Medicare Program; FY 2016 Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate Update and Hospice Quality Reporting Requirements, 47141-47207 [2015-19033]
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Vol. 80
Thursday,
No. 151
August 6, 2015
Part III
Department of Health and Human Services
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Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Part 418
Medicare Program; FY 2016 Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate
Update and Hospice Quality Reporting Requirements; Final Rule
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Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
Hospice/).
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Table of Contents
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
42 CFR Part 418
[CMS–1629–F]
RIN 0938–AS39
Medicare Program; FY 2016 Hospice
Wage Index and Payment Rate Update
and Hospice Quality Reporting
Requirements
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule will update the
hospice payment rates and the wage
index for fiscal year (FY) 2016 (October
1, 2015 through September 30, 2016),
including implementing the last year of
the phase-out of the wage index budget
neutrality adjustment factor (BNAF).
Effective on January 1, 2016, this rule
also finalizes our proposals to
differentiate payments for routine home
care (RHC) based on the beneficiary’s
length of stay and implement a service
intensity add-on (SIA) payment for
services provided in the last 7 days of
a beneficiary’s life, if certain criteria are
met. In addition, this rule will
implement changes to the aggregate cap
calculation mandated by the Improving
Medicare Post-Acute Care
Transformation Act of 2014 (IMPACT
Act), align the cap accounting year for
both the inpatient cap and the hospice
aggregate cap with the federal fiscal year
starting in FY 2017, make changes to the
hospice quality reporting program,
clarify a requirement for diagnosis
reporting on the hospice claim, and
discuss recent hospice payment reform
research and analyses.
DATES: Effective Date: These regulations
are effective on October 1, 2015 and the
implementation date for the RHC rates
and the SIA payment rates will be
January 1, 2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Debra Dean-Whittaker, (410) 786–0848
for questions regarding the CAHPS®
Hospice Survey. Michelle Brazil, (410)
786–1648 for questions regarding the
hospice quality reporting program. For
general questions about hospice
payment policy please send your
inquiry via email to: hospicepolicy@
cms.hhs.gov.
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SUMMARY:
Wage
index addenda will be available only
through the internet on the CMS Web
site at: (https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
C. Summary of Costs, Benefits, and
Transfers
II. Background
A. Hospice Care
B. History of the Medicare Hospice Benefit
C. Services Covered by the Medicare
Hospice Benefit
D. Medicare Payment for Hospice Care
1. Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of
1989
2. Balanced Budget Act of 1997
3. FY 1998 Hospice Wage Index Final Rule
4. FY 2010 Hospice Wage Index Final Rule
5. The Affordable Care Act
6. FY 2012 Hospice Wage Index Final Rule
7. FY 2015 Hospice Rate Update Final Rule
8. Impact Act of 2014
E. Trends in Medicare Hospice Utilization
III. Provisions of the Proposed Rule and
Responses to Comments
A. Hospice Payment Reform: Research and
Analyses
1. Pre-Hospice Spending
2. Non-Hospice Spending for Hospice
Beneficiaries During an Election
3. Live Discharge Rates
B. Routine Home Care Rates and Service
Intensity Add-On (SIA) Payment
1. Background and Statutory Authority
a. U-Shaped Payment Model
b. Tiered Payment Model
c. Visits During the Beginning and End of
a Hospice Election
2. Routine Home Care Rates
3. Service Intensity Add-On Payment
C. FY 2016 Hospice Wage Index and Rates
Update
1. FY 2016 Hospice Wage Index
a. Background
b. Elimination of the Wage Index Budget
Neutrality Factor (BNAF)
c. Implementation of New Labor Market
Delineations
2. Hospice Payment Update Percentage
3. FY 2016 Hospice Payment Rates
4. Hospice Aggregate Cap and the IMPACT
Act of 2014
D. Alignment of the Inpatient and
Aggregate Cap Accounting Year With the
Federal Fiscal Year
1. Streamlined Method and Patient-byPatient Proportional Method for
Counting Beneficiaries To Determine
Each Hospice’s Aggregate Cap Amount
2. Inpatient and Aggregate Cap Accounting
Year Timeframe
E. Updates to the Hospice Quality
Reporting Program
1. Background and Statutory Authority
2. General Considerations Used for
Selection of Quality Measures for the
HQRP
3. Policy for Retention on HQRP Measures
Adopted for Previous Payment
Determination
4. Previously Adopted Measures for FY
2016 and FY 2017 Payment
Determination
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5. HQRP Quality Measures and Concepts
Under Consideration for Future Years
6. Form, Manner, and Timing of Quality
Data Submission
a. Background
b. Policy for New Facilities To Begin
Submitting Quality Data
c. Previously Finalized Data Submission
Mechanism, Collection Timelines, and
Submission Deadlines for the FY 2017
Payment Determination
d. Data Submission Timelines and
Requirements for FY 2018 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
e. HQRP Data Submission and Compliance
Thresholds for the FY 2018 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
7. HQRP Submission Exception and
Extension Requirements for the FY 2017
Payment Determination and Subsequent
Years
8. Adoption of the CAHPS Hospice Survey
for the FY 2017 Payment Determination
a. Background Description of the Survey
b. Participation Requirements To Meet
Quality Reporting Requirements for the
FY 2017 APU
c. Participation Requirements To Meet
Quality Reporting Requirements for the
FY 2018 APU
d. Vendor Participation Requirements for
the FY 2017 APU
9. Previously Finalized HQRP
Reconsideration and Appeals Procedures
for the FY 2016 Payment Determination
and Subsequent Years
10. Public Display of Quality Measures
Data for HQRP
11. Public Display of Other Hospice
Information
F. Clarification Regarding Diagnosis
Reporting on Hospice Claims
1. Background
2. Current Discussions About Hospice
Vulnerabilities
3. Medicare Hospice Eligibility
Requirements
4. Assessment of Conditions and
Comorbidities Required by Regulation
5. Clarification Regarding Diagnosis
Reporting on Hospice Claims
IV. Collection of Information Requirements
V. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
B. Introduction
C. Overall Impact
1. Detailed Economic Analysis
a. Effects on Hospices
b. Hospice Size
c. Geographic Location
d. Type of Ownership
e. Hospice Base
f. Effects on Other Providers
g. Effects on the Medicare and Medicaid
Programs
h. Alternatives Considered
i. Accounting Statement
j. Conclusion
2. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
3. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Analysis
VI. Federalism Analysis and Regulations Text
Acronyms
Because of the many terms to which
we refer by acronym in this final rule,
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we are listing the acronyms used and
their corresponding meanings in
alphabetical order below:
APU Annual Payment Update
ASPE Assistant Secretary of Planning and
Evaluation
AHIMA American Health Information
Management Association
BBA Balanced Budget Act of 1997
BETOS Berenson-Eggers Types of Service
BIPA Benefits Improvement and Protection
Act of 2000
BNAF Budget Neutrality Adjustment Factor
BLS Bureau of Labor Statistics
CAHPS® Consumer Assessment of
Healthcare Providers and Systems
CBSA Core-Based Statistical Area
CCN CMS Certification Number
CCW Chronic Conditions Data Warehouse
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CHC Continuous Home Care
CHF Congestive Heart Failure
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
COPD Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary
Disease
CoPs Conditions of Participation
CPI Center for Program Integrity
CPI–U Consumer Price Index-Urban
Consumers
CR Change Request
CVA Cerebral Vascular Accident
CWF Common Working File
CY Calendar Year
DME Durable Medical Equipment
DRG Diagnostic Related Group
ER Emergency Room
FEHC Family Evaluation of Hospice Care
FR Federal Register
FY Fiscal Year
GAO Government Accountability Office
GIP General Inpatient Care
HCFA Healthcare Financing Administration
HHS Health and Human Services
HIPPA Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act
HIS Hospice Item Set
HQRP Hospice Quality Reporting Program
IACS Individuals Authorized Access to
CMS Computer Services
ICD–9–CM International Classification of
Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical
Modification
ICD–10–CM International Classification of
Diseases, Tenth Revision, Clinical
Modification
ICR Information Collection Requirement
IDG Interdisciplinary Group
IMPACT Act Improving Medicare PostAcute Care Transformation Act of 2014
IOM Institute of Medicine
IPPS Inpatient Prospective Payment System
IRC Inpatient Respite Care
LCD Local Coverage Determination
LPN Licensed Practical Nurse
MAC Medicare Administrative Contractor
MAP Measure Applications Partnership
MedPAC Medicare Payment Advisory
Commission
MFP Multifactor Productivity
MSA Metropolitan Statistical Area
MSS Medical Social Services
NHPCO National Hospice and Palliative
Care Organization
NF Long Term Care Nursing Facility
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NOE Notice of Election
NOTR Notice of Termination/Revocation
NP Nurse Practitioner
NPI National Provider Identifier
NQF National Quality Forum
OIG Office of the Inspector General
OACT Office of the Actuary
OMB Office of Management and Budget
PRRB Provider Reimbursement Review
Board
PS&R Provider Statistical and
Reimbursement Report
Pub. L Public Law
QAPI Quality Assessment and Performance
Improvement
RHC Routine Home Care
RN Registered Nurse
SBA Small Business Administration
SEC Securities and Exchange Commission
SIA Service Intensity Add-on
SNF Skilled Nursing Facility
TEFRA Tax Equity and Fiscal
Responsibility Act of 1982
TEP Technical Expert Panel
UHDDS Uniform Hospital Discharge Data
Set
U.S.C. United States Code
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose
This final rule updates the payment
rates for hospices for fiscal year (FY)
2016, as required under section 1814(i)
of the Social Security Act (the Act) and
reflects the final year of the 7-year
Budget Neutrality Adjustment Factor
(BNAF) phase-out finalized in the FY
2010 Hospice Wage Index final rule (74
FR 39407). Our updates to payment
rates for hospices also include changes
to the hospice wage index by
incorporating the new Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) corebased statistical area (CBSA) definitions,
changes to the aggregate cap calculation
required by section 1814(i)(2)(B)(ii) of
the Act, and includes aligning the cap
accounting year for both the inpatient
cap and the hospice aggregate cap with
the federal fiscal year starting in FY
2017. In addition, pursuant to the
discretion granted the Secretary under
section 1814(i)(6)(D)(i) of the Act and
effective on January 1, 2016; this rule
will create two different payment rates
for routine home care (RHC) that will
result in a higher base payment rate for
the first 60 days of hospice care and a
reduced base payment rate for days 61
and over of hospice care; and a service
intensity add-on (SIA) payment that will
result in an add-on payment equal to the
Continuous Home Care (CHC) hourly
payment rate multiplied by the amount
of direct patient care provided by a
registered nurse (RN) or social worker
provided during the last 7 days of a
beneficiary’s life, if certain criteria are
met. In addition, section 3004(c) of the
Affordable Care Act established a
quality reporting program for hospices.
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In accordance with section 1814(i)(5)(A)
of the Act, starting in FY 2014, hospices
that have failed to meet quality
reporting requirements receive a 2
percentage point reduction to their
payment update percentage. Although
this rule does not implement new
quality measures, it provides updates on
the hospice quality reporting program.
Finally, this rule includes a clarification
regarding diagnosis reporting on the
hospice claim form.
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
Section III.A of this rule provides an
update on hospice payment reform
research and analysis. As a result of the
hospice payment reform research and
analysis conducted over the past several
years, some of which is described in
section III.A of this rule and in various
technical reports available on the CMS
Hospice Center Web page (https://www.
cms.gov/Center/Provider-Type/HospiceCenter.html) we proposed several
provisions to address issues identified
and strengthen the Medicare hospice
benefit. Section III.B implements the
creation of two different payment rates
for RHC that will result in a higher base
payment rate for the first 60 days of
hospice care and a reduced base
payment rate for days 61 and over of
hospice care. Section III.B also
implements SIA payment, in addition to
the per diem rate for the RHC level of
care, that will result in an add-on
payment equal to the CHC hourly
payment rate multiplied by the amount
of direct patient care provided by an RN
or social worker that occurs during the
last 7 days of a beneficiary’s life, if
certain criteria are met.
In section III.C.1 of this rule, we
update the hospice wage index using a
50/50 blend of the existing CBSA
designations and the new CBSA
designations outlined in a February 28,
2013, OMB bulletin. Section III.C.2 of
this rule implements year 7 of the 7-year
BNAF phase-out finalized in the FY
2010 Hospice Wage Index final rule (74
FR 39407). In section III.C.3, we update
the hospice payment rates for FY 2016
by 1.6 percent. Section III.C.4
implements changes mandated by the
Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care
Transformation Act of 2014 (IMPACT
Act), in which the aggregate cap for
accounting years that end after
September 30, 2016 and before October
1, 2025, will be updated by the hospice
payment update percentage rather than
using the consumer price index for
urban consumers (CPI–U). Specifically,
the 2016 cap year, starting on November
1, 2015 and ending on October 31, 2016,
will be updated by the FY 2016 hospice
update percentage for hospice care. In
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addition, in section III.D, we are
aligning the cap accounting year for
both the inpatient cap and the hospice
aggregate cap with the fiscal year for FY
2017 and later. We believe that this will
allow for the timely implementation of
the IMPACT Act changes while better
aligning the cap accounting year with
the timeframe described in the IMPACT
Act.
In section III.E of this rule, we discuss
updates to the hospice quality reporting
program, including participation
requirements for current year (CY) 2015
regarding the Consumer Assessment of
Healthcare Providers and Systems
(CAHPS®) Hospice Survey, and remind
the hospice industry that last year we
set the July 1, 2014 implementation date
for the Hospice Item Set (HIS) and the
January 1, 2015 implementation date for
the CAHPS® Hospice Survey. More than
seven new quality measures will be
derived from these tools; therefore, no
new measures were implemented this
year. Also, Section III.E of this rule will
make changes related to the
reconsideration process, extraordinary
circumstance extensions or exemptions,
hospice quality reporting program
(HQRP) eligibility requirements for
newly certified hospices and new data
submission timeliness requirements and
compliance thresholds. Finally, in
Section III.F, we clarify that hospices
must report all diagnoses of the
beneficiary on the hospice claim as a
part of the ongoing data collection
efforts for possible future hospice
refinements. We believe that reporting
of all diagnoses on the hospice claim
aligns with current coding guidelines as
well as admission requirements for
hospice certifications.
C. Summary of Impacts
TABLE 1—IMPACT SUMMARY TABLE
Provision description
Transfers
FY 2016 Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate Update.
The overall economic impact of this final rule is estimated to be $160 million in increased payments
to hospices during FY 2016.
II. Background
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A. Hospice Care
Hospice care is an approach to
treatment that recognizes that the
impending death of an individual
warrants a change in the focus from
curative care to palliative care for relief
of pain and for symptom management.
The goal of hospice care is to help
terminally ill individuals continue life
with minimal disruption to normal
activities while remaining primarily in
the home environment. A hospice uses
an interdisciplinary approach to deliver
medical, nursing, social, psychological,
emotional, and spiritual services
through use of a broad spectrum of
professionals and other caregivers, with
the goal of making the individual as
physically and emotionally comfortable
as possible. Hospice is compassionate
patient and family-centered care for
those who are terminally ill. It is a
comprehensive, holistic approach to
treatment that recognizes that the
impending death of an individual
necessitates a change from curative to
palliative care.
Medicare regulations define
‘‘palliative care’’ as ‘‘patient and familycentered care that optimizes quality of
life by anticipating, preventing, and
treating suffering. Palliative care
throughout the continuum of illness
involves addressing physical,
intellectual, emotional, social, and
spiritual needs and to facilitate patient
autonomy, access to information, and
choice.’’ (42 CFR 418.3) Palliative care
is at the core of hospice philosophy and
care practices, and is a critical
component of the Medicare hospice
benefit. See also Hospice Conditions of
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Participation final rule (73 FR 32088)
(2008). The goal of palliative care in
hospice is to improve the quality of life
of individuals, and their families, facing
the issues associated with a lifethreatening illness through the
prevention and relief of suffering by
means of early identification,
assessment and treatment of pain and
other issues. This is achieved by the
hospice interdisciplinary team working
with the patient and family to develop
a comprehensive care plan focused on
coordinating care services, reducing
unnecessary diagnostics or ineffective
therapies, and offering ongoing
conversations with individuals and
their families about changes in their
condition. It is expected that this
comprehensive care plan will shift over
time to meet the changing needs of the
patient and family as the individual
approaches the end of life.
Medicare hospice care is palliative
care for individuals with a prognosis of
living 6 months or less if the terminal
illness runs its normal course. When an
individual is terminally ill, many health
problems are brought on by underlying
condition(s), as bodily systems are
interdependent. In the June 5, 2008
Hospice Conditions of Participation
final rule (73 FR 32088), we stated that
‘‘the medical director must consider the
primary terminal condition, related
diagnoses, current subjective and
objective medical findings, current
medication and treatment orders, and
information about unrelated conditions
when considering the initial
certification of the terminal illness.’’ As
referenced in our regulations at
§ 418.22(b)(1), to be eligible for
Medicare hospice services, the patient’s
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attending physician (if any) and the
hospice medical director must certify
that the individual is ‘‘terminally ill,’’ as
defined in section 1861(dd)(3)(A) of the
Act and our regulations at § 418.3 that
is, the individual’s prognosis is for a life
expectancy of 6 months or less if the
terminal illness runs its normal course.
The certification of terminal illness
must include a brief narrative
explanation of the clinical findings that
supports a life expectancy of 6 months
or less as part of the certification and
recertification forms, as set out at
§ 418.22(b)(3).
The goal of hospice care is to make
the hospice patient as physically and
emotionally comfortable as possible,
with minimal disruption to normal
activities, while remaining primarily in
the home environment. Hospice care
uses an interdisciplinary approach to
deliver medical, nursing, social,
psychological, emotional, and spiritual
services through the use of a broad
spectrum of professional and other
caregivers and volunteers. While the
goal of hospice care is to allow for the
individual to remain in his or her home
environment, circumstances during the
end-of-life may necessitate short-term
inpatient admission to a hospital,
skilled nursing facility (SNF), or hospice
facility for procedures necessary for
pain control or acute or chronic
symptom management that cannot be
managed in any other setting. These
acute hospice care services are to ensure
that any new or worsening symptoms
are intensively addressed so that the
individual can return to his or her home
environment at a home level of care.
Short-term, intermittent, inpatient
respite services are also available to the
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B. History of the Medicare Hospice
Benefit
Before the creation of the Medicare
hospice benefit, hospice programs were
originally operated by volunteers who
cared for the dying. During the early
development stages of the Medicare
hospice benefit, hospice advocates were
clear that they wanted a Medicare
benefit that provided all-inclusive care
for terminally-ill individuals, provided
pain relief and symptom management,
and offered the opportunity to die with
dignity in the comfort of one’s home
rather than in an institutional setting.1
As stated in the August 22, 1983
proposed rule entitled ‘‘Medicare
Program; Hospice Care’’ (48 FR 38146),
‘‘the hospice experience in the United
States has placed emphasis on home
care. It offers physician services,
specialized nursing services, and other
forms of care in the home to enable the
terminally ill individual to remain at
home in the company of family and
friends as long as possible.’’ The
concept of a patient ‘‘electing’’ the
hospice benefit and being certified as
terminally ill were two key components
of the legislation responsible for the
creation of the Medicare Hospice
Benefit (section 122 of the Tax Equity
and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982
(TEFRA), (Pub. L. 97–248)). Section 122
of TEFRA created the Medicare Hospice
benefit, which was implemented on
November 1, 1983. Under sections
1812(d) and 1861(dd) of the Act,
codified at 42 U.S.C. 1395d(d) and
1395x(dd), we provide coverage of
hospice care for terminally ill Medicare
beneficiaries who elect to receive care
from a Medicare-certified hospice. Our
regulations at § 418.54(c) stipulate that
the comprehensive hospice assessment
must identify the patient’s physical,
psychosocial, emotional, and spiritual
needs related to the terminal illness and
related conditions, and address those
needs in order to promote the hospice
patient’s well-being, comfort, and
dignity throughout the dying process.
The comprehensive assessment must
take into consideration the following
factors: the nature and condition
causing admission (including the
presence or lack of objective data and
subjective complaints); complications
and risk factors that affect care
planning; functional status; imminence
of death; and severity of symptoms
(§ 418.54(c)). The Medicare hospice
benefit requires the hospice to cover all
reasonable and necessary palliative care
related to the terminal prognosis, as
described in the patient’s plan of care.
The December 16, 1983 Hospice final
rule (48 FR 56008) requires hospices to
cover care for interventions to manage
pain and symptoms. Additionally, the
hospice Conditions of Participation
(CoPs) at § 418.56(c) require that the
hospice must provide all reasonable and
necessary services for the palliation and
management of the terminal illness,
related conditions and interventions to
manage pain and symptoms. Therapy
and interventions must be assessed and
managed in terms of providing
palliation and comfort without undue
symptom burden for the hospice patient
or family.2 In the December 16, 1983
Hospice final rule (48 FR 56010 through
56011), regarding what is related versus
unrelated to the terminal illness, we
stated: ‘‘. . . we believe that the unique
physical condition of each terminally ill
individual makes it necessary for these
decisions to be made on a case-by-case
basis. It is our general view that
hospices are required to provide
virtually all the care that is needed by
terminally ill patients.’’ Therefore,
unless there is clear evidence that a
1 Connor, Stephen. (2007). Development of
Hospice and Palliative Care in the United States.
OMEGA. 56(1), p89–99.
2 Paolini, DO, Charlotte. (2001). Symptoms
Management at End of Life. JAOA. 101(10). p609–
615.
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family of the hospice patient when
needed to relieve the family or other
caregivers. Additionally, an individual
can receive continuous home care
during a period of crisis in which an
individual requires primarily
continuous nursing care to achieve
palliation or management of acute
medical symptoms so that the
individual can remain at home.
Continuous home care may be covered
on a continuous basis for as much as 24
hours a day, and these periods must be
predominantly nursing care in
accordance with our regulations at
§ 418.204. A minimum of 8 hours of
nursing, or nursing and aide, care must
be furnished on a particular day to
qualify for the continuous home care
rate (§ 418.302(e)(4)).
Hospices are expected to comply with
all civil rights laws, including the
provision of auxiliary aids and services
to ensure effective communication with
patients or patient care representatives
with disabilities consistent with Section
504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973
and the Americans with Disabilities Act,
and to provide language access for such
persons who are limited in English
proficiency, consistent with Title VI of
the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Further
information about these requirements
may be found at https://www.hhs.gov/
ocr/civilrights.
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condition is unrelated to the terminal
prognosis; all conditions are considered
to be related to the terminal prognosis.
It is also the responsibility of the
hospice physician to document why a
patient’s medical needs will be
unrelated to the terminal prognosis.
As stated in the December 16, 1983
Hospice final rule, the fundamental
premise upon which the hospice benefit
was designed was the ‘‘revocation’’ of
traditional curative care and the
‘‘election’’ of hospice care for end-of-life
symptom management and
maximization of quality of life (48 FR
56008). After electing hospice care, the
patient typically returns to the home
from an institutionalized setting or
remains in the home, to be surrounded
by family and friends, and to prepare
emotionally and spiritually for death
while receiving expert symptom
management and other supportive
services. Election of hospice care also
includes waiving the right to Medicare
payment for curative treatment for the
terminal prognosis, and instead
receiving palliative care to manage pain
or symptoms.
The benefit was originally designed to
cover hospice care for a finite period of
time that roughly corresponded to a life
expectancy of 6 months or less. Initially,
beneficiaries could receive three
election periods: two 90-day periods
and one 30-day period. Currently,
Medicare beneficiaries can elect hospice
care for two 90-day periods and an
unlimited number of subsequent 60-day
periods; however, the expectation
remains that beneficiaries have a life
expectancy of 6 months or less if the
terminal illness runs its normal course.
C. Services Covered by the Medicare
Hospice Benefit
One requirement for coverage under
the Medicare Hospice benefit is that
hospice services must be reasonable and
necessary for the palliation and
management of the terminal illness and
related conditions. Section 1861(dd)(1)
of the Act establishes the services that
are to be rendered by a Medicare
certified hospice program. These
covered services include: Nursing care;
physical therapy; occupational therapy;
speech-language pathology therapy;
medical social services; home health
aide services (now called hospice aide
services); physician services;
homemaker services; medical supplies
(including drugs and biologics); medical
appliances; counseling services
(including dietary counseling); shortterm inpatient care (including both
respite care and care necessary for pain
control and acute or chronic symptom
management) in a hospital, nursing
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facility, or hospice inpatient facility;
continuous home care during periods of
crisis and only as necessary to maintain
the terminally ill individual at home;
and any other item or service which is
specified in the plan of care and for
which payment may otherwise be made
under Medicare, in accordance with
Title XVIII of the Act.
Section 1814(a)(7)(B) of the Act
requires that a written plan for
providing hospice care to a beneficiary
who is a hospice patient be established
before care is provided by, or under
arrangements made by, that hospice
program and that the written plan be
periodically reviewed by the
beneficiary’s attending physician (if
any), the hospice medical director, and
an interdisciplinary group (described in
section 1861(dd)(2)(B) of the Act). The
services offered under the Medicare
hospice benefit must be available, as
needed, to beneficiaries 24 hours a day,
7 days a week (section 1861(dd)(2)(A)(i)
of the Act). Upon the implementation of
the hospice benefit, the Congress
expected hospices to continue to use
volunteer services, though these
services are not reimbursed by Medicare
(see Section 1861(dd)(2)(E) of the Act
and (48 FR 38149)). As stated in the
August 22, 1983 Hospice proposed rule,
the hospice interdisciplinary group
should be comprised of paid hospice
employees as well as hospice volunteers
(48 FR 38149). This expectation
supports the hospice philosophy of
holistic, comprehensive, compassionate,
end-of-life care.
Before the Medicare hospice benefit
was established, the Congress requested
a demonstration project to test the
feasibility of covering hospice care
under Medicare. The National Hospice
Study was initiated in 1980 through a
grant sponsored by the Robert Wood
Johnson and John A. Hartford
Foundations and CMS (then, the Health
Care Financing Administration (HCFA)).
The demonstration project was
conducted between October 1980 and
March 1983. The project summarized
the hospice care philosophy and
principles as the following:
• Patient and family know of the
terminal condition.
• Further medical treatment and
intervention are indicated only on a
supportive basis.
• Pain control should be available to
patients as needed to prevent rather
than to just ameliorate pain.
• Interdisciplinary teamwork is
essential in caring for patient and
family.
• Family members and friends should
be active in providing support during
the death and bereavement process.
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• Trained volunteers should provide
additional support as needed.
The cost data and the findings on
what services hospices provided in the
demonstration project were used to
design the Medicare hospice benefit.
The identified hospice services were
incorporated into the service
requirements under the Medicare
hospice benefit. Importantly, in the
August 22, 1983 Hospice proposed rule,
we stated ‘‘the hospice benefit and the
resulting Medicare reimbursement is not
intended to diminish the voluntary
spirit of hospices’’ (48 FR 38149).
D. Medicare Payment for Hospice Care
Sections 1812(d), 1813(a)(4),
1814(a)(7), 1814(i), and 1861(dd) of the
Act, and our regulations in part 418,
establish eligibility requirements,
payment standards and procedures,
define covered services, and delineate
the conditions a hospice must meet to
be approved for participation in the
Medicare program. Part 418, subpart G,
provides for a per diem payment in one
of four prospectively-determined rate
categories of hospice care (RHC, CHC,
inpatient respite care, and general
inpatient care), based on each day a
qualified Medicare beneficiary is under
hospice care (once the individual has
elected). This per diem payment is to
include all of the hospice services set
out at section 1861(dd)(1) of the Act that
are needed to manage the beneficiary’s
care. There has been little change in the
hospice payment structure since the
benefit’s inception. The per diem rate
based on level of care was established
in 1983, and this payment structure
remains today with some adjustments,
as noted below.
1. Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act
of 1989
Section 6005(a) of the Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act of 1989 (Pub.
L. 101–239) amended section
1814(i)(1)(C) of the Act and provided for
the following two changes in the
methodology concerning updating the
daily payment rates: (1) Effective
January 1, 1990, the daily payment rates
for RHC and other services included in
hospice care were increased to equal
120 percent of the rates in effect on
September 30, 1989; and (2) the daily
payment rate for RHC and other services
included in hospice care for fiscal years
(FYs) beginning on or after October 1,
1990, were the payment rates in effect
during the previous Federal fiscal year
increased by the hospital market basket
percentage increase.
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2. Balanced Budget Act of 1997
Section 4441(a) of the Balanced
Budget Act of 1997 (BBA) (Pub. L. 105–
33) amended section 1814(i)(1)(C)(ii)(VI)
of the Act to establish updates to
hospice rates for FYs 1998 through
2002. Hospice rates were updated by a
factor equal to the hospital market
basket percentage increase, minus 1
percentage point. Payment rates for FYs
from 2002 have been updated according
to section 1814(i)(1)(C)(ii)(VII) of the
Act, which states that the update to the
payment rates for subsequent FYs will
be the hospital market basket percentage
increase for the FY. The Act requires us
to use the inpatient hospital market
basket to determine hospice payment
rates.
3. FY 1998 Hospice Wage Index Final
Rule
In the August 8, 1997 FY 1998
Hospice Wage Index final rule (62 FR
42860), we implemented a new
methodology for calculating the hospice
wage index based on the
recommendations of a negotiated
rulemaking committee. The original
hospice wage index was based on 1981
Bureau of Labor Statistics hospital data
and had not been updated since 1983.
In 1994, because of disparity in wages
from one geographical location to
another, the Hospice Wage Index
Negotiated Rulemaking Committee was
formed to negotiate a new wage index
methodology that could be accepted by
the industry and the government. This
Committee was comprised of
representatives from national hospice
associations; rural, urban, large and
small hospices, and multi-site hospices;
consumer groups; and a government
representative. The Committee decided
that in updating the hospice wage
index, aggregate Medicare payments to
hospices would remain budget neutral
to payments calculated using the 1983
wage index, to cushion the impact of
using a new wage index methodology.
To implement this policy, a BNAF will
be computed and applied annually to
the pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital
wage index when deriving the hospice
wage index, subject to a wage index
floor.
4. FY 2010 Hospice Wage Index Final
Rule
Inpatient hospital pre-floor and prereclassified wage index values, as
described in the August 8, 1997 Hospice
Wage Index final rule, are subject to
either a budget neutrality adjustment or
application of the wage index floor.
Wage index values of 0.8 or greater are
adjusted by the BNAF. Starting in FY
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2010, a 7-year phase-out of the BNAF
began (August 6, 2009 FY 2010 Hospice
Wage Index final rule, (74 FR 39384)),
with a 10 percent reduction in FY 2010,
an additional 15 percent reduction for a
total of 25 percent in FY 2011, an
additional 15 percent reduction for a
total 40 percent reduction in FY 2012,
an additional 15 percent reduction for a
total of 55 percent in FY 2013, and an
additional 15 percent reduction for a
total 70 percent reduction in FY 2014.
The phase-out will continue with an
additional 15 percent reduction for a
total reduction of 85 percent in FY 2015,
and an additional 15 percent reduction
for complete elimination in FY 2016.
We note that the BNAF is an adjustment
which increases the hospice wage index
value. Therefore, the BNAF reduction is
a reduction in the amount of the BNAF
increase applied to the hospice wage
index value. It is not a reduction in the
hospice wage index value or in the
hospice payment rates.
5. The Affordable Care Act
Starting with FY 2013 (and in
subsequent FYs), the market basket
percentage update under the hospice
payment system referenced in sections
1814(i)(1)(C)(ii)(VII) and
1814(i)(1)(C)(iii) of the Act will be
annually reduced by changes in
economy-wide productivity, as
specified in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II)
of the Act, as amended by section
3132(a) of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111–148) as
amended by the Health Care and
Education Reconciliation Act (Pub. L.
111–152) (collectively referred to as the
Affordable Care Act)). In FY 2013
through FY 2019, the market basket
percentage update under the hospice
payment system will be reduced by an
additional 0.3 percentage point
(although for FY 2014 to FY 2019, the
potential 0.3 percentage point reduction
is subject to suspension under
conditions as specified in section
1814(i)(1)(C)(v) of the Act).
In addition, sections 1814(i)(5)(A)
through (C) of the Act, as amended by
section 3132(a) of the Affordable Care
Act, require hospices to begin
submitting quality data, based on
measures to be specified by the
Secretary of the Department of Health
and Human Services (the Secretary), for
FY 2014 and subsequent FYs. Beginning
in FY 2014, hospices that fail to report
quality data will have their market
basket update reduced by 2 percentage
points.
Section 1814(a)(7)(D)(i) of the Act was
amended by section 3132(b)(2)(D)(i) of
the Affordable Care Act, and requires
effective January 1, 2011, that a hospice
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physician or nurse practitioner have a
face-to-face encounter with the
beneficiary to determine continued
eligibility of the beneficiary’s hospice
care prior to the 180th-day
recertification and each subsequent
recertification, and to attest that such
visit took place. When implementing
this provision, we finalized in the CY
2011 Home Health Prospective Payment
System final rule (75 FR 70435) that the
180th-day recertification and
subsequent recertifications
corresponded to the beneficiary’s third
or subsequent benefit periods. Further,
section 1814(i)(6) of the Act, as
amended by section 3132(a)(1)(B) of the
Affordable Care Act, authorizes the
Secretary to collect additional data and
information determined appropriate to
revise payments for hospice care and
other purposes. The types of data and
information suggested in the Affordable
Care Act would capture accurate
resource utilization, which could be
collected on claims, cost reports, and
possibly other mechanisms, as the
Secretary determines to be appropriate.
The data collected may be used to revise
the methodology for determining the
payment rates for RHC and other
services included in hospice care, no
earlier than October 1, 2013, as
described in section 1814(i)(6)(D) of the
Act. In addition, we are required to
consult with hospice programs and the
Medicare Payment Advisory
Commission (MedPAC) regarding
additional data collection and payment
revision options.
6. FY 2012 Hospice Wage Index Final
Rule
When the Medicare Hospice benefit
was implemented, the Congress
included an aggregate cap on hospice
payments, which limits the total
aggregate payments any individual
hospice can receive in a year. The
Congress stipulated that a ‘‘cap amount’’
be computed each year. The cap amount
was set at $6,500 per beneficiary when
first enacted in 1983 and is adjusted
annually by the change in the medical
care expenditure category of the
consumer price index for urban
consumers from March 1984 to March of
the cap year (section 1814(i)(2)(B) of the
Act). The cap year is defined as the
period from November 1st to October
31st. As we stated in the August 4, 2011
FY 2012 Hospice Wage Index final rule
(76 FR 47308 through 47314) for the
2012 cap year and subsequent cap years,
the hospice aggregate cap will be
calculated using the patient-by-patient
proportional methodology, within
certain limits. We will allow existing
hospices the option of having their cap
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47147
calculated via the original streamlined
methodology, also within certain limits.
New hospices will have their cap
determinations calculated using the
patient-by-patient proportional
methodology. The patient-by-patient
proportional methodology and the
streamlined methodology are two
different methodologies for counting
beneficiaries when calculating the
hospice aggregate cap. A detailed
explanation of these methods is found
in the August 4, 2011 FY 2012 Hospice
Wage Index final rule (76 FR 47308
through 47314). If a hospice’s total
Medicare reimbursement for the cap
year exceeded the hospice aggregate
cap, then the hospice must repay the
excess back to Medicare.
7. FY 2015 Hospice Rate Update Final
Rule
When electing hospice, a beneficiary
waives Medicare coverage for any care
for the terminal illness and related
conditions except for services provided
by the designated hospice and attending
physician. A hospice is to file a Notice
of Election (NOE) as soon as possible to
establish the hospice election within the
claims processing system. Late filing of
the NOE can result in inaccurate benefit
period data and leaves Medicare
vulnerable to paying non-hospice claims
related to the terminal illness and
related conditions and beneficiaries
possibly liable for any cost-sharing
associated costs. The FY 2015 Hospice
Rate Update final rule (79 FR 50452)
finalized a requirement that requires the
NOE be filed within 5 calendar days
after the effective date of hospice
election. If the NOE is filed beyond this
5 day period, hospice providers are
liable for the services furnished during
the days from the effective date of
hospice election to the date of NOE
filing (79 FR 50454, 50474). Similar to
the NOE, the claims processing system
must be notified of a beneficiary’s
discharge from hospice or hospice
benefit revocation. This update to the
beneficiary’s status allows claims from
non-hospice providers to process and be
paid. Upon live discharge or revocation,
the beneficiary immediately resumes the
Medicare coverage that had been waived
when he or she elected hospice. The FY
2015 Hospice Rate Update final rule
also finalized a requirement that
requires hospices to file a notice of
termination/revocation within 5
calendar days of a beneficiary’s live
discharge or revocation, unless the
hospices have already filed a final
claim. This requirement helps to protect
beneficiaries from delays in accessing
needed care (79 FR 50509).
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A hospice ‘‘attending physician’’ is
described by the statutory and
regulatory definitions as a medical
doctor, osteopath, or nurse practitioner
whom the patient identifies, at the time
of hospice election, as having the most
significant role in the determination and
delivery of his or her medical care. We
received reports of problems with the
identification of the patient’s designated
attending physician and a third of
hospice patients had multiple providers
submit Part B claims as the ‘‘attending
physician’’ using a modifier. The FY
2015 Hospice Rate Update final rule
finalized a requirement that the election
form must include the beneficiary’s
choice of attending physician and that
the beneficiary provide the hospice with
a signed document when he or she
chooses to change attending physicians
(79 FR 50479).
Hospice providers are required to
begin using a Hospice Experience of
Care Survey for informal caregivers of
hospice patients surveyed in 2015. The
FY 2015 Hospice Rate Update final rule
provided background and a description
of the development of the Hospice
Experience of Care Survey, including
the model of survey implementation,
the survey respondents, eligibility
criteria for the sample, and the
languages in which the survey is
offered. The FY 2015 Hospice Rate
Update final rule also outlined
participation requirements for CY 2015
and discussed vendor oversight
activities and the reconsideration and
appeals process (79 FR 50496).
Finally, the FY 2015 Hospice Rate
Update final rule requires providers to
complete their aggregate cap
determination within 5 months after the
cap year, but not sooner than 3 months
after the end of the cap year, and remit
any overpayments. Those hospices that
do not submit their aggregate cap
determinations will have their payments
suspended until the determination is
completed and received by the Medicare
Administrative Contractor (MAC) (79 FR
50503).
8. IMPACT Act of 2014
The Improving Medicare Post-Acute
Care Transformation Act (IMPACT Act)
of 2014 became law on October 6, 2014
(Pub. L. 113–185). Section 3(a) of the
IMPACT Act mandates that all Medicare
certified hospices be surveyed every 3
years beginning April 6, 2015 and
ending September 30, 2025, as it was
found that surveys of hospices were
being performed on an infrequent basis.
In addition, the IMPACT Act also
implements a provision set forth in the
Affordable Care Act that requires
medical review of hospice cases
involving patients receiving more than
180 days care in select hospices that
show a preponderance of such patients,
and the IMPACT Act contains a new
provision mandating that the aggregate
cap amount for accounting years that
end after September 30, 2016, and
before October 1, 2025 be updated by
the hospice payment update rather than
using the CPI–U for medical care
expenditures. Specifically, the 2016 cap
year, which starts on November 1, 2015
and ends on October 31, 2016, will be
updated by the FY 2016 payment
update percentage for hospice care. In
accordance with the statute, we will
continue to do this through any cap year
ending before October 1, 2025 (that is,
through cap year 2025).
E. Trends in Medicare Hospice
Utilization
Since the implementation of the
hospice benefit in 1983, and especially
within the last decade, there has been
substantial growth in hospice
utilization. The number of Medicare
beneficiaries receiving hospice services
has grown from 513,000 in FY 2000 to
over 1.3 million in FY 2013. Similarly,
Medicare hospice expenditures have
risen from $2.8 billion in FY 2000 to an
estimated $15.3 billion in FY 2013. Our
Office of the Actuary (OACT) projects
that hospice expenditures are expected
to continue to increase, by
approximately 8 percent annually,
reflecting an increase in the number of
Medicare beneficiaries, more beneficiary
awareness of the Medicare Hospice
Benefit for end-of-life care, and a
growing preference for care provided in
home and community-based settings.
However, this increased spending is
partly due to an increased average
lifetime length of stay for beneficiaries,
from 54 days in 2000 to 98.5 days in FY
2013, an increase of 82 percent.
There have also been changes in the
diagnosis patterns among Medicare
hospice enrollees. Specifically, there
were notable increases between 2002
and 2007 in neurologically-based
diagnoses, including various dementia
diagnoses. Additionally, there have
been significant increases in the use of
non-specific, symptom-classified
diagnoses, such as ‘‘debility’’ and ‘‘adult
failure to thrive.’’ In FY 2013, ‘‘debility’’
and ‘‘adult failure to thrive’’ were the
first and sixth most common hospice
diagnoses, respectively, accounting for
approximately 14 percent of all
diagnoses. Effective October 1, 2014,
hospice claims were returned to the
provider if ‘‘debility’’ and ‘‘adult failure
to thrive’’ were coded as the principal
hospice diagnosis as well as other ICD–
9–CM codes that are not permissible as
principal diagnosis codes per ICD–9–
CM coding guidelines. We reminded the
hospice industry that this policy would
go into effect and claims would start to
be returned October 1, 2014 in the FY
2015 hospice rate update final rule. As
a result of this, there has been a shift in
coding patterns on hospice claims. For
FY 2014, the most common hospice
principal diagnoses were Alzheimer’s
disease, Congestive Heart Failure, Lung
Cancer, Chronic Airway Obstruction
and Senile Dementia which constituted
approximately 32 percent of all claimsreported principal diagnosis codes
reported in FY 2014 (see Table 2 below).
TABLE 2—THE TOP TWENTY PRINCIPAL HOSPICE DIAGNOSES, FY 2002, FY 2007, FY 2013, FY 2014
Rank
ICD–9/Reported principal diagnosis
Count
Percentage
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Year: FY 2002
1 ................................
2 ................................
3 ................................
4 ................................
5 ................................
6 ................................
7 ................................
8 ................................
9 ................................
10 ..............................
11 ..............................
12 ..............................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
162.9 Lung Cancer .........................................................................................................
428.0 Congestive Heart Failure .....................................................................................
799.3 Debility Unspecified ..............................................................................................
496 COPD ......................................................................................................................
331.0 Alzheimer’s Disease .............................................................................................
436 CVA/Stroke ..............................................................................................................
185 Prostate Cancer ......................................................................................................
783.7 Adult Failure To Thrive ........................................................................................
174.9 Breast Cancer ......................................................................................................
290.0 Senile Dementia, Uncomp. ..................................................................................
153.0 Colon Cancer .......................................................................................................
157.9 Pancreatic Cancer ................................................................................................
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73,769
45,951
36,999
35,197
28,787
26,897
20,262
18,304
17,812
16,999
16,379
15,427
11
7
6
5
4
4
3
3
3
3
2
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47149
TABLE 2—THE TOP TWENTY PRINCIPAL HOSPICE DIAGNOSES, FY 2002, FY 2007, FY 2013, FY 2014—Continued
Rank
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
ICD–9/Reported principal diagnosis
..............................
..............................
..............................
..............................
..............................
..............................
..............................
..............................
Count
294.8 Organic Brain Synd Nec ......................................................................................
429.9 Heart Disease Unspecified ..................................................................................
154.0 Rectosigmoid Colon Cancer ................................................................................
332.0 Parkinson’s Disease .............................................................................................
586 Renal Failure Unspecified .......................................................................................
585 Chronic Renal Failure (End 2005) ..........................................................................
183.0 Ovarian Cancer ....................................................................................................
188.9 Bladder Cancer ....................................................................................................
Percentage
10,394
10,332
8,956
8,865
8,764
8,599
7,432
6,916
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
90,150
86,954
77,836
60,815
58,303
58,200
37,667
31,800
22,170
22,086
20,378
19,082
19,080
17,697
16,524
15,777
12,188
11,196
8,806
8,434
9
8
7
6
6
6
4
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
1
1
1
127,415
96,171
91,598
82,184
79,626
71,122
60,579
36,914
34,459
30,963
25,396
23,228
23,224
23,059
22,341
21,769
19,309
15,965
14,372
13,687
9
7
6
6
6
5
4
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
1
1
1
128,844
107,540
90,689
79,249
40,269
37,129
33,759
33,329
30,292
23,634
23,569
22,789
22,374
21,713
19,660
9
8
6
6
3
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
Year: FY 2007
1 ................................
2 ................................
3 ................................
4 ................................
5 ................................
6 ................................
7 ................................
8 ................................
9 ................................
10 ..............................
11 ..............................
12 ..............................
13 ..............................
14 ..............................
15 ..............................
16 ..............................
17 ..............................
18 ..............................
19 ..............................
20 ..............................
799.3 Debility Unspecified ..............................................................................................
162.9 Lung Cancer .........................................................................................................
428.0 Congestive Heart Failure .....................................................................................
496 COPD ......................................................................................................................
783.7 Adult Failure To Thrive ........................................................................................
331.0 Alzheimer’s Disease .............................................................................................
290.0 Senile Dementia Uncomp. ...................................................................................
436 CVA/Stroke ..............................................................................................................
429.9 Heart Disease Unspecified ..................................................................................
185 Prostate Cancer ......................................................................................................
174.9 Breast Cancer ......................................................................................................
157.9 Pancreas Unspecified ..........................................................................................
153.9 Colon Cancer .......................................................................................................
294.8 Organic Brain Syndrome NEC .............................................................................
332.0 Parkinson’s Disease .............................................................................................
294.10 Dementia In Other Diseases w/o Behav. Dist. ..................................................
586 Renal Failure Unspecified .......................................................................................
585.6 End Stage Renal Disease ....................................................................................
188.9 Bladder Cancer ....................................................................................................
183.0 Ovarian Cancer ....................................................................................................
Year: FY 2013
1 ................................
2 ................................
3 ................................
4 ................................
5 ................................
6 ................................
7 ................................
8 ................................
9 ................................
10 ..............................
11 ..............................
12 ..............................
13 ..............................
14 ..............................
15 ..............................
16 ..............................
17 ..............................
18 ..............................
19 ..............................
20 ..............................
799.3 Debility Unspecified ..............................................................................................
428.0 Congestive Heart Failure .....................................................................................
162.9 Lung Cancer .........................................................................................................
496 COPD ......................................................................................................................
331.0 Alzheimer’s Disease .............................................................................................
783.7 Adult Failure to Thrive ..........................................................................................
290.0 Senile Dementia, Uncomp. ..................................................................................
429.9 Heart Disease Unspecified ..................................................................................
436 CVA/Stroke ..............................................................................................................
294.10 Dementia In Other Diseases w/o Behavioral Dist. ............................................
332.0 Parkinson’s Disease .............................................................................................
153.9 Colon Cancer .......................................................................................................
294.20 Dementia Unspecified w/o Behavioral Dist. .......................................................
174.9 Breast Cancer ......................................................................................................
157.9 Pancreatic Cancer ................................................................................................
185 Prostate Cancer ......................................................................................................
585.6 End-Stage Renal Disease ....................................................................................
518.81 Acute Respiratory Failure ..................................................................................
294.8 Other Persistent Mental Dis.-classified elsewhere ..............................................
294.11 Dementia In Other Diseases w/Behavioral Dist. ...............................................
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Year: FY 2014
1 ................................
2 ................................
3 ................................
4 ................................
5 ................................
6 ................................
7 ................................
8 ................................
9 ................................
10 ..............................
11 ..............................
12 ..............................
13 ..............................
14 ..............................
15 ..............................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
331.0 Alzheimer’s disease .............................................................................................
428.0 Congestive heart failure, unspecified ...................................................................
162.9 Lung Cancer .........................................................................................................
496 COPD ......................................................................................................................
290.0 Senile dementia, uncomplicated ..........................................................................
429.9 Heart disease, unspecified ...................................................................................
436 CVA/Stroke ..............................................................................................................
294.20 Dementia, unspecified, without behavioral disturbance ....................................
332.0 Parkinson’s Disease .............................................................................................
153.9 Colon Cancer .......................................................................................................
174.9 Breast Cancer ......................................................................................................
157.9 Pancreatic Cancer ................................................................................................
185 Prostate Cancer ......................................................................................................
585.6 End stage renal disease ......................................................................................
294.10 Dementia in conditions classified elsewhere w/o behav disturbance ...............
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TABLE 2—THE TOP TWENTY PRINCIPAL HOSPICE DIAGNOSES, FY 2002, FY 2007, FY 2013, FY 2014—Continued
Rank
16
17
18
19
20
ICD–9/Reported principal diagnosis
..............................
..............................
..............................
..............................
..............................
Count
331.2 Senile degeneration of brain ................................................................................
518.81 Acute respiratory failure .....................................................................................
290.40 Vascular dementia, uncomplicated ....................................................................
491.21 Obstructive chronic bronchitis with (acute) exacerbation ..................................
429.2 Cardiovascular disease, unspecified ...................................................................
18,847
17,624
17,318
16,168
14,305
Percentage
1
1
1
1
1
Note(s): The frequencies shown represent beneficiaries that had a least one claim with the specific ICD–9–CM code reported as the principal
diagnosis. Beneficiaries could be represented multiple times in the results if they have multiple claims during that time period with different principal diagnoses.
Source: FY 2002 and 2007 hospice claims data from the Chronic Conditions Data Warehouse (CCW), accessed on February 14 and February
20, 2013. FY 2013 hospice claims data from the CCW, accessed on June 26, 2014 and FY 2014 hospice claims data from the CCW, accessed
on July 6, 2015.
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A. Hospice Payment Reform Research
and Analyses
In 2010, the Congress amended
section 1814(i)(6) of the Act with
section 3132(a) of the Affordable Care
Act. The amendment authorizes the
Secretary to collect additional data and
information determined appropriate to
revise payments for hospice care and for
other purposes. The data collected may
be used to revise the methodology for
RHC and other hospice services (in a
budget-neutral manner in the first year),
no earlier than October 1, 2013, as
described in section 1814(i)(6)(D) of the
Act. The Secretary is required to consult
with hospice programs and the
Medicare Payment Advisory
Commission (MedPAC) regarding
additional data collection and payment
reform options.
Since 2010, we have undertaken
efforts to collect the data needed to
establish what revisions to the
methodology for determining the
hospice payment rates may be
necessary. Effective April 1, 2014, we
began requiring additional information
on hospice claims regarding drugs and
certain durable medical equipment and
effective October 1, 2014, we finalized
changes to the hospice cost report to
improve data collection on the costs of
providing hospice care.3 In addition,
our research contractor, Abt Associates,
conducted a hospice literature review;
held stakeholder meetings; and
developed and maintained an analytic
plan, which supports effort towards
implementing hospice payment reform.
During the stakeholder meetings,
attendees articulated concerns of
sweeping payment reform changes and
encouraged us to consider incremental
steps or to use existing regulatory
authority to refine the hospice program.
We also held five industry technical
3 CMS
Transmittal 2864, ‘‘Additional Data
Reporting Requirements for Hospice claim’’.
Available at https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-andGuidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/
R2864P.pdf.
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expert panels (TEPs) via webinar and inperson meetings; consulted with federal
hospice experts; provided annual
updates on findings from our research
and analyses and reform options in the
FY 2014 and FY 2015 Hospice Wage
Index and Payment Rate Update
proposed and final rules (78 FR 48234
and 79 FR 50452); and updated the
hospice industry on reform work
through Open Door Forums, industry
conferences and academic conferences.4
We have taken into consideration the
recommendations from MedPAC on
reforming hospice payment, as
articulated in the MedPAC Reports to
Congress since 2009. The MedPAC
recommendations and research
provided a foundation for our
development of an analytic plan and
additional payment reform concepts.
Furthermore, MedPAC participated in
post-TEP meetings with other federal
hospice experts. These meetings
provided valuable feedback regarding
the TEP’s comments and discussed
potential research and analyses to
consider for hospice payment reform.
The FY 2012 Hospice Wage Index
final rule (76 FR 47324) noted our
collaboration with the Assistant
Secretary of Planning and Evaluation
(ASPE) to develop analyses that were
used to inform our research efforts. The
results from such analyses were used by
Abt Associates to facilitate discussion,
in 2012, of potential payment reform
options and to guide the identification
of topics for further analysis. In early
2014, we began working with Acumen,
LLC, using real-time claims data, to
monitor the vulnerabilities identified in
the 2013 and 2014 Abt Associates’
Hospice Payment Reform Technical
Reports. On September 18, 2014, the
IMPACT Act, mandated that the Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid (CMS)
undertake additional hospice
monitoring and oversight activities. As
4 https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-forService-Payment/Hospice/Downloads/HospiceProject-Background.pdf.
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noted previously, the IMPACT Act
requires CMS to survey hospices at least
as frequently as every 3 years for the
next 10 years and review medical
records of hospice beneficiaries on the
hospice benefit for 180 days or greater
as specified by the Secretary. CMS is
actively engaged in cross-agency
collaboration to meet the intent of the
IMPACT Act to increase monitoring and
oversight of hospice providers.
The majority of the research and
analyses conducted by CMS and
summarized in this rule were based on
analyses of FY 2013 Medicare claims
and cost report data conducted by our
research contractor, Abt Associates,
unless otherwise specified. In addition,
we cite research and analyses,
conducted by Acumen, LLC that are
based on real-time claims data from the
Integrated Data Repository (IDR). In the
sections below, analysis conducted on
pre-hospice spending, non-hospice
spending for hospice beneficiaries
during a hospice election, and live
discharge rates highlight potential
vulnerabilities of the Medicare hospice
benefit.
1. Pre-Hospice Spending
In 1982, the Congress introduced
hospice into the Medicare program as an
alternative to aggressive treatment at the
end of life. During the development of
the benefit, multiple testimonies from
industry leaders and hospice families
were heard and it was reported that
hospices provided high-quality,
compassionate and humane care while
also offering a reduction in Medicare
costs.5 Additionally, a Congressional
Budget Office (CBO) study asserted that
hospice care would result in sizable
savings over conventional hospital
care.6 Those savings estimates were
based on a comparison of spending in
5 Subcommittee of Health of the Committee of
Ways and Means, House of Representatives, March
25, 1982.
6 Mor V. Masterson-Allen S. (1987): Hospice care
systems: Structure, process, costs and outcome.
New York: Springer Publishing Company.
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the last 6 months of life for a cancer
patient not utilizing hospice care versus
the cost of hospice care for the 6 months
preceding death.7 The original language
for § 1814(i) of the Act (prior to August,
29, 1983) set the hospice aggregate cap
amount at 40 percent of the average
Medicare per capita expenditure
amount for cancer patients in the last 6
months of life. When the hospice benefit
was created, the average lifetime length
of stay for a hospice patient was
between 55 and 75 days. Since the
implementation of the Medicare hospice
benefit, the principal diagnosis for
patients electing the hospice benefit has
changed from primarily cancer
diagnoses in 1983 to primarily noncancer diagnoses in FY 2014.8
Alzheimer’s disease and Congestive
Heart Failure (CHF) were the most
reported principal diagnoses comprising
17 percent of all diagnoses reported (see
Table 2 in section II.E) in FY 2014.
Analysis was conducted to evaluate
pre-hospice spending for beneficiaries
who used hospice and who died in FY
2013. To evaluate pre-hospice spending,
we calculated the median daily
Medicare payments for such
beneficiaries for the 180 days, 90 days,
and 30 days prior to electing hospice
care. We then categorized patients
according to the principal diagnosis
reported on the hospice claim. The
analysis revealed that for some patients,
the Medicare payments in the 180 days
prior to the hospice election were lower
than Medicare payments associated
with hospice care once the benefit was
elected (see Table 3 and Figure 1
below). Specifically, median Medicare
spending for a beneficiary with a
diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease, nonAlzheimer’s dementia, or Parkinson’s in
the 180 days prior to hospice admission
(about 20 percent of patients) was
$66.84 per day compared to the daily
RHC rate of $153.45 in FY 2013 (see
Table 3 below). Closer to the hospice
admission, the median Medicare
payments per day increase, as would be
expected as the patient approaches the
end of life and patient needs intensify.
However, 30 days prior to a hospice
47151
election, median Medicare spending
was $105.24 for patients with
Alzheimer’s disease, non-Alzheimer’s
dementia, or Parkinson’s. In contrast,
the median Medicare payments prior to
hospice election for patients with a
principal hospice diagnosis of cancer
were $143.56 in the 180 days prior to
hospice admission and increased to
$289.85 in the 30 days prior to hospice
admission. The average length of stay
for hospice elections where the
principal diagnosis was reported as
Alzheimer’s disease, non-Alzheimer’s
Dementia, or Parkinson’s is greater than
patients with other diagnoses, such as
cancer, Cerebral Vascular Accident
(CVA)/stroke, chronic kidney disease,
and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary
Disease (COPD). For example, the
average lifetime length of stay for an
Alzheimer’s, non-Alzheimer’s
Dementia, or Parkinson’s patient in FY
2013 was 119 days compared to 47 days
for patients with a principal diagnosis of
cancer (or in other words, 150 percent
longer).
TABLE 3—MEDIAN PRE-HOSPICE DAILY SPENDING ESTIMATES AND INTERQUARTILE RANGE BASED ON 180, 90, AND 30
DAY LOOK-BACK PERIODS PRIOR TO INITIAL HOSPICE ADMISSION WITH ESTIMATES OF AVERAGE LIFETIME LENGTH
OF STAY (LOS) BY PRIMARY DIAGNOSIS AT HOSPICE ADMISSION, FY 2013
Estimates of daily non-hospice medicare spending prior to first hospice admission
180 day look-back
25th Pct.
All Diagnoses ...........
Alzheimer’s, Dementia, and Parkinson’s .....................
CVA/Stroke ...............
Cancers ....................
Chronic Kidney Disease ......................
Heart (CHF and
Other Heart Disease) .....................
Lung (COPD and
Pneumonias) .........
All Other Diagnoses
Median
90 day look-back
75th Pct.
25th Pct.
Median
Mean
lifetime
LOS
30 day look-back
75th Pct.
25th Pct.
Median
75th Pct.
$47.04
$117.73
$240.73
$55.75
$157.89
$337.97
$57.66
$266.84
$545.44
73.8
23.39
56.18
62.81
66.84
116.86
143.56
162.60
239.30
265.58
23.06
82.32
78.30
82.00
170.40
188.08
220.12
352.74
360.92
21.02
150.21
81.52
105.24
352.41
289.85
368.30
622.23
569.67
119.3
47.4
47.1
94.78
217.46
402.10
126.41
293.18
541.41
199.01
466.25
820.78
27.3
61.28
135.48
255.53
80.62
186.52
364.24
101.80
325.15
588.50
77.2
65.53
36.00
142.78
99.80
272.13
222.25
90.68
39.45
201.02
132.88
401.12
316.15
126.51
38.96
367.68
213.84
685.17
504.57
67.5
85.3
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Source: All Medicare Parts A, B, and D claims for FY 2013 from the Chronic Conditions Data Warehouse (CCW) retrieved March, 2015.
Note(s): Estimates drawn from FY2013 hospice decedents who were first-time hospice admissions, ages 66+ at hospice admission, admitted
since 2006, and not enrolled in Medicare Advantage prior to admission. All payments are inflation-adjusted to September 2013 dollars using the
Consumer Price Index (Medical Care; All Urban Consumers).
7 Fogel, Richard. (1983): Comments on the
Legislative Intent of Medicare’s Hospice Benefit
(GAO/HRD–83–72).
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8 Connor, S. (2007). Development of Hospice and
Palliative Care in the United States. OMEGA. 56(1),
89–99. doi:102190/OM.5.1.h
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In the FY 2014 Hospice Wage Index
and Payment Rate Update proposed and
final rules (78 FR 27843 and 78 FR
48272), we discussed whether a casemix system could be created in future
refinements to differentiate hospice
payments according to patient
characteristics. While we do not have
the necessary data on the hospice claim
form at this time to conduct more
thorough research to determine whether
a case-mix system is appropriate,
analyzing pre-hospice spending was
undertaken as an initial step in
determining whether patients required
different resource needs prior to hospice
based on the principal diagnosis
reported on the hospice claim. Table 3
and Figure 1 above indicate that hospice
patients with the longest length of stay
had lower pre-hospice spending relative
to hospice patients with shorter lengths
of stay. These hospice patients tend to
be those with neurological conditions,
including those with Alzheimer’s
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disease, other related dementias and
Parkinson’s disease. Typically, these
conditions are associated with longer
disease trajectories, progressive loss of
functional and cognitive abilities, and
more difficult prognostication.
Research has shown that the majority
of dementia patients are cared for at
home, leading to increased informal
care costs that put an economic burden
on families rather than on healthcare
systems.9 Additionally, research using
the National Long-Term Care Survey
(NLCS) merged with Medicare claims;
found that patients with Alzheimer’s
disease and related conditions do not
have higher Medicare expenditures over
the last 5 years of their life compared to
non-demented elderly.10 Some
9 Schaller, S., Mauskopf, J., Kriza, C., Wahlster, P.,
Kolominsky-Rabas, P. (2015). The main cost drivers
in dementia: a systematic review. International
Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry. 15, 111–129. doi:
10.1002/gps.4198.
10 Ayyagari, P., M. Salm, and F. Sloan. 2008.
‘‘Effects of Diagnosed Dementia on Medicare and
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researchers have measured whether
hospice care reduces overall Medicare
costs at the end of life. Research
conducted by the RAND Corporation
and published in the Annals of Internal
Medicine in February of 2004 found that
‘‘adjusted mean [Medicare]
expenditures were 4.0 percent higher
overall among hospice enrollees than
among non-enrollees. Adjusted mean
[Medicare] expenditures were 1 percent
lower for hospice enrollees with cancer
than for patients with cancer who did
not use hospice. Savings were highest (7
percent to 17 percent) among enrollees
with lung cancer and other very
aggressive types of cancer diagnosed in
the last year of life. [Medicare]
Expenditures for hospice enrollees
without cancer were 11 percent higher
than for non-enrollees, ranging from 20
Medicaid Program Costs.’’ Inquiry 44 (Winter 2007/
2008): 481–94. Lamb, V., F. Sloan, and A. Nathan.
2008. ‘‘Dementia and Medicare at Life’s End.’’
Health Services Research 43 (2): 714–32.
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When a beneficiary elects the
Medicare hospice benefit, he or she
waives the right to Medicare payment
for services related to the terminal
illness and related conditions, except
for services provided by the designated
hospice and the attending physician (as
described in section II of this rule).
However, Medicare payment is allowed
for covered Medicare items and services
that are unrelated to the terminal illness
and related conditions (that is, the
terminal prognosis). When a hospice
beneficiary receives items or services
unrelated to the terminal illness and
related conditions from a non-hospice
provider, that provider can bill
Medicare for the items or services, but
must include on the claim a GW (service
not related to the hospice patient’s
terminal condition) modifier (if billed
on a professional claim),14 or condition
code 07 (if billed on an institutional
claim).15 Prescription Drug Events
(PDEs) unrelated to the terminal
prognosis for which hospice
beneficiaries are receiving hospice care
are billed to Part D and do not require
a modifier or a condition code. We
reported initial findings on CY 2012
non-hospice spending during a hospice
election in the FY 2015 Hospice Wage
Index and Payment Rate Update final
rule (79 FR 50452). This section updates
our analysis of non-hospice spending
during a hospice election using FY 2013
data.
For FY 2013, we found that Medicare
paid $694.1 million for Part A and Part
B items or services while a beneficiary
was receiving hospice care. The $694.1
million paid for Part A and Part B items
or services was for durable medical
equipment (6.4 percent), inpatient care
(care in long- term care hospitals,
inpatient rehabilitation facilities, acute
care hospitals; 28.6 percent), outpatient
Part B services (16.6 percent), other Part
B services (also known as physician,
practitioner and supplier claims, such
as labs and diagnostic tests, ambulance
transports, and physician office visits;
38.8 percent), skilled nursing facility
care (5.3 percent), and home health care
(4.3 percent). Part A and Part B nonhospice spending occurred mostly for
hospice beneficiaries who were at home
(56.0 percent). We also found that on
hospice service days in which nonhospice spending occurred, 25.7 percent
of hospice beneficiaries were in a
nursing facility, 1.9 percent were in an
inpatient setting, 15.1 percent were in
an assisted living facility, and 1.3
percent were in other settings. Although
the average daily rate of expenditures
outside the hospice benefit was $7.65,
we found geographic differences where
beneficiaries receive care. The highest
rates per day occurred for hospice
beneficiaries residing in West Virginia
($13.74), Delaware ($12.76), Mississippi
($12.31), South Florida ($12.24), and
Texas ($12.10).
Table 4 below details the various
components of Part D spending for
patients receiving hospice care. The
portion of the $439.5 million total Part
D spending which was paid by
11 https://www.rand.org/pubs/external_
publications/EP20040207.html. Accessed on April
23, 2015.
12 Yang, Z., Zhang, K., Lin, P., Clevenger, C., &
Atherly, A. (2012). A Longitudinal Analysis of the
Lifetime Cost of Dementia. Health Services
Research, 47(4), 1660–1678. doi:10.1111/j.1475–
6773.2011.01365.x.
13 Gozalo, P., Plotske, M., Mor, V., Miller, S. &
Teno, J. (2015). Changes in Medicare Costs with the
Growth of Hospice Care in Nursing Homes. New
England Journal of Medicine, 372:19, 1823–1831.
14 Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter
11-Processing Hospice Claims, Section 30.4-Claims
from Medicare Advantage Organizations, B-Billing
of Covered Services. https://www.cms.gov/
Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/
downloads/clm104c11.pdf.
15 Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter
11-Processing Hospice Claims, Section 30.3-Data
Required on the Institutional Claim to Medicare
Contractors, Conditions Codes. https://www.cms.
gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/
downloads/clm104c11.pdf.
percent to 44 percent for patients with
dementia and 0 percent to 16 percent for
those with chronic heart failure or
failure of most other organ systems.’’ 11
While analyses examining pre-hospice
spending for hospice patients according
to their diagnosis reported on the
hospice claim has some limitations, it
does show that, depending on the type
of research study design selected,
different conclusions can be drawn
regarding the effect of Alzheimer’s
disease and dementia on medical care
costs.12 An article was released in May
of 2015 by the New England Journal of
Medicine titled ‘‘Changes in Medicare
Costs with the Growth of Hospice Care
in Nursing Homes,’’ that examined the
impact of hospice use for nursing home
residents on end of life costs. This
article found that between 2004 and
2009, the expansion of hospice was
associated with a mean net increase in
Medicare expenditures of $6,761 (95
percent confidence interval, 6,335 to
7,186), reflecting greater additional
spending on hospice care ($10,191) than
reduced spending on hospital and other
care ($3,430). The growth in hospice
care for nursing home residents was
associated with less aggressive care near
death but at an overall increase in
Medicare expenditures.’’ 13
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2. Non-Hospice Spending for Hospice
Beneficiaries During an Election
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47153
Medicare is the sum of the Low Income
Cost-Sharing Subsidy and the Covered
Drug Plan Paid Amount, or $347.1
million.
TABLE 4—DRUG COST SOURCES FOR
HOSPICE BENEFICIARIES’ FY 2013
DRUGS RECEIVED THROUGH PART D
Component
(Patient Pay Amount) ...........
(Low Income Cost-Sharing
Subsidy) ............................
(Other True Out-of Pocket
Amount) .............................
(Patient Liability Reduction
due to Other Payer
Amount) .............................
(Covered Drug Plan Paid
Amount) .............................
(Non-Covered Plan Paid
Amount ..............................
(Six Payment Amount Totals)
(Unknown/Unreconciled) ......
(Gross Total Drug Costs, Reported) ...............................
FY 2013
expenditures
$50,871,517
116,890,745
2,125,071
6,678,561
230,216,153
28,733,518
435,515,566
3,945,667
439,461,233
Source: Abt Associates analysis of 100%
FY 2013 Medicare Claim Files. For more information on the components above and on Part
D data, go to the Research Data Assistance
Center’s (ResDAC’s) Web site at: https://
www.resdac.org/.
Non-hospice Medicare expenditures
occurring during a hospice election in
FY 2013 were $694.1 million for Parts
A and B plus $347.1 million for Part D
spending, or approximately $1 billion
dollars total. This figure is comparable
to the estimated $1 billion MedPAC
reported during its December 2013
public meeting.16 Associated with this
$1 billion in Medicare spending were
cost sharing liabilities such as copayments and deductibles that
beneficiaries incurred. Hospice
beneficiaries had $132.5 million in costsharing for items and services that were
billed to Medicare Parts A and B, and
$50.9 million in cost-sharing for drugs
that were billed to Medicare Part D,
while they were in a hospice election.
In total, this represents an FY 2013
beneficiary liability of $183.4 million
for Parts A, B, and D items or services
provided to hospice beneficiaries during
a hospice election. Therefore, the total
non-hospice costs paid by Medicare or
beneficiaries for items or services
provided to hospice beneficiaries during
a hospice election were over $1.2 billion
in FY 2013.
In a recent report, the HHS Office of
Inspector General (OIG) identified
instances where Medicare may be
16 MedPAC, ‘‘Assessing payment adequacy and
updating payments: hospice services’’, December 13
2013. Available at: https://www.medpac.gov/
documents/december-2013-meeting-transcript.pdf.
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paying twice under Part D for drugs that
should be provided by the hospice as
part of the plan of care.17 To assist CMS
in identifying and evaluating instances
where drugs, supplies, durable medical
equipment (DME), and Part B services
provided to hospice patients appear to
be related to the principal diagnosis
reported on the hospice claim, but were
billed separately to other parts of the
Medicare program, Acumen, LLC
developed case studies that were
reviewed and evaluated by CMS clinical
staff.18 Although hospice beneficiaries
are allowed to continue receiving care
outside the hospice benefit for
conditions that are unrelated to the
terminal illness and related conditions
(that is, unrelated to the terminal
prognosis), § 418.56(c) requires hospices
to provide all services necessary for the
palliation and management of the
terminal illness and related conditions.
Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
Across Terminal Conditions
Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
(DMEPOS) products whose use was
initiated during a hospice stay are likely
related to the terminal prognosis. Table
5 and 6 below summarizes total
concurrent billing for DMEPOS
products by Berenson-Eggers Types of
Service (BETOS) categories and
concurrent DME billing by the top 20
principal diagnoses as reported on
hospice claims in CY 2013.19 These
diagnoses comprised 2.3 million
hospice stays, and accounted for $27.1
million in total concurrent spending for
DME products. This amount does not
include spending for DME rental
products that beneficiaries began using
prior to a hospice stay.
TABLE 5—CONCURRENT PAYMENTS
FOR ALL DME USE INITIATED DURING A HOSPICE STAY BY BETOS
CATEGORY, CY 2013
DMEPOS BETOS category
Total payment
for related
DME
Hospital Beds .......................
Wheelchairs ..........................
Oxygen and Supplies ...........
Orthotics and Prosthetics .....
Medical/Surgical Supplies ....
Other DME ............................
$943,731
2,295,038
2,412,281
4,400,353
7,467,616
9,585,003
Total ...............................
27,104,022
TABLE 6—CONCURRENT PAYMENTS FOR ALL DME USE INITIATED DURING A HOSPICE STAY BY TOP 20 PRINCIPAL
DIAGNOSIS REPORTED ON HOSPICE CLAIM, CY 2013
Total payment
for related
DME
Principal diagnosis
Heart failure .................................................................................................................................................................................
Malignant neoplasm of trachea, bronchus, and lung ..................................................................................................................
Other cerebral degenerations ......................................................................................................................................................
Other organic psychotic conditions (chronic) ..............................................................................................................................
Chronic airways obstruction, not elsewhere classified ................................................................................................................
Senile and presenile organic psychotic conditions .....................................................................................................................
Other ill-defined and unknown causes of morbidity and mortality ..............................................................................................
Ill-defined descriptions and complications of heart disease ........................................................................................................
Acute but ill-defined cerebrovascular disease .............................................................................................................................
Other diseases of lung ................................................................................................................................................................
Chronic renal failure ....................................................................................................................................................................
Symptoms concerning nutrition, metabolism, and development .................................................................................................
Malignant neoplasm of pancreas ................................................................................................................................................
Malignant neoplasm of female breast .........................................................................................................................................
Malignant neoplasm of colon .......................................................................................................................................................
Parkinson’s disease .....................................................................................................................................................................
Malignant neoplasm of prostate ..................................................................................................................................................
Late effects of cerebrovascular disease ......................................................................................................................................
Other forms of chronic ischemic heart disease ...........................................................................................................................
Malignant neoplasm of liver and intrahepatic bile ducts .............................................................................................................
$3,365,348
1,519,514
2,979,399
2,540,146
2,610,628
2,868,760
2,349,855
1,584,522
1,092,772
412,501
415,800
1,390,685
297,573
486,019
521,690
955,390
312,754
559,253
670,947
170,470
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES3
We noted that hospice beneficiaries
with hospice claims-reported principal
diagnoses of chronic airway obstruction,
congestive heart failure, cerebral
degeneration and lung cancer were
receiving services clinically indicated
and recommended for these conditions
outside of the hospice benefit, which is
in violation of requirements regarding
the Medicare hospice benefit. This
could be attributed to hospices
incorrectly classifying conditions as
unrelated and referring patients to nonhospice providers, not communicating
and coordinating the care and services
needed to manage the needs of the
hospice beneficiary, or deliberately, to
avoid costs. The case studies below are
focused on four of the most commonly
reported principal hospice diagnoses on
hospice claims (see Table 2 in section
II.E) based on clinical guidelines as
described for each principal hospice
diagnosis.
17 oig.hhs.gov/oas/region6/61000059.pdf
‘‘Medicare Could Be Paying Twice for Prescriptions
For Beneficiaries in Hospice.’’
18 The case studies were developed using CY
2013 claims data for only those beneficiaries with
Parts A, B and D coverage throughout their hospice.
In identifying services that overlapped with a
hospice election, we used two methods. The first
method identified a match between the first three
diagnosis codes of the hospice claim and the
diagnosis codes of the overlapping services in the
Part A, Part B, and Part D claim for the same
beneficiary. The second method identified a match
between the hospice diagnoses and the diagnosis
codes of the overlapping services in the Part A, Part
B and Part D based on a diagnosis code on the
overlapping claim and any diagnosis on the hospice
claim mapping to the same Healthcare Cost and
Utilization Project (HCUP).
19 DMEPOS HCPCS codes are summarized by
Berenson-Eggers Types of Service (BETOS)
categories. BETOS categories were developed by the
American Medical Association (AMA) and
aggregate HCPCS codes into clinically coherent
groups.
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Malignant Neoplasm of the Trachea,
Bronchus, and Lung
Malignant neoplasm of the trachea,
bronchus, and lung (or lung cancer) is
defined by ICD–9 diagnosis codes
beginning with 162 and describes
malignant cancers affecting various part
of the pulmonary system. Symptoms for
this class of conditions may include
chronic and worsening cough, shortness
of breath, chest pain, metastatic bone
pain, and anorexia and weight loss.
Clinical practice guidelines for endstage cancer recommend treatment and
management of refractory symptoms
including pain, mucositis, dyspnea,
fatigue, depression and anorexia
through the use of pharmacological
interventions including nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatories, corticosteroids,
opioids and antidepressants.20
Additionally, evidence shows that
palliative chemotherapy and
radiotherapy can provide symptom
relief from bone and brain metastasis.21
Recommended interventions for
dyspnea include treatment of the
underlying reason such as, thoracentesis
for pleural effusion, bronchodilators and
systemic corticosteroids for
inflammation and secretions, and
supportive measures such supplemental
oxygen, opioids and anxiolytics to
decrease the sensation of
breathlessness.22
Our assessment of concurrently billed
Part D drugs included 89,925 stays for
beneficiaries with ICD–9 code 162 listed
47155
as a primary diagnosis on the hospice
claim. Our assessment of concurrently
billed Part B services included 153,199
stays. In CY 2013, concurrent billing for
all services related this terminal
condition comprised $3.4 million. Table
7 below summarizes concurrent
payments for services that were
potentially related to this class of
conditions. Part D drugs that should
have been covered under the hospice
benefit for the treatment of this
condition accounted for $2.1 million.
DME services that were billed during
hospice stays related to this condition
during the same time cost $640,166.
Concurrent services provided in Part B
institutional settings accounted for
$591,772.
TABLE 7—CONCURRENT PAYMENTS FOR SERVICES PROVIDED TO HOSPICE BENEFICIARIES WITH MALIGNANT NEOPLASM
OF THE TRACHEA, BRONCHUS, AND LUNG, CY 2013
Type of service
Description
Drugs/Part D ..........................................
Drugs/Part D ..........................................
DME .......................................................
DME .......................................................
DME .......................................................
Part B Inst ..............................................
Part B Inst ..............................................
Common Palliative Drugs .......................................................................................
Anti-neoplastics (chemotherapy) ............................................................................
Oxygen Equipment and Supplies ...........................................................................
Hospital Beds ..........................................................................................................
Wheelchairs ............................................................................................................
Diagnostic Imaging .................................................................................................
Radiation .................................................................................................................
$851,639
1,321,507
454,068
47,781
138,316
341,601
250,171
Total ................................................
.................................................................................................................................
3,405,083
Chronic Airway Obstruction
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES3
Chronic airway obstruction is defined
by ICD–9 diagnosis codes beginning
with 496 and includes chronic lung
disease with unspecified cause, and is
characterized by inflammation of the
lungs and airways. Typical symptoms of
these pulmonary diseases include
increasing and disabling shortness of
breath, labored breathing, increased
coughing, increased heart rate,
decreased functional reserve, increased
infections and unintentional,
progressive weight loss. Evidence-based
practice supports the benefits of oral
opioids, neuromuscular electrical
stimulation, chest wall vibration,
20 Qaseem A, Snow V, Shekelle P, Casey DE,
Cross JT, Owens DK, et al. Evidence-Based
Interventions to Improve the Palliative Care of Pain,
Dyspnea, and Depression at the End of Life: A
Clinical Practice Guideline from the American
College of Physicians. Ann Intern Med.
2008;148:141–146. doi:10.7326/0003–4819–148–2–
200801150–00009.
21 Palliative care in lung cancer*: accp evidencebased clinical practice guidelines (2nd edition)
Kvale PA, Selecky PA, Prakash US. Chest.
2007;132(3_suppl):368S–403S.
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walking aids, respiratory assist devices
and pursed-lip breathing in the
management of dyspnea in the
individual patient with advanced
COPD.23 Oxygen is recommended for
COPD patients with resting hypoxemia
for symptomatic benefit.24 Additionally,
clinical practice guidelines recommend
inhaled bronchodilators, systemic
corticosteroids, and pulmonary
physiotherapy for the management of
COPD exacerbations.25 Analysis
conducted by Acumen, LLC, shows
concurrently billed Part D drugs
included 130,283 stays for beneficiaries
with ICD–9 code 469 listed as a primary
diagnosis on the hospice claim.
Additionally, concurrently billed Part B
22 Ibid.
23 DD
Marciniuk, D Goodridge, P Hernandez, et
al. (2011). Canadian Thoracic Society COPD
Committee Dyspnea Expert Working Group.
Managing dyspnea in patients with advanced
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: A Canadian
Thoracic Society clinical practice guideline.
Canadian Respiratory Journal. 18(2), 1–10.
24 Ibid.
25 National Clinical Guideline Centre for Acute
and Chronic Conditions. Chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease. Management of chronic
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Total payment
services included 198,098 such stays.
Table 8 below summarizes concurrent
payments for services that are
potentially related to this class of
conditions. In CY 2013, concurrent
billing for all services related this
terminal condition comprised $10.4
million. Part D drugs that should have
been covered under the hospice benefit
for the treatment of this condition
accounted for $8.6 million. DME
services that were billed during hospice
stays related to this condition during the
same time amounted to $1.2 million
dollars.26 Finally, concurrent services
provided in Part B institutional settings
accounted for $605,110.
obstructive pulmonary disease in adults in primary
and secondary care. London (UK): National Institute
for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE); 2010 Jun.
61 p. (Clinical guideline; no. 101). Retrieved from
the National Guideline Clearinghouse on February
19, 2015. https://www.guideline.gov/.
26 DMEPOS HCPCS codes are summarized by
Berenson-Eggers Types of Service (BETOS)
categories. BETOS categories were developed by the
American Medical Association (AMA) and
aggregate HCPCS codes into clinically coherent
groups.
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TABLE 8—CONCURRENT PAYMENTS FOR SERVICES PROVIDED TO HOSPICE BENEFICIARIES WITH CHRONIC AIRWAY
OBSTRUCTION, CY 2013
Type of service
Description
Drugs/Part D .............................................
Drugs/Part D .............................................
Drugs/Part D .............................................
Drugs/Part D .............................................
DME ..........................................................
DME ..........................................................
DME ..........................................................
Part B Institutional ....................................
Common Palliative Drugs 27 .......................................................................................
Antiasthmatics & Bronchodilators ..............................................................................
Corticosteroids ............................................................................................................
Respiratory Agents .....................................................................................................
Oxygen Equipment and Supplies 28 ...........................................................................
Hospital Beds .............................................................................................................
Wheelchairs ................................................................................................................
Diagnostic Imaging .....................................................................................................
$1,757,326
6,545,089
141,179
148,793
525,276
480,854
196,692
605,110
Total ...................................................
.....................................................................................................................................
10,400,319
Cerebral Degeneration
Cerebral degeneration is defined by
ICD–9 diagnosis codes beginning with
331, and includes conditions such as
Alzheimer’s disease and Reye’s
syndrome. These conditions are
typically characterized by a progressive
loss of cognitive function with
symptoms including the loss of memory
and changes in language ability,
behavior, and personality. Additionally,
as these cerebral degenerations progress,
other clinical manifestations occur such
as dysphagia, motor dysfunction,
impaired mobility, increased need for
activities of daily living assistance,
urinary and fecal incontinence, weight
loss and muscle wasting. Individuals
with these conditions are also at
increased risk for aspiration, falls,
pneumonias, decubitus ulcers and
urinary tract infections. Clinical practice
guidelines for the treatment of cerebral
degenerative conditions includes
pharmacological interventions
including Angiotensin Converting
Enzyme inhibitors, memantine or
combination therapy depending on
severity of disease, as well as
antidepressants, antipsychotics,
psychostimulants, mood stabilizers,
benzodiazepines and neuroleptics,
depending on behavioral
manifestations. Non-pharmacological
interventions recommended include
mental, behavioral and cognitive
therapy, speech language pathology to
address swallowing issues, and other
interventions to treat and manage
manifestations including pressure
ulcers, cachexia and infections.29
Total payment
Our assessment of concurrently billed
Part D drugs included 208,346 stays for
beneficiaries with ICD–9 code 331 listed
as a primary diagnosis on the hospice
claim. Our assessment of concurrently
billed Part B services included 318,044
stays. In CY 2013, concurrent billing for
all services related to this principal
diagnosis comprised $11.2 million.
Table 9 below summarizes concurrent
payments for services that are
potentially related to this class of
conditions. Part D drugs that should
have been covered under the hospice
benefit for the treatment of this
condition accounted for $10.3 million.
Concurrently billed DME products that
were related this condition cost
Medicare an additional $390,476.
