the maximum extent
practicable and consistent with the requirements of section 101, use
existing sharing agreements, existing contracts, and other processes
available at VA medical facilities prior to using provider agreements
under this section. This is consistent with the requirements of section
101(d)(1)(A), as modified by section 409 of Public Law 113-175.
Paragraph (c) of Sec. 17.1530 defines whether an entity or
provider is accessible to a veteran. Under section 101(a)(2) of the
Act, a veteran who is eligible for the Program based on being unable to
schedule an appointment within the wait-time goals of the Veterans
Health Administration can only select an entity or provider that is
accessible to the veteran. The broad intent of the Act is to ensure
that veterans are able to be seen quickly and close to their home. The
Act did not contemplate, for example, that a veteran living in New York
would have his or her care in California and travel paid for by VA.
Under the Act, this accessibility requirement technically only applies
to veterans who are eligible based on being unable to be seen within
the wait-time goals of the Veterans Health Administration. However, we
believe the same standard should apply when any eligible veteran elects
to receive non-VA care under the Program because it would be unfair to
impose an accessibility requirement to limit the non-VA entities and
providers available to some veterans but not others. Also, in those
situations when a veteran does not select a provider, it would be
inconsistent with the purpose of the Act if VA were able to select a
non-VA provider who was inaccessible to veterans whose basis for
eligibility is their residence. The factors identified in Sec.
17.1530(c)(1)-(3) are intended to ensure that, as often as possible,
veterans are able to access the care they need from an entity or
provider that can see them quickly and that is at least as close as the
nearest VA medical facility.
VA will consider several factors when determining whether an entity
or provider is accessible. Under Sec. 17.1530(c)(1), VA will consider
the length of time an eligible veteran would have to wait to receive
hospital care or medical services. One of the principal issues the Act
was intended to address was extended wait times for hospital care and
medical services in VA facilities. Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee
Chairman Sanders explained the purpose of the Program shortly before
the Senate passed an early version of this bill by saying, ``this
legislation says to veterans that if there are long wait times, if they
cannot get into a facility in a reasonable time, they can go out
outside of . . . VA.'' See 160 Cong. Rec. S3591 (June 11, 2014). By
considering the length of time a veteran would have to wait to receive
hospital care or medical services from a non-VA entity or provider, VA
can ensure that veterans receive care as quickly as possible. If a
veteran selects a provider who cannot see the veteran for several
months, VA would probably determine that provider was inaccessible.
Alternatively, under this standard, there may be several eligible
entities or providers who could provide care more quickly than VA
could, and in such a situation, in those instances when an eligible
veteran does not specify a particular eligible entity or provider, VA
could select the eligible entity or provider that is able to schedule
the earliest appointment for the eligible veteran.
Under Sec. 17.1530(c)(2), VA will consider the qualifications of
the entity or provider to furnish the hospital care or medical services
the veteran requires. If an entity or provider does not have the
expertise or equipment necessary to provide the required care or
services, the needed care is not accessible from that provider, and VA
will not authorize a patient to receive hospital care or medical
services from that entity or provider. This will ensure that veterans
have access to, and can receive, the care they need and that
appropriated resources are spent only for services that actually can be
delivered.
Under Sec. 17.1530(c)(3), VA will consider the distance between
the eligible veteran's residence and the entity or provider. Three of
the four bases for eligibility under the Program focus on the residence
of the veteran, and therefore we believe that travel distance was a
clear concern and focus of the Act. If a veteran has to travel long
distances to receive care, then these non-VA providers may be no more
accessible than a VA medical facility that is more than 40 miles away
from the veteran's residence.
[[Page 65580]]
VA will consider these factors together. Sometimes, there may be
several eligible entities or providers that could deliver care close to
the veteran's residence, and in such a scenario, distance likely will
not matter. In other situations, there may only be one provider near
the veteran's residence, but this provider either has extended wait
times or lacks the expertise or equipment to provide the necessary
care. VA will need to balance these competing interests and the
preference of the veteran to determine whether or not an entity or
provider is accessible. We will also make accessibility determinations
on a case-by-case basis, considering each veteran's specific needs and
ability to travel, as well as changes in the status of a non-VA entity
or provider. For example, VA might find a health care provider
inaccessible to a veteran in one month because the provider cannot see
new patients in a timely manner or because the provider lacks the
qualifications to treat a particular condition. But the following
month, VA might find that same health care provider accessible to the
same veteran because the provider's wait time has decreased or the
provider has gained expertise through a newly hired health care
provider.
Under Sec. 17.1530(d), a non-VA provider must maintain at least
the same or similar credentials and licenses as required by VA of its
own providers. This requirement is codified in section 101(i)(1) of the
Act, which also provides further support for the qualification standard
in paragraph (c)(2) of this section. The agreement VA reaches with the
non-VA entity or provider will clarify the requirement referenced in
Sec. 17.1530(d). These requirements will be the same or similar to the
requirements included in VA policy and are also available through
Veterans Health Administration (VHA) Handbook 1100.19 and VHA Directive
2012-030, available online at: https://www.va.gov/vhapublications/. Non-
VA health care entities or providers must submit verification of this
information to VA at least once per 12-month period to continue to
remain eligible under this Program. This requirement is consistent with
section 101(i)(2) of the Act.
For purposes of the Program, qualifications of non-VA providers
will be set forth in the terms of the agreement with VA, but, in
accordance with the Act, those terms must specify requirements that are
``at least the same or similar credentials and licenses'' as those
required of VA providers. Sec. 101(i)(1), Public Law 113-146, 128 Stat.
1754. We also note that to the extent there may be concerns about the
qualifications of a particular provider, section 101(a)(1)(B) of the
Act requires that eligible entities and providers of non-VA care must
either be Federal providers themselves (the Department of Defense or
the Indian Health Service), a Federally-qualified health center, or be
a participating provider in the Medicare program. Accordingly, these
non-VA entities and providers have already met quality standards
established in Federal law.