Concurrent services provided in Part B
institutional settings accounted for
$496,790.
TABLE 9—CONCURRENT PAYMENTS FOR SERVICES PROVIDED TO HOSPICE BENEFICIARIES WITH CEREBRAL
DEGENERATION, CY 2013
Type of service
Description
Drugs/Part D .............................................
Drugs/Part D .............................................
Drugs/Part D .............................................
DME ..........................................................
DME ..........................................................
Part B Inst. ................................................
Common Palliative Drugs ...........................................................................................
Antipsychotic/Antimanic Agents .................................................................................
Psychotherapeutic & Neurological Agents .................................................................
Hospital Beds .............................................................................................................
Wheelchairs ................................................................................................................
Diagnostic Imaging .....................................................................................................
$1,184,005
2,336,504
6,752,270
138,249
252,228
496,790
Total ...................................................
.....................................................................................................................................
11,160,046
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Congestive Heart Failure
CHF is defined by ICD–9 diagnosis
codes beginning with 428. CHF is
characterized by symptoms such as
shortness of breath, edema, diminished
endurance, angina, productive cough
and fatigue. For the management of
27 Includes all analgesics, anxiolytics,
antiemetics, and laxatives. These four drug types
are considered ‘‘nearly always covered under the
hospice benefit’’ and as such are rarely expected to
be billed separately during a hospice stay.
28 For COPD, we also include respiratory assist
devices (RADs) in this category.
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congestive heart failure, clinical practice
guidelines recommend pharmacological
interventions including beta blockers,
angiotensin converting enzyme
inhibitors, angiotensin receptor
blockers, diuretics, anti-platelets, anticoagulants and digoxin, depending on
symptomology and response or
nonresponse to other treatments.30
Nonpharmacological interventions
recommended include continuous
positive airway pressure and
supplemental oxygen for those with
coexisting pulmonary disease.31
29 Development Group of the Clinical Practice
Guideline [trunc]. Clinical practice guideline on the
comprehensive care of people with Alzheimer’s
disease and other dementias. Barcelona (Spain):
Agency for Health Quality and Assessment of
Catalonia (AQuAS); 2010. 499 p. Retrieved from the
National Guideline Clearinghouse on February 19,
2015. https://www.guideline.gov/.
30 Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network
(SIGN). Management of chronic heart failure. A
national clinical guideline. Edinburgh (Scotland):
Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN);
2007 Feb. 53 p. (SIGN publication; no. 95).
31 Lindenfeld J, Albert NM, Boehmer JP, Collins
SP, Ezekowitz JA, Givertz MM, Klapholz M, Moser
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Our assessment of concurrently billed
Part D drugs included 158,220 stays for
beneficiaries with ICD–9 code 428 listed
as a primary diagnosis on the hospice
claim. Our assessment of concurrently
billed Part B services included 256,236
stays. In CY 2013, concurrent billing for
all services related this terminal
condition comprised $5.8 million. Table
10 below summarizes concurrent
payments for services that are
potentially related to this class of
conditions. Part D drugs that should
have been covered under the hospice
benefit for the treatment of this
condition accounted for $3.8 million.
47157
DME services that were billed during
hospice stays related to this condition
during this time cost $843,534.
Concurrent services provided in Part B
institutional settings accounted for $1.2
million.
TABLE 10—CONCURRENT PAYMENTS FOR SERVICES PROVIDED TO HOSPICE BENEFICIARIES WITH CONGESTIVE HEALTH
FAILURE, CY 2013
Type of service
Description
Drugs/Part D .............................................
Drugs/Part D .............................................
Drugs/Part D .............................................
Drugs/Part D .............................................
Drugs/Part D .............................................
Drugs/Part D .............................................
Drugs/Part D .............................................
DME ..........................................................
DME ..........................................................
DME ..........................................................
Part B Inst .................................................
Part B Inst .................................................
Part B Inst .................................................
Part B Inst .................................................
Part B Prof ................................................
Common Palliative Drugs ...........................................................................................
Diuretics ......................................................................................................................
Beta Blockers .............................................................................................................
Anti-hypertensives ......................................................................................................
Anti-anginal Agents ....................................................................................................
Cardiovascular Agents—Misc ....................................................................................
Vasopressors ..............................................................................................................
Oxygen Equipment and Supplies ...............................................................................
Hospital Beds .............................................................................................................
Wheelchairs ................................................................................................................
Diagnostic Imaging .....................................................................................................
EKGs ..........................................................................................................................
Cardiac Devices .........................................................................................................
Diagnostic Clinical Labs .............................................................................................
Diagnostic Clinical Labs .............................................................................................
$1,229,748
334,700
363,480
584,799
468,333
799,605
43,496
471,376
96,219
275,940
690,726
72,933
242,819
79,999
64,698
Total ...................................................
.....................................................................................................................................
5,818,871
Currently, federal regulations allow a
patient who has elected to receive
Medicare hospice services to revoke
their hospice election at any time and
for any reason. The revocation shall act
as a waiver of the right to have payment
made for any hospice care benefits for
the remaining time in such period. The
patient may, at a subsequent time, reelect to receive hospice coverage for
additional hospice election periods if he
or she is eligible to receive them
(§ 418.28(c)(3) and § 418.24(e)). During
the time period between revocation/
discharge and the re-election of the
hospice benefit, Medicare coverage
would resume for those Medicare
benefits previously waived. A
revocation can only be made by the
beneficiary, in writing, that he or she is
revoking the hospice election; and must
indicate the effective date of the
revocation. A hospice cannot ‘‘revoke’’
a beneficiary’s hospice election, nor is it
appropriate for hospices to encourage,
request or demand that the beneficiary
revoke his or her hospice election. Like
the hospice election, a hospice
revocation is to be an informed choice
based on the beneficiary’s goals, values
and preferences for the services they
wish to receive.
Federal regulations only provide
limited opportunity for a Medicare
hospice provider to discharge a patient
from its care. In accordance with
§ 418.26, discharge from hospice care is
permissible when the patient moves out
of the provider’s service area, is
determined to be no longer terminally
ill, or for cause. Hospices may not
automatically or routinely discharge the
patient at its discretion, even if the care
may be costly or inconvenient. As we
indicated in the FY 2015 Hospice Wage
Index and Payment Rate Update
proposed and final rules, we understand
that the rate of live discharges should
DK, Rogers JG, Starling RC, Stevenson WG, Tang
WHW, Teerlink JR, Walsh MN. Executive Summary:
not be zero, given the uncertainties of
prognostication and the ability of
patients and their families to revoke the
hospice election at any time. On July 1,
2012, we began collecting discharge
information on the claim to capture the
reason for all types of discharges which
includes, death, revocation, transfer to
another hospice, moving out of the
hospice’s service area, discharge for
cause, or due to the patient no longer
being considered terminally ill (that is,
no longer qualifying for hospice
services). Based upon the additional
discharge information, Abt Associates,
our research contractor performed
analysis on FY 2013 claims to identify
those beneficiaries who were discharged
alive. The details of this analysis will be
reported in the 2015 technical report
and will be made available on the
Hospice Center Web page. Several key
conclusions from the 2015 technical
report are included below. In order to
better understand the characteristics of
hospices with high live discharge rates,
we examined the aggregate cap status,
skilled visit intensity; average lengths of
stay; and non-hospice spending rates
per beneficiary.
Between 2000 and 2013, the overall
rate of live discharges increased from
13.2 percent in 2000 to 18.3 percent in
2013. Among hospices with 50 or more
HFSA 2010 Comprehensive Heart Failure Practice
Guideline. J Card Fail 2010;16:475e539.
Our regulations at § 418.56(c) require
that hospices provide all services
necessary for the palliation and
management of the terminal illness and
related conditions. We have discussed
recommended evidence-based practice
clinical guidelines for the hospice
claims-reported principal diagnoses
mentioned in this section. However, this
analysis reveals that these
recommended practices are not always
being covered under the Medicare
hospice benefit. We believe the case
studies in this section highlight the
potential systematic unbundling of the
Medicare hospice benefit by some
providers and may be valuable analysis
to inform policy stakeholders.
3. Live Discharge Rates
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discharges (discharged alive or
deceased), there is significant variation
in the rate of live discharge between the
10th and 90th percentiles (see Table 11
below). Most notably, hospices at the
95th percentile discharged 50 percent or
more of their patients alive.
TABLE 11—DISTRIBUTION OF LIVE DISCHARGE RATES IN FY 2013 FOR
HOSPICES WITH 50 OR MORE LIVE
DISCHARGES
Live
discharge
rate
%
Statistic
5th Percentile ..............................
10th Percentile ............................
25th Percentile ............................
Median ........................................
75th Percentile ............................
90th Percentile ............................
95th Percentile ............................
Note: n = 3,096.
8.1
9.5
12.9
18.3
26.6
39.1
50.0
We analyzed hospices’ aggregate cap
status to determine whether there is a
relationship between live discharge
rates and their aggregate cap status. As
described in section III.4.C and section
III.D, when the Medicare Hospice
Benefit was implemented, the Congress
included an aggregate cap on hospice
payments, which limits the total
aggregate payments any individual
hospice can receive in a year. Our FY
2013 analytic file contained 3,061
hospices with aggregate cap information
and with more than 50 discharges in FY
2013. We found that 40.3 percent of
hospices above the 90th percentile were
also above the aggregate cap for the 2013
cap year. Conversely, only 3.8 percent of
hospices below the 90th percentile were
above the aggregate cap. As illustrated
by the box plot below, the vertical axis
represents the hospices’ live discharge
rates in FY 2013 and the horizontal axis
represents the total payments hospices
received at the end of the cap year of
November 2012 through October 2013
relative to the total cap amount.
Hospices under 100 percent on the Xaxis are below the cap and those 100
percent or higher on the X-axis are
above the cap. Our analysis found that
hospices with higher live discharge
rates are also above the cap.
Specifically, the top of the rectangle
represents the 75th percentile of live
discharge rates, the middle line
represents the median for that group,
and the bottom of the rectangle is the
25th percentile of live discharge rates
among all hospices ending the year
within the range of cap percentages of
live discharge rates as indicated by the
horizontal axis (see Figure 2 below). We
found that there appears to be a
relationship with hospices with high
live discharge rates and those that are
above the aggregate cap.
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FIGURE 2: DISTRIBUTION OF HOSPICE LIVE DISCHARGE RATES BY HOSPICE PAYMENT RECEIVED RELATIVE TO THE
HOSPICE’S AGGREGATE CAP AMOUNT, FY 2013
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 151 / Thursday, August 6, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
In FY 2013, we found that hospices
with high live discharge rates also, on
average, provide fewer visits per week.
Those hospices with live discharge rates
at or above the 90th percentile provide,
on average, 3.97 visits per week.
Hospices with live discharge rates
below the 90th percentile provide, on
average, 4.48 visits per week. We also
found in FY 2013 that, when focusing
on visits classified as skilled nursing or
medical social services, hospices with
live discharge rates at or above the 90th
percentile provide, on average, 1.91
visits per week versus hospices with
live discharge rates below the 90th
percentile that provide, on average, 2.35
visits per week.
We examined whether there was a
relationship between hospices with high
live discharge rates, average length of
stay, and non-hospice spending per
beneficiary per day (see Table 12 and
Figure 3 below). As described above in
section III.A.2, we identified instances,
in the aggregate and illustrated by case
studies, where Medicare appeared to be
paying for services twice because we
would expect them to be covered by the
hospice base payment rate, but were
receiving items and services
characterized as ‘‘non-hospice’’ under
‘‘regular’’ Medicare. Hospices with
patients that, on average, accounted for
$30 per day in non-hospice spending
while in hospice (decile 10 in Table 12
and Figure 3 below) had live discharge
47159
rates that were, on average, about 33.8
percent and had an average lifetime
length of stay of 156 days. In contrast,
hospices with patients that, on average,
accounted for $4 per day in non-hospice
spending while in a hospice election
(decile 1 in Table 12 and Figure 3
below) had live discharge rates that
were, on average, about 19.2 percent
and an average lifetime length of stay of
103 days. In other words, hospices in
the highest decile, according to their
level of non-hospice spending for
patients in a hospice election, had live
discharge rates and average lifetime
lengths of stay that averaged 76 percent
and 52 percent higher, respectively,
than the hospices in lowest decile.
TABLE 12—MEAN DAILY NON-HOSPICE MEDICARE UTILIZATION AND SUM TOTAL NON-HOSPICE UTILIZATION BY HOSPICE
PROVIDER DECILE BASED ON SORTED NON-HOSPICE MEDICARE UTILIZATION PER HOSPICE DAY, FFY 2013
Non-hospice
medicare ($)
per hospice
service day
Decile
Total
non-hospice
medicare ($)
1 ...................................................................................................................................................................
2 ...................................................................................................................................................................
3 ...................................................................................................................................................................
4 ...................................................................................................................................................................
5 ...................................................................................................................................................................
6 ...................................................................................................................................................................
7 ...................................................................................................................................................................
8 ...................................................................................................................................................................
9 ...................................................................................................................................................................
10 .................................................................................................................................................................
$4.15
6.30
7.86
9.22
10.63
12.13
13.82
15.89
19.43
29.47
$24,683,958
47,971,918
56,871,943
69,879,537
105,399,628
116,697,215
154,499,596
177,609,853
214,073,434
256,226,963
All Hospices ..........................................................................................................................................
12.89
1,223,914,046
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Note: Abt Associates analysis of 100% Medicare Analytic Files, FFY 2013. Cohort is hospices with 50+ total discharges in FFY 2013 [n =
3,096]. Hospice deciles are based on estimates of total non-hospice Medicare utilization ($) per hospice service day, excluding utilization on hospice admission or live discharge days.
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The analytic findings presented above
suggests that some hospices may
consider the Medicare Hospice program
as a long-term custodial benefit rather
than an end of life benefit for
beneficiaries with a medical prognosis
of 6 months or less if the illness runs its
normal course. As previously discussed
in reports by MedPAC and the OIG,
there is a concern that hospices may be
admitting individuals who do not meet
hospice eligibility criteria. We continue
to communicate and collaborate across
CMS to improve monitoring and
oversight activities. We expect to
analyze the additional claims and cost
report data reported by hospices in the
future to determine whether additional
regulatory proposals to reform and
strengthen the Medicare Hospice benefit
are warranted.
We did not propose any new
regulations or solicit any comments
with this update on our hospice
payment reform research and analyses.
However, we received several
comments.
A few commenters asserted that the
fact that CMS did not release the
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technical report with the rule prevented
them from being able to fully evaluate
the impact of hospice payment reform.
The 2015 Technical Report, that is
planned for release later in 2015,
describes some of the findings described
above in this section of the rule. The
2015 Technical Report will not contain
analyses described in section III.B
related to hospice payment reform. All
of the analysis in support of hospice
payment reform can be found in section
III.B of this final rule. In addition, a
couple of commenters noted concerns
about questionable provider behavior
and asked what CMS plans to do in
response to these findings. These
providers felt that a targeted approach to
address program integrity concerns may
be more effective than a universal
payment reform approach, which may
harm those providers who are compliant
with coverage requirements. Several
commenters also noted concerns that a
more timely and coordinated system is
needed to address some of the payment
vulnerabilities identified in our
research. One industry commenter
stated that there are many reasons that
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services are rendered outside of the
Medicare hospice benefit and that often
these reasons are result from a
misunderstanding of the concept of
‘‘relatedness’’. This commenter
discussed an industry-driven
relatedness initiative that has been
developed to help inform hospice
decision making. Another commenter
urged CMS to consider the reasons why
hospices would counsel beneficiaries to
revoke the hospice benefit to seek care
outside of hospice. Several commenters
stated that they have no control or
knowledge over what services nonhospice providers are rendering or
billing. They suggested that CMS
provide outreach and education to
hospitals, physicians, DME suppliers
and other non-hospice providers on
those services covered under the
Medicare hospice benefit. Some
commenters suggested a claims-based
edit to prevent inappropriate payments.
We appreciate these comments on the
ongoing analysis presented and will
continue to monitor hospice trends and
vulnerabilities within the hospice
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program to help inform future policy
efforts and program integrity measures.
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B. Routine Home Care Rates and Service
Intensity Add-On Payment
1. Statutory Authority and Background
Section 3132(a) of the Affordable Care
Act amended 1814(i) of the Act by
adding paragraph (6)(D), that instructs
the Secretary, no earlier than October 1,
2013, to implement revisions to the
methodology for determining the
payment rates for RHC and other
services included in hospice care as the
Secretary determines to be appropriate.
The revisions may be based on an
analysis of new data and information
collected and such revisions may
include adjustments to per diem
payments that reflect changes in
resource intensity in providing such
care and services during the course of
the entire episode of hospice care. In
addition, we are required to consult
with hospice programs and MedPAC on
the revised hospice payment
methodology.
This legislation emerged largely in
response to MedPAC’s March 2009
Report to Congress, which cited rapid
growth of for-profit hospices and longer
lengths of stay that raised concerns
regarding a per diem payment structure
that encouraged inappropriate
utilization of the benefit.32 MedPAC
stated that a revised payment system
would encourage hospice stays
consistent with meeting the eligibility
requirements of a medical prognosis of
6 months or less if the illness runs its
normal course and increase greater
provider accountability to monitor
patients’ conditions. In that same report,
MedPAC stated that their goal was to
‘‘strengthen the hospice payment system
and not discourage enrollment in
hospice, while deterring program
abuse.’’
As described in section III.A, CMS has
transparently conducted payment
reform activities and released research
findings to the public since 2010. At
that time, Abt Associates conducted a
literature review and carried out
original research to provide background
on the current state of the Medicare
hospice benefit. The initial contract also
included several technical expert panel
meetings with national hospice
association representatives, academic
researchers, and a cross-section of
hospice programs that provided
32 Medicare Payment Advisory Commission
(MedPAC). ‘‘Reforming Medicare’s Hospice
Benefit.’’ Report to the Congress: Medicare Payment
Policy. March, 2009. Web. 18 Feb. 2015. https://
medpac.gov/documents/reports/Mar09_Ch06.pdf?
sfvrsn=0.
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valuable insights and feedback on
baseline empirical analyses provided by
ASPE. A subsequent award to Abt
Associates continues to support the
dissemination of research analyses and
findings, which are located in the
‘‘Research and Analyses’’ section of the
Hospice Center Web page (https://
cms.hhs.gov/Center/Provider-Type/
Hospice-Center.html). In addition,
research findings and payment reform
concepts were set out in a 2013
technical report and a 2014 technical
report, as well as in the FY 2014
Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate
Update final rule (78 FR 48234) and in
the FY 2015 Hospice Wage Index and
Payment Rate Update final rule (79 FR
50452). These research findings and
concepts provide a basis for an
important initial step toward payment
reform outlined in section III.B.2 below.
Over the past several years, MedPAC,
the Government Accountability Office
(GAO), and OIG, have all recommended
that CMS collect more comprehensive
data to better evaluate trends in
utilization of the Medicare hospice
benefit. Furthermore, section
3132(a)(1)(C) of the Affordable Care Act
specifies that the Secretary may collect
additional data and information on cost
reports, claims, or other mechanisms as
the Secretary determines to be
appropriate. We have received many
suggestions for ways to improve data
collection to support larger payment
reform efforts in the future. Based on
those suggestions and industry
feedback, we began collecting additional
information on the hospice claim form
as of April 1, 2014.33 Additionally,
revisions to the cost report form for
freestanding hospices became effective
for cost reporting periods beginning on
or after October 1, 2014. The
instructions for completing the revised
freestanding hospice cost report form
are found in the Medicare Provider
Reimbursement Manual-Part 2, chapter
43.34 Once available, we expect the data
from hospice claims and cost reports to
provide more comprehensive
information on the costs associated with
the services provided by hospices to
Medicare beneficiaries by level of care.
a. U-Shaped Payment Model
For over a decade, MedPAC and other
organizations have reported findings
33 CMS Transmittal 2864. ‘‘Additional Data
Reporting Requirements for Hospice Claims’’.
Available at: https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-andGuidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/
R2864CP.pdf.
34 https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-andGuidance/Guidance/Manuals/Paper-BasedManuals-Items/CMS021935.html?
DLPage=1&DLSort=0&DLSortDir=ascending.
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that suggest that the hospice benefit’s
fixed per-diem payment system is
inconsistent with the true variance of
service costs over the course of an
episode. Specifically, MedPAC cited
both academic and non-academic
studies, as well as its own analyses (as
summarized and articulated in
MedPAC’s 2002,35 2004,36 2006,37
2008 38 and 2009 39 Reports to
Congress), demonstrating that the
intensity of services over the duration of
a hospice stay manifests in a ‘U-Shaped’
pattern (that is, the intensity of services
provided is higher both at admission
and near death and, conversely, is
relatively lower during the middle
period of the hospice episode). Since
hospice care is most profitable during
the long, low-cost middle portions of an
episode, longer episodes have very
profitable, long middle segments. This
financial incentive appears to have
resulted in hospices enrolling
beneficiaries that are not truly eligible
for the benefit (that is, do not have a life
expectancy of 6 months or less) and
‘‘may lead some patients, families, and
providers to implicitly regard hospice as
a source of basic health care for failing
patients who did not qualify for skilled
nursing facility or home health care and
did not qualify for Medicaid or
otherwise could not afford other sources
of long-term custodial care,’’ 40 rather
than the end-of-life care for which the
benefit was originally designed.
In its March 2009 report, ‘‘Reforming
Medicare’s Hospice Benefit,’’ MedPAC
recommended that the Congress require
CMS to implement a payment system
that would adjust per-diem hospice
rates based on the day’s timing within
the hospice episode, with the express
goal of mitigating the apparent
inconsistency between payments and
resource utilization (that is, costs) in
hospice episodes.41 Specifically,
MedPAC recommended that payments
near the beginning and ending of a stay
be set at higher levels (weighted
upwards) and payments during the
35 https://www.medpac.gov/documents/contractorreports/report-to-the-congress-medicarebeneficiaries’-access-to-hospice-(may-2002).pdf.
36 https://www.medpac.gov/documents/reports/
June04_ch6.pdf.
37 https://www.medpac.gov/documents/reports/
Jun06_Ch03.pdf.
38 https://www.medpac.gov/documents/reports/
Jun08_Ch08.pdf.
39 https://www.medpac.gov/documents/reports/
Mar09_Ch06.pdf.
40 https://www.medpac.gov/documents/reports/
Mar09_Ch06.pdf?sfvrsn=0.
41 Medicare Payment Advisory Commission
(MedPAC). ‘‘Reforming Medicare’s Hospice
Benefit.’’ Report to the Congress: Medicare Payment
Policy. March, 2009. Web. 18 Feb. 2015. https://
medpac.gov/documents/reports/Mar09_Ch06.pdf?
sfvrsn=0.
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middle portion of care be set at lower
levels (weighted downwards) to better
mirror documented variation in cost
over an episode’s duration. Two
primary weighting schemes were
outlined in MedPAC’s 2009 Report: A
‘‘larger intensity adjustment’’
(essentially a deeper U-shaped payment
model, paying twice the base rate in the
first 30/last 7 days and just a quarter of
the daily rate in days 181+) and a
‘‘smaller intensity adjustment’’ (a
relatively shallower U-shaped model,
paying 1.5 times the base rate in the first
30/last 7 days and 0.375 times the daily
rate in days 181+).
In its March 2015 Report to the
Congress,42 MedPAC reiterated its
continued concerns regarding the
‘‘mismatch between payments and
hospice service intensity’’ in the current
hospice system and the ongoing need
for payment reform. The Commission
stated that ‘‘Medicare’s hospice
payment system is not well aligned with
the costs of providing care throughout a
hospice episode. As a result, long
hospice stays are generally more
profitable than short stays.’’ The
Commission previously ‘‘recommended
that the hospice payment system be
reformed to better match service
intensity throughout a hospice episode
of care (higher per diem payments at the
beginning of the episode and at the end
of the episode near the time of death
and lower payments in the middle)’’.
Other organizations have also
explored the concept of a U-shaped
payment model. ASPE, in conjunction
with its contractor, Acumen LLC,
analyzed hospice enrollment and
utilization data. ASPE’s research
demonstrated that the resource use
curve becomes more pronounced as
episode lengths increase for hospice
users, indicating that this effect occurs
because resource use declines more
substantially for the middle days
relative to beginning and ending days in
longer episodes of hospice care than it
does for shorter episodes. The decline in
the center of the ‘U’ is deeper for those
users who receive RHC only during
their hospice episode, which is the case
for the majority of hospice patients.
Recently, CMS’ contracting partner, Abt
Associates, conducted analysis of FY
2013 hospice claims data, showing that
of the approximately 92 million hospice
days billed, 97.45 percent are
categorized as RHC.
b. Tiered Payment Model
As required under section 3132(a) of
the Affordable Care Act, CMS also
explored other options for hospice
payment reform. Taking into
consideration the research and analysis
performed by MedPAC, ASPE, and
others, our payment reform contractor,
Abt Associates, examined hospice
utilization data and modeled a
hypothetical ‘‘tiered’’ payment system
similar to MedPAC’s U-shaped payment
model by paying different per-diem
rates for RHC according to the timing of
the RHC day in the patient’s episode of
care. However, because analysis of
hospice claims data found that a
relatively high percentage of patients
were not receiving skilled visits during
the last days of life, the ‘‘tiered payment
model’’ made the increased payments at
end of life contingent on whether
skilled services were provided. As
reported in the FY 2015 Hospice
Payment Rate Update final rule, in CY
2012, approximately 14 percent
beneficiaries did not receive any skilled
visits in the last 2 days of life (79 FR
50461). While this could be explained,
in part, by sudden or unexpected death,
the high percentage of beneficiaries with
no skilled visits in the last 2 days of life
causes concern as to whether
beneficiaries and their families are not
receiving needed hospice care and
support at the very end of life. If
hospices are actively engaging with the
beneficiary and the family throughout
the election, we would expect to see
skilled visits during those last days of
life. Therefore, in the tiered payment
model, making the increased payment at
the end of life contingent on whether
skilled visits occurred in the last 2 days
of life was thought of as one way to
provide additional incentive for care to
be provided when the patient needs it
most.
The groupings in the tiered payment
model, presented in Table13 below,
were developed through Abt Associates’
analyses of resource utilization over the
hospice episode and clinical input.
Using all RHC hospice service days from
2011, Abt then developed payment
weights for each grouping by calculating
its relative resource utilization rate
compared to the overall estimate of
resource use across all RHC days (see
Table 13 below).
TABLE 13—AVERAGE DAILY RESOURCE USE BY PAYMENT GROUPS IN THE TIERED PAYMENT MODEL, CY 2011
Group
1:
2:
3:
4:
5:
6:
7:
RHC
RHC
RHC
RHC
RHC
RHC
RHC
Implied weight
Days 1–5 .............................................................................................................................
Days 6–10 ...........................................................................................................................
Days 11–30 .........................................................................................................................
Days 31+ .............................................................................................................................
During Last Seven Days, Skilled Visits During Last 2 Days ..............................................
During Last Seven Days, No Skilled Visits During Last 2 Days ........................................
When Hospice Length of Stay is 5 Days or Less, Patient Discharged as ‘‘Expired’’. .......
2,800,144
2,493,004
7,767,918
65,958,740
2,832,620
476,809
510,787
2.3
1.11
0.97
0.86
2.44
0.91
3.64
Total ......................................................................................................................................................
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Group
Group
Group
Group
Group
Group
Group
Days of hospice
82,840,022
1.0
The payment weighting scheme in
this system, derived from observed
resource utilization across the entire
episode, would produce higher
payments during times when service is
more intensive (the beginning of a stay
or the end of life) and produce lower
payments during times when service is
less intensive (such as the ‘‘middle
period’’ of the stay). The tiered payment
model was discussed in more detail in
the FY 2014 Hospice Wage Index final
rule (78 FR 48271) and in the Hospice
Study Technical Report issued in April
of 2013.43
42 https://medpac.gov/documents/reports/chapter12-hospice-services-(march-2015report).pdf?sfvrsn=0.
43 https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/Hospice/Downloads/HospiceStudy-Technical-Report.pdf
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c. Visits During the Beginning and End
of a Hospice Election
Updated analysis of FY 2013 hospice
claims data continues to demonstrate a
U-Shaped pattern of resource use.
Increased utilization at both the
beginning and end of a stay is
demonstrated in Figure 4 below, where
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47163
FY 2013 resource costs (as captured by
wage-weighted minutes) are markedly
higher in the first 2 days of a hospice
election and once again in the 6 days
preceding the date of death and on the
date of death itself.
Analysis of skilled nursing and social
work visits provided on the first day of
a hospice election shows that nearly 89
percent of patients received a visit
totaling 15 minutes or more, while 11
percent did not receive a skilled nursing
visit or social work visit on the first day
of a hospice election (see Table 14
below). The percentage of patients who
did not receive a skilled nursing or
social work visit on a given day
increased to nearly 38 percent on the
second day of a hospice election. In
accordance with the hospice CoPs at
§ 418.54(a), hospices are required to
have a RN complete an initial
assessment of the hospice patient within
48 hours of election; therefore, we
would expect to see a nursing visit
occurring within the first 2 days of an
election in order to be in compliance
with the CoPs. We found that, in FY
2013, 96 percent of hospice patients did
receive a skilled visit in the first 2 days
of a hospice election. The percentage of
patients that did not receive a skilled
nursing or social work visit on any
given day increased to about 65 percent
by the sixth day of a hospice election.
Overall, on any given day during the
first 7 days of a hospice election, nearly
50 percent of the time the patient is not
receiving a skilled visit (skilled nursing
or social worker visit).
TABLE 14—FREQUENCY AND LENGTH OF SKILLED NURSING AND SOCIAL WORK VISITS (COMBINED) DURING THE FIRST
SEVEN DAYS OF A HOSPICE ELECTION, FY 2013
First day
(%)
Visit length
Second day
(%)
Third day
(%)
Fourth day
(%)
Fifth day
(%)
Sixth day
(%)
Seventh day
(%)
First
through
seventh day
(%)
No Visit ..............................................................
15 mins to 1 hr ..................................................
1 hr 15 m to 2 hrs .............................................
2 hrs 15 m to 3 hrs ...........................................
3 hrs 15 m to 3hrs45m .....................................
4 or more hrs ....................................................
11.0
12.8
32.0
22.8
8.5
13.0
37.7
27.1
21.4
8.6
2.6
2.6
56.0
22.2
14.3
4.8
1.3
1.3
59.1
20.6
13.4
4.5
1.2
1.2
62.0
20.4
12.2
3.6
0.9
0.9
65.6
20.1
10.4
2.5
0.6
0.7
64.2
22.3
10.2
2.2
0.5
0.6
49.3
20.7
16.9
7.5
2.4
3.2
Total ...........................................................
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
As we noted above, we are concerned
that many beneficiaries are not receiving
skilled visits during the last few days of
life. At the end of life, patient needs
typically surge and more intensive
services are warranted. However,
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analysis of FY 2013 claims data shows
that on any given day during the last 7
days of a hospice election, nearly 50
percent of the time the patient is not
receiving a skilled visit (skilled nursing
or social worker visit) (see table 15
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below). Moreover, on the day of death
nearly 30 percent of beneficiaries did
not receive a skilled visit (skilled
nursing or social work visit).
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Source: FY 2013 hospice claims data from the Standard Analytic Files for CY 2012 (as of June 30, 2013) and CY 2014 (as of December 31, 2013).
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TABLE 15—FREQUENCY AND LENGTH OF SKILLED NURSING AND SOCIAL WORK VISITS (COMBINED) DURING THE LAST
SEVEN DAYS OF A HOSPICE ELECTION, FY 2013
Visit length
(%)
Day of death
(%)
One day
before death
(%)
Two days
before death
(%)
Three days
before death
(%)
Four days
before death
(%)
Five days
before death
(%)
Six days
before death
(%)
Last seven
days
combined
(%)
No Visit ..............................
15 mins to 1 hr ..................
1 hr 15 m to 2 hrs .............
2 hrs 15 m to 3 hrs ...........
3 hrs 15 m to 3hrs45m .....
4 or more hrs ....................
27.8
23.9
24.2
12.3
4.4
7.4
38.7
27.9
19.3
7.2
2.4
4.3
45.2
26.5
17.4
5.9
1.9
3.0
49.8
25.1
15.9
5.1
1.6
2.4
53.2
24.2
14.5
4.5
1.4
2.1
55.8
23.5
13.6
4.1
1.2
1.9
58.0
22.8
12.7
3.8
1.1
1.6
46.3
24.9
17.1
6.3
2.1
3.4
Total ...........................
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
Source: FY 2013 hospice claims data from the Standard Analytic Files for CY 2012 (as of June 30, 2013) and CY 2014 (as of December 31, 2013).
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We would expect that skilled visits
are provided to the patient and family
at end of life as the changing condition
of the individual and the imminence of
death often warrants frequent changes to
care to alleviate and minimize
symptoms and to provide support for
the family. Although previous public
comments stated that patients and
families sometimes request no visits at
the end of life, and there are rare
instances where a patient passes away
unexpectedly, we would expect that
these instances would be rare and
represent a small proportion of the
noted days without visits at the end of
life. However, the data presented in
Table 15 above suggests that it is not
rare for patients and families to have not
received skilled visits (skilled nursing
or social work visits) at the end of life.
In the FY 2015 Hospice Wage Index and
Payment Rate Update final rule, we
noted that nearly 5 percent of hospices
did not provide any skilled visits in the
last 2 days of life to more than 50
percent of their decedents receiving
routine home care on those last 2 days
and 34 hospices did not make any
skilled visits in the last 2 days of life to
any of their decedents who died while
receiving routine home care (79 FR
50462).
2. Routine Home Care Rates
RHC is the basic level of care under
the Hospice benefit, where a beneficiary
receives hospice care, but remains at
home. With this level of care, hospice
providers are currently reimbursed per
day regardless of the volume or
intensity of services provided to a
beneficiary on any given day. As stated
in the FY 2014 Hospice Wage Index and
Payment Rate Update final rule (78 FR
48234), ‘‘it is CMS’ intent to ensure that
reimbursement rates under the Hospice
benefit align as closely as possible with
the average costs hospices incur when
efficiently providing covered services to
beneficiaries.’’ However, as discussed in
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section III.B.1 above, there is evidence
of a misalignment between the current
RHC per diem payment rate and the cost
of providing RHC. In order to help
ensure that hospices are paid adequately
for providing care to patients regardless
of their palliative care needs during the
stay, while at the same time encouraging
hospices to more carefully determine
patient eligibility relative to the
statutory requirement that the patient’s
life expectancy be 6 months or less, in
the FY 2016 Hospice Wage Index and
Payment Rate Update proposed rule (80
FR 25831), we proposed to use the
authority under section 1814(i)(6)(D) of
the Act, as amended by section 3132(a)
of the Affordable Care Act to revise the
current RHC per diem payment rate to
more accurately align the per diem
payments with visit intensity (that is,
the cost of providing care for the clinical
service (labor) components of the RHC
rate). We proposed to implement, in
conjunction with a SIA payment
discussed in section III.B.3 below, two
different RHC rates that would result in
a higher base payment rate for the first
60 days of hospice care and a reduced
base payment rate for days 61 and
beyond of hospice care.
The proposed two rates for RHC were
based on an extensive body of research
concerning visit intensity during a
hospice episode as cited throughout this
section. We consider a hospice
‘‘episode’’ of care to be a hospice
election period or series of election
periods. Visit intensity is commonly
measured in terms of wage-weighted
minutes and reflects variation in the
provision of care for the clinical service
(labor) components of the RHC rate. The
labor components of the RHC rate
comprise nearly 70 percent of the RHC
rate (78 FR 48272). Therefore, visit
intensity is a close proxy for the
reasonable cost of providing hospice
care absent data on the non-labor
components of the RHC rate, such as
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drugs and DME. As shown in Figures 5
and 6 below, the daily cost of care, as
measured wage-weighted minutes,
declines quickly for individual patients
during their hospice episodes, and for
long episode patients, remains low for a
significant portion of the episode. Thus,
long episode patients are potentially
more profitable than shorter episode
patients under the current per diem
payments system in which the payment
rate is the same for the entire episode.
At the same time, the percent of
beneficiaries that enter hospice less than
7 days prior to death has remained
relatively constant (approximately 30
percent) over this time period, meaning
the increase in the average episode
length can be attributed to an increasing
number of long stay patients. We found
that the percent of episodes that are
more than 6 months in length has nearly
doubled from about 7 percent in 1999 to
13 percent in 2013.
Figure 5 displays the pattern of wageweighted minutes by time period within
beneficiary episodes, but separating out
the last 7 days of the episode for
decedents. The wage-weighted minutes
for the last 7 days are displayed
separately by the bar furthest to the right
of the Figure 5. The visit intensity curve
declines rapidly after 7 days and then at
a slower rate until 60 days when the
curve becomes flat throughout the
remainder of episodes (excluding the
last 7 days prior to death). It is for this
reason that we proposed to pay a higher
rate for the first 60 days and a lower rate
thereafter. It is clear from the figure that
visit utilization is constant from day 61
on, until the last 7 days for decedents.
We believe the most important reason
for implementing a different RHC rate
for the first 60 days versus days 61 and
beyond is that we must account for
differences in average visit intensity
between episodes that will end within
60 days and those that will go on for
longer episodes.
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quality care to patients (for example, 1
through 60 days) whose average daily
visit intensity is higher than for longer
stay patients.
phases within an episode as well as
overall.
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with longer stays. Using 60 days for the
high RHC rate as opposed to an earlier
time assures that hospices have
sufficient resources for providing high
Table 16 below describes the average
wage-weighted minutes for RHC days in
FY 2014, calculated both in specific
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As Figure 6 demonstrates,
beneficiaries whose entire episode is
between 8 and 60 days do have higher
wage-weighted minute usage than those
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TABLE 16—AVERAGE WAGE WEIGHTED MINUTES PER RHC DAY, FY 2014
Average wageweighted minutes
Phase of days in episode
RHC days
Ratio of wage
weighted minutes
for each row
divided by wage
weighted minutes
for days 1–7
1–7 Days ..............................................................................................................
8–14 Days ............................................................................................................
15–30 Days ..........................................................................................................
31–60 Days ..........................................................................................................
61–90 Days ..........................................................................................................
91–180 Days ........................................................................................................
181–272 Days ......................................................................................................
273–365 Days ......................................................................................................
365 up Days ........................................................................................................
$39.29
20.12
17.96
16.09
15.44
14.93
14.78
14.90
15.05
5,446,868
4,310,630
7,752,375
10,758,904
8,123,686
16,271,786
10,118,998
6,876,814
16,029,597
1.0000
0.5121
0.4570
0.4097
0.3930
0.3799
0.3762
0.3793
0.3830
Total RHC Days ...........................................................................................
17.21
85,689,658
0.4380
In Table 16, the average wageweighted minutes per day for days 1
through 7 describe the baseline for the
other phases of care, set at a value of
one. Given the demands of the initial
care in an episode, resource intensity is
highest during this first week of an
episode, and resource needs decline
steadily over the course of an episode.
The overall average wage-weighted
minutes per day across all RHC days
equals $17.21 as described in the last
row in table 16 above. We then
calculated the average wage-weighted
minute costs for the two groups of days
(Days 1 through 60 and Days 61+)
utilizing FY 2014 RHC days multiplied
by the 2013 Bureau of Labor Statistics
(BLS) average hourly wage values for
the relevant disciplines, as follows:
Skilled Nursing: $40.07; Physical
Therapy: $55.93; Occupational Therapy:
$55.57; Speech Language Pathology:
$60.21; Medical Social Services: $38.25;
and Aide: $14.28. The average wageweighted minute cost for days 1 through
60 equals to $21.69 while the average
wage weighted minutes for days 61 or
more equals $15.01.
To calculate the RHC payment rate for
days 1 through 60, we compared the
average wage-weighted minutes per day
for days 1 through 60 to the overall
average wage-weighted minutes per day
multiplied by the labor portion of the
FY 2015 RHC rate (column 4 in Table
17 below), which equals ($21.69/
$17.21)*$109.48 = $137.98. Similarly,
the RHC payment rate for days 61+
equals the average wage-weighted
minutes per day for days 61+ divided by
the overall average wage-weighted
minutes per day multiplied by the labor
portion of the FY 2015 RHC rate
(column 4 in Table 17 below), which
equals ($15.01/$17.21)*$109.48 =
$95.49.
TABLE 17—FY 2015 RHC RATE REVISED LABOR PORTION CALCULATION
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
FY 2015 RHC
Payment rate
RHC Laborrelated share
FY 2015 RHC
Payment
rate—labor
portion
Average wage weighted
minutes for RHC differential
rate/overall RHC average
wage weighted minutes
Revised FY
2015 labor
portion
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Days 1–60 ....................................................
Days 61+ ......................................................
$159.34
159.34
As discussed in section III.C of this
rule, currently, the labor-related share of
the hospice payment rate for RHC is
68.71 percent. The non-labor share is
equal to 100 percent minus the laborrelated share, or 31.29 percent. Given
the current base rate for RHC for FY
2015 of $159.34, the labor and non-labor
components are as follows: For the
labor-share portion, $159.34 multiplied
by 68.71 percent equals $109.48; for the
non-labor share portion, $159.34
multiplied by 31.29 percent equals
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× 0.6871
× 0.6871
$109.48
109.48
$49.86. After determining the labor
portion for the RHC rate for the first 60
days and the labor portion for the RHC
rate for days 61 and over, we add the
non-labor portion ($49.86) to the revised
labor portions. In order to maintain
budget neutrality, as required under
section 1814(i)(6)(D)(ii) of the Act, the
RHC rates will be adjusted by a ratio of
the estimated total labor payments for
RHC using the current single rate for
RHC to the estimated total labor
payments for RHC using the two rates
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× 1.2603 ($21.69/$17.21)
× 0.8722 ($15.01/$17.21)
$137.98
95.49
for RHC and taking into account area
wage adjustment. This ratio results in a
budget neutrality adjustment of 0.9978,
which is due to differences in the
average wage index for days 1–60
compared to days 61 and beyond, as
shown in column 3 in Table 18 below.
Finally, adding the revised labor portion
with budget neutrality to the non-labor
portion results in revised FY 2015 RHC
payment rates of $187.54 for days 1
through 60 and $145.14 for days 61 and
beyond.
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TABLE 18—RHC BUDGET NEUTRALITY ADJUSTMENT FOR RHC RATES
(1)
(2)
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1 The
(4)
(5)
(6)
Revised FY
2015 Labor
portion
Days 1–60 ............................................................................
Days 61+ ..............................................................................
(3)
Budget
neutrality
factor 1
Revised FY
2015 labor
portion with
budget
neutrality
FY 2015 Nonlabor portion
FY 2015
Revised RHC
payment rates
$49.86
49.86
$187.54
145.14
$137.98
95.49
× 0.9978
× 0.9978
$137.68
95.28
budget neutrality adjustment is required due to differences in the average wage index for days 1–60 compared to days 61 and beyond.
The RHC rates for days 1 through 60
and days 61 and over (column 6 of
Table 18 above) would replace the
current single RHC per diem payment
rate with two new RHC per diem rates
for patients who require RHC level of
care during a hospice election. In order
to mitigate potential high rates of
discharge and readmissions, we
proposed that the count of days follow
the patient. For hospice patients who
are discharged and readmitted to
hospice within 60 days of that
discharge, his or her prior hospice days
would continue to follow the patient
and count toward his or her patient days
for the receiving hospice upon hospice
election. The hospice days would
continue to follow the patient solely to
determine whether the receiving
hospice would receive payment at the
day 1 through 60 or day 61 and beyond
RHC rate. Therefore, we consider an
‘‘episode’’ of care to be a hospice
election period or series of election
periods separated by no more than a 60
day gap.
Summaries of the public comments
and our responses to comments on all
aspects of the RHC payment rates are
summarized below:
Comment: Nearly all commenters
were supportive of our proposal to
create two RHC rates, one higher rate for
the first 60 days of hospice care and a
second lower rate for days 61 and
beyond. MedPAC supported both the
proposed new structure for RHC
payments and the proposed Service
Intensity Adjustment (SIA) in section
III.B.3 below, and stated that these two
proposals begin to better align payments
with the u-shaped pattern of hospice
visits throughout an episode. Several
commenters went on to add that the
proposed RHC rates would increase
reimbursement and accurately align the
higher cost of care for relatively short
stay patients while fairly reimbursing
the lower cost of care for long stay
patients.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support. We agree that our
proposal to create two RHC rates, one
for days 1–60 and another for days 61
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and beyond, addresses observed
differences in resource intensity
between the first 60 days of hospice care
and hospice care that extends beyond 60
days.
Comment: Several commenters
questioned why CMS differentiated
between a higher and a lower RHC rate
at 60 days. Several commenters stated
that the costs do not decrease after 60
days and that costs often increase near
the end of life. While the proposed SIA,
discussed in section III.B.3 below, helps
to compensate for increased costs at end
of life, the proposed RHC rates do not
take into consideration the increased
costs of medications, sometimes extra
equipment, nor the real costs of
providing care. One commenter stated
that once a patient exceeds 60 days of
care, the lower RHC rate simply reintroduces the current incentive to
provide long spells of potentially
unnecessary care. The commenter went
on to add that the proposed RHC rates
are, in reality, two flat per diem rates
that perpetuate the shortcomings of the
current payment approach.
A few commenters recommended that
CMS maintain consistency with already
established benefit periods and should,
instead of differentiating payment at 60
days, differentiate RHC payments
between days 1–90 and days 91 and
beyond, or even apply the higher rate
for the first 6 months and then the lower
rate thereafter to maintain consistency
with the eligibility requirement of a
‘‘life expectancy of 6 months or less if
the illness runs its normal course’’. One
commenter agreed with CMS’ proposal
to create two RHC rates, but
recommended that in the future, CMS
consider establishing a separate rate for
the first 7 or 14 days of care and a lower
rate thereafter.
Several commenters stated that while
they support the proposal to create two
RHC rates, further refinements may be
necessary in the future. Specifically, one
commenter stated that CMS may need to
further weight the first 60 days or
transition from the first to the second
RHC rate earlier than day 61. Several
commenters added that CMS may find
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that hospice payments should be
adjusted based on beneficiary
characteristics, such as comorbidities
and socio-economic status and that CMS
should develop a reimbursement
methodology that reflects the actual cost
of caring for individuals with different
diagnoses related to the terminal illness
as well as individuals that receive
higher cost treatments (for example,
chemotherapy, total parenteral
nutrition).
Response: As discussed above, visit
intensity declines after 7 days of
hospice care until day 60 of hospice
care when the visit intensity becomes
flat throughout the remainder of the
hospice episode (excluding the last 7
days prior to death). It is for this reason
that we proposed to pay a higher rate for
the first 60 days and a lower rate
thereafter. CMS did consider
establishing an even higher rate for the
first 7 days of care; however, given
concerns voiced by the National
Hospice and Palliative Care
Organization (NHPCO), MedPAC, and
others that short lengths of stay may
prevent patients and family caregivers
from benefiting fully from the range of
specialized services and compassionate
care that hospices offer, we decided to
propose a higher RHC rate for days 1–
60 and an lower RHC rate for days 61
and beyond as to not provide a larger
incentive for hospices to target short
stay patients. In addition to the higher
RHC rate for days 1–60, the proposed
SIA, discussed in section III.B.3 below,
would increase the reimbursement
further for short stay patients, including
those with lengths of stay of 7 days or
less, as long as skilled visits by a
registered nurse or social worker are
provided to the patient at end of life.
For those commenters that suggested
CMS pay a higher rate for the first 90
days and then a lower rate thereafter, we
concur with MedPAC’s comments on
the proposed rule cautioning against
any changes to the proposed structure
that would lengthen the period for the
initial payment rate (for example, days
1–90) because that would result in a
lower initial payment rate and represent
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a smaller increase in reimbursement for
shorter stays.
CMS recently revised the freestanding
hospice cost report form for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2014. On April 1, 2014, we
began requiring hospices to report on
the hospice claim, in line item detail,
the charges associated with infusion
pumps and non-injectable and
injectable prescription drugs (as
dispensed). In section III.F of this final
rule, we are clarifying that, effective
October 1, 2015, hospices are to report
all patient diagnoses (related and
unrelated) on the hospice claim form.
Once several years of additional data are
available for analysis, we will determine
whether additional changes to the
hospice payment system are needed in
the future, including analysis to
determine whether a case-mix system
for hospice payments would be an
appropriate, viable option.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that the proposed RHC rates would
allow some hospices to ‘‘game the
system’’ by receiving the full benefit of
the initial 60 day period then
discharging the patient, leaving other
smaller, non-profit hospices to assume
care for someone with decreased
reimbursement. Commenters expressed
concern that this payment differential
could provide an incentive for hospices
to target and admit larger numbers of
short stay patients, and to discharge or
decline to admit, patients who hospice
care would be paid at the lower rate
causing more patients to show up at the
emergency room multiple times for pain
management and symptom control. One
commenter stated that the proposed
RHC rates could cause hospices to shift
away from caring for patients with noncancer diagnoses with unpredictable
lengths of stay. Commenters further
urged CMS to monitor for discharges
around day 60 and to put mechanisms
in place to prevent hospices from
discharging a patient around day 60.
Some commenters suggested that CMS
address the areas of illegal and
unethical behaviors of those individual
hospices who do not comply with the
rules and regulations of the Medicare
hospice benefit and that CMS not apply
a universal payment reform that impacts
those hospice providers who are in
compliance with the rules and
regulations.
Response: Reiterating what we stated
in the FY 2016 Hospice Wage Index and
Payment Rate Update proposed rule (80
FR 25831), we will monitor the impact
of this proposal, including trends in
discharges and revocations, and propose
future refinements if necessary. We
want to remind hospices that, pursuant
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to section 418.26, there are only three
reasons why a hospice may discharge a
patient—(1) If the hospice patient moves
outside of the hospice’s service area or
transfers to another hospice; (2) if the
hospice determines the patient is no
longer terminally ill; or (3) for cause
when the patient or others living in the
patient’s home are disruptive, abusive,
or uncooperative. Program integrity and
oversight efforts are being considered to
address fraud and abuse and such
efforts include, but are not limited to,
medical review, MAC audits, Zone
Program Integrity Contractor actions,
RAC activities, or suspension of
provider billing privileges.
Comment: Commenters stated that the
proposed RHC rates do not address the
challenges faced by hospices with very
short stay patients. A few commenters
stated that instead of adding complexity
to the billing process, CMS should target
its efforts on ensuring beneficiaries are
informed early and often on the value of
services they are entitled to under the
Medicare hospice benefit and target
providers experiencing high profit
margins and separately evaluate the
level and intensity of such providers
and those providers’ case-mix and
staffing strategies.
Response: While the proposed RHC
rates themselves do not specifically
address very short stay patients, the
proposed SIA, discussed in section
III.B.3 below, would apply to the last 7
days of life. We believe that the higher
RHC rate in conjunction with the
proposed SIA payment will mitigate
some of the financial concerns
associated with these very short stay
patients. CMS makes every effort to
provide outreach and education to
Medicare beneficiaries and providers
regarding all Medicare benefits,
including those services available under
the Medicare hospice benefit.
Information regarding benefit coverage
is available via MLN articles, the annual
Medicare & You handbook, and on the
Medicare.gov Web site, to name a few.
We will continue to monitor provider
behavior and will continue efforts to
protect beneficiary access to high
quality, coordinated and comprehensive
hospice care under the Medicare
hospice benefit.
Comment: Most commenters,
including MedPAC, generally agreed
that for hospice patients who are
discharged and readmitted to hospice
within 60 days of that discharge, his or
her prior hospice days should continue
to follow the patient and count toward
his or her patient days for the receiving
hospice upon hospice election. MedPAC
stated that this policy is necessary to
minimize financial incentives for
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hospice patients to be dis-enrolled and
re-enrolled, or transferred between
hospice providers, for the purposes of
obtaining a higher payment rate.
MedPAC went on to state that they
would also support a longer ‘‘break’’
than 60 days, but does not believe this
threshold should be shorter. A few
commenters did not agree with having
the hospice days follow the patient and
added that concerns exist about
instances where the patient transfers to
another hospice and the inequities for
the second hospice if they are not
entitled to the higher RHC rate after 60
days have lapsed. A few commenters
suggested that CMS allow the second
hospice to receive the higher RHC rate
or an add-on payment just for the first
seven days of a new election after being
discharged from a different hospice
provider. One commenter suggested that
for live discharges prior to 60 days, the
lower tiered RHC rate be applied to all
claims where a patient is in their initial
60 days. Other commenters suggested
that CMS monitor this issue and
whether it has any effect on access to
hospice care. One commenter suggested
that CMS’ proposed ‘‘episode’’
definition (a hospice election period or
series of election periods separated by
no more than a 60 day gap) may be most
appropriate to apply to those hospices
that share common ownership rather
than to all hospice providers.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support. We want to reiterate
that in order to mitigate potential high
rates of discharge and readmissions
(‘‘churning’’), we proposed that the
count of days follow the patient. We
continue to believe that this policy is
both necessary and appropriate.
Allowing for a higher payment for the
first seven days of a new hospice
election without a gap in hospice care
of greater than 60 days goes against our
intent to mitigate the incentive to
discharge and readmit patients at or
around day 60 for the purposes of
obtaining a higher payment. As we
stated above, we will monitor the
impact of the new RHC rates policy
based on claims data, including trends
in discharges and revocations, and
implement future refinements to the
rates or policy changes, if necessary. In
response to the commenter that
suggested that for live discharges prior
to 60 days, the lower tiered RHC rate be
applied to all claims where a patient is
in their initial 60 days, we will take this
suggestion under advisement for future
rulemaking after analyzing any trends in
discharges and revocations as a result of
the policy changes finalized in this rule.
Finally, the Medicare claims processing
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system is not able to identify hospices
that share common ownership. In the
future, if this capability is developed in
the future, we will consider whether it
would be appropriate to restrict the
application of episode definition to
hospices that share common ownership.
Comment: Some commenters
expressed concern about the ability of
CMS, the state Medicaid agencies, and
hospices to make the necessary systems
changes and undertake education and
training to be ready to implement the
new billing system by October 1, 2015.
Commenters urged CMS to be mindful
to the challenges associated with any
new hospice payment system that
affects Medicaid. A few commenters
suggested that CMS should pilot test
this new methodology before
implementation in order to determine
any unintended consequences as well as
better determine the administrative
burden imposed. Other commenters
suggested that CMS consider a one-year
demonstration project to test the new
RHC payment rates for all hospices
under the jurisdiction of one MAC. A
few commenters stated that the two
RHC rates should be phased in, similar
to how CMS implemented the new
Ambulatory Surgical Center (ASC)
payment system and the phase-out of
the hospice BNAF. One commenter
suggested that CMS delay
implementation of this final rule until
after ICD–10–CM implementation.
Response: Although some
commenters suggested that, before
national implementation, CMS should
conduct a demonstration project or pilot
test the two proposed RHC rates, we do
not believe that a demonstration project
or pilot test is warranted. CMS has been
working with our contractors to develop
systems changes to the fullest extent
possible in parallel with the
development of this rule. Our system
maintainers will have their full software
development lifecycle to implement
these changes. We do not have concerns
about the readiness of Medicare systems
on October 1, 2015. Regarding hospice
system changes, we do not anticipate
that this rule will require any changes
to hospice billing instructions so
systems for submitting claims and
receiving Medicare payment should not
be affected and the need for retraining
billing staff should be limited, but
hospices may need to change their
internal accounting systems . Further,
the data presented in the proposed rule
sufficiently demonstrate that CMS needs
to implement the proposed RHC
payment rate change to better align
hospice payments with resource use.
Any phase-in of the proposed RHC rates
would not be appropriate given the
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current misalignment between
payments and resource use and the
ability of CMS to effectively implement
the required systems changes. Likewise,
CMS does not believe that a delay in the
implementation of the two RHC rates
would be warranted due to the
implementation of ICD–10–CM.
While CMS is ready and able to make
the required systems changes to
implement a change from a single RHC
per diem payment rate to two RHC per
diem payment rates, we anticipate that
state Medicaid agencies may encounter
difficulties in making the necessary
systems and software changes to be
ready to implement the proposed RHC
rates on October 1, 2015. Therefore, we
will delay implementation of both the
proposed RHC rates and the SIA
payment until January 1, 2016 in order
to ensure, to the greatest extent possible,
that the state Medicaid agencies can
likewise implement these changes.
Between October 1, 2015 and December
31, 2015, hospices will continue to be
paid a single FY 2016 RHC per diem
payment amount. Effective January 1,
2016, the RHC rates for days 1 through
60 and days 61 and beyond would
replace the single RHC per diem
payment rate (the RHC per diem rates
are listed in section III.C of this final
rule). We assure hospices that CMS and
the MACs will take steps to educate and
train hospice providers and state
Medicaid agencies on the policy
changes and associated systems changes
finalized in this rule so that hospices
and the state Medicaid agencies are
ready to implement the two RHC rates
on January 1, 2016.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that the proposed rule did not describe
how hospice days will be counted for
beneficiaries in existing hospice
episodes that continue through October
1, 2015. Several commenters, including
MedPAC, stated that the patient’s day
count on October 1, 2015 should be
based on the total number of days in the
hospice episode, even those days prior
to October 1, 2015 (taking into account
the proposed policy that the episode
days follow the patient and 60 days
without hospice care would trigger a
new hospice episode). A few
commenters stated that the new RHC
rates should apply just for new
admissions starting on or after October
1, 2015 and a few other commenters
added that existing admissions should
continue to be paid the existing single
RHC rate for a year after
implementation. A few commenters
asked whether the 60 day hospice
episode period is counting 60 days of
continuous days of hospice care
regardless of level of care or whether it
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47169
is only counting days at the RHC level
of care and whether days of care that
were provided, but not billable, would
be included in the count.
Response: Table 16, used to establish
the proposed RHC payment rates for
days 1–60 and days 61 and beyond,
takes into account the patient’s episode
day count based on the total number of
days included in that episode regardless
of level of care, whether those days were
billable or not, and taking into account
any instances where the patient was not
receiving hospice care for more than 60
days, which would trigger a new
hospice episode for the purpose of
determining whether to pay the higher
versus the lower RHC rate. We agree
with MedPAC that it would not be
appropriate to reset all hospice patients’
episodes to day 1 on January 1, 2016
since patients who have already been in
hospice for at least 60 days would not
require the higher base payment rate
associated with the first 60 days of the
hospice episode. Likewise, we agree
with MedPAC that allowing patients in
existing elections to remain under the
prior single RHC rate system would
perpetuate concerns about payments
being misaligned with costs for the
longest-stay patients. Therefore, we
believe that the most appropriate
approach is to calculate the patient’s
episode day count based on the total
number of days the patient has been
receiving hospice care, separated by no
more than a 60 day gap in hospice care,
regardless of level of care or whether
those days were billable or not. This
calculation would include hospice days
that occurred prior to January 1, 2016.
Comment: Some commenters stated
that it was unclear from the proposal
whether hospices will simply bill a RHC
day and CMS will determine the count
of days for the patient and pay the
appropriate rate, or whether hospices
will be responsible for determining the
patient day count and billing at the
correct rate. A few commenters
questioned how CMS would address
instances where a hospice is delayed in
filing a Notice of Termination/
Revocation and the days that the
beneficiary was served by a previous
hospice program may not be ‘‘visible’’
for purposes of determining the day
count and the appropriate billing rate.
One commenter suggested that CMS
should be responsible for the count of
days, rather than individual hospices.
One commenter recommended that
CMS not finalize its proposal to have
the count of days follow the patient as
this could become problematic from a
billing perspective for receiving
hospices in instances where a previous
hospice provider does not bill their
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hospice claims for its patients in a
timely manner. Another commenter
recommended that CMS eliminate the
sequential billing requirement so that
there would be fewer implementation
problems associated with the proposed
reimbursement changes. Finally, one
commenter questioned if payments are
made to the hospice and are later found
to have been the wrong rate because of
missing or inaccurate information on
the day count, what the process would
be for reconciliation and recoupment
and over what time period might this
occur.
Response: Hospices will not be
required to change how they bill for
RHC days to comply with the proposed
higher RHC rate for the first 60 days of
care and a lower rate thereafter. CMS’
claims processing system will be
responsible for the count of days, rather
than the individual hospices, and will
pay the appropriate rate accordingly.
We believe this should alleviate hospice
providers’ concerns about having access
to timely information on the patients’
day count. There may be cases where a
hospice submits a claim for a new
admission and expects payment days
under the high RHC rate because they
are unaware of a prior admission in a
sequence of elections. If the prior
hospice’s benefit period is posted in the
Common Working File (CWF) at the
time the second hospice’s claim is
processed, Medicare systems will pay
the low RHC rate on that claim and no
recoupment will result. If the two
hospices’ benefit periods are processed
out of sequence, this typically requires
that the second hospice’s claims be
cancelled and reprocessed. When
Medicare systems reprocess the claims,
they will pay the low RHC rate and any
difference between the two rates will be
recouped on the provider’s next
remittance advice. While we are not
eliminating the sequential billing
requirement at this time, we will
consider whether the elimination of that
requirement may be appropriate in the
future.
Comment: Several commenters asked
how hospices will be able to determine
and confirm the days on service for a
new hospice admission. One commenter
recommended that a separate count be
established to track and report the 60
day ‘‘break’’ in service so it is clear to
hospice providers if a patient is within
the first 60 days of a hospice episode.
One commenter provided the following
scenario:
• Patient begins hospice care on day
one
• Patient discharged on day five
• Patient does not receive hospice care
for 50 days
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• Patient is then re-admitted.
The commenter asked whether the day
count would leave 55 more days to be
paid the higher RHC rate, or only 5 days
to be paid at the higher RHC rate. One
commenter questioned how the count of
days would work for transfers where
both hospices may bill on the day of
transition.
Response: If a patient is discharged
and readmitted within 60 days of that
discharge, then the day count would
start back where they were at discharge.
In the scenario described above, the day
count would leave 55 more days to be
paid the higher RHC rate. When a
patient transfers hospices and there is
no gap in care, the transfer day (both
hospices will be including the same
date on their claim) will only be
counted as 1 day. Hospices can access
this information through the HIPAA
Eligibility Transaction System (HETS),
which is intended to allow the release
of eligibility data to Medicare Providers,
Suppliers, or their authorized billing
agents for the purpose of preparing an
accurate Medicare claim, determining
Beneficiary liability or determining
eligibility for specific services. The
hospice data provided by the Common
Working File (CWF) and the HETS
system includes the actual start and end
date of the hospice benefit days. That
information will help hospices
determine how many days the hospice
benefit was utilized. The HETS system
allowable date span is up to 12 months
in the past, based on the date the
transaction was received. The data
return in the HETS system is driven by
the date requested in the hospice’s
eligibility request. To ensure that all
hospice episodes available in the HETS
system are returned, hospices should
request a date 12 months prior from the
date of the request. If a hospice does not
have access to the CWF or the HETS
system, the hospice can access this data
via their MAC’s Portal, the MAC’s
Interactive Voice Response (IVR) unit,
or request a direct access to the HETS
system. A hospice that uses a
clearinghouse may already have access
to the HETS system.
Comment: A few commenters had
extensive comments on the technical
aspects in implementing the proposed
RHC rates and the SIA payments. For
example, some commenters questioned:
(1) Whether the claims processing
system can accommodate a break in line
item detail when the revenue code does
not change, but the rate does; (2) how
the electronic remittance advice will
reflect multiple payment rates for
revenue code 0651; (3) will the two RHC
rates affect revenue reporting on the
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hospice cost report, and if so, will the
PS&R report summarize the needed data
appropriately; and (4) how will
Medicare secondary payer processing
apply the two RHC rates on claims
billed to a primary payer that utilizes a
single rate.
Response: We do not anticipate that
this rule will require any changes to the
hospice cost report form to differentiate
between the two RHC rates and thus we
do not anticipate that this rule will
require CMS modify the PS&R report.
There will often be cases where the RHC
rate changes during a period RHC that
is shown on a single line item on a
claim (for example, an RHC line shows
20 days of care and the high RHC rate
ends after day 10). The line item should
not be split in this case. Medicare
billing instructions for hospice are not
changing due to this rule. Existing
instructions require that level of care
revenue code lines should only be
repeated if the site of service changes.
A claim submitted with consecutive
RHC lines reporting the same site of
service HCPCS code will be returned to
the provider. Medicare systems will
combine the high and low RHC rates for
the applicable days in the total payment
for the RHC line item. No changes to the
electronic remittance advice are
planned as a result of this rule. If
remittance advice coding to identify
lines that are paid using the high RHC
rate or that are paid at multiple rates
would be beneficial, CMS will consider
requesting and implementing such
coding in future program instructions.
Regarding Medicare Secondary Payer
(MSP), a primary payer’s method of
payment frequently differs from
Medicare’s method. This policy does
not change the calculation of MSP
amounts. The primary payer’s total
payment for the claim, the claim charges
and the Medicare primary payment
amount are subject to the MSP
calculations required by law and the
MSP payment is determined
accordingly.
Comment: One commenter stated that
its state Medicaid system does not
utilize the CMS 1450 claim form for
hospice elections nor do they make
benefit utilization information available
to providers and questioned whether
Medicaid reimbursement would be
changing to a two-tiered system for RHC
level of care. A few commenters stated
that the Affordable Care Act authorized
concurrent care for children, so they
could receive hospice services while
continuing to receive treatment
intended to prolong their lives and was
specifically intended to enable children
and their parents to access hospice
services earlier in the course of disease.
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The commenter stated that a reduction
in reimbursement for services longer
than 60 days could undercut the intent
of the concurrent care provision. One
commenter asked whether any
provisions would be made to facilitate
a later implementation date for
Medicaid if there is no delay to the
October 1, 2015 effective date of the
proposals in the proposed rule.
Response: Section 2302 of the
Affordable Care Act requires states to
make hospice services available to
children eligible for Medicaid without
forgoing any other service to which the
child is entitled under Medicaid for
treatment of the terminal condition. As
a general matter, individuals under age
21 in Medicaid receive all medically
necessary services coverable under the
mandatory and optional categories in
section 1905(a) of the Social Security
Act, including hospice. Therefore,
payment changes in the Medicaid
hospice program should not affect the
curative services a child receives. As we
noted above, we will finalize a delay in
the implementation of both the
proposed RHC rates and the proposed
SIA payment until January 1, 2016.
Between October 1, 2015 and December
31, 2015, hospices will continue to be
paid a single FY 2016 RHC per diem
payment amount while the operational
transition is being finalized at CMS.
Effective January 1, 2016, the RHC rates
for days 1 through 60 and days 61 and
beyond would replace the single RHC
per diem payment rate (the RHC per
diem rates are listed in section III.C of
this final rule). Therefore, the effective
date for both Medicare and Medicaid
will be January 1, 2016. As we noted
above, for Medicare reimbursement,
hospices will not be required to change
how the bill for RHC days to comply
with the proposed higher RHC rate for
the first 60 days of care and a lower rate
thereafter. CMS’ claims processing
system will be responsible for the count
of days, rather than the individual
hospices, and will pay the appropriate
rate accordingly. We defer to the states
on how they will implement this change
in Medicare reimbursement for their
state Medicaid programs.
Comment: One commenter
questioned, with two RHC rates, how
CMS and the MACs will determine
which RHC payment rate will be
applicable when a hospice exceeds the
General Inpatient Cap and the rate is
changed to the RHC rate.
Response: If a hospice’s inpatient
days (GIP and respite) exceed 20 percent
of all hospice days then, for inpatient
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care, the hospice is paid: (1) The sum of
the total reimbursement for inpatient
care multiplied by eighty percent, the
maximum allowable inpatient days
percentage; and (2) The sum of the
actual number of inpatient days in
excess of the limitation multiplied by
the routine home care rate. Since the
inpatient cap determination is done in
the aggregate and not on an individual
claim-by-claim basis, CMS will be using
the RHC rate for days 61 and beyond
when reconciling payments for hospices
that exceed the inpatient cap. Using the
RHC rate for days 61 and beyond is the
most appropriate RHC rate to use for
this purpose since the RHC rate for days
1–60 currently exceeds the inpatient
respite care (IRC) payment rate.
Comment: One commenter stated that
some hospice patients revoke the
hospice benefit to pursue curative
treatment and then return to the benefit
in a matter of days or weeks. Does the
60 day period start and stop with these
patient requests?
Response: CMS will not count the
days in between an election as hospice
days. Anytime there is a discharge
(patient revocation, patient discharged
as no longer terminally ill, patient
transfer, patient discharge for cause) the
days where the patient was receiving
care under the Medicare hospice benefit
will be included as part of the hospice
day count for the next election, unless
the patient does not receive hospice
services for 60 consecutive days. As we
stated above, we consider a hospice
‘‘episode’’ of care to be a hospice
election period or series of election
periods separated by no more than a 60
day gap in hospice care. However, we
note that if a patient is electing the
hospice benefit, revoking the hospice
benefit to seek curative care, and then
re-electing the hospice benefit within a
few days, we are concerned about
whether these patients are truly
appropriate for the hospice benefit and/
or whether hospices are fully explaining
and obtaining patient acknowledgement
of the palliative versus curative nature
of hospice care.
Comment: One commenter expressed
confusion in how CMS calculated the
budget neutrality factors for the
proposed RHC payment rates in Table
18. The commenter provided a series of
tables that used information in Table 16
in an effort to replicate the budget
neutrality factor.
Response: The commenter was using
information in Table 16 to calculate the
budget neutrality factor in Table 18
above. Table 16 is used to create the two
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RHC rates that are budget neutral to one
another without the application of area
wage adjustment. Once we calculate
RHC payments taking into account area
wage adjustment, an additional budget
neutrality factor is necessary to ensure
overall hospice payments remain budget
neutral. The footnote for Table 18 above
notes that a budget neutrality
adjustment to the two RHC rates is
required to maintain overall budget
neutrality for the hospice benefit due to
differences in the average wage index
for days 1–60 compared to days 61 and
over when making payments based on
the two RHC rates, rather than the one
RHC rate.
Comment: One commenter stated that
after the revision to the labor portion
applicable to the proposed two RHC rate
structure, the labor portion of each rate
is now different. The commenter
questioned whether CMS would be
revising the labor-related share for each
of the two proposed RHC rates or
whether CMS would still be applying
the labor-related share of 68.71 percent
to each of the two proposed RHC rates.
Response: The calculations in Tables
17 and 18 above make adjustments to
the labor portion of the FY 2015 RHC
rate to create two new RHC rates based
on observed differences in visit
intensity (as measured by wageweighted minutes) between days 1–60
of the hospice episode of care and days
61 and beyond. These calculations were
performed to set two RHC rates that
sufficiently align with the expected visit
intensity differences observed in days
1–60 versus days 61 and beyond in
accordance with section 1814(i)(1)(A) of
the Act, which requires hospice
payment amounts to equal the
reasonable cost of providing hospice
care. As outlined in Table 19 below,
multiplying the labor-portion of the two
RHC rates, prior to the budget neutrality
adjustment for average wage index
differences between days 1–60 and days
61 and beyond, in column 2 of Table 18
above ($137.98 for days 1–60 and $95.49
for days 61+) by the number of
respective RHC days (column 2 in Table
19 below), produces the total amount of
RHC payments attributable to the labor
portion of the two RHC rates. Total RHC
payments attributable to the labor
portion is equal to the sum of payments
for the two RHC rates attributable to the
labor portion and likewise for the
payments attributable to the non-labor
portion. Table 19 below shows the
results.
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TABLE 19—ESTIMATED RHC LABOR PORTION PAYMENTS, RHC NON-LABOR PORTION PAYMENTS AND TOTAL RHC
PAYMENTS FOR DAYS 1–60 AND DAYS 61 AND BEYOND, FY 2015
Labor portion of
payments
RHC days
Non-labor portion of
payments
Total payments
28,052,004
57,082,561
$3,870,615,511.92
5,450,813,749.89
$1,398,672,919.44
2,846,136,491.46
$5,269,288,431.36
8,296,950,241.35
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Days 1–60 ..........................................................................
Days 61+ ............................................................................
........................
9,321,429,261.81
4,244,809,410.90
13,566,238,672.71
When you divide the amount of total
payments attributable to the labor
portion of the proposed RHC rates of
$9,321,429,261.81 by the amount of
total payments of $13,566,238,672.71,
the result is 68.71 percent, which is the
labor-related share for the RHC rate.
Therefore, these calculations do not
ultimately change the labor-related
share of 68.71 percent that will be used
for geographic area wage adjustment
required per section 1814(i)(2)(D) of the
Act. We will consider changes to the
labor-related share for the purposes of
geographic wage adjustment once cost
report data by level of care is available
for analysis.
Comment: One commenter asked if
CMS performed any analysis on how the
proposed RHC rates would impact
hospices that exceed their aggregate cap.
Response: Yes, CMS did perform
analysis on how the proposed RHC
payment rates for days 1–60 and days 61
and beyond would impact both hospice
providers who did not exceed their
aggregate cap in 2013 and for those
hospice providers who did exceed their
aggregate cap in 2013. For those hospice
providers who did not exceed their
aggregate cap in 2013, we estimated that
the proposed RHC rates would result in
a 0.14 percent increase in payments.
However, for those hospice providers
that exceeded their aggregate cap,
hospice payments were estimated to
decrease by 5.40 percent.
Comment: One commenter objected to
payment rates being based, at least in
part, on information that has never been
audited (cost reports). The commenter
implored CMS to develop a strategy to
establish a base year and audit hospice
cost reports to determine costs for future
rate setting and/or further changes in
payment methodologies. Another
commenter noted that the data used to
determine the proposed RHC rates are
old data that do not reflect the shift in
coverage occurring as a result in the
clarification by CMS that hospices are
expected to cover ‘‘virtually all’’ care.
The commenter stated that additional
analysis of more recent data is needed
to determine a sufficient base rate for
RHC.
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Response: We note that the proposed
RHC rates and the proposed SIA
payment policy were established based
on analysis of visit intensity during a
hospice episode of care and visit
patterns during the last seven days of
life using hospice claims data. As noted
above, CMS recently revised the
freestanding hospice cost report form for
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 2014. Once the new cost
report data are available for analysis, we
will be able to analyze hospice costs by
level of care. We want to remind
hospices that each hospice cost report is
required to be certified by the Officer or
Administrator of the hospice and that
the Hospice Medicare Cost Report
(MCR) Form (CMS–1984–14) states the
following:
MISREPRESENTATION OR FALSIFICATION
OF ANY INFORMATION CONTAINED IN
THIS COST REPORT MAY BE PUNISHABLE
BY CRIMINAL, CIVIL, AND
ADMINISTRATIVE ACTION, FINE AND/OR
IMPRISONMENT UNDER FEDERAL LAW.
FURTHERMORE, IF SERVICES IDENTIFIED
IN THIS REPORT WERE PROVIDED
THROUGH THE PAYMENT DIRECTLY OR
INDIRECTLY OF A KICKBACK OR WERE
OTHERWISE ILLEGAL, CRIMINAL, CIVIL,
AND ADMINISTRATIVE ACTION, FINES
AND/OR IMPRISONMENT MAY RESULT.
I HEREBY CERTIFY that I have read the
above certification statement and that I have
examined the accompanying electronically
filed or manually submitted cost report and
the Balance Sheet and Statement of Revenue
and Expenses prepared by lllll
{Provider Name(s) and Provider CCN(s)} for
the cost reporting period beginning lll
and ending lll and that to the best of my
knowledge and belief, this report and
statement are true, correct, complete and
prepared from the books and records of the
provider in accordance with applicable
instructions, except as noted. I further certify
that I am familiar with the laws and
regulations regarding the provision of health
care services, and that the services identified
in this cost report were provided in
compliance with such laws and regulations.
As always, we encourage providers to
fill out the Medicare cost reports as
accurately as possible.
Comment: Some commenters urged
CMS to review its policies and
payments for CHC and General Inpatient
Care (GIP). One commenter stated that
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both these levels of care are highly
abused and used for the wrong reasons.
The commenter suggested that CMS
require pre-authorization for those two
levels of care. The commenter stated
that they are pressured to admit patients
to GIP at the end of a hospital stay or
in a SNF just because they are dying and
stated that many nursing homes/
hospices/hospitals are operating in this
matter. The commenter went on to state
that all states should require a
Certificate of Need for hospice and all
hospices should be non-profit as it is
very disturbing to see companies that
own nursing homes and hospices
gaming payments to increase profits.
Other commenters expressed frustration
regarding the Notice of Election (NOE)
timely filing requirement that was
finalized in the FY 2015 Hospice Wage
Index and Payment Rate Update final
rule (79 FR 50452).
Response: While these comments are
outside the scope of this rule, we thank
the commenters for their comments and
will take them under consideration for
future rulemaking.
Final Action: We are finalizing this
proposal as proposed with an effective
date of January 1, 2016. This delay in
implementation from October 1, 2015 to
January 1, 2016 will allow for state
Medicaid agencies to make the
necessary systems and software
changes. Between October 1, 2015 and
December 31, 2015, hospices will
continue to be paid a single FY 2016
RHC per diem payment amount.
Effective January 1, 2016, a higher RHC
rate for days 1 through 60 of a hospice
episode of care and a lower RHC rate for
days 61 and beyond of a hospice
episode of care will replace the single
RHC per diem payment rate (the RHC
per diem rates are listed in section III.C
of this final rule). An episode of care for
hospice RHC payment purposes is a
hospice election period or series of
election periods separated by no more
than a 60 day gap in hospice care. For
hospice patients who are discharged
and readmitted to hospice within 60
days of that discharge, a patient’s prior
hospice days would continue to follow
the patient and count toward his or her
patient days for the new hospice
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election. We will calculate the patient’s
episode day count based on the total
number of days the patient has been
receiving hospice care separated by no
more than a 60 day gap in hospice care,
regardless of level of care or whether
those days were billable or not. This
calculation would include hospice days
that occurred prior to January 1, 2016.
3. Service Intensity Add-On (SIA)
Payment
Section 1814(i)(1)(A) of the Act states
that payment for hospice services must
be equal to the costs which are
reasonable and related to the cost of
providing hospice care or which are
based on such other tests of
reasonableness as the Secretary may
prescribe in regulations. In addition,
section 1814(i)(6)(D) of the Act, as
amended by section 3132(a) of the
Affordable Care Act, requires the
Secretary to implement revisions to the
methodology for determining the
payment rates for the RHC level of care
and other services included in hospice
care under Medicare Part A as the
Secretary determines to be appropriate
as described in section III.B.1 above.
Given that independent analyses
demonstrate a U-shaped cost pattern
across hospice episodes, CMS believes
that implementing revisions to the
payment system that align with this
concept supports the requirements of
reasonable cost in section 1814(i)(A) of
the Act.
As articulated in section III.B.1.b
above, CMS considered implementing a
tiered payment model as described in
the FY2014 Hospice Wage Index final
rule (78 FR 48271) and in the Hospice
Study Technical Report issued in April
of 2013,44 in order to better align
payments with observed resource use
over the length of a hospice stay.
However, operational concerns and
programmatic complexity led us to
explore the concept of an approach that
could be implemented with minimal
systems changes that limit reprocessing
of hospice claims due to sequential
billing requirements. In addition, while
the tiered model represented a move
toward better aligning payments with
resource use, it only accounted for
whether skilled services were provided
in the last 2 days of life (Groups 5 and
6 in Table 13 above). Section III.B.1.c,
above notes that on any given day
during the first 7 days of a hospice
election and last 7 days of life, only
about 50 percent of the time are visits
being made. In our view, increasing
44 https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-
for-Service-Payment/Hospice/Downloads/HospiceStudy-Technical-Report.pdf.
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payments at the end of life for days
where visits are not occurring does not
align with the requirements of
reasonable cost articulated in statute in
section 1814(i)(A) of the Act. Therefore,
as one of the first steps in addressing the
observed misalignment between
resource use and associated Medicare
payments and in improving patient care
through the promotion of skilled visits
at end of life with minimal claims
processing systems changes, CMS
proposed to provide an SIA payment if
the conditions outlined below are
satisfied.
To qualify for the SIA payment, the
following criteria must be met: (1) The
day is a RHC level of care day; (2) the
day occurs during the last 7 days of life
(and the beneficiary is discharged dead);
and, (3) direct patient care is provided
by a RN or a social worker (as defined
by § 418.114(c) and § 418.114(b)(3),
respectively) that day. The SIA payment
will be equal to the CHC hourly
payment rate (the current FY 2015 CHC
rate is $38.75 per hour), multiplied by
the amount of direct patient care
provided by a RN or social worker for
up to 4 hours total, per day, as long as
the three criteria listed above are met.
The SIA payment will be paid in
addition to the current per diem rate for
the RHC level of care.
CMS will create two separate G-codes
for use when billing skilled nursing
visits (revenue center 055x), one for a
RN and one for a Licensed Practical
Nurse (LPN). During periods of crisis,
such as the precipitous decline before
death, patient needs intensify and RNs
are more highly trained clinicians with
commensurately higher payment rates
who can appropriately meet those
increased needs. Moreover, our rules at
§ 418.56(a)(1) require the RN member of
the hospice interdisciplinary group to
be responsible for ensuring that the
needs of the patient and family are
continually assessed. We expect that at
end of life, the needs of the patient and
family will need to be frequently
assessed; thus the skills of the
interdisciplinary group RN are required.
We note that social workers also often
play a crucial role in providing support
for the patient and family when a
patient is at end of life. While the nature
of the role of the social worker does
facilitate interaction via the telephone,
CMS will only pay an SIA for those
social work services provided by means
of in-person visits. Analysis conducted
by Abt Associates on the FY 2013
hospice claims data shows that in the
last 7 days of life only approximately 10
percent of beneficiaries received social
work visits of any kind. Moreover, we
also found that only about 13 percent of
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social work ‘‘visits’’ are provided via
telephone; therefore, the proportion of
social work calls likely represents a very
small fraction of visits overall in the last
few days of life. The SIA payment will
be in addition to the RHC payment
amount. The costs associated with
social work phone conversations; visits
by LPNs, hospice aides, and therapists;
counseling; drugs; medical supplies;
DME; and any other item or service
usually covered by Medicare will still
be covered by the existing RHC payment
amount in accordance with section
1861(dd)(1) of the Act.
In 2011, the OIG published a report
that focused specifically on Medicare
payments to hospices that served a high
percentage of nursing facility residents.
The OIG found that from 2005 to 2009,
the total Medicare spending for hospice
care for nursing facility residents
increased from $2.55 billion to $4.31
billion, an increase of almost 70 percent
(OIG, 2011). When looking at hospices
that had more than two-thirds of their
beneficiaries in nursing facilities, the
OIG found that 72 percent of these
facilities were for-profit and received,
on average, $3,182 more per beneficiary
in Medicare payments than hospices
overall. High-percentage hospices were
found to serve beneficiaries who spent
more days in hospice care, to the
magnitude of 3 weeks longer than the
average beneficiary. In addition, when
looking at distributions in diagnoses,
OIG found that high-percentage
hospices enrolled beneficiaries who
required less skilled care. In response to
these findings, OIG recommended that
CMS modify the current hospice
reimbursement system to reduce the
incentive for hospices to seek out
beneficiaries in nursing facilities, who
often receive longer but less complex
and costly care.45 Given the OIG
recommendation, CMS proposed
excluding SNF/NF sites of service from
eligibility for the SIA payment.
The for-profit provider community
has frequently highlighted its concerns
regarding the lack of adequate
reimbursement for hospice short stays
in its public filings with the Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC) as
described in MedPAC’s 2008 Report to
Congress.46 Specifically, MedPAC cited
records from the SEC for publicly traded
for-profit hospice chains as evidence of
a general acknowledgement of the
nonlinear cost function of resource use
within hospice episodes. For instance:
45 https://oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/oei-02-1000070.pdf.
46 https://www.medpac.gov/documents/reports/
Jun08_Ch08.pdf.
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• VistaCare: ‘‘Our profitability is
largely dependent on our ability to
manage costs of providing services and
to maintain a patient base with a
sufficiently long length of stay to attain
profitability,’’ and that ‘‘cost pressures
resulting from shorter patient lengths of
stay . . . could negatively impact our
profitability.’’ 47
• Odyssey HealthCare: ‘‘Length of
stay impacts our direct hospice care
expenses as a percentage of net patient
service revenue because, if lengths of
stay decline, direct hospice care
expenses, which are often highest
during the earliest and latter days of
care for a patient, are spread against
fewer days of care.’’ 48
Short lengths of stay were also cited
as a source of financial difficulties for
small rural hospices (implying that
longer stays were more profitable).49 In
the FY 2014 Hospice Wage Index and
Payment Rate Update proposed rule, we
stated that ‘‘analysis conducted by Abt
Associates found that very short hospice
stays have a flatter curve than the Ushaped curve seen for longer stays, and
that average hospice costs are much
higher. These short stays are less Ushaped because there is not a lower-cost
middle period between the time of
admission and the time of death.’’ The
FY 2014 Hospice Wage Index and
Payment Rate Update proposed rule
went on to note that a ‘‘short stay addon’’ was under consideration as a
possible reform option (78 FR 27843).
Public comments received in response
to the proposed rule were favorable
regarding a possible short stay add-on
payment.
Since the SIA payment will be
applicable to any 7-day period of time
ending in a patient’s death, hospice
elections with short lengths of stay are
eligible to receive an additional
payment that will help mitigate the
marginally higher costs associated with
short lengths of stay, consistent with the
‘reasonable cost’ structure of the hospice
payment system. For FY 2013, 32
percent of hospice stays were 7 days or
less with 60 percent of stays lasting 30
days or less. The median length of stay
in FY 2013 was 17 days.
Although Figure 4 above
demonstrates that there is increased
47 Health Care Strategic Management. 2004.
Hospice companies benefit from favorable Medicare
rates. Health Care Strategic Management 22, no. 1:
13–14.
48 Odyssey HealthCare, Inc. 2004. Annual report
to shareholders, form 10–K. Filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission, Washington,
DC, March 11. Dallas, TX: Odyssey HealthCare, Inc.
49 Virnig, B. A., I. S. Moscovice, S. B. Durham, et
al. 2004. Do rural elders have limited access to
Medicare hospice services? Journal of the American
Geriatrics Society 52, no. 5: 731–735.
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resource use during the first 2 days of
an election, we are not proposing an
additional SIA payment for the first or
second day of a hospice election when
the length of stay is beyond 7 days. The
SIA payment for the last 7 days of life
will provide additional reimbursement
to help to mitigate the higher costs for
stays lasting less than the median length
of stay, where spreading out the initial
costs of the first 2 days of the election
over a smaller number of days may not
be enough to make the overall stay
profitable. Any stay of 7 days or less
before death will be eligible for SIA
payment on all RHC days.
We believe that the SIA payment
would help to address MedPAC and
industry concerns regarding the visit
intensity at end of life and the concerns
associated with the profitability of
hospice short stays. The RHC rates
described in section III.B.2 above and
SIA payment will advance hospice
payment reform incrementally, as
mandated by the Affordable Care Act
while simultaneously maintaining
flexibility for future refinements. Since
this approach will be implemented
within the current constructs of the
hospice payment system, no major
overhaul of the claims processing
system or related claims/cost report
forms will be required, minimizing
burden for hospices as well as for
Medicare.
As required by Section
1814(i)(6)(D)(ii) of the Act, any changes
to the hospice payment system must be
made in a budget neutral manner in the
first year of implementation. Based on
the desire to improve patient care
through the promotion of skilled visits
at end of life, regardless of the patient’s
lifetime length of stay, we proposed that
the SIA payments would be budget
neutral through a reduction to the RHC
rates. The SIA payment budget
neutrality factor (SBNF) used to reduce
the RHC rates is outlined in section
III.C.3.
Finally, we solicited public comment
on all aspects of the SIA payment as
articulated in this section as well as the
corresponding changes to the
regulations at § 418.302 in section VI.
We also proposed changing the word
‘‘Intermediary’’ to ‘‘Medicare
Administrative Contractor’’ in the
regulations text at § 418.302 and
technical regulations text changes to
§ 418.306 as described in section VI.
Summaries of the public comments
and our responses to comments on all
aspects of the SIA payment are
summarized below:
Comment: Nearly all commenters
support the implementation of the SIA
payment policy, stating that the need for
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skilled direct patient care and support is
greater at end of life, causing an increase
in hospice costs. Many commenters
further suggested that implementation
occur as soon as possible and appreciate
the opportunity for incremental
payment reform.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support. We agree that our
proposal helps to reinforce the
provision of skilled direct patient care
when the need is greater at end of life.
Comment: Several commenters
suggested that services provided by
chaplains and other spiritual care
counselors should be eligible for the SIA
payment. In addition, several
commenters asked whether services
provided by LPNs, hospice aides, and
other professionals (therapists, etc.)
would be covered under the SIA
payment provisions. Many commenters
note that the services provided by LPNs
are currently covered in the CHC level
of care. One commenter asked if visits
for the pronouncement of death will be
considered eligible for the SIA payment.
Response: While we acknowledge the
tremendous value delivered by spiritual
care counseling and other disciplines
during hospice episodes, Section
1814(i)(1)(A) of the Act explicitly
precludes Medicare payment for
bereavement counseling and other
counseling services (including
nutritional and dietary counseling) as
separate services. Therefore, no
payment will be extended for those
services under the SIA policy. While
CMS recognizes that the services
rendered by all hospice professionals,
including LPNs, are extremely valuable,
the primary goal of the SIA policy is to
promote the highest-quality, skilled care
to beneficiaries at the end of life. Given
that RNs provide higher-skilled services,
as required by CMS’s Conditions of
Participation, and social workers
provide a skilled level of support for
both the patient and family, CMS will
only pay an SIA amount for those
services rendered by RNs and social
workers. CMS will not pay an SIA
amount for those services rendered by
other professionals. The base RHC rate
is intended to cover other skilled and
non-skilled services that may be needed
at the end of life. However, at the end
of life, where a rapid decline is often
expected, patient and family needs
intensify and typically there are
frequent care plan changes necessitating
the immediate need for RN and SW
services. In accordance with the hospice
CoPs, an RN, and not an LPN, is
required to be part of the hospice IDT
to provide coordination of care and to
ensure continuous assessment of the
patient. Therefore, to ensure continuous
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assessment and coordination of care at
the very end of life, the skills of an RN
would be needed and we believe
hospices should be encouraged to meet
the needs of the patient and family.
Additionally, given commenters’
overwhelming support for incremental
payment reform, CMS hopes to advance
hospice payment changes over time;
therefore, in the future, we will reevaluate whether the inclusion of
services provided by LPNs for the SIA
is warranted and re-assess the policies
and payments around the CHC level of
care as well as other facets of the
Medicare Hospice Benefit.
Comment: Several commenters noted
that they are concerned that setting the
SIA add-on payment equal to the CHC
hourly payment rate multiplied by the
amount of direct patient care up to 4
hours total per day does not adequately
cover the cost of hospice care, especially
for individuals with certain diagnoses
related to their terminal illness. The
commenters also noted that the
Continuous Home Care Payment rate
currently has a minimum 8 hour
requirement to meet these complex
needs. One commenter asked if the CHC
level of care could still be provided in
the last 7 days of an episode.
Response: The primary purpose of the
SIA payment is to promote visits during
the end of life and account for the
associated increased resources required.
We believe that using the CHC hourly
payment rate is a reasonable proxy for
the costs of providing such care. The
CHC level of care will still be available
to both beneficiaries and providers, as
the patient’s status dictates. For the
purposes of the SIA payment, the claims
processing systems will evaluate all 7
days prior to death. If any of the days
meet the eligibility criteria (RHC level of
care with appropriate staffing, etc.), then
those days will be eligible for the SIA
payment. Other levels of hospice care
are still eligible for payment as
appropriate. Given that CMS intends to
promote direct patient care in the 7 days
prior to death, visits for the
pronouncement of death will not be
included as eligible visits for SIA
payments. As CMS collects more data
related to the costs of providing care,
specifically data included in the newlyrevised cost reports, we will reassess the
appropriate payment level for all
aspects of the hospice payment system,
including the SIA payment as well as
the four levels of care.
Comment: Several commenters
suggested that hospices should be given
the opportunity to provide additional
RN and social work services approved
by the patient’s physician in order to
deliver more than 4 hours of RN or
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social work time and receive payment
for these additional service hours. One
commenter requested clarification
regarding the payment for services for
concurrent care from both a RN and
social worker during the last 7 days of
life.
Response: While we understand the
interest in providing a SIA payment for
services beyond the 4 hour threshold
established by the SIA policy, we do
believe that the RHC rate level of care
plus the SIA payment for services up to
4 hours will provide sufficient payment
to cover the increased cost of patient
care. If a patient’s needs intensify
further, requiring more intensive
supports, hospices will still be able to
provide the CHC level of care for 8
hours of service and beyond as well as
utilize the other levels of hospice care
as appropriate. CMS acknowledges that
there may be a need for concurrent care
from both an RN and a social worker
during the days preceding death. The
natures of the two disciplines are
distinct, and we acknowledge that the
RN may need to focus on the clinical
aspects of the patient while the social
worker meets separately with the family
and others to process anticipatory grief.
Therefore, concurrent services will be
eligible for the SIA payment, according
to the criteria outlined above.
Comment: Many commenters had
concerns regarding the ‘‘billing’’ of SIA
days and requested clarification of the
provider’s responsibility for ‘‘billing’’
days for the SIA payment. In addition,
several commenters requested
clarification on the time increments
provided by the RN and social workers
that would be eligible for the SIA
payment, asking for detail on whether or
not service should be tracked in 15
minute increments. One commenter
asked how the SIA payment will apply
if a patient’s last 7 days of life spans 2
months. Another commenter questioned
whether CMS has the time, energy, and
staff to review all claims for appropriate
distribution of SIA payments.
Response: Hospices will continue to
submit claims with revenue center lines
appropriately noted in appropriate
increments. CMS’ claims processing
system will assess the last 7 days of
services before end of life and determine
if the RHC level of care was provided on
any of those 7 days, regardless of other
levels of care also provided during that
period. We acknowledge that the term
‘billing’ may have been misleading.
Hospices should submit claims per the
established protocols, and the claims
processing system will determine the
SIA payment eligibility of the 7 days
preceding death. For eligible stays, the
SIA payment will be calculated by the
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number of hours (in 15 minute
increments) of service provided by an
RN or social worker during last 7 days
of life for a minimum of 15 minutes and
up to 4 hours total per day. CMS
appreciates the concern regarding the
appropriate disbursement of SIA
payments. We will be working with our
operational staff and contracting
partners in order to fully automate the
review of claims with a discharge of
death in order to identify eligible visits
and generate appropriate SIA outlays.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS include
episodes in SNF/NF as eligible for the
SIA payment. The commenters stated
that the needs of dying patients were
not specific to any particular physical
location. Commenters stated that more
intensive services are merited in any
‘home’ setting. Additionally,
commenters noted that the Medicare
Conditions of Participation for hospices
require the provision of the same level
of care and service to patients,
regardless of setting.
Response: We agree that the payment
of the SIA for additional RN and SW
services during the last 7 days of life in
these settings is appropriate and thus
we are finalizing a policy that pays the
SIA payment for patients that reside in
a SNF/NF. We will monitor the SIA
based on claims data and continue to
investigate whether a differential site of
service payment could be an
appropriate mechanism to address OIG
and MedPAC concerns.
Comment: One commenter asked
whether the SIA payment policy will
apply for both new and existing hospice
elections. Several commenters asked if
different or additional documentation
would be required for SIA visits. Some
commenters suggested that criteria be
developed demonstrating the need for
additional hours per day similar to the
protocols around CHC. Such
documentation could potentially require
that the clinician document why
additional hours are needed. Several
commenters expressed concern that
hospice providers may begin making
‘unnecessary’ visits to hospice patients
at the end of life in order to capitalize
on potential SIA payments. The same
commenters further suggested that CMS
not use an SIA-type payment approach
but instead utilize a high RHC rate for
the last 7 days of life.
Response: Both new and existing
hospice elections will be eligible for the
SIA payment, as long as the criteria for
the add-on are met. No additional
documentation will be required in order
to receive the SIA payment. The
Medicare claims processing system will
evaluate the days within a hospice
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election for SIA eligibility and calculate
the add-on payment accordingly. We
appreciate the concern that some
hospices may attempt to capitalize on
extra payments made possible through
the SIA policy. CMS will certainly
continue to monitor hospice behavior
for any concerning patterns as well as
any impact to future payment updates.
However, we maintain that providing
payment for increased services at the
end of life is consistent with the goal of
responding to and providing for
intensified patient needs. Conversely,
paying an increased RHC rate for the
last 7 days of life regardless of whether
or not skilled visits (RN or social
worker) are provided would not
encourage the hospice to schedule
skilled visits during that timeframe.
With this SIA policy, we strive to
encourage the hospice to provide skilled
care in a patient’s most intense
moments of need by dispersing
additional payment for actual services
rendered by the appropriate skilled
staff.
Comment: Several commenters raised
concerns regarding the criteria that the
RN and SW visit be an in-person visit
in order to be reimbursable, stating that
there are many hospice patients in rural
and frontier areas that require long
travel times for hospice staff. The
commenters stated that telephone
interaction becomes an important part
of the hospice service and suggested
that as long as hospice providers
document the reason for the telephone
call versus an in-person visit the call
should be reimbursable.
Response: We appreciate the
comments regarding the value of
hospice social work services provided
via the telephone. CMS recognizes that
this support is vital and provides
needed assistance in crucial
circumstances. However, the primary
purpose of the SIA payment is to
encourage direct patient care in the last
days of life. Therefore, CMS will only be
paying the SIA payment for those
services provided directly to the patient
in his/her last week of life by an RN or
SW in his or her home setting.
Comment: Several commenters noted
their support for CMS’ proposal to
continue to make the SIA payments
budget neutral in future years through
annual determination of the Service
Intensity Add-On Budget Neutrality
Factor (SBNF) based on the most current
and complete fiscal year utilization data
available at the time of rulemaking.
Response: We appreciate the support
of our budget neutrality approach for
the SIA payment policy proposal. We
believe that this will help to create an
incentive in the longer term for the
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provision of services in patients’
moments of most intensive need.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that CMS should provide stakeholders
adequate time to test, assess, perform
necessary software updates, receive
education, and provide feedback on
changes due to the SIA payments, either
by delaying its implementation or
initiating a pilot program before
applying the policy across all providers.
Many commenters noted concern over
the potential impact of the SIA payment
proposal to state Medicaid programs,
which are currently unprepared for the
transition to this payment methodology
and would need time to prepare for this
significant change.
Response: CMS has been working
with our contractors to develop systems
changes to the fullest extent possible in
parallel with the development of this
rule. Our system maintainers will have
their full software development lifecycle
to implement these changes. We do not
have concerns about the readiness of
Medicare systems on October 1, 2015.
Regarding hospice system changes, we
do not anticipate that this rule will
require any changes to hospice billing
instructions so systems for submitting
claims and receiving Medicare payment
should not be affected and the need for
retraining billing staff should be limited,
but hospices may need to change their
internal accounting systems. However,
given the delay in the implementation
date for the two RHC rates in section
III.B.2 above, CMS will delay the
effective date of the SIA policy to
January 1, 2016 in order to better
coordinate implementation of hospice
payment reforms.
Comment: Several commenters noted
concern that the length of stay for a
beneficiary is out of the patient’s control
and should not be factored into the SIA.
Additionally, several commenters
further noted that hospice providers
will not likely be able to forecast an
accurate and reliable operating budget
to include the proposed 7 day payment
add-on at the patient’s end of life.
Response: CMS appreciates that the
nature of the hospice population leads
to difficulty in prognosticating the
required length of services. However,
the SIA payment policy is meant to
encourage visits in the last 7 days of life,
regardless of the length of stay, so an
episode will be eligible for the payment
regardless of the patient’s overall total
days in hospice care. Moreover, CMS
notes that the expectation is that
providers would be supplying the
needed services to patients during the
RHC and other levels of care, regardless
of budgeting prognostication for any
potential SIA payment amounts.
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Comment: A few commenters
expressed concern over the two
proposed SIA budget neutrality factors,
stating that the proposed budget
neutrality factor for days 61 and beyond
is higher than that of days 1–60, leading
to a greater reduction to the High RHC
rate for days 1–60. The commenters
argue that a single SIA budget neutrality
factor would yield a more equitable
overall reduction with less of a decrease
to the higher RHC rate.
Response: CMS appreciates the
feedback regarding the application of
the SIA budget neutrality factors.
Because of the interaction between the
SIA payment policy and the two RHC
rates, we believe that it is appropriate
that two factors be generated for each
rate, maintaining a budget neutral
system for the whole of the Medicare
hospice benefit, so that our rates
accurately align with and account for
resource use differences during the first
60 versus days 61 and beyond of
hospice care. However, CMS will
consider this and other refinements to
the policy for future payment and policy
updates.
Comment: Several commenters
suggested that CMS should increase its
oversight of hospice providers not
delivering the services required under
the Hospice Conditions of Participation
and exhibiting inappropriate practices
highlighted by the OIG and the
MedPAC.
Response: CMS appreciates the
encouragement to continue overseeing
and monitoring provider behavior for
questionable activity. CMS is committed
to encouraging providers to supply the
best quality care in the most appropriate
ways, and we will continue to work to
incentivize and monitor for the most
appropriate practices in the hospice
provider community.
Comment: Several commenters
requested information regarding the
forthcoming G-codes that will be used to
differentiate LPN and RN services. One
commenter suggested that CMS provide
detailed instructions and answer
operational questions in this final rule
as opposed to Change Requests,
Medicare Learning Network articles,
and other sub-regulatory guidance as is
the typical process.
Response: Per the CMS protocols, the
details regarding these newly-created Gcodes will be forthcoming through the
established Change Request process.
CMS appreciates the desire for more
education regarding the SIA; however,
we will continue to utilize the
established means to convey the
systems changes as well as to educate
the provider community regarding the
policy and operational changes.
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Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS continue to evaluate cost data
in order to identify any trends in ‘cofactors’ that may be related to service
intensity at the end of life, such as visits
from the Spiritual Care Coordinator and
other disciplines, and propose further
adjustments as data directs.
Response: CMS will continue to
monitor and analyze data related to the
cost of providing care in the hospice
population. We will re-evaluate policies
and payments in accordance to observed
trends in the cost and other data
gathered so long as it does not violate
the Act.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS consider paying the SIA to
those hospices that receive a transfer
hospice patient from another provider,
as this additional funding could help
mitigate the receiving hospice’s costs for
starting care.
Response: CMS recognizes that a
hospice who receives a transfer hospice
patient may experience increased startof-care costs. However, we are not
proposing to provide SIA payments at
the start of an episode. We believe that
the SIA payment coupled with the new
RHC rates finalized in section III.B.2
above, provide sufficient payment for
the delivery of hospice care.
Final Action: We are finalizing the
SIA proposal as proposed; however, we
will include episodes in SNF/NF as
eligible for the SIA payment. We are
finalizing the SIA proposal with an
effective date of January 1, 2016 in order
to better coordinate implementation of
the hospice payment reforms, including
the finalization of the new RHC rates
discussed in section III.B.2 above.
Finally, we will also finalize our
proposal to continue to make the SIA
payments budget neutral through an
annual determination of the SBNF,
which will then be applied to the RHC
payment rates. The SBNF for the SIA
payments will be calculated for each FY
using the most current and complete
fiscal year utilization data available at
the time of rulemaking.
C. FY 2016 Hospice Wage Index and
Rate Update
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1. FY 2016 Hospice Wage Index
a. Background
The hospice wage index is used to
adjust payment rates for hospice
agencies under the Medicare program to
reflect local differences in area wage
levels based on the location where
services are furnished. The hospice
wage index utilizes the wage adjustment
factors used by the Secretary for
purposes of section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the
Act for hospital wage adjustments. Our
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regulations at § 418.306(c) require each
labor market to be established using the
most current hospital wage data
available, including any changes made
by OMB to the Metropolitan Statistical
Areas (MSAs) definitions.
We use the previous fiscal year’s
hospital wage index data to calculate
the hospice wage index values. We have
consistently used the pre-floor, prereclassified hospital wage index to
derive the hospice wage index. For FY
2016, the hospice wage index will be
based on the FY 2015 hospital pre-floor,
pre-reclassified wage index. This means
that the hospital wage data used for the
hospice wage index is not adjusted to
take into account any geographic
reclassification of hospitals including
those in accordance with section
1886(d)(8)(B) or 1886(d)(10) of the Act.
The appropriate wage index value is
applied to the labor portion of the
payment rate based on the geographic
area in which the beneficiary resides
when receiving RHC or CHC. The
appropriate wage index value is applied
to the labor portion of the payment rate
based on the geographic location of the
facility for beneficiaries receiving GIP or
Inpatient Respite Care (IRC).
In the FY 2006 Hospice Wage Index
final rule (70 FR 45130), we adopted the
revised labor market area definitions as
discussed in the OMB Bulletin No. 03–
04 (June 6, 2003). This bulletin
announced revised definitions for MSAs
and the creation of micropolitan
statistical areas and combined statistical
areas. The bulletin is available online at
https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/
bulletins/b03-04.html. In adopting the
CBSA geographic designations for FY
2006, we provided for a 1-year
transition with a blended wage index for
all providers. For FY 2006, the wage
index for each geographic area consisted
of a blend of 50 percent of the FY 2006
MSA-based wage index and 50 percent
of the FY 2006 CBSA-based wage index.
Since the expiration of this 1-year
transition on September 30, 2006, we
have used the full CBSA-based wage
index values.
When adopting OMB’s new labor
market designations in FY 2006, we
identified some geographic areas where
there were no hospitals, and thus, no
hospital wage index data, which to base
the calculation of the hospice wage
index. In the FY 2010 Hospice Wage
Index final rule (74 FR 39386), we also
adopted the policy that for urban labor
markets without a hospital from which
hospital wage index data could be
derived, all of the CBSAs within the
state will be used to calculate a
statewide urban average pre-floor, prereclassified hospital wage index value to
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use as a reasonable proxy for these
areas. In FY 2016, the only CBSA
without a hospital from which hospital
wage data could be derived is 25980,
Hinesville, Georgia.
In the FY 2008 Hospice Wage Index
final rule (72 FR 50214), we
implemented a new methodology to
update the hospice wage index for rural
areas without a hospital, and thus no
hospital wage data. In cases where there
was a rural area without rural hospital
wage data, we used the average prefloor, pre-reclassified hospital wage
index data from all contiguous CBSAs to
represent a reasonable proxy for the
rural area. The term ‘‘contiguous’’
means sharing a border (72 FR 50217).
Currently, the only rural area without a
hospital from which hospital wage data
could be derived is Puerto Rico.
However, our policy of imputing a rural
pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage
index based on the pre-floor, prereclassified hospital wage index (or
indices) of CBSAs contiguous to a rural
area without a hospital from which
hospital wage data could be derived
does not recognize the unique
circumstances of Puerto Rico. For FY
2016, we will continue to use the most
recent pre-floor, pre-reclassified
hospital wage index value available for
Puerto Rico, which is 0.4047.
b. Elimination of the Wage Index Budget
Neutrality Factor (BNAF)
As described in the August 8, 1997
Hospice Wage Index final rule (62 FR
42860), the pre-floor and prereclassified hospital wage index is used
as the raw wage index for the hospice
benefit. These raw wage index values
were then subject to either a budget
neutrality adjustment or application of
the hospice floor to compute the
hospice wage index used to determine
payments to hospices. Pre-floor, prereclassified hospital wage index values
below 0.8 were adjusted by either: (1)
The hospice BNAF; or (2) the hospice
floor—a 15 percent increase subject to a
maximum wage index value of 0.8;
whichever results in the greater value.
The FY 2010 Hospice Wage Index rule
finalized a provision to phase-out the
BNAF over 7 years, with a 10 percent
reduction in the BNAF in FY 2010, and
an additional 15 percent reduction in
each of the next 6 years, with complete
phase out in FY 2016 (74 FR 39384). As
discussed in the proposed rule, (80 FR
25860), the hospice BNAF for FY 2016
is reduced by an additional and final 15
percent for a cumulative reduction of
100 percent. Therefore, for FY 2016, the
BNAF is completely phased-out and
eliminated.
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Hospital wage index values which are
less than 0.8 are still subject to the
hospice floor calculation. The hospice
floor equates to a 15 percent increase,
subject to a maximum wage index value
of 0.8. For example, if County A has a
pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage
index value of 0.3994, we would
multiply 0.3994 by 1.15, which equals
0.4593. Since 0.4593 is not greater than
0.8, then County A’s hospice wage
index would be 0.4593. In another
example, if County B has a pre-floor,
pre-reclassified hospital wage index
value of 0.7440, we would multiply
0.7440 by 1.15 which equals 0.8556.
Because 0.8556 is greater than 0.8,
County B’s hospice wage index would
be 0.8.
c. Implementation of New Labor Market
Delineations
OMB has published subsequent
bulletins regarding CBSA changes. On
February 28, 2013, OMB issued OMB
Bulletin No. 13–01, announcing
revisions to the delineation of MSAs,
Micropolitan Statistical Areas, and
Combined Statistical Areas, and
guidance on uses of the delineation in
these areas. A copy of this bulletin is
available online at: https://
www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/
omb/bulletins/2013/b-13-01.pdf. This
bulletin states that it ‘‘provides the
delineations of all Metropolitan
Statistical Areas, Metropolitan
Divisions, Micropolitan Statistical
Areas, Combined Statistical Areas, and
New England City and Town Areas in
the United States and Puerto Rico based
on the standards published on June 28,
2010, in the Federal Register (75 FR
37246–37252) and Census Bureau data.’’
Overall, we believe that implementing
the new OMB delineations will result in
wage index values being more
representative of the actual costs of
labor in a given area. Among the 458
total CBSA and statewide rural areas, 20
(4 percent) will have a higher wage
index using the newer delineations.
However, 34 (7.4 percent) will have a
lower wage index using the newer
delineations. Therefore, to remain
consistent with the manner in which we
ultimately adopted the revised OMB
delineations for FY 2006 (70 FR 45138),
we are implementing a 1-year transition
to the new OMB delineations.
Specifically, we will apply a blended
wage index for 1 year (FY 2016) for all
geographic areas that will consist of a
50/50 blend of the wage index values
using OMB’s old area delineations and
the wage index values using OMB’s new
area delineations. That is, for each
county, a blended wage index will be
calculated equal to 50 percent of the FY
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2016 wage index using the old labor
market area delineation and 50 percent
of the FY 2016 wage index using the
new labor market area delineation. This
results in an average of the two values.
We refer to this blended wage index as
the FY 2016 hospice transition wage
index.
This 1-year transition policy is also
consistent with the transition policies
adopted by both the FY 2015 SNF PPS
(79 FR 25767) and the CY 2015 HH PPS
(79 FR 66032). This transition policy
will be for a 1-year period, going into
effect on October 1, 2015, and
continuing through September 30, 2016.
Thus, beginning October 1, 2016, the
wage index for all hospice payments
will be fully based on the new OMB
delineations.
The wage index applicable to FY 2016
is available as a wage index file on the
CMS Web site at https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-ServicePayment/Hospice/. The wage
index will not be published in the
Federal Register. The hospice wage
index for FY 2016 will be effective
October 1, 2015 through September 30,
2016.
The wage index file provides a
crosswalk between the FY 2016 wage
index using the current OMB
delineations in effect in FY 2015 and
the FY 2016 wage index using the
revised OMB delineations, as well as the
transition wage index values that will be
in effect in FY 2016. The wage index file
shows each state and county and its
corresponding transition wage index
along with the previous CBSA number,
the new CBSA number, and the new
CBSA name.
Due to the way that the transition
wage index is calculated, some CBSAs
and statewide rural areas may have
more than one transition wage index
value associated with that CBSA or rural
area. However, each county will have
only one transition wage index. For
counties located in CBSAs and rural
areas that correspond to more than one
transition wage index value, the CBSA
number will not be able to be used for
FY 2016 claims. In these cases, a
number other than the CBSA number
will be necessary to identify the
appropriate wage index value on claims
for hospice care provided in FY 2016.
These numbers are five digits in length
and begin with ‘‘50.’’ These codes are
shown in the last column of the wage
index file in place of the CBSA number
where appropriate. For counties located
in CBSAs and rural areas that still
correspond to only one wage index
value, the CBSA number will still be
used.
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A summary of the comments we
received regarding the wage index and
our responses to those comments
appears below.
Comment: Several commenters
support the use of the revised OMB
CBSA delineations, which incorporate
the 2010 Census data for FY 2016 and
the proposed transition methodology
that would apply a blended wage index
for 1 year (FY 2016) for all geographic
areas that would consist of a 50/50
blend of the wage index values using
OMB’s old area delineations and the
wage index values using OMB’s new
area delineations. We received a few
comments regarding the transition to the
new delineations requesting a longer
transition period or clarification of the
transition year. One commenter requests
that CMS review the impact this has on
provider reimbursement and determine
if changes need to be made beyond the
1 year transition period.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support of the new
delineations which will be incorporated
into hospice reimbursement beginning
in FY 2016. We established the use of
the latest OMB delineations that are
available since FY 2006 (70 FR 45138)
in order to maintain a more accurate
and up-to-date payment system that
reflects the reality of population shifts
and labor market conditions. We also
agree that applying 50/50 blend of the
wage index values using OMB’s old area
delineations and the wage index values
using OMB’s new area delineations for
1 year is an appropriate transition
policy. We incorporated the CBSAs for
FY 2006 using a 1-year transition policy
and we continue to believe that 1 year
is an appropriate length of time to
transition to the new area delineations.
In order to determine the 50/50
blended wage index for FY 2016, we
calculate the wage index values for each
county by adding the wage index value
under the county’s old area delineation
with the wage index value under the
county’s new area delineation. Then, we
divide by two. The wage index values
for each county may be found in the
wage index file located at https://www.
cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-forService-Payment/Hospice/.
For claim submission, hospices will use
either the CBSA code or the special
50xxx number found in column L of the
wage index file. The special 50xxx
numbers will be applicable to FY 2016
claims only. Hospices need to use the
correct CBSA or alternate 50xxx
number. Our claims processing systems
will match the correct wage index with
the CBSA or alternate 50xxx number
submitted on the claim. Hospices will
not need to calculate the transition wage
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index. Once the 1-year transition to the
new area delineations is over, the 50xxx
numbers will not be needed. We
provide an impact analysis in Section V.
‘‘Regulatory Impact Analysis’’ of this
final rule. At this time, our impact
analysis does not lead us to conclude
that changes need to be made beyond
the 1 year transition period.
Comment: A commenter notes that
hospices that serve more than one
county may see large variations in the
wage index even though the hospice
pays standardized wages for all of their
staff. We received a comment expressing
concerns that the reduction in the wage
index does not align with local market
pressure. The commenter states that
hospice wages and benefits are not
reflective of those in hospitals and
would like to see an approach focused
solely on hospice data and trends. A
commenter believes that the use of the
hospital wage index methodology for
both the hospice and home health
benefits creates payment inaccuracies
that, unlike those applied to hospitals,
are not subject to correction through a
reclassification process. The commenter
urges CMS to take action to create a fair
and level playing field through reform
of the wage index process.
Response: For many years, hospices
have been able to manage their business
operations (including staff
compensation) while receiving different
reimbursements based on serving
patients in a variety of locales which
have differing wage indexes. Developing
a wage index that utilizes data specific
to hospices would require us to engage
resources in an audit process. In order
to establish a hospice specific wage
index, we would need to collect data
that is specific to hospices. This is not
currently feasible due to the volatility of
existing hospice wage data and the
significant amount of resources that
would be required to assess the quality
of that data. Furthermore, hospices have
expressed concerns over the past few
years with recent data collection efforts
to support payment reform, the Hospice
Item Set Quality Reporting Program, and
the CAHPS® Hospice Survey. At this
time, we are not collecting hospice
specific wage data that may place an
additional burden on hospices. We
continue to believe that in the absence
of hospice or home health specific wage
data, using the pre-floor, pre-reclassified
hospital wage data is appropriate and
reasonable for hospice reimbursement
purposes.
The regulations that govern hospice
reimbursement do not provide a
mechanism for allowing hospices to
seek geographic reclassification or to
utilize the rural floor provisions that
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exist for IPPS hospitals. The rural floor
provision in section 4410 of the
Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (BBA)
(Pub. L. 105–33) is specific to hospitals.
The reclassification provision found in
section 1886(d)(10) of the Act is also
specific to hospitals. CMS is exploring
opportunities to reform the hospital
wage index. We refer readers to the CMS
Web site at: www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/
AcuteInpatientPPS/Wage-IndexReform.html).
Comment: A commenter believes that
hospices in rural and frontier areas
incur higher labor costs due to the need
for staff to travel long distances. The
commenter encourages CMS to analyze
the impact of the change in the wage
index area delineations especially on
labor costs for hospices in rural and
frontier areas.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s recommendation. Based on
the limited hospice cost report data, we
do not have the ability to determine
whether an add-on or an adjustment to
account for labor costs in different
geographic areas would be appropriate
at this time.
Comment: Commenters protest using
CBSAs to determine the wage index for
hospice and suggest that we discontinue
the use of CBSAs. These commenters
specifically mention Montgomery
County, Maryland in their comments.
Commenters stated that in the ten years
since CMS has used CBSAs to
determine payment, Montgomery
Hospice has received lower payments
than neighboring hospices in the
Washington–Arlington–Alexandria, DC–
VA–MD, WV CBSA. These commenters
believe that Montgomery County has a
similar cost of living compared to
Washington, DC and that Montgomery
County shares the same labor market
when competing for labor. Therefore,
commenters state that hospices in
Montgomery County should be
reimbursed at the same level as hospices
in the Washington, DC area.
Commenters stated that Montgomery
County should be paid similarly to
Washington, DC due to close
commuting ties with the District and
also due to the fact that Montgomery
County is contiguous with Washington,
DC. A commenter also protests the use
of CBSAs to determine the wage index,
specifically in Montgomery County, also
notes that OMB cautions agencies
concerning the use of the geographic
area delineations in non-statistical
programs.
Response: In the FY 2005 proposed
rule (70 FR 22394), we indicated that
the MSA delineations as well as the
CBSA delineations are determined by
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47179
the OMB. The OMB reviews its
Metropolitan Area definitions preceding
each decennial census to reflect recent
population changes. We also indicated
in the proposed rule, that we believed
that the OMB’s CBSA designations
reflect the most recent available
geographic classifications and were a
reasonable and appropriate way to
define geographic areas for purposes of
wage index values. Ten years ago, in our
FY 2006 Hospice Wage Index final rule
(70 FR 45130), we finalized the
adoption of the revised labor market
area definitions as discussed in the
OMB Bulletin No. 03–04 (June 6, 2003).
In the December 27, 2000 Federal
Register (65 FR 82228 through 82238),
OMB announced its new standards for
defining metropolitan and micropolitan
statistical areas. According to that
notice, OMB defines a CBSA, beginning
in 2003, as ‘‘a geographic entity
associated with at least one core of
10,000 or more population, plus
adjacent territory that has a high degree
of social and economic integration with
the core as measured by commuting ties.
The general concept of the CBSAs is
that of an area containing a recognized
population nucleus and adjacent
communities that have a high degree of
integration with that nucleus. The
purpose of the standards is to provide
nationally consistent definitions for
collecting, tabulating, and publishing
Federal statistics for a set of geographic
areas. CBSAs include adjacent counties
that have a minimum of 25 percent
commuting to the central counties of the
area. This is an increase over the
minimum commuting threshold for
outlying counties applied in the
previous MSA definition of 15 percent.
Based on the OMB’s current
delineations, as described in the
February 28, 2013 OMB Bulletin No.
13–01, Montgomery County (along with
Frederick County, Maryland) belongs in
a separate CBSA from the areas defined
in the Washington–Arlington–
Alexandria, DC–VA CBSA. Unlike IPPS,
IRF, and SNF, where each provider uses
a single CBSA, hospice agencies may be
reimbursed based on more than one
wage index. Payments are based upon
the location of the beneficiary for
routine and continuous home care or
the location of the agency for respite
and general inpatient care. It is very
likely that hospices in Montgomery
County, Maryland provide RHC and
CHC to patients in the ‘‘WashingtonArlington-Alexandria, DC–VA’’ CBSA in
addition to serving patients in the
‘‘Baltimore-Columbia-Towson,
Maryland’’ CBSA.
While CMS and other stakeholders
have explored potential alternatives to
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the current CBSA-based labor market
system (we refer readers to the CMS
Web site at: www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
AcuteInpatientPPS/Wage-IndexReform.html), no consensus has been
achieved regarding how best to
implement a replacement system. As
discussed in the FY 2005 IPPS final rule
(69 FR 49027), ‘‘While we recognize that
MSAs are not designed specifically to
define labor market areas, we believe
they do represent a useful proxy for this
purpose.’’ We further believe that using
the most current OMB delineations will
increase the integrity of the hospice
wage index by creating a more accurate
representation of geographic variation in
wage levels. We have reviewed our
findings and impacts relating to the new
OMB delineations, and have concluded
that there is no compelling reason to
further delay implementation. We are
implementing the new OMB
delineations as described in the
February 28, 2013 OMB Bulletin No.
13–01 for the hospice wage index
effective beginning in FY 2016.
We recognize that the OMB cautions
that the delineations should not be used
to develop and implement Federal,
state, and local nonstatistical programs
and policies without full consideration
of the effects of using these delineations
for such purposes. The OMB states that,
‘‘In cases where there is no statutory
requirement and an agency elects to use
the Metropolitan, Micropolitan, or
Combined Statistical Area definitions in
nonstatistical programs, it is the
sponsoring agency’s responsibility to
ensure that the definitions are
appropriate for such use. When an
agency is publishing for comment a
proposed regulation that would use the
definitions for a nonstatistical purpose,
the agency should seek public comment
on the proposed use.’’
While we recognize that OMB’s
geographic area delineations are not
designed specifically for use in nonstatistical programs or for program
purposes, including the allocation of
Federal funds, we continue to believe
that the OMB’s geographic area
delineations represent a useful proxy for
differentiating between labor markets
and that the geographic area
delineations are appropriate for use in
determining Medicare hospice
payments. In implementing the use of
CBSAs for hospice payment purposes in
our FY 2006 rule (70 FR 45130), we
considered the effects of using these
delineations. We have used CBSAs for
determining hospice payments for ten
years (since FY 2006). In addition, other
provider types, such as IPPS hospital,
home health, SNF, inpatient
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rehabilitation facility (IRF), and the
ESRD program, have used CBSAs to
define their labor market areas for the
last decade.
Comment: A commenter noted that in
Table 20 of the proposed rule (80 FR
25862), the state attributed to a county
listed under CBSA 41540 ‘‘Salisbury,
MD–DE’’ is incorrect.
Response: We thank the commenter
for bringing this error to our attention.
Worcester County, Maryland is part of
CBSA 41540. We made a typographical
error when we referred to Worcester
County, Maryland as ‘‘Worcester
County, MA’’. The correct reference
should be ‘‘Worcester County, MD’’.
Final Action: We are implementing
the hospice wage index with a 1-year
transition period as proposed, meaning
the counties impacted will receive 50
percent of the rate from the current
CBSA and 50 percent from the new
OMB CBSA delineations for FY 2016
effective October 1, 2015.
2. Hospice Payment Update Percentage
Section 4441(a) of the Balanced
Budget Act of 1997 (BBA) amended
section 1814(i)(1)(C)(ii)(VI) of the Act to
establish updates to hospice rates for
FYs 1998 through 2002. Hospice rates
were to be updated by a factor equal to
the market basket index, minus one
percentage point. Payment rates for FYs
since 2002 have been updated according
to section 1814(i)(1)(C)(ii)(VII) of the
Act, which states that the update to the
payment rates for subsequent FYs must
be the market basket percentage for that
FY. The Act requires us to use the
inpatient hospital market basket to
determine the hospice payment rate
update. In addition, section 3401(g) of
the Affordable Care Act mandates that,
starting with FY 2013 (and in
subsequent FYs), the hospice payment
update percentage will be annually
reduced by changes in economy-wide
productivity as specified in section
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act. The
statute defines the productivity
adjustment to be equal to the 10-year
moving average of changes in annual
economy-wide private nonfarm business
multifactor productivity (MFP) (as
projected by the Secretary for the 10year period ending with the applicable
FY, year, cost reporting period, or other
annual period) (the ‘‘MFP adjustment’’).
A complete description of the MFP
projection methodology is available on
our Web site at https://www.cms.gov/
Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/
Statistics-Trends-and-Reports/Medicare
ProgramRatesStats/MarketBasket
Research.html.
In addition to the MFP adjustment,
section 3401(g) of the Affordable Care
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Act also mandates that in FY 2013
through FY 2019, the hospice payment
update percentage will be reduced by an
additional 0.3 percentage point
(although for FY 2014 to FY 2019, the
potential 0.3 percentage point reduction
is subject to suspension under
conditions specified in section
1814(i)(1)(C)(v) of the Act). The hospice
payment update percentage for FY 2016
is based on the estimated inpatient
hospital market basket update of 2.4
percent (based on IHS Global Insight,
Inc.’s second quarter 2015 forecast with
historical data through the first quarter
of 2015). Due to the requirements at
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) and 1814(i)(1)(C)(v)
of the Act, the estimated inpatient
hospital market basket update for FY
2016 of 2.4 percent must be reduced by
a MFP adjustment as mandated by
Affordable Care Act (currently estimated
to be 0.5 percentage point for FY 2016).
The estimated inpatient hospital market
basket update for FY 2016 is reduced
further by a 0.3 percentage point, as
mandated by the Affordable Care Act. In
effect, the hospice payment update
percentage for FY 2016 is 1.6 percent. If
more recent data are subsequently
available (for example, a more recent
estimate of the inpatient hospital market
basket update and MFP adjustment), we
will use such data, if appropriate, to
determine the FY 2016 market basket
update and the MFP adjustment in the
FY 2016 Hospice Rate Update final rule.
Currently, the labor portion of the
hospice payment rates is as follows: For
RHC, 68.71 percent; for CHC, 68.71
percent; for General Inpatient Care,
64.01 percent; and for Respite Care,
54.13 percent. The non-labor portion is
equal to 100 percent minus the labor
portion for each level of care. Therefore,
the non-labor portion of the payment
rates is as follows: For RHC, 31.29
percent; for CHC, 31.29 percent; for
General Inpatient Care, 35.99 percent;
and for Respite Care, 45.87 percent.
A summary of the comments we
received regarding the payment rates
and our responses to those comments
appear below.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed appreciation for the positive
payment update for FY 2016. However,
the commenters believe that the update
does not keep pace with the cost of
providing highest quality care for
beneficiaries. One commenter states that
costs associated with workforce
recruitment and training, supplies, and
technology are all rising faster than
reimbursement. The commenter further
states that non-profit, mission-based
hospices already operate on extremely
slim margins: MedPAC calculated
average non-profit hospice margins at
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3.7 percent for 2012 with an expectation
for margins to decline further (MedPAC
March 2015). Some commenters note
that margins for non-profit hospices are
much lower than margins for for-profit
hospices. The commenters strongly
encourage CMS to reevaluate the
payment update for FY 2016.
Response: The payment update to the
hospice rates is based in statute as
previously described in detail in this
section and we do not have regulatory
authority to alter the payment update.
Final Action: We are implementing
the hospice payment update as
discussed in the proposed rule.
3. FY 2016 Hospice Payment Rates
Historically, the hospice rate update
has been published through a separate
administrative instruction issued
annually in the summer to provide
adequate time to implement system
change requirements; however,
beginning in FY 2014 and for
subsequent FY, we are using rulemaking
as the means to update payment rates.
This change was proposed in the FY
2014 Hospice Wage Index and Payment
Rate Update proposed rule and finalized
in the FY 2014 Hospice Wage Index and
Payment Rate Update final rule (78 FR
48270). It is consistent with the rate
update process in other Medicare
benefits, and provides rate information
to hospices as quickly as, or earlier than,
when rates are published in an
administrative instruction.
There are four payment categories that
are distinguished by the location and
intensity of the services provided. The
base payments are adjusted for
geographic differences in wages by
multiplying the labor share, which
varies by category, of each base rate by
the applicable hospice wage index. A
hospice is paid the RHC rate for each
day the beneficiary is enrolled in
hospice, unless the hospice provides
continuous home care, IRC, or general
inpatient care. CHC is provided during
a period of patient crisis to maintain the
patient at home; IRC is short-term care
to allow the usual caregiver to rest; and
GIP is to treat symptoms that cannot be
managed in another setting.
As discussed in section III.B, of this
final rule, we will delay implementation
of both the proposed RHC rates and the
SIA payment until January 1, 2016.
Between October 1, 2015 and December
31, 2015, hospices will continue to be
paid a single RHC per diem payment
amount. Effective January 1, 2016, the
RHC rates for days 1 through 60 and
days 61 and beyond would replace the
single RHC per diem payment rate. As
discussed in section III.B.3, we will
make a SIA payment, in addition to the
daily RHC payment, when direct patient
care is provided by a RN or social
worker during the last 7 days of the
patient’s life. The SIA payment will be
equal to the CHC hourly rate multiplied
by the hours of nursing or social work
provided (up to 4 hours total) that
occurred on the day of service. The SIA
47181
payment will also be adjusted by the
appropriate wage index. In order to
maintain budget neutrality, as required
under section 1814(i)(6)(D)(ii) of the
Act, for the SIA payment, the RHC rates
will need to be adjusted by a budget
neutrality factor. The budget neutrality
adjustment that will apply to days 1
through 60 is equal to 1 minus the ratio
of SIA payments for days 1 through 60
to the total payments for days 1 through
60 and is calculated to be 0.9806. The
budget neutrality adjustment that will
apply to days 61 and beyond is equal to
1 minus the ratio of SIA payments for
days 61 and beyond to the total
payments for days 61 and beyond and
is calculated to be 0.9957. Lastly, the
RHC rates will be increased by the FY
2016 hospice payment update
percentage of 1.6 percent as discussed
in section III.C.3. The FY 2016 RHC rate
for hospice claims between October 1,
2015 and December 31, 2015 is shown
in Table 20. The FY 2016 RHC rates for
hospice claims for January 1, 2016
through September 30, 2016 are shown
in Table 21. The FY 2016 payment rates
for CHC, IRC, and GIP will be the FY
2015 payment rates increased by 1.6
percent. The rates for these three levels
of care are shown in Table 22. The FY
2016 rates for hospices that do not
submit the required quality data are
shown in Tables 23, 24, and 25. The FY
2016 hospice payment rates will be
effective for care and services furnished
on or after October 1, 2015 through
September 30, 2016.
TABLE 20—FY 2016 HOSPICE PAYMENT RATE FOR RHC FOR OCTOBER 1, 2015 THROUGH DECEMBER 31, 2015
Code
Description
FY 2015
Payment
rate
651 ..........................................
Routine Home Care ...............................................................
$159.34
FY 2016
Hospice
payment
update
percentage
FY 2016
Payment rate
× 1.016
$161.89
TABLE 21—FY 2016 HOSPICE PAYMENT RATES FOR RHC FOR JANUARY 1, 2016 THROUGH SEPTEMBER 30, 2016
Rates 1
Description
651 .................................
651 .................................
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Code
Routine Home Care (days 1–60) ........................
Routine Home Care (days 61+) ..........................
$187.54
145.14
SIA
Budget
neutrality
factor
adjustment
× 0.9806
× 0.9957
FY 2016
Hospice
payment
update
percentage
× 1.016
× 1.016
FY 2016
Payment rates
$186.84
146.83
1 See section III.B.2 for the RHC rates for days 1–60, and days 61 and beyond before accounting for the Service Intensity Add-on (SIA) payment budget neutrality factor and the FY 2016 hospice payment update percentage of 1.6 percent as required by section 1814(i)(1)(C) of the Act.
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TABLE 22—FY 2016 HOSPICE PAYMENT RATES FOR CHC, IRC, AND GIP
FY 2015
Payment
rates
Code
Description
652 ..........................................
Continuous Home Care ..........................................................
Full Rate = 24 hours of care ..................................................
$ = 39.37 FY 2016 hourly rate ...............................................
Inpatient Respite Care ...........................................................
General Inpatient Care ...........................................................
655 ..........................................
656 ..........................................
We reiterate in this final rule, that the
Congress required in sections
1814(i)(5)(A) through (C) of the Act that
hospices begin submitting quality data,
based on measures to be specified by the
Secretary. In the FY 2012 Hospice Wage
Index final rule (76 FR 47320 through
47324), we implemented a HQRP as
required by section 3004 of the
Affordable Care Act. Hospices were
required to begin collecting quality data
in October 2012, and submit that quality
data in 2013. Section 1814(i)(5)(A)(i) of
the Act requires that beginning with FY
2014 and each subsequent FY, the
Secretary shall reduce the market basket
update by 2 percentage points for any
hospice that does not comply with the
FY 2016
Hospice
payment
update
percentage
FY 2016
Payment rate
$929.91
× 1.016
$944.79
164.81
708.77
× 1.016
× 1.016
167.45
720.11
quality data submission requirements
with respect to that FY. We remind
hospices that this applies to payments
in FY 2016 (See Tables 23 through 25
below). For more information on the
HQRP requirements please see section
III.E in this final rule.
TABLE 23—FY 2016 HOSPICE PAYMENT RATE FOR RHC FOR OCTOBER 1, 2015 THROUGH DECEMBER 31, 2015 FOR
HOSPICES THAT DO NOT SUBMIT THE REQUIRED QUALITY DATA
Code
Description
FY 2015
Payment rate
FY 2016
Hospice
payment
update of
1.6 percent
minus
2 percentage
points = ¥0.4
percent
651 ....................
Routine Home Care .....................................................................................
$159.34
× 0.996
FY 2016
Payment rate
$158.70
TABLE 24—FY 2016 HOSPICE PAYMENT RATES FOR RHC FOR JANUARY 1, 2016 THROUGH SEPTEMBER 30, 2016 FOR
HOSPICES THAT DO NOT SUBMIT THE REQUIRED QUALITY DATA
RHC Rates 1
Code
Description
651 .................................
651 .................................
Routine Home Care (days 1–60) ........................
Routine Home Care (days 61+) ..........................
$187.54
145.14
SIA Budget
neutrality
factor
adjustment
× 0.9806
× 0.9957
FY 2016
Hospice
payment
update of
1.6 percent
minus
2 percentage
points = ¥0.4
percent
FY 2016
Payment rates
× 0.996
× 0.996
$183.17
143.94
1 See section III.B.2 for the RHC rates for days 1–60, and days 61 and beyond before accounting for the Service Intensity Add-on (SIA) payment budget neutrality factor and the FY 2016 hospice payment update percentage of 1.6 percent as required by section 1814(i)(1)(C) of the Act.
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TABLE 25—FY 2016 HOSPICE PAYMENT RATES FOR CHC, IRC, AND GIP FOR HOSPICES THAT DO NOT SUBMIT THE
REQUIRED QUALITY DATA
FY 2015
Payment rates
Code
Description
652 ..........................................
Continuous Home Care Full Rate = 24 hours of care $ =
38.67 hourly rate.
Inpatient Respite Care ...........................................................
655 ..........................................
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FY 2016
Hospice
payment
update of 1.6
percent minus
2 percentage
points
= ¥0.4 percent
FY 2016
Payment rate
$929.91
× 0.996
$926.19
164.81
× 0.996
164.15
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TABLE 25—FY 2016 HOSPICE PAYMENT RATES FOR CHC, IRC, AND GIP FOR HOSPICES THAT DO NOT SUBMIT THE
REQUIRED QUALITY DATA—Continued
FY 2015
Payment rates
Code
Description
656 ..........................................
General Inpatient Care ...........................................................
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4. Hospice Aggregate Cap and the
IMPACT Act of 2014
When the Medicare hospice benefit
was implemented, the Congress
included 2 limits on payments to
hospices: An inpatient cap and an
aggregate cap. As set out in sections
1861(dd)(2)(A)(iii) and 1814(i)(2)(A)
through (C) of the Act, respectively, the
hospice inpatient cap limits the total
number of Medicare inpatient days
(general inpatient care and respite care)
to no more than 20 percent of a
hospice’s total Medicare hospice days.
The intent of the inpatient cap was to
ensure that hospice remained a homebased benefit. The hospice aggregate cap
limits the total aggregate payment any
individual hospice can receive in a year.
The intent of the hospice aggregate cap
was to protect Medicare from spending
more for hospice care than it would for
conventional care at the end of life.
The aggregate cap amount was set at
$6,500 per beneficiary when first
enacted in 1983; this was an amount
hospice advocates agreed was well
above the average cost of caring for a
hospice patient.50 Since 1983, the
$6,500 amount has been adjusted
annually by the change in the medical
care expenditure category of the
consumer price index for urban
consumers (CPI–U) from March 1984 to
March of the cap year, as required by
section 1814(i)(2)(B) of the Act. The cap
amount is multiplied by the number of
Medicare beneficiaries who received
hospice care from a particular hospice
during the year, resulting in its hospice
aggregate cap, which is the allowable
amount of total Medicare payments that
hospice can receive for that cap year.
The cap year is currently November 1 to
October 31, and was set in place in the
December 16, 1983 Hospice final rule
(48 FR 56022).
50 National Hospice and Palliative Care
Organization (NHPCO), ‘‘A Short History of the
Medicare Hospice Cap on Total Expenditures.’’ Web
19 Feb. 2014. https://www.nhpco.org/sites/default/
files/public/regulatory/History_of_Hospice_
Cap.pdf.
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Section 1814(i)(2)(B)(i) and (ii) of the
Act, as added by section 3(b) of the
IMPACT Act requires, effective for the
2016 cap year (November 1, 2015
through October 31, 2016), that the cap
amount for the previous year to be
updated by the hospice payment update
percentage, rather than the original
$6,500 being annually adjusted by the
change in the CPI–U for medical care
expenditures since 1984. This new
provision will sunset for cap years
ending after September 30, 2025, at
which time the annual update to the cap
amount will revert back to the original
methodology. This provision is
estimated to result in $540 million in
savings over 10 years starting in 2017.
As a result, we will update § 418.309
to reflect the new language added to
section 1814(i)(2)(B) of the Act.
In accordance with section
1814(i)(2)(B)(i) of the Act, the hospice
aggregate cap amount for the 2015 cap
year, starting on November 1, 2014 and
ending on October 31, 2015, will be
$27,382.63. This amount was calculated
by multiplying the original cap amount
of $6,500 by the change in the CPI–U
medical care expenditure category, from
the fifth month of the 1984 accounting
year (March 1984) to the fifth month the
current accounting year (in this case,
March 2015). The CPI–U for medical
care expenditures for 1984 to present is
available from the BLS Web site at:
https://www.bls.gov/cpi/home.htm.
Step 1: From the BLS Web site given
above, the March 2015 CPI–U for
medical care expenditures is 444.020
and the 1984 CPI–U for medical care
expenditures was 105.4.
Step 2: Divide the March 2015 CPI–
U for medical care expenditures by the
1984 CPI–U for medical care
expenditures to compute the change.
444.020/105.4 = 4.212713
Step 3: Multiply the original cap base
amount ($6,500) by the result from step
2) to get the updated aggregate cap
amount for the 2015 cap year.
$6,500 × 4.212713 = $27,382.63
As required by section
1814(i)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act, the hospice
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FY 2016
Hospice
payment
update of 1.6
percent minus
2 percentage
points
= ¥0.4 percent
FY 2016
Payment rate
708.77
× 0.996
705.93
aggregate cap amount for the 2016 cap
year, starting on November 1, 2015 and
ending on October 31, 2016, will be the
2015 cap amount updated by the FY
2016 hospice payment update
percentage (see section III.C.2 above). As
such, the 2016 cap amount will be
$27,820.75 ($27,382.63 * 1.016). A
Change Request with the finalized
hospice payment rates, a finalized
hospice wage index, the Pricer for FY
2016, and the hospice cap amount for
the cap year ending October 31, 2015
will be issued in the summer.
A summary of the comments we
received regarding the aggregate cap and
our responses to those comments
appears below.
Comment: A number of commenters
supported the use of payment update
data to update the hospice aggregate
cap. Some commenters suggested that
CMS reduce the hospice aggregate cap
between ten to fifteen percent and that
a portion of the savings be utilized to
support innovation and research around
end-of-life, hospice, and palliative care.
Another commenter stated that the
aggregate cap should be adjusted to
account for regional differences in
payment. The commenter argued that
providers in areas with an overall higher
cost of living would hit the aggregate
cap sooner than providers in areas with
a lower cost of living and that the
aggregate cap should be applied on a
CBSA basis, not a national basis.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support. We reiterate that the
use of hospice payment update
percentage to update the hospice
aggregate cap is mandated by the
IMPACT Act. We also note that while
we find the suggestion to adjust the
hospice aggregate cap compelling, we
would need statutory authority to
reduce the hospice aggregate cap. In
addition, we do not have statutory
authority to change the aggregate cap
amount by region or CBSA.
Comment: A commenter noted an
error in our calculation of the aggregate
cap amount for the 2015 cap year. In the
proposed rule, (80 FR 25867), in Step 2,
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we should have divided the March 2015
CPI–U for medical care expenditures,
444.020, by the 1984 CPI–U for medical
care expenditures, 105.4. However, we
inadvertently divided 440.020 by 105.4.
Response: We would like to thank the
commenter for noticing the error and
alerting us. We have corrected the error
in the calculation in this final rule.
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D. Alignment of the Inpatient and
Aggregate Cap Accounting Year With
the Federal Fiscal Year
As noted in section III.C.4, when the
Medicare hospice benefit was
implemented, the Congress included
two limits on payments to hospices: An
aggregate cap and an inpatient cap. The
intent of the hospice aggregate cap was
to protect Medicare from spending more
for hospice care than it would for
conventional care at the end-of-life. If a
hospice’s total Medicare payments for
the cap year exceed such hospice’s
aggregate cap amount, then the hospice
must repay the excess back to Medicare.
The intent of the inpatient cap was to
ensure that hospice remained a homebased benefit. If a hospice’s inpatient
days (GIP and respite) exceed 20 percent
of all hospice days then, for inpatient
care, the hospice is paid: (1) The sum of
the total reimbursement for inpatient
care multiplied by the ratio of the
maximum number of allowable
inpatient days to actual number of all
inpatient days; and (2) the sum of the
actual number of inpatient days in
excess of the limitation by the routine
home care rate.
1. Streamlined Method and Patient-byPatient Proportional Method for
Counting Beneficiaries To Determine
Each Hospice’s Aggregate Cap Amount
The aggregate cap amount for any
given hospice is established by
multiplying the cap amount by the
number of Medicare beneficiaries who
received hospice services during the
year. Originally, the number of
Medicare beneficiaries who received
hospice services during the year was
determined using a ‘‘streamlined’’
methodology whereby each beneficiary
is counted as ‘‘1’’ in the initial cap year
of the hospice election and is not
counted in subsequent cap years.
Specifically, the hospice includes in its
number of Medicare beneficiaries those
Medicare beneficiaries who have not
previously been included in the
calculation of any hospice cap, and who
have filed an election to receive hospice
care in accordance with § 418.24 during
the period beginning on September 28th
(34 days before the beginning of the cap
year) and ending on September 27th (35
days before the end of the cap year),
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using the best data available at the time
of the calculation. This is applicable for
cases in which a beneficiary received
care from only one hospice. If a
beneficiary received care from more
than one hospice, each hospice includes
in its number of Medicare beneficiaries
only that fraction which represents the
portion of a patient’s total days of care
with that hospice in that cap year, using
the best data available at the time of the
calculation. Using the streamlined
method, a different timeframe from the
cap year is used to count the number of
Medicare beneficiaries because it allows
those beneficiaries who elected hospice
near the end of the cap year to be
counted in the year when most of the
services were provided (48 FR 38158).
During FY 2012 rulemaking, in
addition to the streamlined method,
CMS added a ‘‘patient-by-patient
proportional’’ method as a way of
calculating the number of Medicare
beneficiaries who received hospice
services during the year in determining
the aggregate cap amount for any given
hospice (76 FR 47309). This method
specifies that a hospice should include
in its number of Medicare beneficiaries
only that fraction which represents the
portion of a patient’s total days of care
in all hospices and all years that was
spent in that hospice in that cap year,
using the best data available at the time
of the calculation. The total number of
Medicare beneficiaries for a given
hospice’s cap year is determined by
summing the whole or fractional share
of each Medicare beneficiary that
received hospice care during the cap
year, from that hospice. Under the
patient-by-patient proportional
methodology, the timeframe for
counting the number of Medicare
beneficiaries is the same as the cap
accounting year (November 1 through
October 31). The aggregate cap amount
for each hospice is now calculated using
the patient-by-patient proportional
method, except for those hospices that
had their cap determination calculated
under the streamlined method prior to
the 2012 cap year, did not appeal the
streamlined method used to determine
the number of Medicare beneficiaries
used in the aggregate cap calculation,
and opted to continue to have their
hospice aggregate cap calculated using
the streamlined method no later than 60
days after receipt of its 2012 cap
determination.
2. Inpatient and Aggregate Cap
Accounting Year Timeframe
As stated in section III.C.4, the cap
accounting year is currently November
1 to October 31. In the past, CMS has
considered changing the cap accounting
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year to coincide with the hospice rate
update year, which is the federal fiscal
year (October 1 through September 30).
In the FY 2011 Hospice Wage Index
notice (75 FR 42951), CMS solicited
comments on aligning the cap
accounting year for both the inpatient
and aggregate hospice cap to coincide
with the FY. In the FY 2012 Hospice
Wage Index proposed rule, we
summarized the comments we received,
stating that ‘‘several commenters
supported the idea of our aligning the
cap year with the federal fiscal year;
with some noting that the change would
be appropriate for a multi-year
apportioning approach (the patient-bypatient proportional method).’’ Other
commenters stated that we should not
change the cap year at this time, and
recommended that we wait for this to be
accomplished as part of hospice
payment reform (76 FR 26812).
In FY 2012, we decided not to finalize
changing the cap accounting year to the
FY, partly because of a concern that a
large portion of providers could still be
using the streamlined method. As stated
earlier, the streamlined method has a
different timeframe for counting the
number of beneficiaries than the cap
accounting year, allowing those
beneficiaries who elected hospice near
the end of the cap year to be counted in
the year when most of the services were
provided. However, for the 2013 cap
year, only 486 hospices used the
streamlined method to calculate the
number of Medicare hospice patients
and the remaining providers used the
patient-by-patient proportional method.
Since the majority of providers now use
the patient-by-patient proportional
method, we believe there is no longer an
advantage to defining the cap
accounting year differently from the
hospice rate update year; maintaining a
cap accounting year (as well as the
period for counting beneficiaries under
the streamlined method) that is different
from the federal fiscal year creates an
added layer of complexity that can lead
to hospices unintentionally calculating
their aggregate cap determinations
incorrectly. In addition, shifting the cap
accounting year timeframes to coincide
with the hospice rate update year (the
federal fiscal year) will better align with
the intent of the new cap calculation
methodology required by the IMPACT
Act of 2014, as discussed in section
III.C.4. Therefore, we are aligning the
cap accounting year for both the
inpatient cap and the hospice aggregate
cap with the federal fiscal year for FYs
2017 and later. In addition to aligning
the cap accounting year with the federal
fiscal year, we will also align the
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timeframe for counting the number of
beneficiaries with the federal fiscal year.
This will eliminate timeframe
complexities associating with counting
payments and beneficiaries differently
from the federal fiscal year and will
help hospices avoid mistakes in
calculating their aggregate cap
determinations.
In shifting the cap accounting year to
match the federal fiscal year, we note
that new section 1814(i)(2)(B)(ii) of the
Act, as added by section 3(b) of the
IMPACT Act, requires the cap amount
for 2016 to be updated by the hospice
payment update percentage in effect
‘‘during the FY beginning on the
October 1 preceding the beginning of
the accounting year’’. In other words,
we interpret this to mean that the statute
requires the 2016 cap amount to be
updated using the most current hospice
payment update percentage in effect at
the start of that cap year. For the 2016
cap year, the 2015 cap amount will be
updated by the FY 2016 hospice
payment update percentage outlined in
section III.C.2. For the 2017 cap year
through the 2025 cap year, we will
update the previous year’s cap amount
by the hospice payment update
percentage for that current federal fiscal
year. For the 2026 cap year and beyond,
changing the cap accounting year to
coincide with the federal fiscal year will
require us to use the CPI–U for February
when updating the cap amount, instead
of the current process which uses the
March CPI–U to update the cap amount.
Section 1814(i)(2)(B) of the Act requires
us to update the cap amount by the
same percentage as the percentage
increase or decrease in the medical care
expenditure category of the CPI–U from
March 1984 to the ‘‘fifth month of the
accounting year ’’ for all years except
those accounting years that end after
September 30, 2016 and before October
1, 2025.
In shifting the cap year to match the
federal fiscal year, we are aligning the
timeframes in which beneficiaries and
payments are counted for the purposes
of determining each individual
hospice’s aggregate cap amount (see
table 26 below) as well as the
timeframes in which days of hospice
care are counted for the purposes
determining whether a given hospice
exceeded the inpatient cap. In the year
of transition (2017 cap year), for the
inpatient cap, we will calculate the
percentage of all hospice days of care
that were provided as inpatient days
(GIP care and respite care) from
November 1, 2016 through September
30, 2017 (11 months). For those
hospices using the patient-by-patient
proportional method for their aggregate
cap determinations, for the 2017 cap
year, we will count beneficiaries from
November 1, 2016 to September 30,
2017. For those hospices using the
streamlined method for their aggregate
cap determinations, we will allow 3
extra days to count beneficiaries in the
year of transition. Specifically, for the
2017 cap year (October 1, 2016 to
47185
September 30, 2017), we will count
beneficiaries from September 28, 2016
to September 30, 2017, which is 12
months plus 3 days, in that cap year’s
calculation. For hospices using either
the streamlined method or the patientby-patient proportional method, we will
count 11 months of payments from
November 1, 2016 to September 30,
2017 for the 2017 cap year. For the 2018
cap year (October 1, 2017 to September
30, 2018), we will count both
beneficiaries and payments for hospices
using the streamlined or the patient-bypatient proportional methods from
October 1, 2017 to September 30, 2018.
Likewise, for the 2018 cap year, we will
calculate the percentage of all hospice
days of care that were provided as
inpatient days (GIP care or respite care)
from October 1, 2017 to September 30,
2018. Because of the non-discretionary
language used by Congress in
determining the cap for a year, the
actual cap amount for the adjustment
year will not be prorated for a shorter
time frame. We solicited public
comment on all aspects of the proposed
alignment of the cap accounting year for
both the inpatient cap and hospice
aggregate cap, as well as the timeframe
for counting the number of beneficiaries
for the hospice aggregate cap, with the
federal fiscal year, as articulated in this
section, as well as the corresponding
proposed changes to the regulations at
§ 418.308(c) in section VI.
TABLE 26—HOSPICE AGGREGATE CAP TIMEFRAMES FOR COUNTING BENEFICIARIES AND PAYMENTS FOR THE ALIGNMENT
OF THE CAP ACCOUNTING YEAR WITH THE FEDERAL FISCAL YEAR
Beneficiaries
Cap year
Streamlined method
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2016 .................................................
2017 (Transition Year) .....................
2018 .................................................
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Patient-by-patient
proportional method
9/28/15–9/27/16
9/28/16–9/30/17
10/1/17– 9/30/18
Summaries of the public comments
and our responses to comments on all
aspects of the proposed alignment of the
cap accounting year with the federal
fiscal year as well as the proposed
changes to the regulations at
§ 418.308(c) are summarized below:
Comment: Commenters supported the
proposed alignment of the inpatient and
aggregate cap with the federal fiscal
year, as well as the alignment of the
timeframe for counting the number of
beneficiaries with the federal fiscal year,
and supported the proposed
methodology for the transition year.
Commenters encouraged CMS to issue,
Payments
11/1/15–10/31/16
11/1/16–9/30/17
10/1/17– 9/30/18
and direct the MACs to provide, timely
notice of forthcoming changes and
reminders to minimize confusion when
hospice providers calculate and selfreport their aggregate cap and to allow
hospices to adequately track their cap
status. Commenters wanted education
and information on the transition and
changes to the cap accounting year
timeframe.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support and will finalize this
policy as proposed. We note that the
MACs currently send a reminder notice
to hospices no later than 30 days prior
to the due date of the self-determined
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Streamlined method
11/1/15–10/31/16
11/1/16–9/30/17
10/1/17– 9/30/18
Patient-by-patient
proportional method
11/1/15–10/31/16
11/1/16–9/30/17
10/1/17– 9/30/18
cap. We encourage hospices to visit
their respective MAC Web site regularly
for announcements and updates
regarding the hospice program. Please
contact your MAC if you need
information regarding the cap
calculation or additional information.
Comment: Some commenters stated
that the proposed rule eliminates the
reference to March 31st in § 418.308 and
requested that the final rule clarify that
hospices are still required to file a selfdetermined inpatient and aggregate cap
determination on or before March 31,
2017 for the 2016 cap year and on or
before February 28, 2018 for the 2017
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cap year. One commenter requested that
CMS provide early notice on the due
date for filing the aggregate cap
determination each year since the
removal of the reference to March 31st
may be a source of confusion for
hospice providers.
Response: We note that the regulatory
text still states that the hospice must file
its aggregate cap determination notice
with its Medicare contractor no later
than 5 months after the end of the cap
year and remit any overpayment due at
that time. Therefore, the regulatory text
change continues to provide hospices
with sufficient information to determine
when aggregate cap self-determinations
must be submitted to the MAC.
Hospices are required to file a selfdetermined inpatient and aggregate cap
determination on or before March 31,
2017 for the 2016 cap year and on or
before February 28, 2018 for the 2017
cap year. We will finalize this policy as
proposed, aligning the cap accounting
year with the federal fiscal year and
removing the reference to March 31st in
§ 418.308. The end of the cap
accounting year for the 2017 cap year
and future years will be the same as the
end of the fiscal year. Therefore, it is
clear that the clause in the regulation
text ‘‘5 months after the end of the cap
year’’ refers to the end of February for
cap years 2017 and beyond.
Final Action: We are finalizing the
proposal and proposed methodology to
align the inpatient and aggregate cap
accounting year, as well as the
timeframe for counting the number of
beneficiaries, with the federal fiscal
year. We are also finalizing the
proposed changes to § 418.308(c).
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E. Proposed Updates to the Hospice
Quality Reporting Program (HQRP)
1. Background and Statutory Authority
Section 3004(c) of the Affordable Care
Act amended section 1814(i)(5) of the
Act to authorize a quality reporting
program for hospices. Section
1814(i)(5)(A)(i) of the Act requires that
beginning with FY 2014 and each
subsequent FY, the Secretary shall
reduce the market basket update by 2
percentage points for any hospice that
does not comply with the quality data
submission requirements with respect to
that FY. Depending on the amount of
the annual update for a particular year,
a reduction of 2 percentage points could
result in the annual market basket
update being less than 0.0 percent for a
FY and may result in payment rates that
are less than payment rates for the
preceding FY. Any reduction based on
failure to comply with the reporting
requirements, as required by section
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1814(i)(5)(B) of the Act, would apply
only for the particular FY involved. Any
such reduction would not be cumulative
or be taken into account in computing
the payment amount for subsequent
FYs. Section 1814(i)(5)(C) of the Act
requires that each hospice submit data
to the Secretary on quality measures
specified by the Secretary. The data
must be submitted in a form, manner,
and at a time specified by the Secretary.
2. General Considerations Used for
Selection of Quality Measures for the
HQRP
Any measures selected by the
Secretary must be endorsed by the
consensus-based entity, which holds a
contract regarding performance
measurement with the Secretary under
section 1890(a) of the Act. This contract
is currently held by the National Quality
Forum (NQF). However, section
1814(i)(5)(D)(ii) of the Act provides that
in the case of a specified area or medical
topic determined appropriate by the
Secretary for which a feasible and
practical measure has not been endorsed
by the consensus-based entity, the
Secretary may specify measures that are
not so endorsed as long as due
consideration is given to measures that
have been endorsed or adopted by a
consensus-based organization identified
by the Secretary. Our paramount
concern is the successful development
of a Hospice Quality Reporting Program
(HQRP) that promotes the delivery of
high quality healthcare services. We
seek to adopt measures for the HQRP
that promote patient-centered, high
quality, and safe care. Our measure
selection activities for the HQRP take
into consideration input from the
Measure Applications Partnership
(MAP), convened by the NQF, as part of
the established CMS pre-rulemaking
process required under section 1890A of
the Act. The MAP is a public-private
partnership comprised of multistakeholder groups convened by the
NQF for the primary purpose of
providing input to CMS on the selection
of certain categories of quality and
efficiency measures, as required by
section 1890A(a)(3) of the Act. By
February 1st of each year, the NQF must
provide that input to CMS. Input from
the MAP is located at: (https://www.
qualityforum.org/Setting_Priorities/
Partnership/Measure_Applications_
Partnership.aspx. We also take into
account national priorities, such as
those established by the National
Priorities Partnership at
(https://www.qualityforum.org/npp/), the
HHS Strategic Plan https://www.hhs.gov/
secretary/about/priorities/
priorities.html), the National Strategy
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for Quality Improvement in Healthcare,
(https://www.ahrq.gov/workingfor
quality/nqs/nqs2013annlrpt.htm) and
the CMS Quality Strategy (https://www.
cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-InitiativesPatient-AssessmentInstruments/Quality
InitiativesGenInfo/CMS-QualityStrategy.html). To the extent
practicable, we have sought to adopt
measures endorsed by member
organizations of the National Consensus
Project recommended by multistakeholder organizations, and
developed with the input of providers,
purchasers/payers, and other
stakeholders.
3. Proposed Policy for Retention of
HQRP Measures Adopted for Previous
Payment Determinations
Beginning with the FY 2018 payment
determination, for the purpose of
streamlining the rulemaking process, we
proposed that when we adopt measures
for the HQRP beginning with a payment
determination year, these measures are
automatically adopted for all
subsequent years’ payment
determinations, unless we propose to
remove, suspend, or replace the
measures.
Quality measures may be considered
for removal by CMS if:
• Measure performance among
hospices is so high and unvarying that
meaningful distinctions in
improvements in performance can be no
longer be made;
• Performance or improvement on a
measure does not result in better patient
outcomes;
• A measure does not align with
current clinical guidelines or practice;
• A more broadly applicable measure
(across settings, populations, or
conditions) for the particular topic is
available;
• A measure that is more proximal in
time to desired patient outcomes for the
particular topic is available;
• A measure that is more strongly
associated with desired patient
outcomes for the particular topic is
available; or
• Collection or public reporting of a
measure leads to negative unintended
consequences.
For any such removal, the public will
be given an opportunity to comment
through the annual rulemaking process.
However, if there is reason to believe
continued collection of a measure raises
potential safety concerns, we will take
immediate action to remove the measure
from the HQRP and will not wait for the
annual rulemaking cycle. The measures
will be promptly removed and we will
immediately notify hospices and the
public of such a decision through the
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usual HQRP communication channels,
including listening sessions, memos,
email notification, and Web postings. In
such instances, the removal of a
measure will be formally announced in
the next annual rulemaking cycle.
CMS did not propose to remove any
measures for the FY 2017 reporting
cycle. We invited public comment only
on our proposal that once a quality
measure is adopted, it be retained for
use in the subsequent fiscal year
payment determinations unless
otherwise stated.
Public comments and our response to
comments are summarized below. All
comments received were supportive of
the proposed policy that once a quality
measure is adopted, it be retained for
use in the subsequent fiscal year
payment determinations until otherwise
stated, as proposed.
Comment: CMS received several
comments on our proposal that once a
quality measure is adopted, it be
retained for use in the subsequent fiscal
year payment determinations until
otherwise stated. All commenters were
supportive of this proposal.
Commenters appreciated the
clarification from CMS and noted that
the proposed reasons for removal of a
measure are reasonable.
Response: CMS thanks commenters
for their support of our proposal to
retain measures that have been adopted
for use in subsequent fiscal year
payment determinations, unless
otherwise stated.
Comment: Two commenters noted the
effort required by hospices in reporting
quality data, and stated that measures
should be systematically reviewed on a
regular basis to ensure they are able to
distinguish performance among
hospices, do not result in unintended
consequences, and have demonstrated
potential to improve care.
Response: CMS agrees with
commenters that regularly assessing
measures to ensure their value in
distinguishing performance and
improving care is vital to the success of
the HQRP. For all measures
implemented for use in the HQRP, CMS
regularly conducts measure testing
activities according to the blueprint for
the CMS Measures Management System
(https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/QualityInitiatives-Patient-AssessmentInstruments/MMS/Measures
ManagementSystemBlueprint.html) to
ensure that measures continue to
demonstrate scientific acceptability
(including reliability and validity) and
meet the goals of the HQRP, which
include distinguishing performance
among hospices and contributing to
better patient outcomes. If measure
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testing activities reveal that a measure
meets one of the conditions for removal
that is listed the proposed rule (measure
performance among hospices high and
unvarying, performance or improvement
in a measure does not result in better
patient outcomes, etc.), the measure will
be considered for removal from the
HQRP to avoid unintended
consequences and ensure that providers’
data collection efforts are meaningful
and are contributing to quality of care.
Comment: Finally, one commenter
noted that both current and new
measures should be thoroughly
evaluated and tested before removal
from or introduction to the HQRP. This
commenter recommended that measure
data from the first two quarters after
implementation not be used for measure
evaluation, and that a minimum of 1
years’ worth of measure data after
implementation be used to evaluate
measures. The commenter also noted
that the measure evaluation process
should include analysis to demonstrate
not only the psychometric properties of
measures, but also evidence of the
measure’s relationship to meaningful
outcomes.
Response: CMS thanks the commenter
for their recommendation, and agrees
that testing the measure’s relationship to
meaningful patient and family outcomes
is an important part of the measure
development and testing process,
especially for process measures. As part
of the validity testing, specifically
convergent validity testing, CMS
examines the relationship between
various measures (for example, process
and outcome measures) to support
measure development and demonstrate
relationships between processes and
outcomes of care.
Final Action: After consideration of
the comments, we are finalizing our
proposal that once a quality measure is
adopted, it be retained for use in the
subsequent fiscal year payment
determinations until otherwise stated,
as proposed.
4. Previously Adopted Quality Measures
for FY 2016 and FY 2017 Payment
Determination
As stated in the CY 2013 HH PPS final
rule (77 FR 67068, 67133), CMS
expanded the set of required measures
to include additional measures
endorsed by NQF. We also stated that to
support the standardized collection and
calculation of quality measures by CMS,
collection of the needed data elements
would require a standardized data
collection instrument. In response, CMS
developed and tested a hospice patientlevel item set, the Hospice Item Set
(HIS). Hospices are required to submit
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an HIS-Admission record and an HISDischarge record for each patient
admission to hospice on or after July 1,
2014. In developing the standardized
HIS, we considered comments offered in
response to the CY 2013 HH PPS
proposed rule (77 FR 41548, 41573). In
the FY 2014 Hospice Wage Index final
rule (78 FR 48257), and in compliance
with section 1814(i)(5)(C) of the Act, we
finalized the specific collection of data
items that support the following six
NQF endorsed measures and one
modified measure for hospice:
• NQF #1617 Patients Treated with
an Opioid who are Given a Bowel
Regimen,
• NQF #1634 Pain Screening,
• NQF #1637 Pain Assessment,
• NQF #1638 Dyspnea Treatment,
• NQF #1639 Dyspnea Screening,
• NQF #1641 Treatment Preferences,
• NQF #1647 Beliefs/Values
Addressed (if desired by the patient)
(modified).
To achieve a comprehensive set of
hospice quality measures available for
widespread use for quality improvement
and informed decision making, and to
carry out our commitment to develop a
quality reporting program for hospices
that uses standardized methods to
collect data needed to calculate quality
measures, we finalized the HIS effective
July 1, 2014 (78 FR 48258). To meet the
quality reporting requirements for
hospices for the FY 2016 payment
determination and each subsequent
year, we require regular and ongoing
electronic submission of the HIS data
for each patient admission to hospice on
or after July 1, 2014, regardless of payer
or patient age (78 FR 48234, 48258).
Collecting data on all patients provides
CMS with the most robust, accurate
reflection of the quality of care
delivered to Medicare beneficiaries as
compared with non-Medicare patients.
Therefore, to measure the quality of care
delivered to Medicare beneficiaries in
the hospice setting, we collect quality
data necessary to calculate the adopted
measures on all patients. We finalized
in the FY 2014 Hospice Wage Index (78
FR 48258) that hospice providers collect
data on all patients in order to ensure
that all patients regardless of payer or
patient age are receiving the same care
and that provider metrics measure
performance across the spectrum of
patients.
Hospices are required to complete and
submit an HIS-Admission and an HISDischarge record for each patient
admission. Hospices failing to report
quality data via the HIS in FY 2015 will
have their market basket update reduced
by 2 percentage points in FY 2017
beginning in October 1, 2016. In the FY
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2015 Hospice Wage Index final rule (79
FR 50485, 50487), we finalized the
proposal to codify the HIS submission
requirement at § 418.312. The System of
Record (SOR) Notice titled ‘‘Hospice
Item Set (HIS) System,’’ SOR number
09–70–0548, was published in the
Federal Register on April 8, 2014 (79 FR
19341).
5. HQRP Quality Measures and
Concepts Under Consideration for
Future Years
We did not propose any new
measures for FY 2017. However, we
continue to work with our measure
development and maintenance
contractor to identify measure concepts
for future implementation in the HQRP.
In identifying priority areas for future
measure enhancement and
development, CMS takes into
consideration input from numerous
stakeholders, including the Measures
Application Partnership (MAP), the
Medicare Payment Advisory
Commission (MedPAC), Technical
Expert Panels, and national priorities,
such as those established by the
National Priorities Partnership, the HHS
Strategic Plan, the National Strategy for
Quality Improvement in Healthcare, and
the CMS Quality Strategy. In addition,
CMS takes into consideration vital
feedback and input from research
published by our payment reform
contractor as well as from the Institute
of Medicine (IOM) report, titled ‘‘Dying
in America’’, released in September
2014.51 Finally, the current HQRP
measure set is also an important
consideration for future measure
development areas; future measure
development areas should complement
the current HQRP measure set, which
includes HIS measures and Consumer
Assessment of Healthcare Providers and
Systems (CAHPS®) Hospice Survey
measures. Based on input from
stakeholders, CMS has identified several
high priority concept areas for future
measure development:
• Patient reported pain outcome
measure that incorporates patient and/
or proxy report regarding pain
management;
• Claims-based measures focused on
care practice patterns including skilled
visits in the last days of life,
burdensome transitions of care for
patients in and out of the hospice
benefit, and rates of live discharges from
hospice;
• Responsiveness of hospice to
patient and family care needs;
51 IOM (Institute of Medicine). 2014. Dying in
America: Improving quality and honoring
individual preferences near the end of life.
Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.
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• Hospice team communication and
care coordination
These measure concepts are under
development, and details regarding
measure definitions, data sources, data
collection approaches, and timeline for
implementation will be communicated
in future rulemaking. CMS invited
comments about these four high priority
concept areas for future measure
development.
Summaries of the public comments
and our responses to comments
regarding the four high priority concept
areas for future measure development
are provided below:
Comment Summary: Many comments
were received about the HQRP quality
measures and concepts under
consideration for future years. Overall,
commenters were supportive of CMS’s
efforts to develop a more robust quality
reporting program that includes
development of outcome measures, and
additional measures that better capture
hospice performance. One of the
commenters, MedPAC, supported the
development of the measure areas
identified by CMS in the proposed rule,
strongly encouraging CMS to pursue the
development of these measures. Several
commenters were supportive of CMS’s
approach to quality measure
development in the HQRP, specifically,
the use of Technical Expert Panels (TEP)
and listening sessions to obtain expert
and other stakeholder input. In regards
to the pain outcome measure, a majority
of commenters were supportive of this
measure concept as pain outcomes
remain an important indicator of quality
end of life care. Several commenters
noted the complexities associated with
developing a pain outcome measure,
including the fact that pain is a
subjective value and that pain outcome
measures should take into account
patient preference for pain levels and
treatment, not just reduction in pain
intensity. A few commenters noted
additional complexities in proxy
reporting of patient’s pain. One
commenter cautioned CMS against a
pain outcome measure that could bear
the risk of contacting the patient or
family for feedback ‘‘at the wrong time’’.
With respect to claims-based measures,
although several commenters were
supportive of the claims-based measure
concept areas identified in the proposed
rule, the majority of commenters had
concerns about using claims data as a
source for quality measures.
Commenters also had concerns about
linking these claims-based measure
concepts to quality of care. Several
commenters noted that performance
measures should guide and promote the
quality of direct care received by
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hospice patients and families.
Commenters expressed that
performance measures should not be
implemented in order to discourage or
correct undesirable organizational
practices. These commenters felt that
utilization metrics should be linked to
quality of care or patient/caregiver
perception of quality of care. Several
commenters were concerned that given
CMS’s criteria for measure retention,
which include measure performance
that relates to better patient outcomes
and ensuring that measures do not lead
to unintended consequences, claimsbased utilization metrics may be at risk
for elimination from the HQRP unless
they are specifically linked to quality of
care outcomes. To help establish such a
link between utilization metrics and
quality of care, one commenter
suggested that CMS compare claimsbased data to Hospice CAHPS® survey
data to verify whether any claims-based
utilization metrics are correlated with
caregiver perception of quality of care.
Several commenters also stated that, as
a data source, hospice claims were
insufficient sources of information for
quality measure purposes. These
commenters noted that claims do not
have sufficient information to inform
performance measures. For example,
several commenters stated that hospice
claims do not capture visits offered by
chaplains, spiritual care professionals,
or volunteers. These commenters felt
these disciplines made important
contributions to hospice care and their
role and involvement should be
captured on claims in any claims-based
quality metric. With respect to the live
discharges measure concept, a few
commenters questioned how CMS
would calculate the live discharge rate,
noting that there are both legitimate and
questionable reasons why a live
discharge may occur, and that claims
data could not distinguish between the
two. Two commenters suggested CMS
use the Program for Evaluating Payment
Patterns Electronic Report (PEPPER)
report definition of live discharge. In
regards to the responsiveness and
communication and care coordination
measure concepts, commenters had
mixed opinions on this measure area. A
few commenters supported measure
development in these areas, but other
commenters had concerns about
developing quality measures that
address these aspects of care. A few
commenters had concerns about the
subjective nature of these areas of care.
One commenter noted that there are few
data points or metrics that CMS could
utilize for comparative analysis of these
aspects of care, and that CMS would
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have to develop new definitions and
benchmarks to capture data on these
areas of care. Several commenters
requested additional information on the
measure areas identified by CMS in the
rule. These commenters requested CMS
provide more information on the
proposed measure concept areas to
allow for more thorough provider input.
Additionally, a few commenters noted
that several of the measure concepts
under consideration by CMS are also
captured, in some way, by the Hospice
CAHPS® survey. Providers cautioned
CMS against developing new measures
that were duplicative of other HQRP
requirements. Several commenters
urged CMS to explore measure
development in other areas not
mentioned in the proposed rule. One
commenter encouraged CMS to consider
measure development for other
psychosocial symptoms, such as anxiety
and depression. Another commenter
suggested CMS explore development
measures around the provision of
bereavement care and services, such as
contacts made by hospices to the
bereaved. This commenter also
suggested that CMS consider measuring
value as part of the HQRP; the
commenter suggested such metrics as
mean cost per diem and percent of
dollars directly related to care and
services for the patient/family. Another
commenter requested that CMS consider
the role that occupational therapists
play in future measure development
work. Finally, one commenter suggested
that CMS take into consideration the
American Academy of Hospice and
Palliative Medicine (AAHPM) and
Hospice and Palliative Nurses
Association (HPNA), ‘‘Measuring What
Matters’’ recommendations when
considering future measure
development areas. One commenter
supported the development of a
standardized patient assessment
instrument that would include the
collection for quality measure data. A
few commenters reiterated the ACA
requirements that any measures that are
part of the HQRP must be: ‘‘. . .
endorsed by the consensus-based entity
. . . . However . . . in the case of a
specified area or medical topic
determined appropriate by the Secretary
for which a feasible and practical
measure has not been endorsed by the
consensus-based entity, the Secretary
may specify measures that are not so
endorsed as long as due consideration is
given to measures that have been
endorsed or adopted by a consensusbased organization . . .’’ Commenters
requested that CMS keep this statutory
requirement in mind when developing
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and adopting measures for the HQRP. A
few commenters asked that CMS be
mindful of burden when considering
new quality measures for adoption since
quality data collection requires
significant time and effort by providers.
One commenter expressed concern
about burden of data collection efforts,
especially for small non-profit
providers.
Response: CMS appreciates
commenters’ input and
recommendations for future measure
development areas for the HQRP. We
plan to continue developing the HQRP
to respond to the measure gaps
identified by the Measures Application
Partnership and others, and align
measure development with the National
Quality Strategy and the CMS Quality
Strategy. We will take these comments
into consideration in developing and
implementing measures for future
inclusion in the HQRP. CMS would like
to take this opportunity to respond to
commenters’ concerns about the claimsbased measure concepts outlined in the
proposed rule, as well as commenters’
concerns about using claims as a data
source for quality performance
measures. CMS appreciates
commenters’ concerns about linking any
claims-based utilization or pattern of
care measures with quality of care prior
to implementation of any such measure
in the HQRP. As noted by one
commenter, developing and adopting
measures that benefit patient outcomes
and do not lead to negative unintended
consequences is of the utmost
importance to CMS. CMS convened a
Technical Expert Panel (TEP) in May
2015 to inform the development of these
measures under consideration, and
linking these claims-based measure
concepts to quality of care was an issue
discussed by the TEP. Throughout the
measure development process, CMS
will conduct continued quantitative and
qualitative analysis to determine
correlation between these measure
concepts and quality of care. CMS
agrees that establishing a relationship
between a measure concept and quality
of care is a vital consideration in the
measure development process. CMS
submits all candidate measures for the
HQRP for review by the Measure
Applications Partnership (MAP), a
public-private partnership convened by
the National Quality Forum (NQF) and
takes the MAP input into consideration
in the measure development and
implementation process. Per the
requirements set forth in the ACA, CMS
also re-iterates that our intent is to adopt
measures that have been endorsed by
NQF if at all possible. For more
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information on these measure concepts,
CMS encourages readers to review the
Measures Under Consideration (MUC)
list and the MAP report, which are both
published annually. More information
on the MUC list and MAP report, as
they relate to statutory requirements for
pre-rulemaking can be found on the
CMS Web site: https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-PatientAssessment-Instruments/Quality
Measures/Pre-Rule-Making.html. Lastly,
with respect to commenters’ concerns
about burden, CMS thanks the
commenters for taking the time to
express these views and suggestions.
CMS attempts to reduce the regulatory
burden of our quality reporting
programs to the greatest extent possible.
As required by the Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA) of 1995, any new
data collection efforts or extensions of
ongoing data collection efforts are
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) to ensure that federal
agencies do not overburden the public
with federally sponsored data
collections.
6. Form, Manner, and Timing of Quality
Data Submission
a. Background
Section 1814(i)(5)(C) of the Act
requires that each hospice submit data
to the Secretary on quality measures
specified by the Secretary. Such data
must be submitted in a form and
manner, and at a time specified by the
Secretary. Section 1814(i)(5)(A)(i) of the
Act requires that beginning with the FY
2014 and for each subsequent FY, the
Secretary shall reduce the market basket
update by 2 percentage points for any
hospice that does not comply with the
quality data submission requirements
with respect to that FY.
b. Proposed Policy for New Facilities To
Begin Submitting Quality Data
In the FY 2015 Hospice Wage Index
and Payment Rate Update final rule (79
FR 50488) we finalized a policy stating
that any hospice that receives its CCN
notification letter on or after November
1 of the preceding year involved is
excluded from any payment penalty for
quality reporting purposes for the
following FY. For example, if a hospice
provider receives its CMS Certification
Number (CCN) (also known as the
Medicare Provider Number) notification
letter on November 2, 2015 they would
not be required to submit quality data
for the current reporting period ending
December 31, 2015 (which would affect
the FY 2017 APU). In this instance, the
hospice would begin with the next
reporting period beginning January 1,
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2016 and all subsequent years.
However, if a hospice provider receives
their CCN notification letter on October
31, 2015, they would be required to
submit quality data for the current
reporting period ending December 31,
2015 (which would affect the FY 2017
APU) and all subsequent years. This
requirement was codified at § 418.312.
We proposed to modify our policies
for the timing of new providers to begin
reporting to CMS. Beginning with the
FY 2018 payment determination and for
each subsequent payment
determination, we proposed that a new
hospice be responsible for HQRP quality
data reporting beginning on the date
they receive their CCN notification letter
from CMS. Under this proposal,
hospices would be responsible for
reporting quality data on patient
admissions beginning on the date they
receive their CCN notification.
Currently, new hospices may
experience a lag between Medicare
certification and receipt of their actual
CCN Number. Since hospices cannot
submit data to the Quality Improvement
and Evaluation System (QIES)
Assessment Submission and Processing
(ASAP) system without a valid CCN
Number, CMS proposed that new
hospices begin collecting HIS quality
data beginning on the date they receive
their CCN notification letter by CMS.
We believe this policy will provide
sufficient time for new hospices to
establish appropriate collection and
reporting mechanisms to submit the
required quality data to CMS. We
invited public comment on this
proposal that a new hospice be required
to begin reporting quality data under
HQRP beginning on the date they
receive their CCN notification letter
from CMS.
Summaries of the public comments
and our responses to comments that a
new hospice be required to begin
reporting quality data under HQRP
beginning on the date they receive their
CCN notification from CMS are
provided below:
Comment: CMS received several
comments regarding the proposal for
new hospices to begin reporting quality
data under the HQRP beginning on the
date they receive their CCN notification
letter from CMS. The vast majority of
commenters expressed support for this
proposal since it provides a clear start
date for HIS reporting, and allows
sufficient time for hospices to establish
processes for collection and submission
of HIS data.
Response: CMS appreciates
commenters support for this proposal.
Comment: Two commenters suggested
alternative policies for new facilities to
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begin reporting quality data to CMS.
One commenter recommended that the
submission policy require facilities to
collect data during the period leading
up to Medicare certification and begin
submitting their data as soon as they
receive their CCN. Another commenter
suggested that, to minimize the risk of
penalties due to issues such as opening
the CCN notification letter a day after it
is received, the submission policy
should require facilities to begin data
collection at the start of the month
following the CCN notification.
Response: In response to the
commenter’s suggestion to begin report
data during the period leading up to
Medicare certification and as soon as
they receive their CCN, CMS would like
to clarify the reasoning for our proposal
for new providers to begin reporting HIS
data on the date they receive their CCN
notification letter. CMS proposed that
providers begin reporting HIS data on
the date they receive their CCN
notification letter since hospices cannot
register for the relevant QIES ASAP
accounts needed to submit HIS data
without a valid CCN. Thus, requiring
quality data reporting beginning on the
date the hospice receives their CCN
notification letter aligns CMS policy for
requirements for new providers with the
functionality of the HIS data submission
system (QIES ASAP). CMS would like to
further clarify our proposal for new
providers, including how our proposal
in this year’s proposed rule intersects
with prior policies for new hospices.
There are two considerations for
providers to keep in mind with respect
to HIS reporting; the first is when
providers should begin reporting HIS
data, the second is when providers will
be subject to the potential two (2)
percentage point APU reduction for
failure to comply with HQRP
requirements. CMS would like to clarify
that, as stated in our proposal, providers
are required to begin reporting data on
the date that they receive their CCN
notification letter. However, if the CCN
notification letter were received on or
after November 1st, they would not be
subject to any financial penalty for
failure to comply with HQRP
requirements for the relevant reporting
year. For example, if a provider receives
their CCN notification letter on
November 5th, 2015, that provider
should begin submitting HIS data for
patient admissions occurring on or after
November 5th, 2015. However, since the
hospice received their CCN notification
letter after November 1st, they would
not be evaluated for, or subject to any
payment penalties for the relevant FY
APU update (which in this instance is
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the FY 2017 APU, which is associated
with patient admissions occurring 1/1/
15–12/31/15). This proposed policy
allows CMS to receive HIS data on all
patient admissions on or after the date
a hospice receives their CCN
notification letter, while at the same
time allowing hospices flexibility and
time to establish the necessary accounts
for data submission, before they are
subject to the potential APU reduction
for a given reporting year. Finally, to
address the commenter’s concern about
providers being subject to payment
penalties if they open the CCN
notification letter the day after it is
received, CMS believes our proposed
policy grants providers ample time to
establish the necessary accounts and
operating systems for HIS data
collection and submission, since there is
often a significant lag time between the
Medicare CCN application process and
receipt of a provider’s CCN Notification
letter.
Comment: Finally, one commenter
requested clarification on how the date
the CCN notification letter was received
would be verified by CMS.
Response: CMS would like to clarify
that the ‘‘date CCN notification letter is
received’’ would be the date listed in
the letterhead of the CCN Notification
Letter. This date is tracked by the
Medicare Administrative Contractors
(MACs) and is verifiable in MAC
records.
Final Action: After consideration of
the comments, we are finalizing our
proposal that new providers be required
to begin reporting quality data under for
the HQRP beginning on the date they
receive their CCN Notification Letter
from CMS.
c. Previously Finalized Data Submission
Mechanism, Collection Timelines and
Submission Deadlines for the FY 2017
Payment Determination
In the FY 2015 Hospice Wage Index
final rule (79 FR 50486) we finalized our
policy requiring that, for the FY 2017
reporting requirements, hospices must
complete and submit HIS records for all
patient admissions to hospice on or after
July 1, 2014. Electronic submission is
required for all HIS records. Although
electronic submission of HIS records is
required, hospices do not need to have
an electronic medical record to
complete or submit HIS data. In the FY
2014 Hospice Wage Index (78 FR 48258)
we finalized that, to complete HIS
records, providers can use either the
Hospice Abstraction Reporting Tool
(HART) software, which is free to
download and use, or a vendor-designed
software. HART provides an alternative
option for hospice providers to collect
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and maintain facility, patient, and HIS
Record information for subsequent
submission to the QIES ASAP system.
Once HIS records are complete,
electronic HIS files must be submitted
to CMS via the QIES ASAP system.
Electronic data submission via the QIES
ASAP system is required for all HIS
submissions; there are no other data
submission methods available. Hospices
have 30 days from a patient admission
or discharge to submit the appropriate
HIS record for that patient through the
QIES ASAP system. CMS will continue
to make HIS completion and submission
software available to hospices at no cost.
We provided details on data collection
and submission timing at https://www.
cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-InitiativesPatient-Assessment-Instruments/
Hospice-Quality-Reporting/HospiceItem-Set-HIS.html.
The QIES ASAP system provides
reports upon successful submission and
processing of the HIS records. The final
validation report may serve as evidence
of submission. This is the same data
submission system used by nursing
homes, inpatient rehabilitation
facilities, home health agencies, and
long-term care hospitals for the
submission of Minimum Data Set
Version 3.0 (MDS 3.0), Inpatient
Rehabilitation Facility—Patient
Assessment Instrument (IRF–PAI),
Outcome Assessment Information Set
(OASIS), and Long-Term Care Hospital
Continuity Assessment Record &
Evaluation Data Set (LTCH CARE),
respectively. We have provided
hospices with information and details
about use of the HIS through postings
on the HQRP Web page, Open Door
Forums, announcements in the CMS
MLN Connects Provider e-News (ENews), and provider training.
d. Proposed Data Submission Timelines
and Requirements for FY 2018 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
Hospices are evaluated for purposes
of the quality reporting program based
on whether or not they submit data, not
on their substantive performance level
with respect to the required quality
measures. In order for CMS to
appropriately evaluate the quality
reporting data received by hospice
providers, it is essential HIS data be
received in a timely manner.
The submission date for any given
HIS record is defined as the date on
which a provider submits the completed
record. The submission date is the date
on which the completed record is
submitted and accepted by the QIES
ASAP system. Beginning with the FY
2018 payment determination, we
proposed that hospices must submit all
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HIS records within 30 days of the Event
Date, which is the patient’s admission
date for HIS-Admission records or
discharge date for HIS-Discharge
records.
• For HIS-Admission records, the
submission date should be no later than
the admission date plus 30 calendar
days. The submission date can be equal
to the admission date, or no greater than
30 days later. The QIES ASAP system
will issue a warning on the Final
Validation Report if the submission date
is more than 30 days after the patient’s
admission date.
• For HIS-Discharge records, the
submission date should be no later than
the discharge date plus 30 calendar
days. The submission date can be equal
to the discharge date, or no greater than
30 days later. The QIES ASAP system
will issue a warning on the Final
Validation Report if the submission date
is more than 30 days after the patient’s
discharge date.
The QIES ASAP system validation
edits are designed to monitor the
timeliness and ensure that providers
submitted records conform to the HIS
data submission specifications.
Providers are notified when timing
criteria have not been met by warnings
that appear on their Final Validation
Reports. A standardized data collection
approach that coincides with timely
submission of data is essential in order
to establish a robust quality reporting
program and ensure the scientific
reliability of the data received. We
invited comments on the proposal that
hospices must submit all HIS records
within 30 days of the Event Date, which
is the patient’s admission date for HISAdmission records or discharge date for
HIS-Discharge records.
Summaries of the public comments
and our responses to comments on the
proposed data submission timelines and
requirements for FY 2018 payment
determination and subsequent years are
provided below:
Comment: CMS received several
comments regarding our proposal that
hospices must submit all HIS records
within 30 days of the Event Date. All
commenters were supportive of this
proposed submission timeline. One
commenter agreed that timely
submission of HIS data is necessary to
facilitate CMS evaluation of HIS data
and hospices’ performance on quality
measures.
Response: CMS appreciates
commenters’ support for our proposal
that hospices must submit all HIS
records within 30 days of the event date.
Comment: Another commenter
addressed what they felt were
inconsistencies between the CMS billing
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practices and some of the requirements
for HIS reporting. The commenter also
noted the burden created by these
discrepancies for providers. This
commenter urges CMS to consider
minimizing differences across various
CMS systems when developing new
policies.
Response: CMS thanks the commenter
for their concern regarding
discrepancies between HIS reporting
requirements and billing requirements.
We believe that the provider is referring
to HIS reporting requirements that are
established and communicated to the
provider community via sub-regulatory
channels. This would include policies
and guidelines regarding defining an
‘‘admission’’ and ‘‘discharge’’ for the
purposes of HIS reporting, and reporting
HIS data in the case of special
circumstances, such as traveling
patients. These policies and guidelines
are released by CMS through subregulatory mechanisms, including the
HIS Manual and HIS trainings. CMS
would like to clarify that the process for
updating sub-regulatory guidance is
based on questions received through the
Help Desk and feedback from the
provider community received through
other communication channels, such as
ODFs and listening sessions. CMS takes
these considerations into account when
updating guidance in the HIS Manual,
HIS trainings, and other documents
such as FAQs and Fact Sheets.
Comment: Two commenters requested
that CMS consider changing or
removing the completion timelines for
HIS records. One commenter noted that
completion deadlines add to hospices’
administrative burden for HIS data
collection and do not facilitate
compliance with submission deadline
requirements.
Response: CMS appreciates
commenters input on the value of the
completion deadlines. Current subregulatory guidance produced by CMS
(for example, HIS Manual, HIS
trainings) state that the completion
deadlines for HIS records are 14 days
from the Event Date for HIS-Admission
records and 7 days from the Event Date
for HIS-Discharge records. Based on
commenter input, CMS would like to
clarify that the completion deadlines
continue to reflect CMS guidance only;
these guidelines are not statutorily
specified and are not designated
through regulation. These guidelines are
intended to offer clear direction to
hospice agencies in regards to the timely
submission of HIS-Admission and HISDischarge records. The completion
deadlines define only the latest possible
date on which a hospice should
complete each HIS record. This
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guidance is meant to better align HIS
completion processes with clinical
workflow processes however, hospices
may develop alternative internal
policies to complete HIS records.
Although it is at the discretion of the
hospice to develop internal policies for
completing HIS records, CMS continues
to recommend that providers complete
and attempt to submit HIS records early,
prior to the proposed submission
deadline of 30 days. Completing and
attempting to submit records early
allows providers ample time to address
any technical issues encountered in the
QIES ASAP submission process, such as
correcting fatal error messages.
Completing and attempting to submit
records early will ensure that providers
are able to comply with the proposed 30
day submission deadline. HQRP
guidance documents, including the
CMS HQRP Web site, HIS Manual, HIS
trainings, Frequently Asked Questions
(FAQs), and Fact Sheets continue to
offer the most up-to-date CMS guidance
to assist providers in the successful
completion and submission of HIS
records. Availability of updated
guidance will be communicated to
providers through the usual HQRP
communication channels.
Final Action: After consideration of
the comments, we are finalizing our
proposal that hospices must submit all
records within 30 days of the Event Date
as proposed.
e. Proposed HQRP Data Submission and
Compliance Thresholds for the FY 2018
Payment Determination and Subsequent
Years
In order to accurately analyze quality
reporting data received by hospice
providers, it is imperative we receive
ongoing and timely submission of all
HIS-Admission and HIS-Discharge
records. To date, the timeliness criteria
for submission of HIS-Admission and
HIS-Discharge records has never been
proposed and finalized through
rulemaking process. We believe this
matter should be addressed by defining
a clear standard for timeliness and
compliance at this time. In response to
input from our stakeholders seeking
additional specificity related to HQRP
compliance affecting FY payment
determinations and, due to the
importance of ensuring the integrity of
quality data submitted to CMS, we
proposed to set specific HQRP
thresholds for timeliness of submission
of hospice quality data beginning with
data affecting the FY 2018 payment
determination and subsequent years.
Beginning with the FY 2018 payment
determination and subsequent FY
payment determinations, we proposed
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that all HIS records must be submitted
within 30 days of the Event Date, which
is the patient’s admission date or
discharge date. To coincide with this
requirement, we proposed to establish
an incremental threshold for
compliance with this timeliness
requirement; the proposed threshold
would be implemented over a 3 year
period. To be compliant with timeliness
requirements, we proposed that
hospices would have to submit no less
than 70 percent of their total number of
HIS-Admission and HIS-Discharge
records by no later than 30 days from
the Event Date for the FY 2018 APU
determination. The timeliness threshold
would be set at 80 percent for the FY
2019 APU determination and at 90
percent for the FY 2020 APU
determination and subsequent years.
The threshold corresponds with the
overall amount of HIS records received
from each provider that fall within the
established 30 day submission
timeframes. Our ultimate goal is to
require all hospices to achieve a
timeliness requirement compliance rate
of 90 percent or more.
To summarize, we proposed to
implement the timeliness threshold
requirement beginning with all HIS
admission and discharge records that
occur on or after January 1, 2016, in
accordance with the following schedule.
• Beginning on or after January 1,
2016 to December 31, 2016, hospices
must submit at least 70 percent of all
required HIS records within the 30 day
submission timeframe for the year or be
subject to a 2 percentage point reduction
to their market basket update for FY
2018.
• Beginning on or after January 1,
2017 to December 31, 2017, hospices
must score at least 80 percent for all HIS
records received within the 30 day
submission timeframe for the year or be
subject to a 2 percentage point reduction
to their market basket update for FY
2019.
• Beginning on or after January 1,
2018 to December 31, 2018, hospices
must score at least 90 percent for all HIS
records received within the 30 day
submission timeframe for the year or be
subject to a 2 percentage point reduction
to their market basket update for FY
2020.
We invited public comment on our
proposal to implement the new data
submission and compliance threshold
requirement, as described previously,
for the HQRP. Summaries of the public
comments and our responses to
comments are provided below:
Comment: CMS received many
comments regarding the proposed
establishment of data submission and
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compliance thresholds for FY2018
payment determinations and for
subsequent years. All commenters but
one were supportive of CMS’s proposal.
Commenters noted that the proposed
thresholds seemed reasonable and
achievable given current experience
with HIS submission and agreed with
the incremental nature of the threshold.
Response: CMS appreciates
commenters’ support of our proposed
compliance thresholds. As stated in the
proposed rule, we agree that timely
submission of data is necessary to
accurately analyze quality data received
by providers. CMS is pleased that
commenters find the proposed
thresholds feasible given their current
experience. To support feasibility of
achieving these proposed compliance
thresholds, CMS’s measure
development contractor conducted
some preliminary analysis of Quarter 3
and Quarter 4 HIS data from 2014.
According to preliminary analysis, the
vast majority of hospices (92 percent)
would have met the compliance
thresholds at 70 percent. Moreover, 88
percent and 78 percent of hospices
would have met the compliance
thresholds at 80 percent and 90 percent,
respectively. CMS believes this analysis
is further evidence that these proposed
compliance thresholds are reasonable
and achievable by hospice providers.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS not implement
the proposed timeliness criteria and
data submission and compliance
threshold until CMS develops
appropriate reporting tools to allow
hospice providers to determine their
compliance statistics in CMS’s system of
records. This provider stated that, at the
present time, CMS systems do now
allow providers to monitor their
performance with respect to timely
submission of records. Another
commenter supported CMS’s proposal,
but recommended a performance report
be made available to hospices before the
data submission and compliance
thresholds are implemented.
Response: CMS agrees with
commenters that having a reporting
system that allows providers to monitor
the timeliness of HIS record submission
is important. However, CMS would like
to clarify that the current reports
available to providers in the CASPER
system do allow providers to track the
number of HIS records that are
submitted within the 30 day submission
timeframe. Currently, submitting an HIS
record past the 30 day submission
timeframe results in a non-fatal
(warning) error. In April 2015, CMS
made available three (3) new Hospice
Reports in CASPER, which include
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reports that can list HIS Record Errors
by Field by Provider and HIS records
with a specific error number. CMS will
consider expanding this functionality in
the future to tailor reporting functions to
the exact data submission and
compliance thresholds.
Comment: CMS received two
comments related to the calculation of
the compliance thresholds. One
commenter appreciated that CMS is
proposing an extension and exemptions
process that would afford hospices an
opportunity to request an extension or
exemption from the 30 day submission
timeframe for extenuating
circumstances. Another commenter
requested that CMS clarify the
definition of a ‘‘successful’’ submission
in the case of modification and
inactivation requests.
Response: CMS appreciates
commenters’ requests for clarification.
CMS would like to clarify the
methodology that would be used for
calculating the proposed 70 percent/80
percent/90 percent compliance
thresholds. In general, CMS would
include HIS records (HIS-Admission
and HIS-Discharge) submitted for
patient admissions and discharges
occurring during the reporting period in
the denominator of the compliance
threshold calculation. The numerator of
the compliance threshold calculation
would include any records from the
denominator that were submitted within
the 30 day submission deadline. In
response to commenters’ concerns about
extension and exemptions and
modification and inactivation requests,
CMS would like to clarify that the
aforementioned methodology would be
appropriately adjusted for cases where
hospices were granted extensions/
exemptions, and instances of
modification/inactivation requests so
that these instances did not ‘‘count
against’’ providers in the proposed
compliance threshold calculation.
Comment: Finally, CMS received one
comment requesting CMS provide
education about the proposed data
submission and compliance thresholds.
Response: CMS appreciates the
commenters’ request for education and
outreach about new requirements. CMS
would like to reiterate that rulemaking
is the official process through which
new requirements are proposed,
finalized, and communicated to the
provider community. In addition, as
further details of the data submission
and compliance threshold are
determined by CMS, we anticipate
communicating these details through
the regular HQRP communication
channels, including Open Door Forums,
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webinars, listening sessions, memos,
email notification, and web postings.
Final Action: After consideration of
comments, and given the clarification
above, CMS is finalizing our proposal to
implement the new data submission and
compliance thresholds for the FY 2018
payment determination and subsequent
FY payment determinations.
7. HQRP Submission Exemption and
Extension Requirements for the FY 2017
Payment Determination and Subsequent
Years
In the FY 2015 Hospice Wage Index
and Payment Rate Update final rule (79,
FR 50488), we finalized our proposal to
allow hospices to request and for CMS
to grant exemptions/extensions with
respect to the reporting of required
quality data when there are
extraordinary circumstances beyond the
control of the provider. When an
extension/exemption is granted, a
hospice will not incur payment
reduction penalties for failure to comply
with the requirements of the HQRP. For
the FY 2016 payment determination and
subsequent payment determinations, a
hospice may request an extension/
exemption of the requirement to submit
quality data for a specified time period.
In the event that a hospice requests an
extension/exemption for quality
reporting purposes, the hospice would
submit a written request to CMS. In
general, exemptions and extensions will
not be granted for hospice vendor
issues, fatal error messages preventing
record submission, or staff error.
In the event that a hospice seeks to
request an exemptions or extension for
quality reporting purposes, the hospice
must request an exemption or extension
within 30 days of the date that the
extraordinary circumstances occurred
by submitting the request to CMS via
email to the HQRP mailbox at
HQRPReconsiderations@cms.hhs.gov.
Exception or extension requests sent to
CMS through any other channel would
not be considered as a valid request for
an exception or extension from the
HQRP’s reporting requirements for any
payment determination. In order to be
considered, a request for an exemption
or extension must contain all of the
finalized requirements as outlined on
our Web site at https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-PatientAssessment-Instruments/
HospiceQuality-Reporting/.
If a provider is granted an exemption
or extension, timeframes for which an
exemption or extension is granted will
be applied to the new timeliness
requirement so providers are not
penalized. If a hospice is granted an
exemption, we will not require that the
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hospice submit any quality data for a
given period of time. If we grant an
extension to a hospice, the hospice will
still remain responsible for submitting
quality data collected during the
timeframe in question, although we will
specify a revised deadline by which the
hospice must submit this quality data.
This process does not preclude us
from granting extensions/exemptions to
hospices that have not requested them
when we determine that an
extraordinary circumstance, such as an
act of nature, affects an entire region or
locale. We may grant an extension/
exemption to a hospice if we determine
that a systemic problem with our data
collection systems directly affected the
ability of the hospice to submit data. If
we make the determination to grant an
extension/exemption to hospices in a
region or locale, we will communicate
this decision through routine
communication channels to hospices
and vendors, including, but not limited
to, Open Door Forums, ENews and
notices on https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-PatientAssessment-Instruments/HospiceQuality-Reporting/. We proposed to
codify the HQRP Submission Exemption
and Extension Requirements at
§ 418.312.
Summaries of public comments and
our responses to comments on our
proposal to codify the HQRP submission
exemption and extension requirements
are provided below:
Comment: CMS received several
comments related to our previously
finalized policy for extensions and
exemptions. A few commenters had
concerns about the process for
requesting an extension or exemption,
especially in the case of a widespread
natural disaster. These commenters
requested that CMS be able to accept
requests for extensions and exemptions
via means other than email. These
commenters noted that in instances of
certain widespread natural disasters,
such as Hurricane Sandy or Hurricane
Katrina, providers would not have been
able to email CMS within 30 days of the
event date. Commenters requested that
CMS accept mail and verbal extension
or exemption requests from providers,
or that CMS extend the submission
timeframe for requesting extensions or
exemptions from 30 days to 90 days.
Response: CMS appreciates the
commenters’ concern about the process
for requesting an extension or
exemption in the circumstance of an
extreme natural disaster. We refer
readers to the extension and exemption
policy that was finalized in the FY 2015
Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate
Update final rule. Additionally, we re-
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iterate our policy that in case of an
extraordinary circumstance, such as an
act of natural disaster similar to
Hurricanes Sandy and Katrina, CMS
may grant extensions/exemptions to an
entire region or locale without the need
for providers to request an extension/
exemption. As stated in our policy, if
CMS makes a determination to grant an
extension/exemption to an entire locale,
we will communicate this decision
through routine communication
channels, such as through ODFs, email
notification, and web postings.
Comment: CMS received two other
comments about our previously
finalized policy for extensions and
exemptions. These two commenters
requested that CMS consider revision of
the criteria for granting an extension or
exemptions to hospices that experience
technological problems. These
commenters noted that in some rare
circumstances, a hospice may have
collected and attempted to submit HIS
data, but HIS record submissions were
unsuccessful. One of the commenters
also noted situations where an entire
hospice’s EHR is nonfunctional for a
time due to issues with the vendor’s
cloud.
Response: CMS appreciates the
commenters’ concern about our policy
for extensions and exemption in the
case of technological difficulty. We refer
readers to the extension and exemption
policy that was finalized in the FY 2015
Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate
Update final rule. In addition, we would
like to re-iterate the availability of other
reporting and submission systems that
are accessible to providers who may be
experiencing technological difficulties.
First, CMS would like to highlight the
availability of final validation reports
that are provided upon submission of
records to the QIES ASAP system. These
final validation reports indicate whether
attempted HIS record submissions were
successful. CMS highly recommends
providers review the final validation
report for all HIS submissions to ensure
that attempted record submissions are
successful. If providers are experiencing
issues with record rejections and fatal
errors, they can contact the appropriate
Help Desk for assistance. Help Desk
contact information can be found on the
CMS HQRP Web site: https://www.cms.
gov/Medicare/Quality-InitiativesPatient-Assessment-Instruments/
Hospice-Quality-Reporting/HelpDesks.html. Second, CMS would like to
re-iterate the availability of the HART
software. The HART software is free
software made available by CMS that all
providers can use as an alternative to
vendor-designed software to maintain
facility, patient, and HIS record
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information for subsequent submission
to QIES ASAP. All providers can
download and use HART, and CMS
recommends that all providers
download HART so that the software is
available to use as an alternative, should
a provider experience issues with
vendor-designed software. More
information on HART can be found on
the CMS HQRP Web site: https://www.
cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-InitiativesPatient-Assessment-Instruments/
Hospice-Quality-Reporting/HISTechnical-Information.html. Finally,
CMS re-iterates our policy to grant an
extension/exemptions to hospices that
have not requested them in the case of
systemic problems with CMS data
collection systems that directly affect
the ability of hospices to submit data.
Final Action: After consideration of
comments, and given the clarification
above, CMS is finalizing our proposal to
codify the HQRP Submission Extension
and Exemption Requirements at
§ 418.312.
8. Hospice CAHPS Participation
Requirements for the 2018 APU and
2019 APU
In the FY 2015 Hospice Wage Index
and Payment Rate Update final rule (79
FR 50452), we stated that CMS would
start national implementation of the
CAHPS® Hospice Survey as of January
1, 2015. We started national
implementation of this survey as
planned. The CAHPS® Hospice Survey
is a component of CMS’ Hospice Quality
Reporting Program that emphasizes the
experiences of hospice patients and
their primary caregivers listed in the
hospice patients’ records. Measures
from the survey will be submitted to the
National Quality Forum (NQF) for
endorsement as hospice quality
measures. We referred readers to our
extensive discussion of the Hospice
Experience of Care Survey in the
Hospice Wage Index FY 2015 final rule
for a description of the measurements
involved and their relationship to the
statutory requirement for hospice
quality reporting (79 FR 50450 also refer
to 78 FR 48261).
a. Background and Description of the
Survey
The CAHPS® Hospice Survey is the
first national hospice experience of care
survey that includes standard survey
administration protocols that allow for
fair comparisons across hospices.
CMS developed the CAHPS® Hospice
Survey with input from many
stakeholders, including other
government agencies, industry
stakeholders, consumer groups and
other key individuals and organizations
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involved in hospice care. The Survey
was designed to measure and assess the
experiences of hospice patients and
their informal caregivers (family or
friends). The goals of the survey are to:
• Produce comparable data on
patients’ and caregivers’ perspectives of
care that allow objective and meaningful
comparisons between hospices on
domains that are important to
consumers;
• Create incentives for hospices to
improve their quality of care through
public reporting of survey results; and
• Hold hospice care providers
accountable by informing the public
about the providers’ quality of care.
The development process for the
survey began in 2012 and included a
public request for information about
publicly available measures and
important topics to measure (78 FR
5458); a review of the existing literature
on tools that measure experiences with
end-of-life care; exploratory interviews
with caregivers of hospice patients; a
technical expert panel attended by
survey development and hospice care
quality experts; cognitive interviews to
test draft survey content; incorporation
of public responses to Federal Register
notices (78 FR 48234) and a field test
conducted by CMS in November and
December 2013.
The CAHPS® Hospice Survey treats
the dying patient and his or her
informal caregivers (family members or
friends) as the unit of care. The Survey
seeks information from the informal
caregivers of patients who died while
enrolled in hospices. Survey-eligible
patients and caregivers are identified
using hospice records. Fielding
timelines give the respondent some
recovery time (2 to 3 months), while
simultaneously not delaying so long that
the respondent is likely to forget details
of the hospice experience. The survey
focuses on topics that are important to
hospice users and for which informal
caregivers are the best source for
gathering this information. Caregivers
are presented with a set of standardized
questions about their own experiences
and the experiences of the patient in
hospice care. During national
implementation of this survey, hospices
are required to conduct the survey to
meet the Hospice Quality Reporting
requirements, but individual caregivers
will respond only if they voluntarily
choose to do so. A survey Web site is
the primary information resource for
hospices and vendors
(www.hospicecahpssurvey.org). The
CAHPS® Hospice Survey is currently
available in English, Spanish,
Traditional Chinese, and Simplified
Chinese. CMS will provide additional
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translations of the survey over time in
response to suggestions for any
additional language translations.
Requests for additional language
translations should be made to the CMS
Hospice CAHPS® Project Team at
hospicesurvey@cms.hhs.gov.
In general, hospice patients and their
caregivers are eligible for inclusion in
the survey sample with the exception of
the following ineligible groups: Patients
who are under the age of 18 at the time
of their death; patients who died fewer
than 48 hours after last admission to
hospice care; patients for whom no
caregiver is listed or available, or for
whom caregiver contact information is
not known; patients whose primary
caregiver is a legal guardian unlikely to
be familiar with care experiences;
patients for whom the primary caregiver
has a foreign (Non-US or US Territory
address) home address; decedents or
caregivers of decedents who voluntarily
requested that they not be contacted
(those who sign ‘‘no publicity’’ requests
while under the care of hospice or
otherwise directly request not to be
contacted). Patients whose last
admission to hospice resulted in a live
discharge will also be excluded.
Identification of patients and caregivers
for exclusion will be based on hospice
administrative data. Additionally,
caregivers under the age of 18 are
excluded.
Hospices with fewer than 50 surveyeligible decedents/caregivers during the
prior calendar year are exempt from the
CAHPS® Hospice Survey data collection
and reporting requirements for payment
determination. Hospices with 50 to 699
survey-eligible decedents/caregivers in
the prior year will be required to survey
all cases. For hospices with 700 or more
survey-eligible decedents/caregivers in
the prior year, a sample of 700 will be
drawn under an equal-probability
design. Survey-eligible decedents/
caregivers are defined as that group of
decedent and caregiver pairs that meet
all the criteria for inclusion in the
survey sample.
We moved forward with a model of
national survey implementation, which
is similar to that of other CMS patient
experience of care surveys. Medicarecertified hospices are required to
contract with a third-party vendor that
is CMS-trained and approved to
administer the survey on their behalf. A
list of approved vendors can be found
at this Web site:
www.hospicecahpssurvey.org. Hospices
are required to contract with
independent survey vendors to ensure
that the data are unbiased and collected
by an organization that is trained to
collect this type of data. It is important
that survey respondents feel comfortable
sharing their experiences with an
interviewer not directly involved in
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providing the care. We have
successfully used this mode of data
collection in other settings, including
for Medicare-certified home health
agencies. The goal is to ensure that we
have comparable data across all
hospices.
Consistent with many other CMS
CAHPS® surveys that are publicly
reported on CMS Web sites, CMS will
publicly report hospice data when at
least 12 months of data are available, so
that valid comparisons can be made
across hospice providers in the United
States, to help patients, family and
friends choose a hospice program for
themselves or their loved ones.
b. Participation Requirements To Meet
Quality Reporting Requirements for the
FY 2018 APU
In section 3004(c) of the Affordable
Care Act, the Secretary is directed to
establish quality reporting requirements
for Hospice Programs. The CAHPS®
Hospice Survey is a component of the
CMS Hospice Quality Reporting
Requirements for the FY 2018 APU and
subsequent years.
The CAHPS® Hospice Survey
includes the measures detailed in Table
24. The individual survey questions that
comprise each measure are listed under
the measure. These measures are in the
process of being submitted to the
National Quality Forum (NQF).
TABLE 27—HOSPICE EXPERIENCE OF CARE SURVEY QUALITY MEASURES AND CONSTITUENT ITEMS
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Composite measures
Hospice team communication
• While your family member was in hospice care, how often did the hospice team keep you informed about when they would arrive to care
for your family member?
• While your family member was in hospice care, how often did the hospice team explain things in a way that was easy to understand?
• How often did the hospice team listen carefully to you when you talked with them about problems with your family member’s hospice
care?
• While your family member was in hospice care, how often did the hospice team keep you informed about your family member’s condition?
• While your family member was in hospice care, how often did the hospice team listen carefully to you?
Getting timely care
• While your family member was in hospice care, when you or your family member asked for help from the hospice team, how often did
you get help as soon as you needed it?
• How often did you get the help you needed from the hospice team during evenings, weekends, or holidays?
Treating family member with respect
• While your family member was in hospice care, how often did the hospice team treat your family member with dignity and respect?
• While your family member was in hospice care, how often did you feel that the hospice team really cared about your family member?
Providing emotional support
• While your family member was in hospice care, how much emotional support did you get from the hospice team?
• In the weeks after your family member died, how much emotional support did you get from the hospice team?
Getting help for symptoms
• Did your family member get as much help with pain as he or she needed?
• How often did your family member get the help he or she needed for trouble breathing?
• How often did your family member get the help he or she needed for trouble with constipation?
• How often did your family member get the help he or she needed from the hospice team for feelings of anxiety or sadness?
Getting hospice care training
• Did the hospice team give you the training you needed about what side effects to watch for from pain medicine?
• Did the hospice team give you the training you needed about if and when to give more pain medicine to your family member?
• Did the hospice team give you the training you needed about how to help your family member if he or she had trouble breathing?
• Did the hospice team give you the training you needed about what to do if your family member became restless or agitated?
Single Item Measures
Providing support for religious and spiritual beliefs
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TABLE 27—HOSPICE EXPERIENCE OF CARE SURVEY QUALITY MEASURES AND CONSTITUENT ITEMS—Continued
Composite measures
• (Support for religious or spiritual beliefs includes talking, praying, quiet time, or other ways of meeting your religious or spiritual needs.)
While your family member was in hospice care, how much support for your religious and spiritual beliefs did you get from the hospice
team?
Information continuity
• While your family member was in hospice care, how often did anyone from the hospice team give you confusing or contradictory information about your family member’s condition or care?
Understanding the side effects of pain medication
• Side effects of pain medicine include things like sleepiness. Did any member of the hospice team discuss side effects of pain medicine
with you or your family member?
Global Measures
Overall rating of hospice
• Using any number from 0 to 10, where 0 is the worst hospice care possible and 10 is the best hospice care possible, what number
would you use to rate your family member’s hospice care?
Recommend hospice
• Would you recommend this hospice to your friends and family?
To comply with CMS’s quality
reporting requirements for the FY 2018
APU, hospices will be required to
collect data using the CAHPS® Hospice
Survey. Hospices would be able to
comply by utilizing only CMS-approved
third party vendors that are in
compliance with the provisions at
§ 418.312(e). Ongoing monthly
participation in the survey is required
January 1, 2016 through December 31,
2016 for compliance with the FY 2018
APU.
Approved CAHPS® Hospice Survey
vendors will submit data on the
hospice’s behalf to the CAHPS® Hospice
Survey Data Center. The deadlines for
data submission occur quarterly and are
shown in Table 25 below. Deadlines are
the second Wednesday of the
submission months, which are August,
November, February, and May.
Deadlines are final; no late submissions
will be accepted. However, in the event
of extraordinary circumstances beyond
the control of the provider, the provider
will be able to request an exemption as
previously noted in the Quality
Measures for Hospice Quality Reporting
Program and Data Submission
Requirements for Payment Year FY 2016
and Beyond section. Hospice providers
are responsible for making sure that
their vendors are submitting Hospice
CAHPS Survey data in a timely manner.
TABLE 28—CAHPS® HOSPICE SURVEY DATA SUBMISSION DATES FY2017 APU, FY2018 APU, AND FY2019 APU
Sample months
(that is, month of death) 1
Quarterly data submission
deadlines 2
FY2017 APU
Dry Run January–March 2015 (Q1) ...............................................................................................................................
April–June 2015 (Q2) .....................................................................................................................................................
July–September 2015 (Q3) ............................................................................................................................................
October–December 2015 (Q4) .......................................................................................................................................
August 12, 2015.
November 11, 2015.3
February 10, 2016.
May 11, 2016.
FY2018 APU
January–March 2016 (Q1) ..............................................................................................................................................
April–June 2016 (Q2) .....................................................................................................................................................
July–September 2016 (Q3) ............................................................................................................................................
October–December 2016 (Q4) .......................................................................................................................................
August 10, 2016.
November 9, 2016.
February 8, 2017.
May 10, 2017.
FY2019 APU
January–March 2017 (Q1) ..............................................................................................................................................
April–June 2017 (Q2) .....................................................................................................................................................
July–September 2017 (Q3) ............................................................................................................................................
October–December 2017 (Q4) .......................................................................................................................................
August 9, 2017.
November 8, 2017.
February, 14, 2018.
May 9, 2018.
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1 Data collection for each sample month initiates two months following the month of patient death (for example, in April for deaths occurring in
January).
2 Data submission deadlines are the second Wednesday of the submission month.
3 Correction Notice published 80 FR 24222.
In the FY 2014 Hospice Wage Index
and Rate Update final rule, we stated
that we would exempt very small
hospices from CAHPS® Hospice Survey
requirements. We propose to continue
that exemption: Hospices that have
fewer than 50 survey-eligible decedents/
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caregivers in the period from January 1,
2015 through December 31, 2015 are
exempt from CAHPS® Hospice Survey
data collection and reporting
requirements for the 2018 APU. To
qualify for the survey exemption for the
FY 2018 APU, hospices must submit an
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exemption request form. This form will
be available on the CAHPS® Hospice
Survey Web site https://www.hospice
cahpssurvey.org. Hospices are required
to submit to CMS their total unique
patient count for the period of January
1, 2015 through December 31, 2015. The
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previously finalized due date for
submitting the exemption request form
for the FY 2018 APU is August 10, 2016
(79 FR 50493).
c. Participation Requirements To Meet
Quality Reporting Requirements for the
FY 2019 APU
To meet participation requirements
for the FY 2019 APU, we proposed that
hospices collect data on an ongoing
monthly basis from January 2017
through December 2017 (inclusive).
Data submission deadlines for the 2019
APU will be announced in future
rulemaking.
Hospices that have fewer than 50
survey-eligible decedents/caregivers in
the period from January 1, 2016 through
December 31, 2016 are exempt from
CAHPS® Hospice Survey data collection
and reporting requirements for the FY
2019 payment determination. To
qualify, hospices must submit an
exemption request form. This form will
be available in first quarter 2017 on the
CAHPS® Hospice Survey Web site
https://www.hospicecahpssurvey.org.
Hospices are required to submit to
CMS their total unique patient count for
the period of January 1, 2016 through
December 31, 2016. The due date for
submitting the exemption request form
for the FY 2018 APU is August 10, 2016
(Finalized 79 FR 50493).
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d. Annual Payment Update
The Affordable Care Act requires that
beginning with FY 2014 and each
subsequent fiscal year, the Secretary
shall reduce the market basket update
by 2 percentage points for any hospice
that does not comply with the quality
data submission requirements with
respect to that fiscal year, unless
covered by specific exemptions. Any
such reduction will not be cumulative
and will not be taken into account in
computing the payment amount for
subsequent fiscal years. In the FY 2015
Hospice Wage Index, we added the
CAHPS® Hospice Survey to the Hospice
Quality Reporting Program requirements
for the FY 2017 payment determination
and determinations for subsequent
years.
• To meet the HQRP requirements for
the FY 2018 payment determination,
hospices would collect survey data on a
monthly basis for the months of January
1, 2016 through December 31, 2016 to
qualify for the full APU.
• To meet the HQRP requirements for
the FY 2019 payment determination,
hospices would collect survey data on a
monthly basis for the months of January
1, 2017 through December 31, 2017 to
qualify for the full APU.
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e. CAHPS® Hospice Survey Oversight
Activities
We proposed to continue a
requirement that vendors and hospice
providers participate in CAHPS®
Hospice Survey oversight activities to
ensure compliance with Hospice
CAHPS® technical specifications and
survey requirements. The purpose of the
oversight activities is to ensure that
hospices and approved survey vendors
follow the CAHPS® Hospice Survey
technical specifications and thereby
ensure the comparability of CAHPS®
Hospice Survey data across hospices.
We proposed that the
reconsiderations and appeals process for
hospices failing to meet the Hospice
CAHPS® data collection requirements
would be part of the Reconsideration
and Appeals process already developed
for the Hospice Quality Reporting
program. We encourage hospices
interested in learning more about the
CAHPS® Hospice Survey to visit the
CAHPS® Hospice Survey Web site:
https://www.hospicecahpssurvey.org.
Comment: A commenter encouraged
CMS to compare scores on claims data
to Hospice CAHPS® data to verify
whether any of these are correlated with
caregiver perception of quality care.
Response: CMS plans to do a variety
of analyses after we have accumulated
at least four quarters of Hospice
CAHPS® data. We will consider
conducting an analysis of the
relationship of Hospice CAHPS® data to
other types of scores.
Comment: A commenter supports the
proposal related to the Hospice CAHPS®
Survey oversight activities.
Response: CMS thanks the commenter
for their support.
Comment: One commenter expressed
the belief that the hospice CAHPS®
survey was a mandate that placed an
unfunded burden on hospices. The
commenter requested that CMS consider
including an administrative
reimbursement mechanism in the final
rule to help cover these costs.
Response: The Hospice CAHPS®
survey follows the model that we
implement for other quality reporting
programs where CMS pays for the
federal implementation of the program,
the vendor training, monitoring, direct
oversight with site visits, technical
assistance to participating facilities, new
facilities with signing up assistance,
technical assistance to vendors, creation
and maintenance of the official Web site
with all survey materials, and the
hospice facilities pay for vendor
services. We have approved numerous
Hospice CAHPS® vendors and we
strongly recommend that hospices shop
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around and check out multiple vendors
to find the vendor that best meets their
needs and provides a good value to
them.
Comment: A commenter asks that
CMS clarify the role of the hospice
facility in meeting performance
standards for the Annual Payment
Update. The commenter asked if
hospices are responsible for making sure
that their vendors are submitting data in
a timely manner.
Response: In the FY 2015 Final Rule
(79 FR 50493), CMS stated: ‘‘Hospice
providers are responsible for making
sure that their vendors are submitting
data in a timely manner. CMS intends
that hospice providers are responsible
for making sure that their vendors
submit their Hospice CAHPS® Survey
data in a timely manner and in
compliance with the Hospice CAHPS®
data submission deadlines. The
CAHPS® Data Warehouse will provide
hospices with data submission reports
on the next business day after the
submission. Hospices will receive email
from the Warehouse each time a new
report is placed in their warehouse
folders letting them know that reports
are available. However, we encourage
hospices to work closely with their
vendors to ensure their data is
submitted in a timely manner. Please
note that the survey vendors are acting
on behalf of the hospice providers. This
is the same policy for other CAHPS®
surveys such as Hospital CAHPS® and
Home Health CAHPS®.
Comment: A commenter reminded
CMS of how challenging it is to capture
patient-reported data from our patient
population, which includes patients
who are incapacitated or near death.
They also reminded CMS of the
importance of selecting future measures
that matter to patients and reflect whole
person needs, including social, cultural,
and emotional dimensions.
Response: Currently CMS is not
considering a patient experience of care
survey where hospice patients are the
respondents. CMS agrees that
interviewing patients in the hospice
setting is extraordinarily difficult, for
both the interviewer and the patients.
Some difficulties in surveying patients
in this setting could include identifying
those who are cognitively able to answer
the survey questions and the patient’s
potential fear of retribution. It would
therefore be more feasible to collect
information from patients who are not
close to death. A sample composed only
of such patients is likely to reflect only
a portion of the entire hospice
experience. The CAHPS® Hospice
Survey considers the patient and
caregiver as a single unit of care. The
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Survey interviews caregivers of patients
who died while under hospice care. The
interviews occur 2–3 months after the
patient’s death. This allows the
caregiver to reflect upon and report
upon the entire hospice experience.
Final Action: After consideration of
comments, CMS is finalizing our
proposal as proposed.
9. HQRP Reconsideration and Appeals
Procedures for the FY 2016 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
In the FY 2015 Hospice Wage Index
and Payment Rate Update final rule (79
FR 50496), we notified hospice
providers on how to seek
reconsideration if they received a
noncompliance decision for the FY 2016
payment determination and subsequent
years. A hospice may request
reconsideration of a decision by CMS
that the hospice has not met the
requirements of the Hospice Quality
Reporting Program for a particular
period. Reporting compliance is
determined by successfully fulfilling
both the Hospice CAHPS® Survey
requirements and the HIS data
submission requirements.
We clarified that any hospice that
wishes to submit a reconsideration
request must do so by submitting an
email to CMS containing all of the
requirements listed on the HQRP Web
site at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Quality-Initiatives-Patient-AssessmentInstruments/Hospice-Quality-Reporting/
Reconsideration-Requests.html.
Electronic email sent to
HQRPReconsiderations@cms.hhs.gov is
the only form of submission that will be
accepted. Any reconsideration requests
received through any other channel
including U.S. postal service or phone
will not be considered as a valid
reconsideration request. We codified
this process at § 418.312. In addition,
we codified at § 418.306 that beginning
with FY 2014 and each subsequent FY,
the Secretary shall reduce the market
basket update by 2 percentage points for
any hospice that does not comply with
the quality data submission
requirements with respect to that FY
and solicited comments on all of the
proposals and the associated regulations
text at § 418.312 and in § 418.306 in
section VI.
In the past, only hospices found to be
non-compliant with the reporting
requirements set forth for a given
payment determination received a
notification of this finding along with
instructions for requesting
reconsideration in the form of a certified
United States Postal Service (USPS)
letter. In an effort to communicate as
quickly, efficiently, and broadly as
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possible with hospices regarding annual
compliance, we proposed additions to
our communications method regarding
annual notification of reporting
compliance in the HQRP. In addition to
sending a letter via regular USPS mail,
beginning with the FY 2017 payment
determination and for subsequent fiscal
years, we proposed to use the QIES
National System for Certification and
Survey Provider Enhanced Reports
(CASPER) Reporting as an additional
mechanism to communicate to hospices
regarding their compliance with the
reporting requirements for the given
reporting cycle. The electronic APU
letters would be accessed using the
CASPER Reporting Application.
Requesting access to the CMS systems is
performed in two steps. Details are
provided on the QIES Technical
Support Office Web site (direct link),
https://www.qtso.com/hospice.html.
Once successfully registered, access the
CMS QIES to Success Welcome page
https://web.qiesnet.org/qiestosuccess/
index.html and select the ‘‘CASPER
Reporting’’ link. Additional information
about how to access the letters will be
provided prior to the release of the
letters.
We proposed to disseminate
communications regarding the
availability of hospice compliance
reports in CASPER files through routine
channels to hospices and vendors,
including, but not limited to issuing
memos, emails, Medicare Learning
Network (MLN) announcements, and
notices on https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-PatientAssessment-Instruments/HospiceQuality-Reporting/ReconsiderationRequests.html.
We further proposed to publish a list
of hospices who successfully meet the
reporting requirements for the
applicable payment determination on
the HQRP Web site https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-PatientAssessment-Instruments/HospiceQuality-Reporting.html. We proposed
updating the list after reconsideration
requests are processed on an annual
basis.
We invited comments on the
proposals to add CASPER Reporting as
an additional communication
mechanism for the dissemination of
compliance notifications and to publish
a list of compliant hospices on the
HQRP Web site. Public comments and
our response to comments are
summarized below.
Comment: CMS received three
comments regarding our proposal to add
CASPER Reporting as an additional
communication mechanism for
dissemination of compliance
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notifications. All commenters were
supportive of this proposal. One
commenter noted that adding CASPER
as a communication mechanism will
facilitate timely reconsideration
requests, when appropriate.
Response: CMS appreciates
commenters’ support of our proposal to
add CASPER reporting as an additional
communication mechanism for
disseminating notifications of
compliance. CMS agrees that adding
CASPER as an additional reporting
mechanism would expedite
communication with providers and
facilitate the reconsideration process for
providers who wish to request
reconsideration.
Comment: CMS also received three
comments on our proposal to publish a
list of compliant hospices on the HQRP
Web site. All commenters were
supportive of this proposal; however,
one commenter did request clarification
from CMS on what information would
be posted on the list of compliant
providers. This commenter was also
concerned that CMS was proposing to
update the list after reconsideration
requests were processed on an annual
basis.
Response: CMS appreciates
commenters’ support of our proposal
and commenters’ requests for
clarification. CMS anticipates that the
proposed published list of compliant
hospices on the HQRP Web site would
include limited organizational data,
such as the name and location of the
hospice. With respect to the
commenters’ concern about updating
the list of compliant hospices after the
reconsideration period, CMS feels that
finalizing the list of compliant providers
for any given year is most appropriately
done after the final determination of
compliance is made. It is CMS’s intent
for the proposed published list of
compliant hospices to be as complete
and accurate as possible, giving
recognition to all providers who were
compliant with HQRP requirements for
that year. Finalizing the list after
requests for reconsideration are
reviewed and a final determination of
compliance is made allows for a more
complete and accurate listing of
compliant providers than developing
any such list prior to reconsideration.
Developing the list after the final
determination of compliance has been
made allows providers whose initial
determination of noncompliance was
reversed to be included in the list of
compliant hospices for that year. Thus,
CMS believes that finalizing the list of
compliant hospices annually, after the
reconsideration period will provide the
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most accurate listing of hospices
compliant with HQRP requirements.
Final Action: After consideration of
comments, we are finalizing our
proposal to add CASPER as an
additional communication mechanism
for disseminating notifications of
noncompliance, as well as our proposal
to publish a list of compliant hospices
on the HQRP Web site.
10. Public Display of Quality Measures
and Other Hospice Data for the HQRP
Under section 1814(i)(5)(E) of the Act,
the Secretary is required to establish
procedures for making any quality data
submitted by hospices available to the
public. The procedures must ensure that
a hospice would have the opportunity to
review the data regarding the hospice’s
respective program before it is made
public.
We recognize that public reporting of
quality data is a vital component of a
robust quality reporting program and are
fully committed to developing the
necessary systems for public reporting
of hospice quality data. We also
recognize that it is essential that the
data made available to the public be
meaningful and that comparing
performance between hospices requires
that measures be constructed from data
collected in a standardized and uniform
manner. Hospices have been required to
use a standardized data collection
approach (HIS) since July 1, 2014. Data
from July 1, 2014 onward is currently
being used to establish the scientific
soundness of the quality measures prior
to the onset of public reporting of the
seven quality measures implemented in
the HQRP. We believe it is critical to
establish the reliability and validity of
the quality measures prior to public
reporting in order to demonstrate the
ability of the quality measures to
distinguish the quality of services
provided. To establish reliability and
validity of the quality measures, at least
four quarters of data will be analyzed.
Typically, the first one or two quarters
of data reflect the learning curve of the
facilities as they adopt standardized
data collection procedures; these data
often are not used to establish reliability
and validity. We began data collection
in CY 2014; the data from CY 2014 for
Quarter 3 (Q3) will not be used for
assessing validity and reliability of the
quality measures. We are analyzing data
collected by hospices during Quarter 4
(Q4) CY 2014 and Q1–Q3 CY 2015.
Decisions about whether to report some
or all of the quality measures publicly
will be based on the findings of analysis
of the CY 2015 data.
In addition, the Affordable Care Act
requires that reporting be made public
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on a CMS Web site and that providers
have an opportunity to review their data
prior to public reporting. CMS will
develop the infrastructure for public
reporting, and provide hospices an
opportunity to review their quality
measure data prior to publicly reporting
information about the quality of care
provided by ‘‘Medicare-certified’’
hospice agencies throughout the nation.
CMS also plans to make available
provider-level feedback reports in the
CASPER system. These provider-level
feedback reports or ‘‘quality reports’’
will be separate from public reporting
and will be for provider viewing only,
for the purposes of internal provider
quality improvement. As is common in
other quality reporting programs,
quality reports would contain feedback
on facility-level performance on quality
metrics, as well as benchmarks and
thresholds. For the CY 2014 Reporting
Cycle, there were no quality reports
available in CASPER; however, CMS
anticipates that provider-level quality
reports will begin to be available
sometime in CY 2015. CMS anticipates
that providers would use the quality
reports as part of their Quality
Assessment and Performance
Improvement (QAPI) efforts.
As part of our ongoing efforts to make
healthcare more transparent, affordable,
and accountable, the HQRP is prepared
to post hospice data on a public data set,
the Medicare Provider Utilization and
Payment Data: Physician and Other
Supplier Public Use File located at
https://data.cms.hhs.gov. This site
includes information on services and
procedures provided to Medicare
beneficiaries by physicians and other
healthcare professionals and serves as a
helpful resource to the healthcare
community. A timeline for posting
hospice data on a public data set has not
been determined by CMS. Should a
timeline become available prior to the
next annual rulemaking cycle, details
would be announced via regular HQRP
communication channels, including
listening sessions, memos, email
notification, and Web postings.
Furthermore, to meet the requirement
for making such data public, we will
develop a CMS Compare Web site for
hospice, which will list hospice
providers geographically. Consumers
can search for all Medicare approved
hospice providers that serve their city or
zip code (which would include the
quality measures and CAHPS® Hospice
Survey results) and then find the
agencies offering the types of services
they need. Like other CMS Compare
Web sites, the Hospice Compare Web
site will feature a quality rating system
that gives each hospice a rating of
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between one (1) and five (5) stars.
Hospices will have prepublication
access to their own agency’s quality
data, which enables each agency to
know how it is performing before public
posting of data on the Compare Web
site. Decisions regarding how the rating
system will determine a providers star
rating and methods used for
calculations, as well as a proposed
timeline for implementation will be
announced via regular HQRP
communication channels, including
listening sessions, memos, email
notification, provider association calls,
Open Door Forums, and Web postings.
We will announce the timeline for
public reporting of quality measure data
in future rulemaking.
Summaries of public comments and
our responses to comments regarding
the public display of quality measures
and other hospice data for the HQRP are
provided below:
Comment: CMS received several
comments that were generally
supportive of public reporting of quality
measure data. Commenters noted that
they were in favor of CMS’s continued
efforts to assess quality and have
transparent reporting of results.
Commenters were also in favor of the
availability of provider-level quality
reports in CASPER, noting that the
availability of such reports is a way for
hospices to engage in benchmarking to
inform their QAPI efforts. Commenters
supported CMS’s movement towards
quality benchmarking and public
reporting since it supports a hospice’s
ability to identify and resolve
performance gaps while increasing
transparency and accountability in the
health care sector. While no
commenters were unsupportive of
public reporting or provider-level
feedback reports in general, several
commenters did have suggestions,
recommendations, and concerns about
specific aspects of public availability of
data.
Response: CMS appreciates
commenters’ support of public reporting
of quality measure data and the
availability of provider-level feedback
reports in CASPER. We address
commenters’ specific concerns with
respect to public reporting and
provider-level quality reports below.
Comment: CMS received a few
comments about the timing for public
reporting of quality data. One
commenter noted that although
continued measure development for
new measures is important, measure
development should not slow efforts to
provide timely feedback to hospices on
existing measures and public reporting
of any existing measures. Another
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commenter had concerns about the
unintended consequences of releasing
data too hastily. This commenter
suggested that public reporting of
hospice performance data occur
gradually and carefully to ensure the
data is accurate and presented in a
format that is meaningful and actionable
for both patients and physicians. The
commenter appreciated CMS’s efforts to
evaluate at least four quarters of data to
establish reliability and validity of the
quality measures prior to public
reporting. However, the commenter
noted their opinion that four quarters
worth of data is an insufficient
foundation on which to draw
conclusions about the accuracy of these
measures, especially given the newness
of these reporting requirements.
Another commenter supported CMS’s
plan to analyze four (4) quarters worth
of data to establish reliability and
validity of quality measures and ensure
accuracy of data before public reporting
begins.
Response: CMS appreciates
commenters’ concerns about the
timeline for public reporting of quality
data. CMS agrees with the one
commenter’s sentiment that, while
important, development of quality
measures for future use in the HQRP
should not delay public reporting or
provider-level feedback reports. CMS is
committed to ensuring the availability
of public and provider-level data as
soon as feasible, while ensuring that
data is analyzed for scientific soundness
and appropriateness for public
reporting. CMS understands the
unintended consequences of making
data available to the public before
comprehensive analyses have been
conducted. CMS assures commenters
that establishing the scientific
soundness of data is of the utmost
importance. In response to the
commenter’s concern about whether
four (4) quarters of data is sufficient to
establish reliability and validity of
quality measures, we agree with the
commenter that having sufficient
evidence to support the reliability and
validity of the measures is important
prior to public reporting. We also agree
that the data collected during the initial
phase of the required reporting may
reflect hospices’ learning curve. To take
this into account, as stated in the
proposed rule, the reliability and
validity testing will not use the data
collected during the first reporting
quarter (Q3, 2014). As stated in the
proposed rule, CMS will use the four
subsequent quarters of data (Q4 2014
and Q1–Q3 2015) for testing. Only
measures that show sufficient reliability
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and validity will be identified as
appropriate for public reporting.
Furthermore, reliability and validity
testing will be ongoing for all measures
implemented in the HQRP as more
quarters of data become available.
Comment: Another commenter
recommended that CMS delay public
reporting until results from measures
derived from the HIS and the CAHPS®
hospice survey is available. This
commenter felt that although the
concept of hospice has fairly wide
public recognition, knowledge about
hospice practice is minimal among the
public. The commenter noted that the
public may not be familiar with the
processes behind the measures derived
from HIS data, nor might the public be
able to understand the relationship of
those processes to quality of care.
Additionally, the commenter noted that
the HIS measures are limited in scope
and, presented alone, HIS data might
fall short of presenting a comprehensive
picture of hospice services. The
commenter recommended that CMS
delay public posting of data until
analysis of HIS and CAHPS® data has
been completed.
Response: CMS appreciates the
commenter’s feedback on public
reporting of HIS and CAHPS® data.
CMS plans to use an approach for
public reporting of these two data
sources that mirrors approaches used in
public reporting of quality data in other
quality reporting programs, such as
what is currently publicly displayed on
Nursing Home Compare, Physician
Compare, the Medicare Advantage Plan
Finder, Dialysis Facility Compare, and
Home Health Compare.
Comment: Two commenters suggested
that CMS take steps to understand and
develop the form, manner, and context
in which data would be presented to the
public. One commenter urged CMS that
prior to sharing these data with the
public, CMS should take time to
carefully analyze quality data to better
understand what types, and formats of
data are most valuable to patients and
providers. Another commenter
requested that CMS develop educational
material that explains hospice practice
to aid in interpretation of publicly
reported data.
Response: CMS agrees that any
publicly reported data should be
presented in a manner that is
meaningful and understandable by the
general public. CMS will take steps to
ensure that any publicly reported data is
displayed in an appropriate and
meaningful manner. CMS will again
mirror approaches used in other quality
reporting programs and will solicit
input from key stakeholders and
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technical experts in the development of
the presentation of publicly available
data, which includes a transparent
process that will contain multiple
opportunities for stakeholder input.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification from CMS about the
process for providers to review quality
measure data prior to public reporting,
specifically, what the purpose of this
process was.
Response: As stated in the proposed
rule, CMS will develop the
infrastructure for public reporting and
method for hospices to preview their
quality data prior to publicly reporting
any such information. Exact details and
reports will be forthcoming in future
rules.
Comment: CMS received several
comments regarding the availability of
provider-level quality reports in
CASPER. As noted above, commenters
were supportive of the availability of
these reports, though a few commenters
did have suggestions for CMS regarding
quality reports. CMS received three
comments about the timing of quality
reports in CASPER. One commenter
stated that CMS did not plan to make
quality reports available in CASPER
until 2020 or later. Another commenter
requested that CMS provide non-public
quarterly performance reports to
hospices that include benchmarking
data for at least one year before
publishing the results publicly on a
compare Web site. The commenter
stated that this one year period would
give hospices the chance to make
improvements in their performance
before data is publicly reported.
Another commenter urged CMS to
provide feedback reports as frequently
as possible and on a timely basis so that
hospices have sufficient opportunity to
learn from the data and make
adjustments to practice before incurring
penalties. This commenter also
encouraged CMS to ensure that the data
in these reports is presented in a userfriendly and actionable format.
Response: CMS thanks commenters
for their feedback on the availability of
provider-level quality reports in
CASPER. First, we would like to clarify
our timeline for the availability of
quality reports. CMS agrees that
providing feedback to hospice providers
as soon as is feasible is a critical step in
the process of quality improvement,
since providers need data about their
performance to inform QAPI and other
performance improvement efforts. As
stated in the proposed rule, CMS
anticipates that quality reports will be
available sometime in calendar year
2015; thus, we respectfully correct the
commenter’s misunderstanding that
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provider-level quality reports would not
be available until 2020. Given our
anticipated timeline for the release of
provider-level quality reports in 2015
and our timeline for public reporting,
which we have stated in prior rules may
occur in 2017, hospice providers would
have all of 2016 to review their quality
reports in CASPER and continue to
develop performance improvement
projects to improve quality measure
scores prior to public reporting. We
would also like to clarify that the intent
of the provider-level feedback reports in
CASPER would provide hospices with
the ‘‘benchmarking’’ data mentioned by
one commenter since, as stated in the
proposed rule, the purpose of quality
reports is to provide feedback on
facility-level performance on quality
metrics, including benchmarks and
thresholds. CMS appreciates the
commenter’s request to make quality
reports available quarterly; CMS will
take this suggested quarterly timeframe
under consideration as we consider how
often quality data should be ‘‘refreshed’’
in CASPER quality reports. Finally,
CMS agrees with the commenter that
quality reports should provide userfriendly, actionable information. CMS
will ensure that provider-level quality
reports are meaningful and provide
actionable information for providers to
improve their care.
Comment: Though commenters were
generally supportive of public reporting
of quality data, several commenters
expressed concerns over the
methodology for the 5-star rating that
CMS proposes to use as part of the
Hospice Compare Web site. Two
commenters were concerned about the
development of a 5-star methodology
where the majority of providers would
be placed in the ‘‘average’’ star range.
These commenters were concerned
about the consumer perception of an
‘‘average’’ rating and encouraged CMS
to develop a 5-star rating system that
allows all hospices to aim for and
achieve a 5-star rating. Commenters also
encouraged CMS to involve providers
and stakeholders in the development of
the methodology for the 5-star rating
system. Commenters also encouraged
CMS to ensure any 5-star methodology
is based on accurate data and evidencebased methodologies, and to allow
ample opportunity for feedback on any
proposed methodology. Commenters
encouraged CMS to carefully consider
the structure and presentation of a the
5-star rating system, including a
consumer-friendly explanation of
quality measures so that the public can
easily interpret the data and use it for
meaningful health care decision-
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making. Finally, one commenter
cautioned CMS to ensure the accuracy
of information, including basic
demographic data such as addresses and
practice affiliations, in any Compare
databases prior to their launch.
Response: CMS appreciates
commenters’ input on the development
of a Hospice Compare Web site and 5star rating system for hospices. CMS
would like to assure commenters that it
is of paramount concern to develop a 5star methodology that is tested and
evidence-based, and can meaningfully
distinguish between quality of care
offered by providers. CMS agrees that
presenting any 5-star rating in a manner
that is meaningful and consumerfriendly is important, and CMS will
ensure that publicly available data is
displayed in a manner that is useful to
the public. As with the development of
5-star methodology in other quality
reporting programs, CMS will allow
continued opportunities for the provider
community and other stakeholders to
comment on and provide input to the
proposed rating system. In addition to
regular HQRP communication channels,
CMS will solicit input from the public
regarding 5-star methodology through
special listening sessions, invitation to
submit comments via a Help Desk
mailbox, Open Door Forums, and other
opportunities.
F. Clarification Regarding Diagnosis
Reporting on Hospice Claims
To ensure hospices are aware of the
issues and requirements when
providing compassionate end-of-life
care to Medicare beneficiaries, we
provided extensive background
regarding program vulnerabilities;
hospice eligibility requirements; and the
hospice assessment of conditions and
comorbidities required by regulation in
the proposed rule (80 FR 25877—
25880). The International Classification
of Diseases, Tenth Revision, Clinical
Modification (ICD–10–CM) Coding
Guidelines state the following regarding
the selection of the principal diagnosis:
The principal diagnosis is defined in the
Uniform Hospital Discharge Data Set
(UHDDS) as that condition established
after study to be chiefly responsible for
occasioning the admission of the patient
to the hospital for care. In the case of
selection of a principal diagnosis for
hospice care, this would mean the
diagnosis most contributory to the
terminal prognosis of the individual. In
the instance where two or more
diagnoses equally meet the criteria for
principal diagnosis, ICD–10–CM coding
guidelines do not provide sequencing
direction, and thus, any one of the
diagnoses may be sequenced first,
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meaning to report all of those diagnoses
meeting the criteria as a principal
diagnosis. Per ICD–10–CM Coding
Guidelines, for diagnosis reporting
purposes, the definition for ‘‘other
diagnoses’’ is interpreted as additional
conditions that affect patient care in
terms of requiring:
• clinical evaluation; or
• therapeutic treatment; or
• diagnostic procedures; or
• extended length of hospital stay; or
• increased nursing care and/or
monitoring.
The UHDDS item #11-b defines Other
Diagnoses as all conditions that coexist
at the time of admission, that develop
subsequently, or that affect the
treatment received and/or the length of
stay. ICD–10–CM coding guidelines are
clear that all diagnoses affecting the
management and treatment of the
individual within the healthcare setting
are requirement to be reported. This has
been longstanding existing policy.
Adherence to coding guidelines when
assigning ICD–9–CM diagnosis and
procedure codes through September 30,
2015 or ICD–10–CM diagnosis and
procedure codes on and after October 1,
2015 is required under HHS regulations
at 45 CFR 162.1002(b) and (c),
respectively, as well as our regulations
at 45 CFR 162.1002.
However, though established coding
guidelines are required, it does not
appear that all hospices are coding per
coding guidelines on hospice claims. In
2010, over 77 percent of hospice claims
reported only one diagnosis. Previous
rules have discussed requirements for
hospice diagnosis reporting on claims
and the importance of complete and
accurate coding. Preliminary analysis of
FY 2014 claims data demonstrates that
hospice diagnosis coding is improving;
however, challenges remain. Analysis of
FY 2014 claims data indicates that 49
percent of hospice claims listed only
one diagnosis.52 We conducted
additional analysis on instances where
only one diagnosis was reported on the
FY 2014 hospice claim and found that
50 percent of these beneficiaries had, on
average, eight or more chronic
conditions and 75 percent had, on
average, five or more chronic
conditions.53 These chronic, comorbid
conditions include: hypertension,
anemia, congestive heart failure, chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease,
ischemic heart disease, depression,
52 Preliminary FY 2014 hospice claims data from
the Chronic Conditions Data Warehouse (CCW),
accessed on January 13, 2015.
53 Preliminary FY 2014 hospice claims data from
the Chronic Conditions Data Warehouse (CCW),
accessed on January 21, 2015.
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diabetes and atrial fibrillation, to name
a few.
In the Medicare Program; Hospice
Wage Index for Fiscal Year 2013 Notice
(77 FR 44248) we stated that hospices
should report, on hospice claims, all
coexisting or additional diagnoses that
are related to the terminal illness; they
should not report coexisting or
additional diagnoses that are unrelated
to the terminal illness, even though
coding guidelines required the reporting
of all diagnoses that affect patient
assessment and planning. However, as
discussed earlier in this section, there is
widely varying interpretation as to what
factors influence the terminal prognosis
of the individual (that is, what
conditions render the individual
terminally ill and which conditions are
related). Furthermore, based on the
numerous comments received in
previous rulemaking, and anecdotal
reports from hospices, hospice
beneficiaries, and non-hospice
providers discussed above, we are
concerned that hospices may not be
conducting a comprehensive assessment
nor updating the plan of care as
articulated by the CoPs to recognize the
conditions that affect an individual’s
terminal prognosis.
Therefore, we are clarifying that
hospices will report all diagnoses
identified in the initial and
comprehensive assessments on hospice
claims, whether related or unrelated to
the terminal prognosis of the individual
effective October 1, 2015. This is in
keeping with the requirements of
determining whether an individual is
terminally ill. This will also include the
reporting of any mental health disorders
and conditions that would affect the
plan of care as hospices are to assess
and provide care for identified
psychosocial and emotional needs, as
well as, for the physical and spiritual
needs. Our regulations at § 418.25(b)
state, ‘‘in reaching a decision to certify
that the patient is terminally ill, the
hospice medical director must consider
at least the following information:
• Diagnosis of the terminal condition
of the patient.
• Other health conditions, whether
related or unrelated to the terminal
condition.
• Current clinically relevant
information supporting all diagnoses.
ICD–10–CM Coding Guidelines state
that diagnoses should be reported that
develop subsequently, coexist, or affect
the treatment of the individual.
Furthermore, having these diagnoses
reported on claims falls under the
authority of the Affordable Care Act for
the collection of data to inform hospice
payment reform. Section 3132 a(1)(C) of
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the Affordable Care Act states that the
Secretary may collect the additional
data and information on cost reports,
claims, or other mechanisms as the
Secretary determines to be appropriate.
We did not propose any new
regulations nor solicit comments with
this coding clarification as these
clarifications are based on existing ICD–
9–CM and ICD–10–CM coding
guidelines, but received several
comments.
Most commenters asked whether
hospices would have to identify
diagnoses as related or unrelated on
hospice claims and if there would be a
modifier created for that identification.
Some commenters stated it would be
burdensome to identify and report all
diagnoses, while others expressed
concern that this would mean that
hospices would be financially
responsible for all reported diagnoses.
Some commenters asked what the
purpose is for collecting this
information and felt that there is no
value added by collecting all diagnoses.
Several commenters stated that CMS
should provide further clarification as to
the scope of diagnoses hospices are
expected to cover and more clear
criteria as to what are unrelated
conditions. One industry commenter
felt that CMS should define ‘‘terminal
illness’’ and ‘‘related conditions’’ to
provide more clear criteria for the
expectation as to what hospices are
required to cover. One commenter
stated the CMS has changed its
interpretation of the hospice regulations
and that this is a requirement without
a purpose. Several commenters felt that
the phrase ‘‘virtually all’’ is a very
ambiguous standard and CMS should
provide greater clarity as to its meaning.
And, as in previous years’ rules, some
commenters provided specific clinical
scenarios as to why a condition was
related or unrelated.
We appreciate the varying
interpretations of what hospices’ view
as holistic and comprehensive end of
life care. However, as articulated in
section II of this rule, since the
implementation of the Medicare hospice
benefit in 1983, we have stated that it
is our general view that hospices are
required to provide virtually all the care
that is needed by terminally ill
individuals and we would expect to see
little being provided outside of the
benefit. Admission to hospice must be
based on the recommendation of the
medical director in consultation with, or
with input from, the patient’s attending
physician (if any). Therefore, we expect
that the hospice medical director follow
the requirements articulated at 42 CFR
418.25. In a separate section at 42 CFR
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418.54(c), hospice’s are expected to
uphold the responsibilities articulated
in regulations regarding the
requirements of the initial and
comprehensive assessments which
becomes part of the patient’s hospice
medical record and should not require
an extensive historical review of
previous healthcare records. Modifiers
for the hospice claim form are not
necessary at this time to identify related
or unrelated conditions.
The American Health Information
Management Association (AHIMA)
provides procedure instructions for
diagnosis reporting using coding
guidance for coding certification.54
These coding procedures are used for
determining which diagnoses to report
for those in the inpatient setting.
Hospices follow coding guidelines for
the inpatient setting. The guidelines
state to sequence those diagnoses that
are listed in the medical record with the
principal diagnosis listed first.
Additionally, these guidelines state to
code other diagnoses that coexist at the
time of admission, that develop
subsequently, or that affect the
treatment received and/or the length of
stay. These represent additional
conditions that affect patient care in
terms of requiring clinical evaluation,
therapeutic treatment, diagnostic
procedures, extended length of hospital
stay, or increased nursing care and/or
monitoring. These additional diagnoses
include those that require active
intervention during hospitalization and
those that require active management of
chronic disease during hospitalization,
which is defined as a patient who is
continued on chronic management at
time of hospitalization. These coding
guidelines instruct to code diagnoses of
chronic systemic or generalized
conditions that are not under active
management when a physician
documents them in the record and that
may have a bearing on the management
of the patient. Specifically, all diagnoses
affecting the plan of care for the
individual, which is in line with the
hospice coverage requirements which
state that hospices are to provide
services for the palliation and
management of the terminal illness and
related conditions, are to be reported on
the hospice claim.