Entities are not required by the Act to maintain the same or
similar credentials and licenses as VA providers because entities are
not direct health care providers. Any entities that are eligible to
provide care through the Program must ensure that any of their
providers furnishing care and services through the Program meet these
standards. If an eligible entity has more than one provider furnishing
hospital care or medical services under this Program, the entity may
submit the information required by paragraph (d) of this section on
behalf of its providers. This will reduce the administrative
responsibilities of each provider and VA by allowing for a consolidated
submission of information.
Although not addressed in the regulation, eligible entities and
providers furnishing hospital care and medical services to eligible
veterans through the Program, to the extent possible, should submit
medical records back to VA in an electronic format. This will ensure
that the veteran's medical record is as complete as possible to provide
quality care in a timely manner. The agreements VA reaches with
eligible entities and providers will clarify this requirement.
Section 17.1535 Payment Rates and Methodologies
Section 17.1535 addresses payment rates and payment methodologies.
Section 17.1535(a) addresses payment rates. This paragraph states
that rates will be negotiated and set forth in an agreement between VA
and an eligible entity or provider. This is consistent with sections
101(d)(1)(A) and (d)(2)(A) of the Act.
Section 17.1535(a)(1) establishes the default payment rule that
reimbursement rates under the Program will not exceed the applicable
Medicare rate under Title XVIII of the Social Security Act. This
limitation is established in section 101(d)(2)(B)(i) of the Act.
Section 17.1535(a)(2) states that VA may pay a rate higher than the
default Medicare rate to an eligible entity or provider in a highly
rural area, so long as such rate is still determined by VA to be fair
and reasonable. A highly rural area is an area located in a county that
has fewer than seven individuals residing in that county per square
mile. This limited exception to the default Medicare rate is
specifically contemplated, and narrowly circumscribed, by section
101(d)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act. The limitation that such rate be
determined by VA to be fair and reasonable is necessary to ensure that
VA is committing and using budgetary resources appropriately.
Section 17.1535(a)(3) addresses situations where there is no
Medicare rate. As cited above, section 101(d)(2)(B) of the Act
establishes that, except in highly rural areas, VA must pay the
Medicare rate. However, there are certain types of care, such as
obstetrics/gynecological and dental care, that are authorized by the VA
medical benefits package in 38 CFR 17.38 but for which Medicare does
not have established rates. The Act does not address the appropriate
rate in such a situation. Because Congress did not address what rate
can be paid when Medicare rates do not exist, we must fill the gap left
by the law. See Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v NRDC, 467 U.S. 837, 842-843
(1984).
Under Sec. 17.1535(a)(3), VA follows the process and methodology
outlined in specified paragraphs of 38 CFR 17.55 and 17.56, to the
extent these paragraphs are consistent with the requirements of section
101 of the Act, when there are no available rates as described in Sec.
17.1535(a)(1). Sections 17.55 and 17.56 establish rates for payment for
care provided to veterans by non-VA providers under different
authorities than the Act. Paragraphs (g) and (k) of Sec. 17.55
conflict with the Act and therefore are not applicable to payments made
under the Program and would not be followed. Section 17.55(g), for
example, states that payment by VA is payment in full, and the health
care provider or agent may not impose any additional charge on a
veteran or his or her health care insurer for any inpatient services
for which payment is made by VA. This is inconsistent with sections
101(e) and 101(j) of the Act, which, as discussed above, specifically
require billing to a health-care plan and copayments by a veteran for
services rendered. Section 17.55(k) states that VA will not pay more
than the amount determined under paragraphs (a)-(j) of Sec. 17.55 or
the negotiated amount, but Sec. 17.1535(a) already establishes a rate
ceiling for payments made under the Program. Sections 17.55(j) and
17.56(b) address payment for care furnished in Alaska, but section 101
of the Act does not permit us to follow these rates. If the
[[Page 65581]]
Act is further modified by Congress to provide flexibility to pay
different rates, VA will comply with the new statutory requirements and
will follow any methodologies in Sec. Sec. 17.55 and 17.56 that are
consistent with those requirements.
Section 17.1535(b) details payment responsibilities. Section
17.1535(b)(1) concerns payments for care related to a nonservice-
connected disability. VA defines a nonservice-connected disability
consistent with 38 CFR 3.1(l). This longstanding VA definition is
consistent with section 101(e)(3)(C) of the Act, as well as the use of
that term in other VA programs. We believe that using this definition
will result in the same outcomes as the definition presented in the Act
and is more familiar to the VA staff who will be administering the
Program. VA has defined the term ``nonservice-connected'' at 38 CFR
3.1(l) to refer to a disability that was not incurred or aggravated in
line of duty in the active military, naval, or air service. The
Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA) is responsible for making
determinations about whether a specific disability is service connected
or not, and any disability that VBA has not identified as service
connected is considered nonservice connected.
When a veteran is seeking care for a nonservice-connected
disability through the Program, the health-care plan of the eligible
veteran, if one exists, is primarily responsible for paying the
eligible entity or provider for authorized hospital care or medical
services that are furnished to an eligible veteran. This is consistent
with the requirements of section 101(e)(3)(A) of the Act. The health-
care plan is only responsible to the extent the care or services are
covered by the health-care plan; this is again consistent with the
language of section 101(e)(3)(A) of the Act. VA will be responsible for
promptly paying only the amount that is not covered by the health-care
plan, except VA cannot pay more than the rate determined under Sec.
17.1535(a).
Section 101(e)(3)(B) of the Act defines when VA is secondarily
responsible for care. The Act states that the eligible entity or
provider is responsible for seeking reimbursement for the cost of
furnishing hospital care or medical services from the health-care plan
of the veteran, if applicable, and VA is responsible for only paying
for the VA-authorized service to the extent not covered by such health-
care plan. Under section 101(d)(2)(C) of the Act, an eligible entity or
provider cannot collect more than the negotiated rate for the
furnishing of care or services. If a veteran is required to make a VA
copayment under section 101(j) of the Act and Sec. 17.1520(b) of this
regulation, the copayment will be applied to the rate established by
Sec. 17.1535(a). This will, in turn, reduce VA's ultimate liability.
Paragraph (b)(2) of this section provides that if hospital care or
medical services are being furnished for a service-connected disability
or pursuant to 38 U.S.C. 1710(e), 1720D, or 1720E, VA is solely
responsible for paying the eligible entity or provider for such
hospital care or medical services. VA has defined the term ``service-
connected'' at 38 CFR 3.1(k) to mean, with respect to a disability,
that such disability was incurred or aggravated in line of duty in the
active military, naval, or air service. VA only has authority to
recover or collect reasonable charges from a health-care plan when the
care is being furnished for a nonservice-connected disability, so VA
cannot collect such charges when service-connected care is involved. 38
U.S.C. 1729. The Act is silent in terms of collecting payment for
service-connected care, so VA believes its existing authorities should
apply here. The three additional authorities cited, 38 U.S.C. 1710(e),
1720D, and 1720E, are what VA refers to as special authorities, which
require VA to furnish care based on certain conditions or exposures
associated with military service. Excluding hospital care and medical
services furnished under these authorities from liability by health-
care plans is consistent with VA's past practice and with the intent
and language of section 101(e)(3) of the Act. VA is developing a
separate rulemaking that would specifically restrict the ability of VA
to collect charges from health-care plans for care provided under these
special authorities. Both that proposed rulemaking and this rulemaking
are consistent with current practice.
Paragraph (c) of this section states that VA will only pay for
hospital care or medical services authorized by VA. Accordingly, if in
the course of providing authorized care or services under the Program,
the eligible entity or provider determines that additional hospital
care or medical services are necessary beyond what VA has authorized,
the eligible entity or provider must contact VA for authorization prior
to furnishing such care or services, in order for such care and
services to be paid for by VA under the Program. Section 101(h) of the
Act requires that, at the election of the veteran, VA must ensure that
a veteran receives such hospital care or medical services through the
completion of the episode of care, including all specialty and
ancillary services deemed necessary as part of the recommended
treatment. We believe that the language ``deemed necessary'' authorizes
VA to make such determinations. This belief is supported by the
Conference Report of the final bill, which stated, ``When coordinating
care for eligible veterans through the Non-VA Care Coordination
program, the Department should attempt to ensure when an appointment is
authorized, the eligible veteran receives care within an appropriate
time period, as defined by medical necessity as determined by the
referring physician, or a mandatory time period established by the
Secretary when the request for care is not initiated by a physician.''
H.R. Rpt. 113-564, p. 55, (emphasis added). In this context, the
referring physician would be a VA health care provider. Furthermore,
for non-VA care authorized under other statutes, VA must periodically
review the necessity for continuing such care. 38 U.S.C. 1703(b). We
interpret the language in section 101(h) of the Act to impose a similar
obligation to ensure that VA has not entered into an open-ended
commitment. VA will craft authorizations for non-VA care to ensure that
veterans can receive the episode of care they need, including specialty
and ancillary service, from eligible entities and providers. While some
episodes of care may only involve a single visit, such as a specific
procedure or test, others may involve multiple visits. VA will
authorize only the care that it deems necessary as part of the
treatment plan; if a non-VA health care provider believes that
additional services are needed beyond 60 days or outside the scope of
the initial course of treatment that was authorized, the health care
provider must contact VA prior to administering such care to ensure
that this care is authorized and therefore will be paid for by VA.
These provisions are included so that veterans are not subjected to
unapproved procedures and tests, and so that appropriated resources are
not used for unapproved care or services.
Also, there must be an actual encounter with a health care
provider, who is either an employee of an entity in an agreement with
VA or who is furnishing care through an agreement the health care
provider has entered into with VA, and such encounter must occur after
an election is made by an eligible veteran. The encounter may be
virtual through use of telehealth or other technologies, but the health
care provider must furnish hospital care or medical services during the
[[Page 65582]]
appointment. This will ensure that VA only pays for hospital care or
medical services that were actually furnished, and is consistent with
the Act's requirement in section 101(m) that the Department does not
pay for care or services that were not furnished to an eligible
veteran.
Section 17.1540 Claims Processing System
Section 17.1540 provides general requirements for a VA claims
processing system. This is required by section 101(k) of the Act.
Paragraph (a) of this section establishes the claims processing system
within the Chief Business Office of the Veterans Health Administration.
This is required by section 101(k)(3) of the Act. The system will
process and pay bills or claims for authorized hospital care and
medical services furnished to veterans through the Program, as required
by section 101(k)(1).
Paragraph (b) of this section establishes responsibility for
overseeing the system with the Chief Business Office of the Veterans
Health Administration. Section 101(k)(3) requires this assignment of
authority.
Paragraph (c) of this section states that the system will receive
requests for payment from eligible entities and providers for hospital
care or medical services furnished to eligible veteran, and that the
system will provide accurate and timely payments for claims received
under the Program. This is required by section 101(k) and section 105
of the Act.
Administrative Procedure Act
The Secretary of Veterans Affairs finds that there is good cause
under 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B) and (d)(3) to dispense with the opportunity
for advance notice and opportunity for public comment and good cause to
publish this rule with an immediate effective date. Section 101(n) of
the Act requires publication of an interim final rule no later than
November 5, 2014, the date that is 90 days after the date of the
enactment of the law. We interpret this mandate to mean that, as a
matter of law, it is impracticable and contrary to law and the public
interest to delay this rule for the purpose of soliciting advance
public comment or to have a delayed effective date.
VA is making the rule effective for certain veterans prior to the
usual 30 day delay for an interim final rule to allow VA to begin
furnishing hospital care and medical services immediately to certain
eligible veterans. Delaying implementation could result in delayed
health care for these veterans, which could have unpredictable negative
health effects.
For the above reasons, the Secretary issues this rule as an interim
final rule. However, VA will consider and address comments that are
received within 120 days of the date this interim final rule is
published in the Federal Register.
Effect of Rulemaking
Title 38 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as revised by this
interim final rulemaking, represents VA's implementation of its legal
authority on this subject. Other than future amendments to this
regulation or governing statutes, no contrary guidance or procedures
are authorized. All existing or subsequent VA guidance must be read to
conform with this rulemaking if possible or, if not possible, such
guidance is superseded by this rulemaking.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This interim final rule includes a collection of information under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3521) that requires
approval by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Accordingly,
under 44 U.S.C. 3507(d), VA has submitted a copy of this rulemaking to
OMB for review.