The purpose of collecting this data,
which is required in every other
healthcare setting as per coding
guidelines, is to have adequate data on
hospice patient characteristics. This
data will help to inform thoughtful,
54 https://www.ahima.org/∼/media/AHIMA/Files/
Certification/CCS%20Coding%20Instructions.
ashx?la=en.
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appropriate, and clinically relevant
policy for future rulemaking. In order to
consider any future refinements, such as
a case mix system which utilizes
diagnosis information as a few
commenters suggested, it is imperative
that detailed patient characteristics are
available to determine whether a case
mix payment system could be achieved.
One industry association felt that we
should consider a risk-adjusted payment
system based on patient characteristics
including comorbidities, which would
also require more detailed information
regarding the patient.
IV. Collection of Information
Requirements
This document does not impose
additional information collection
requirements, that is, reporting,
recordkeeping or third-party disclosure
requirements. All information collection
discussed in this final rule have been
approved by the Office of Management
and Budget. Consequently, there is no
need for review by the Office of
Management and Budget under the
authority of the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995.
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V. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
This final rule meets the requirements
of our regulations at § 418.306(c), which
requires annual issuance, in the Federal
Register, of the hospice wage index
based on the most current available
CMS hospital wage data, including any
changes to the definitions of CBSAs, or
previously used MSAs. This final rule
will also update payment rates for each
of the categories of hospice care
described in § 418.302(b) for FY 2016 as
required under section
1814(i)(1)(C)(ii)(VII) of the Act. The
payment rate updates are subject to
changes in economy-wide productivity
as specified in section
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act. In
addition, the payment rate updates may
be reduced by an additional 0.3
percentage point (although for FY 2014
to FY 2019, the potential 0.3 percentage
point reduction is subject to suspension
under conditions specified in section
1814(i)(1)(C)(v) of the Act). In 2010, the
Congress amended section 1814(i)(6) of
the Act with section 3132(a) of the
Affordable Care Act. The amendment
authorized the Secretary to collect
additional data and information
determined appropriate to revise
payments for hospice care and for other
purposes. The data collected may be
used to revise the methodology for
determining the payment rates for
routine home care and other services
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included in hospice care, no earlier than
October 1, 2013. In accordance with
section 1814(i)(6)(D) of the Act, this
final rule will provide an update on
hospice payment reform research and
analyses and implement an SIA
payment in accordance with the
requirement to revise the methodology
for determining hospice payments in a
budget-neutral manner. Finally, section
3004 of the Affordable Care Act
amended the Act to authorize a quality
reporting program for hospices and this
rule discusses changes in the
requirements for the hospice quality
reporting program in accordance with
section 1814(i)(5) of the Act.
B. Introduction
We have examined the impacts of this
final rule as required by Executive
Order 12866 on Regulatory Planning
and Review (September 30, 1993),
Executive Order 13563 on Improving
Regulation and Regulatory Review
(January 18, 2011), the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA) (September 19,
1980, Pub. L. 96–354), section 1102(b) of
the Act, section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA,
March 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104–4), and the
Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C.
804(2)).
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). Executive Order 13563
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits, of
reducing costs, of harmonizing rules,
and of promoting flexibility. A
regulatory impact analysis (RIA) must
be prepared for major rules with
economically significant effects ($100
million or more in any 1 year). This
final rule has been designated as
economically significant under section
3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866 and
thus a major rule under the
Congressional Review Act. Accordingly,
we have prepared a regulatory impact
analysis (RIA) that, to the best of our
ability, presents the costs and benefits of
the rulemaking. This final rule was also
reviewed by OMB.
C. Overall Impact
The overall impact of this final rule is
an estimated net increase in Federal
Medicare payments to hospices of $160
million, or 1.1 percent, for FY 2016. The
$160 million increase in estimated
payments for FY 2016 reflects the
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47203
distributional effects of the 1.6 percent
FY 2016 hospice payment update
percentage ($250 million increase), the
use of updated wage index data and the
phase-out of the wage index budget
neutrality adjustment factor (¥0.7
percent/$120 million decrease) and the
implementation of the new OMB CBSA
delineations for the FY 2016 hospice
wage index with a 1-year transition (0.2
percent/$30 million increase). The
elimination of the wage index budget
neutrality adjustment factor (BNAF) was
part of a 7-year phase-out that was
finalized in the FY 2010 Hospice Wage
Index final rule (74 FR 39384), and is
not a policy change. The RHC rates and
the SIA payment, outlined in section
III.B, will be implemented in a budget
neutral manner in the first year of
implementation, as required per section
1814(i)(6)(D)(ii) of the Act. In section
III.B, we are also finalizing our proposal
make the SIA payments budget neutral
annually. The RHC rate budget
neutrality factors and the SBNF used to
reduce the overall RHC rate are outlined
in section III.C.3. Therefore, the RHC
rates and the SIA payment will not
result in an overall payment impact for
the Medicare program or hospices.
D. Detailed Economic Analysis
Table H1, Column 3 shows the
combined effects of the use of updated
wage data (the FY 2015 pre-floor, prereclassified hospital wage index) and
the phase-out of the BNAF (for a total
BNAF reduction of 100 percent),
resulting in an estimated decrease in FY
2016 payments of 0.7 percent ($¥120
million). Column 4 of Table 29, shows
the effects of the 50/50 blend of the FY
2016 hospice wage index values (based
on the use of FY 2015 pre-floor, prereclassified hospital wage index data)
under the old and the new CBSA
delineations, resulting in an estimated
increase in FY 2016 payments of 0.2
percent ($30 million). Column 5
displays the estimated effects of the
RHC rates, resulting in no overall
change in FY 2016 payments for
hospices as this will be implemented in
a budget neutral manner. Column 6
shows the estimated effects of the SIA
payment, resulting in no change in FY
2016 payments for hospices as this will
be implemented in a budget neutral
manner through a reduction to the
overall RHC rate for FY 2016. Column
7 shows the effects of the FY 2016
hospice payment update percentage.
The 1.6 percent hospice payment
update percentage is based on a 2.4
percent inpatient hospital market basket
update for FY 2016 reduced by a 0.5
percentage point productivity
adjustment and by 0.3 percentage point
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as mandated by the Affordable Care Act.
The estimated effects of the 1.6 percent
hospice payment update percentage will
result in an increase in payments to
hospices of approximately $250 million.
Taking into account the 1.6 percent
hospice payment update percentage
($250 million increase), the use of
updated wage data and the phase-out of
the BNAF (¥$120 million), and the
adoption of the new OMB CBSA
delineations with a 1-year transition for
the FY 2016 hospice wage index ($30
million), Column 8 shows that hospice
payments are estimated to increase by
$160 million ($250 million¥$120
million + $30 million = $160 million),
or 1.1 percent, in FY 2016. For the
purposes of our impact analysis, we use
the utilization observed in the most
complete hospice claims data available
at the time of rulemaking (FY 2014
hospice claims submitted as of March
31, 2015). Presenting these data gives
the hospice industry a more complete
picture of the effects on their total
revenue based on the use of updated
hospital wage index data and the BNAF
phase-out, the adoption of the new OMB
CBSA delineations with a 1-year
transition, the SIA payment, and the FY
2016 hospice payment update
percentage as discussed in this final
rule. Certain events may limit the scope
or accuracy of our impact analysis,
because such an analysis is susceptible
to forecasting errors due to other
changes in the forecasted impact time
period. The nature of the Medicare
program is such that the changes may
interact, and the complexity of the
interaction of these changes could make
it difficult to predict accurately the full
scope of the impact upon hospices. As
illustrated in Table 29, the combined
effects of all of the changes vary by
specific types of providers and by
location. We note that some individual
hospices within the same group may
experience different impacts on
payments than others due to: the
distributional impact of the FY 2016
wage index and phase-out of the BNAF;
the extent to which hospices had
varying volume in the number of RHC
days in days 1–60 of the hospice
episode versus days 61 and beyond; the
number, length and type (discipline) of
visits provided to patients during the
last 7 days of life; and the degree of
Medicare utilization.
TABLE 29—ESTIMATED HOSPICE IMPACTS BY FACILITY TYPE AND AREA OF THE COUNTRY, FY 2016
Providers
Updated FY
2016 wage
index data and
phase-out of
BNAF
(% change)
50/50 Blend of
FY 2016 wage
index values
under old and
new CBSA
delineations
(% change)
Routine home
care rates
(days 1 thru
60 and days
61+)
FY 2016 SIA
payment
(% change)
FY 2016
Hospice
payment
update
percentage
(% change)
Total FY 2016
policies
(% change)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
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(1)
All Hospices .................
Urban Hospices ...........
Rural Hospices .............
Urban Hospices—New
England ....................
Urban Hospices—Middle Atlantic ................
Urban Hospices—South
Atlantic ......................
Urban Hospices—East
North Central ............
Urban Hospices—East
South Central ...........
Urban Hospices—West
North Central ............
Urban Hospices—West
South Central ...........
Urban Hospices—
Mountain ...................
Urban Hospices—Pacific ...........................
Urban Hospices—Outlying ..........................
Rural Hospices—New
England ....................
Rural Hospices—Middle
Atlantic ......................
Rural Hospices—South
Atlantic ......................
Rural Hospices—East
North Central ............
Rural Hospices—East
South Central ...........
Rural Hospices—West
North Central ............
Rural Hospices—West
South Central ...........
Rural Hospices—Mountain ............................
Rural Hospices—Pacific
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4,067
3,060
1,007
¥0.7
¥0.7
¥0.3
0.2
0.3
¥0.2
0.0
0.0
0.3
0.0
0.0
0.0
1.6
1.6
1.6
1.1
1.2
1.4
140
0.0
0.1
0.9
0.0
1.6
2.6
253
¥0.7
¥0.2
0.6
0.0
1.6
1.3
416
¥1.1
0.3
¥0.5
¥0.1
1.6
0.2
392
¥0.8
0.7
¥0.2
0.1
1.6
1.4
166
¥0.7
0.5
¥0.2
0.0
1.6
1.2
222
¥0.7
0.6
0.6
0.2
1.6
2.3
602
¥1.1
0.6
¥0.9
¥0.1
1.6
0.1
305
¥0.6
0.2
¥0.2
¥0.1
1.6
0.9
527
¥0.1
0.0
0.8
0.0
1.6
2.3
37
0.0
0.3
¥0.7
¥0.3
1.6
0.9
24
¥0.3
0.0
2.4
0.2
1.6
3.9
42
0.3
¥0.1
1.3
0.4
1.6
3.5
142
¥0.6
0.0
¥0.1
¥0.1
1.6
0.8
137
¥0.7
¥0.4
0.6
0.2
1.6
1.3
137
¥0.1
¥0.1
¥0.6
¥0.2
1.6
0.6
186
¥0.3
¥0.1
1.7
0.2
1.6
3.1
185
¥0.1
¥0.1
¥0.6
¥0.1
1.6
0.7
104
47
¥1.4
2.1
¥0.6
0.1
0.3
2.5
0.0
0.1
1.6
1.6
¥0.1
6.4
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47205
TABLE 29—ESTIMATED HOSPICE IMPACTS BY FACILITY TYPE AND AREA OF THE COUNTRY, FY 2016—Continued
Providers
Updated FY
2016 wage
index data and
phase-out of
BNAF
(% change)
50/50 Blend of
FY 2016 wage
index values
under old and
new CBSA
delineations
(% change)
Routine home
care rates
(days 1 thru
60 and days
61+)
FY 2016 SIA
payment
(% change)
FY 2016
Hospice
payment
update
percentage
(% change)
Total FY 2016
policies
(% change)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(1)
Rural Hospices—Outlying ..........................
0–3,499 RHC Days
(Small) ......................
3,500–19,999 RHC
Days (Medium) .........
20,000+ RHC Days
(Large) ......................
Non-Profit Ownership ...
For Profit Ownership ....
Govt/Other Ownership
Freestanding Facility
Type ..........................
HHA/Facility-Based Facility Type .................
Rate of RHC NF/SNF
Days is in Lowest
Quartile (Less than or
equal to 3.1) .............
Rate of RHC NF/SNF
Days is in 2nd Quartile (Greater than 3.1
and Less than or
equal to 16.7) ...........
Rate of RHC NF/SNF
Days is in 3rd Quartile (Greater than
16.7 and less than or
equal to 35.5) ...........
Rate of RHC NF/SNF
Days is in Highest
Quartile (Greater
than 35.5) .................
3
¥0.8
¥0.2
1.4
¥0.2
1.6
1.8
886
¥0.5
0.1
2.6
0.0
1.6
3.8
1,923
¥0.6
0.2
0.5
0.0
1.6
1.7
1,258
1,073
2,449
545
¥0.7
¥0.6
¥0.7
¥0.6
0.3
0.2
0.3
0.2
¥0.1
1.0
¥0.7
0.5
0.0
0.1
¥0.1
0.1
1.6
1.6
1.6
1.6
1.1
2.3
0.4
1.8
3,070
¥0.7
0.2
¥0.2
0.0
1.6
0.9
997
¥0.4
0.2
1.4
0.1
1.6
2.9
1,016
¥0.5
0.1
0.5
¥0.1
1.6
1.6
1,017
¥0.6
0.1
0.3
0.0
1.6
1.4
1,017
¥0.8
0.3
0.0
0.0
1.6
1.1
1,017
¥0.7
0.4
¥0.4
0.0
1.6
0.9
Source: FY 2014 hospice claims data from the Standard Analytic Files for CY 2013 (as of June 30, 2014) and CY 2014 (as of March 31,
2015).
Note(s): The 1.6 percent hospice payment update percentage for FY 2016 is based on an estimated 2.4 percent inpatient hospital market basket update, reduced by a 0.5 percentage point productivity adjustment and by 0.3 percentage point. Starting with FY 2013 (and in subsequent
fiscal years), the market basket percentage update under the hospice payment system as described in section 1814(i)(1)(C)(ii)(VII) or section
1814(i)(1)(C)(iii) of the Act will be annually reduced by changes in economy-wide productivity as set out at section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act.
In FY 2013 through FY 2019, the market basket percentage update under the hospice payment system will be reduced by an additional 0.3 percentage point (although for FY 2014 to FY 2019, the potential 0.3 percentage point reduction is subject to suspension under conditions set out
under section 1814(i)(1)(C)(v) of the Act).
Region Key:
New England = Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont; Middle Atlantic = Pennsylvania, New Jersey,
New York; South Atlantic = Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia;
East North Central = Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin; East South Central = Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi, Tennessee; West
North Central = Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota; West South Central = Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Texas; Mountain = Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming; Pacific = Alaska, California, Hawaii, Oregon, Washington; Outlying = Guam, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands
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E. Accounting Statement and Table
As required by OMB Circular A–4
(available at https://www.whitehouse.
gov/omb/circulars/a004/a-4.pdf), in
Table 30 below, we have prepared an
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accounting statement showing the
classification of the expenditures
associated with this final rule. Table H2
provides our best estimate of the
increase in Medicare payments under
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the hospice benefit as a result of the
changes presented in this final rule for
4,067 hospices in our impact analysis
file constructed using FY 2014 claims as
of March 31, 2015.
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TABLE 30—ACCOUNTING STATEMENT: CLASSIFICATION OF ESTIMATED TRANSFERS, FROM FY 2015 TO FY 2016
[In $millions]
Category
Transfers
FY 2015 Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate Update
Annualized Monetized Transfers ..............................................................
From Whom to Whom? ............................................................................
F. Conclusion
In conclusion, the overall effect of this
final rule is an estimated $160 million
increase in Medicare payments to
hospices. The $160 million increase in
estimated payments for FY 2016 reflects
the distributional effects of the 1.6
percent FY 2016 hospice payment
update percentage ($250 million
increase), the use of updated wage index
data and the phase-out of the wage
index budget neutrality adjustment
factor (¥0.7 percent/$120 million
decrease) and the implementation of the
new OMB CBSA delineations for FY
2016 hospice wage index with a 1-year
transition (0.2 percent/$30 million
increase). The SIA payment does not
result in aggregate changes to estimate
hospice payments for FY 2016 as this
will be implemented in a budget neutral
manner through an overall reduction to
the RHC payment rate for all hospices.
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2. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
The RFA requires agencies to analyze
options for regulatory relief of small
businesses if a rule has a significant
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The great majority of hospitals
and most other health care providers
and suppliers are small entities by
meeting the Small Business
Administration (SBA) definition of a
small business (in the service sector,
having revenues of less than $7.5
million to $38.5 million in any 1 year),
or being nonprofit organizations. For
purposes of the RFA, we consider all
hospices as small entities as that term is
used in the RFA. HHS’s practice in
interpreting the RFA is to consider
effects economically ‘‘significant’’ only
if they reach a threshold of 3 to 5
percent or more of total revenue or total
costs. As noted above, the combined
effect of the updated wage data and the
BNAF phase-out (¥0.7 percent decrease
or ¥$120 million) the implementation
of the new OMB CBSA delineations for
FY 2016 hospice wage index with a 1year transition (0.2 percent increase or
$30 million), the SIA payment (no
estimated aggregate impact on
payments), and the FY 2016 hospice
payment update percentage (1.6 percent
increase or $250 million) results in an
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$160.
Federal Government to Hospices.
overall increase in estimated hospice
payments of 1.1 percent, or $160
million, for FY 2016. Therefore, the
Secretary has determined that this final
rule will not create a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act
requires us to prepare a regulatory
impact analysis if a rule may have a
significant impact on the operations of
a substantial number of small rural
hospitals. This analysis must conform to
the provisions of section 604 of the
RFA. For purposes of section 1102(b) of
the Act, we define a small rural hospital
as a hospital that is located outside of
a metropolitan statistical area and has
fewer than 100 beds. This final rule only
affects hospices. Therefore, the
Secretary has determined that this final
rule will not have a significant impact
on the operations of a substantial
number of small rural hospitals.
3. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Analysis
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 also
requires that agencies assess anticipated
costs and benefits before issuing any
rule whose mandates require spending
in any 1 year of $100 million in 1995
dollars, updated annually for inflation.
In 2015, that threshold is approximately
$144 million. This final rule is not
anticipated to have an effect on State,
local, or tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or on the private sector of
$144 million or more.
VI. Federalism Analysis and
Regulations Text
Executive Order 13132, Federalism
(August 4, 1999) requires an agency to
provide federalism summary impact
statement when it promulgates a
proposed rule (and subsequent final
rule) that has federalism implications
and which imposes substantial direct
requirement costs on State and local
governments which are not required by
statute. We have reviewed this final rule
under these criteria of Executive Order
13132, and have determined that it will
not impose substantial direct costs on
State or local governments.
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List of Subjects
42 CFR Part 418
Health facilities, Hospice care,
Medicare, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services amends 42 CFR
chapter IV as set forth below:
PART 418—HOSPICE CARE
1. The authority citation for part 418
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the
Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302 and
1395hh)
Subpart G—Payment for Hospice Care
2. Section 418.302 is amended by—
a. Adding paragraph (b)(1)(i) and (ii).
b. Amending paragraphs (d)(1), (d)(2),
(e) introductory text, (f)(2) and (f)(5)(ii)
by removing the word ‘‘intermediary’’
and adding in its place the words
‘‘Medicare Administrative Contractor’’.
■ c. Revising paragraph (e)(1).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
■
■
§ 418.302
care.
Payment procedures for hospice
*
*
*
*
*
(b)
(1) * * *
(i) Service intensity add-on. Routine
home care days that occur during the
last 7 days of a hospice election ending
with a patient discharged due to death
are eligible for a service intensity addon payment.
(ii) The service intensity add-on
payment shall be equal to the
continuous home care hourly payment
rate, as described in paragraph (e)(4) of
this section, multiplied by the amount
of direct patient care actually provided
by a RN and/or social worker, up to 4
hours total per day.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(1) Payment is made to the hospice for
each day during which the beneficiary
is eligible and under the care of the
hospice, regardless of the amount of
services furnished on any given day
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(except as set out in paragraph (b)(1)(i)
of this section).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Section 418.306 is amended by
revising the section heading and
paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) to read as
follows.
§ 418.306 Annual update of the payment
rates and adjustment for area wage
differences.
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(a) Applicability. CMS establishes
payment rates for each of the categories
of hospice care described in
§ 418.302(b). The rates are established
using the methodology described in
section 1814(i)(1)(C) of the Act and in
accordance with section 1814(i)(6)(D) of
the Act.
(b) Annual update of the payment
rates. The payment rates for routine
home care and other services included
in hospice care are the payment rates in
effect under this paragraph during the
previous fiscal year increased by the
hospice payment update percentage
increase (as defined in
sections1814(i)(1)(C) of the Act),
applicable to discharges occurring in the
fiscal year.
(1) For fiscal year 2014 and
subsequent fiscal years, in accordance
with section 1814(i)(5)(A)(i) of the Act,
in the case of a Medicare-certified
hospice that submits hospice quality
data, as specified by the Secretary, the
payment rates are equal to the rates for
the previous fiscal year increased by the
applicable hospice payment update
percentage increase.
(2) For fiscal year 2014 and
subsequent fiscal years, in accordance
with section 1814(i)(5)(A)(i) of the Act,
in the case of a Medicare-certified
hospice that does not submit hospice
quality data, as specified by the
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Secretary, the payment rates are equal to
the rates for the previous fiscal year
increased by the applicable hospice
payment update percentage increase,
minus 2 percentage points. Any
reduction of the percentage change will
apply only to the fiscal year involved
and will not be taken into account in
computing the payment amounts for a
subsequent fiscal year.
(c) Adjustment for wage differences.
Each hospice’s labor market is
determined based on definitions of
Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs)
issued by OMB. CMS will issue
annually, in the Federal Register, a
hospice wage index based on the most
current available CMS hospital wage
data, including changes to the definition
of MSAs. The urban and rural area
geographic classifications are defined in
§ 412.64(b)(1)(ii)(A) through (C) of this
chapter. The payment rates established
by CMS are adjusted by the Medicare
contractor to reflect local differences in
wages according to the revised wage
data.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 418.308
[Amended]
4. Section 418.308(c) is amended by
removing the phrase ‘‘(that is, by March
31st)’’.
■ 5. Section 418.309 is amended by
revising the introductory text and
paragraph (a) to read as follows:
■
§ 418.309
Hospice aggregate cap.
A hospice’s aggregate cap is
calculated by multiplying the adjusted
cap amount (determined in paragraph
(a) of this section) by the number of
Medicare beneficiaries, as determined
by one of two methodologies for
determining the number of Medicare
beneficiaries for a given cap year
PO 00000
Frm 00067
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
47207
described in paragraphs (b) and (c) of
this section.
(a) Cap Amount. The cap amount was
set at $6,500 in 1983 and is updated
using one of two methodologies
described in paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2)
of this section.
(1) For accounting years that end on
or before September 30, 2016 and end
on or after October 1, 2025, the cap
amount is adjusted for inflation by using
the percentage change in the medical
care expenditure category of the
Consumer Price Index (CPI) for urban
consumers that is published by the
Bureau of Labor Statistics. This
adjustment is made using the change in
the CPI from March 1984 to the fifth
month of the cap year.
(2) For accounting years that end after
September 30, 2016, and before October
1, 2025, the cap amount is the cap
amount for the preceding accounting
year updated by the percentage update
to payment rates for hospice care for
services furnished during the fiscal year
beginning on the October 1 preceding
the beginning of the accounting year as
determined pursuant to section
1814(i)(1)(C) of the Act (including the
application of any productivity or other
adjustments to the hospice percentage
update).
*
*
*
*
*
Dated: July 27, 2015
Andrew M. Slavitt,
Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services.
Dated: July 28, 2015
Sylvia M. Burwell,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
[FR Doc. 2015–19033 Filed 7–31–15; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\06AUR3.SGM
06AUR3
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 151 (Thursday, August 6, 2015)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 47141-47207]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-19033]
[[Page 47141]]
Vol. 80
Thursday,
No. 151
August 6, 2015
Part III
Department of Health and Human Services
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Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
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42 CFR Part 418
Medicare Program; FY 2016 Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate Update
and Hospice Quality Reporting Requirements; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 80 , No. 151 / Thursday, August 6, 2015 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 47142]]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Part 418
[CMS-1629-F]
RIN 0938-AS39
Medicare Program; FY 2016 Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate
Update and Hospice Quality Reporting Requirements
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: This final rule will update the hospice payment rates and the
wage index for fiscal year (FY) 2016 (October 1, 2015 through September
30, 2016), including implementing the last year of the phase-out of the
wage index budget neutrality adjustment factor (BNAF). Effective on
January 1, 2016, this rule also finalizes our proposals to
differentiate payments for routine home care (RHC) based on the
beneficiary's length of stay and implement a service intensity add-on
(SIA) payment for services provided in the last 7 days of a
beneficiary's life, if certain criteria are met. In addition, this rule
will implement changes to the aggregate cap calculation mandated by the
Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care Transformation Act of 2014 (IMPACT
Act), align the cap accounting year for both the inpatient cap and the
hospice aggregate cap with the federal fiscal year starting in FY 2017,
make changes to the hospice quality reporting program, clarify a
requirement for diagnosis reporting on the hospice claim, and discuss
recent hospice payment reform research and analyses.
DATES: Effective Date: These regulations are effective on October 1,
2015 and the implementation date for the RHC rates and the SIA payment
rates will be January 1, 2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Debra Dean-Whittaker, (410) 786-0848
for questions regarding the CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey. Michelle
Brazil, (410) 786-1648 for questions regarding the hospice quality
reporting program. For general questions about hospice payment policy
please send your inquiry via email to: hospicepolicy@cms.hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Wage index addenda will be available only
through the internet on the CMS Web site at: (https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/Hospice/).
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
C. Summary of Costs, Benefits, and Transfers
II. Background
A. Hospice Care
B. History of the Medicare Hospice Benefit
C. Services Covered by the Medicare Hospice Benefit
D. Medicare Payment for Hospice Care
1. Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1989
2. Balanced Budget Act of 1997
3. FY 1998 Hospice Wage Index Final Rule
4. FY 2010 Hospice Wage Index Final Rule
5. The Affordable Care Act
6. FY 2012 Hospice Wage Index Final Rule
7. FY 2015 Hospice Rate Update Final Rule
8. Impact Act of 2014
E. Trends in Medicare Hospice Utilization
III. Provisions of the Proposed Rule and Responses to Comments
A. Hospice Payment Reform: Research and Analyses
1. Pre-Hospice Spending
2. Non-Hospice Spending for Hospice Beneficiaries During an
Election
3. Live Discharge Rates
B. Routine Home Care Rates and Service Intensity Add-On (SIA)
Payment
1. Background and Statutory Authority
a. U-Shaped Payment Model
b. Tiered Payment Model
c. Visits During the Beginning and End of a Hospice Election
2. Routine Home Care Rates
3. Service Intensity Add-On Payment
C. FY 2016 Hospice Wage Index and Rates Update
1. FY 2016 Hospice Wage Index
a. Background
b. Elimination of the Wage Index Budget Neutrality Factor (BNAF)
c. Implementation of New Labor Market Delineations
2. Hospice Payment Update Percentage
3. FY 2016 Hospice Payment Rates
4. Hospice Aggregate Cap and the IMPACT Act of 2014
D. Alignment of the Inpatient and Aggregate Cap Accounting Year
With the Federal Fiscal Year
1. Streamlined Method and Patient-by-Patient Proportional Method
for Counting Beneficiaries To Determine Each Hospice's Aggregate Cap
Amount
2. Inpatient and Aggregate Cap Accounting Year Timeframe
E. Updates to the Hospice Quality Reporting Program
1. Background and Statutory Authority
2. General Considerations Used for Selection of Quality Measures
for the HQRP
3. Policy for Retention on HQRP Measures Adopted for Previous
Payment Determination
4. Previously Adopted Measures for FY 2016 and FY 2017 Payment
Determination
5. HQRP Quality Measures and Concepts Under Consideration for
Future Years
6. Form, Manner, and Timing of Quality Data Submission
a. Background
b. Policy for New Facilities To Begin Submitting Quality Data
c. Previously Finalized Data Submission Mechanism, Collection
Timelines, and Submission Deadlines for the FY 2017 Payment
Determination
d. Data Submission Timelines and Requirements for FY 2018
Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
e. HQRP Data Submission and Compliance Thresholds for the FY
2018 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
7. HQRP Submission Exception and Extension Requirements for the
FY 2017 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
8. Adoption of the CAHPS Hospice Survey for the FY 2017 Payment
Determination
a. Background Description of the Survey
b. Participation Requirements To Meet Quality Reporting
Requirements for the FY 2017 APU
c. Participation Requirements To Meet Quality Reporting
Requirements for the FY 2018 APU
d. Vendor Participation Requirements for the FY 2017 APU
9. Previously Finalized HQRP Reconsideration and Appeals
Procedures for the FY 2016 Payment Determination and Subsequent
Years
10. Public Display of Quality Measures Data for HQRP
11. Public Display of Other Hospice Information
F. Clarification Regarding Diagnosis Reporting on Hospice Claims
1. Background
2. Current Discussions About Hospice Vulnerabilities
3. Medicare Hospice Eligibility Requirements
4. Assessment of Conditions and Comorbidities Required by
Regulation
5. Clarification Regarding Diagnosis Reporting on Hospice Claims
IV. Collection of Information Requirements
V. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
B. Introduction
C. Overall Impact
1. Detailed Economic Analysis
a. Effects on Hospices
b. Hospice Size
c. Geographic Location
d. Type of Ownership
e. Hospice Base
f. Effects on Other Providers
g. Effects on the Medicare and Medicaid Programs
h. Alternatives Considered
i. Accounting Statement
j. Conclusion
2. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
3. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act Analysis
VI. Federalism Analysis and Regulations Text
Acronyms
Because of the many terms to which we refer by acronym in this
final rule,
[[Page 47143]]
we are listing the acronyms used and their corresponding meanings in
alphabetical order below:
APU Annual Payment Update
ASPE Assistant Secretary of Planning and Evaluation
AHIMA American Health Information Management Association
BBA Balanced Budget Act of 1997
BETOS Berenson-Eggers Types of Service
BIPA Benefits Improvement and Protection Act of 2000
BNAF Budget Neutrality Adjustment Factor
BLS Bureau of Labor Statistics
CAHPS[supreg] Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and
Systems
CBSA Core-Based Statistical Area
CCN CMS Certification Number
CCW Chronic Conditions Data Warehouse
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CHC Continuous Home Care
CHF Congestive Heart Failure
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
COPD Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
CoPs Conditions of Participation
CPI Center for Program Integrity
CPI-U Consumer Price Index-Urban Consumers
CR Change Request
CVA Cerebral Vascular Accident
CWF Common Working File
CY Calendar Year
DME Durable Medical Equipment
DRG Diagnostic Related Group
ER Emergency Room
FEHC Family Evaluation of Hospice Care
FR Federal Register
FY Fiscal Year
GAO Government Accountability Office
GIP General Inpatient Care
HCFA Healthcare Financing Administration
HHS Health and Human Services
HIPPA Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act
HIS Hospice Item Set
HQRP Hospice Quality Reporting Program
IACS Individuals Authorized Access to CMS Computer Services
ICD-9-CM International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision,
Clinical Modification
ICD-10-CM International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision,
Clinical Modification
ICR Information Collection Requirement
IDG Interdisciplinary Group
IMPACT Act Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care Transformation Act of
2014
IOM Institute of Medicine
IPPS Inpatient Prospective Payment System
IRC Inpatient Respite Care
LCD Local Coverage Determination
LPN Licensed Practical Nurse
MAC Medicare Administrative Contractor
MAP Measure Applications Partnership
MedPAC Medicare Payment Advisory Commission
MFP Multifactor Productivity
MSA Metropolitan Statistical Area
MSS Medical Social Services
NHPCO National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization
NF Long Term Care Nursing Facility
NOE Notice of Election
NOTR Notice of Termination/Revocation
NP Nurse Practitioner
NPI National Provider Identifier
NQF National Quality Forum
OIG Office of the Inspector General
OACT Office of the Actuary
OMB Office of Management and Budget
PRRB Provider Reimbursement Review Board
PS&R Provider Statistical and Reimbursement Report
Pub. L Public Law
QAPI Quality Assessment and Performance Improvement
RHC Routine Home Care
RN Registered Nurse
SBA Small Business Administration
SEC Securities and Exchange Commission
SIA Service Intensity Add-on
SNF Skilled Nursing Facility
TEFRA Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982
TEP Technical Expert Panel
UHDDS Uniform Hospital Discharge Data Set
U.S.C. United States Code
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose
This final rule updates the payment rates for hospices for fiscal
year (FY) 2016, as required under section 1814(i) of the Social
Security Act (the Act) and reflects the final year of the 7-year Budget
Neutrality Adjustment Factor (BNAF) phase-out finalized in the FY 2010
Hospice Wage Index final rule (74 FR 39407). Our updates to payment
rates for hospices also include changes to the hospice wage index by
incorporating the new Office of Management and Budget (OMB) core-based
statistical area (CBSA) definitions, changes to the aggregate cap
calculation required by section 1814(i)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act, and
includes aligning the cap accounting year for both the inpatient cap
and the hospice aggregate cap with the federal fiscal year starting in
FY 2017. In addition, pursuant to the discretion granted the Secretary
under section 1814(i)(6)(D)(i) of the Act and effective on January 1,
2016; this rule will create two different payment rates for routine
home care (RHC) that will result in a higher base payment rate for the
first 60 days of hospice care and a reduced base payment rate for days
61 and over of hospice care; and a service intensity add-on (SIA)
payment that will result in an add-on payment equal to the Continuous
Home Care (CHC) hourly payment rate multiplied by the amount of direct
patient care provided by a registered nurse (RN) or social worker
provided during the last 7 days of a beneficiary's life, if certain
criteria are met. In addition, section 3004(c) of the Affordable Care
Act established a quality reporting program for hospices. In accordance
with section 1814(i)(5)(A) of the Act, starting in FY 2014, hospices
that have failed to meet quality reporting requirements receive a 2
percentage point reduction to their payment update percentage. Although
this rule does not implement new quality measures, it provides updates
on the hospice quality reporting program. Finally, this rule includes a
clarification regarding diagnosis reporting on the hospice claim form.
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
Section III.A of this rule provides an update on hospice payment
reform research and analysis. As a result of the hospice payment reform
research and analysis conducted over the past several years, some of
which is described in section III.A of this rule and in various
technical reports available on the CMS Hospice Center Web page (https://www.cms.gov/Center/Provider-Type/Hospice-Center.html) we proposed
several provisions to address issues identified and strengthen the
Medicare hospice benefit. Section III.B implements the creation of two
different payment rates for RHC that will result in a higher base
payment rate for the first 60 days of hospice care and a reduced base
payment rate for days 61 and over of hospice care. Section III.B also
implements SIA payment, in addition to the per diem rate for the RHC
level of care, that will result in an add-on payment equal to the CHC
hourly payment rate multiplied by the amount of direct patient care
provided by an RN or social worker that occurs during the last 7 days
of a beneficiary's life, if certain criteria are met.
In section III.C.1 of this rule, we update the hospice wage index
using a 50/50 blend of the existing CBSA designations and the new CBSA
designations outlined in a February 28, 2013, OMB bulletin. Section
III.C.2 of this rule implements year 7 of the 7-year BNAF phase-out
finalized in the FY 2010 Hospice Wage Index final rule (74 FR 39407).
In section III.C.3, we update the hospice payment rates for FY 2016 by
1.6 percent. Section III.C.4 implements changes mandated by the
Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care Transformation Act of 2014 (IMPACT
Act), in which the aggregate cap for accounting years that end after
September 30, 2016 and before October 1, 2025, will be updated by the
hospice payment update percentage rather than using the consumer price
index for urban consumers (CPI-U). Specifically, the 2016 cap year,
starting on November 1, 2015 and ending on October 31, 2016, will be
updated by the FY 2016 hospice update percentage for hospice care. In
[[Page 47144]]
addition, in section III.D, we are aligning the cap accounting year for
both the inpatient cap and the hospice aggregate cap with the fiscal
year for FY 2017 and later. We believe that this will allow for the
timely implementation of the IMPACT Act changes while better aligning
the cap accounting year with the timeframe described in the IMPACT Act.
In section III.E of this rule, we discuss updates to the hospice
quality reporting program, including participation requirements for
current year (CY) 2015 regarding the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare
Providers and Systems (CAHPS[supreg]) Hospice Survey, and remind the
hospice industry that last year we set the July 1, 2014 implementation
date for the Hospice Item Set (HIS) and the January 1, 2015
implementation date for the CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey. More than
seven new quality measures will be derived from these tools; therefore,
no new measures were implemented this year. Also, Section III.E of this
rule will make changes related to the reconsideration process,
extraordinary circumstance extensions or exemptions, hospice quality
reporting program (HQRP) eligibility requirements for newly certified
hospices and new data submission timeliness requirements and compliance
thresholds. Finally, in Section III.F, we clarify that hospices must
report all diagnoses of the beneficiary on the hospice claim as a part
of the ongoing data collection efforts for possible future hospice
refinements. We believe that reporting of all diagnoses on the hospice
claim aligns with current coding guidelines as well as admission
requirements for hospice certifications.
C. Summary of Impacts
Table 1--Impact Summary Table
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Provision description Transfers
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2016 Hospice Wage Index and The overall economic impact of
Payment Rate Update. this final rule is estimated to
be $160 million in increased
payments to hospices during FY
2016.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Background
A. Hospice Care
Hospice care is an approach to treatment that recognizes that the
impending death of an individual warrants a change in the focus from
curative care to palliative care for relief of pain and for symptom
management. The goal of hospice care is to help terminally ill
individuals continue life with minimal disruption to normal activities
while remaining primarily in the home environment. A hospice uses an
interdisciplinary approach to deliver medical, nursing, social,
psychological, emotional, and spiritual services through use of a broad
spectrum of professionals and other caregivers, with the goal of making
the individual as physically and emotionally comfortable as possible.
Hospice is compassionate patient and family-centered care for those who
are terminally ill. It is a comprehensive, holistic approach to
treatment that recognizes that the impending death of an individual
necessitates a change from curative to palliative care.
Medicare regulations define ``palliative care'' as ``patient and
family-centered care that optimizes quality of life by anticipating,
preventing, and treating suffering. Palliative care throughout the
continuum of illness involves addressing physical, intellectual,
emotional, social, and spiritual needs and to facilitate patient
autonomy, access to information, and choice.'' (42 CFR 418.3)
Palliative care is at the core of hospice philosophy and care
practices, and is a critical component of the Medicare hospice benefit.
See also Hospice Conditions of Participation final rule (73 FR 32088)
(2008). The goal of palliative care in hospice is to improve the
quality of life of individuals, and their families, facing the issues
associated with a life-threatening illness through the prevention and
relief of suffering by means of early identification, assessment and
treatment of pain and other issues. This is achieved by the hospice
interdisciplinary team working with the patient and family to develop a
comprehensive care plan focused on coordinating care services, reducing
unnecessary diagnostics or ineffective therapies, and offering ongoing
conversations with individuals and their families about changes in
their condition. It is expected that this comprehensive care plan will
shift over time to meet the changing needs of the patient and family as
the individual approaches the end of life.
Medicare hospice care is palliative care for individuals with a
prognosis of living 6 months or less if the terminal illness runs its
normal course. When an individual is terminally ill, many health
problems are brought on by underlying condition(s), as bodily systems
are interdependent. In the June 5, 2008 Hospice Conditions of
Participation final rule (73 FR 32088), we stated that ``the medical
director must consider the primary terminal condition, related
diagnoses, current subjective and objective medical findings, current
medication and treatment orders, and information about unrelated
conditions when considering the initial certification of the terminal
illness.'' As referenced in our regulations at Sec. 418.22(b)(1), to
be eligible for Medicare hospice services, the patient's attending
physician (if any) and the hospice medical director must certify that
the individual is ``terminally ill,'' as defined in section
1861(dd)(3)(A) of the Act and our regulations at Sec. 418.3 that is,
the individual's prognosis is for a life expectancy of 6 months or less
if the terminal illness runs its normal course. The certification of
terminal illness must include a brief narrative explanation of the
clinical findings that supports a life expectancy of 6 months or less
as part of the certification and recertification forms, as set out at
Sec. 418.22(b)(3).
The goal of hospice care is to make the hospice patient as
physically and emotionally comfortable as possible, with minimal
disruption to normal activities, while remaining primarily in the home
environment. Hospice care uses an interdisciplinary approach to deliver
medical, nursing, social, psychological, emotional, and spiritual
services through the use of a broad spectrum of professional and other
caregivers and volunteers. While the goal of hospice care is to allow
for the individual to remain in his or her home environment,
circumstances during the end-of-life may necessitate short-term
inpatient admission to a hospital, skilled nursing facility (SNF), or
hospice facility for procedures necessary for pain control or acute or
chronic symptom management that cannot be managed in any other setting.
These acute hospice care services are to ensure that any new or
worsening symptoms are intensively addressed so that the individual can
return to his or her home environment at a home level of care. Short-
term, intermittent, inpatient respite services are also available to
the
[[Page 47145]]
family of the hospice patient when needed to relieve the family or
other caregivers. Additionally, an individual can receive continuous
home care during a period of crisis in which an individual requires
primarily continuous nursing care to achieve palliation or management
of acute medical symptoms so that the individual can remain at home.
Continuous home care may be covered on a continuous basis for as much
as 24 hours a day, and these periods must be predominantly nursing care
in accordance with our regulations at Sec. 418.204. A minimum of 8
hours of nursing, or nursing and aide, care must be furnished on a
particular day to qualify for the continuous home care rate (Sec.
418.302(e)(4)).
Hospices are expected to comply with all civil rights laws,
including the provision of auxiliary aids and services to ensure
effective communication with patients or patient care representatives
with disabilities consistent with Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act
of 1973 and the Americans with Disabilities Act, and to provide
language access for such persons who are limited in English
proficiency, consistent with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Further information about these requirements may be found at https://www.hhs.gov/ocr/civilrights.
B. History of the Medicare Hospice Benefit
Before the creation of the Medicare hospice benefit, hospice
programs were originally operated by volunteers who cared for the
dying. During the early development stages of the Medicare hospice
benefit, hospice advocates were clear that they wanted a Medicare
benefit that provided all-inclusive care for terminally-ill
individuals, provided pain relief and symptom management, and offered
the opportunity to die with dignity in the comfort of one's home rather
than in an institutional setting.\1\ As stated in the August 22, 1983
proposed rule entitled ``Medicare Program; Hospice Care'' (48 FR
38146), ``the hospice experience in the United States has placed
emphasis on home care. It offers physician services, specialized
nursing services, and other forms of care in the home to enable the
terminally ill individual to remain at home in the company of family
and friends as long as possible.'' The concept of a patient
``electing'' the hospice benefit and being certified as terminally ill
were two key components of the legislation responsible for the creation
of the Medicare Hospice Benefit (section 122 of the Tax Equity and
Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA), (Pub. L. 97-248)). Section
122 of TEFRA created the Medicare Hospice benefit, which was
implemented on November 1, 1983. Under sections 1812(d) and 1861(dd) of
the Act, codified at 42 U.S.C. 1395d(d) and 1395x(dd), we provide
coverage of hospice care for terminally ill Medicare beneficiaries who
elect to receive care from a Medicare-certified hospice. Our
regulations at Sec. 418.54(c) stipulate that the comprehensive hospice
assessment must identify the patient's physical, psychosocial,
emotional, and spiritual needs related to the terminal illness and
related conditions, and address those needs in order to promote the
hospice patient's well-being, comfort, and dignity throughout the dying
process. The comprehensive assessment must take into consideration the
following factors: the nature and condition causing admission
(including the presence or lack of objective data and subjective
complaints); complications and risk factors that affect care planning;
functional status; imminence of death; and severity of symptoms (Sec.
418.54(c)). The Medicare hospice benefit requires the hospice to cover
all reasonable and necessary palliative care related to the terminal
prognosis, as described in the patient's plan of care. The December 16,
1983 Hospice final rule (48 FR 56008) requires hospices to cover care
for interventions to manage pain and symptoms. Additionally, the
hospice Conditions of Participation (CoPs) at Sec. 418.56(c) require
that the hospice must provide all reasonable and necessary services for
the palliation and management of the terminal illness, related
conditions and interventions to manage pain and symptoms. Therapy and
interventions must be assessed and managed in terms of providing
palliation and comfort without undue symptom burden for the hospice
patient or family.\2\ In the December 16, 1983 Hospice final rule (48
FR 56010 through 56011), regarding what is related versus unrelated to
the terminal illness, we stated: ``. . . we believe that the unique
physical condition of each terminally ill individual makes it necessary
for these decisions to be made on a case-by-case basis. It is our
general view that hospices are required to provide virtually all the
care that is needed by terminally ill patients.'' Therefore, unless
there is clear evidence that a condition is unrelated to the terminal
prognosis; all conditions are considered to be related to the terminal
prognosis. It is also the responsibility of the hospice physician to
document why a patient's medical needs will be unrelated to the
terminal prognosis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Connor, Stephen. (2007). Development of Hospice and
Palliative Care in the United States. OMEGA. 56(1), p89-99.
\2\ Paolini, DO, Charlotte. (2001). Symptoms Management at End
of Life. JAOA. 101(10). p609-615.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As stated in the December 16, 1983 Hospice final rule, the
fundamental premise upon which the hospice benefit was designed was the
``revocation'' of traditional curative care and the ``election'' of
hospice care for end-of-life symptom management and maximization of
quality of life (48 FR 56008). After electing hospice care, the patient
typically returns to the home from an institutionalized setting or
remains in the home, to be surrounded by family and friends, and to
prepare emotionally and spiritually for death while receiving expert
symptom management and other supportive services. Election of hospice
care also includes waiving the right to Medicare payment for curative
treatment for the terminal prognosis, and instead receiving palliative
care to manage pain or symptoms.
The benefit was originally designed to cover hospice care for a
finite period of time that roughly corresponded to a life expectancy of
6 months or less. Initially, beneficiaries could receive three election
periods: two 90-day periods and one 30-day period. Currently, Medicare
beneficiaries can elect hospice care for two 90-day periods and an
unlimited number of subsequent 60-day periods; however, the expectation
remains that beneficiaries have a life expectancy of 6 months or less
if the terminal illness runs its normal course.
C. Services Covered by the Medicare Hospice Benefit
One requirement for coverage under the Medicare Hospice benefit is
that hospice services must be reasonable and necessary for the
palliation and management of the terminal illness and related
conditions. Section 1861(dd)(1) of the Act establishes the services
that are to be rendered by a Medicare certified hospice program. These
covered services include: Nursing care; physical therapy; occupational
therapy; speech-language pathology therapy; medical social services;
home health aide services (now called hospice aide services); physician
services; homemaker services; medical supplies (including drugs and
biologics); medical appliances; counseling services (including dietary
counseling); short-term inpatient care (including both respite care and
care necessary for pain control and acute or chronic symptom
management) in a hospital, nursing
[[Page 47146]]
facility, or hospice inpatient facility; continuous home care during
periods of crisis and only as necessary to maintain the terminally ill
individual at home; and any other item or service which is specified in
the plan of care and for which payment may otherwise be made under
Medicare, in accordance with Title XVIII of the Act.
Section 1814(a)(7)(B) of the Act requires that a written plan for
providing hospice care to a beneficiary who is a hospice patient be
established before care is provided by, or under arrangements made by,
that hospice program and that the written plan be periodically reviewed
by the beneficiary's attending physician (if any), the hospice medical
director, and an interdisciplinary group (described in section
1861(dd)(2)(B) of the Act). The services offered under the Medicare
hospice benefit must be available, as needed, to beneficiaries 24 hours
a day, 7 days a week (section 1861(dd)(2)(A)(i) of the Act). Upon the
implementation of the hospice benefit, the Congress expected hospices
to continue to use volunteer services, though these services are not
reimbursed by Medicare (see Section 1861(dd)(2)(E) of the Act and (48
FR 38149)). As stated in the August 22, 1983 Hospice proposed rule, the
hospice interdisciplinary group should be comprised of paid hospice
employees as well as hospice volunteers (48 FR 38149). This expectation
supports the hospice philosophy of holistic, comprehensive,
compassionate, end-of-life care.
Before the Medicare hospice benefit was established, the Congress
requested a demonstration project to test the feasibility of covering
hospice care under Medicare. The National Hospice Study was initiated
in 1980 through a grant sponsored by the Robert Wood Johnson and John
A. Hartford Foundations and CMS (then, the Health Care Financing
Administration (HCFA)). The demonstration project was conducted between
October 1980 and March 1983. The project summarized the hospice care
philosophy and principles as the following:
Patient and family know of the terminal condition.
Further medical treatment and intervention are indicated
only on a supportive basis.
Pain control should be available to patients as needed to
prevent rather than to just ameliorate pain.
Interdisciplinary teamwork is essential in caring for
patient and family.
Family members and friends should be active in providing
support during the death and bereavement process.
Trained volunteers should provide additional support as
needed.
The cost data and the findings on what services hospices provided
in the demonstration project were used to design the Medicare hospice
benefit. The identified hospice services were incorporated into the
service requirements under the Medicare hospice benefit. Importantly,
in the August 22, 1983 Hospice proposed rule, we stated ``the hospice
benefit and the resulting Medicare reimbursement is not intended to
diminish the voluntary spirit of hospices'' (48 FR 38149).
D. Medicare Payment for Hospice Care
Sections 1812(d), 1813(a)(4), 1814(a)(7), 1814(i), and 1861(dd) of
the Act, and our regulations in part 418, establish eligibility
requirements, payment standards and procedures, define covered
services, and delineate the conditions a hospice must meet to be
approved for participation in the Medicare program. Part 418, subpart
G, provides for a per diem payment in one of four prospectively-
determined rate categories of hospice care (RHC, CHC, inpatient respite
care, and general inpatient care), based on each day a qualified
Medicare beneficiary is under hospice care (once the individual has
elected). This per diem payment is to include all of the hospice
services set out at section 1861(dd)(1) of the Act that are needed to
manage the beneficiary's care. There has been little change in the
hospice payment structure since the benefit's inception. The per diem
rate based on level of care was established in 1983, and this payment
structure remains today with some adjustments, as noted below.
1. Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1989
Section 6005(a) of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1989
(Pub. L. 101-239) amended section 1814(i)(1)(C) of the Act and provided
for the following two changes in the methodology concerning updating
the daily payment rates: (1) Effective January 1, 1990, the daily
payment rates for RHC and other services included in hospice care were
increased to equal 120 percent of the rates in effect on September 30,
1989; and (2) the daily payment rate for RHC and other services
included in hospice care for fiscal years (FYs) beginning on or after
October 1, 1990, were the payment rates in effect during the previous
Federal fiscal year increased by the hospital market basket percentage
increase.
2. Balanced Budget Act of 1997
Section 4441(a) of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (BBA) (Pub. L.
105-33) amended section 1814(i)(1)(C)(ii)(VI) of the Act to establish
updates to hospice rates for FYs 1998 through 2002. Hospice rates were
updated by a factor equal to the hospital market basket percentage
increase, minus 1 percentage point. Payment rates for FYs from 2002
have been updated according to section 1814(i)(1)(C)(ii)(VII) of the
Act, which states that the update to the payment rates for subsequent
FYs will be the hospital market basket percentage increase for the FY.
The Act requires us to use the inpatient hospital market basket to
determine hospice payment rates.
3. FY 1998 Hospice Wage Index Final Rule
In the August 8, 1997 FY 1998 Hospice Wage Index final rule (62 FR
42860), we implemented a new methodology for calculating the hospice
wage index based on the recommendations of a negotiated rulemaking
committee. The original hospice wage index was based on 1981 Bureau of
Labor Statistics hospital data and had not been updated since 1983. In
1994, because of disparity in wages from one geographical location to
another, the Hospice Wage Index Negotiated Rulemaking Committee was
formed to negotiate a new wage index methodology that could be accepted
by the industry and the government. This Committee was comprised of
representatives from national hospice associations; rural, urban, large
and small hospices, and multi-site hospices; consumer groups; and a
government representative. The Committee decided that in updating the
hospice wage index, aggregate Medicare payments to hospices would
remain budget neutral to payments calculated using the 1983 wage index,
to cushion the impact of using a new wage index methodology. To
implement this policy, a BNAF will be computed and applied annually to
the pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage index when deriving the
hospice wage index, subject to a wage index floor.
4. FY 2010 Hospice Wage Index Final Rule
Inpatient hospital pre-floor and pre-reclassified wage index
values, as described in the August 8, 1997 Hospice Wage Index final
rule, are subject to either a budget neutrality adjustment or
application of the wage index floor. Wage index values of 0.8 or
greater are adjusted by the BNAF. Starting in FY
[[Page 47147]]
2010, a 7-year phase-out of the BNAF began (August 6, 2009 FY 2010
Hospice Wage Index final rule, (74 FR 39384)), with a 10 percent
reduction in FY 2010, an additional 15 percent reduction for a total of
25 percent in FY 2011, an additional 15 percent reduction for a total
40 percent reduction in FY 2012, an additional 15 percent reduction for
a total of 55 percent in FY 2013, and an additional 15 percent
reduction for a total 70 percent reduction in FY 2014. The phase-out
will continue with an additional 15 percent reduction for a total
reduction of 85 percent in FY 2015, and an additional 15 percent
reduction for complete elimination in FY 2016. We note that the BNAF is
an adjustment which increases the hospice wage index value. Therefore,
the BNAF reduction is a reduction in the amount of the BNAF increase
applied to the hospice wage index value. It is not a reduction in the
hospice wage index value or in the hospice payment rates.
5. The Affordable Care Act
Starting with FY 2013 (and in subsequent FYs), the market basket
percentage update under the hospice payment system referenced in
sections 1814(i)(1)(C)(ii)(VII) and 1814(i)(1)(C)(iii) of the Act will
be annually reduced by changes in economy-wide productivity, as
specified in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act, as amended by
section 3132(a) of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Pub.
L. 111-148) as amended by the Health Care and Education Reconciliation
Act (Pub. L. 111-152) (collectively referred to as the Affordable Care
Act)). In FY 2013 through FY 2019, the market basket percentage update
under the hospice payment system will be reduced by an additional 0.3
percentage point (although for FY 2014 to FY 2019, the potential 0.3
percentage point reduction is subject to suspension under conditions as
specified in section 1814(i)(1)(C)(v) of the Act).
In addition, sections 1814(i)(5)(A) through (C) of the Act, as
amended by section 3132(a) of the Affordable Care Act, require hospices
to begin submitting quality data, based on measures to be specified by
the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services (the
Secretary), for FY 2014 and subsequent FYs. Beginning in FY 2014,
hospices that fail to report quality data will have their market basket
update reduced by 2 percentage points.
Section 1814(a)(7)(D)(i) of the Act was amended by section
3132(b)(2)(D)(i) of the Affordable Care Act, and requires effective
January 1, 2011, that a hospice physician or nurse practitioner have a
face-to-face encounter with the beneficiary to determine continued
eligibility of the beneficiary's hospice care prior to the 180th-day
recertification and each subsequent recertification, and to attest that
such visit took place. When implementing this provision, we finalized
in the CY 2011 Home Health Prospective Payment System final rule (75 FR
70435) that the 180th-day recertification and subsequent
recertifications corresponded to the beneficiary's third or subsequent
benefit periods. Further, section 1814(i)(6) of the Act, as amended by
section 3132(a)(1)(B) of the Affordable Care Act, authorizes the
Secretary to collect additional data and information determined
appropriate to revise payments for hospice care and other purposes. The
types of data and information suggested in the Affordable Care Act
would capture accurate resource utilization, which could be collected
on claims, cost reports, and possibly other mechanisms, as the
Secretary determines to be appropriate. The data collected may be used
to revise the methodology for determining the payment rates for RHC and
other services included in hospice care, no earlier than October 1,
2013, as described in section 1814(i)(6)(D) of the Act. In addition, we
are required to consult with hospice programs and the Medicare Payment
Advisory Commission (MedPAC) regarding additional data collection and
payment revision options.
6. FY 2012 Hospice Wage Index Final Rule
When the Medicare Hospice benefit was implemented, the Congress
included an aggregate cap on hospice payments, which limits the total
aggregate payments any individual hospice can receive in a year. The
Congress stipulated that a ``cap amount'' be computed each year. The
cap amount was set at $6,500 per beneficiary when first enacted in 1983
and is adjusted annually by the change in the medical care expenditure
category of the consumer price index for urban consumers from March
1984 to March of the cap year (section 1814(i)(2)(B) of the Act). The
cap year is defined as the period from November 1st to October 31st. As
we stated in the August 4, 2011 FY 2012 Hospice Wage Index final rule
(76 FR 47308 through 47314) for the 2012 cap year and subsequent cap
years, the hospice aggregate cap will be calculated using the patient-
by-patient proportional methodology, within certain limits. We will
allow existing hospices the option of having their cap calculated via
the original streamlined methodology, also within certain limits. New
hospices will have their cap determinations calculated using the
patient-by-patient proportional methodology. The patient-by-patient
proportional methodology and the streamlined methodology are two
different methodologies for counting beneficiaries when calculating the
hospice aggregate cap. A detailed explanation of these methods is found
in the August 4, 2011 FY 2012 Hospice Wage Index final rule (76 FR
47308 through 47314). If a hospice's total Medicare reimbursement for
the cap year exceeded the hospice aggregate cap, then the hospice must
repay the excess back to Medicare.
7. FY 2015 Hospice Rate Update Final Rule
When electing hospice, a beneficiary waives Medicare coverage for
any care for the terminal illness and related conditions except for
services provided by the designated hospice and attending physician. A
hospice is to file a Notice of Election (NOE) as soon as possible to
establish the hospice election within the claims processing system.
Late filing of the NOE can result in inaccurate benefit period data and
leaves Medicare vulnerable to paying non-hospice claims related to the
terminal illness and related conditions and beneficiaries possibly
liable for any cost-sharing associated costs. The FY 2015 Hospice Rate
Update final rule (79 FR 50452) finalized a requirement that requires
the NOE be filed within 5 calendar days after the effective date of
hospice election. If the NOE is filed beyond this 5 day period, hospice
providers are liable for the services furnished during the days from
the effective date of hospice election to the date of NOE filing (79 FR
50454, 50474). Similar to the NOE, the claims processing system must be
notified of a beneficiary's discharge from hospice or hospice benefit
revocation. This update to the beneficiary's status allows claims from
non-hospice providers to process and be paid. Upon live discharge or
revocation, the beneficiary immediately resumes the Medicare coverage
that had been waived when he or she elected hospice. The FY 2015
Hospice Rate Update final rule also finalized a requirement that
requires hospices to file a notice of termination/revocation within 5
calendar days of a beneficiary's live discharge or revocation, unless
the hospices have already filed a final claim. This requirement helps
to protect beneficiaries from delays in accessing needed care (79 FR
50509).
[[Page 47148]]
A hospice ``attending physician'' is described by the statutory and
regulatory definitions as a medical doctor, osteopath, or nurse
practitioner whom the patient identifies, at the time of hospice
election, as having the most significant role in the determination and
delivery of his or her medical care. We received reports of problems
with the identification of the patient's designated attending physician
and a third of hospice patients had multiple providers submit Part B
claims as the ``attending physician'' using a modifier. The FY 2015
Hospice Rate Update final rule finalized a requirement that the
election form must include the beneficiary's choice of attending
physician and that the beneficiary provide the hospice with a signed
document when he or she chooses to change attending physicians (79 FR
50479).
Hospice providers are required to begin using a Hospice Experience
of Care Survey for informal caregivers of hospice patients surveyed in
2015. The FY 2015 Hospice Rate Update final rule provided background
and a description of the development of the Hospice Experience of Care
Survey, including the model of survey implementation, the survey
respondents, eligibility criteria for the sample, and the languages in
which the survey is offered. The FY 2015 Hospice Rate Update final rule
also outlined participation requirements for CY 2015 and discussed
vendor oversight activities and the reconsideration and appeals process
(79 FR 50496).
Finally, the FY 2015 Hospice Rate Update final rule requires
providers to complete their aggregate cap determination within 5 months
after the cap year, but not sooner than 3 months after the end of the
cap year, and remit any overpayments. Those hospices that do not submit
their aggregate cap determinations will have their payments suspended
until the determination is completed and received by the Medicare
Administrative Contractor (MAC) (79 FR 50503).
8. IMPACT Act of 2014
The Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care Transformation Act (IMPACT
Act) of 2014 became law on October 6, 2014 (Pub. L. 113-185). Section
3(a) of the IMPACT Act mandates that all Medicare certified hospices be
surveyed every 3 years beginning April 6, 2015 and ending September 30,
2025, as it was found that surveys of hospices were being performed on
an infrequent basis. In addition, the IMPACT Act also implements a
provision set forth in the Affordable Care Act that requires medical
review of hospice cases involving patients receiving more than 180 days
care in select hospices that show a preponderance of such patients, and
the IMPACT Act contains a new provision mandating that the aggregate
cap amount for accounting years that end after September 30, 2016, and
before October 1, 2025 be updated by the hospice payment update rather
than using the CPI-U for medical care expenditures. Specifically, the
2016 cap year, which starts on November 1, 2015 and ends on October 31,
2016, will be updated by the FY 2016 payment update percentage for
hospice care. In accordance with the statute, we will continue to do
this through any cap year ending before October 1, 2025 (that is,
through cap year 2025).
E. Trends in Medicare Hospice Utilization
Since the implementation of the hospice benefit in 1983, and
especially within the last decade, there has been substantial growth in
hospice utilization. The number of Medicare beneficiaries receiving
hospice services has grown from 513,000 in FY 2000 to over 1.3 million
in FY 2013. Similarly, Medicare hospice expenditures have risen from
$2.8 billion in FY 2000 to an estimated $15.3 billion in FY 2013. Our
Office of the Actuary (OACT) projects that hospice expenditures are
expected to continue to increase, by approximately 8 percent annually,
reflecting an increase in the number of Medicare beneficiaries, more
beneficiary awareness of the Medicare Hospice Benefit for end-of-life
care, and a growing preference for care provided in home and community-
based settings. However, this increased spending is partly due to an
increased average lifetime length of stay for beneficiaries, from 54
days in 2000 to 98.5 days in FY 2013, an increase of 82 percent.
There have also been changes in the diagnosis patterns among
Medicare hospice enrollees. Specifically, there were notable increases
between 2002 and 2007 in neurologically-based diagnoses, including
various dementia diagnoses. Additionally, there have been significant
increases in the use of non-specific, symptom-classified diagnoses,
such as ``debility'' and ``adult failure to thrive.'' In FY 2013,
``debility'' and ``adult failure to thrive'' were the first and sixth
most common hospice diagnoses, respectively, accounting for
approximately 14 percent of all diagnoses. Effective October 1, 2014,
hospice claims were returned to the provider if ``debility'' and
``adult failure to thrive'' were coded as the principal hospice
diagnosis as well as other ICD-9-CM codes that are not permissible as
principal diagnosis codes per ICD-9-CM coding guidelines. We reminded
the hospice industry that this policy would go into effect and claims
would start to be returned October 1, 2014 in the FY 2015 hospice rate
update final rule. As a result of this, there has been a shift in
coding patterns on hospice claims. For FY 2014, the most common hospice
principal diagnoses were Alzheimer's disease, Congestive Heart Failure,
Lung Cancer, Chronic Airway Obstruction and Senile Dementia which
constituted approximately 32 percent of all claims-reported principal
diagnosis codes reported in FY 2014 (see Table 2 below).
Table 2--The Top Twenty Principal Hospice Diagnoses, FY 2002, FY 2007, FY 2013, FY 2014
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rank ICD-9/Reported principal diagnosis Count Percentage
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year: FY 2002
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1.......................................... 162.9 Lung Cancer.................. 73,769 11
2.......................................... 428.0 Congestive Heart Failure..... 45,951 7
3.......................................... 799.3 Debility Unspecified......... 36,999 6
4.......................................... 496 COPD........................... 35,197 5
5.......................................... 331.0 Alzheimer's Disease.......... 28,787 4
6.......................................... 436 CVA/Stroke..................... 26,897 4
7.......................................... 185 Prostate Cancer................ 20,262 3
8.......................................... 783.7 Adult Failure To Thrive...... 18,304 3
9.......................................... 174.9 Breast Cancer................ 17,812 3
10......................................... 290.0 Senile Dementia, Uncomp...... 16,999 3
11......................................... 153.0 Colon Cancer................. 16,379 2
12......................................... 157.9 Pancreatic Cancer............ 15,427 2
[[Page 47149]]
13......................................... 294.8 Organic Brain Synd Nec....... 10,394 2
14......................................... 429.9 Heart Disease Unspecified.... 10,332 2
15......................................... 154.0 Rectosigmoid Colon Cancer.... 8,956 1
16......................................... 332.0 Parkinson's Disease.......... 8,865 1
17......................................... 586 Renal Failure Unspecified...... 8,764 1
18......................................... 585 Chronic Renal Failure (End 8,599 1
2005).
19......................................... 183.0 Ovarian Cancer............... 7,432 1
20......................................... 188.9 Bladder Cancer............... 6,916 1
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year: FY 2007
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1.......................................... 799.3 Debility Unspecified......... 90,150 9
2.......................................... 162.9 Lung Cancer.................. 86,954 8
3.......................................... 428.0 Congestive Heart Failure..... 77,836 7
4.......................................... 496 COPD........................... 60,815 6
5.......................................... 783.7 Adult Failure To Thrive...... 58,303 6
6.......................................... 331.0 Alzheimer's Disease.......... 58,200 6
7.......................................... 290.0 Senile Dementia Uncomp....... 37,667 4
8.......................................... 436 CVA/Stroke..................... 31,800 3
9.......................................... 429.9 Heart Disease Unspecified.... 22,170 2
10......................................... 185 Prostate Cancer................ 22,086 2
11......................................... 174.9 Breast Cancer................ 20,378 2
12......................................... 157.9 Pancreas Unspecified......... 19,082 2
13......................................... 153.9 Colon Cancer................. 19,080 2
14......................................... 294.8 Organic Brain Syndrome NEC... 17,697 2
15......................................... 332.0 Parkinson's Disease.......... 16,524 2
16......................................... 294.10 Dementia In Other Diseases w/ 15,777 2
o Behav. Dist..
17......................................... 586 Renal Failure Unspecified...... 12,188 1
18......................................... 585.6 End Stage Renal Disease...... 11,196 1
19......................................... 188.9 Bladder Cancer............... 8,806 1
20......................................... 183.0 Ovarian Cancer............... 8,434 1
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year: FY 2013
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1.......................................... 799.3 Debility Unspecified......... 127,415 9
2.......................................... 428.0 Congestive Heart Failure..... 96,171 7
3.......................................... 162.9 Lung Cancer.................. 91,598 6
4.......................................... 496 COPD........................... 82,184 6
5.......................................... 331.0 Alzheimer's Disease.......... 79,626 6
6.......................................... 783.7 Adult Failure to Thrive...... 71,122 5
7.......................................... 290.0 Senile Dementia, Uncomp...... 60,579 4
8.......................................... 429.9 Heart Disease Unspecified.... 36,914 3
9.......................................... 436 CVA/Stroke..................... 34,459 2
10......................................... 294.10 Dementia In Other Diseases w/ 30,963 2
o Behavioral Dist..
11......................................... 332.0 Parkinson's Disease.......... 25,396 2
12......................................... 153.9 Colon Cancer................. 23,228 2
13......................................... 294.20 Dementia Unspecified w/o 23,224 2
Behavioral Dist..
14......................................... 174.9 Breast Cancer................ 23,059 2
15......................................... 157.9 Pancreatic Cancer............ 22,341 2
16......................................... 185 Prostate Cancer................ 21,769 2
17......................................... 585.6 End-Stage Renal Disease...... 19,309 1
18......................................... 518.81 Acute Respiratory Failure... 15,965 1
19......................................... 294.8 Other Persistent Mental Dis.- 14,372 1
classified elsewhere.
20......................................... 294.11 Dementia In Other Diseases w/ 13,687 1
Behavioral Dist..
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year: FY 2014
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1.......................................... 331.0 Alzheimer's disease.......... 128,844 9
2.......................................... 428.0 Congestive heart failure, 107,540 8
unspecified.
3.......................................... 162.9 Lung Cancer.................. 90,689 6
4.......................................... 496 COPD........................... 79,249 6
5.......................................... 290.0 Senile dementia, 40,269 3
uncomplicated.
6.......................................... 429.9 Heart disease, unspecified... 37,129 3
7.......................................... 436 CVA/Stroke..................... 33,759 2
8.......................................... 294.20 Dementia, unspecified, 33,329 2
without behavioral disturbance.
9.......................................... 332.0 Parkinson's Disease.......... 30,292 2
10......................................... 153.9 Colon Cancer................. 23,634 2
11......................................... 174.9 Breast Cancer................ 23,569 2
12......................................... 157.9 Pancreatic Cancer............ 22,789 2
13......................................... 185 Prostate Cancer................ 22,374 2
14......................................... 585.6 End stage renal disease...... 21,713 2
15......................................... 294.10 Dementia in conditions 19,660 1
classified elsewhere w/o behav
disturbance.
[[Page 47150]]
16......................................... 331.2 Senile degeneration of brain. 18,847 1
17......................................... 518.81 Acute respiratory failure... 17,624 1
18......................................... 290.40 Vascular dementia, 17,318 1
uncomplicated.
19......................................... 491.21 Obstructive chronic 16,168 1
bronchitis with (acute)
exacerbation.
20......................................... 429.2 Cardiovascular disease, 14,305 1
unspecified.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note(s): The frequencies shown represent beneficiaries that had a least one claim with the specific ICD-9-CM
code reported as the principal diagnosis. Beneficiaries could be represented multiple times in the results if
they have multiple claims during that time period with different principal diagnoses.
Source: FY 2002 and 2007 hospice claims data from the Chronic Conditions Data Warehouse (CCW), accessed on
February 14 and February 20, 2013. FY 2013 hospice claims data from the CCW, accessed on June 26, 2014 and FY
2014 hospice claims data from the CCW, accessed on July 6, 2015.
A. Hospice Payment Reform Research and Analyses
In 2010, the Congress amended section 1814(i)(6) of the Act with
section 3132(a) of the Affordable Care Act. The amendment authorizes
the Secretary to collect additional data and information determined
appropriate to revise payments for hospice care and for other purposes.
The data collected may be used to revise the methodology for RHC and
other hospice services (in a budget-neutral manner in the first year),
no earlier than October 1, 2013, as described in section 1814(i)(6)(D)
of the Act. The Secretary is required to consult with hospice programs
and the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) regarding
additional data collection and payment reform options.
Since 2010, we have undertaken efforts to collect the data needed
to establish what revisions to the methodology for determining the
hospice payment rates may be necessary. Effective April 1, 2014, we
began requiring additional information on hospice claims regarding
drugs and certain durable medical equipment and effective October 1,
2014, we finalized changes to the hospice cost report to improve data
collection on the costs of providing hospice care.\3\ In addition, our
research contractor, Abt Associates, conducted a hospice literature
review; held stakeholder meetings; and developed and maintained an
analytic plan, which supports effort towards implementing hospice
payment reform. During the stakeholder meetings, attendees articulated
concerns of sweeping payment reform changes and encouraged us to
consider incremental steps or to use existing regulatory authority to
refine the hospice program. We also held five industry technical expert
panels (TEPs) via webinar and in-person meetings; consulted with
federal hospice experts; provided annual updates on findings from our
research and analyses and reform options in the FY 2014 and FY 2015
Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate Update proposed and final rules (78
FR 48234 and 79 FR 50452); and updated the hospice industry on reform
work through Open Door Forums, industry conferences and academic
conferences.\4\ We have taken into consideration the recommendations
from MedPAC on reforming hospice payment, as articulated in the MedPAC
Reports to Congress since 2009. The MedPAC recommendations and research
provided a foundation for our development of an analytic plan and
additional payment reform concepts. Furthermore, MedPAC participated in
post-TEP meetings with other federal hospice experts. These meetings
provided valuable feedback regarding the TEP's comments and discussed
potential research and analyses to consider for hospice payment reform.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ CMS Transmittal 2864, ``Additional Data Reporting
Requirements for Hospice claim''. Available at https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/R2864P.pdf.
\4\ https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/Hospice/Downloads/Hospice-Project-Background.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FY 2012 Hospice Wage Index final rule (76 FR 47324) noted our
collaboration with the Assistant Secretary of Planning and Evaluation
(ASPE) to develop analyses that were used to inform our research
efforts. The results from such analyses were used by Abt Associates to
facilitate discussion, in 2012, of potential payment reform options and
to guide the identification of topics for further analysis. In early
2014, we began working with Acumen, LLC, using real-time claims data,
to monitor the vulnerabilities identified in the 2013 and 2014 Abt
Associates' Hospice Payment Reform Technical Reports. On September 18,
2014, the IMPACT Act, mandated that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
(CMS) undertake additional hospice monitoring and oversight activities.
As noted previously, the IMPACT Act requires CMS to survey hospices at
least as frequently as every 3 years for the next 10 years and review
medical records of hospice beneficiaries on the hospice benefit for 180
days or greater as specified by the Secretary. CMS is actively engaged
in cross-agency collaboration to meet the intent of the IMPACT Act to
increase monitoring and oversight of hospice providers.
The majority of the research and analyses conducted by CMS and
summarized in this rule were based on analyses of FY 2013 Medicare
claims and cost report data conducted by our research contractor, Abt
Associates, unless otherwise specified. In addition, we cite research
and analyses, conducted by Acumen, LLC that are based on real-time
claims data from the Integrated Data Repository (IDR). In the sections
below, analysis conducted on pre-hospice spending, non-hospice spending
for hospice beneficiaries during a hospice election, and live discharge
rates highlight potential vulnerabilities of the Medicare hospice
benefit.
1. Pre-Hospice Spending
In 1982, the Congress introduced hospice into the Medicare program
as an alternative to aggressive treatment at the end of life. During
the development of the benefit, multiple testimonies from industry
leaders and hospice families were heard and it was reported that
hospices provided high-quality, compassionate and humane care while
also offering a reduction in Medicare costs.\5\ Additionally, a
Congressional Budget Office (CBO) study asserted that hospice care
would result in sizable savings over conventional hospital care.\6\
Those savings estimates were based on a comparison of spending in
[[Page 47151]]
the last 6 months of life for a cancer patient not utilizing hospice
care versus the cost of hospice care for the 6 months preceding
death.\7\ The original language for Sec. 1814(i) of the Act (prior to
August, 29, 1983) set the hospice aggregate cap amount at 40 percent of
the average Medicare per capita expenditure amount for cancer patients
in the last 6 months of life. When the hospice benefit was created, the
average lifetime length of stay for a hospice patient was between 55
and 75 days. Since the implementation of the Medicare hospice benefit,
the principal diagnosis for patients electing the hospice benefit has
changed from primarily cancer diagnoses in 1983 to primarily non-cancer
diagnoses in FY 2014.\8\ Alzheimer's disease and Congestive Heart
Failure (CHF) were the most reported principal diagnoses comprising 17
percent of all diagnoses reported (see Table 2 in section II.E) in FY
2014.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Subcommittee of Health of the Committee of Ways and Means,
House of Representatives, March 25, 1982.
\6\ Mor V. Masterson-Allen S. (1987): Hospice care systems:
Structure, process, costs and outcome. New York: Springer Publishing
Company.
\7\ Fogel, Richard. (1983): Comments on the Legislative Intent
of Medicare's Hospice Benefit (GAO/HRD-83-72).
\8\ Connor, S. (2007). Development of Hospice and Palliative
Care in the United States. OMEGA. 56(1), 89-99. doi:102190/OM.5.1.h
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Analysis was conducted to evaluate pre-hospice spending for
beneficiaries who used hospice and who died in FY 2013. To evaluate
pre-hospice spending, we calculated the median daily Medicare payments
for such beneficiaries for the 180 days, 90 days, and 30 days prior to
electing hospice care. We then categorized patients according to the
principal diagnosis reported on the hospice claim. The analysis
revealed that for some patients, the Medicare payments in the 180 days
prior to the hospice election were lower than Medicare payments
associated with hospice care once the benefit was elected (see Table 3
and Figure 1 below). Specifically, median Medicare spending for a
beneficiary with a diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease, non-Alzheimer's
dementia, or Parkinson's in the 180 days prior to hospice admission
(about 20 percent of patients) was $66.84 per day compared to the daily
RHC rate of $153.45 in FY 2013 (see Table 3 below). Closer to the
hospice admission, the median Medicare payments per day increase, as
would be expected as the patient approaches the end of life and patient
needs intensify. However, 30 days prior to a hospice election, median
Medicare spending was $105.24 for patients with Alzheimer's disease,
non-Alzheimer's dementia, or Parkinson's. In contrast, the median
Medicare payments prior to hospice election for patients with a
principal hospice diagnosis of cancer were $143.56 in the 180 days
prior to hospice admission and increased to $289.85 in the 30 days
prior to hospice admission. The average length of stay for hospice
elections where the principal diagnosis was reported as Alzheimer's
disease, non-Alzheimer's Dementia, or Parkinson's is greater than
patients with other diagnoses, such as cancer, Cerebral Vascular
Accident (CVA)/stroke, chronic kidney disease, and Chronic Obstructive
Pulmonary Disease (COPD). For example, the average lifetime length of
stay for an Alzheimer's, non-Alzheimer's Dementia, or Parkinson's
patient in FY 2013 was 119 days compared to 47 days for patients with a
principal diagnosis of cancer (or in other words, 150 percent longer).
Table 3--Median Pre-Hospice Daily Spending Estimates and Interquartile Range Based on 180, 90, and 30 Day Look-Back Periods Prior to Initial Hospice
Admission With Estimates of Average Lifetime Length of Stay (LOS) by Primary Diagnosis at Hospice Admission, FY 2013
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimates of daily non-hospice medicare spending prior to first hospice admission
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Mean
180 day look-back 90 day look-back 30 day look-back lifetime
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LOS
25th Pct. Median 75th Pct. 25th Pct. Median 75th Pct. 25th Pct. Median 75th Pct.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All Diagnoses............................. $47.04 $117.73 $240.73 $55.75 $157.89 $337.97 $57.66 $266.84 $545.44 73.8
Alzheimer's, Dementia, and Parkinson's.... 23.39 66.84 162.60 23.06 82.00 220.12 21.02 105.24 368.30 119.3
CVA/Stroke................................ 56.18 116.86 239.30 82.32 170.40 352.74 150.21 352.41 622.23 47.4
Cancers................................... 62.81 143.56 265.58 78.30 188.08 360.92 81.52 289.85 569.67 47.1
Chronic Kidney Disease.................... 94.78 217.46 402.10 126.41 293.18 541.41 199.01 466.25 820.78 27.3
Heart (CHF and Other Heart Disease)....... 61.28 135.48 255.53 80.62 186.52 364.24 101.80 325.15 588.50 77.2
Lung (COPD and Pneumonias)................ 65.53 142.78 272.13 90.68 201.02 401.12 126.51 367.68 685.17 67.5
All Other Diagnoses....................... 36.00 99.80 222.25 39.45 132.88 316.15 38.96 213.84 504.57 85.3
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: All Medicare Parts A, B, and D claims for FY 2013 from the Chronic Conditions Data Warehouse (CCW) retrieved March, 2015.
Note(s): Estimates drawn from FY2013 hospice decedents who were first-time hospice admissions, ages 66+ at hospice admission, admitted since 2006, and
not enrolled in Medicare Advantage prior to admission. All payments are inflation-adjusted to September 2013 dollars using the Consumer Price Index
(Medical Care; All Urban Consumers).
[[Page 47152]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06AU15.000
In the FY 2014 Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate Update proposed
and final rules (78 FR 27843 and 78 FR 48272), we discussed whether a
case-mix system could be created in future refinements to differentiate
hospice payments according to patient characteristics. While we do not
have the necessary data on the hospice claim form at this time to
conduct more thorough research to determine whether a case-mix system
is appropriate, analyzing pre-hospice spending was undertaken as an
initial step in determining whether patients required different
resource needs prior to hospice based on the principal diagnosis
reported on the hospice claim. Table 3 and Figure 1 above indicate that
hospice patients with the longest length of stay had lower pre-hospice
spending relative to hospice patients with shorter lengths of stay.
These hospice patients tend to be those with neurological conditions,
including those with Alzheimer's disease, other related dementias and
Parkinson's disease. Typically, these conditions are associated with
longer disease trajectories, progressive loss of functional and
cognitive abilities, and more difficult prognostication.
Research has shown that the majority of dementia patients are cared
for at home, leading to increased informal care costs that put an
economic burden on families rather than on healthcare systems.\9\
Additionally, research using the National Long-Term Care Survey (NLCS)
merged with Medicare claims; found that patients with Alzheimer's
disease and related conditions do not have higher Medicare expenditures
over the last 5 years of their life compared to non-demented
elderly.\10\ Some researchers have measured whether hospice care
reduces overall Medicare costs at the end of life. Research conducted
by the RAND Corporation and published in the Annals of Internal
Medicine in February of 2004 found that ``adjusted mean [Medicare]
expenditures were 4.0 percent higher overall among hospice enrollees
than among non-enrollees. Adjusted mean [Medicare] expenditures were 1
percent lower for hospice enrollees with cancer than for patients with
cancer who did not use hospice. Savings were highest (7 percent to 17
percent) among enrollees with lung cancer and other very aggressive
types of cancer diagnosed in the last year of life. [Medicare]
Expenditures for hospice enrollees without cancer were 11 percent
higher than for non-enrollees, ranging from 20
[[Page 47153]]
percent to 44 percent for patients with dementia and 0 percent to 16
percent for those with chronic heart failure or failure of most other
organ systems.'' \11\ While analyses examining pre-hospice spending for
hospice patients according to their diagnosis reported on the hospice
claim has some limitations, it does show that, depending on the type of
research study design selected, different conclusions can be drawn
regarding the effect of Alzheimer's disease and dementia on medical
care costs.\12\ An article was released in May of 2015 by the New
England Journal of Medicine titled ``Changes in Medicare Costs with the
Growth of Hospice Care in Nursing Homes,'' that examined the impact of
hospice use for nursing home residents on end of life costs. This
article found that between 2004 and 2009, the expansion of hospice was
associated with a mean net increase in Medicare expenditures of $6,761
(95 percent confidence interval, 6,335 to 7,186), reflecting greater
additional spending on hospice care ($10,191) than reduced spending on
hospital and other care ($3,430). The growth in hospice care for
nursing home residents was associated with less aggressive care near
death but at an overall increase in Medicare expenditures.'' \13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Schaller, S., Mauskopf, J., Kriza, C., Wahlster, P.,
Kolominsky-Rabas, P. (2015). The main cost drivers in dementia: a
systematic review. International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry.
15, 111-129. doi: 10.1002/gps.4198.
\10\ Ayyagari, P., M. Salm, and F. Sloan. 2008. ``Effects of
Diagnosed Dementia on Medicare and Medicaid Program Costs.'' Inquiry
44 (Winter 2007/2008): 481-94. Lamb, V., F. Sloan, and A. Nathan.
2008. ``Dementia and Medicare at Life's End.'' Health Services
Research 43 (2): 714-32.
\11\ https://www.rand.org/pubs/external_publications/EP20040207.html. Accessed on April 23, 2015.
\12\ Yang, Z., Zhang, K., Lin, P., Clevenger, C., & Atherly, A.
(2012). A Longitudinal Analysis of the Lifetime Cost of Dementia.