OMB assigns a control number for each collection of information it
approves. VA may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required
to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a
currently valid OMB control number. Sections 17.1510(d), 17.1515, and
17.1530 contain a collection of information under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3521). If OMB does not approve
the collection of information as requested, VA will immediately remove
the provisions containing a collection of information or take such
other action as is directed by OMB.
Comments on the collection of information contained in this interim
final rule should be submitted to the Office of Management and Budget,
Attention: Desk Officer for the Department of Veterans Affairs, Office
of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Washington, DC 20503, with
copies sent by mail or hand delivery to the Director, Regulation Policy
and Management (02REG), Department of Veterans Affairs, 810 Vermont
Avenue NW., Room 1068, Washington, DC 20420; fax to (202) 273-9026; or
through www.Regulations.gov. Comments should indicate that they are
submitted in response to ``RIN 2900-AP24--Expanded Access to Non-VA
Care through the Veterans Choice Program.''
A comment to OMB is best assured of having its full effect if OMB
receives it within 30 days of publication. This does not affect the
deadline for the public to comment on the rule.
VA considers comments by the public on proposed collections of
information in--
Evaluating whether the proposed collections of information
are necessary for the proper performance of the functions of VA,
including whether the information will have practical utility;
Evaluating the accuracy of VA's estimate of the burden of
the proposed collections of information, including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
Enhancing the quality, usefulness, and clarity of the
information to be collected; and
Minimizing the burden of the collections of information on
those who are to respond, including through the use of appropriate
automated, electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection
techniques or other forms of information technology, e.g., permitting
electronic submission of responses.
The amendments to title 38 CFR part 17 contain collections of
information under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 for which we are
requesting approval by OMB. These collections of information are
described immediately following this paragraph, under their respective
titles.
Title: Election to Receive Authorized Non-VA Care and Selection of
Provider for the Veterans Choice Program.
Summary of collection of information: Section 17.1515 requires
eligible veterans to notify VA whether the veteran elects to receive
authorized non-VA care through the Veterans Choice Program, be placed
on an electronic waiting list, or be scheduled for an appointment with
a VA health care provider. Section 17.1515(b)(1) also allows eligible
veterans to specify a particular non-VA entity or health care provider,
if that entity or provider meets certain requirements.
Description of the need for information and proposed use of
information: The information is required by the Act. Section 101(c) of
Public Law 113-146 requires an eligible veteran to make an election to
receive authorized non-VA care through the Veterans Choice Program, be
placed on an electronic waiting list, or be scheduled for an
appointment with a VA health care provider. Section 101(a)(2)
authorizes certain eligible veterans to select a non-VA health care
provider, and through regulation at Sec. 17.1515(b), all eligible
veterans may
[[Page 65583]]
select a non-VA health care provider that is eligible under Sec.
17.1530. This information is necessary because VA must know what the
veteran's choice is and whom the veteran would like to see for an
appointment.
Description of likely respondents: Eligible veterans seeking
authorization to receive non-VA care through the Veterans Choice
Program.
Estimated number of respondents per year: 440,794 eligible persons.
Estimated frequency of responses per year: 12.64 times per year.
Estimated average burden per response: 2 minutes.
Estimated total annual reporting and recordkeeping burden: 185,721
hours.
Title: Health-Care Plan Information for the Veterans Choice
Program.
Summary of collection of information: Section 17.1510(d) requires
eligible veterans to submit to VA information about their health-care
plan to participate in the Veterans Choice Program.
Description of the need for information and proposed use of
information: The information is required by the Act. Section 101(e)(1)
of Public Law 113-146 requires an eligible veteran to provide to the
Secretary information on any health-care plan under which the eligible
veteran is covered. This information is necessary because the veteran's
other health-care plan is primarily responsible for paying for hospital
care or medical services furnished through the Veterans Choice Program
for a nonservice-connected disability.
Description of likely respondents: Eligible veterans seeking
authorization to receive non-VA care through the Veterans Choice
Program.
Estimated number of respondents per year: 440,794 eligible persons.
Estimated frequency of responses per year: 1.2 times per year.
Estimated average burden per response: 10 minutes.
Estimated total annual reporting and recordkeeping burden: 88,159
hours.
Title: Submission of Medical Record Information under the Veterans
Choice Program.
Summary of collection of information: Participating eligible
entities and providers are required to submit a copy of any medical
record related to hospital care or medical services furnished under
this Program to an eligible veteran.
Description of the need for information and proposed use of
information: The information is required by the Act. Section 101(l) of
Public Law 113-146, as amended by section 409 of Public Law 113-175,
requires VA to ensure that any health care provider that furnishes care
or services under the Program to an eligible veteran submits to VA a
copy of any medical record related to the care or services that were
provided. This is necessary to ensure continuity of care for the health
and well-being of the veteran.
Description of likely respondents: Eligible entities and health
care providers furnishing hospital care or medical services to eligible
veterans through the Veterans Choice Program.
Estimated number of respondents per year: 187,000 eligible persons.
Estimated frequency of responses per year: 29.80 times per year.
Estimated average burden per response: 5 minutes.
Estimated total annual reporting and recordkeeping burden: 464,428
hours.
Title: Submission of Information on Credentials and Licenses by
Eligible Entities or Providers.
Summary of collection of information: Section 17.1530 requires
eligible entities and providers to submit verification that the entity
or provider maintains at least the same or similar credentials and
licenses as those required of VA's health care providers, as determined
by the Secretary.
Description of the need for information and proposed use of
information: The information is required by the Act. Section 101(i) of
Public Law 113-146 requires non-VA entities or providers to maintain
the same or similar credentials and licenses as those required of
health care providers of the Department, as determined by the
Secretary, and to submit not less than once per year verification of
such licenses and credentials maintained by the health care provider.
Under the interim final rule, an eligible entity may submit this
information on behalf of its providers. This information is necessary
to ensure that non-VA entities and providers who are furnishing
hospital care and medical services to eligible veterans are meeting the
same quality standards as VA health care providers.
Description of likely respondents: Eligible entities or providers
furnishing hospital care and medical services through the Veterans
Choice Program.
Estimated number of respondents per year: 187,000 eligible persons.
Estimated frequency of responses per year: 1 time per year.
Estimated average burden per response: 5 minutes.
Estimated total annual reporting and recordkeeping burden: 15,583
hours.
VA is also developing a survey to understand veteran satisfaction
with receipt of care under the Veterans Choice Program. The information
is required by the Act. Section 101(q)(2)(D) of Public Law 113-146
requires VA to report to Congress the results of a survey of eligible
veterans who have received care or services under this Program on the
satisfaction of such eligible veterans with the care or services they
received. This information is necessary because VA must report this
information to Congress, and this feedback will help VA better
understand whether veterans like the Program. A separate notice will be
published in the Federal Register providing more information about the
planned veteran satisfaction survey.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess the
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, when
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, and other advantages; distributive impacts;
and equity). Executive Order 13563 (Improving Regulation and Regulatory
Review) emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and
benefits, reducing costs, harmonizing rules, and promoting flexibility.
Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review) defines a
``significant regulatory action,'' requiring review by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB), unless OMB waives such review, as ``any
regulatory action that is likely to result in a rule that may: (1) Have
an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more or adversely
affect in a material way the economy, a sector of the economy,
productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public health or
safety, or State, local, or tribal governments or communities; (2)
Create a serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere with an action
taken or planned by another agency; (3) Materially alter the budgetary
impact of entitlements, grants, user fees, or loan programs or the
rights and obligations of recipients thereof; or (4) Raise novel legal
or policy issues arising out of legal mandates, the President's
priorities, or the principles set forth in this Executive Order.''
The economic, interagency, budgetary, legal, and policy
implications of this regulatory action have been examined, and it has
been determined that this is an economically significant regulatory
action under Executive Order 12866. VA's regulatory impact analysis can
be found as a supporting document at https://
[[Page 65584]]
www.regulations.gov, usually within 48 hours after the rulemaking
document is published. Additionally, a copy of the rulemaking and its
regulatory impact analysis are available on VA's Web site at https://www.va.gov/orpm/, by following the link for ``VA Regulations Published
From FY 2004 Through Fiscal Year to Date.''
Congressional Review Act
This regulatory action is a major rule under the Congressional
Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 801-08, because it may result in an annual effect
on the economy of $100 million or more. Although this regulatory action
constitutes a major rule within the meaning of the Congressional Review
Act, 5 U.S.C. 804(2), it is not subject to the 60-day delay in
effective date applicable to major rules under 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(3)
because the Secretary finds that good cause exists under 5 U.S.C.
808(2) to make this regulatory action effective on the date of
publication, consistent with the reasons given for the publication of
this interim final rule. Congress directed VA to publish an interim
final rule within 90 days of the date of enactment of the law, and
further delay in expanding access to non-VA care for eligible veterans
could result in the deterioration of their health. Accordingly, the
Secretary finds that additional advance notice and public procedure
thereon are impractical, unnecessary, and contrary to the public
interest. In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1), VA will submit to the
Comptroller General and to Congress a copy of this regulatory action
and VA's Regulatory Impact Analysis.
Unfunded Mandates
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 requires, at 2 U.S.C.
1532, that agencies prepare an assessment of anticipated costs and
benefits before issuing any rule that may result in the expenditure by
State, local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more (adjusted annually for
inflation) in any 1 year. This interim final rule will have no such
effect on State, local, and tribal governments, or on the private
sector.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Secretary hereby certifies that this interim final rule will
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities as they are defined in the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5
U.S.C. 601-612. This interim final rule will not have a significant
economic impact on participating eligible entities and providers who
enter into agreements with VA. To the extent there is any such impact,
it will result in increased business and revenue for them. We also do
not believe there will be a significant economic impact on insurance
companies, as claims will only be submitted for care that will
otherwise have been received whether such care was authorized under
this Program or not. Therefore, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b), this
rulemaking is exempt from the initial and final regulatory flexibility
analysis requirements of 5 U.S.C. 603 and 604.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance numbers and titles for
the programs affected by this document are as follows: 64.007, Blind
Rehabilitation Centers; 64.008, Veterans Domiciliary Care; 64.009,
Veterans Medical Care Benefits; 64.010, Veterans Nursing Home Care;
64.011, Veterans Dental Care; 64.012, Veterans Prescription Service;
64.013, Veterans Prosthetic Appliances; 64.014, Veterans State
Domiciliary Care; 64.015, Veterans State Nursing Home Care; 64.016,
Veterans State Hospital Care; 64.018, Sharing Specialized Medical
Resources; 64.019, Veterans Rehabilitation Alcohol and Drug Dependence;
64.022, Veterans Home Based Primary Care; and 64.024, VA Homeless
Providers Grant and Per Diem Program.
Signing Authority
The Secretary of Veterans Affairs, or designee, approved this
document and authorized the undersigned to sign and submit the document
to the Office of the Federal Register for publication electronically as
an official document of the Department of Veterans Affairs. Jose D.
Riojas, Chief of Staff, Department of Veterans Affairs, approved this
document on October 30, 2014, for publication.
List of Subjects in 38 CFR Part 17
Administrative practice and procedure, Alcohol abuse, Alcoholism,
Claims, Day care, Dental health, Drug abuse, Government contracts,
Grant programs--health, Grant programs--veterans, Health care, Health
facilities, Health professions, Health records, Homeless, Mental health
programs, Nursing homes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Travel and transportation expenses, Veterans.
Dated: October 31, 2014.
William F. Russo,
Acting Director, Office of Regulation Policy & Management, Office of
the General Counsel, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, VA amends 38 CFR part 17
as follows:
PART 17--MEDICAL
0
1. The authority citation for part 17 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501, and as noted in specific sections.