Health Services Research, 47(4), 1660-1678. doi:10.1111/j.1475-
6773.2011.01365.x.
\13\ Gozalo, P., Plotske, M., Mor, V., Miller, S. & Teno, J.
(2015). Changes in Medicare Costs with the Growth of Hospice Care in
Nursing Homes. New England Journal of Medicine, 372:19, 1823-1831.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Non-Hospice Spending for Hospice Beneficiaries During an Election
When a beneficiary elects the Medicare hospice benefit, he or she
waives the right to Medicare payment for services related to the
terminal illness and related conditions, except for services provided
by the designated hospice and the attending physician (as described in
section II of this rule). However, Medicare payment is allowed for
covered Medicare items and services that are unrelated to the terminal
illness and related conditions (that is, the terminal prognosis). When
a hospice beneficiary receives items or services unrelated to the
terminal illness and related conditions from a non-hospice provider,
that provider can bill Medicare for the items or services, but must
include on the claim a GW (service not related to the hospice patient's
terminal condition) modifier (if billed on a professional claim),\14\
or condition code 07 (if billed on an institutional claim).\15\
Prescription Drug Events (PDEs) unrelated to the terminal prognosis for
which hospice beneficiaries are receiving hospice care are billed to
Part D and do not require a modifier or a condition code. We reported
initial findings on CY 2012 non-hospice spending during a hospice
election in the FY 2015 Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate Update
final rule (79 FR 50452). This section updates our analysis of non-
hospice spending during a hospice election using FY 2013 data.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 11-Processing
Hospice Claims, Section 30.4-Claims from Medicare Advantage
Organizations, B-Billing of Covered Services. https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/downloads/clm104c11.pdf.
\15\ Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 11-Processing
Hospice Claims, Section 30.3-Data Required on the Institutional
Claim to Medicare Contractors, Conditions Codes. https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/downloads/clm104c11.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For FY 2013, we found that Medicare paid $694.1 million for Part A
and Part B items or services while a beneficiary was receiving hospice
care. The $694.1 million paid for Part A and Part B items or services
was for durable medical equipment (6.4 percent), inpatient care (care
in long- term care hospitals, inpatient rehabilitation facilities,
acute care hospitals; 28.6 percent), outpatient Part B services (16.6
percent), other Part B services (also known as physician, practitioner
and supplier claims, such as labs and diagnostic tests, ambulance
transports, and physician office visits; 38.8 percent), skilled nursing
facility care (5.3 percent), and home health care (4.3 percent). Part A
and Part B non-hospice spending occurred mostly for hospice
beneficiaries who were at home (56.0 percent). We also found that on
hospice service days in which non-hospice spending occurred, 25.7
percent of hospice beneficiaries were in a nursing facility, 1.9
percent were in an inpatient setting, 15.1 percent were in an assisted
living facility, and 1.3 percent were in other settings. Although the
average daily rate of expenditures outside the hospice benefit was
$7.65, we found geographic differences where beneficiaries receive
care. The highest rates per day occurred for hospice beneficiaries
residing in West Virginia ($13.74), Delaware ($12.76), Mississippi
($12.31), South Florida ($12.24), and Texas ($12.10).
Table 4 below details the various components of Part D spending for
patients receiving hospice care. The portion of the $439.5 million
total Part D spending which was paid by Medicare is the sum of the Low
Income Cost-Sharing Subsidy and the Covered Drug Plan Paid Amount, or
$347.1 million.
Table 4--Drug Cost Sources for Hospice Beneficiaries' FY 2013 Drugs
Received Through Part D
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2013
Component expenditures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(Patient Pay Amount).................................... $50,871,517
(Low Income Cost-Sharing Subsidy)....................... 116,890,745
(Other True Out-of Pocket Amount)....................... 2,125,071
(Patient Liability Reduction due to Other Payer Amount). 6,678,561
(Covered Drug Plan Paid Amount)......................... 230,216,153
(Non-Covered Plan Paid Amount........................... 28,733,518
(Six Payment Amount Totals)............................. 435,515,566
(Unknown/Unreconciled).................................. 3,945,667
(Gross Total Drug Costs, Reported)...................... 439,461,233
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: Abt Associates analysis of 100% FY 2013 Medicare Claim Files.
For more information on the components above and on Part D data, go to
the Research Data Assistance Center's (ResDAC's) Web site at: https://www.resdac.org/.
Non-hospice Medicare expenditures occurring during a hospice
election in FY 2013 were $694.1 million for Parts A and B plus $347.1
million for Part D spending, or approximately $1 billion dollars total.
This figure is comparable to the estimated $1 billion MedPAC reported
during its December 2013 public meeting.\16\ Associated with this $1
billion in Medicare spending were cost sharing liabilities such as co-
payments and deductibles that beneficiaries incurred. Hospice
beneficiaries had $132.5 million in cost-sharing for items and services
that were billed to Medicare Parts A and B, and $50.9 million in cost-
sharing for drugs that were billed to Medicare Part D, while they were
in a hospice election. In total, this represents an FY 2013 beneficiary
liability of $183.4 million for Parts A, B, and D items or services
provided to hospice beneficiaries during a hospice election. Therefore,
the total non-hospice costs paid by Medicare or beneficiaries for items
or services provided to hospice beneficiaries during a hospice election
were over $1.2 billion in FY 2013.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ MedPAC, ``Assessing payment adequacy and updating payments:
hospice services'', December 13 2013. Available at: https://www.medpac.gov/documents/december-2013-meeting-transcript.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In a recent report, the HHS Office of Inspector General (OIG)
identified instances where Medicare may be
[[Page 47154]]
paying twice under Part D for drugs that should be provided by the
hospice as part of the plan of care.\17\ To assist CMS in identifying
and evaluating instances where drugs, supplies, durable medical
equipment (DME), and Part B services provided to hospice patients
appear to be related to the principal diagnosis reported on the hospice
claim, but were billed separately to other parts of the Medicare
program, Acumen, LLC developed case studies that were reviewed and
evaluated by CMS clinical staff.\18\ Although hospice beneficiaries are
allowed to continue receiving care outside the hospice benefit for
conditions that are unrelated to the terminal illness and related
conditions (that is, unrelated to the terminal prognosis), Sec.
418.56(c) requires hospices to provide all services necessary for the
palliation and management of the terminal illness and related
conditions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ oig.hhs.gov/oas/region6/61000059.pdf ``Medicare Could Be
Paying Twice for Prescriptions For Beneficiaries in Hospice.''
\18\ The case studies were developed using CY 2013 claims data
for only those beneficiaries with Parts A, B and D coverage
throughout their hospice. In identifying services that overlapped
with a hospice election, we used two methods. The first method
identified a match between the first three diagnosis codes of the
hospice claim and the diagnosis codes of the overlapping services in
the Part A, Part B, and Part D claim for the same beneficiary. The
second method identified a match between the hospice diagnoses and
the diagnosis codes of the overlapping services in the Part A, Part
B and Part D based on a diagnosis code on the overlapping claim and
any diagnosis on the hospice claim mapping to the same Healthcare
Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies Across
Terminal Conditions
Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
(DMEPOS) products whose use was initiated during a hospice stay are
likely related to the terminal prognosis. Table 5 and 6 below
summarizes total concurrent billing for DMEPOS products by Berenson-
Eggers Types of Service (BETOS) categories and concurrent DME billing
by the top 20 principal diagnoses as reported on hospice claims in CY
2013.\19\ These diagnoses comprised 2.3 million hospice stays, and
accounted for $27.1 million in total concurrent spending for DME
products. This amount does not include spending for DME rental products
that beneficiaries began using prior to a hospice stay.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ DMEPOS HCPCS codes are summarized by Berenson-Eggers Types
of Service (BETOS) categories. BETOS categories were developed by
the American Medical Association (AMA) and aggregate HCPCS codes
into clinically coherent groups.
Table 5--Concurrent Payments for All DME Use Initiated During a Hospice
Stay by BETOS Category, CY 2013
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total payment
DMEPOS BETOS category for related
DME
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hospital Beds........................................... $943,731
Wheelchairs............................................. 2,295,038
Oxygen and Supplies..................................... 2,412,281
Orthotics and Prosthetics............................... 4,400,353
Medical/Surgical Supplies............................... 7,467,616
Other DME............................................... 9,585,003
---------------
Total............................................... 27,104,022
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 6--Concurrent Payments for All DME Use Initiated During a Hospice
Stay by Top 20 Principal Diagnosis Reported on Hospice Claim, CY 2013
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total payment for
Principal diagnosis related DME
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Heart failure....................................... $3,365,348
Malignant neoplasm of trachea, bronchus, and lung... 1,519,514
Other cerebral degenerations........................ 2,979,399
Other organic psychotic conditions (chronic)........ 2,540,146
Chronic airways obstruction, not elsewhere 2,610,628
classified.........................................
Senile and presenile organic psychotic conditions... 2,868,760
Other ill-defined and unknown causes of morbidity 2,349,855
and mortality......................................
Ill-defined descriptions and complications of heart 1,584,522
disease............................................
Acute but ill-defined cerebrovascular disease....... 1,092,772
Other diseases of lung.............................. 412,501
Chronic renal failure............................... 415,800
Symptoms concerning nutrition, metabolism, and 1,390,685
development........................................
Malignant neoplasm of pancreas...................... 297,573
Malignant neoplasm of female breast................. 486,019
Malignant neoplasm of colon......................... 521,690
Parkinson's disease................................. 955,390
Malignant neoplasm of prostate...................... 312,754
Late effects of cerebrovascular disease............. 559,253
Other forms of chronic ischemic heart disease....... 670,947
Malignant neoplasm of liver and intrahepatic bile 170,470
ducts..............................................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We noted that hospice beneficiaries with hospice claims-reported
principal diagnoses of chronic airway obstruction, congestive heart
failure, cerebral degeneration and lung cancer were receiving services
clinically indicated and recommended for these conditions outside of
the hospice benefit, which is in violation of requirements regarding
the Medicare hospice benefit. This could be attributed to hospices
incorrectly classifying conditions as unrelated and referring patients
to non-hospice providers, not communicating and coordinating the care
and services needed to manage the needs of the hospice beneficiary, or
deliberately, to avoid costs. The case studies below are focused on
four of the most commonly reported principal hospice diagnoses on
hospice claims (see Table 2 in section II.E) based on clinical
guidelines as described for each principal hospice diagnosis.
[[Page 47155]]
Malignant Neoplasm of the Trachea, Bronchus, and Lung
Malignant neoplasm of the trachea, bronchus, and lung (or lung
cancer) is defined by ICD-9 diagnosis codes beginning with 162 and
describes malignant cancers affecting various part of the pulmonary
system. Symptoms for this class of conditions may include chronic and
worsening cough, shortness of breath, chest pain, metastatic bone pain,
and anorexia and weight loss. Clinical practice guidelines for end-
stage cancer recommend treatment and management of refractory symptoms
including pain, mucositis, dyspnea, fatigue, depression and anorexia
through the use of pharmacological interventions including nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatories, corticosteroids, opioids and antidepressants.\20\
Additionally, evidence shows that palliative chemotherapy and
radiotherapy can provide symptom relief from bone and brain
metastasis.\21\ Recommended interventions for dyspnea include treatment
of the underlying reason such as, thoracentesis for pleural effusion,
bronchodilators and systemic corticosteroids for inflammation and
secretions, and supportive measures such supplemental oxygen, opioids
and anxiolytics to decrease the sensation of breathlessness.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ Qaseem A, Snow V, Shekelle P, Casey DE, Cross JT, Owens DK,
et al. Evidence-Based Interventions to Improve the Palliative Care
of Pain, Dyspnea, and Depression at the End of Life: A Clinical
Practice Guideline from the American College of Physicians. Ann
Intern Med. 2008;148:141-146. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-148-2-200801150-
00009.
\21\ Palliative care in lung cancer*: accp evidence-based
clinical practice guidelines (2nd edition) Kvale PA, Selecky PA,
Prakash US. Chest. 2007;132(3_suppl):368S-403S.
\22\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our assessment of concurrently billed Part D drugs included 89,925
stays for beneficiaries with ICD-9 code 162 listed as a primary
diagnosis on the hospice claim. Our assessment of concurrently billed
Part B services included 153,199 stays. In CY 2013, concurrent billing
for all services related this terminal condition comprised $3.4
million. Table 7 below summarizes concurrent payments for services that
were potentially related to this class of conditions. Part D drugs that
should have been covered under the hospice benefit for the treatment of
this condition accounted for $2.1 million. DME services that were
billed during hospice stays related to this condition during the same
time cost $640,166. Concurrent services provided in Part B
institutional settings accounted for $591,772.
Table 7--Concurrent Payments for Services Provided to Hospice
Beneficiaries With Malignant Neoplasm of the Trachea, Bronchus, and
Lung, CY 2013
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Type of service Description Total payment
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Drugs/Part D................. Common Palliative $851,639
Drugs.
Drugs/Part D................. Anti-neoplastics 1,321,507
(chemotherapy).
DME.......................... Oxygen Equipment and 454,068
Supplies.
DME.......................... Hospital Beds........ 47,781
DME.......................... Wheelchairs.......... 138,316
Part B Inst.................. Diagnostic Imaging... 341,601
Part B Inst.................. Radiation............ 250,171
-------------------
Total.................... ..................... 3,405,083
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Chronic Airway Obstruction
Chronic airway obstruction is defined by ICD-9 diagnosis codes
beginning with 496 and includes chronic lung disease with unspecified
cause, and is characterized by inflammation of the lungs and airways.
Typical symptoms of these pulmonary diseases include increasing and
disabling shortness of breath, labored breathing, increased coughing,
increased heart rate, decreased functional reserve, increased
infections and unintentional, progressive weight loss. Evidence-based
practice supports the benefits of oral opioids, neuromuscular
electrical stimulation, chest wall vibration, walking aids, respiratory
assist devices and pursed-lip breathing in the management of dyspnea in
the individual patient with advanced COPD.\23\ Oxygen is recommended
for COPD patients with resting hypoxemia for symptomatic benefit.\24\
Additionally, clinical practice guidelines recommend inhaled
bronchodilators, systemic corticosteroids, and pulmonary physiotherapy
for the management of COPD exacerbations.\25\ Analysis conducted by
Acumen, LLC, shows concurrently billed Part D drugs included 130,283
stays for beneficiaries with ICD-9 code 469 listed as a primary
diagnosis on the hospice claim. Additionally, concurrently billed Part
B services included 198,098 such stays. Table 8 below summarizes
concurrent payments for services that are potentially related to this
class of conditions. In CY 2013, concurrent billing for all services
related this terminal condition comprised $10.4 million. Part D drugs
that should have been covered under the hospice benefit for the
treatment of this condition accounted for $8.6 million. DME services
that were billed during hospice stays related to this condition during
the same time amounted to $1.2 million dollars.\26\ Finally, concurrent
services provided in Part B institutional settings accounted for
$605,110.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ DD Marciniuk, D Goodridge, P Hernandez, et al. (2011).
Canadian Thoracic Society COPD Committee Dyspnea Expert Working
Group. Managing dyspnea in patients with advanced chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease: A Canadian Thoracic Society clinical
practice guideline. Canadian Respiratory Journal. 18(2), 1-10.
\24\ Ibid.
\25\ National Clinical Guideline Centre for Acute and Chronic
Conditions. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Management of
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in adults in primary and
secondary care. London (UK): National Institute for Health and
Clinical Excellence (NICE); 2010 Jun. 61 p. (Clinical guideline; no.
101). Retrieved from the National Guideline Clearinghouse on
February 19, 2015. https://www.guideline.gov/.
\26\ DMEPOS HCPCS codes are summarized by Berenson-Eggers Types
of Service (BETOS) categories. BETOS categories were developed by
the American Medical Association (AMA) and aggregate HCPCS codes
into clinically coherent groups.
[[Page 47156]]
Table 8--Concurrent Payments for Services Provided to Hospice
Beneficiaries With Chronic Airway Obstruction, CY 2013
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Type of service Description Total payment
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Drugs/Part D................... Common Palliative $1,757,326
Drugs \27\.
Drugs/Part D................... Antiasthmatics & 6,545,089
Bronchodilators.
Drugs/Part D................... Corticosteroids....... 141,179
Drugs/Part D................... Respiratory Agents.... 148,793
DME............................ Oxygen Equipment and 525,276
Supplies \28\.
DME............................ Hospital Beds......... 480,854
DME............................ Wheelchairs........... 196,692
Part B Institutional........... Diagnostic Imaging.... 605,110
----------------
Total...................... ...................... 10,400,319
------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ Includes all analgesics, anxiolytics, antiemetics, and
laxatives. These four drug types are considered ``nearly always
covered under the hospice benefit'' and as such are rarely expected
to be billed separately during a hospice stay.
\28\ For COPD, we also include respiratory assist devices (RADs)
in this category.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cerebral Degeneration
Cerebral degeneration is defined by ICD-9 diagnosis codes beginning
with 331, and includes conditions such as Alzheimer's disease and
Reye's syndrome. These conditions are typically characterized by a
progressive loss of cognitive function with symptoms including the loss
of memory and changes in language ability, behavior, and personality.
Additionally, as these cerebral degenerations progress, other clinical
manifestations occur such as dysphagia, motor dysfunction, impaired
mobility, increased need for activities of daily living assistance,
urinary and fecal incontinence, weight loss and muscle wasting.
Individuals with these conditions are also at increased risk for
aspiration, falls, pneumonias, decubitus ulcers and urinary tract
infections. Clinical practice guidelines for the treatment of cerebral
degenerative conditions includes pharmacological interventions
including Angiotensin Converting Enzyme inhibitors, memantine or
combination therapy depending on severity of disease, as well as
antidepressants, antipsychotics, psychostimulants, mood stabilizers,
benzodiazepines and neuroleptics, depending on behavioral
manifestations. Non-pharmacological interventions recommended include
mental, behavioral and cognitive therapy, speech language pathology to
address swallowing issues, and other interventions to treat and manage
manifestations including pressure ulcers, cachexia and infections.\29\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ Development Group of the Clinical Practice Guideline
[trunc]. Clinical practice guideline on the comprehensive care of
people with Alzheimer's disease and other dementias. Barcelona
(Spain): Agency for Health Quality and Assessment of Catalonia
(AQuAS); 2010. 499 p. Retrieved from the National Guideline
Clearinghouse on February 19, 2015. https://www.guideline.gov/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our assessment of concurrently billed Part D drugs included 208,346
stays for beneficiaries with ICD-9 code 331 listed as a primary
diagnosis on the hospice claim. Our assessment of concurrently billed
Part B services included 318,044 stays. In CY 2013, concurrent billing
for all services related to this principal diagnosis comprised $11.2
million. Table 9 below summarizes concurrent payments for services that
are potentially related to this class of conditions. Part D drugs that
should have been covered under the hospice benefit for the treatment of
this condition accounted for $10.3 million. Concurrently billed DME
products that were related this condition cost Medicare an additional
$390,476. Concurrent services provided in Part B institutional settings
accounted for $496,790.
Table 9--Concurrent Payments for Services Provided to Hospice
Beneficiaries With Cerebral Degeneration, CY 2013
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Type of service Description Total payment
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Drugs/Part D................... Common Palliative $1,184,005
Drugs.
Drugs/Part D................... Antipsychotic/ 2,336,504
Antimanic Agents.
Drugs/Part D................... Psychotherapeutic & 6,752,270
Neurological Agents.
DME............................ Hospital Beds......... 138,249
DME............................ Wheelchairs........... 252,228
Part B Inst.................... Diagnostic Imaging.... 496,790
----------------
Total...................... ...................... 11,160,046
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Congestive Heart Failure
CHF is defined by ICD-9 diagnosis codes beginning with 428. CHF is
characterized by symptoms such as shortness of breath, edema,
diminished endurance, angina, productive cough and fatigue. For the
management of congestive heart failure, clinical practice guidelines
recommend pharmacological interventions including beta blockers,
angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors, angiotensin receptor
blockers, diuretics, anti-platelets, anti-coagulants and digoxin,
depending on symptomology and response or nonresponse to other
treatments.\30\ Nonpharmacological interventions recommended include
continuous positive airway pressure and supplemental oxygen for those
with coexisting pulmonary disease.\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN).
Management of chronic heart failure. A national clinical guideline.
Edinburgh (Scotland): Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network
(SIGN); 2007 Feb. 53 p. (SIGN publication; no. 95).
\31\ Lindenfeld J, Albert NM, Boehmer JP, Collins SP, Ezekowitz
JA, Givertz MM, Klapholz M, Moser DK, Rogers JG, Starling RC,
Stevenson WG, Tang WHW, Teerlink JR, Walsh MN. Executive Summary:
HFSA 2010 Comprehensive Heart Failure Practice Guideline. J Card
Fail 2010;16:475e539.
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[[Page 47157]]
Our assessment of concurrently billed Part D drugs included 158,220
stays for beneficiaries with ICD-9 code 428 listed as a primary
diagnosis on the hospice claim. Our assessment of concurrently billed
Part B services included 256,236 stays. In CY 2013, concurrent billing
for all services related this terminal condition comprised $5.8
million. Table 10 below summarizes concurrent payments for services
that are potentially related to this class of conditions. Part D drugs
that should have been covered under the hospice benefit for the
treatment of this condition accounted for $3.8 million. DME services
that were billed during hospice stays related to this condition during
this time cost $843,534. Concurrent services provided in Part B
institutional settings accounted for $1.2 million.
Table 10--Concurrent Payments for Services Provided to Hospice
Beneficiaries With Congestive Health Failure, CY 2013
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Type of service Description Total payment
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Drugs/Part D................... Common Palliative $1,229,748
Drugs.
Drugs/Part D................... Diuretics............. 334,700
Drugs/Part D................... Beta Blockers......... 363,480
Drugs/Part D................... Anti-hypertensives.... 584,799
Drugs/Part D................... Anti-anginal Agents... 468,333
Drugs/Part D................... Cardiovascular Agents-- 799,605
Misc.
Drugs/Part D................... Vasopressors.......... 43,496
DME............................ Oxygen Equipment and 471,376
Supplies.
DME............................ Hospital Beds......... 96,219
DME............................ Wheelchairs........... 275,940
Part B Inst.................... Diagnostic Imaging.... 690,726
Part B Inst.................... EKGs.................. 72,933
Part B Inst.................... Cardiac Devices....... 242,819
Part B Inst.................... Diagnostic Clinical 79,999
Labs.
Part B Prof.................... Diagnostic Clinical 64,698
Labs.
----------------
Total...................... ...................... 5,818,871
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our regulations at Sec. 418.56(c) require that hospices provide
all services necessary for the palliation and management of the
terminal illness and related conditions. We have discussed recommended
evidence-based practice clinical guidelines for the hospice claims-
reported principal diagnoses mentioned in this section. However, this
analysis reveals that these recommended practices are not always being
covered under the Medicare hospice benefit. We believe the case studies
in this section highlight the potential systematic unbundling of the
Medicare hospice benefit by some providers and may be valuable analysis
to inform policy stakeholders.
3. Live Discharge Rates
Currently, federal regulations allow a patient who has elected to
receive Medicare hospice services to revoke their hospice election at
any time and for any reason. The revocation shall act as a waiver of
the right to have payment made for any hospice care benefits for the
remaining time in such period. The patient may, at a subsequent time,
re-elect to receive hospice coverage for additional hospice election
periods if he or she is eligible to receive them (Sec. 418.28(c)(3)
and Sec. 418.24(e)). During the time period between revocation/
discharge and the re-election of the hospice benefit, Medicare coverage
would resume for those Medicare benefits previously waived. A
revocation can only be made by the beneficiary, in writing, that he or
she is revoking the hospice election; and must indicate the effective
date of the revocation. A hospice cannot ``revoke'' a beneficiary's
hospice election, nor is it appropriate for hospices to encourage,
request or demand that the beneficiary revoke his or her hospice
election. Like the hospice election, a hospice revocation is to be an
informed choice based on the beneficiary's goals, values and
preferences for the services they wish to receive.
Federal regulations only provide limited opportunity for a Medicare
hospice provider to discharge a patient from its care. In accordance
with Sec. 418.26, discharge from hospice care is permissible when the
patient moves out of the provider's service area, is determined to be
no longer terminally ill, or for cause. Hospices may not automatically
or routinely discharge the patient at its discretion, even if the care
may be costly or inconvenient. As we indicated in the FY 2015 Hospice
Wage Index and Payment Rate Update proposed and final rules, we
understand that the rate of live discharges should not be zero, given
the uncertainties of prognostication and the ability of patients and
their families to revoke the hospice election at any time. On July 1,
2012, we began collecting discharge information on the claim to capture
the reason for all types of discharges which includes, death,
revocation, transfer to another hospice, moving out of the hospice's
service area, discharge for cause, or due to the patient no longer
being considered terminally ill (that is, no longer qualifying for
hospice services). Based upon the additional discharge information, Abt
Associates, our research contractor performed analysis on FY 2013
claims to identify those beneficiaries who were discharged alive. The
details of this analysis will be reported in the 2015 technical report
and will be made available on the Hospice Center Web page. Several key
conclusions from the 2015 technical report are included below. In order
to better understand the characteristics of hospices with high live
discharge rates, we examined the aggregate cap status, skilled visit
intensity; average lengths of stay; and non-hospice spending rates per
beneficiary.
Between 2000 and 2013, the overall rate of live discharges
increased from 13.2 percent in 2000 to 18.3 percent in 2013. Among
hospices with 50 or more
[[Page 47158]]
discharges (discharged alive or deceased), there is significant
variation in the rate of live discharge between the 10th and 90th
percentiles (see Table 11 below). Most notably, hospices at the 95th
percentile discharged 50 percent or more of their patients alive.
Table 11--Distribution of Live Discharge Rates in FY 2013 for Hospices
With 50 or More Live Discharges
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Live
Statistic discharge
rate %
------------------------------------------------------------------------
5th Percentile.............................................. 8.1
10th Percentile............................................. 9.5
25th Percentile............................................. 12.9
Median...................................................... 18.3
75th Percentile............................................. 26.6
90th Percentile............................................. 39.1
95th Percentile............................................. 50.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: n = 3,096.
We analyzed hospices' aggregate cap status to determine whether
there is a relationship between live discharge rates and their
aggregate cap status. As described in section III.4.C and section
III.D, when the Medicare Hospice Benefit was implemented, the Congress
included an aggregate cap on hospice payments, which limits the total
aggregate payments any individual hospice can receive in a year. Our FY
2013 analytic file contained 3,061 hospices with aggregate cap
information and with more than 50 discharges in FY 2013. We found that
40.3 percent of hospices above the 90th percentile were also above the
aggregate cap for the 2013 cap year. Conversely, only 3.8 percent of
hospices below the 90th percentile were above the aggregate cap. As
illustrated by the box plot below, the vertical axis represents the
hospices' live discharge rates in FY 2013 and the horizontal axis
represents the total payments hospices received at the end of the cap
year of November 2012 through October 2013 relative to the total cap
amount. Hospices under 100 percent on the X-axis are below the cap and
those 100 percent or higher on the X-axis are above the cap. Our
analysis found that hospices with higher live discharge rates are also
above the cap. Specifically, the top of the rectangle represents the
75th percentile of live discharge rates, the middle line represents the
median for that group, and the bottom of the rectangle is the 25th
percentile of live discharge rates among all hospices ending the year
within the range of cap percentages of live discharge rates as
indicated by the horizontal axis (see Figure 2 below). We found that
there appears to be a relationship with hospices with high live
discharge rates and those that are above the aggregate cap.
Figure 2: Distribution of Hospice Live Discharge Rates by Hospice
Payment Received Relative to the Hospice's Aggregate Cap Amount, FY 2013
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06AU15.001
[[Page 47159]]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-C
In FY 2013, we found that hospices with high live discharge rates
also, on average, provide fewer visits per week. Those hospices with
live discharge rates at or above the 90th percentile provide, on
average, 3.97 visits per week. Hospices with live discharge rates below
the 90th percentile provide, on average, 4.48 visits per week. We also
found in FY 2013 that, when focusing on visits classified as skilled
nursing or medical social services, hospices with live discharge rates
at or above the 90th percentile provide, on average, 1.91 visits per
week versus hospices with live discharge rates below the 90th
percentile that provide, on average, 2.35 visits per week.
We examined whether there was a relationship between hospices with
high live discharge rates, average length of stay, and non-hospice
spending per beneficiary per day (see Table 12 and Figure 3 below). As
described above in section III.A.2, we identified instances, in the
aggregate and illustrated by case studies, where Medicare appeared to
be paying for services twice because we would expect them to be covered
by the hospice base payment rate, but were receiving items and services
characterized as ``non-hospice'' under ``regular'' Medicare. Hospices
with patients that, on average, accounted for $30 per day in non-
hospice spending while in hospice (decile 10 in Table 12 and Figure 3
below) had live discharge rates that were, on average, about 33.8
percent and had an average lifetime length of stay of 156 days. In
contrast, hospices with patients that, on average, accounted for $4 per
day in non-hospice spending while in a hospice election (decile 1 in
Table 12 and Figure 3 below) had live discharge rates that were, on
average, about 19.2 percent and an average lifetime length of stay of
103 days. In other words, hospices in the highest decile, according to
their level of non-hospice spending for patients in a hospice election,
had live discharge rates and average lifetime lengths of stay that
averaged 76 percent and 52 percent higher, respectively, than the
hospices in lowest decile.
Table 12--Mean Daily Non-Hospice Medicare Utilization and Sum Total Non-
Hospice Utilization by Hospice Provider Decile Based on Sorted Non-
Hospice Medicare Utilization per Hospice Day, FFY 2013
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-hospice
medicare ($) per Total non-
Decile hospice service hospice medicare
day ($)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1................................. $4.15 $24,683,958
2................................. 6.30 47,971,918
3................................. 7.86 56,871,943
4................................. 9.22 69,879,537
5................................. 10.63 105,399,628
6................................. 12.13 116,697,215
7................................. 13.82 154,499,596
8................................. 15.89 177,609,853
9................................. 19.43 214,073,434
10................................ 29.47 256,226,963
-------------------------------------
All Hospices.................. 12.89 1,223,914,046
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: Abt Associates analysis of 100% Medicare Analytic Files, FFY 2013.
Cohort is hospices with 50+ total discharges in FFY 2013 [n = 3,096].
Hospice deciles are based on estimates of total non-hospice Medicare
utilization ($) per hospice service day, excluding utilization on
hospice admission or live discharge days.
[[Page 47160]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06AU15.002
The analytic findings presented above suggests that some hospices
may consider the Medicare Hospice program as a long-term custodial
benefit rather than an end of life benefit for beneficiaries with a
medical prognosis of 6 months or less if the illness runs its normal
course. As previously discussed in reports by MedPAC and the OIG, there
is a concern that hospices may be admitting individuals who do not meet
hospice eligibility criteria. We continue to communicate and
collaborate across CMS to improve monitoring and oversight activities.
We expect to analyze the additional claims and cost report data
reported by hospices in the future to determine whether additional
regulatory proposals to reform and strengthen the Medicare Hospice
benefit are warranted.
We did not propose any new regulations or solicit any comments with
this update on our hospice payment reform research and analyses.
However, we received several comments.
A few commenters asserted that the fact that CMS did not release
the technical report with the rule prevented them from being able to
fully evaluate the impact of hospice payment reform. The 2015 Technical
Report, that is planned for release later in 2015, describes some of
the findings described above in this section of the rule. The 2015
Technical Report will not contain analyses described in section III.B
related to hospice payment reform. All of the analysis in support of
hospice payment reform can be found in section III.B of this final
rule. In addition, a couple of commenters noted concerns about
questionable provider behavior and asked what CMS plans to do in
response to these findings. These providers felt that a targeted
approach to address program integrity concerns may be more effective
than a universal payment reform approach, which may harm those
providers who are compliant with coverage requirements. Several
commenters also noted concerns that a more timely and coordinated
system is needed to address some of the payment vulnerabilities
identified in our research. One industry commenter stated that there
are many reasons that services are rendered outside of the Medicare
hospice benefit and that often these reasons are result from a
misunderstanding of the concept of ``relatedness''. This commenter
discussed an industry-driven relatedness initiative that has been
developed to help inform hospice decision making. Another commenter
urged CMS to consider the reasons why hospices would counsel
beneficiaries to revoke the hospice benefit to seek care outside of
hospice. Several commenters stated that they have no control or
knowledge over what services non-hospice providers are rendering or
billing. They suggested that CMS provide outreach and education to
hospitals, physicians, DME suppliers and other non-hospice providers on
those services covered under the Medicare hospice benefit. Some
commenters suggested a claims-based edit to prevent inappropriate
payments. We appreciate these comments on the ongoing analysis
presented and will continue to monitor hospice trends and
vulnerabilities within the hospice
[[Page 47161]]
program to help inform future policy efforts and program integrity
measures.
B. Routine Home Care Rates and Service Intensity Add-On Payment
1. Statutory Authority and Background
Section 3132(a) of the Affordable Care Act amended 1814(i) of the
Act by adding paragraph (6)(D), that instructs the Secretary, no
earlier than October 1, 2013, to implement revisions to the methodology
for determining the payment rates for RHC and other services included
in hospice care as the Secretary determines to be appropriate. The
revisions may be based on an analysis of new data and information
collected and such revisions may include adjustments to per diem
payments that reflect changes in resource intensity in providing such
care and services during the course of the entire episode of hospice
care. In addition, we are required to consult with hospice programs and
MedPAC on the revised hospice payment methodology.
This legislation emerged largely in response to MedPAC's March 2009
Report to Congress, which cited rapid growth of for-profit hospices and
longer lengths of stay that raised concerns regarding a per diem
payment structure that encouraged inappropriate utilization of the
benefit.\32\ MedPAC stated that a revised payment system would
encourage hospice stays consistent with meeting the eligibility
requirements of a medical prognosis of 6 months or less if the illness
runs its normal course and increase greater provider accountability to
monitor patients' conditions. In that same report, MedPAC stated that
their goal was to ``strengthen the hospice payment system and not
discourage enrollment in hospice, while deterring program abuse.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC). ``Reforming
Medicare's Hospice Benefit.'' Report to the Congress: Medicare
Payment Policy. March, 2009. Web. 18 Feb. 2015. https://medpac.gov/documents/reports/Mar09_Ch06.pdf?sfvrsn=0.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As described in section III.A, CMS has transparently conducted
payment reform activities and released research findings to the public
since 2010. At that time, Abt Associates conducted a literature review
and carried out original research to provide background on the current
state of the Medicare hospice benefit. The initial contract also
included several technical expert panel meetings with national hospice
association representatives, academic researchers, and a cross-section
of hospice programs that provided valuable insights and feedback on
baseline empirical analyses provided by ASPE. A subsequent award to Abt
Associates continues to support the dissemination of research analyses
and findings, which are located in the ``Research and Analyses''
section of the Hospice Center Web page (https://cms.hhs.gov/Center/Provider-Type/Hospice-Center.html). In addition, research findings and
payment reform concepts were set out in a 2013 technical report and a
2014 technical report, as well as in the FY 2014 Hospice Wage Index and
Payment Rate Update final rule (78 FR 48234) and in the FY 2015 Hospice
Wage Index and Payment Rate Update final rule (79 FR 50452). These
research findings and concepts provide a basis for an important initial
step toward payment reform outlined in section III.B.2 below.
Over the past several years, MedPAC, the Government Accountability
Office (GAO), and OIG, have all recommended that CMS collect more
comprehensive data to better evaluate trends in utilization of the
Medicare hospice benefit. Furthermore, section 3132(a)(1)(C) of the
Affordable Care Act specifies that the Secretary may collect additional
data and information on cost reports, claims, or other mechanisms as
the Secretary determines to be appropriate. We have received many
suggestions for ways to improve data collection to support larger
payment reform efforts in the future. Based on those suggestions and
industry feedback, we began collecting additional information on the
hospice claim form as of April 1, 2014.\33\ Additionally, revisions to
the cost report form for freestanding hospices became effective for
cost reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 2014. The
instructions for completing the revised freestanding hospice cost
report form are found in the Medicare Provider Reimbursement Manual-
Part 2, chapter 43.\34\ Once available, we expect the data from hospice
claims and cost reports to provide more comprehensive information on
the costs associated with the services provided by hospices to Medicare
beneficiaries by level of care.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ CMS Transmittal 2864. ``Additional Data Reporting
Requirements for Hospice Claims''. Available at: https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/R2864CP.pdf.
\34\ https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/Paper-Based-Manuals-Items/CMS021935.html?DLPage=1&DLSort=0&DLSortDir=ascending.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
a. U-Shaped Payment Model
For over a decade, MedPAC and other organizations have reported
findings that suggest that the hospice benefit's fixed per-diem payment
system is inconsistent with the true variance of service costs over the
course of an episode. Specifically, MedPAC cited both academic and non-
academic studies, as well as its own analyses (as summarized and
articulated in MedPAC's 2002,\35\ 2004,\36\ 2006,\37\ 2008 \38\ and
2009 \39\ Reports to Congress), demonstrating that the intensity of
services over the duration of a hospice stay manifests in a `U-Shaped'
pattern (that is, the intensity of services provided is higher both at
admission and near death and, conversely, is relatively lower during
the middle period of the hospice episode). Since hospice care is most
profitable during the long, low-cost middle portions of an episode,
longer episodes have very profitable, long middle segments. This
financial incentive appears to have resulted in hospices enrolling
beneficiaries that are not truly eligible for the benefit (that is, do
not have a life expectancy of 6 months or less) and ``may lead some
patients, families, and providers to implicitly regard hospice as a
source of basic health care for failing patients who did not qualify
for skilled nursing facility or home health care and did not qualify
for Medicaid or otherwise could not afford other sources of long-term
custodial care,'' \40\ rather than the end-of-life care for which the
benefit was originally designed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ https://www.medpac.gov/documents/contractor-reports/report-to-the-congress-medicare-beneficiaries'-access-to-hospice-(may-
2002).pdf.
\36\ https://www.medpac.gov/documents/reports/June04_ch6.pdf.
\37\ https://www.medpac.gov/documents/reports/Jun06_Ch03.pdf.
\38\ https://www.medpac.gov/documents/reports/Jun08_Ch08.pdf.
\39\ https://www.medpac.gov/documents/reports/Mar09_Ch06.pdf.
\40\ https://www.medpac.gov/documents/reports/Mar09_Ch06.pdf?sfvrsn=0.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In its March 2009 report, ``Reforming Medicare's Hospice Benefit,''
MedPAC recommended that the Congress require CMS to implement a payment
system that would adjust per-diem hospice rates based on the day's
timing within the hospice episode, with the express goal of mitigating
the apparent inconsistency between payments and resource utilization
(that is, costs) in hospice episodes.\41\ Specifically, MedPAC
recommended that payments near the beginning and ending of a stay be
set at higher levels (weighted upwards) and payments during the
[[Page 47162]]
middle portion of care be set at lower levels (weighted downwards) to
better mirror documented variation in cost over an episode's duration.
Two primary weighting schemes were outlined in MedPAC's 2009 Report: A
``larger intensity adjustment'' (essentially a deeper U-shaped payment
model, paying twice the base rate in the first 30/last 7 days and just
a quarter of the daily rate in days 181+) and a ``smaller intensity
adjustment'' (a relatively shallower U-shaped model, paying 1.5 times
the base rate in the first 30/last 7 days and 0.375 times the daily
rate in days 181+).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC). ``Reforming
Medicare's Hospice Benefit.'' Report to the Congress: Medicare
Payment Policy. March, 2009. Web. 18 Feb. 2015. https://medpac.gov/documents/reports/Mar09_Ch06.pdf?sfvrsn=0.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In its March 2015 Report to the Congress,\42\ MedPAC reiterated its
continued concerns regarding the ``mismatch between payments and
hospice service intensity'' in the current hospice system and the
ongoing need for payment reform. The Commission stated that
``Medicare's hospice payment system is not well aligned with the costs
of providing care throughout a hospice episode. As a result, long
hospice stays are generally more profitable than short stays.'' The
Commission previously ``recommended that the hospice payment system be
reformed to better match service intensity throughout a hospice episode
of care (higher per diem payments at the beginning of the episode and
at the end of the episode near the time of death and lower payments in
the middle)''.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ https://medpac.gov/documents/reports/chapter-12-hospice-services-(march-2015-report).pdf?sfvrsn=0.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other organizations have also explored the concept of a U-shaped
payment model. ASPE, in conjunction with its contractor, Acumen LLC,
analyzed hospice enrollment and utilization data. ASPE's research
demonstrated that the resource use curve becomes more pronounced as
episode lengths increase for hospice users, indicating that this effect
occurs because resource use declines more substantially for the middle
days relative to beginning and ending days in longer episodes of
hospice care than it does for shorter episodes. The decline in the
center of the `U' is deeper for those users who receive RHC only during
their hospice episode, which is the case for the majority of hospice
patients. Recently, CMS' contracting partner, Abt Associates, conducted
analysis of FY 2013 hospice claims data, showing that of the
approximately 92 million hospice days billed, 97.45 percent are
categorized as RHC.
b. Tiered Payment Model
As required under section 3132(a) of the Affordable Care Act, CMS
also explored other options for hospice payment reform. Taking into
consideration the research and analysis performed by MedPAC, ASPE, and
others, our payment reform contractor, Abt Associates, examined hospice
utilization data and modeled a hypothetical ``tiered'' payment system
similar to MedPAC's U-shaped payment model by paying different per-diem
rates for RHC according to the timing of the RHC day in the patient's
episode of care. However, because analysis of hospice claims data found
that a relatively high percentage of patients were not receiving
skilled visits during the last days of life, the ``tiered payment
model'' made the increased payments at end of life contingent on
whether skilled services were provided. As reported in the FY 2015
Hospice Payment Rate Update final rule, in CY 2012, approximately 14
percent beneficiaries did not receive any skilled visits in the last 2
days of life (79 FR 50461). While this could be explained, in part, by
sudden or unexpected death, the high percentage of beneficiaries with
no skilled visits in the last 2 days of life causes concern as to
whether beneficiaries and their families are not receiving needed
hospice care and support at the very end of life. If hospices are
actively engaging with the beneficiary and the family throughout the
election, we would expect to see skilled visits during those last days
of life. Therefore, in the tiered payment model, making the increased
payment at the end of life contingent on whether skilled visits
occurred in the last 2 days of life was thought of as one way to
provide additional incentive for care to be provided when the patient
needs it most.
The groupings in the tiered payment model, presented in Table13
below, were developed through Abt Associates' analyses of resource
utilization over the hospice episode and clinical input. Using all RHC
hospice service days from 2011, Abt then developed payment weights for
each grouping by calculating its relative resource utilization rate
compared to the overall estimate of resource use across all RHC days
(see Table 13 below).
Table 13--Average Daily Resource Use by Payment Groups in the Tiered
Payment Model, CY 2011
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Group Days of hospice Implied weight
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Group 1: RHC Days 1-5............. 2,800,144 2.3
Group 2: RHC Days 6-10............ 2,493,004 1.11
Group 3: RHC Days 11-30........... 7,767,918 0.97
Group 4: RHC Days 31+............. 65,958,740 0.86
Group 5: RHC During Last Seven 2,832,620 2.44
Days, Skilled Visits During Last
2 Days...........................
Group 6: RHC During Last Seven 476,809 0.91
Days, No Skilled Visits During
Last 2 Days......................
Group 7: RHC When Hospice Length 510,787 3.64
of Stay is 5 Days or Less,
Patient Discharged as
``Expired''......................
-------------------------------------
Total......................... 82,840,022 1.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The payment weighting scheme in this system, derived from observed
resource utilization across the entire episode, would produce higher
payments during times when service is more intensive (the beginning of
a stay or the end of life) and produce lower payments during times when
service is less intensive (such as the ``middle period'' of the stay).
The tiered payment model was discussed in more detail in the FY 2014
Hospice Wage Index final rule (78 FR 48271) and in the Hospice Study
Technical Report issued in April of 2013.\43\
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\43\ https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/Hospice/Downloads/Hospice-Study-Technical-Report.pdf
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
c. Visits During the Beginning and End of a Hospice Election
Updated analysis of FY 2013 hospice claims data continues to
demonstrate a U-Shaped pattern of resource use. Increased utilization
at both the beginning and end of a stay is demonstrated in Figure 4
below, where
[[Page 47163]]
FY 2013 resource costs (as captured by wage-weighted minutes) are
markedly higher in the first 2 days of a hospice election and once
again in the 6 days preceding the date of death and on the date of
death itself.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06AU15.003
Analysis of skilled nursing and social work visits provided on the
first day of a hospice election shows that nearly 89 percent of
patients received a visit totaling 15 minutes or more, while 11 percent
did not receive a skilled nursing visit or social work visit on the
first day of a hospice election (see Table 14 below). The percentage of
patients who did not receive a skilled nursing or social work visit on
a given day increased to nearly 38 percent on the second day of a
hospice election. In accordance with the hospice CoPs at Sec.
418.54(a), hospices are required to have a RN complete an initial
assessment of the hospice patient within 48 hours of election;
therefore, we would expect to see a nursing visit occurring within the
first 2 days of an election in order to be in compliance with the CoPs.
We found that, in FY 2013, 96 percent of hospice patients did receive a
skilled visit in the first 2 days of a hospice election. The percentage
of patients that did not receive a skilled nursing or social work visit
on any given day increased to about 65 percent by the sixth day of a
hospice election. Overall, on any given day during the first 7 days of
a hospice election, nearly 50 percent of the time the patient is not
receiving a skilled visit (skilled nursing or social worker visit).
Table 14--Frequency and Length of Skilled Nursing and Social Work Visits (Combined) During the First Seven Days of a Hospice Election, FY 2013
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
First
First day Second day Third day Fourth day Fifth day Sixth day Seventh day through
Visit length (%) (%) (%) (%) (%) (%) (%) seventh day
(%)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
No Visit........................................ 11.0 37.7 56.0 59.1 62.0 65.6 64.2 49.3
15 mins to 1 hr................................. 12.8 27.1 22.2 20.6 20.4 20.1 22.3 20.7
1 hr 15 m to 2 hrs.............................. 32.0 21.4 14.3 13.4 12.2 10.4 10.2 16.9
2 hrs 15 m to 3 hrs............................. 22.8 8.6 4.8 4.5 3.6 2.5 2.2 7.5
3 hrs 15 m to 3hrs45m........................... 8.5 2.6 1.3 1.2 0.9 0.6 0.5 2.4
4 or more hrs................................... 13.0 2.6 1.3 1.2 0.9 0.7 0.6 3.2
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total....................................... 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: FY 2013 hospice claims data from the Standard Analytic Files for CY 2012 (as of June 30, 2013) and CY 2014 (as of December 31, 2013).
As we noted above, we are concerned that many beneficiaries are not
receiving skilled visits during the last few days of life. At the end
of life, patient needs typically surge and more intensive services are
warranted. However, analysis of FY 2013 claims data shows that on any
given day during the last 7 days of a hospice election, nearly 50
percent of the time the patient is not receiving a skilled visit
(skilled nursing or social worker visit) (see table 15 below).
Moreover, on the day of death nearly 30 percent of beneficiaries did
not receive a skilled visit (skilled nursing or social work visit).
[[Page 47164]]
Table 15--Frequency and Length of Skilled Nursing and Social Work Visits (Combined) During the Last Seven Days of a Hospice Election, FY 2013
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
One day Two days Three days Four days Five days Six days Last seven
Visit length (%) Day of death before death before death before death before death before death before death days combined
(%) (%) (%) (%) (%) (%) (%) (%)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
No Visit........................................................ 27.8 38.7 45.2 49.8 53.2 55.8 58.0 46.3
15 mins to 1 hr................................................. 23.9 27.9 26.5 25.1 24.2 23.5 22.8 24.9
1 hr 15 m to 2 hrs.............................................. 24.2 19.3 17.4 15.9 14.5 13.6 12.7 17.1
2 hrs 15 m to 3 hrs............................................. 12.3 7.2 5.9 5.1 4.5 4.1 3.8 6.3
3 hrs 15 m to 3hrs45m........................................... 4.4 2.4 1.9 1.6 1.4 1.2 1.1 2.1
4 or more hrs................................................... 7.4 4.3 3.0 2.4 2.1 1.9 1.6 3.4
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total....................................................... 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: FY 2013 hospice claims data from the Standard Analytic Files for CY 2012 (as of June 30, 2013) and CY 2014 (as of December 31, 2013).
We would expect that skilled visits are provided to the patient and
family at end of life as the changing condition of the individual and
the imminence of death often warrants frequent changes to care to
alleviate and minimize symptoms and to provide support for the family.
Although previous public comments stated that patients and families
sometimes request no visits at the end of life, and there are rare
instances where a patient passes away unexpectedly, we would expect
that these instances would be rare and represent a small proportion of
the noted days without visits at the end of life. However, the data
presented in Table 15 above suggests that it is not rare for patients
and families to have not received skilled visits (skilled nursing or
social work visits) at the end of life. In the FY 2015 Hospice Wage
Index and Payment Rate Update final rule, we noted that nearly 5
percent of hospices did not provide any skilled visits in the last 2
days of life to more than 50 percent of their decedents receiving
routine home care on those last 2 days and 34 hospices did not make any
skilled visits in the last 2 days of life to any of their decedents who
died while receiving routine home care (79 FR 50462).
2. Routine Home Care Rates
RHC is the basic level of care under the Hospice benefit, where a
beneficiary receives hospice care, but remains at home. With this level
of care, hospice providers are currently reimbursed per day regardless
of the volume or intensity of services provided to a beneficiary on any
given day. As stated in the FY 2014 Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate
Update final rule (78 FR 48234), ``it is CMS' intent to ensure that
reimbursement rates under the Hospice benefit align as closely as
possible with the average costs hospices incur when efficiently
providing covered services to beneficiaries.'' However, as discussed in
section III.B.1 above, there is evidence of a misalignment between the
current RHC per diem payment rate and the cost of providing RHC. In
order to help ensure that hospices are paid adequately for providing
care to patients regardless of their palliative care needs during the
stay, while at the same time encouraging hospices to more carefully
determine patient eligibility relative to the statutory requirement
that the patient's life expectancy be 6 months or less, in the FY 2016
Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate Update proposed rule (80 FR 25831),
we proposed to use the authority under section 1814(i)(6)(D) of the
Act, as amended by section 3132(a) of the Affordable Care Act to revise
the current RHC per diem payment rate to more accurately align the per
diem payments with visit intensity (that is, the cost of providing care
for the clinical service (labor) components of the RHC rate). We
proposed to implement, in conjunction with a SIA payment discussed in
section III.B.3 below, two different RHC rates that would result in a
higher base payment rate for the first 60 days of hospice care and a
reduced base payment rate for days 61 and beyond of hospice care.
The proposed two rates for RHC were based on an extensive body of
research concerning visit intensity during a hospice episode as cited
throughout this section. We consider a hospice ``episode'' of care to
be a hospice election period or series of election periods. Visit
intensity is commonly measured in terms of wage-weighted minutes and
reflects variation in the provision of care for the clinical service
(labor) components of the RHC rate. The labor components of the RHC
rate comprise nearly 70 percent of the RHC rate (78 FR 48272).
Therefore, visit intensity is a close proxy for the reasonable cost of
providing hospice care absent data on the non-labor components of the
RHC rate, such as drugs and DME. As shown in Figures 5 and 6 below, the
daily cost of care, as measured wage-weighted minutes, declines quickly
for individual patients during their hospice episodes, and for long
episode patients, remains low for a significant portion of the episode.
Thus, long episode patients are potentially more profitable than
shorter episode patients under the current per diem payments system in
which the payment rate is the same for the entire episode. At the same
time, the percent of beneficiaries that enter hospice less than 7 days
prior to death has remained relatively constant (approximately 30
percent) over this time period, meaning the increase in the average
episode length can be attributed to an increasing number of long stay
patients. We found that the percent of episodes that are more than 6
months in length has nearly doubled from about 7 percent in 1999 to 13
percent in 2013.
Figure 5 displays the pattern of wage-weighted minutes by time
period within beneficiary episodes, but separating out the last 7 days
of the episode for decedents. The wage-weighted minutes for the last 7
days are displayed separately by the bar furthest to the right of the
Figure 5. The visit intensity curve declines rapidly after 7 days and
then at a slower rate until 60 days when the curve becomes flat
throughout the remainder of episodes (excluding the last 7 days prior
to death). It is for this reason that we proposed to pay a higher rate
for the first 60 days and a lower rate thereafter. It is clear from the
figure that visit utilization is constant from day 61 on, until the
last 7 days for decedents. We believe the most important reason for
implementing a different RHC rate for the first 60 days versus days 61
and beyond is that we must account for differences in average visit
intensity between episodes that will end within 60 days and those that
will go on for longer episodes.
[[Page 47165]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06AU15.004
As Figure 6 demonstrates, beneficiaries whose entire episode is
between 8 and 60 days do have higher wage-weighted minute usage than
those with longer stays. Using 60 days for the high RHC rate as opposed
to an earlier time assures that hospices have sufficient resources for
providing high quality care to patients (for example, 1 through 60
days) whose average daily visit intensity is higher than for longer
stay patients.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06AU15.005
Table 16 below describes the average wage-weighted minutes for RHC
days in FY 2014, calculated both in specific phases within an episode
as well as overall.
[[Page 47166]]
Table 16--Average Wage Weighted Minutes per RHC Day, FY 2014
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ratio of wage
weighted minutes
Average wage- for each row
Phase of days in episode weighted minutes RHC days divided by wage
weighted minutes
for days 1-7
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1-7 Days............................................ $39.29 5,446,868 1.0000
8-14 Days........................................... 20.12 4,310,630 0.5121
15-30 Days.......................................... 17.96 7,752,375 0.4570
31-60 Days.......................................... 16.09 10,758,904 0.4097
61-90 Days.......................................... 15.44 8,123,686 0.3930
91-180 Days......................................... 14.93 16,271,786 0.3799
181-272 Days........................................ 14.78 10,118,998 0.3762
273-365 Days........................................ 14.90 6,876,814 0.3793
365 up Days......................................... 15.05 16,029,597 0.3830
-----------------------------------------------------------
Total RHC Days.................................. 17.21 85,689,658 0.4380
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In Table 16, the average wage-weighted minutes per day for days 1
through 7 describe the baseline for the other phases of care, set at a
value of one. Given the demands of the initial care in an episode,
resource intensity is highest during this first week of an episode, and
resource needs decline steadily over the course of an episode. The
overall average wage-weighted minutes per day across all RHC days
equals $17.21 as described in the last row in table 16 above. We then
calculated the average wage-weighted minute costs for the two groups of
days (Days 1 through 60 and Days 61+) utilizing FY 2014 RHC days
multiplied by the 2013 Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) average hourly
wage values for the relevant disciplines, as follows: Skilled Nursing:
$40.07; Physical Therapy: $55.93; Occupational Therapy: $55.57; Speech
Language Pathology: $60.21; Medical Social Services: $38.25; and Aide:
$14.28. The average wage-weighted minute cost for days 1 through 60
equals to $21.69 while the average wage weighted minutes for days 61 or
more equals $15.01.
To calculate the RHC payment rate for days 1 through 60, we
compared the average wage-weighted minutes per day for days 1 through
60 to the overall average wage-weighted minutes per day multiplied by
the labor portion of the FY 2015 RHC rate (column 4 in Table 17 below),
which equals ($21.69/$17.21)*$109.48 = $137.98. Similarly, the RHC
payment rate for days 61+ equals the average wage-weighted minutes per
day for days 61+ divided by the overall average wage-weighted minutes
per day multiplied by the labor portion of the FY 2015 RHC rate (column
4 in Table 17 below), which equals ($15.01/$17.21)*$109.48 = $95.49.
Table 17--FY 2015 RHC Rate Revised Labor Portion Calculation
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2015 RHC RHC Labor- FY 2015 RHC Average wage weighted Revised FY
Payment rate related share Payment rate-- minutes for RHC 2015 labor
labor portion differential rate/overall portion
RHC average wage weighted
minutes
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Days 1-60.................................................. $159.34 x 0.6871 $109.48 x 1.2603 ($21.69/$17.21) $137.98
Days 61+................................................... 159.34 x 0.6871 109.48 x 0.8722 ($15.01/$17.21) 95.49
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed in section III.C of this rule, currently, the labor-
related share of the hospice payment rate for RHC is 68.71 percent. The
non-labor share is equal to 100 percent minus the labor-related share,
or 31.29 percent. Given the current base rate for RHC for FY 2015 of
$159.34, the labor and non-labor components are as follows: For the
labor-share portion, $159.34 multiplied by 68.71 percent equals
$109.48; for the non-labor share portion, $159.34 multiplied by 31.29
percent equals $49.86. After determining the labor portion for the RHC
rate for the first 60 days and the labor portion for the RHC rate for
days 61 and over, we add the non-labor portion ($49.86) to the revised
labor portions. In order to maintain budget neutrality, as required
under section 1814(i)(6)(D)(ii) of the Act, the RHC rates will be
adjusted by a ratio of the estimated total labor payments for RHC using
the current single rate for RHC to the estimated total labor payments
for RHC using the two rates for RHC and taking into account area wage
adjustment. This ratio results in a budget neutrality adjustment of
0.9978, which is due to differences in the average wage index for days
1-60 compared to days 61 and beyond, as shown in column 3 in Table 18
below. Finally, adding the revised labor portion with budget neutrality
to the non-labor portion results in revised FY 2015 RHC payment rates
of $187.54 for days 1 through 60 and $145.14 for days 61 and beyond.
[[Page 47167]]
Table 18--RHC Budget Neutrality Adjustment for RHC Rates
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Revised FY Budget Revised FY FY 2015 Non- FY 2015
2015 Labor neutrality 2015 labor labor portion Revised RHC
portion factor \1\ portion with payment rates
budget
neutrality
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Days 1-60....................... $137.98 x 0.9978 $137.68 $49.86 $187.54
Days 61+........................ 95.49 x 0.9978 95.28 49.86 145.14
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The budget neutrality adjustment is required due to differences in the average wage index for days 1-60
compared to days 61 and beyond.
The RHC rates for days 1 through 60 and days 61 and over (column 6
of Table 18 above) would replace the current single RHC per diem
payment rate with two new RHC per diem rates for patients who require
RHC level of care during a hospice election. In order to mitigate
potential high rates of discharge and readmissions, we proposed that
the count of days follow the patient. For hospice patients who are
discharged and readmitted to hospice within 60 days of that discharge,
his or her prior hospice days would continue to follow the patient and
count toward his or her patient days for the receiving hospice upon
hospice election. The hospice days would continue to follow the patient
solely to determine whether the receiving hospice would receive payment
at the day 1 through 60 or day 61 and beyond RHC rate. Therefore, we
consider an ``episode'' of care to be a hospice election period or
series of election periods separated by no more than a 60 day gap.
Summaries of the public comments and our responses to comments on
all aspects of the RHC payment rates are summarized below:
Comment: Nearly all commenters were supportive of our proposal to
create two RHC rates, one higher rate for the first 60 days of hospice
care and a second lower rate for days 61 and beyond. MedPAC supported
both the proposed new structure for RHC payments and the proposed
Service Intensity Adjustment (SIA) in section III.B.3 below, and stated
that these two proposals begin to better align payments with the u-
shaped pattern of hospice visits throughout an episode. Several
commenters went on to add that the proposed RHC rates would increase
reimbursement and accurately align the higher cost of care for
relatively short stay patients while fairly reimbursing the lower cost
of care for long stay patients.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support. We agree that
our proposal to create two RHC rates, one for days 1-60 and another for
days 61 and beyond, addresses observed differences in resource
intensity between the first 60 days of hospice care and hospice care
that extends beyond 60 days.
Comment: Several commenters questioned why CMS differentiated
between a higher and a lower RHC rate at 60 days. Several commenters
stated that the costs do not decrease after 60 days and that costs
often increase near the end of life. While the proposed SIA, discussed
in section III.B.3 below, helps to compensate for increased costs at
end of life, the proposed RHC rates do not take into consideration the
increased costs of medications, sometimes extra equipment, nor the real
costs of providing care. One commenter stated that once a patient
exceeds 60 days of care, the lower RHC rate simply re-introduces the
current incentive to provide long spells of potentially unnecessary
care. The commenter went on to add that the proposed RHC rates are, in
reality, two flat per diem rates that perpetuate the shortcomings of
the current payment approach.
A few commenters recommended that CMS maintain consistency with
already established benefit periods and should, instead of
differentiating payment at 60 days, differentiate RHC payments between
days 1-90 and days 91 and beyond, or even apply the higher rate for the
first 6 months and then the lower rate thereafter to maintain
consistency with the eligibility requirement of a ``life expectancy of
6 months or less if the illness runs its normal course''. One commenter
agreed with CMS' proposal to create two RHC rates, but recommended that
in the future, CMS consider establishing a separate rate for the first
7 or 14 days of care and a lower rate thereafter.
Several commenters stated that while they support the proposal to
create two RHC rates, further refinements may be necessary in the
future. Specifically, one commenter stated that CMS may need to further
weight the first 60 days or transition from the first to the second RHC
rate earlier than day 61. Several commenters added that CMS may find
that hospice payments should be adjusted based on beneficiary
characteristics, such as comorbidities and socio-economic status and
that CMS should develop a reimbursement methodology that reflects the
actual cost of caring for individuals with different diagnoses related
to the terminal illness as well as individuals that receive higher cost
treatments (for example, chemotherapy, total parenteral nutrition).
Response: As discussed above, visit intensity declines after 7 days
of hospice care until day 60 of hospice care when the visit intensity
becomes flat throughout the remainder of the hospice episode (excluding
the last 7 days prior to death). It is for this reason that we proposed
to pay a higher rate for the first 60 days and a lower rate thereafter.
CMS did consider establishing an even higher rate for the first 7 days
of care; however, given concerns voiced by the National Hospice and
Palliative Care Organization (NHPCO), MedPAC, and others that short
lengths of stay may prevent patients and family caregivers from
benefiting fully from the range of specialized services and
compassionate care that hospices offer, we decided to propose a higher
RHC rate for days 1-60 and an lower RHC rate for days 61 and beyond as
to not provide a larger incentive for hospices to target short stay
patients. In addition to the higher RHC rate for days 1-60, the
proposed SIA, discussed in section III.B.3 below, would increase the
reimbursement further for short stay patients, including those with
lengths of stay of 7 days or less, as long as skilled visits by a
registered nurse or social worker are provided to the patient at end of
life. For those commenters that suggested CMS pay a higher rate for the
first 90 days and then a lower rate thereafter, we concur with MedPAC's
comments on the proposed rule cautioning against any changes to the
proposed structure that would lengthen the period for the initial
payment rate (for example, days 1-90) because that would result in a
lower initial payment rate and represent
[[Page 47168]]
a smaller increase in reimbursement for shorter stays.
CMS recently revised the freestanding hospice cost report form for
cost reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 2014. On April
1, 2014, we began requiring hospices to report on the hospice claim, in
line item detail, the charges associated with infusion pumps and non-
injectable and injectable prescription drugs (as dispensed). In section
III.F of this final rule, we are clarifying that, effective October 1,
2015, hospices are to report all patient diagnoses (related and
unrelated) on the hospice claim form. Once several years of additional
data are available for analysis, we will determine whether additional
changes to the hospice payment system are needed in the future,
including analysis to determine whether a case-mix system for hospice
payments would be an appropriate, viable option.
Comment: Several commenters stated that the proposed RHC rates
would allow some hospices to ``game the system'' by receiving the full
benefit of the initial 60 day period then discharging the patient,
leaving other smaller, non-profit hospices to assume care for someone
with decreased reimbursement. Commenters expressed concern that this
payment differential could provide an incentive for hospices to target
and admit larger numbers of short stay patients, and to discharge or
decline to admit, patients who hospice care would be paid at the lower
rate causing more patients to show up at the emergency room multiple
times for pain management and symptom control. One commenter stated
that the proposed RHC rates could cause hospices to shift away from
caring for patients with non-cancer diagnoses with unpredictable
lengths of stay. Commenters further urged CMS to monitor for discharges
around day 60 and to put mechanisms in place to prevent hospices from
discharging a patient around day 60. Some commenters suggested that CMS
address the areas of illegal and unethical behaviors of those
individual hospices who do not comply with the rules and regulations of
the Medicare hospice benefit and that CMS not apply a universal payment
reform that impacts those hospice providers who are in compliance with
the rules and regulations.
Response: Reiterating what we stated in the FY 2016 Hospice Wage
Index and Payment Rate Update proposed rule (80 FR 25831), we will
monitor the impact of this proposal, including trends in discharges and
revocations, and propose future refinements if necessary. We want to
remind hospices that, pursuant to section 418.26, there are only three
reasons why a hospice may discharge a patient--(1) If the hospice
patient moves outside of the hospice's service area or transfers to
another hospice; (2) if the hospice determines the patient is no longer
terminally ill; or (3) for cause when the patient or others living in
the patient's home are disruptive, abusive, or uncooperative. Program
integrity and oversight efforts are being considered to address fraud
and abuse and such efforts include, but are not limited to, medical
review, MAC audits, Zone Program Integrity Contractor actions, RAC
activities, or suspension of provider billing privileges.
Comment: Commenters stated that the proposed RHC rates do not
address the challenges faced by hospices with very short stay patients.
A few commenters stated that instead of adding complexity to the
billing process, CMS should target its efforts on ensuring
beneficiaries are informed early and often on the value of services
they are entitled to under the Medicare hospice benefit and target
providers experiencing high profit margins and separately evaluate the
level and intensity of such providers and those providers' case-mix and
staffing strategies.
Response: While the proposed RHC rates themselves do not
specifically address very short stay patients, the proposed SIA,
discussed in section III.B.3 below, would apply to the last 7 days of
life. We believe that the higher RHC rate in conjunction with the
proposed SIA payment will mitigate some of the financial concerns
associated with these very short stay patients. CMS makes every effort
to provide outreach and education to Medicare beneficiaries and
providers regarding all Medicare benefits, including those services
available under the Medicare hospice benefit. Information regarding
benefit coverage is available via MLN articles, the annual Medicare &
You handbook, and on the Medicare.gov Web site, to name a few. We will
continue to monitor provider behavior and will continue efforts to
protect beneficiary access to high quality, coordinated and
comprehensive hospice care under the Medicare hospice benefit.
Comment: Most commenters, including MedPAC, generally agreed that
for hospice patients who are discharged and readmitted to hospice
within 60 days of that discharge, his or her prior hospice days should
continue to follow the patient and count toward his or her patient days
for the receiving hospice upon hospice election. MedPAC stated that
this policy is necessary to minimize financial incentives for hospice
patients to be dis-enrolled and re-enrolled, or transferred between
hospice providers, for the purposes of obtaining a higher payment rate.
MedPAC went on to state that they would also support a longer ``break''
than 60 days, but does not believe this threshold should be shorter. A
few commenters did not agree with having the hospice days follow the
patient and added that concerns exist about instances where the patient
transfers to another hospice and the inequities for the second hospice
if they are not entitled to the higher RHC rate after 60 days have
lapsed. A few commenters suggested that CMS allow the second hospice to
receive the higher RHC rate or an add-on payment just for the first
seven days of a new election after being discharged from a different
hospice provider. One commenter suggested that for live discharges
prior to 60 days, the lower tiered RHC rate be applied to all claims
where a patient is in their initial 60 days. Other commenters suggested
that CMS monitor this issue and whether it has any effect on access to
hospice care. One commenter suggested that CMS' proposed ``episode''
definition (a hospice election period or series of election periods
separated by no more than a 60 day gap) may be most appropriate to
apply to those hospices that share common ownership rather than to all
hospice providers.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support. We want to
reiterate that in order to mitigate potential high rates of discharge
and readmissions (``churning''), we proposed that the count of days
follow the patient. We continue to believe that this policy is both
necessary and appropriate. Allowing for a higher payment for the first
seven days of a new hospice election without a gap in hospice care of
greater than 60 days goes against our intent to mitigate the incentive
to discharge and readmit patients at or around day 60 for the purposes
of obtaining a higher payment. As we stated above, we will monitor the
impact of the new RHC rates policy based on claims data, including
trends in discharges and revocations, and implement future refinements
to the rates or policy changes, if necessary. In response to the
commenter that suggested that for live discharges prior to 60 days, the
lower tiered RHC rate be applied to all claims where a patient is in
their initial 60 days, we will take this suggestion under advisement
for future rulemaking after analyzing any trends in discharges and
revocations as a result of the policy changes finalized in this rule.
Finally, the Medicare claims processing
[[Page 47169]]
system is not able to identify hospices that share common ownership. In
the future, if this capability is developed in the future, we will
consider whether it would be appropriate to restrict the application of
episode definition to hospices that share common ownership.
Comment: Some commenters expressed concern about the ability of
CMS, the state Medicaid agencies, and hospices to make the necessary
systems changes and undertake education and training to be ready to
implement the new billing system by October 1, 2015. Commenters urged
CMS to be mindful to the challenges associated with any new hospice
payment system that affects Medicaid. A few commenters suggested that
CMS should pilot test this new methodology before implementation in
order to determine any unintended consequences as well as better
determine the administrative burden imposed. Other commenters suggested
that CMS consider a one-year demonstration project to test the new RHC
payment rates for all hospices under the jurisdiction of one MAC. A few
commenters stated that the two RHC rates should be phased in, similar
to how CMS implemented the new Ambulatory Surgical Center (ASC) payment
system and the phase-out of the hospice BNAF. One commenter suggested
that CMS delay implementation of this final rule until after ICD-10-CM
implementation.
Response: Although some commenters suggested that, before national
implementation, CMS should conduct a demonstration project or pilot
test the two proposed RHC rates, we do not believe that a demonstration
project or pilot test is warranted. CMS has been working with our
contractors to develop systems changes to the fullest extent possible
in parallel with the development of this rule. Our system maintainers
will have their full software development lifecycle to implement these
changes. We do not have concerns about the readiness of Medicare
systems on October 1, 2015. Regarding hospice system changes, we do not
anticipate that this rule will require any changes to hospice billing
instructions so systems for submitting claims and receiving Medicare
payment should not be affected and the need for retraining billing
staff should be limited, but hospices may need to change their internal
accounting systems . Further, the data presented in the proposed rule
sufficiently demonstrate that CMS needs to implement the proposed RHC
payment rate change to better align hospice payments with resource use.
Any phase-in of the proposed RHC rates would not be appropriate given
the current misalignment between payments and resource use and the
ability of CMS to effectively implement the required systems changes.
Likewise, CMS does not believe that a delay in the implementation of
the two RHC rates would be warranted due to the implementation of ICD-
10-CM.
While CMS is ready and able to make the required systems changes to
implement a change from a single RHC per diem payment rate to two RHC
per diem payment rates, we anticipate that state Medicaid agencies may
encounter difficulties in making the necessary systems and software
changes to be ready to implement the proposed RHC rates on October 1,
2015. Therefore, we will delay implementation of both the proposed RHC
rates and the SIA payment until January 1, 2016 in order to ensure, to
the greatest extent possible, that the state Medicaid agencies can
likewise implement these changes. Between October 1, 2015 and December
31, 2015, hospices will continue to be paid a single FY 2016 RHC per
diem payment amount. Effective January 1, 2016, the RHC rates for days
1 through 60 and days 61 and beyond would replace the single RHC per
diem payment rate (the RHC per diem rates are listed in section III.C
of this final rule). We assure hospices that CMS and the MACs will take
steps to educate and train hospice providers and state Medicaid
agencies on the policy changes and associated systems changes finalized
in this rule so that hospices and the state Medicaid agencies are ready
to implement the two RHC rates on January 1, 2016.
Comment: Several commenters stated that the proposed rule did not
describe how hospice days will be counted for beneficiaries in existing
hospice episodes that continue through October 1, 2015. Several
commenters, including MedPAC, stated that the patient's day count on
October 1, 2015 should be based on the total number of days in the
hospice episode, even those days prior to October 1, 2015 (taking into
account the proposed policy that the episode days follow the patient
and 60 days without hospice care would trigger a new hospice episode).
A few commenters stated that the new RHC rates should apply just for
new admissions starting on or after October 1, 2015 and a few other
commenters added that existing admissions should continue to be paid
the existing single RHC rate for a year after implementation. A few
commenters asked whether the 60 day hospice episode period is counting
60 days of continuous days of hospice care regardless of level of care
or whether it is only counting days at the RHC level of care and
whether days of care that were provided, but not billable, would be
included in the count.
Response: Table 16, used to establish the proposed RHC payment
rates for days 1-60 and days 61 and beyond, takes into account the
patient's episode day count based on the total number of days included
in that episode regardless of level of care, whether those days were
billable or not, and taking into account any instances where the
patient was not receiving hospice care for more than 60 days, which
would trigger a new hospice episode for the purpose of determining
whether to pay the higher versus the lower RHC rate. We agree with
MedPAC that it would not be appropriate to reset all hospice patients'
episodes to day 1 on January 1, 2016 since patients who have already
been in hospice for at least 60 days would not require the higher base
payment rate associated with the first 60 days of the hospice episode.
Likewise, we agree with MedPAC that allowing patients in existing
elections to remain under the prior single RHC rate system would
perpetuate concerns about payments being misaligned with costs for the
longest-stay patients. Therefore, we believe that the most appropriate
approach is to calculate the patient's episode day count based on the
total number of days the patient has been receiving hospice care,
separated by no more than a 60 day gap in hospice care, regardless of
level of care or whether those days were billable or not. This
calculation would include hospice days that occurred prior to January
1, 2016.
Comment: Some commenters stated that it was unclear from the
proposal whether hospices will simply bill a RHC day and CMS will
determine the count of days for the patient and pay the appropriate
rate, or whether hospices will be responsible for determining the
patient day count and billing at the correct rate. A few commenters
questioned how CMS would address instances where a hospice is delayed
in filing a Notice of Termination/Revocation and the days that the
beneficiary was served by a previous hospice program may not be
``visible'' for purposes of determining the day count and the
appropriate billing rate. One commenter suggested that CMS should be
responsible for the count of days, rather than individual hospices. One
commenter recommended that CMS not finalize its proposal to have the
count of days follow the patient as this could become problematic from
a billing perspective for receiving hospices in instances where a
previous hospice provider does not bill their
[[Page 47170]]
hospice claims for its patients in a timely manner. Another commenter
recommended that CMS eliminate the sequential billing requirement so
that there would be fewer implementation problems associated with the
proposed reimbursement changes. Finally, one commenter questioned if
payments are made to the hospice and are later found to have been the
wrong rate because of missing or inaccurate information on the day
count, what the process would be for reconciliation and recoupment and
over what time period might this occur.
Response: Hospices will not be required to change how they bill for
RHC days to comply with the proposed higher RHC rate for the first 60
days of care and a lower rate thereafter. CMS' claims processing system
will be responsible for the count of days, rather than the individual
hospices, and will pay the appropriate rate accordingly. We believe
this should alleviate hospice providers' concerns about having access
to timely information on the patients' day count. There may be cases
where a hospice submits a claim for a new admission and expects payment
days under the high RHC rate because they are unaware of a prior
admission in a sequence of elections. If the prior hospice's benefit
period is posted in the Common Working File (CWF) at the time the
second hospice's claim is processed, Medicare systems will pay the low
RHC rate on that claim and no recoupment will result. If the two
hospices' benefit periods are processed out of sequence, this typically
requires that the second hospice's claims be cancelled and reprocessed.
When Medicare systems reprocess the claims, they will pay the low RHC
rate and any difference between the two rates will be recouped on the
provider's next remittance advice. While we are not eliminating the
sequential billing requirement at this time, we will consider whether
the elimination of that requirement may be appropriate in the future.
Comment: Several commenters asked how hospices will be able to
determine and confirm the days on service for a new hospice admission.
One commenter recommended that a separate count be established to track
and report the 60 day ``break'' in service so it is clear to hospice
providers if a patient is within the first 60 days of a hospice
episode. One commenter provided the following scenario:
Patient begins hospice care on day one
Patient discharged on day five
Patient does not receive hospice care for 50 days
Patient is then re-admitted.
The commenter asked whether the day count would leave 55 more days to
be paid the higher RHC rate, or only 5 days to be paid at the higher
RHC rate. One commenter questioned how the count of days would work for
transfers where both hospices may bill on the day of transition.
Response: If a patient is discharged and readmitted within 60 days
of that discharge, then the day count would start back where they were
at discharge. In the scenario described above, the day count would
leave 55 more days to be paid the higher RHC rate. When a patient
transfers hospices and there is no gap in care, the transfer day (both
hospices will be including the same date on their claim) will only be
counted as 1 day. Hospices can access this information through the
HIPAA Eligibility Transaction System (HETS), which is intended to allow
the release of eligibility data to Medicare Providers, Suppliers, or
their authorized billing agents for the purpose of preparing an
accurate Medicare claim, determining Beneficiary liability or
determining eligibility for specific services. The hospice data
provided by the Common Working File (CWF) and the HETS system includes
the actual start and end date of the hospice benefit days. That
information will help hospices determine how many days the hospice
benefit was utilized. The HETS system allowable date span is up to 12
months in the past, based on the date the transaction was received. The
data return in the HETS system is driven by the date requested in the
hospice's eligibility request. To ensure that all hospice episodes
available in the HETS system are returned, hospices should request a
date 12 months prior from the date of the request. If a hospice does
not have access to the CWF or the HETS system, the hospice can access
this data via their MAC's Portal, the MAC's Interactive Voice Response
(IVR) unit, or request a direct access to the HETS system. A hospice
that uses a clearinghouse may already have access to the HETS system.
Comment: A few commenters had extensive comments on the technical
aspects in implementing the proposed RHC rates and the SIA payments.
For example, some commenters questioned: (1) Whether the claims
processing system can accommodate a break in line item detail when the
revenue code does not change, but the rate does; (2) how the electronic
remittance advice will reflect multiple payment rates for revenue code
0651; (3) will the two RHC rates affect revenue reporting on the
hospice cost report, and if so, will the PS&R report summarize the
needed data appropriately; and (4) how will Medicare secondary payer
processing apply the two RHC rates on claims billed to a primary payer
that utilizes a single rate.
Response: We do not anticipate that this rule will require any
changes to the hospice cost report form to differentiate between the
two RHC rates and thus we do not anticipate that this rule will require
CMS modify the PS&R report. There will often be cases where the RHC
rate changes during a period RHC that is shown on a single line item on
a claim (for example, an RHC line shows 20 days of care and the high
RHC rate ends after day 10). The line item should not be split in this
case. Medicare billing instructions for hospice are not changing due to
this rule. Existing instructions require that level of care revenue
code lines should only be repeated if the site of service changes. A
claim submitted with consecutive RHC lines reporting the same site of
service HCPCS code will be returned to the provider. Medicare systems
will combine the high and low RHC rates for the applicable days in the
total payment for the RHC line item. No changes to the electronic
remittance advice are planned as a result of this rule. If remittance
advice coding to identify lines that are paid using the high RHC rate
or that are paid at multiple rates would be beneficial, CMS will
consider requesting and implementing such coding in future program
instructions. Regarding Medicare Secondary Payer (MSP), a primary
payer's method of payment frequently differs from Medicare's method.
This policy does not change the calculation of MSP amounts. The primary
payer's total payment for the claim, the claim charges and the Medicare
primary payment amount are subject to the MSP calculations required by
law and the MSP payment is determined accordingly.
Comment: One commenter stated that its state Medicaid system does
not utilize the CMS 1450 claim form for hospice elections nor do they
make benefit utilization information available to providers and
questioned whether Medicaid reimbursement would be changing to a two-
tiered system for RHC level of care. A few commenters stated that the
Affordable Care Act authorized concurrent care for children, so they
could receive hospice services while continuing to receive treatment
intended to prolong their lives and was specifically intended to enable
children and their parents to access hospice services earlier in the
course of disease.
[[Page 47171]]
The commenter stated that a reduction in reimbursement for services
longer than 60 days could undercut the intent of the concurrent care
provision. One commenter asked whether any provisions would be made to
facilitate a later implementation date for Medicaid if there is no
delay to the October 1, 2015 effective date of the proposals in the
proposed rule.
Response: Section 2302 of the Affordable Care Act requires states
to make hospice services available to children eligible for Medicaid
without forgoing any other service to which the child is entitled under
Medicaid for treatment of the terminal condition. As a general matter,
individuals under age 21 in Medicaid receive all medically necessary
services coverable under the mandatory and optional categories in
section 1905(a) of the Social Security Act, including hospice.
Therefore, payment changes in the Medicaid hospice program should not
affect the curative services a child receives. As we noted above, we
will finalize a delay in the implementation of both the proposed RHC
rates and the proposed SIA payment until January 1, 2016. Between
October 1, 2015 and December 31, 2015, hospices will continue to be
paid a single FY 2016 RHC per diem payment amount while the operational
transition is being finalized at CMS. Effective January 1, 2016, the
RHC rates for days 1 through 60 and days 61 and beyond would replace
the single RHC per diem payment rate (the RHC per diem rates are listed
in section III.C of this final rule). Therefore, the effective date for
both Medicare and Medicaid will be January 1, 2016. As we noted above,
for Medicare reimbursement, hospices will not be required to change how
the bill for RHC days to comply with the proposed higher RHC rate for
the first 60 days of care and a lower rate thereafter. CMS' claims
processing system will be responsible for the count of days, rather
than the individual hospices, and will pay the appropriate rate
accordingly. We defer to the states on how they will implement this
change in Medicare reimbursement for their state Medicaid programs.
Comment: One commenter questioned, with two RHC rates, how CMS and
the MACs will determine which RHC payment rate will be applicable when
a hospice exceeds the General Inpatient Cap and the rate is changed to
the RHC rate.
Response: If a hospice's inpatient days (GIP and respite) exceed 20
percent of all hospice days then, for inpatient care, the hospice is
paid: (1) The sum of the total reimbursement for inpatient care
multiplied by eighty percent, the maximum allowable inpatient days
percentage; and (2) The sum of the actual number of inpatient days in
excess of the limitation multiplied by the routine home care rate.
Since the inpatient cap determination is done in the aggregate and not
on an individual claim-by-claim basis, CMS will be using the RHC rate
for days 61 and beyond when reconciling payments for hospices that
exceed the inpatient cap. Using the RHC rate for days 61 and beyond is
the most appropriate RHC rate to use for this purpose since the RHC
rate for days 1-60 currently exceeds the inpatient respite care (IRC)
payment rate.
Comment: One commenter stated that some hospice patients revoke the
hospice benefit to pursue curative treatment and then return to the
benefit in a matter of days or weeks. Does the 60 day period start and
stop with these patient requests?
Response: CMS will not count the days in between an election as
hospice days. Anytime there is a discharge (patient revocation, patient
discharged as no longer terminally ill, patient transfer, patient
discharge for cause) the days where the patient was receiving care
under the Medicare hospice benefit will be included as part of the
hospice day count for the next election, unless the patient does not
receive hospice services for 60 consecutive days. As we stated above,
we consider a hospice ``episode'' of care to be a hospice election
period or series of election periods separated by no more than a 60 day
gap in hospice care. However, we note that if a patient is electing the
hospice benefit, revoking the hospice benefit to seek curative care,
and then re-electing the hospice benefit within a few days, we are
concerned about whether these patients are truly appropriate for the
hospice benefit and/or whether hospices are fully explaining and
obtaining patient acknowledgement of the palliative versus curative
nature of hospice care.
Comment: One commenter expressed confusion in how CMS calculated
the budget neutrality factors for the proposed RHC payment rates in
Table 18. The commenter provided a series of tables that used
information in Table 16 in an effort to replicate the budget neutrality
factor.
Response: The commenter was using information in Table 16 to
calculate the budget neutrality factor in Table 18 above. Table 16 is
used to create the two RHC rates that are budget neutral to one another
without the application of area wage adjustment. Once we calculate RHC
payments taking into account area wage adjustment, an additional budget
neutrality factor is necessary to ensure overall hospice payments
remain budget neutral. The footnote for Table 18 above notes that a
budget neutrality adjustment to the two RHC rates is required to
maintain overall budget neutrality for the hospice benefit due to
differences in the average wage index for days 1-60 compared to days 61
and over when making payments based on the two RHC rates, rather than
the one RHC rate.
Comment: One commenter stated that after the revision to the labor
portion applicable to the proposed two RHC rate structure, the labor
portion of each rate is now different. The commenter questioned whether
CMS would be revising the labor-related share for each of the two
proposed RHC rates or whether CMS would still be applying the labor-
related share of 68.71 percent to each of the two proposed RHC rates.
Response: The calculations in Tables 17 and 18 above make
adjustments to the labor portion of the FY 2015 RHC rate to create two
new RHC rates based on observed differences in visit intensity (as
measured by wage-weighted minutes) between days 1-60 of the hospice
episode of care and days 61 and beyond. These calculations were
performed to set two RHC rates that sufficiently align with the
expected visit intensity differences observed in days 1-60 versus days
61 and beyond in accordance with section 1814(i)(1)(A) of the Act,
which requires hospice payment amounts to equal the reasonable cost of
providing hospice care. As outlined in Table 19 below, multiplying the
labor-portion of the two RHC rates, prior to the budget neutrality
adjustment for average wage index differences between days 1-60 and
days 61 and beyond, in column 2 of Table 18 above ($137.98 for days 1-
60 and $95.49 for days 61+) by the number of respective RHC days
(column 2 in Table 19 below), produces the total amount of RHC payments
attributable to the labor portion of the two RHC rates. Total RHC
payments attributable to the labor portion is equal to the sum of
payments for the two RHC rates attributable to the labor portion and
likewise for the payments attributable to the non-labor portion. Table
19 below shows the results.
[[Page 47172]]
Table 19--Estimated RHC Labor Portion Payments, RHC Non-Labor Portion Payments and Total RHC Payments for Days 1-
60 and Days 61 and Beyond, FY 2015
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Labor portion of Non-labor portion
RHC days payments of payments Total payments
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Days 1-60........................ 28,052,004 $3,870,615,511.92 $1,398,672,919.44 $5,269,288,431.36
Days 61+......................... 57,082,561 5,450,813,749.89 2,846,136,491.46 8,296,950,241.35
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total........................ .............. 9,321,429,261.81 4,244,809,410.90 13,566,238,672.71
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
When you divide the amount of total payments attributable to the
labor portion of the proposed RHC rates of $9,321,429,261.81 by the
amount of total payments of $13,566,238,672.71, the result is 68.71
percent, which is the labor-related share for the RHC rate. Therefore,
these calculations do not ultimately change the labor-related share of
68.71 percent that will be used for geographic area wage adjustment
required per section 1814(i)(2)(D) of the Act. We will consider changes
to the labor-related share for the purposes of geographic wage
adjustment once cost report data by level of care is available for
analysis.
Comment: One commenter asked if CMS performed any analysis on how
the proposed RHC rates would impact hospices that exceed their
aggregate cap.
Response: Yes, CMS did perform analysis on how the proposed RHC
payment rates for days 1-60 and days 61 and beyond would impact both
hospice providers who did not exceed their aggregate cap in 2013 and
for those hospice providers who did exceed their aggregate cap in 2013.
For those hospice providers who did not exceed their aggregate cap in
2013, we estimated that the proposed RHC rates would result in a 0.14
percent increase in payments. However, for those hospice providers that
exceeded their aggregate cap, hospice payments were estimated to
decrease by 5.40 percent.
Comment: One commenter objected to payment rates being based, at
least in part, on information that has never been audited (cost
reports). The commenter implored CMS to develop a strategy to establish
a base year and audit hospice cost reports to determine costs for
future rate setting and/or further changes in payment methodologies.
Another commenter noted that the data used to determine the proposed
RHC rates are old data that do not reflect the shift in coverage
occurring as a result in the clarification by CMS that hospices are
expected to cover ``virtually all'' care. The commenter stated that
additional analysis of more recent data is needed to determine a
sufficient base rate for RHC.
Response: We note that the proposed RHC rates and the proposed SIA
payment policy were established based on analysis of visit intensity
during a hospice episode of care and visit patterns during the last
seven days of life using hospice claims data. As noted above, CMS
recently revised the freestanding hospice cost report form for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 2014. Once the new
cost report data are available for analysis, we will be able to analyze
hospice costs by level of care. We want to remind hospices that each
hospice cost report is required to be certified by the Officer or
Administrator of the hospice and that the Hospice Medicare Cost Report
(MCR) Form (CMS-1984-14) states the following:
MISREPRESENTATION OR FALSIFICATION OF ANY INFORMATION CONTAINED IN
THIS COST REPORT MAY BE PUNISHABLE BY CRIMINAL, CIVIL, AND
ADMINISTRATIVE ACTION, FINE AND/OR IMPRISONMENT UNDER FEDERAL LAW.
FURTHERMORE, IF SERVICES IDENTIFIED IN THIS REPORT WERE PROVIDED
THROUGH THE PAYMENT DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY OF A KICKBACK OR WERE
OTHERWISE ILLEGAL, CRIMINAL, CIVIL, AND ADMINISTRATIVE ACTION, FINES
AND/OR IMPRISONMENT MAY RESULT.
I HEREBY CERTIFY that I have read the above certification statement
and that I have examined the accompanying electronically filed or
manually submitted cost report and the Balance Sheet and Statement
of Revenue and Expenses prepared by _____ {Provider Name(s) and
Provider CCN(s){time} for the cost reporting period beginning ___
and ending ___ and that to the best of my knowledge and belief, this
report and statement are true, correct, complete and prepared from
the books and records of the provider in accordance with applicable
instructions, except as noted. I further certify that I am familiar
with the laws and regulations regarding the provision of health care
services, and that the services identified in this cost report were
provided in compliance with such laws and regulations.
As always, we encourage providers to fill out the Medicare cost
reports as accurately as possible.
Comment: Some commenters urged CMS to review its policies and
payments for CHC and General Inpatient Care (GIP). One commenter stated
that both these levels of care are highly abused and used for the wrong
reasons. The commenter suggested that CMS require pre-authorization for
those two levels of care. The commenter stated that they are pressured
to admit patients to GIP at the end of a hospital stay or in a SNF just
because they are dying and stated that many nursing homes/hospices/
hospitals are operating in this matter. The commenter went on to state
that all states should require a Certificate of Need for hospice and
all hospices should be non-profit as it is very disturbing to see
companies that own nursing homes and hospices gaming payments to
increase profits. Other commenters expressed frustration regarding the
Notice of Election (NOE) timely filing requirement that was finalized
in the FY 2015 Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate Update final rule
(79 FR 50452).
Response: While these comments are outside the scope of this rule,
we thank the commenters for their comments and will take them under
consideration for future rulemaking.
Final Action: We are finalizing this proposal as proposed with an
effective date of January 1, 2016. This delay in implementation from
October 1, 2015 to January 1, 2016 will allow for state Medicaid
agencies to make the necessary systems and software changes. Between
October 1, 2015 and December 31, 2015, hospices will continue to be
paid a single FY 2016 RHC per diem payment amount. Effective January 1,
2016, a higher RHC rate for days 1 through 60 of a hospice episode of
care and a lower RHC rate for days 61 and beyond of a hospice episode
of care will replace the single RHC per diem payment rate (the RHC per
diem rates are listed in section III.C of this final rule). An episode
of care for hospice RHC payment purposes is a hospice election period
or series of election periods separated by no more than a 60 day gap in
hospice care. For hospice patients who are discharged and readmitted to
hospice within 60 days of that discharge, a patient's prior hospice
days would continue to follow the patient and count toward his or her
patient days for the new hospice
[[Page 47173]]
election. We will calculate the patient's episode day count based on
the total number of days the patient has been receiving hospice care
separated by no more than a 60 day gap in hospice care, regardless of
level of care or whether those days were billable or not. This
calculation would include hospice days that occurred prior to January
1, 2016.
3. Service Intensity Add-On (SIA) Payment
Section 1814(i)(1)(A) of the Act states that payment for hospice
services must be equal to the costs which are reasonable and related to
the cost of providing hospice care or which are based on such other
tests of reasonableness as the Secretary may prescribe in regulations.
In addition, section 1814(i)(6)(D) of the Act, as amended by section
3132(a) of the Affordable Care Act, requires the Secretary to implement
revisions to the methodology for determining the payment rates for the
RHC level of care and other services included in hospice care under
Medicare Part A as the Secretary determines to be appropriate as
described in section III.B.1 above. Given that independent analyses
demonstrate a U-shaped cost pattern across hospice episodes, CMS
believes that implementing revisions to the payment system that align
with this concept supports the requirements of reasonable cost in
section 1814(i)(A) of the Act.
As articulated in section III.B.1.b above, CMS considered
implementing a tiered payment model as described in the FY2014 Hospice
Wage Index final rule (78 FR 48271) and in the Hospice Study Technical
Report issued in April of 2013,\44\ in order to better align payments
with observed resource use over the length of a hospice stay. However,
operational concerns and programmatic complexity led us to explore the
concept of an approach that could be implemented with minimal systems
changes that limit reprocessing of hospice claims due to sequential
billing requirements. In addition, while the tiered model represented a
move toward better aligning payments with resource use, it only
accounted for whether skilled services were provided in the last 2 days
of life (Groups 5 and 6 in Table 13 above). Section III.B.1.c, above
notes that on any given day during the first 7 days of a hospice
election and last 7 days of life, only about 50 percent of the time are
visits being made. In our view, increasing payments at the end of life
for days where visits are not occurring does not align with the
requirements of reasonable cost articulated in statute in section
1814(i)(A) of the Act. Therefore, as one of the first steps in
addressing the observed misalignment between resource use and
associated Medicare payments and in improving patient care through the
promotion of skilled visits at end of life with minimal claims
processing systems changes, CMS proposed to provide an SIA payment if
the conditions outlined below are satisfied.
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\44\ https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/Hospice/Downloads/Hospice-Study-Technical-Report.pdf.
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To qualify for the SIA payment, the following criteria must be met:
(1) The day is a RHC level of care day; (2) the day occurs during the
last 7 days of life (and the beneficiary is discharged dead); and, (3)
direct patient care is provided by a RN or a social worker (as defined
by Sec. 418.114(c) and Sec. 418.114(b)(3), respectively) that day.
The SIA payment will be equal to the CHC hourly payment rate (the
current FY 2015 CHC rate is $38.75 per hour), multiplied by the amount
of direct patient care provided by a RN or social worker for up to 4
hours total, per day, as long as the three criteria listed above are
met. The SIA payment will be paid in addition to the current per diem
rate for the RHC level of care.
CMS will create two separate G-codes for use when billing skilled
nursing visits (revenue center 055x), one for a RN and one for a
Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN). During periods of crisis, such as the
precipitous decline before death, patient needs intensify and RNs are
more highly trained clinicians with commensurately higher payment rates
who can appropriately meet those increased needs. Moreover, our rules
at Sec. 418.56(a)(1) require the RN member of the hospice
interdisciplinary group to be responsible for ensuring that the needs
of the patient and family are continually assessed. We expect that at
end of life, the needs of the patient and family will need to be
frequently assessed; thus the skills of the interdisciplinary group RN
are required.
We note that social workers also often play a crucial role in
providing support for the patient and family when a patient is at end
of life. While the nature of the role of the social worker does
facilitate interaction via the telephone, CMS will only pay an SIA for
those social work services provided by means of in-person visits.
Analysis conducted by Abt Associates on the FY 2013 hospice claims data
shows that in the last 7 days of life only approximately 10 percent of
beneficiaries received social work visits of any kind. Moreover, we
also found that only about 13 percent of social work ``visits'' are
provided via telephone; therefore, the proportion of social work calls
likely represents a very small fraction of visits overall in the last
few days of life. The SIA payment will be in addition to the RHC
payment amount. The costs associated with social work phone
conversations; visits by LPNs, hospice aides, and therapists;
counseling; drugs; medical supplies; DME; and any other item or service
usually covered by Medicare will still be covered by the existing RHC
payment amount in accordance with section 1861(dd)(1) of the Act.
In 2011, the OIG published a report that focused specifically on
Medicare payments to hospices that served a high percentage of nursing
facility residents. The OIG found that from 2005 to 2009, the total
Medicare spending for hospice care for nursing facility residents
increased from $2.55 billion to $4.31 billion, an increase of almost 70
percent (OIG, 2011). When looking at hospices that had more than two-
thirds of their beneficiaries in nursing facilities, the OIG found that
72 percent of these facilities were for-profit and received, on
average, $3,182 more per beneficiary in Medicare payments than hospices
overall. High-percentage hospices were found to serve beneficiaries who
spent more days in hospice care, to the magnitude of 3 weeks longer
than the average beneficiary. In addition, when looking at
distributions in diagnoses, OIG found that high-percentage hospices
enrolled beneficiaries who required less skilled care. In response to
these findings, OIG recommended that CMS modify the current hospice
reimbursement system to reduce the incentive for hospices to seek out
beneficiaries in nursing facilities, who often receive longer but less
complex and costly care.\45\ Given the OIG recommendation, CMS proposed
excluding SNF/NF sites of service from eligibility for the SIA payment.
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\45\ https://oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/oei-02-10-00070.pdf.
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The for-profit provider community has frequently highlighted its
concerns regarding the lack of adequate reimbursement for hospice short
stays in its public filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC) as described in MedPAC's 2008 Report to Congress.\46\
Specifically, MedPAC cited records from the SEC for publicly traded
for-profit hospice chains as evidence of a general acknowledgement of
the nonlinear cost function of resource use within hospice episodes.
For instance:
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\46\ https://www.medpac.gov/documents/reports/Jun08_Ch08.pdf.
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[[Page 47174]]
VistaCare: ``Our profitability is largely dependent on our
ability to manage costs of providing services and to maintain a patient
base with a sufficiently long length of stay to attain profitability,''
and that ``cost pressures resulting from shorter patient lengths of
stay . . . could negatively impact our profitability.'' \47\
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\47\ Health Care Strategic Management. 2004. Hospice companies
benefit from favorable Medicare rates. Health Care Strategic
Management 22, no. 1: 13-14.
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Odyssey HealthCare: ``Length of stay impacts our direct
hospice care expenses as a percentage of net patient service revenue
because, if lengths of stay decline, direct hospice care expenses,
which are often highest during the earliest and latter days of care for
a patient, are spread against fewer days of care.'' \48\
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\48\ Odyssey HealthCare, Inc. 2004. Annual report to
shareholders, form 10-K. Filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission, Washington, DC, March 11. Dallas, TX: Odyssey
HealthCare, Inc.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Short lengths of stay were also cited as a source of financial
difficulties for small rural hospices (implying that longer stays were
more profitable).\49\ In the FY 2014 Hospice Wage Index and Payment
Rate Update proposed rule, we stated that ``analysis conducted by Abt
Associates found that very short hospice stays have a flatter curve
than the U-shaped curve seen for longer stays, and that average hospice
costs are much higher. These short stays are less U-shaped because
there is not a lower-cost middle period between the time of admission
and the time of death.'' The FY 2014 Hospice Wage Index and Payment
Rate Update proposed rule went on to note that a ``short stay add-on''
was under consideration as a possible reform option (78 FR 27843).
Public comments received in response to the proposed rule were
favorable regarding a possible short stay add-on payment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ Virnig, B. A., I. S. Moscovice, S. B. Durham, et al. 2004.
Do rural elders have limited access to Medicare hospice services?
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society 52, no. 5: 731-735.
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Since the SIA payment will be applicable to any 7-day period of
time ending in a patient's death, hospice elections with short lengths
of stay are eligible to receive an additional payment that will help
mitigate the marginally higher costs associated with short lengths of
stay, consistent with the `reasonable cost' structure of the hospice
payment system. For FY 2013, 32 percent of hospice stays were 7 days or
less with 60 percent of stays lasting 30 days or less. The median
length of stay in FY 2013 was 17 days.
Although Figure 4 above demonstrates that there is increased
resource use during the first 2 days of an election, we are not
proposing an additional SIA payment for the first or second day of a
hospice election when the length of stay is beyond 7 days. The SIA
payment for the last 7 days of life will provide additional
reimbursement to help to mitigate the higher costs for stays lasting
less than the median length of stay, where spreading out the initial
costs of the first 2 days of the election over a smaller number of days
may not be enough to make the overall stay profitable. Any stay of 7
days or less before death will be eligible for SIA payment on all RHC
days.
We believe that the SIA payment would help to address MedPAC and
industry concerns regarding the visit intensity at end of life and the
concerns associated with the profitability of hospice short stays. The
RHC rates described in section III.B.2 above and SIA payment will
advance hospice payment reform incrementally, as mandated by the
Affordable Care Act while simultaneously maintaining flexibility for
future refinements. Since this approach will be implemented within the
current constructs of the hospice payment system, no major overhaul of
the claims processing system or related claims/cost report forms will
be required, minimizing burden for hospices as well as for Medicare.
As required by Section 1814(i)(6)(D)(ii) of the Act, any changes to
the hospice payment system must be made in a budget neutral manner in
the first year of implementation. Based on the desire to improve
patient care through the promotion of skilled visits at end of life,
regardless of the patient's lifetime length of stay, we proposed that
the SIA payments would be budget neutral through a reduction to the RHC
rates. The SIA payment budget neutrality factor (SBNF) used to reduce
the RHC rates is outlined in section III.C.3.
Finally, we solicited public comment on all aspects of the SIA
payment as articulated in this section as well as the corresponding
changes to the regulations at Sec. 418.302 in section VI. We also
proposed changing the word ``Intermediary'' to ``Medicare
Administrative Contractor'' in the regulations text at Sec. 418.302
and technical regulations text changes to Sec. 418.306 as described in
section VI.
Summaries of the public comments and our responses to comments on
all aspects of the SIA payment are summarized below:
Comment: Nearly all commenters support the implementation of the
SIA payment policy, stating that the need for skilled direct patient
care and support is greater at end of life, causing an increase in
hospice costs. Many commenters further suggested that implementation
occur as soon as possible and appreciate the opportunity for
incremental payment reform.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support. We agree that
our proposal helps to reinforce the provision of skilled direct patient
care when the need is greater at end of life.
Comment: Several commenters suggested that services provided by
chaplains and other spiritual care counselors should be eligible for
the SIA payment. In addition, several commenters asked whether services
provided by LPNs, hospice aides, and other professionals (therapists,
etc.) would be covered under the SIA payment provisions. Many
commenters note that the services provided by LPNs are currently
covered in the CHC level of care. One commenter asked if visits for the
pronouncement of death will be considered eligible for the SIA payment.
Response: While we acknowledge the tremendous value delivered by
spiritual care counseling and other disciplines during hospice
episodes, Section 1814(i)(1)(A) of the Act explicitly precludes
Medicare payment for bereavement counseling and other counseling
services (including nutritional and dietary counseling) as separate
services. Therefore, no payment will be extended for those services
under the SIA policy. While CMS recognizes that the services rendered
by all hospice professionals, including LPNs, are extremely valuable,
the primary goal of the SIA policy is to promote the highest-quality,
skilled care to beneficiaries at the end of life. Given that RNs
provide higher-skilled services, as required by CMS's Conditions of
Participation, and social workers provide a skilled level of support
for both the patient and family, CMS will only pay an SIA amount for
those services rendered by RNs and social workers. CMS will not pay an
SIA amount for those services rendered by other professionals. The base
RHC rate is intended to cover other skilled and non-skilled services
that may be needed at the end of life. However, at the end of life,
where a rapid decline is often expected, patient and family needs
intensify and typically there are frequent care plan changes
necessitating the immediate need for RN and SW services. In accordance
with the hospice CoPs, an RN, and not an LPN, is required to be part of
the hospice IDT to provide coordination of care and to ensure
continuous assessment of the patient. Therefore, to ensure continuous
[[Page 47175]]
assessment and coordination of care at the very end of life, the skills
of an RN would be needed and we believe hospices should be encouraged
to meet the needs of the patient and family. Additionally, given
commenters' overwhelming support for incremental payment reform, CMS
hopes to advance hospice payment changes over time; therefore, in the
future, we will re-evaluate whether the inclusion of services provided
by LPNs for the SIA is warranted and re-assess the policies and
payments around the CHC level of care as well as other facets of the
Medicare Hospice Benefit.
Comment: Several commenters noted that they are concerned that
setting the SIA add-on payment equal to the CHC hourly payment rate
multiplied by the amount of direct patient care up to 4 hours total per
day does not adequately cover the cost of hospice care, especially for
individuals with certain diagnoses related to their terminal illness.
The commenters also noted that the Continuous Home Care Payment rate
currently has a minimum 8 hour requirement to meet these complex needs.
One commenter asked if the CHC level of care could still be provided in
the last 7 days of an episode.
Response: The primary purpose of the SIA payment is to promote
visits during the end of life and account for the associated increased
resources required. We believe that using the CHC hourly payment rate
is a reasonable proxy for the costs of providing such care. The CHC
level of care will still be available to both beneficiaries and
providers, as the patient's status dictates. For the purposes of the
SIA payment, the claims processing systems will evaluate all 7 days
prior to death. If any of the days meet the eligibility criteria (RHC
level of care with appropriate staffing, etc.), then those days will be
eligible for the SIA payment. Other levels of hospice care are still
eligible for payment as appropriate. Given that CMS intends to promote
direct patient care in the 7 days prior to death, visits for the
pronouncement of death will not be included as eligible visits for SIA
payments. As CMS collects more data related to the costs of providing
care, specifically data included in the newly-revised cost reports, we
will reassess the appropriate payment level for all aspects of the
hospice payment system, including the SIA payment as well as the four
levels of care.
Comment: Several commenters suggested that hospices should be given
the opportunity to provide additional RN and social work services
approved by the patient's physician in order to deliver more than 4
hours of RN or social work time and receive payment for these
additional service hours. One commenter requested clarification
regarding the payment for services for concurrent care from both a RN
and social worker during the last 7 days of life.
Response: While we understand the interest in providing a SIA
payment for services beyond the 4 hour threshold established by the SIA
policy, we do believe that the RHC rate level of care plus the SIA
payment for services up to 4 hours will provide sufficient payment to
cover the increased cost of patient care. If a patient's needs
intensify further, requiring more intensive supports, hospices will
still be able to provide the CHC level of care for 8 hours of service
and beyond as well as utilize the other levels of hospice care as
appropriate. CMS acknowledges that there may be a need for concurrent
care from both an RN and a social worker during the days preceding
death. The natures of the two disciplines are distinct, and we
acknowledge that the RN may need to focus on the clinical aspects of
the patient while the social worker meets separately with the family
and others to process anticipatory grief. Therefore, concurrent
services will be eligible for the SIA payment, according to the
criteria outlined above.
Comment: Many commenters had concerns regarding the ``billing'' of
SIA days and requested clarification of the provider's responsibility
for ``billing'' days for the SIA payment. In addition, several
commenters requested clarification on the time increments provided by
the RN and social workers that would be eligible for the SIA payment,
asking for detail on whether or not service should be tracked in 15
minute increments. One commenter asked how the SIA payment will apply
if a patient's last 7 days of life spans 2 months. Another commenter
questioned whether CMS has the time, energy, and staff to review all
claims for appropriate distribution of SIA payments.
Response: Hospices will continue to submit claims with revenue
center lines appropriately noted in appropriate increments. CMS' claims
processing system will assess the last 7 days of services before end of
life and determine if the RHC level of care was provided on any of
those 7 days, regardless of other levels of care also provided during
that period. We acknowledge that the term `billing' may have been
misleading. Hospices should submit claims per the established
protocols, and the claims processing system will determine the SIA
payment eligibility of the 7 days preceding death. For eligible stays,
the SIA payment will be calculated by the number of hours (in 15 minute
increments) of service provided by an RN or social worker during last 7
days of life for a minimum of 15 minutes and up to 4 hours total per
day. CMS appreciates the concern regarding the appropriate disbursement
of SIA payments. We will be working with our operational staff and
contracting partners in order to fully automate the review of claims
with a discharge of death in order to identify eligible visits and
generate appropriate SIA outlays.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS include episodes
in SNF/NF as eligible for the SIA payment. The commenters stated that
the needs of dying patients were not specific to any particular
physical location. Commenters stated that more intensive services are
merited in any `home' setting. Additionally, commenters noted that the
Medicare Conditions of Participation for hospices require the provision
of the same level of care and service to patients, regardless of
setting.
Response: We agree that the payment of the SIA for additional RN
and SW services during the last 7 days of life in these settings is
appropriate and thus we are finalizing a policy that pays the SIA
payment for patients that reside in a SNF/NF. We will monitor the SIA
based on claims data and continue to investigate whether a differential
site of service payment could be an appropriate mechanism to address
OIG and MedPAC concerns.
Comment: One commenter asked whether the SIA payment policy will
apply for both new and existing hospice elections. Several commenters
asked if different or additional documentation would be required for
SIA visits. Some commenters suggested that criteria be developed
demonstrating the need for additional hours per day similar to the
protocols around CHC. Such documentation could potentially require that
the clinician document why additional hours are needed. Several
commenters expressed concern that hospice providers may begin making
`unnecessary' visits to hospice patients at the end of life in order to
capitalize on potential SIA payments. The same commenters further
suggested that CMS not use an SIA-type payment approach but instead
utilize a high RHC rate for the last 7 days of life.
Response: Both new and existing hospice elections will be eligible
for the SIA payment, as long as the criteria for the add-on are met. No
additional documentation will be required in order to receive the SIA
payment. The Medicare claims processing system will evaluate the days
within a hospice
[[Page 47176]]
election for SIA eligibility and calculate the add-on payment
accordingly. We appreciate the concern that some hospices may attempt
to capitalize on extra payments made possible through the SIA policy.
CMS will certainly continue to monitor hospice behavior for any
concerning patterns as well as any impact to future payment updates.
However, we maintain that providing payment for increased services at
the end of life is consistent with the goal of responding to and
providing for intensified patient needs. Conversely, paying an
increased RHC rate for the last 7 days of life regardless of whether or
not skilled visits (RN or social worker) are provided would not
encourage the hospice to schedule skilled visits during that timeframe.
With this SIA policy, we strive to encourage the hospice to provide
skilled care in a patient's most intense moments of need by dispersing
additional payment for actual services rendered by the appropriate
skilled staff.
Comment: Several commenters raised concerns regarding the criteria
that the RN and SW visit be an in-person visit in order to be
reimbursable, stating that there are many hospice patients in rural and
frontier areas that require long travel times for hospice staff. The
commenters stated that telephone interaction becomes an important part
of the hospice service and suggested that as long as hospice providers
document the reason for the telephone call versus an in-person visit
the call should be reimbursable.
Response: We appreciate the comments regarding the value of hospice
social work services provided via the telephone. CMS recognizes that
this support is vital and provides needed assistance in crucial
circumstances. However, the primary purpose of the SIA payment is to
encourage direct patient care in the last days of life. Therefore, CMS
will only be paying the SIA payment for those services provided
directly to the patient in his/her last week of life by an RN or SW in
his or her home setting.
Comment: Several commenters noted their support for CMS' proposal
to continue to make the SIA payments budget neutral in future years
through annual determination of the Service Intensity Add-On Budget
Neutrality Factor (SBNF) based on the most current and complete fiscal
year utilization data available at the time of rulemaking.
Response: We appreciate the support of our budget neutrality
approach for the SIA payment policy proposal. We believe that this will
help to create an incentive in the longer term for the provision of
services in patients' moments of most intensive need.
Comment: Several commenters stated that CMS should provide
stakeholders adequate time to test, assess, perform necessary software
updates, receive education, and provide feedback on changes due to the
SIA payments, either by delaying its implementation or initiating a
pilot program before applying the policy across all providers. Many
commenters noted concern over the potential impact of the SIA payment
proposal to state Medicaid programs, which are currently unprepared for
the transition to this payment methodology and would need time to
prepare for this significant change.
Response: CMS has been working with our contractors to develop
systems changes to the fullest extent possible in parallel with the
development of this rule. Our system maintainers will have their full
software development lifecycle to implement these changes. We do not
have concerns about the readiness of Medicare systems on October 1,
2015. Regarding hospice system changes, we do not anticipate that this
rule will require any changes to hospice billing instructions so
systems for submitting claims and receiving Medicare payment should not
be affected and the need for retraining billing staff should be
limited, but hospices may need to change their internal accounting
systems. However, given the delay in the implementation date for the
two RHC rates in section III.B.2 above, CMS will delay the effective
date of the SIA policy to January 1, 2016 in order to better coordinate
implementation of hospice payment reforms.
Comment: Several commenters noted concern that the length of stay
for a beneficiary is out of the patient's control and should not be
factored into the SIA. Additionally, several commenters further noted
that hospice providers will not likely be able to forecast an accurate
and reliable operating budget to include the proposed 7 day payment
add-on at the patient's end of life.
Response: CMS appreciates that the nature of the hospice population
leads to difficulty in prognosticating the required length of services.
However, the SIA payment policy is meant to encourage visits in the
last 7 days of life, regardless of the length of stay, so an episode
will be eligible for the payment regardless of the patient's overall
total days in hospice care. Moreover, CMS notes that the expectation is
that providers would be supplying the needed services to patients
during the RHC and other levels of care, regardless of budgeting
prognostication for any potential SIA payment amounts.
Comment: A few commenters expressed concern over the two proposed
SIA budget neutrality factors, stating that the proposed budget
neutrality factor for days 61 and beyond is higher than that of days 1-
60, leading to a greater reduction to the High RHC rate for days 1-60.
The commenters argue that a single SIA budget neutrality factor would
yield a more equitable overall reduction with less of a decrease to the
higher RHC rate.
Response: CMS appreciates the feedback regarding the application of
the SIA budget neutrality factors. Because of the interaction between
the SIA payment policy and the two RHC rates, we believe that it is
appropriate that two factors be generated for each rate, maintaining a
budget neutral system for the whole of the Medicare hospice benefit, so
that our rates accurately align with and account for resource use
differences during the first 60 versus days 61 and beyond of hospice
care. However, CMS will consider this and other refinements to the
policy for future payment and policy updates.
Comment: Several commenters suggested that CMS should increase its
oversight of hospice providers not delivering the services required
under the Hospice Conditions of Participation and exhibiting
inappropriate practices highlighted by the OIG and the MedPAC.
Response: CMS appreciates the encouragement to continue overseeing
and monitoring provider behavior for questionable activity. CMS is
committed to encouraging providers to supply the best quality care in
the most appropriate ways, and we will continue to work to incentivize
and monitor for the most appropriate practices in the hospice provider
community.
Comment: Several commenters requested information regarding the
forthcoming G-codes that will be used to differentiate LPN and RN
services. One commenter suggested that CMS provide detailed
instructions and answer operational questions in this final rule as
opposed to Change Requests, Medicare Learning Network articles, and
other sub-regulatory guidance as is the typical process.
Response: Per the CMS protocols, the details regarding these newly-
created G-codes will be forthcoming through the established Change
Request process. CMS appreciates the desire for more education
regarding the SIA; however, we will continue to utilize the established
means to convey the systems changes as well as to educate the provider
community regarding the policy and operational changes.
[[Page 47177]]
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS continue to evaluate cost
data in order to identify any trends in `co-factors' that may be
related to service intensity at the end of life, such as visits from
the Spiritual Care Coordinator and other disciplines, and propose
further adjustments as data directs.
Response: CMS will continue to monitor and analyze data related to
the cost of providing care in the hospice population. We will re-
evaluate policies and payments in accordance to observed trends in the
cost and other data gathered so long as it does not violate the Act.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS consider paying the SIA
to those hospices that receive a transfer hospice patient from another
provider, as this additional funding could help mitigate the receiving
hospice's costs for starting care.
Response: CMS recognizes that a hospice who receives a transfer
hospice patient may experience increased start-of-care costs. However,
we are not proposing to provide SIA payments at the start of an
episode. We believe that the SIA payment coupled with the new RHC rates
finalized in section III.B.2 above, provide sufficient payment for the
delivery of hospice care.
Final Action: We are finalizing the SIA proposal as proposed;
however, we will include episodes in SNF/NF as eligible for the SIA
payment. We are finalizing the SIA proposal with an effective date of
January 1, 2016 in order to better coordinate implementation of the
hospice payment reforms, including the finalization of the new RHC
rates discussed in section III.B.2 above. Finally, we will also
finalize our proposal to continue to make the SIA payments budget
neutral through an annual determination of the SBNF, which will then be
applied to the RHC payment rates. The SBNF for the SIA payments will be
calculated for each FY using the most current and complete fiscal year
utilization data available at the time of rulemaking.
C. FY 2016 Hospice Wage Index and Rate Update
1. FY 2016 Hospice Wage Index
a. Background
The hospice wage index is used to adjust payment rates for hospice
agencies under the Medicare program to reflect local differences in
area wage levels based on the location where services are furnished.
The hospice wage index utilizes the wage adjustment factors used by the
Secretary for purposes of section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act for hospital
wage adjustments. Our regulations at Sec. 418.306(c) require each
labor market to be established using the most current hospital wage
data available, including any changes made by OMB to the Metropolitan
Statistical Areas (MSAs) definitions.
We use the previous fiscal year's hospital wage index data to
calculate the hospice wage index values. We have consistently used the
pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage index to derive the hospice
wage index. For FY 2016, the hospice wage index will be based on the FY
2015 hospital pre-floor, pre-reclassified wage index. This means that
the hospital wage data used for the hospice wage index is not adjusted
to take into account any geographic reclassification of hospitals
including those in accordance with section 1886(d)(8)(B) or 1886(d)(10)
of the Act. The appropriate wage index value is applied to the labor
portion of the payment rate based on the geographic area in which the
beneficiary resides when receiving RHC or CHC. The appropriate wage
index value is applied to the labor portion of the payment rate based
on the geographic location of the facility for beneficiaries receiving
GIP or Inpatient Respite Care (IRC).
In the FY 2006 Hospice Wage Index final rule (70 FR 45130), we
adopted the revised labor market area definitions as discussed in the
OMB Bulletin No. 03-04 (June 6, 2003). This bulletin announced revised
definitions for MSAs and the creation of micropolitan statistical areas
and combined statistical areas. The bulletin is available online at
https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/bulletins/b03-04.html. In adopting the
CBSA geographic designations for FY 2006, we provided for a 1-year
transition with a blended wage index for all providers. For FY 2006,
the wage index for each geographic area consisted of a blend of 50
percent of the FY 2006 MSA-based wage index and 50 percent of the FY
2006 CBSA-based wage index. Since the expiration of this 1-year
transition on September 30, 2006, we have used the full CBSA-based wage
index values.
When adopting OMB's new labor market designations in FY 2006, we
identified some geographic areas where there were no hospitals, and
thus, no hospital wage index data, which to base the calculation of the
hospice wage index. In the FY 2010 Hospice Wage Index final rule (74 FR
39386), we also adopted the policy that for urban labor markets without
a hospital from which hospital wage index data could be derived, all of
the CBSAs within the state will be used to calculate a statewide urban
average pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage index value to use as
a reasonable proxy for these areas. In FY 2016, the only CBSA without a
hospital from which hospital wage data could be derived is 25980,
Hinesville, Georgia.
In the FY 2008 Hospice Wage Index final rule (72 FR 50214), we
implemented a new methodology to update the hospice wage index for
rural areas without a hospital, and thus no hospital wage data. In
cases where there was a rural area without rural hospital wage data, we
used the average pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage index data
from all contiguous CBSAs to represent a reasonable proxy for the rural
area. The term ``contiguous'' means sharing a border (72 FR 50217).
Currently, the only rural area without a hospital from which hospital
wage data could be derived is Puerto Rico. However, our policy of
imputing a rural pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage index based
on the pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage index (or indices) of
CBSAs contiguous to a rural area without a hospital from which hospital
wage data could be derived does not recognize the unique circumstances
of Puerto Rico. For FY 2016, we will continue to use the most recent
pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage index value available for
Puerto Rico, which is 0.4047.
b. Elimination of the Wage Index Budget Neutrality Factor (BNAF)
As described in the August 8, 1997 Hospice Wage Index final rule
(62 FR 42860), the pre-floor and pre-reclassified hospital wage index
is used as the raw wage index for the hospice benefit. These raw wage
index values were then subject to either a budget neutrality adjustment
or application of the hospice floor to compute the hospice wage index
used to determine payments to hospices. Pre-floor, pre-reclassified
hospital wage index values below 0.8 were adjusted by either: (1) The
hospice BNAF; or (2) the hospice floor--a 15 percent increase subject
to a maximum wage index value of 0.8; whichever results in the greater
value.
The FY 2010 Hospice Wage Index rule finalized a provision to phase-
out the BNAF over 7 years, with a 10 percent reduction in the BNAF in
FY 2010, and an additional 15 percent reduction in each of the next 6
years, with complete phase out in FY 2016 (74 FR 39384). As discussed
in the proposed rule, (80 FR 25860), the hospice BNAF for FY 2016 is
reduced by an additional and final 15 percent for a cumulative
reduction of 100 percent. Therefore, for FY 2016, the BNAF is
completely phased-out and eliminated.
[[Page 47178]]
Hospital wage index values which are less than 0.8 are still
subject to the hospice floor calculation. The hospice floor equates to
a 15 percent increase, subject to a maximum wage index value of 0.8.
For example, if County A has a pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital
wage index value of 0.3994, we would multiply 0.3994 by 1.15, which
equals 0.4593. Since 0.4593 is not greater than 0.8, then County A's
hospice wage index would be 0.4593. In another example, if County B has
a pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage index value of 0.7440, we
would multiply 0.7440 by 1.15 which equals 0.8556. Because 0.8556 is
greater than 0.8, County B's hospice wage index would be 0.8.
c. Implementation of New Labor Market Delineations
OMB has published subsequent bulletins regarding CBSA changes. On
February 28, 2013, OMB issued OMB Bulletin No. 13-01, announcing
revisions to the delineation of MSAs, Micropolitan Statistical Areas,
and Combined Statistical Areas, and guidance on uses of the delineation
in these areas. A copy of this bulletin is available online at: https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/bulletins/2013/b-13-01.pdf.
This bulletin states that it ``provides the delineations of all
Metropolitan Statistical Areas, Metropolitan Divisions, Micropolitan
Statistical Areas, Combined Statistical Areas, and New England City and
Town Areas in the United States and Puerto Rico based on the standards
published on June 28, 2010, in the Federal Register (75 FR 37246-37252)
and Census Bureau data.''
Overall, we believe that implementing the new OMB delineations will
result in wage index values being more representative of the actual
costs of labor in a given area. Among the 458 total CBSA and statewide
rural areas, 20 (4 percent) will have a higher wage index using the
newer delineations. However, 34 (7.4 percent) will have a lower wage
index using the newer delineations. Therefore, to remain consistent
with the manner in which we ultimately adopted the revised OMB
delineations for FY 2006 (70 FR 45138), we are implementing a 1-year
transition to the new OMB delineations. Specifically, we will apply a
blended wage index for 1 year (FY 2016) for all geographic areas that
will consist of a 50/50 blend of the wage index values using OMB's old
area delineations and the wage index values using OMB's new area
delineations. That is, for each county, a blended wage index will be
calculated equal to 50 percent of the FY 2016 wage index using the old
labor market area delineation and 50 percent of the FY 2016 wage index
using the new labor market area delineation. This results in an average
of the two values. We refer to this blended wage index as the FY 2016
hospice transition wage index.
This 1-year transition policy is also consistent with the
transition policies adopted by both the FY 2015 SNF PPS (79 FR 25767)
and the CY 2015 HH PPS (79 FR 66032). This transition policy will be
for a 1-year period, going into effect on October 1, 2015, and
continuing through September 30, 2016. Thus, beginning October 1, 2016,
the wage index for all hospice payments will be fully based on the new
OMB delineations.
The wage index applicable to FY 2016 is available as a wage index
file on the CMS Web site at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/Hospice/. The wage index will not be
published in the Federal Register. The hospice wage index for FY 2016
will be effective October 1, 2015 through September 30, 2016.
The wage index file provides a crosswalk between the FY 2016 wage
index using the current OMB delineations in effect in FY 2015 and the
FY 2016 wage index using the revised OMB delineations, as well as the
transition wage index values that will be in effect in FY 2016. The
wage index file shows each state and county and its corresponding
transition wage index along with the previous CBSA number, the new CBSA
number, and the new CBSA name.
Due to the way that the transition wage index is calculated, some
CBSAs and statewide rural areas may have more than one transition wage
index value associated with that CBSA or rural area. However, each
county will have only one transition wage index. For counties located
in CBSAs and rural areas that correspond to more than one transition
wage index value, the CBSA number will not be able to be used for FY
2016 claims. In these cases, a number other than the CBSA number will
be necessary to identify the appropriate wage index value on claims for
hospice care provided in FY 2016. These numbers are five digits in
length and begin with ``50.'' These codes are shown in the last column
of the wage index file in place of the CBSA number where appropriate.
For counties located in CBSAs and rural areas that still correspond to
only one wage index value, the CBSA number will still be used.
A summary of the comments we received regarding the wage index and
our responses to those comments appears below.
Comment: Several commenters support the use of the revised OMB CBSA
delineations, which incorporate the 2010 Census data for FY 2016 and
the proposed transition methodology that would apply a blended wage
index for 1 year (FY 2016) for all geographic areas that would consist
of a 50/50 blend of the wage index values using OMB's old area
delineations and the wage index values using OMB's new area
delineations. We received a few comments regarding the transition to
the new delineations requesting a longer transition period or
clarification of the transition year. One commenter requests that CMS
review the impact this has on provider reimbursement and determine if
changes need to be made beyond the 1 year transition period.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support of the new
delineations which will be incorporated into hospice reimbursement
beginning in FY 2016. We established the use of the latest OMB
delineations that are available since FY 2006 (70 FR 45138) in order to
maintain a more accurate and up-to-date payment system that reflects
the reality of population shifts and labor market conditions. We also
agree that applying 50/50 blend of the wage index values using OMB's
old area delineations and the wage index values using OMB's new area
delineations for 1 year is an appropriate transition policy. We
incorporated the CBSAs for FY 2006 using a 1-year transition policy and
we continue to believe that 1 year is an appropriate length of time to
transition to the new area delineations.
In order to determine the 50/50 blended wage index for FY 2016, we
calculate the wage index values for each county by adding the wage
index value under the county's old area delineation with the wage index
value under the county's new area delineation. Then, we divide by two.
The wage index values for each county may be found in the wage index
file located at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/Hospice/. For claim submission, hospices will use
either the CBSA code or the special 50xxx number found in column L of
the wage index file. The special 50xxx numbers will be applicable to FY
2016 claims only. Hospices need to use the correct CBSA or alternate
50xxx number. Our claims processing systems will match the correct wage
index with the CBSA or alternate 50xxx number submitted on the claim.
Hospices will not need to calculate the transition wage
[[Page 47179]]
index. Once the 1-year transition to the new area delineations is over,
the 50xxx numbers will not be needed. We provide an impact analysis in
Section V. ``Regulatory Impact Analysis'' of this final rule. At this
time, our impact analysis does not lead us to conclude that changes
need to be made beyond the 1 year transition period.
Comment: A commenter notes that hospices that serve more than one
county may see large variations in the wage index even though the
hospice pays standardized wages for all of their staff. We received a
comment expressing concerns that the reduction in the wage index does
not align with local market pressure. The commenter states that hospice
wages and benefits are not reflective of those in hospitals and would
like to see an approach focused solely on hospice data and trends. A
commenter believes that the use of the hospital wage index methodology
for both the hospice and home health benefits creates payment
inaccuracies that, unlike those applied to hospitals, are not subject
to correction through a reclassification process. The commenter urges
CMS to take action to create a fair and level playing field through
reform of the wage index process.
Response: For many years, hospices have been able to manage their
business operations (including staff compensation) while receiving
different reimbursements based on serving patients in a variety of
locales which have differing wage indexes. Developing a wage index that
utilizes data specific to hospices would require us to engage resources
in an audit process. In order to establish a hospice specific wage
index, we would need to collect data that is specific to hospices. This
is not currently feasible due to the volatility of existing hospice
wage data and the significant amount of resources that would be
required to assess the quality of that data. Furthermore, hospices have
expressed concerns over the past few years with recent data collection
efforts to support payment reform, the Hospice Item Set Quality
Reporting Program, and the CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey. At this time,
we are not collecting hospice specific wage data that may place an
additional burden on hospices. We continue to believe that in the
absence of hospice or home health specific wage data, using the pre-
floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage data is appropriate and
reasonable for hospice reimbursement purposes.
The regulations that govern hospice reimbursement do not provide a
mechanism for allowing hospices to seek geographic reclassification or
to utilize the rural floor provisions that exist for IPPS hospitals.
The rural floor provision in section 4410 of the Balanced Budget Act of
1997 (BBA) (Pub. L. 105-33) is specific to hospitals. The
reclassification provision found in section 1886(d)(10) of the Act is
also specific to hospitals. CMS is exploring opportunities to reform
the hospital wage index. We refer readers to the CMS Web site at:
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Wage-Index-Reform.html).
Comment: A commenter believes that hospices in rural and frontier
areas incur higher labor costs due to the need for staff to travel long
distances. The commenter encourages CMS to analyze the impact of the
change in the wage index area delineations especially on labor costs
for hospices in rural and frontier areas.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's recommendation. Based on
the limited hospice cost report data, we do not have the ability to
determine whether an add-on or an adjustment to account for labor costs
in different geographic areas would be appropriate at this time.
Comment: Commenters protest using CBSAs to determine the wage index
for hospice and suggest that we discontinue the use of CBSAs. These
commenters specifically mention Montgomery County, Maryland in their
comments. Commenters stated that in the ten years since CMS has used
CBSAs to determine payment, Montgomery Hospice has received lower
payments than neighboring hospices in the Washington-Arlington-
Alexandria, DC-VA-MD, WV CBSA. These commenters believe that Montgomery
County has a similar cost of living compared to Washington, DC and that
Montgomery County shares the same labor market when competing for
labor. Therefore, commenters state that hospices in Montgomery County
should be reimbursed at the same level as hospices in the Washington,
DC area. Commenters stated that Montgomery County should be paid
similarly to Washington, DC due to close commuting ties with the
District and also due to the fact that Montgomery County is contiguous
with Washington, DC. A commenter also protests the use of CBSAs to
determine the wage index, specifically in Montgomery County, also notes
that OMB cautions agencies concerning the use of the geographic area
delineations in non-statistical programs.
Response: In the FY 2005 proposed rule (70 FR 22394), we indicated
that the MSA delineations as well as the CBSA delineations are
determined by the OMB. The OMB reviews its Metropolitan Area
definitions preceding each decennial census to reflect recent
population changes. We also indicated in the proposed rule, that we
believed that the OMB's CBSA designations reflect the most recent
available geographic classifications and were a reasonable and
appropriate way to define geographic areas for purposes of wage index
values. Ten years ago, in our FY 2006 Hospice Wage Index final rule (70
FR 45130), we finalized the adoption of the revised labor market area
definitions as discussed in the OMB Bulletin No. 03-04 (June 6, 2003).
In the December 27, 2000 Federal Register (65 FR 82228 through 82238),
OMB announced its new standards for defining metropolitan and
micropolitan statistical areas. According to that notice, OMB defines a
CBSA, beginning in 2003, as ``a geographic entity associated with at
least one core of 10,000 or more population, plus adjacent territory
that has a high degree of social and economic integration with the core
as measured by commuting ties. The general concept of the CBSAs is that
of an area containing a recognized population nucleus and adjacent
communities that have a high degree of integration with that nucleus.
The purpose of the standards is to provide nationally consistent
definitions for collecting, tabulating, and publishing Federal
statistics for a set of geographic areas. CBSAs include adjacent
counties that have a minimum of 25 percent commuting to the central
counties of the area. This is an increase over the minimum commuting
threshold for outlying counties applied in the previous MSA definition
of 15 percent.
Based on the OMB's current delineations, as described in the
February 28, 2013 OMB Bulletin No. 13-01, Montgomery County (along with
Frederick County, Maryland) belongs in a separate CBSA from the areas
defined in the Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA CBSA. Unlike
IPPS, IRF, and SNF, where each provider uses a single CBSA, hospice
agencies may be reimbursed based on more than one wage index. Payments
are based upon the location of the beneficiary for routine and
continuous home care or the location of the agency for respite and
general inpatient care. It is very likely that hospices in Montgomery
County, Maryland provide RHC and CHC to patients in the ``Washington-
Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA'' CBSA in addition to serving patients in
the ``Baltimore-Columbia-Towson, Maryland'' CBSA.
While CMS and other stakeholders have explored potential
alternatives to
[[Page 47180]]
the current CBSA-based labor market system (we refer readers to the CMS
Web site at: www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Wage-Index-Reform.html), no consensus has been
achieved regarding how best to implement a replacement system. As
discussed in the FY 2005 IPPS final rule (69 FR 49027), ``While we
recognize that MSAs are not designed specifically to define labor
market areas, we believe they do represent a useful proxy for this
purpose.'' We further believe that using the most current OMB
delineations will increase the integrity of the hospice wage index by
creating a more accurate representation of geographic variation in wage
levels. We have reviewed our findings and impacts relating to the new
OMB delineations, and have concluded that there is no compelling reason
to further delay implementation. We are implementing the new OMB
delineations as described in the February 28, 2013 OMB Bulletin No. 13-
01 for the hospice wage index effective beginning in FY 2016.
We recognize that the OMB cautions that the delineations should not
be used to develop and implement Federal, state, and local
nonstatistical programs and policies without full consideration of the
effects of using these delineations for such purposes. The OMB states
that, ``In cases where there is no statutory requirement and an agency
elects to use the Metropolitan, Micropolitan, or Combined Statistical
Area definitions in nonstatistical programs, it is the sponsoring
agency's responsibility to ensure that the definitions are appropriate
for such use. When an agency is publishing for comment a proposed
regulation that would use the definitions for a nonstatistical purpose,
the agency should seek public comment on the proposed use.''
While we recognize that OMB's geographic area delineations are not
designed specifically for use in non-statistical programs or for
program purposes, including the allocation of Federal funds, we
continue to believe that the OMB's geographic area delineations
represent a useful proxy for differentiating between labor markets and
that the geographic area delineations are appropriate for use in
determining Medicare hospice payments. In implementing the use of CBSAs
for hospice payment purposes in our FY 2006 rule (70 FR 45130), we
considered the effects of using these delineations. We have used CBSAs
for determining hospice payments for ten years (since FY 2006). In
addition, other provider types, such as IPPS hospital, home health,
SNF, inpatient rehabilitation facility (IRF), and the ESRD program,
have used CBSAs to define their labor market areas for the last decade.
Comment: A commenter noted that in Table 20 of the proposed rule
(80 FR 25862), the state attributed to a county listed under CBSA 41540
``Salisbury, MD-DE'' is incorrect.
Response: We thank the commenter for bringing this error to our
attention. Worcester County, Maryland is part of CBSA 41540. We made a
typographical error when we referred to Worcester County, Maryland as
``Worcester County, MA''. The correct reference should be ``Worcester
County, MD''.
Final Action: We are implementing the hospice wage index with a 1-
year transition period as proposed, meaning the counties impacted will
receive 50 percent of the rate from the current CBSA and 50 percent
from the new OMB CBSA delineations for FY 2016 effective October 1,
2015.
2. Hospice Payment Update Percentage
Section 4441(a) of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (BBA) amended
section 1814(i)(1)(C)(ii)(VI) of the Act to establish updates to
hospice rates for FYs 1998 through 2002. Hospice rates were to be
updated by a factor equal to the market basket index, minus one
percentage point. Payment rates for FYs since 2002 have been updated
according to section 1814(i)(1)(C)(ii)(VII) of the Act, which states
that the update to the payment rates for subsequent FYs must be the
market basket percentage for that FY. The Act requires us to use the
inpatient hospital market basket to determine the hospice payment rate
update. In addition, section 3401(g) of the Affordable Care Act
mandates that, starting with FY 2013 (and in subsequent FYs), the
hospice payment update percentage will be annually reduced by changes
in economy-wide productivity as specified in section
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act. The statute defines the productivity
adjustment to be equal to the 10-year moving average of changes in
annual economy-wide private nonfarm business multifactor productivity
(MFP) (as projected by the Secretary for the 10-year period ending with
the applicable FY, year, cost reporting period, or other annual period)
(the ``MFP adjustment''). A complete description of the MFP projection
methodology is available on our Web site at https://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Statistics-Trends-and-Reports/MedicareProgramRatesStats/MarketBasketResearch.html.
In addition to the MFP adjustment, section 3401(g) of the
Affordable Care Act also mandates that in FY 2013 through FY 2019, the
hospice payment update percentage will be reduced by an additional 0.3
percentage point (although for FY 2014 to FY 2019, the potential 0.3
percentage point reduction is subject to suspension under conditions
specified in section 1814(i)(1)(C)(v) of the Act). The hospice payment
update percentage for FY 2016 is based on the estimated inpatient
hospital market basket update of 2.4 percent (based on IHS Global
Insight, Inc.'s second quarter 2015 forecast with historical data
through the first quarter of 2015). Due to the requirements at
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) and 1814(i)(1)(C)(v) of the Act, the estimated
inpatient hospital market basket update for FY 2016 of 2.4 percent must
be reduced by a MFP adjustment as mandated by Affordable Care Act
(currently estimated to be 0.5 percentage point for FY 2016). The
estimated inpatient hospital market basket update for FY 2016 is
reduced further by a 0.3 percentage point, as mandated by the
Affordable Care Act. In effect, the hospice payment update percentage
for FY 2016 is 1.6 percent. If more recent data are subsequently
available (for example, a more recent estimate of the inpatient
hospital market basket update and MFP adjustment), we will use such
data, if appropriate, to determine the FY 2016 market basket update and
the MFP adjustment in the FY 2016 Hospice Rate Update final rule.
Currently, the labor portion of the hospice payment rates is as
follows: For RHC, 68.71 percent; for CHC, 68.71 percent; for General
Inpatient Care, 64.01 percent; and for Respite Care, 54.13 percent. The
non-labor portion is equal to 100 percent minus the labor portion for
each level of care. Therefore, the non-labor portion of the payment
rates is as follows: For RHC, 31.29 percent; for CHC, 31.29 percent;
for General Inpatient Care, 35.99 percent; and for Respite Care, 45.87
percent.
A summary of the comments we received regarding the payment rates
and our responses to those comments appear below.
Comment: Several commenters expressed appreciation for the positive
payment update for FY 2016. However, the commenters believe that the
update does not keep pace with the cost of providing highest quality
care for beneficiaries. One commenter states that costs associated with
workforce recruitment and training, supplies, and technology are all
rising faster than reimbursement. The commenter further states that
non-profit, mission-based hospices already operate on extremely slim
margins: MedPAC calculated average non-profit hospice margins at
[[Page 47181]]
3.7 percent for 2012 with an expectation for margins to decline further
(MedPAC March 2015). Some commenters note that margins for non-profit
hospices are much lower than margins for for-profit hospices. The
commenters strongly encourage CMS to reevaluate the payment update for
FY 2016.
Response: The payment update to the hospice rates is based in
statute as previously described in detail in this section and we do not
have regulatory authority to alter the payment update.
Final Action: We are implementing the hospice payment update as
discussed in the proposed rule.
3. FY 2016 Hospice Payment Rates
Historically, the hospice rate update has been published through a
separate administrative instruction issued annually in the summer to
provide adequate time to implement system change requirements; however,
beginning in FY 2014 and for subsequent FY, we are using rulemaking as
the means to update payment rates. This change was proposed in the FY
2014 Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate Update proposed rule and
finalized in the FY 2014 Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate Update
final rule (78 FR 48270). It is consistent with the rate update process
in other Medicare benefits, and provides rate information to hospices
as quickly as, or earlier than, when rates are published in an
administrative instruction.
There are four payment categories that are distinguished by the
location and intensity of the services provided. The base payments are
adjusted for geographic differences in wages by multiplying the labor
share, which varies by category, of each base rate by the applicable
hospice wage index. A hospice is paid the RHC rate for each day the
beneficiary is enrolled in hospice, unless the hospice provides
continuous home care, IRC, or general inpatient care. CHC is provided
during a period of patient crisis to maintain the patient at home; IRC
is short-term care to allow the usual caregiver to rest; and GIP is to
treat symptoms that cannot be managed in another setting.
As discussed in section III.B, of this final rule, we will delay
implementation of both the proposed RHC rates and the SIA payment until
January 1, 2016. Between October 1, 2015 and December 31, 2015,
hospices will continue to be paid a single RHC per diem payment amount.
Effective January 1, 2016, the RHC rates for days 1 through 60 and days
61 and beyond would replace the single RHC per diem payment rate. As
discussed in section III.B.3, we will make a SIA payment, in addition
to the daily RHC payment, when direct patient care is provided by a RN
or social worker during the last 7 days of the patient's life. The SIA
payment will be equal to the CHC hourly rate multiplied by the hours of
nursing or social work provided (up to 4 hours total) that occurred on
the day of service. The SIA payment will also be adjusted by the
appropriate wage index. In order to maintain budget neutrality, as
required under section 1814(i)(6)(D)(ii) of the Act, for the SIA
payment, the RHC rates will need to be adjusted by a budget neutrality
factor. The budget neutrality adjustment that will apply to days 1
through 60 is equal to 1 minus the ratio of SIA payments for days 1
through 60 to the total payments for days 1 through 60 and is
calculated to be 0.9806. The budget neutrality adjustment that will
apply to days 61 and beyond is equal to 1 minus the ratio of SIA
payments for days 61 and beyond to the total payments for days 61 and
beyond and is calculated to be 0.9957. Lastly, the RHC rates will be
increased by the FY 2016 hospice payment update percentage of 1.6
percent as discussed in section III.C.3. The FY 2016 RHC rate for
hospice claims between October 1, 2015 and December 31, 2015 is shown
in Table 20. The FY 2016 RHC rates for hospice claims for January 1,
2016 through September 30, 2016 are shown in Table 21. The FY 2016
payment rates for CHC, IRC, and GIP will be the FY 2015 payment rates
increased by 1.6 percent. The rates for these three levels of care are
shown in Table 22. The FY 2016 rates for hospices that do not submit
the required quality data are shown in Tables 23, 24, and 25. The FY
2016 hospice payment rates will be effective for care and services
furnished on or after October 1, 2015 through September 30, 2016.
Table 20--FY 2016 Hospice Payment Rate for RHC for October 1, 2015 Through December 31, 2015
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2016 Hospice
Code Description FY 2015 Payment payment update FY 2016 Payment
rate percentage rate
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
651............................... Routine Home Care........ $159.34 x 1.016 $161.89
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 21--FY 2016 Hospice Payment Rates for RHC for January 1, 2016 Through September 30, 2016
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2016
SIA Budget Hospice
Code Description Rates \1\ neutrality payment FY 2016
factor update Payment rates
adjustment percentage
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
651............................................ Routine Home Care (days 1-60).......... $187.54 x 0.9806 x 1.016 $186.84
651............................................ Routine Home Care (days 61+)........... 145.14 x 0.9957 x 1.016 146.83
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See section III.B.2 for the RHC rates for days 1-60, and days 61 and beyond before accounting for the Service Intensity Add-on (SIA) payment budget
neutrality factor and the FY 2016 hospice payment update percentage of 1.6 percent as required by section 1814(i)(1)(C) of the Act.
[[Page 47182]]
Table 22--FY 2016 Hospice Payment Rates for CHC, IRC, and GIP
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2016
Hospice
Code Description FY 2015 payment FY 2016
Payment rates update Payment rate
percentage
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
652................................ Continuous Home Care....... $929.91 x 1.016 $944.79
Full Rate = 24 hours of
care.
$ = 39.37 FY 2016 hourly
rate.
655................................ Inpatient Respite Care..... 164.81 x 1.016 167.45
656................................ General Inpatient Care..... 708.77 x 1.016 720.11
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We reiterate in this final rule, that the Congress required in
sections 1814(i)(5)(A) through (C) of the Act that hospices begin
submitting quality data, based on measures to be specified by the
Secretary. In the FY 2012 Hospice Wage Index final rule (76 FR 47320
through 47324), we implemented a HQRP as required by section 3004 of
the Affordable Care Act. Hospices were required to begin collecting
quality data in October 2012, and submit that quality data in 2013.
Section 1814(i)(5)(A)(i) of the Act requires that beginning with FY
2014 and each subsequent FY, the Secretary shall reduce the market
basket update by 2 percentage points for any hospice that does not
comply with the quality data submission requirements with respect to
that FY. We remind hospices that this applies to payments in FY 2016
(See Tables 23 through 25 below). For more information on the HQRP
requirements please see section III.E in this final rule.
Table 23--FY 2016 Hospice Payment Rate for RHC for October 1, 2015 Through December 31, 2015 for Hospices That
DO NOT Submit the Required Quality Data
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2016 Hospice
payment
update of 1.6
Code Description FY 2015 Payment percent minus FY 2016 Payment
rate 2 percentage rate
points = -0.4
percent
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
651........................... Routine Home Care............ $159.34 x 0.996 $158.70
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 24--FY 2016 Hospice Payment Rates for RHC for January 1, 2016 Through September 30, 2016 for Hospices That DO NOT Submit the Required Quality Data
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2016
Hospice
SIA Budget payment
neutrality update of 1.6 FY 2016
Code Description RHC Rates \1\ factor percent minus Payment rates
adjustment 2 percentage
points = -0.4
percent
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
651............................................ Routine Home Care (days 1-60).......... $187.54 x 0.9806 x 0.996 $183.17
651............................................ Routine Home Care (days 61+)........... 145.14 x 0.9957 x 0.996 143.94
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See section III.B.2 for the RHC rates for days 1-60, and days 61 and beyond before accounting for the Service Intensity Add-on (SIA) payment budget
neutrality factor and the FY 2016 hospice payment update percentage of 1.6 percent as required by section 1814(i)(1)(C) of the Act.
Table 25--FY 2016 Hospice Payment Rates for CHC, IRC, and GIP for Hospices That DO NOT Submit the Required
Quality Data
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2016
Hospice
payment
FY 2015 update of 1.6 FY 2016
Code Description Payment rates percent minus Payment rate
2 percentage
points = -0.4
percent
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
652................................ Continuous Home Care Full $929.91 x 0.996 $926.19
Rate = 24 hours of care $
= 38.67 hourly rate.
655................................ Inpatient Respite Care..... 164.81 x 0.996 164.15
[[Page 47183]]
656................................ General Inpatient Care..... 708.77 x 0.996 705.93
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. Hospice Aggregate Cap and the IMPACT Act of 2014
When the Medicare hospice benefit was implemented, the Congress
included 2 limits on payments to hospices: An inpatient cap and an
aggregate cap. As set out in sections 1861(dd)(2)(A)(iii) and
1814(i)(2)(A) through (C) of the Act, respectively, the hospice
inpatient cap limits the total number of Medicare inpatient days
(general inpatient care and respite care) to no more than 20 percent of
a hospice's total Medicare hospice days. The intent of the inpatient
cap was to ensure that hospice remained a home-based benefit. The
hospice aggregate cap limits the total aggregate payment any individual
hospice can receive in a year. The intent of the hospice aggregate cap
was to protect Medicare from spending more for hospice care than it
would for conventional care at the end of life.
The aggregate cap amount was set at $6,500 per beneficiary when
first enacted in 1983; this was an amount hospice advocates agreed was
well above the average cost of caring for a hospice patient.\50\ Since
1983, the $6,500 amount has been adjusted annually by the change in the
medical care expenditure category of the consumer price index for urban
consumers (CPI-U) from March 1984 to March of the cap year, as required
by section 1814(i)(2)(B) of the Act. The cap amount is multiplied by
the number of Medicare beneficiaries who received hospice care from a
particular hospice during the year, resulting in its hospice aggregate
cap, which is the allowable amount of total Medicare payments that
hospice can receive for that cap year. The cap year is currently
November 1 to October 31, and was set in place in the December 16, 1983
Hospice final rule (48 FR 56022).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization (NHPCO),
``A Short History of the Medicare Hospice Cap on Total
Expenditures.'' Web 19 Feb. 2014. https://www.nhpco.org/sites/default/files/public/regulatory/History_of_Hospice_Cap.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 1814(i)(2)(B)(i) and (ii) of the Act, as added by section
3(b) of the IMPACT Act requires, effective for the 2016 cap year
(November 1, 2015 through October 31, 2016), that the cap amount for
the previous year to be updated by the hospice payment update
percentage, rather than the original $6,500 being annually adjusted by
the change in the CPI-U for medical care expenditures since 1984. This
new provision will sunset for cap years ending after September 30,
2025, at which time the annual update to the cap amount will revert
back to the original methodology. This provision is estimated to result
in $540 million in savings over 10 years starting in 2017.
As a result, we will update Sec. 418.309 to reflect the new
language added to section 1814(i)(2)(B) of the Act.
In accordance with section 1814(i)(2)(B)(i) of the Act, the hospice
aggregate cap amount for the 2015 cap year, starting on November 1,
2014 and ending on October 31, 2015, will be $27,382.63. This amount
was calculated by multiplying the original cap amount of $6,500 by the
change in the CPI-U medical care expenditure category, from the fifth
month of the 1984 accounting year (March 1984) to the fifth month the
current accounting year (in this case, March 2015). The CPI-U for
medical care expenditures for 1984 to present is available from the BLS
Web site at: https://www.bls.gov/cpi/home.htm.
Step 1: From the BLS Web site given above, the March 2015 CPI-U for
medical care expenditures is 444.020 and the 1984 CPI-U for medical
care expenditures was 105.4.
Step 2: Divide the March 2015 CPI-U for medical care expenditures
by the 1984 CPI-U for medical care expenditures to compute the change.
444.020/105.4 = 4.212713
Step 3: Multiply the original cap base amount ($6,500) by the
result from step 2) to get the updated aggregate cap amount for the
2015 cap year.
$6,500 x 4.212713 = $27,382.63
As required by section 1814(i)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act, the hospice
aggregate cap amount for the 2016 cap year, starting on November 1,
2015 and ending on October 31, 2016, will be the 2015 cap amount
updated by the FY 2016 hospice payment update percentage (see section
III.C.2 above). As such, the 2016 cap amount will be $27,820.75
($27,382.63 * 1.016). A Change Request with the finalized hospice
payment rates, a finalized hospice wage index, the Pricer for FY 2016,
and the hospice cap amount for the cap year ending October 31, 2015
will be issued in the summer.
A summary of the comments we received regarding the aggregate cap
and our responses to those comments appears below.
Comment: A number of commenters supported the use of payment update
data to update the hospice aggregate cap. Some commenters suggested
that CMS reduce the hospice aggregate cap between ten to fifteen
percent and that a portion of the savings be utilized to support
innovation and research around end-of-life, hospice, and palliative
care. Another commenter stated that the aggregate cap should be
adjusted to account for regional differences in payment. The commenter
argued that providers in areas with an overall higher cost of living
would hit the aggregate cap sooner than providers in areas with a lower
cost of living and that the aggregate cap should be applied on a CBSA
basis, not a national basis.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support. We reiterate
that the use of hospice payment update percentage to update the hospice
aggregate cap is mandated by the IMPACT Act. We also note that while we
find the suggestion to adjust the hospice aggregate cap compelling, we
would need statutory authority to reduce the hospice aggregate cap. In
addition, we do not have statutory authority to change the aggregate
cap amount by region or CBSA.
Comment: A commenter noted an error in our calculation of the
aggregate cap amount for the 2015 cap year. In the proposed rule, (80
FR 25867), in Step 2,
[[Page 47184]]
we should have divided the March 2015 CPI-U for medical care
expenditures, 444.020, by the 1984 CPI-U for medical care expenditures,
105.4. However, we inadvertently divided 440.020 by 105.4.
Response: We would like to thank the commenter for noticing the
error and alerting us. We have corrected the error in the calculation
in this final rule.
D. Alignment of the Inpatient and Aggregate Cap Accounting Year With
the Federal Fiscal Year
As noted in section III.C.4, when the Medicare hospice benefit was
implemented, the Congress included two limits on payments to hospices:
An aggregate cap and an inpatient cap. The intent of the hospice
aggregate cap was to protect Medicare from spending more for hospice
care than it would for conventional care at the end-of-life. If a
hospice's total Medicare payments for the cap year exceed such
hospice's aggregate cap amount, then the hospice must repay the excess
back to Medicare. The intent of the inpatient cap was to ensure that
hospice remained a home-based benefit. If a hospice's inpatient days
(GIP and respite) exceed 20 percent of all hospice days then, for
inpatient care, the hospice is paid: (1) The sum of the total
reimbursement for inpatient care multiplied by the ratio of the maximum
number of allowable inpatient days to actual number of all inpatient
days; and (2) the sum of the actual number of inpatient days in excess
of the limitation by the routine home care rate.
1. Streamlined Method and Patient-by-Patient Proportional Method for
Counting Beneficiaries To Determine Each Hospice's Aggregate Cap Amount
The aggregate cap amount for any given hospice is established by
multiplying the cap amount by the number of Medicare beneficiaries who
received hospice services during the year. Originally, the number of
Medicare beneficiaries who received hospice services during the year
was determined using a ``streamlined'' methodology whereby each
beneficiary is counted as ``1'' in the initial cap year of the hospice
election and is not counted in subsequent cap years. Specifically, the
hospice includes in its number of Medicare beneficiaries those Medicare
beneficiaries who have not previously been included in the calculation
of any hospice cap, and who have filed an election to receive hospice
care in accordance with Sec. 418.24 during the period beginning on
September 28th (34 days before the beginning of the cap year) and
ending on September 27th (35 days before the end of the cap year),
using the best data available at the time of the calculation. This is
applicable for cases in which a beneficiary received care from only one
hospice. If a beneficiary received care from more than one hospice,
each hospice includes in its number of Medicare beneficiaries only that
fraction which represents the portion of a patient's total days of care
with that hospice in that cap year, using the best data available at
the time of the calculation. Using the streamlined method, a different
timeframe from the cap year is used to count the number of Medicare
beneficiaries because it allows those beneficiaries who elected hospice
near the end of the cap year to be counted in the year when most of the
services were provided (48 FR 38158).
During FY 2012 rulemaking, in addition to the streamlined method,
CMS added a ``patient-by-patient proportional'' method as a way of
calculating the number of Medicare beneficiaries who received hospice
services during the year in determining the aggregate cap amount for
any given hospice (76 FR 47309). This method specifies that a hospice
should include in its number of Medicare beneficiaries only that
fraction which represents the portion of a patient's total days of care
in all hospices and all years that was spent in that hospice in that
cap year, using the best data available at the time of the calculation.
The total number of Medicare beneficiaries for a given hospice's cap
year is determined by summing the whole or fractional share of each
Medicare beneficiary that received hospice care during the cap year,
from that hospice. Under the patient-by-patient proportional
methodology, the timeframe for counting the number of Medicare
beneficiaries is the same as the cap accounting year (November 1
through October 31). The aggregate cap amount for each hospice is now
calculated using the patient-by-patient proportional method, except for
those hospices that had their cap determination calculated under the
streamlined method prior to the 2012 cap year, did not appeal the
streamlined method used to determine the number of Medicare
beneficiaries used in the aggregate cap calculation, and opted to
continue to have their hospice aggregate cap calculated using the
streamlined method no later than 60 days after receipt of its 2012 cap
determination.
2. Inpatient and Aggregate Cap Accounting Year Timeframe
As stated in section III.C.4, the cap accounting year is currently
November 1 to October 31. In the past, CMS has considered changing the
cap accounting year to coincide with the hospice rate update year,
which is the federal fiscal year (October 1 through September 30). In
the FY 2011 Hospice Wage Index notice (75 FR 42951), CMS solicited
comments on aligning the cap accounting year for both the inpatient and
aggregate hospice cap to coincide with the FY. In the FY 2012 Hospice
Wage Index proposed rule, we summarized the comments we received,
stating that ``several commenters supported the idea of our aligning
the cap year with the federal fiscal year; with some noting that the
change would be appropriate for a multi-year apportioning approach (the
patient-by-patient proportional method).'' Other commenters stated that
we should not change the cap year at this time, and recommended that we
wait for this to be accomplished as part of hospice payment reform (76
FR 26812).
In FY 2012, we decided not to finalize changing the cap accounting
year to the FY, partly because of a concern that a large portion of
providers could still be using the streamlined method. As stated
earlier, the streamlined method has a different timeframe for counting
the number of beneficiaries than the cap accounting year, allowing
those beneficiaries who elected hospice near the end of the cap year to
be counted in the year when most of the services were provided.
However, for the 2013 cap year, only 486 hospices used the streamlined
method to calculate the number of Medicare hospice patients and the
remaining providers used the patient-by-patient proportional method.
Since the majority of providers now use the patient-by-patient
proportional method, we believe there is no longer an advantage to
defining the cap accounting year differently from the hospice rate
update year; maintaining a cap accounting year (as well as the period
for counting beneficiaries under the streamlined method) that is
different from the federal fiscal year creates an added layer of
complexity that can lead to hospices unintentionally calculating their
aggregate cap determinations incorrectly. In addition, shifting the cap
accounting year timeframes to coincide with the hospice rate update
year (the federal fiscal year) will better align with the intent of the
new cap calculation methodology required by the IMPACT Act of 2014, as
discussed in section III.C.4. Therefore, we are aligning the cap
accounting year for both the inpatient cap and the hospice aggregate
cap with the federal fiscal year for FYs 2017 and later. In addition to
aligning the cap accounting year with the federal fiscal year, we will
also align the
[[Page 47185]]
timeframe for counting the number of beneficiaries with the federal
fiscal year. This will eliminate timeframe complexities associating
with counting payments and beneficiaries differently from the federal
fiscal year and will help hospices avoid mistakes in calculating their
aggregate cap determinations.
In shifting the cap accounting year to match the federal fiscal
year, we note that new section 1814(i)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act, as added
by section 3(b) of the IMPACT Act, requires the cap amount for 2016 to
be updated by the hospice payment update percentage in effect ``during
the FY beginning on the October 1 preceding the beginning of the
accounting year''. In other words, we interpret this to mean that the
statute requires the 2016 cap amount to be updated using the most
current hospice payment update percentage in effect at the start of
that cap year. For the 2016 cap year, the 2015 cap amount will be
updated by the FY 2016 hospice payment update percentage outlined in
section III.C.2. For the 2017 cap year through the 2025 cap year, we
will update the previous year's cap amount by the hospice payment
update percentage for that current federal fiscal year. For the 2026
cap year and beyond, changing the cap accounting year to coincide with
the federal fiscal year will require us to use the CPI-U for February
when updating the cap amount, instead of the current process which uses
the March CPI-U to update the cap amount. Section 1814(i)(2)(B) of the
Act requires us to update the cap amount by the same percentage as the
percentage increase or decrease in the medical care expenditure
category of the CPI-U from March 1984 to the ``fifth month of the
accounting year '' for all years except those accounting years that end
after September 30, 2016 and before October 1, 2025.
In shifting the cap year to match the federal fiscal year, we are
aligning the timeframes in which beneficiaries and payments are counted
for the purposes of determining each individual hospice's aggregate cap
amount (see table 26 below) as well as the timeframes in which days of
hospice care are counted for the purposes determining whether a given
hospice exceeded the inpatient cap. In the year of transition (2017 cap
year), for the inpatient cap, we will calculate the percentage of all
hospice days of care that were provided as inpatient days (GIP care and
respite care) from November 1, 2016 through September 30, 2017 (11
months). For those hospices using the patient-by-patient proportional
method for their aggregate cap determinations, for the 2017 cap year,
we will count beneficiaries from November 1, 2016 to September 30,
2017. For those hospices using the streamlined method for their
aggregate cap determinations, we will allow 3 extra days to count
beneficiaries in the year of transition. Specifically, for the 2017 cap
year (October 1, 2016 to September 30, 2017), we will count
beneficiaries from September 28, 2016 to September 30, 2017, which is
12 months plus 3 days, in that cap year's calculation. For hospices
using either the streamlined method or the patient-by-patient
proportional method, we will count 11 months of payments from November
1, 2016 to September 30, 2017 for the 2017 cap year. For the 2018 cap
year (October 1, 2017 to September 30, 2018), we will count both
beneficiaries and payments for hospices using the streamlined or the
patient-by-patient proportional methods from October 1, 2017 to
September 30, 2018. Likewise, for the 2018 cap year, we will calculate
the percentage of all hospice days of care that were provided as
inpatient days (GIP care or respite care) from October 1, 2017 to
September 30, 2018. Because of the non-discretionary language used by
Congress in determining the cap for a year, the actual cap amount for
the adjustment year will not be prorated for a shorter time frame. We
solicited public comment on all aspects of the proposed alignment of
the cap accounting year for both the inpatient cap and hospice
aggregate cap, as well as the timeframe for counting the number of
beneficiaries for the hospice aggregate cap, with the federal fiscal
year, as articulated in this section, as well as the corresponding
proposed changes to the regulations at Sec. 418.308(c) in section VI.
Table 26--Hospice Aggregate Cap Timeframes for Counting Beneficiaries and Payments for the Alignment of the Cap Accounting Year With the Federal Fiscal
Year
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beneficiaries Payments
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cap year Patient-by-patient Patient-by-patient
Streamlined method proportional method Streamlined method proportional method
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2016................................................ 9/28/15-9/27/16 11/1/15-10/31/16 11/1/15-10/31/16 11/1/15-10/31/16
2017 (Transition Year).............................. 9/28/16-9/30/17 11/1/16-9/30/17 11/1/16-9/30/17 11/1/16-9/30/17
2018................................................ 10/1/17- 9/30/18 10/1/17- 9/30/18 10/1/17- 9/30/18 10/1/17- 9/30/18
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summaries of the public comments and our responses to comments on
all aspects of the proposed alignment of the cap accounting year with
the federal fiscal year as well as the proposed changes to the
regulations at Sec. 418.308(c) are summarized below:
Comment: Commenters supported the proposed alignment of the
inpatient and aggregate cap with the federal fiscal year, as well as
the alignment of the timeframe for counting the number of beneficiaries
with the federal fiscal year, and supported the proposed methodology
for the transition year. Commenters encouraged CMS to issue, and direct
the MACs to provide, timely notice of forthcoming changes and reminders
to minimize confusion when hospice providers calculate and self-report
their aggregate cap and to allow hospices to adequately track their cap
status. Commenters wanted education and information on the transition
and changes to the cap accounting year timeframe.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support and will
finalize this policy as proposed. We note that the MACs currently send
a reminder notice to hospices no later than 30 days prior to the due
date of the self-determined cap. We encourage hospices to visit their
respective MAC Web site regularly for announcements and updates
regarding the hospice program. Please contact your MAC if you need
information regarding the cap calculation or additional information.
Comment: Some commenters stated that the proposed rule eliminates
the reference to March 31st in Sec. 418.308 and requested that the
final rule clarify that hospices are still required to file a self-
determined inpatient and aggregate cap determination on or before March
31, 2017 for the 2016 cap year and on or before February 28, 2018 for
the 2017
[[Page 47186]]
cap year. One commenter requested that CMS provide early notice on the
due date for filing the aggregate cap determination each year since the
removal of the reference to March 31st may be a source of confusion for
hospice providers.
Response: We note that the regulatory text still states that the
hospice must file its aggregate cap determination notice with its
Medicare contractor no later than 5 months after the end of the cap
year and remit any overpayment due at that time. Therefore, the
regulatory text change continues to provide hospices with sufficient
information to determine when aggregate cap self-determinations must be
submitted to the MAC. Hospices are required to file a self-determined
inpatient and aggregate cap determination on or before March 31, 2017
for the 2016 cap year and on or before February 28, 2018 for the 2017
cap year. We will finalize this policy as proposed, aligning the cap
accounting year with the federal fiscal year and removing the reference
to March 31st in Sec. 418.308. The end of the cap accounting year for
the 2017 cap year and future years will be the same as the end of the
fiscal year. Therefore, it is clear that the clause in the regulation
text ``5 months after the end of the cap year'' refers to the end of
February for cap years 2017 and beyond.
Final Action: We are finalizing the proposal and proposed
methodology to align the inpatient and aggregate cap accounting year,
as well as the timeframe for counting the number of beneficiaries, with
the federal fiscal year. We are also finalizing the proposed changes to
Sec. 418.308(c).
E. Proposed Updates to the Hospice Quality Reporting Program (HQRP)
1. Background and Statutory Authority
Section 3004(c) of the Affordable Care Act amended section
1814(i)(5) of the Act to authorize a quality reporting program for
hospices. Section 1814(i)(5)(A)(i) of the Act requires that beginning
with FY 2014 and each subsequent FY, the Secretary shall reduce the
market basket update by 2 percentage points for any hospice that does
not comply with the quality data submission requirements with respect
to that FY. Depending on the amount of the annual update for a
particular year, a reduction of 2 percentage points could result in the
annual market basket update being less than 0.0 percent for a FY and
may result in payment rates that are less than payment rates for the
preceding FY. Any reduction based on failure to comply with the
reporting requirements, as required by section 1814(i)(5)(B) of the
Act, would apply only for the particular FY involved. Any such
reduction would not be cumulative or be taken into account in computing
the payment amount for subsequent FYs. Section 1814(i)(5)(C) of the Act
requires that each hospice submit data to the Secretary on quality
measures specified by the Secretary. The data must be submitted in a
form, manner, and at a time specified by the Secretary.
2. General Considerations Used for Selection of Quality Measures for
the HQRP
Any measures selected by the Secretary must be endorsed by the
consensus-based entity, which holds a contract regarding performance
measurement with the Secretary under section 1890(a) of the Act. This
contract is currently held by the National Quality Forum (NQF).