0
2. Amend Sec. 17.108 by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (b)(1).
0
b. Adding paragraph (b)(4).
0
c. Revising paragraph (c)(1).
0
d. Adding paragraph (c)(4).
0
e. Revising the authority citation at the end of the section.
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 17.108 Copayments for inpatient hospital care and outpatient
medical care.
* * * * *
(b) Copayments for inpatient hospital care. (1) Except as provided
in paragraphs (d) or (e) of this section, a veteran, as a condition of
receiving inpatient hospital care provided by VA (provided either
directly by VA or obtained by VA by contract, provider agreement, or
sharing agreement), must agree to pay VA (and is obligated to pay VA)
the applicable copayment, as set forth in paragraph (b)(2), (b)(3), or
(b)(4) of this section.
* * * * *
(4) For inpatient hospital care furnished through the Veterans
Choice Program under Sec. 17.1500 through 17.1540, the copayment
amount at the time of furnishing such care or services by a non-VA
entity or provider is $0. VA will determine and assess the veteran's
copayment amount at the end of the billing process, but at no time will
a veteran's copayment be more than the amount identified in paragraphs
(b)(2) or (b)(3) of this section.
* * * * *
(c) Copayments for outpatient medical care. (1) Except as provided
in paragraphs (d), (e), or (f) of this section, a veteran, as a
condition for receiving outpatient medical care provided by VA
(provided either directly by VA or obtained by VA by contract, provider
agreement, or sharing agreement), must agree to pay VA (and is
obligated to pay VA) a copayment as set forth in paragraph (c)(2) or
(c)(4) of this section.
* * * * *
(4) For outpatient medical care furnished through the Veterans
Choice
[[Page 65585]]
Program under Sec. 17.1500 through 17.1540, the copayment amount at
the time of furnishing such care or services by a non-VA entity or
provider is $0. VA will determine and assess the veteran's copayment
amount at the end of the billing process, but at no time will a
veteran's copayment be more than the amount identified in paragraph
(c)(2) of this section.
* * * * *
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501, 1710, 1730A, Sec. 101, Pub. L. 113-146,
128 Stat. 1754)
0
3. Amend Sec. 17.110 by:
0
a. Adding paragraph (b)(4).
0
b. Revising the authority citation at the end of the section.
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 17.110 Copayments for medications.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(4) For medications furnished through the Veterans Choice Program
under Sec. 17.1500 through 17.1540, the copayment amount at the time
the veteran fills the prescription is $0. VA will determine and assess
the veteran's copayment amount at the end of the billing process, but
at no time will a veteran's copayment be more than the amount
identified in paragraphs (b)(1)(i) through (b)(1)(iii) of this section.
* * * * *
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501, 1710, 1720D, 1722A, 1730A, Sec. 101, Pub.
L. 113-146, 128 Stat. 1754)
0
4. Amend Sec. 17.111 by:
0
a. Adding paragraph (b)(3).
0
b. Revising the authority citation at the end of the section.
The addition and revision read as follows:
Sec. 17.111 Copayments for extended care services.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(3) For hospital care and medical services considered non-
institutional care furnished through the Veterans Choice Program under
Sec. 17.1500 through 17.1540, the copayment amount at the time of
furnishing such care or services by a non-VA entity or provider is $0.
VA will determine and assess the veteran's copayment amount at the end
of the billing process, but at no time will a veteran's copayment be
more than the amount identified in paragraphs (b)(1) or (b)(2) of this
section.
* * * * *
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 101(28), 501, 1701(7), 1710, 1710B, 1720B,
1720D, 1722A, Sec. 101, Pub. L. 113-146, 128 Stat. 1754)
0
5. Add an undesignated center heading and Sec. Sec. 17.1500 through
17.1540 to read as follows:
Expanded Access to Non-VA Care Through the Veterans Choice Program
Sec.
17.1500 Purpose and scope.
17.1505 Definitions.
17.1510 Eligible veterans.
17.1515 Authorizing non-VA care.
17.1520 Effect on other provisions.
17.1525 Start date for eligible veterans.
17.1530 Eligible entities and providers.
17.1535 Payment rates and methodologies.
17.1540 Claims processing system.
Expanded Access to Non-VA Care Through the Veterans Choice Program
Sec. 17.1500 Purpose and scope.
(a) Purpose. Sections 17.1500 through 17.1540 implement the
Veterans Choice Program, authorized by section 101 of the Veterans
Access, Choice, and Accountability Act of 2014.
(b) Scope. The Veterans Choice Program authorizes VA to furnish
hospital care and medical services to eligible veterans, as defined in
Sec. 17.1510, through agreements with eligible entities or providers,
as defined in Sec. 17.1530.
(Authority: Sec. 101, Pub. L. 113-146, 128 Stat. 1754)
Sec. 17.1505 Definitions.
For purposes of the Veterans Choice Program under Sec. Sec.
17.1500 through 17.1540:
Appointment means an authorized and scheduled encounter with a
health care provider for the delivery of hospital care or medical
services. A visit to an emergency room or an unscheduled visit to a
clinic is not an appointment.
Attempt to schedule means contact with a VA scheduler or VA health
care provider in which a stated request by the veteran for an
appointment is made.
Episode of care means a necessary course of treatment, including
follow-up appointments and ancillary and specialty services, which
lasts no longer than 60 days from the date of the first appointment
with a non-VA health care provider.
Health-care plan means an insurance policy or contract, medical or
hospital service agreement, membership or subscription contract, or
similar arrangement not administered by the Secretary of Veterans
Affairs, under which health services for individuals are provided or
the expenses of such services are paid; and does not include any such
policy, contract, agreement, or similar arrangement pursuant to title
XVIII or XIX of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1395 et seq.) or
chapter 55 of title 10, United States Code.
Residence means a legal residence or personal domicile, even if
such residence is seasonal. A person may maintain more than one
residence but may only have one residence at a time. If a veteran lives
in more than one location during a year, the veteran's residence is the
residence or domicile where the person is staying at the time the
veteran wants to receive hospital care or medical services through the
Program. A post office box or other non-residential point of delivery
does not constitute a residence.
Schedule means identifying and confirming a date, time, location,
and entity or health care provider for an appointment.
VA medical facility means a VA hospital, a VA community-based
outpatient clinic, or a VA health care center. A Vet Center, or
Readjustment Counseling Service Center, is not a VA medical facility.
Wait-time goals of the Veterans Health Administration means, unless
changed by further notice in the Federal Register, a date not more than
30 days from either:
(1) The date that an appointment is deemed clinically appropriate
by a VA health care provider. In the event a VA health care provider
identifies a time range when care must be provided (e.g., within the
next 2 months), VA will use the last clinically appropriate date for
determining whether or not such care is timely.
(2) Or, if no such clinical determination has been made, the date
that a veteran prefers to be seen for hospital care or medical
services.
(Authority: Sec. 101, Pub. L. 113-146, 128 Stat. 1754)
Sec. 17.1510 Eligible veterans.
A veteran must meet the eligibility criteria under both paragraphs
(a) and (b) of this section to be eligible for care through the
Veterans Choice Program. A veteran must also provide the information
required by paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section.
(a) A veteran must:
(1) Be enrolled in the VA health care system under Sec. 17.36 on
or before August 1, 2014; or
(2) Be eligible for hospital care and medical services under 38
U.S.C. 1710(e)(1)(D) and be a veteran described in 38 U.S.C.
1710(e)(3).
(b) A veteran must also meet at least one of the following
criteria:
(1) The veteran attempts, or has attempted, to schedule an
appointment with a VA health care provider, but VA is unable to
schedule an appointment for the veteran within the wait-time goals of
the Veterans Health Administration.
(2) The veteran's residence is more than 40 miles from the VA
medical
[[Page 65586]]
facility that is closest to the veteran's residence.
(3) The veteran's residence is both:
(i) In a state without a VA medical facility that provides hospital
care, emergency medical services, and surgical care having a surgical
complexity of standard (VA maintains a Web site with a list of the
facilities that have been designated with at least a surgical
complexity of standard. That Web site can be accessed here: www.va.gov/health/surgery); and
(ii) More than 20 miles from a medical facility described in
paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this section.
(4) The veteran's residence is in a location, other than one in
Guam, American Samoa, or the Republic of the Philippines, which is 40
miles or less from a VA medical facility and the veteran:
(i) Must travel by air, boat, or ferry to reach such a VA medical
facility; or
(ii) Faces an unusual or excessive burden in traveling to such a VA
medical facility based on the presence of a body of water (including
moving water and still water) or a geologic formation that cannot be
crossed by road.
(c) If the veteran changes his or her residence, the veteran must
update VA about the change within 60 days.
(d) A veteran must provide to VA information on any health-care
plan under which the veteran is covered prior to obtaining
authorization for care under the Veterans Choice Program. If the
veteran changes health-care plans, the veteran must update VA about the
change within 60 days.
(e) For purposes of calculating the distance between a veteran's
residence and the nearest VA medical facility under this section
(except for purposes of calculating a driving route under paragraph
(b)(4)(ii) of this section), VA will use the straight-line distance
between the nearest VA medical facility and a veteran's residence.
(Authority: Sec. 101, Pub. L. 113-146, 128 Stat. 1754)
(The information collection requirements have been submitted to
the Office of Management and Budget and are pending OMB approval.)
Sec. 17.1515 Authorizing non-VA care.
(a) Electing non-VA care. A veteran eligible for the Veterans
Choice Program under Sec. 17.1510 may choose to schedule an
appointment with a VA health care provider, be placed on an electronic
waiting list for VA care, or have VA authorize the veteran to receive
an episode of care for hospital care or medical services under 38 CFR
17.38 from an eligible entity or provider.
(b) Selecting a non-VA provider. An eligible veteran may specify a
particular non-VA entity or health care provider, if that entity or
health care provider meets the requirements of Sec. 17.1530. If an
eligible veteran does not specify a particular eligible entity or
provider, VA will refer the veteran to a specific eligible entity or
provider.
(Authority: Sec. 101, Pub. L. 113-146, 128 Stat. 1754)
(The information collection requirements have been submitted to
the Office of Management and Budget and are pending OMB approval.)
Sec. 17.1520 Effect on other provisions.
(a) General. In general, eligibility under the Veterans Choice
Program does not affect a veteran's eligibility for hospital care or
medical services under the medical benefits package, as defined in
Sec. 17.38, or other benefits addressed in this part. Notwithstanding
any other provision of this part, VA will pay for and fill
prescriptions written by eligible providers under Sec. 17.1530 for
eligible veterans under Sec. 17.1510, including prescriptions for
drugs, including over-the-counter drugs and medical and surgical
supplies available under the VA national formulary system.
(b) Copayments. VA will be liable for any deductibles, cost-shares,
or copayments required by an eligible veteran's health-care plan for
hospital care and medical services furnished under this Program, to the
extent that such reimbursement does not result in expenditures by VA
for the furnished care or services in excess of the rate established
under Sec. 17.1535. Veterans are also liable for a VA copayment for
care furnished under this Program, as required by Sec. Sec.
17.108(b)(4), 17.108(c)(4), 17.110(b)(4), and 17.111(b)(3).
(c) Beneficiary travel. For veterans who are eligible for
beneficiary travel benefits under part 70 of this chapter, VA will
provide beneficiary travel benefits for travel to and from the location
of the eligible entity or provider who furnishes hospital care or
medical services for an authorized appointment under the Veterans
Choice Program without regard to the limitations in Sec. 70.30(b)(2)
of this chapter.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 111; Sec. 101, Pub. L. 113-146, 128 Stat.
1754)
Sec. 17.1525 Start date for eligible veterans.
(a) VA will begin furnishing hospital care and medical services
under the Program authorized by 38 CFR 17.1500 through 17.1540 as
follows:
(1) Beginning November 5, 2014, to Veterans eligible under Sec.
17.1510(b)(2), (b)(3), or (b)(4).
(2) Beginning no later than December 5, 2014, to Veterans eligible
under Sec. 17.1510(b)(1).
(b) If the start date will be earlier than the date identified in
paragraph (a)(2) of this section, the Secretary will notify the public
of the start date by publishing a Notice in the Federal Register.
(Authority: Sec. 101, Pub. L. 113-146, 128 Stat. 1754)
Sec. 17.1530 Eligible entities and providers.
(a) General. An entity or provider is eligible to deliver care
under the Veterans Choice Program if, in accordance with paragraph (c)
of this section, it is accessible to the veteran and is an entity or
provider identified in section 101(a)(1)(B) of the Veterans Access,
Choice, and Accountability Act of 2014 and is either:
(1) Not a part of, or an employee of, VA; or
(2) If the provider is an employee of VA, is not acting within the
scope of such employment while providing hospital care or medical
services through the Veterans Choice Program.
(b) Agreement. An entity or provider must enter into an agreement
with VA to provide non-VA hospital care or medical services to eligible
veterans through one of the following types of agreements: contracts,
intergovernmental agreements, or provider agreements. Each form of
agreement must be executed by a duly authorized Department official.
(c) Accessibility. An entity or provider may only furnish hospital
care or medical services to an eligible veteran if the entity or
provider is accessible to the eligible veteran. VA will determine
accessibility by considering the following factors:
(1) The length of time the eligible veteran would have to wait to
receive hospital care or medical services from the entity or provider;
(2) The qualifications of the entity or provider to furnish the
hospital care or medical services to the eligible veteran; and
(3) The distance between the eligible veteran's residence and the
entity or provider.
(d) Requirements for health care providers. To be eligible to
furnish care or services under the Veterans Choice Program, a health
care provider must maintain at least the same or similar credentials
and licenses as those required of VA's health care providers, as
determined by the Secretary. The agreement reached under paragraph (b)
of this section will clarify these requirements. Eligible health care
providers must submit verification of such licenses and credentials
[[Page 65587]]
maintained by the provider to VA at least once per 12-month period. Any
entities that are eligible to provide care through the Program must
ensure that any of their providers furnishing care and services through
the Program meet these standards. An eligible entity may submit this
information on behalf of its providers.
(Authority: Sec. 101, Pub. L. 113-146, 128 Stat. 1754)
(The information collection requirements have been submitted to
the Office of Management and Budget and are pending OMB approval.)
Sec. 17.1535 Payment rates and methodologies.
(a) Payment rates. Payment rates will be negotiated and set forth
in an agreement between the Secretary and an eligible entity or
provider.
(1) Except as otherwise provided in this section, payment rates may
not exceed the rates paid by the United States to a provider of
services (as defined in section 1861(u) of the Social Security Act (42
U.S.C. 1395x(u)) or a supplier (as defined in section 1861(d) of such
Act (42 U.S.C. 1395x(d)) under the Medicare program under title XVIII
of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1395 et seq.) for the same care
or services. These rates are known as the ``Medicare Fee Schedule'' for
VA purposes.
(2) For eligible entities or providers in highly rural areas, the
Secretary may enter into an agreement that includes a rate greater than
the rate defined paragraph (a)(1) of this section for hospital care or
medical services, so long as such rate is still determined by VA to be
fair and reasonable. The term ``highly rural area'' means an area
located in a county that has fewer than seven individuals residing in
that county per square mile.
(3) When there are no available rates as described in paragraph
(a)(1) of this section, the Secretary shall, to the extent consistent
with the Veterans Access, Choice, and Accountability Act of 2014,
follow the process and methodology outlined in Sec. Sec. 17.55 and
17.56 and pay the resulting rate.
(b) Payment responsibilities. Responsibility for payments will be
as follows.
(1) For a nonservice-connected disability, as that term is defined
at Sec. 3.1(l) of this chapter, a health-care plan of an eligible
veteran is primarily responsible, to the extent such care or services
is covered by the health-care plan, for paying the eligible entity or
provider for such hospital care or medical services as are authorized
under Sec. Sec. 17.1500 through 17.1540 and furnished to an eligible
veteran. VA shall be responsible for promptly paying only for costs of
the VA-authorized service not covered by such health-care plan,
including a payment made by the veteran, except that such payment may
not exceed the rate determined for such care or services pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section.
(2) For hospital care or medical services furnished for a service-
connected disability, as that term is defined at Sec. 3.1(k) of this
chapter, or pursuant to 38 U.S.C. 1710(e), 1720D, or 1720E, VA is
solely responsible for paying the eligible entity or provider for such
hospital care or medical services as are authorized under Sec. Sec.
17.1500 through 17.1540 and furnished to an eligible veteran.
(c) Authorized care. VA will only pay for an episode of care for
hospital care or medical services authorized by VA. The eligible entity
or provider must contact VA to receive authorization prior to providing
any hospital care or medical services the eligible non-VA entity or
provider believes are necessary that are not identified in the
authorization VA submits to the eligible entity or provider. VA will
only pay for the hospital care or medical services that are furnished
by an eligible entity or provider. There must be an actual encounter
with a health care provider, who is either an employee of an entity in
an agreement with VA or who is furnishing care through an agreement the
health care provider has entered into with VA, and such encounter must
occur after an election is made by an eligible veteran.
(Authority: Secs. 101, 105, Pub. L. 113-146, 128 Stat. 1754)
Sec. 17.1540 Claims processing system.
(a) There is established within the Chief Business Office of the
Veterans Health Administration a nationwide claims processing system
for processing and paying bills or claims for authorized hospital care
and medical services furnished to eligible veterans under Sec. Sec.
17.1500 through 17.1540.
(b) The Chief Business Office is responsible for overseeing the
implementation and maintenance of such system.
(c) The claims processing system will receive requests for payment
from eligible entities and providers for hospital care or medical
services furnished to eligible veterans. The claims processing system
will provide accurate, timely payments for claims received in
accordance with Sec. Sec. 17.1500 through 17.1540.
(Authority: Secs. 101, 105, Pub. L. 113-146, 128 Stat. 1754)
[FR Doc. 2014-26316 Filed 11-4-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320-01-P