However, section 1814(i)(5)(D)(ii) of the Act provides that in the case
of a specified area or medical topic determined appropriate by the
Secretary for which a feasible and practical measure has not been
endorsed by the consensus-based entity, the Secretary may specify
measures that are not so endorsed as long as due consideration is given
to measures that have been endorsed or adopted by a consensus-based
organization identified by the Secretary. Our paramount concern is the
successful development of a Hospice Quality Reporting Program (HQRP)
that promotes the delivery of high quality healthcare services. We seek
to adopt measures for the HQRP that promote patient-centered, high
quality, and safe care. Our measure selection activities for the HQRP
take into consideration input from the Measure Applications Partnership
(MAP), convened by the NQF, as part of the established CMS pre-
rulemaking process required under section 1890A of the Act. The MAP is
a public-private partnership comprised of multi-stakeholder groups
convened by the NQF for the primary purpose of providing input to CMS
on the selection of certain categories of quality and efficiency
measures, as required by section 1890A(a)(3) of the Act. By February
1st of each year, the NQF must provide that input to CMS. Input from
the MAP is located at: (https://www.qualityforum.org/Setting_Priorities/Partnership/Measure_Applications_Partnership.aspx. We also take into
account national priorities, such as those established by the National
Priorities Partnership at (https://www.qualityforum.org/npp/), the HHS
Strategic Plan https://www.hhs.gov/secretary/about/priorities/priorities.html), the National Strategy for Quality Improvement in
Healthcare, (https://www.ahrq.gov/workingforquality/nqs/nqs2013annlrpt.htm) and the CMS Quality Strategy (https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-AssessmentInstruments/QualityInitiativesGenInfo/CMS-Quality-Strategy.html). To the extent
practicable, we have sought to adopt measures endorsed by member
organizations of the National Consensus Project recommended by multi-
stakeholder organizations, and developed with the input of providers,
purchasers/payers, and other stakeholders.
3. Proposed Policy for Retention of HQRP Measures Adopted for Previous
Payment Determinations
Beginning with the FY 2018 payment determination, for the purpose
of streamlining the rulemaking process, we proposed that when we adopt
measures for the HQRP beginning with a payment determination year,
these measures are automatically adopted for all subsequent years'
payment determinations, unless we propose to remove, suspend, or
replace the measures.
Quality measures may be considered for removal by CMS if:
Measure performance among hospices is so high and
unvarying that meaningful distinctions in improvements in performance
can be no longer be made;
Performance or improvement on a measure does not result in
better patient outcomes;
A measure does not align with current clinical guidelines
or practice;
A more broadly applicable measure (across settings,
populations, or conditions) for the particular topic is available;
A measure that is more proximal in time to desired patient
outcomes for the particular topic is available;
A measure that is more strongly associated with desired
patient outcomes for the particular topic is available; or
Collection or public reporting of a measure leads to
negative unintended consequences.
For any such removal, the public will be given an opportunity to
comment through the annual rulemaking process. However, if there is
reason to believe continued collection of a measure raises potential
safety concerns, we will take immediate action to remove the measure
from the HQRP and will not wait for the annual rulemaking cycle. The
measures will be promptly removed and we will immediately notify
hospices and the public of such a decision through the
[[Page 47187]]
usual HQRP communication channels, including listening sessions, memos,
email notification, and Web postings. In such instances, the removal of
a measure will be formally announced in the next annual rulemaking
cycle.
CMS did not propose to remove any measures for the FY 2017
reporting cycle. We invited public comment only on our proposal that
once a quality measure is adopted, it be retained for use in the
subsequent fiscal year payment determinations unless otherwise stated.
Public comments and our response to comments are summarized below.
All comments received were supportive of the proposed policy that once
a quality measure is adopted, it be retained for use in the subsequent
fiscal year payment determinations until otherwise stated, as proposed.
Comment: CMS received several comments on our proposal that once a
quality measure is adopted, it be retained for use in the subsequent
fiscal year payment determinations until otherwise stated. All
commenters were supportive of this proposal. Commenters appreciated the
clarification from CMS and noted that the proposed reasons for removal
of a measure are reasonable.
Response: CMS thanks commenters for their support of our proposal
to retain measures that have been adopted for use in subsequent fiscal
year payment determinations, unless otherwise stated.
Comment: Two commenters noted the effort required by hospices in
reporting quality data, and stated that measures should be
systematically reviewed on a regular basis to ensure they are able to
distinguish performance among hospices, do not result in unintended
consequences, and have demonstrated potential to improve care.
Response: CMS agrees with commenters that regularly assessing
measures to ensure their value in distinguishing performance and
improving care is vital to the success of the HQRP. For all measures
implemented for use in the HQRP, CMS regularly conducts measure testing
activities according to the blueprint for the CMS Measures Management
System (https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/MMS/MeasuresManagementSystemBlueprint.html) to
ensure that measures continue to demonstrate scientific acceptability
(including reliability and validity) and meet the goals of the HQRP,
which include distinguishing performance among hospices and
contributing to better patient outcomes. If measure testing activities
reveal that a measure meets one of the conditions for removal that is
listed the proposed rule (measure performance among hospices high and
unvarying, performance or improvement in a measure does not result in
better patient outcomes, etc.), the measure will be considered for
removal from the HQRP to avoid unintended consequences and ensure that
providers' data collection efforts are meaningful and are contributing
to quality of care.
Comment: Finally, one commenter noted that both current and new
measures should be thoroughly evaluated and tested before removal from
or introduction to the HQRP. This commenter recommended that measure
data from the first two quarters after implementation not be used for
measure evaluation, and that a minimum of 1 years' worth of measure
data after implementation be used to evaluate measures. The commenter
also noted that the measure evaluation process should include analysis
to demonstrate not only the psychometric properties of measures, but
also evidence of the measure's relationship to meaningful outcomes.
Response: CMS thanks the commenter for their recommendation, and
agrees that testing the measure's relationship to meaningful patient
and family outcomes is an important part of the measure development and
testing process, especially for process measures. As part of the
validity testing, specifically convergent validity testing, CMS
examines the relationship between various measures (for example,
process and outcome measures) to support measure development and
demonstrate relationships between processes and outcomes of care.
Final Action: After consideration of the comments, we are
finalizing our proposal that once a quality measure is adopted, it be
retained for use in the subsequent fiscal year payment determinations
until otherwise stated, as proposed.
4. Previously Adopted Quality Measures for FY 2016 and FY 2017 Payment
Determination
As stated in the CY 2013 HH PPS final rule (77 FR 67068, 67133),
CMS expanded the set of required measures to include additional
measures endorsed by NQF. We also stated that to support the
standardized collection and calculation of quality measures by CMS,
collection of the needed data elements would require a standardized
data collection instrument. In response, CMS developed and tested a
hospice patient-level item set, the Hospice Item Set (HIS). Hospices
are required to submit an HIS-Admission record and an HIS-Discharge
record for each patient admission to hospice on or after July 1, 2014.
In developing the standardized HIS, we considered comments offered in
response to the CY 2013 HH PPS proposed rule (77 FR 41548, 41573). In
the FY 2014 Hospice Wage Index final rule (78 FR 48257), and in
compliance with section 1814(i)(5)(C) of the Act, we finalized the
specific collection of data items that support the following six NQF
endorsed measures and one modified measure for hospice:
NQF #1617 Patients Treated with an Opioid who are Given a
Bowel Regimen,
NQF #1634 Pain Screening,
NQF #1637 Pain Assessment,
NQF #1638 Dyspnea Treatment,
NQF #1639 Dyspnea Screening,
NQF #1641 Treatment Preferences,
NQF #1647 Beliefs/Values Addressed (if desired by the
patient) (modified).
To achieve a comprehensive set of hospice quality measures
available for widespread use for quality improvement and informed
decision making, and to carry out our commitment to develop a quality
reporting program for hospices that uses standardized methods to
collect data needed to calculate quality measures, we finalized the HIS
effective July 1, 2014 (78 FR 48258). To meet the quality reporting
requirements for hospices for the FY 2016 payment determination and
each subsequent year, we require regular and ongoing electronic
submission of the HIS data for each patient admission to hospice on or
after July 1, 2014, regardless of payer or patient age (78 FR 48234,
48258). Collecting data on all patients provides CMS with the most
robust, accurate reflection of the quality of care delivered to
Medicare beneficiaries as compared with non-Medicare patients.
Therefore, to measure the quality of care delivered to Medicare
beneficiaries in the hospice setting, we collect quality data necessary
to calculate the adopted measures on all patients. We finalized in the
FY 2014 Hospice Wage Index (78 FR 48258) that hospice providers collect
data on all patients in order to ensure that all patients regardless of
payer or patient age are receiving the same care and that provider
metrics measure performance across the spectrum of patients.
Hospices are required to complete and submit an HIS-Admission and
an HIS-Discharge record for each patient admission. Hospices failing to
report quality data via the HIS in FY 2015 will have their market
basket update reduced by 2 percentage points in FY 2017 beginning in
October 1, 2016. In the FY
[[Page 47188]]
2015 Hospice Wage Index final rule (79 FR 50485, 50487), we finalized
the proposal to codify the HIS submission requirement at Sec. 418.312.
The System of Record (SOR) Notice titled ``Hospice Item Set (HIS)
System,'' SOR number 09-70-0548, was published in the Federal Register
on April 8, 2014 (79 FR 19341).
5. HQRP Quality Measures and Concepts Under Consideration for Future
Years
We did not propose any new measures for FY 2017. However, we
continue to work with our measure development and maintenance
contractor to identify measure concepts for future implementation in
the HQRP. In identifying priority areas for future measure enhancement
and development, CMS takes into consideration input from numerous
stakeholders, including the Measures Application Partnership (MAP), the
Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC), Technical Expert Panels,
and national priorities, such as those established by the National
Priorities Partnership, the HHS Strategic Plan, the National Strategy
for Quality Improvement in Healthcare, and the CMS Quality Strategy. In
addition, CMS takes into consideration vital feedback and input from
research published by our payment reform contractor as well as from the
Institute of Medicine (IOM) report, titled ``Dying in America'',
released in September 2014.\51\ Finally, the current HQRP measure set
is also an important consideration for future measure development
areas; future measure development areas should complement the current
HQRP measure set, which includes HIS measures and Consumer Assessment
of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS[supreg]) Hospice Survey
measures. Based on input from stakeholders, CMS has identified several
high priority concept areas for future measure development:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ IOM (Institute of Medicine). 2014. Dying in America:
Improving quality and honoring individual preferences near the end
of life. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Patient reported pain outcome measure that incorporates
patient and/or proxy report regarding pain management;
Claims-based measures focused on care practice patterns
including skilled visits in the last days of life, burdensome
transitions of care for patients in and out of the hospice benefit, and
rates of live discharges from hospice;
Responsiveness of hospice to patient and family care
needs;
Hospice team communication and care coordination
These measure concepts are under development, and details regarding
measure definitions, data sources, data collection approaches, and
timeline for implementation will be communicated in future rulemaking.
CMS invited comments about these four high priority concept areas for
future measure development.
Summaries of the public comments and our responses to comments
regarding the four high priority concept areas for future measure
development are provided below:
Comment Summary: Many comments were received about the HQRP quality
measures and concepts under consideration for future years. Overall,
commenters were supportive of CMS's efforts to develop a more robust
quality reporting program that includes development of outcome
measures, and additional measures that better capture hospice
performance. One of the commenters, MedPAC, supported the development
of the measure areas identified by CMS in the proposed rule, strongly
encouraging CMS to pursue the development of these measures. Several
commenters were supportive of CMS's approach to quality measure
development in the HQRP, specifically, the use of Technical Expert
Panels (TEP) and listening sessions to obtain expert and other
stakeholder input. In regards to the pain outcome measure, a majority
of commenters were supportive of this measure concept as pain outcomes
remain an important indicator of quality end of life care. Several
commenters noted the complexities associated with developing a pain
outcome measure, including the fact that pain is a subjective value and
that pain outcome measures should take into account patient preference
for pain levels and treatment, not just reduction in pain intensity. A
few commenters noted additional complexities in proxy reporting of
patient's pain. One commenter cautioned CMS against a pain outcome
measure that could bear the risk of contacting the patient or family
for feedback ``at the wrong time''. With respect to claims-based
measures, although several commenters were supportive of the claims-
based measure concept areas identified in the proposed rule, the
majority of commenters had concerns about using claims data as a source
for quality measures. Commenters also had concerns about linking these
claims-based measure concepts to quality of care. Several commenters
noted that performance measures should guide and promote the quality of
direct care received by hospice patients and families. Commenters
expressed that performance measures should not be implemented in order
to discourage or correct undesirable organizational practices. These
commenters felt that utilization metrics should be linked to quality of
care or patient/caregiver perception of quality of care. Several
commenters were concerned that given CMS's criteria for measure
retention, which include measure performance that relates to better
patient outcomes and ensuring that measures do not lead to unintended
consequences, claims-based utilization metrics may be at risk for
elimination from the HQRP unless they are specifically linked to
quality of care outcomes. To help establish such a link between
utilization metrics and quality of care, one commenter suggested that
CMS compare claims-based data to Hospice CAHPS[supreg] survey data to
verify whether any claims-based utilization metrics are correlated with
caregiver perception of quality of care. Several commenters also stated
that, as a data source, hospice claims were insufficient sources of
information for quality measure purposes. These commenters noted that
claims do not have sufficient information to inform performance
measures. For example, several commenters stated that hospice claims do
not capture visits offered by chaplains, spiritual care professionals,
or volunteers. These commenters felt these disciplines made important
contributions to hospice care and their role and involvement should be
captured on claims in any claims-based quality metric. With respect to
the live discharges measure concept, a few commenters questioned how
CMS would calculate the live discharge rate, noting that there are both
legitimate and questionable reasons why a live discharge may occur, and
that claims data could not distinguish between the two. Two commenters
suggested CMS use the Program for Evaluating Payment Patterns
Electronic Report (PEPPER) report definition of live discharge. In
regards to the responsiveness and communication and care coordination
measure concepts, commenters had mixed opinions on this measure area. A
few commenters supported measure development in these areas, but other
commenters had concerns about developing quality measures that address
these aspects of care. A few commenters had concerns about the
subjective nature of these areas of care. One commenter noted that
there are few data points or metrics that CMS could utilize for
comparative analysis of these aspects of care, and that CMS would
[[Page 47189]]
have to develop new definitions and benchmarks to capture data on these
areas of care. Several commenters requested additional information on
the measure areas identified by CMS in the rule. These commenters
requested CMS provide more information on the proposed measure concept
areas to allow for more thorough provider input. Additionally, a few
commenters noted that several of the measure concepts under
consideration by CMS are also captured, in some way, by the Hospice
CAHPS[supreg] survey. Providers cautioned CMS against developing new
measures that were duplicative of other HQRP requirements. Several
commenters urged CMS to explore measure development in other areas not
mentioned in the proposed rule. One commenter encouraged CMS to
consider measure development for other psychosocial symptoms, such as
anxiety and depression. Another commenter suggested CMS explore
development measures around the provision of bereavement care and
services, such as contacts made by hospices to the bereaved. This
commenter also suggested that CMS consider measuring value as part of
the HQRP; the commenter suggested such metrics as mean cost per diem
and percent of dollars directly related to care and services for the
patient/family. Another commenter requested that CMS consider the role
that occupational therapists play in future measure development work.
Finally, one commenter suggested that CMS take into consideration the
American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine (AAHPM) and Hospice
and Palliative Nurses Association (HPNA), ``Measuring What Matters''
recommendations when considering future measure development areas. One
commenter supported the development of a standardized patient
assessment instrument that would include the collection for quality
measure data. A few commenters reiterated the ACA requirements that any
measures that are part of the HQRP must be: ``. . . endorsed by the
consensus-based entity . . . . However . . . in the case of a specified
area or medical topic determined appropriate by the Secretary for which
a feasible and practical measure has not been endorsed by the
consensus-based entity, the Secretary may specify measures that are not
so endorsed as long as due consideration is given to measures that have
been endorsed or adopted by a consensus-based organization . . .''
Commenters requested that CMS keep this statutory requirement in mind
when developing and adopting measures for the HQRP. A few commenters
asked that CMS be mindful of burden when considering new quality
measures for adoption since quality data collection requires
significant time and effort by providers. One commenter expressed
concern about burden of data collection efforts, especially for small
non-profit providers.
Response: CMS appreciates commenters' input and recommendations for
future measure development areas for the HQRP. We plan to continue
developing the HQRP to respond to the measure gaps identified by the
Measures Application Partnership and others, and align measure
development with the National Quality Strategy and the CMS Quality
Strategy. We will take these comments into consideration in developing
and implementing measures for future inclusion in the HQRP. CMS would
like to take this opportunity to respond to commenters' concerns about
the claims-based measure concepts outlined in the proposed rule, as
well as commenters' concerns about using claims as a data source for
quality performance measures. CMS appreciates commenters' concerns
about linking any claims-based utilization or pattern of care measures
with quality of care prior to implementation of any such measure in the
HQRP. As noted by one commenter, developing and adopting measures that
benefit patient outcomes and do not lead to negative unintended
consequences is of the utmost importance to CMS. CMS convened a
Technical Expert Panel (TEP) in May 2015 to inform the development of
these measures under consideration, and linking these claims-based
measure concepts to quality of care was an issue discussed by the TEP.
Throughout the measure development process, CMS will conduct continued
quantitative and qualitative analysis to determine correlation between
these measure concepts and quality of care. CMS agrees that
establishing a relationship between a measure concept and quality of
care is a vital consideration in the measure development process. CMS
submits all candidate measures for the HQRP for review by the Measure
Applications Partnership (MAP), a public-private partnership convened
by the National Quality Forum (NQF) and takes the MAP input into
consideration in the measure development and implementation process.
Per the requirements set forth in the ACA, CMS also re-iterates that
our intent is to adopt measures that have been endorsed by NQF if at
all possible. For more information on these measure concepts, CMS
encourages readers to review the Measures Under Consideration (MUC)
list and the MAP report, which are both published annually. More
information on the MUC list and MAP report, as they relate to statutory
requirements for pre-rulemaking can be found on the CMS Web site:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/QualityMeasures/Pre-Rule-Making.html. Lastly, with respect
to commenters' concerns about burden, CMS thanks the commenters for
taking the time to express these views and suggestions. CMS attempts to
reduce the regulatory burden of our quality reporting programs to the
greatest extent possible. As required by the Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA) of 1995, any new data collection efforts or extensions of ongoing
data collection efforts are submitted to the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) to ensure that federal agencies do not overburden the
public with federally sponsored data collections.
6. Form, Manner, and Timing of Quality Data Submission
a. Background
Section 1814(i)(5)(C) of the Act requires that each hospice submit
data to the Secretary on quality measures specified by the Secretary.
Such data must be submitted in a form and manner, and at a time
specified by the Secretary. Section 1814(i)(5)(A)(i) of the Act
requires that beginning with the FY 2014 and for each subsequent FY,
the Secretary shall reduce the market basket update by 2 percentage
points for any hospice that does not comply with the quality data
submission requirements with respect to that FY.
b. Proposed Policy for New Facilities To Begin Submitting Quality Data
In the FY 2015 Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate Update final
rule (79 FR 50488) we finalized a policy stating that any hospice that
receives its CCN notification letter on or after November 1 of the
preceding year involved is excluded from any payment penalty for
quality reporting purposes for the following FY. For example, if a
hospice provider receives its CMS Certification Number (CCN) (also
known as the Medicare Provider Number) notification letter on November
2, 2015 they would not be required to submit quality data for the
current reporting period ending December 31, 2015 (which would affect
the FY 2017 APU). In this instance, the hospice would begin with the
next reporting period beginning January 1,
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2016 and all subsequent years. However, if a hospice provider receives
their CCN notification letter on October 31, 2015, they would be
required to submit quality data for the current reporting period ending
December 31, 2015 (which would affect the FY 2017 APU) and all
subsequent years. This requirement was codified at Sec. 418.312.
We proposed to modify our policies for the timing of new providers
to begin reporting to CMS. Beginning with the FY 2018 payment
determination and for each subsequent payment determination, we
proposed that a new hospice be responsible for HQRP quality data
reporting beginning on the date they receive their CCN notification
letter from CMS. Under this proposal, hospices would be responsible for
reporting quality data on patient admissions beginning on the date they
receive their CCN notification.
Currently, new hospices may experience a lag between Medicare
certification and receipt of their actual CCN Number. Since hospices
cannot submit data to the Quality Improvement and Evaluation System
(QIES) Assessment Submission and Processing (ASAP) system without a
valid CCN Number, CMS proposed that new hospices begin collecting HIS
quality data beginning on the date they receive their CCN notification
letter by CMS. We believe this policy will provide sufficient time for
new hospices to establish appropriate collection and reporting
mechanisms to submit the required quality data to CMS. We invited
public comment on this proposal that a new hospice be required to begin
reporting quality data under HQRP beginning on the date they receive
their CCN notification letter from CMS.
Summaries of the public comments and our responses to comments that
a new hospice be required to begin reporting quality data under HQRP
beginning on the date they receive their CCN notification from CMS are
provided below:
Comment: CMS received several comments regarding the proposal for
new hospices to begin reporting quality data under the HQRP beginning
on the date they receive their CCN notification letter from CMS. The
vast majority of commenters expressed support for this proposal since
it provides a clear start date for HIS reporting, and allows sufficient
time for hospices to establish processes for collection and submission
of HIS data.
Response: CMS appreciates commenters support for this proposal.
Comment: Two commenters suggested alternative policies for new
facilities to begin reporting quality data to CMS. One commenter
recommended that the submission policy require facilities to collect
data during the period leading up to Medicare certification and begin
submitting their data as soon as they receive their CCN. Another
commenter suggested that, to minimize the risk of penalties due to
issues such as opening the CCN notification letter a day after it is
received, the submission policy should require facilities to begin data
collection at the start of the month following the CCN notification.
Response: In response to the commenter's suggestion to begin report
data during the period leading up to Medicare certification and as soon
as they receive their CCN, CMS would like to clarify the reasoning for
our proposal for new providers to begin reporting HIS data on the date
they receive their CCN notification letter. CMS proposed that providers
begin reporting HIS data on the date they receive their CCN
notification letter since hospices cannot register for the relevant
QIES ASAP accounts needed to submit HIS data without a valid CCN. Thus,
requiring quality data reporting beginning on the date the hospice
receives their CCN notification letter aligns CMS policy for
requirements for new providers with the functionality of the HIS data
submission system (QIES ASAP). CMS would like to further clarify our
proposal for new providers, including how our proposal in this year's
proposed rule intersects with prior policies for new hospices. There
are two considerations for providers to keep in mind with respect to
HIS reporting; the first is when providers should begin reporting HIS
data, the second is when providers will be subject to the potential two
(2) percentage point APU reduction for failure to comply with HQRP
requirements. CMS would like to clarify that, as stated in our
proposal, providers are required to begin reporting data on the date
that they receive their CCN notification letter. However, if the CCN
notification letter were received on or after November 1st, they would
not be subject to any financial penalty for failure to comply with HQRP
requirements for the relevant reporting year. For example, if a
provider receives their CCN notification letter on November 5th, 2015,
that provider should begin submitting HIS data for patient admissions
occurring on or after November 5th, 2015. However, since the hospice
received their CCN notification letter after November 1st, they would
not be evaluated for, or subject to any payment penalties for the
relevant FY APU update (which in this instance is the FY 2017 APU,
which is associated with patient admissions occurring 1/1/15-12/31/15).
This proposed policy allows CMS to receive HIS data on all patient
admissions on or after the date a hospice receives their CCN
notification letter, while at the same time allowing hospices
flexibility and time to establish the necessary accounts for data
submission, before they are subject to the potential APU reduction for
a given reporting year. Finally, to address the commenter's concern
about providers being subject to payment penalties if they open the CCN
notification letter the day after it is received, CMS believes our
proposed policy grants providers ample time to establish the necessary
accounts and operating systems for HIS data collection and submission,
since there is often a significant lag time between the Medicare CCN
application process and receipt of a provider's CCN Notification
letter.
Comment: Finally, one commenter requested clarification on how the
date the CCN notification letter was received would be verified by CMS.
Response: CMS would like to clarify that the ``date CCN
notification letter is received'' would be the date listed in the
letterhead of the CCN Notification Letter. This date is tracked by the
Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs) and is verifiable in MAC
records.
Final Action: After consideration of the comments, we are
finalizing our proposal that new providers be required to begin
reporting quality data under for the HQRP beginning on the date they
receive their CCN Notification Letter from CMS.
c. Previously Finalized Data Submission Mechanism, Collection Timelines
and Submission Deadlines for the FY 2017 Payment Determination
In the FY 2015 Hospice Wage Index final rule (79 FR 50486) we
finalized our policy requiring that, for the FY 2017 reporting
requirements, hospices must complete and submit HIS records for all
patient admissions to hospice on or after July 1, 2014. Electronic
submission is required for all HIS records. Although electronic
submission of HIS records is required, hospices do not need to have an
electronic medical record to complete or submit HIS data. In the FY
2014 Hospice Wage Index (78 FR 48258) we finalized that, to complete
HIS records, providers can use either the Hospice Abstraction Reporting
Tool (HART) software, which is free to download and use, or a vendor-
designed software. HART provides an alternative option for hospice
providers to collect
[[Page 47191]]
and maintain facility, patient, and HIS Record information for
subsequent submission to the QIES ASAP system. Once HIS records are
complete, electronic HIS files must be submitted to CMS via the QIES
ASAP system. Electronic data submission via the QIES ASAP system is
required for all HIS submissions; there are no other data submission
methods available. Hospices have 30 days from a patient admission or
discharge to submit the appropriate HIS record for that patient through
the QIES ASAP system. CMS will continue to make HIS completion and
submission software available to hospices at no cost. We provided
details on data collection and submission timing at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Hospice-Quality-Reporting/Hospice-Item-Set-HIS.html.
The QIES ASAP system provides reports upon successful submission
and processing of the HIS records. The final validation report may
serve as evidence of submission. This is the same data submission
system used by nursing homes, inpatient rehabilitation facilities, home
health agencies, and long-term care hospitals for the submission of
Minimum Data Set Version 3.0 (MDS 3.0), Inpatient Rehabilitation
Facility--Patient Assessment Instrument (IRF-PAI), Outcome Assessment
Information Set (OASIS), and Long-Term Care Hospital Continuity
Assessment Record & Evaluation Data Set (LTCH CARE), respectively. We
have provided hospices with information and details about use of the
HIS through postings on the HQRP Web page, Open Door Forums,
announcements in the CMS MLN Connects Provider e-News (E-News), and
provider training.
d. Proposed Data Submission Timelines and Requirements for FY 2018
Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
Hospices are evaluated for purposes of the quality reporting
program based on whether or not they submit data, not on their
substantive performance level with respect to the required quality
measures. In order for CMS to appropriately evaluate the quality
reporting data received by hospice providers, it is essential HIS data
be received in a timely manner.
The submission date for any given HIS record is defined as the date
on which a provider submits the completed record. The submission date
is the date on which the completed record is submitted and accepted by
the QIES ASAP system. Beginning with the FY 2018 payment determination,
we proposed that hospices must submit all HIS records within 30 days of
the Event Date, which is the patient's admission date for HIS-Admission
records or discharge date for HIS-Discharge records.
For HIS-Admission records, the submission date should be
no later than the admission date plus 30 calendar days. The submission
date can be equal to the admission date, or no greater than 30 days
later. The QIES ASAP system will issue a warning on the Final
Validation Report if the submission date is more than 30 days after the
patient's admission date.
For HIS-Discharge records, the submission date should be
no later than the discharge date plus 30 calendar days. The submission
date can be equal to the discharge date, or no greater than 30 days
later. The QIES ASAP system will issue a warning on the Final
Validation Report if the submission date is more than 30 days after the
patient's discharge date.
The QIES ASAP system validation edits are designed to monitor the
timeliness and ensure that providers submitted records conform to the
HIS data submission specifications. Providers are notified when timing
criteria have not been met by warnings that appear on their Final
Validation Reports. A standardized data collection approach that
coincides with timely submission of data is essential in order to
establish a robust quality reporting program and ensure the scientific
reliability of the data received. We invited comments on the proposal
that hospices must submit all HIS records within 30 days of the Event
Date, which is the patient's admission date for HIS-Admission records
or discharge date for HIS-Discharge records.
Summaries of the public comments and our responses to comments on
the proposed data submission timelines and requirements for FY 2018
payment determination and subsequent years are provided below:
Comment: CMS received several comments regarding our proposal that
hospices must submit all HIS records within 30 days of the Event Date.
All commenters were supportive of this proposed submission timeline.
One commenter agreed that timely submission of HIS data is necessary to
facilitate CMS evaluation of HIS data and hospices' performance on
quality measures.
Response: CMS appreciates commenters' support for our proposal that
hospices must submit all HIS records within 30 days of the event date.
Comment: Another commenter addressed what they felt were
inconsistencies between the CMS billing practices and some of the
requirements for HIS reporting. The commenter also noted the burden
created by these discrepancies for providers. This commenter urges CMS
to consider minimizing differences across various CMS systems when
developing new policies.
Response: CMS thanks the commenter for their concern regarding
discrepancies between HIS reporting requirements and billing
requirements. We believe that the provider is referring to HIS
reporting requirements that are established and communicated to the
provider community via sub-regulatory channels. This would include
policies and guidelines regarding defining an ``admission'' and
``discharge'' for the purposes of HIS reporting, and reporting HIS data
in the case of special circumstances, such as traveling patients. These
policies and guidelines are released by CMS through sub-regulatory
mechanisms, including the HIS Manual and HIS trainings. CMS would like
to clarify that the process for updating sub-regulatory guidance is
based on questions received through the Help Desk and feedback from the
provider community received through other communication channels, such
as ODFs and listening sessions. CMS takes these considerations into
account when updating guidance in the HIS Manual, HIS trainings, and
other documents such as FAQs and Fact Sheets.
Comment: Two commenters requested that CMS consider changing or
removing the completion timelines for HIS records. One commenter noted
that completion deadlines add to hospices' administrative burden for
HIS data collection and do not facilitate compliance with submission
deadline requirements.
Response: CMS appreciates commenters input on the value of the
completion deadlines. Current sub-regulatory guidance produced by CMS
(for example, HIS Manual, HIS trainings) state that the completion
deadlines for HIS records are 14 days from the Event Date for HIS-
Admission records and 7 days from the Event Date for HIS-Discharge
records. Based on commenter input, CMS would like to clarify that the
completion deadlines continue to reflect CMS guidance only; these
guidelines are not statutorily specified and are not designated through
regulation. These guidelines are intended to offer clear direction to
hospice agencies in regards to the timely submission of HIS-Admission
and HIS-Discharge records. The completion deadlines define only the
latest possible date on which a hospice should complete each HIS
record. This
[[Page 47192]]
guidance is meant to better align HIS completion processes with
clinical workflow processes however, hospices may develop alternative
internal policies to complete HIS records. Although it is at the
discretion of the hospice to develop internal policies for completing
HIS records, CMS continues to recommend that providers complete and
attempt to submit HIS records early, prior to the proposed submission
deadline of 30 days. Completing and attempting to submit records early
allows providers ample time to address any technical issues encountered
in the QIES ASAP submission process, such as correcting fatal error
messages. Completing and attempting to submit records early will ensure
that providers are able to comply with the proposed 30 day submission
deadline. HQRP guidance documents, including the CMS HQRP Web site, HIS
Manual, HIS trainings, Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs), and Fact
Sheets continue to offer the most up-to-date CMS guidance to assist
providers in the successful completion and submission of HIS records.
Availability of updated guidance will be communicated to providers
through the usual HQRP communication channels.
Final Action: After consideration of the comments, we are
finalizing our proposal that hospices must submit all records within 30
days of the Event Date as proposed.
e. Proposed HQRP Data Submission and Compliance Thresholds for the FY
2018 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
In order to accurately analyze quality reporting data received by
hospice providers, it is imperative we receive ongoing and timely
submission of all HIS-Admission and HIS-Discharge records. To date, the
timeliness criteria for submission of HIS-Admission and HIS-Discharge
records has never been proposed and finalized through rulemaking
process. We believe this matter should be addressed by defining a clear
standard for timeliness and compliance at this time. In response to
input from our stakeholders seeking additional specificity related to
HQRP compliance affecting FY payment determinations and, due to the
importance of ensuring the integrity of quality data submitted to CMS,
we proposed to set specific HQRP thresholds for timeliness of
submission of hospice quality data beginning with data affecting the FY
2018 payment determination and subsequent years.
Beginning with the FY 2018 payment determination and subsequent FY
payment determinations, we proposed that all HIS records must be
submitted within 30 days of the Event Date, which is the patient's
admission date or discharge date. To coincide with this requirement, we
proposed to establish an incremental threshold for compliance with this
timeliness requirement; the proposed threshold would be implemented
over a 3 year period. To be compliant with timeliness requirements, we
proposed that hospices would have to submit no less than 70 percent of
their total number of HIS-Admission and HIS-Discharge records by no
later than 30 days from the Event Date for the FY 2018 APU
determination. The timeliness threshold would be set at 80 percent for
the FY 2019 APU determination and at 90 percent for the FY 2020 APU
determination and subsequent years. The threshold corresponds with the
overall amount of HIS records received from each provider that fall
within the established 30 day submission timeframes. Our ultimate goal
is to require all hospices to achieve a timeliness requirement
compliance rate of 90 percent or more.
To summarize, we proposed to implement the timeliness threshold
requirement beginning with all HIS admission and discharge records that
occur on or after January 1, 2016, in accordance with the following
schedule.
Beginning on or after January 1, 2016 to December 31,
2016, hospices must submit at least 70 percent of all required HIS
records within the 30 day submission timeframe for the year or be
subject to a 2 percentage point reduction to their market basket update
for FY 2018.
Beginning on or after January 1, 2017 to December 31,
2017, hospices must score at least 80 percent for all HIS records
received within the 30 day submission timeframe for the year or be
subject to a 2 percentage point reduction to their market basket update
for FY 2019.
Beginning on or after January 1, 2018 to December 31,
2018, hospices must score at least 90 percent for all HIS records
received within the 30 day submission timeframe for the year or be
subject to a 2 percentage point reduction to their market basket update
for FY 2020.
We invited public comment on our proposal to implement the new data
submission and compliance threshold requirement, as described
previously, for the HQRP. Summaries of the public comments and our
responses to comments are provided below:
Comment: CMS received many comments regarding the proposed
establishment of data submission and compliance thresholds for FY2018
payment determinations and for subsequent years. All commenters but one
were supportive of CMS's proposal. Commenters noted that the proposed
thresholds seemed reasonable and achievable given current experience
with HIS submission and agreed with the incremental nature of the
threshold.
Response: CMS appreciates commenters' support of our proposed
compliance thresholds. As stated in the proposed rule, we agree that
timely submission of data is necessary to accurately analyze quality
data received by providers. CMS is pleased that commenters find the
proposed thresholds feasible given their current experience. To support
feasibility of achieving these proposed compliance thresholds, CMS's
measure development contractor conducted some preliminary analysis of
Quarter 3 and Quarter 4 HIS data from 2014. According to preliminary
analysis, the vast majority of hospices (92 percent) would have met the
compliance thresholds at 70 percent. Moreover, 88 percent and 78
percent of hospices would have met the compliance thresholds at 80
percent and 90 percent, respectively. CMS believes this analysis is
further evidence that these proposed compliance thresholds are
reasonable and achievable by hospice providers.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS not implement the
proposed timeliness criteria and data submission and compliance
threshold until CMS develops appropriate reporting tools to allow
hospice providers to determine their compliance statistics in CMS's
system of records. This provider stated that, at the present time, CMS
systems do now allow providers to monitor their performance with
respect to timely submission of records. Another commenter supported
CMS's proposal, but recommended a performance report be made available
to hospices before the data submission and compliance thresholds are
implemented.
Response: CMS agrees with commenters that having a reporting system
that allows providers to monitor the timeliness of HIS record
submission is important. However, CMS would like to clarify that the
current reports available to providers in the CASPER system do allow
providers to track the number of HIS records that are submitted within
the 30 day submission timeframe. Currently, submitting an HIS record
past the 30 day submission timeframe results in a non-fatal (warning)
error. In April 2015, CMS made available three (3) new Hospice Reports
in CASPER, which include
[[Page 47193]]
reports that can list HIS Record Errors by Field by Provider and HIS
records with a specific error number. CMS will consider expanding this
functionality in the future to tailor reporting functions to the exact
data submission and compliance thresholds.
Comment: CMS received two comments related to the calculation of
the compliance thresholds. One commenter appreciated that CMS is
proposing an extension and exemptions process that would afford
hospices an opportunity to request an extension or exemption from the
30 day submission timeframe for extenuating circumstances. Another
commenter requested that CMS clarify the definition of a ``successful''
submission in the case of modification and inactivation requests.
Response: CMS appreciates commenters' requests for clarification.
CMS would like to clarify the methodology that would be used for
calculating the proposed 70 percent/80 percent/90 percent compliance
thresholds. In general, CMS would include HIS records (HIS-Admission
and HIS-Discharge) submitted for patient admissions and discharges
occurring during the reporting period in the denominator of the
compliance threshold calculation. The numerator of the compliance
threshold calculation would include any records from the denominator
that were submitted within the 30 day submission deadline. In response
to commenters' concerns about extension and exemptions and modification
and inactivation requests, CMS would like to clarify that the
aforementioned methodology would be appropriately adjusted for cases
where hospices were granted extensions/exemptions, and instances of
modification/inactivation requests so that these instances did not
``count against'' providers in the proposed compliance threshold
calculation.
Comment: Finally, CMS received one comment requesting CMS provide
education about the proposed data submission and compliance thresholds.
Response: CMS appreciates the commenters' request for education and
outreach about new requirements. CMS would like to reiterate that
rulemaking is the official process through which new requirements are
proposed, finalized, and communicated to the provider community. In
addition, as further details of the data submission and compliance
threshold are determined by CMS, we anticipate communicating these
details through the regular HQRP communication channels, including Open
Door Forums, webinars, listening sessions, memos, email notification,
and web postings.
Final Action: After consideration of comments, and given the
clarification above, CMS is finalizing our proposal to implement the
new data submission and compliance thresholds for the FY 2018 payment
determination and subsequent FY payment determinations.
7. HQRP Submission Exemption and Extension Requirements for the FY 2017
Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
In the FY 2015 Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate Update final
rule (79, FR 50488), we finalized our proposal to allow hospices to
request and for CMS to grant exemptions/extensions with respect to the
reporting of required quality data when there are extraordinary
circumstances beyond the control of the provider. When an extension/
exemption is granted, a hospice will not incur payment reduction
penalties for failure to comply with the requirements of the HQRP. For
the FY 2016 payment determination and subsequent payment
determinations, a hospice may request an extension/exemption of the
requirement to submit quality data for a specified time period. In the
event that a hospice requests an extension/exemption for quality
reporting purposes, the hospice would submit a written request to CMS.
In general, exemptions and extensions will not be granted for hospice
vendor issues, fatal error messages preventing record submission, or
staff error.
In the event that a hospice seeks to request an exemptions or
extension for quality reporting purposes, the hospice must request an
exemption or extension within 30 days of the date that the
extraordinary circumstances occurred by submitting the request to CMS
via email to the HQRP mailbox at HQRPReconsiderations@cms.hhs.gov.
Exception or extension requests sent to CMS through any other channel
would not be considered as a valid request for an exception or
extension from the HQRP's reporting requirements for any payment
determination. In order to be considered, a request for an exemption or
extension must contain all of the finalized requirements as outlined on
our Web site at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospiceQuality-Reporting/.
If a provider is granted an exemption or extension, timeframes for
which an exemption or extension is granted will be applied to the new
timeliness requirement so providers are not penalized. If a hospice is
granted an exemption, we will not require that the hospice submit any
quality data for a given period of time. If we grant an extension to a
hospice, the hospice will still remain responsible for submitting
quality data collected during the timeframe in question, although we
will specify a revised deadline by which the hospice must submit this
quality data.
This process does not preclude us from granting extensions/
exemptions to hospices that have not requested them when we determine
that an extraordinary circumstance, such as an act of nature, affects
an entire region or locale. We may grant an extension/exemption to a
hospice if we determine that a systemic problem with our data
collection systems directly affected the ability of the hospice to
submit data. If we make the determination to grant an extension/
exemption to hospices in a region or locale, we will communicate this
decision through routine communication channels to hospices and
vendors, including, but not limited to, Open Door Forums, ENews and
notices on https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Hospice-Quality-Reporting/. We proposed to
codify the HQRP Submission Exemption and Extension Requirements at
Sec. 418.312.
Summaries of public comments and our responses to comments on our
proposal to codify the HQRP submission exemption and extension
requirements are provided below:
Comment: CMS received several comments related to our previously
finalized policy for extensions and exemptions. A few commenters had
concerns about the process for requesting an extension or exemption,
especially in the case of a widespread natural disaster. These
commenters requested that CMS be able to accept requests for extensions
and exemptions via means other than email. These commenters noted that
in instances of certain widespread natural disasters, such as Hurricane
Sandy or Hurricane Katrina, providers would not have been able to email
CMS within 30 days of the event date. Commenters requested that CMS
accept mail and verbal extension or exemption requests from providers,
or that CMS extend the submission timeframe for requesting extensions
or exemptions from 30 days to 90 days.
Response: CMS appreciates the commenters' concern about the process
for requesting an extension or exemption in the circumstance of an
extreme natural disaster. We refer readers to the extension and
exemption policy that was finalized in the FY 2015 Hospice Wage Index
and Payment Rate Update final rule. Additionally, we re-
[[Page 47194]]
iterate our policy that in case of an extraordinary circumstance, such
as an act of natural disaster similar to Hurricanes Sandy and Katrina,
CMS may grant extensions/exemptions to an entire region or locale
without the need for providers to request an extension/exemption. As
stated in our policy, if CMS makes a determination to grant an
extension/exemption to an entire locale, we will communicate this
decision through routine communication channels, such as through ODFs,
email notification, and web postings.
Comment: CMS received two other comments about our previously
finalized policy for extensions and exemptions. These two commenters
requested that CMS consider revision of the criteria for granting an
extension or exemptions to hospices that experience technological
problems. These commenters noted that in some rare circumstances, a
hospice may have collected and attempted to submit HIS data, but HIS
record submissions were unsuccessful. One of the commenters also noted
situations where an entire hospice's EHR is nonfunctional for a time
due to issues with the vendor's cloud.
Response: CMS appreciates the commenters' concern about our policy
for extensions and exemption in the case of technological difficulty.
We refer readers to the extension and exemption policy that was
finalized in the FY 2015 Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate Update
final rule. In addition, we would like to re-iterate the availability
of other reporting and submission systems that are accessible to
providers who may be experiencing technological difficulties. First,
CMS would like to highlight the availability of final validation
reports that are provided upon submission of records to the QIES ASAP
system. These final validation reports indicate whether attempted HIS
record submissions were successful. CMS highly recommends providers
review the final validation report for all HIS submissions to ensure
that attempted record submissions are successful. If providers are
experiencing issues with record rejections and fatal errors, they can
contact the appropriate Help Desk for assistance. Help Desk contact
information can be found on the CMS HQRP Web site: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Hospice-Quality-Reporting/Help-Desks.html. Second, CMS would like to re-iterate
the availability of the HART software. The HART software is free
software made available by CMS that all providers can use as an
alternative to vendor-designed software to maintain facility, patient,
and HIS record information for subsequent submission to QIES ASAP. All
providers can download and use HART, and CMS recommends that all
providers download HART so that the software is available to use as an
alternative, should a provider experience issues with vendor-designed
software. More information on HART can be found on the CMS HQRP Web
site: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Hospice-Quality-Reporting/HIS-Technical-Information.html. Finally, CMS re-iterates our policy to grant an
extension/exemptions to hospices that have not requested them in the
case of systemic problems with CMS data collection systems that
directly affect the ability of hospices to submit data.
Final Action: After consideration of comments, and given the
clarification above, CMS is finalizing our proposal to codify the HQRP
Submission Extension and Exemption Requirements at Sec. 418.312.
8. Hospice CAHPS Participation Requirements for the 2018 APU and 2019
APU
In the FY 2015 Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate Update final
rule (79 FR 50452), we stated that CMS would start national
implementation of the CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey as of January 1,
2015. We started national implementation of this survey as planned. The
CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey is a component of CMS' Hospice Quality
Reporting Program that emphasizes the experiences of hospice patients
and their primary caregivers listed in the hospice patients' records.
Measures from the survey will be submitted to the National Quality
Forum (NQF) for endorsement as hospice quality measures. We referred
readers to our extensive discussion of the Hospice Experience of Care
Survey in the Hospice Wage Index FY 2015 final rule for a description
of the measurements involved and their relationship to the statutory
requirement for hospice quality reporting (79 FR 50450 also refer to 78
FR 48261).
a. Background and Description of the Survey
The CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey is the first national hospice
experience of care survey that includes standard survey administration
protocols that allow for fair comparisons across hospices.
CMS developed the CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey with input from many
stakeholders, including other government agencies, industry
stakeholders, consumer groups and other key individuals and
organizations involved in hospice care. The Survey was designed to
measure and assess the experiences of hospice patients and their
informal caregivers (family or friends). The goals of the survey are
to:
Produce comparable data on patients' and caregivers'
perspectives of care that allow objective and meaningful comparisons
between hospices on domains that are important to consumers;
Create incentives for hospices to improve their quality of
care through public reporting of survey results; and
Hold hospice care providers accountable by informing the
public about the providers' quality of care.
The development process for the survey began in 2012 and included a
public request for information about publicly available measures and
important topics to measure (78 FR 5458); a review of the existing
literature on tools that measure experiences with end-of-life care;
exploratory interviews with caregivers of hospice patients; a technical
expert panel attended by survey development and hospice care quality
experts; cognitive interviews to test draft survey content;
incorporation of public responses to Federal Register notices (78 FR
48234) and a field test conducted by CMS in November and December 2013.
The CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey treats the dying patient and his
or her informal caregivers (family members or friends) as the unit of
care. The Survey seeks information from the informal caregivers of
patients who died while enrolled in hospices. Survey-eligible patients
and caregivers are identified using hospice records. Fielding timelines
give the respondent some recovery time (2 to 3 months), while
simultaneously not delaying so long that the respondent is likely to
forget details of the hospice experience. The survey focuses on topics
that are important to hospice users and for which informal caregivers
are the best source for gathering this information. Caregivers are
presented with a set of standardized questions about their own
experiences and the experiences of the patient in hospice care. During
national implementation of this survey, hospices are required to
conduct the survey to meet the Hospice Quality Reporting requirements,
but individual caregivers will respond only if they voluntarily choose
to do so. A survey Web site is the primary information resource for
hospices and vendors (www.hospicecahpssurvey.org). The CAHPS[supreg]
Hospice Survey is currently available in English, Spanish, Traditional
Chinese, and Simplified Chinese. CMS will provide additional
[[Page 47195]]
translations of the survey over time in response to suggestions for any
additional language translations. Requests for additional language
translations should be made to the CMS Hospice CAHPS[supreg] Project
Team at hospicesurvey@cms.hhs.gov.
In general, hospice patients and their caregivers are eligible for
inclusion in the survey sample with the exception of the following
ineligible groups: Patients who are under the age of 18 at the time of
their death; patients who died fewer than 48 hours after last admission
to hospice care; patients for whom no caregiver is listed or available,
or for whom caregiver contact information is not known; patients whose
primary caregiver is a legal guardian unlikely to be familiar with care
experiences; patients for whom the primary caregiver has a foreign
(Non-US or US Territory address) home address; decedents or caregivers
of decedents who voluntarily requested that they not be contacted
(those who sign ``no publicity'' requests while under the care of
hospice or otherwise directly request not to be contacted). Patients
whose last admission to hospice resulted in a live discharge will also
be excluded. Identification of patients and caregivers for exclusion
will be based on hospice administrative data. Additionally, caregivers
under the age of 18 are excluded.
Hospices with fewer than 50 survey-eligible decedents/caregivers
during the prior calendar year are exempt from the CAHPS[supreg]
Hospice Survey data collection and reporting requirements for payment
determination. Hospices with 50 to 699 survey-eligible decedents/
caregivers in the prior year will be required to survey all cases. For
hospices with 700 or more survey-eligible decedents/caregivers in the
prior year, a sample of 700 will be drawn under an equal-probability
design. Survey-eligible decedents/caregivers are defined as that group
of decedent and caregiver pairs that meet all the criteria for
inclusion in the survey sample.
We moved forward with a model of national survey implementation,
which is similar to that of other CMS patient experience of care
surveys. Medicare-certified hospices are required to contract with a
third-party vendor that is CMS-trained and approved to administer the
survey on their behalf. A list of approved vendors can be found at this
Web site: www.hospicecahpssurvey.org. Hospices are required to contract
with independent survey vendors to ensure that the data are unbiased
and collected by an organization that is trained to collect this type
of data. It is important that survey respondents feel comfortable
sharing their experiences with an interviewer not directly involved in
providing the care. We have successfully used this mode of data
collection in other settings, including for Medicare-certified home
health agencies. The goal is to ensure that we have comparable data
across all hospices.
Consistent with many other CMS CAHPS[supreg] surveys that are
publicly reported on CMS Web sites, CMS will publicly report hospice
data when at least 12 months of data are available, so that valid
comparisons can be made across hospice providers in the United States,
to help patients, family and friends choose a hospice program for
themselves or their loved ones.
b. Participation Requirements To Meet Quality Reporting Requirements
for the FY 2018 APU
In section 3004(c) of the Affordable Care Act, the Secretary is
directed to establish quality reporting requirements for Hospice
Programs. The CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey is a component of the CMS
Hospice Quality Reporting Requirements for the FY 2018 APU and
subsequent years.
The CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey includes the measures detailed in
Table 24. The individual survey questions that comprise each measure
are listed under the measure. These measures are in the process of
being submitted to the National Quality Forum (NQF).
Table 27--Hospice Experience of Care Survey Quality Measures and
Constituent Items
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Composite measures
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hospice team communication
While your family member was in hospice care, how often did
the hospice team keep you informed about when they would arrive to
care for your family member?
While your family member was in hospice care, how often did
the hospice team explain things in a way that was easy to
understand?
How often did the hospice team listen carefully to you when
you talked with them about problems with your family member's
hospice care?
While your family member was in hospice care, how often did
the hospice team keep you informed about your family member's
condition?
While your family member was in hospice care, how often did
the hospice team listen carefully to you?
Getting timely care
While your family member was in hospice care, when you or
your family member asked for help from the hospice team, how often
did you get help as soon as you needed it?
How often did you get the help you needed from the hospice
team during evenings, weekends, or holidays?
Treating family member with respect
While your family member was in hospice care, how often did
the hospice team treat your family member with dignity and respect?
While your family member was in hospice care, how often did
you feel that the hospice team really cared about your family
member?
Providing emotional support
While your family member was in hospice care, how much
emotional support did you get from the hospice team?
In the weeks after your family member died, how much
emotional support did you get from the hospice team?
Getting help for symptoms
Did your family member get as much help with pain as he or
she needed?
How often did your family member get the help he or she
needed for trouble breathing?
How often did your family member get the help he or she
needed for trouble with constipation?
How often did your family member get the help he or she
needed from the hospice team for feelings of anxiety or sadness?
Getting hospice care training
Did the hospice team give you the training you needed about
what side effects to watch for from pain medicine?
Did the hospice team give you the training you needed about
if and when to give more pain medicine to your family member?
Did the hospice team give you the training you needed about
how to help your family member if he or she had trouble breathing?
Did the hospice team give you the training you needed about
what to do if your family member became restless or agitated?
Single Item Measures
Providing support for religious and spiritual beliefs
[[Page 47196]]
(Support for religious or spiritual beliefs includes
talking, praying, quiet time, or other ways of meeting your
religious or spiritual needs.) While your family member was in
hospice care, how much support for your religious and spiritual
beliefs did you get from the hospice team?
Information continuity
While your family member was in hospice care, how often did
anyone from the hospice team give you confusing or contradictory
information about your family member's condition or care?
Understanding the side effects of pain medication
Side effects of pain medicine include things like
sleepiness. Did any member of the hospice team discuss side effects
of pain medicine with you or your family member?
Global Measures
Overall rating of hospice
Using any number from 0 to 10, where 0 is the worst hospice
care possible and 10 is the best hospice care possible, what number
would you use to rate your family member's hospice care?
Recommend hospice
Would you recommend this hospice to your friends and
family?
------------------------------------------------------------------------
To comply with CMS's quality reporting requirements for the FY 2018
APU, hospices will be required to collect data using the CAHPS[supreg]
Hospice Survey. Hospices would be able to comply by utilizing only CMS-
approved third party vendors that are in compliance with the provisions
at Sec. 418.312(e). Ongoing monthly participation in the survey is
required January 1, 2016 through December 31, 2016 for compliance with
the FY 2018 APU.
Approved CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey vendors will submit data on
the hospice's behalf to the CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey Data Center.
The deadlines for data submission occur quarterly and are shown in
Table 25 below. Deadlines are the second Wednesday of the submission
months, which are August, November, February, and May. Deadlines are
final; no late submissions will be accepted. However, in the event of
extraordinary circumstances beyond the control of the provider, the
provider will be able to request an exemption as previously noted in
the Quality Measures for Hospice Quality Reporting Program and Data
Submission Requirements for Payment Year FY 2016 and Beyond section.
Hospice providers are responsible for making sure that their vendors
are submitting Hospice CAHPS Survey data in a timely manner.
Table 28--CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey Data Submission Dates FY2017 APU,
FY2018 APU, and FY2019 APU
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sample months (that is, month of Quarterly data submission deadlines
death) \1\ \2\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY2017 APU
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dry Run January-March 2015 (Q1).. August 12, 2015.
April-June 2015 (Q2)............. November 11, 2015.\3\
July-September 2015 (Q3)......... February 10, 2016.
October-December 2015 (Q4)....... May 11, 2016.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY2018 APU
------------------------------------------------------------------------
January-March 2016 (Q1).......... August 10, 2016.
April-June 2016 (Q2)............. November 9, 2016.
July-September 2016 (Q3)......... February 8, 2017.
October-December 2016 (Q4)....... May 10, 2017.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY2019 APU
------------------------------------------------------------------------
January-March 2017 (Q1).......... August 9, 2017.
April-June 2017 (Q2)............. November 8, 2017.
July-September 2017 (Q3)......... February, 14, 2018.
October-December 2017 (Q4)....... May 9, 2018.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Data collection for each sample month initiates two months following
the month of patient death (for example, in April for deaths occurring
in January).
\2\ Data submission deadlines are the second Wednesday of the submission
month.
\3\ Correction Notice published 80 FR 24222.
In the FY 2014 Hospice Wage Index and Rate Update final rule, we
stated that we would exempt very small hospices from CAHPS[supreg]
Hospice Survey requirements. We propose to continue that exemption:
Hospices that have fewer than 50 survey-eligible decedents/caregivers
in the period from January 1, 2015 through December 31, 2015 are exempt
from CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey data collection and reporting
requirements for the 2018 APU. To qualify for the survey exemption for
the FY 2018 APU, hospices must submit an exemption request form. This
form will be available on the CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey Web site
https://www.hospicecahpssurvey.org. Hospices are required to submit to
CMS their total unique patient count for the period of January 1, 2015
through December 31, 2015. The
[[Page 47197]]
previously finalized due date for submitting the exemption request form
for the FY 2018 APU is August 10, 2016 (79 FR 50493).
c. Participation Requirements To Meet Quality Reporting Requirements
for the FY 2019 APU
To meet participation requirements for the FY 2019 APU, we proposed
that hospices collect data on an ongoing monthly basis from January
2017 through December 2017 (inclusive). Data submission deadlines for
the 2019 APU will be announced in future rulemaking.
Hospices that have fewer than 50 survey-eligible decedents/
caregivers in the period from January 1, 2016 through December 31, 2016
are exempt from CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey data collection and
reporting requirements for the FY 2019 payment determination. To
qualify, hospices must submit an exemption request form. This form will
be available in first quarter 2017 on the CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey
Web site https://www.hospicecahpssurvey.org.
Hospices are required to submit to CMS their total unique patient
count for the period of January 1, 2016 through December 31, 2016. The
due date for submitting the exemption request form for the FY 2018 APU
is August 10, 2016 (Finalized 79 FR 50493).
d. Annual Payment Update
The Affordable Care Act requires that beginning with FY 2014 and
each subsequent fiscal year, the Secretary shall reduce the market
basket update by 2 percentage points for any hospice that does not
comply with the quality data submission requirements with respect to
that fiscal year, unless covered by specific exemptions. Any such
reduction will not be cumulative and will not be taken into account in
computing the payment amount for subsequent fiscal years. In the FY
2015 Hospice Wage Index, we added the CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey to
the Hospice Quality Reporting Program requirements for the FY 2017
payment determination and determinations for subsequent years.
To meet the HQRP requirements for the FY 2018 payment
determination, hospices would collect survey data on a monthly basis
for the months of January 1, 2016 through December 31, 2016 to qualify
for the full APU.
To meet the HQRP requirements for the FY 2019 payment
determination, hospices would collect survey data on a monthly basis
for the months of January 1, 2017 through December 31, 2017 to qualify
for the full APU.
e. CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey Oversight Activities
We proposed to continue a requirement that vendors and hospice
providers participate in CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey oversight
activities to ensure compliance with Hospice CAHPS[supreg] technical
specifications and survey requirements. The purpose of the oversight
activities is to ensure that hospices and approved survey vendors
follow the CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey technical specifications and
thereby ensure the comparability of CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey data
across hospices.
We proposed that the reconsiderations and appeals process for
hospices failing to meet the Hospice CAHPS[supreg] data collection
requirements would be part of the Reconsideration and Appeals process
already developed for the Hospice Quality Reporting program. We
encourage hospices interested in learning more about the CAHPS[supreg]
Hospice Survey to visit the CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey Web site:
https://www.hospicecahpssurvey.org.
Comment: A commenter encouraged CMS to compare scores on claims
data to Hospice CAHPS[supreg] data to verify whether any of these are
correlated with caregiver perception of quality care.
Response: CMS plans to do a variety of analyses after we have
accumulated at least four quarters of Hospice CAHPS[supreg] data. We
will consider conducting an analysis of the relationship of Hospice
CAHPS[supreg] data to other types of scores.
Comment: A commenter supports the proposal related to the Hospice
CAHPS[supreg] Survey oversight activities.
Response: CMS thanks the commenter for their support.
Comment: One commenter expressed the belief that the hospice
CAHPS[supreg] survey was a mandate that placed an unfunded burden on
hospices. The commenter requested that CMS consider including an
administrative reimbursement mechanism in the final rule to help cover
these costs.
Response: The Hospice CAHPS[supreg] survey follows the model that
we implement for other quality reporting programs where CMS pays for
the federal implementation of the program, the vendor training,
monitoring, direct oversight with site visits, technical assistance to
participating facilities, new facilities with signing up assistance,
technical assistance to vendors, creation and maintenance of the
official Web site with all survey materials, and the hospice facilities
pay for vendor services. We have approved numerous Hospice
CAHPS[supreg] vendors and we strongly recommend that hospices shop
around and check out multiple vendors to find the vendor that best
meets their needs and provides a good value to them.
Comment: A commenter asks that CMS clarify the role of the hospice
facility in meeting performance standards for the Annual Payment
Update. The commenter asked if hospices are responsible for making sure
that their vendors are submitting data in a timely manner.
Response: In the FY 2015 Final Rule (79 FR 50493), CMS stated:
``Hospice providers are responsible for making sure that their vendors
are submitting data in a timely manner. CMS intends that hospice
providers are responsible for making sure that their vendors submit
their Hospice CAHPS[supreg] Survey data in a timely manner and in
compliance with the Hospice CAHPS[supreg] data submission deadlines.
The CAHPS[supreg] Data Warehouse will provide hospices with data
submission reports on the next business day after the submission.
Hospices will receive email from the Warehouse each time a new report
is placed in their warehouse folders letting them know that reports are
available. However, we encourage hospices to work closely with their
vendors to ensure their data is submitted in a timely manner. Please
note that the survey vendors are acting on behalf of the hospice
providers. This is the same policy for other CAHPS[supreg] surveys such
as Hospital CAHPS[supreg] and Home Health CAHPS[supreg].
Comment: A commenter reminded CMS of how challenging it is to
capture patient-reported data from our patient population, which
includes patients who are incapacitated or near death. They also
reminded CMS of the importance of selecting future measures that matter
to patients and reflect whole person needs, including social, cultural,
and emotional dimensions.
Response: Currently CMS is not considering a patient experience of
care survey where hospice patients are the respondents. CMS agrees that
interviewing patients in the hospice setting is extraordinarily
difficult, for both the interviewer and the patients. Some difficulties
in surveying patients in this setting could include identifying those
who are cognitively able to answer the survey questions and the
patient's potential fear of retribution. It would therefore be more
feasible to collect information from patients who are not close to
death. A sample composed only of such patients is likely to reflect
only a portion of the entire hospice experience. The CAHPS[supreg]
Hospice Survey considers the patient and caregiver as a single unit of
care. The
[[Page 47198]]
Survey interviews caregivers of patients who died while under hospice
care. The interviews occur 2-3 months after the patient's death. This
allows the caregiver to reflect upon and report upon the entire hospice
experience.
Final Action: After consideration of comments, CMS is finalizing
our proposal as proposed.
9. HQRP Reconsideration and Appeals Procedures for the FY 2016 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
In the FY 2015 Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate Update final
rule (79 FR 50496), we notified hospice providers on how to seek
reconsideration if they received a noncompliance decision for the FY
2016 payment determination and subsequent years. A hospice may request
reconsideration of a decision by CMS that the hospice has not met the
requirements of the Hospice Quality Reporting Program for a particular
period. Reporting compliance is determined by successfully fulfilling
both the Hospice CAHPS[supreg] Survey requirements and the HIS data
submission requirements.
We clarified that any hospice that wishes to submit a
reconsideration request must do so by submitting an email to CMS
containing all of the requirements listed on the HQRP Web site at
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Hospice-Quality-Reporting/Reconsideration-Requests.html.
Electronic email sent to HQRPReconsiderations@cms.hhs.gov is the only
form of submission that will be accepted. Any reconsideration requests
received through any other channel including U.S. postal service or
phone will not be considered as a valid reconsideration request. We
codified this process at Sec. 418.312. In addition, we codified at
Sec. 418.306 that beginning with FY 2014 and each subsequent FY, the
Secretary shall reduce the market basket update by 2 percentage points
for any hospice that does not comply with the quality data submission
requirements with respect to that FY and solicited comments on all of
the proposals and the associated regulations text at Sec. 418.312 and
in Sec. 418.306 in section VI.
In the past, only hospices found to be non-compliant with the
reporting requirements set forth for a given payment determination
received a notification of this finding along with instructions for
requesting reconsideration in the form of a certified United States
Postal Service (USPS) letter. In an effort to communicate as quickly,
efficiently, and broadly as possible with hospices regarding annual
compliance, we proposed additions to our communications method
regarding annual notification of reporting compliance in the HQRP. In
addition to sending a letter via regular USPS mail, beginning with the
FY 2017 payment determination and for subsequent fiscal years, we
proposed to use the QIES National System for Certification and Survey
Provider Enhanced Reports (CASPER) Reporting as an additional mechanism
to communicate to hospices regarding their compliance with the
reporting requirements for the given reporting cycle. The electronic
APU letters would be accessed using the CASPER Reporting Application.
Requesting access to the CMS systems is performed in two steps. Details
are provided on the QIES Technical Support Office Web site (direct
link), https://www.qtso.com/hospice.html. Once successfully registered,
access the CMS QIES to Success Welcome page https://web.qiesnet.org/qiestosuccess/ and select the ``CASPER Reporting'' link.
Additional information about how to access the letters will be provided
prior to the release of the letters.
We proposed to disseminate communications regarding the
availability of hospice compliance reports in CASPER files through
routine channels to hospices and vendors, including, but not limited to
issuing memos, emails, Medicare Learning Network (MLN) announcements,
and notices on https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Hospice-Quality-Reporting/Reconsideration-Requests.html.
We further proposed to publish a list of hospices who successfully
meet the reporting requirements for the applicable payment
determination on the HQRP Web site https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Hospice-Quality-Reporting.html. We proposed updating the list after reconsideration
requests are processed on an annual basis.
We invited comments on the proposals to add CASPER Reporting as an
additional communication mechanism for the dissemination of compliance
notifications and to publish a list of compliant hospices on the HQRP
Web site. Public comments and our response to comments are summarized
below.
Comment: CMS received three comments regarding our proposal to add
CASPER Reporting as an additional communication mechanism for
dissemination of compliance notifications. All commenters were
supportive of this proposal. One commenter noted that adding CASPER as
a communication mechanism will facilitate timely reconsideration
requests, when appropriate.
Response: CMS appreciates commenters' support of our proposal to
add CASPER reporting as an additional communication mechanism for
disseminating notifications of compliance. CMS agrees that adding
CASPER as an additional reporting mechanism would expedite
communication with providers and facilitate the reconsideration process
for providers who wish to request reconsideration.
Comment: CMS also received three comments on our proposal to
publish a list of compliant hospices on the HQRP Web site. All
commenters were supportive of this proposal; however, one commenter did
request clarification from CMS on what information would be posted on
the list of compliant providers. This commenter was also concerned that
CMS was proposing to update the list after reconsideration requests
were processed on an annual basis.
Response: CMS appreciates commenters' support of our proposal and
commenters' requests for clarification. CMS anticipates that the
proposed published list of compliant hospices on the HQRP Web site
would include limited organizational data, such as the name and
location of the hospice. With respect to the commenters' concern about
updating the list of compliant hospices after the reconsideration
period, CMS feels that finalizing the list of compliant providers for
any given year is most appropriately done after the final determination
of compliance is made. It is CMS's intent for the proposed published
list of compliant hospices to be as complete and accurate as possible,
giving recognition to all providers who were compliant with HQRP
requirements for that year. Finalizing the list after requests for
reconsideration are reviewed and a final determination of compliance is
made allows for a more complete and accurate listing of compliant
providers than developing any such list prior to reconsideration.
Developing the list after the final determination of compliance has
been made allows providers whose initial determination of noncompliance
was reversed to be included in the list of compliant hospices for that
year. Thus, CMS believes that finalizing the list of compliant hospices
annually, after the reconsideration period will provide the
[[Page 47199]]
most accurate listing of hospices compliant with HQRP requirements.
Final Action: After consideration of comments, we are finalizing
our proposal to add CASPER as an additional communication mechanism for
disseminating notifications of noncompliance, as well as our proposal
to publish a list of compliant hospices on the HQRP Web site.
10. Public Display of Quality Measures and Other Hospice Data for the
HQRP
Under section 1814(i)(5)(E) of the Act, the Secretary is required
to establish procedures for making any quality data submitted by
hospices available to the public. The procedures must ensure that a
hospice would have the opportunity to review the data regarding the
hospice's respective program before it is made public.
We recognize that public reporting of quality data is a vital
component of a robust quality reporting program and are fully committed
to developing the necessary systems for public reporting of hospice
quality data. We also recognize that it is essential that the data made
available to the public be meaningful and that comparing performance
between hospices requires that measures be constructed from data
collected in a standardized and uniform manner. Hospices have been
required to use a standardized data collection approach (HIS) since
July 1, 2014. Data from July 1, 2014 onward is currently being used to
establish the scientific soundness of the quality measures prior to the
onset of public reporting of the seven quality measures implemented in
the HQRP. We believe it is critical to establish the reliability and
validity of the quality measures prior to public reporting in order to
demonstrate the ability of the quality measures to distinguish the
quality of services provided. To establish reliability and validity of
the quality measures, at least four quarters of data will be analyzed.
Typically, the first one or two quarters of data reflect the learning
curve of the facilities as they adopt standardized data collection
procedures; these data often are not used to establish reliability and
validity. We began data collection in CY 2014; the data from CY 2014
for Quarter 3 (Q3) will not be used for assessing validity and
reliability of the quality measures. We are analyzing data collected by
hospices during Quarter 4 (Q4) CY 2014 and Q1-Q3 CY 2015. Decisions
about whether to report some or all of the quality measures publicly
will be based on the findings of analysis of the CY 2015 data.
In addition, the Affordable Care Act requires that reporting be
made public on a CMS Web site and that providers have an opportunity to
review their data prior to public reporting. CMS will develop the
infrastructure for public reporting, and provide hospices an
opportunity to review their quality measure data prior to publicly
reporting information about the quality of care provided by ``Medicare-
certified'' hospice agencies throughout the nation. CMS also plans to
make available provider-level feedback reports in the CASPER system.
These provider-level feedback reports or ``quality reports'' will be
separate from public reporting and will be for provider viewing only,
for the purposes of internal provider quality improvement. As is common
in other quality reporting programs, quality reports would contain
feedback on facility-level performance on quality metrics, as well as
benchmarks and thresholds. For the CY 2014 Reporting Cycle, there were
no quality reports available in CASPER; however, CMS anticipates that
provider-level quality reports will begin to be available sometime in
CY 2015. CMS anticipates that providers would use the quality reports
as part of their Quality Assessment and Performance Improvement (QAPI)
efforts.
As part of our ongoing efforts to make healthcare more transparent,
affordable, and accountable, the HQRP is prepared to post hospice data
on a public data set, the Medicare Provider Utilization and Payment
Data: Physician and Other Supplier Public Use File located at https://data.cms.hhs.gov. This site includes information on services and
procedures provided to Medicare beneficiaries by physicians and other
healthcare professionals and serves as a helpful resource to the
healthcare community. A timeline for posting hospice data on a public
data set has not been determined by CMS. Should a timeline become
available prior to the next annual rulemaking cycle, details would be
announced via regular HQRP communication channels, including listening
sessions, memos, email notification, and Web postings.
Furthermore, to meet the requirement for making such data public,
we will develop a CMS Compare Web site for hospice, which will list
hospice providers geographically. Consumers can search for all Medicare
approved hospice providers that serve their city or zip code (which
would include the quality measures and CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey
results) and then find the agencies offering the types of services they
need. Like other CMS Compare Web sites, the Hospice Compare Web site
will feature a quality rating system that gives each hospice a rating
of between one (1) and five (5) stars. Hospices will have
prepublication access to their own agency's quality data, which enables
each agency to know how it is performing before public posting of data
on the Compare Web site. Decisions regarding how the rating system will
determine a providers star rating and methods used for calculations, as
well as a proposed timeline for implementation will be announced via
regular HQRP communication channels, including listening sessions,
memos, email notification, provider association calls, Open Door
Forums, and Web postings. We will announce the timeline for public
reporting of quality measure data in future rulemaking.
Summaries of public comments and our responses to comments
regarding the public display of quality measures and other hospice data
for the HQRP are provided below:
Comment: CMS received several comments that were generally
supportive of public reporting of quality measure data. Commenters
noted that they were in favor of CMS's continued efforts to assess
quality and have transparent reporting of results. Commenters were also
in favor of the availability of provider-level quality reports in
CASPER, noting that the availability of such reports is a way for
hospices to engage in benchmarking to inform their QAPI efforts.
Commenters supported CMS's movement towards quality benchmarking and
public reporting since it supports a hospice's ability to identify and
resolve performance gaps while increasing transparency and
accountability in the health care sector. While no commenters were
unsupportive of public reporting or provider-level feedback reports in
general, several commenters did have suggestions, recommendations, and
concerns about specific aspects of public availability of data.
Response: CMS appreciates commenters' support of public reporting
of quality measure data and the availability of provider-level feedback
reports in CASPER. We address commenters' specific concerns with
respect to public reporting and provider-level quality reports below.
Comment: CMS received a few comments about the timing for public
reporting of quality data. One commenter noted that although continued
measure development for new measures is important, measure development
should not slow efforts to provide timely feedback to hospices on
existing measures and public reporting of any existing measures.
Another
[[Page 47200]]
commenter had concerns about the unintended consequences of releasing
data too hastily. This commenter suggested that public reporting of
hospice performance data occur gradually and carefully to ensure the
data is accurate and presented in a format that is meaningful and
actionable for both patients and physicians. The commenter appreciated
CMS's efforts to evaluate at least four quarters of data to establish
reliability and validity of the quality measures prior to public
reporting. However, the commenter noted their opinion that four
quarters worth of data is an insufficient foundation on which to draw
conclusions about the accuracy of these measures, especially given the
newness of these reporting requirements. Another commenter supported
CMS's plan to analyze four (4) quarters worth of data to establish
reliability and validity of quality measures and ensure accuracy of
data before public reporting begins.
Response: CMS appreciates commenters' concerns about the timeline
for public reporting of quality data. CMS agrees with the one
commenter's sentiment that, while important, development of quality
measures for future use in the HQRP should not delay public reporting
or provider-level feedback reports. CMS is committed to ensuring the
availability of public and provider-level data as soon as feasible,
while ensuring that data is analyzed for scientific soundness and
appropriateness for public reporting. CMS understands the unintended
consequences of making data available to the public before
comprehensive analyses have been conducted. CMS assures commenters that
establishing the scientific soundness of data is of the utmost
importance. In response to the commenter's concern about whether four
(4) quarters of data is sufficient to establish reliability and
validity of quality measures, we agree with the commenter that having
sufficient evidence to support the reliability and validity of the
measures is important prior to public reporting. We also agree that the
data collected during the initial phase of the required reporting may
reflect hospices' learning curve. To take this into account, as stated
in the proposed rule, the reliability and validity testing will not use
the data collected during the first reporting quarter (Q3, 2014). As
stated in the proposed rule, CMS will use the four subsequent quarters
of data (Q4 2014 and Q1-Q3 2015) for testing. Only measures that show
sufficient reliability and validity will be identified as appropriate
for public reporting. Furthermore, reliability and validity testing
will be ongoing for all measures implemented in the HQRP as more
quarters of data become available.
Comment: Another commenter recommended that CMS delay public
reporting until results from measures derived from the HIS and the
CAHPS[supreg] hospice survey is available. This commenter felt that
although the concept of hospice has fairly wide public recognition,
knowledge about hospice practice is minimal among the public. The
commenter noted that the public may not be familiar with the processes
behind the measures derived from HIS data, nor might the public be able
to understand the relationship of those processes to quality of care.
Additionally, the commenter noted that the HIS measures are limited in
scope and, presented alone, HIS data might fall short of presenting a
comprehensive picture of hospice services. The commenter recommended
that CMS delay public posting of data until analysis of HIS and
CAHPS[supreg] data has been completed.
Response: CMS appreciates the commenter's feedback on public
reporting of HIS and CAHPS[supreg] data. CMS plans to use an approach
for public reporting of these two data sources that mirrors approaches
used in public reporting of quality data in other quality reporting
programs, such as what is currently publicly displayed on Nursing Home
Compare, Physician Compare, the Medicare Advantage Plan Finder,
Dialysis Facility Compare, and Home Health Compare.
Comment: Two commenters suggested that CMS take steps to understand
and develop the form, manner, and context in which data would be
presented to the public. One commenter urged CMS that prior to sharing
these data with the public, CMS should take time to carefully analyze
quality data to better understand what types, and formats of data are
most valuable to patients and providers. Another commenter requested
that CMS develop educational material that explains hospice practice to
aid in interpretation of publicly reported data.
Response: CMS agrees that any publicly reported data should be
presented in a manner that is meaningful and understandable by the
general public. CMS will take steps to ensure that any publicly
reported data is displayed in an appropriate and meaningful manner. CMS
will again mirror approaches used in other quality reporting programs
and will solicit input from key stakeholders and technical experts in
the development of the presentation of publicly available data, which
includes a transparent process that will contain multiple opportunities
for stakeholder input.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification from CMS about the
process for providers to review quality measure data prior to public
reporting, specifically, what the purpose of this process was.
Response: As stated in the proposed rule, CMS will develop the
infrastructure for public reporting and method for hospices to preview
their quality data prior to publicly reporting any such information.
Exact details and reports will be forthcoming in future rules.
Comment: CMS received several comments regarding the availability
of provider-level quality reports in CASPER. As noted above, commenters
were supportive of the availability of these reports, though a few
commenters did have suggestions for CMS regarding quality reports. CMS
received three comments about the timing of quality reports in CASPER.
One commenter stated that CMS did not plan to make quality reports
available in CASPER until 2020 or later. Another commenter requested
that CMS provide non-public quarterly performance reports to hospices
that include benchmarking data for at least one year before publishing
the results publicly on a compare Web site. The commenter stated that
this one year period would give hospices the chance to make
improvements in their performance before data is publicly reported.
Another commenter urged CMS to provide feedback reports as frequently
as possible and on a timely basis so that hospices have sufficient
opportunity to learn from the data and make adjustments to practice
before incurring penalties. This commenter also encouraged CMS to
ensure that the data in these reports is presented in a user-friendly
and actionable format.
Response: CMS thanks commenters for their feedback on the
availability of provider-level quality reports in CASPER. First, we
would like to clarify our timeline for the availability of quality
reports. CMS agrees that providing feedback to hospice providers as
soon as is feasible is a critical step in the process of quality
improvement, since providers need data about their performance to
inform QAPI and other performance improvement efforts. As stated in the
proposed rule, CMS anticipates that quality reports will be available
sometime in calendar year 2015; thus, we respectfully correct the
commenter's misunderstanding that
[[Page 47201]]
provider-level quality reports would not be available until 2020. Given
our anticipated timeline for the release of provider-level quality
reports in 2015 and our timeline for public reporting, which we have
stated in prior rules may occur in 2017, hospice providers would have
all of 2016 to review their quality reports in CASPER and continue to
develop performance improvement projects to improve quality measure
scores prior to public reporting. We would also like to clarify that
the intent of the provider-level feedback reports in CASPER would
provide hospices with the ``benchmarking'' data mentioned by one
commenter since, as stated in the proposed rule, the purpose of quality
reports is to provide feedback on facility-level performance on quality
metrics, including benchmarks and thresholds. CMS appreciates the
commenter's request to make quality reports available quarterly; CMS
will take this suggested quarterly timeframe under consideration as we
consider how often quality data should be ``refreshed'' in CASPER
quality reports. Finally, CMS agrees with the commenter that quality
reports should provide user-friendly, actionable information. CMS will
ensure that provider-level quality reports are meaningful and provide
actionable information for providers to improve their care.
Comment: Though commenters were generally supportive of public
reporting of quality data, several commenters expressed concerns over
the methodology for the 5-star rating that CMS proposes to use as part
of the Hospice Compare Web site. Two commenters were concerned about
the development of a 5-star methodology where the majority of providers
would be placed in the ``average'' star range. These commenters were
concerned about the consumer perception of an ``average'' rating and
encouraged CMS to develop a 5-star rating system that allows all
hospices to aim for and achieve a 5-star rating. Commenters also
encouraged CMS to involve providers and stakeholders in the development
of the methodology for the 5-star rating system. Commenters also
encouraged CMS to ensure any 5-star methodology is based on accurate
data and evidence-based methodologies, and to allow ample opportunity
for feedback on any proposed methodology. Commenters encouraged CMS to
carefully consider the structure and presentation of a the 5-star
rating system, including a consumer-friendly explanation of quality
measures so that the public can easily interpret the data and use it
for meaningful health care decision-making. Finally, one commenter
cautioned CMS to ensure the accuracy of information, including basic
demographic data such as addresses and practice affiliations, in any
Compare databases prior to their launch.
Response: CMS appreciates commenters' input on the development of a
Hospice Compare Web site and 5-star rating system for hospices. CMS
would like to assure commenters that it is of paramount concern to
develop a 5-star methodology that is tested and evidence-based, and can
meaningfully distinguish between quality of care offered by providers.
CMS agrees that presenting any 5-star rating in a manner that is
meaningful and consumer-friendly is important, and CMS will ensure that
publicly available data is displayed in a manner that is useful to the
public. As with the development of 5-star methodology in other quality
reporting programs, CMS will allow continued opportunities for the
provider community and other stakeholders to comment on and provide
input to the proposed rating system. In addition to regular HQRP
communication channels, CMS will solicit input from the public
regarding 5-star methodology through special listening sessions,
invitation to submit comments via a Help Desk mailbox, Open Door
Forums, and other opportunities.
F. Clarification Regarding Diagnosis Reporting on Hospice Claims
To ensure hospices are aware of the issues and requirements when
providing compassionate end-of-life care to Medicare beneficiaries, we
provided extensive background regarding program vulnerabilities;
hospice eligibility requirements; and the hospice assessment of
conditions and comorbidities required by regulation in the proposed
rule (80 FR 25877--25880). The International Classification of
Diseases, Tenth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-10-CM) Coding
Guidelines state the following regarding the selection of the principal
diagnosis: The principal diagnosis is defined in the Uniform Hospital
Discharge Data Set (UHDDS) as that condition established after study to
be chiefly responsible for occasioning the admission of the patient to
the hospital for care. In the case of selection of a principal
diagnosis for hospice care, this would mean the diagnosis most
contributory to the terminal prognosis of the individual. In the
instance where two or more diagnoses equally meet the criteria for
principal diagnosis, ICD-10-CM coding guidelines do not provide
sequencing direction, and thus, any one of the diagnoses may be
sequenced first, meaning to report all of those diagnoses meeting the
criteria as a principal diagnosis. Per ICD-10-CM Coding Guidelines, for
diagnosis reporting purposes, the definition for ``other diagnoses'' is
interpreted as additional conditions that affect patient care in terms
of requiring:
clinical evaluation; or
therapeutic treatment; or
diagnostic procedures; or
extended length of hospital stay; or
increased nursing care and/or monitoring.
The UHDDS item #11-b defines Other Diagnoses as all conditions that
coexist at the time of admission, that develop subsequently, or that
affect the treatment received and/or the length of stay. ICD-10-CM
coding guidelines are clear that all diagnoses affecting the management
and treatment of the individual within the healthcare setting are
requirement to be reported. This has been longstanding existing policy.
Adherence to coding guidelines when assigning ICD-9-CM diagnosis and
procedure codes through September 30, 2015 or ICD-10-CM diagnosis and
procedure codes on and after October 1, 2015 is required under HHS
regulations at 45 CFR 162.1002(b) and (c), respectively, as well as our
regulations at 45 CFR 162.1002.
However, though established coding guidelines are required, it does
not appear that all hospices are coding per coding guidelines on
hospice claims. In 2010, over 77 percent of hospice claims reported
only one diagnosis. Previous rules have discussed requirements for
hospice diagnosis reporting on claims and the importance of complete
and accurate coding. Preliminary analysis of FY 2014 claims data
demonstrates that hospice diagnosis coding is improving; however,
challenges remain. Analysis of FY 2014 claims data indicates that 49
percent of hospice claims listed only one diagnosis.\52\ We conducted
additional analysis on instances where only one diagnosis was reported
on the FY 2014 hospice claim and found that 50 percent of these
beneficiaries had, on average, eight or more chronic conditions and 75
percent had, on average, five or more chronic conditions.\53\ These
chronic, comorbid conditions include: hypertension, anemia, congestive
heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, ischemic heart
disease, depression,
[[Page 47202]]
diabetes and atrial fibrillation, to name a few.
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\52\ Preliminary FY 2014 hospice claims data from the Chronic
Conditions Data Warehouse (CCW), accessed on January 13, 2015.
\53\ Preliminary FY 2014 hospice claims data from the Chronic
Conditions Data Warehouse (CCW), accessed on January 21, 2015.
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In the Medicare Program; Hospice Wage Index for Fiscal Year 2013
Notice (77 FR 44248) we stated that hospices should report, on hospice
claims, all coexisting or additional diagnoses that are related to the
terminal illness; they should not report coexisting or additional
diagnoses that are unrelated to the terminal illness, even though
coding guidelines required the reporting of all diagnoses that affect
patient assessment and planning. However, as discussed earlier in this
section, there is widely varying interpretation as to what factors
influence the terminal prognosis of the individual (that is, what
conditions render the individual terminally ill and which conditions
are related). Furthermore, based on the numerous comments received in
previous rulemaking, and anecdotal reports from hospices, hospice
beneficiaries, and non-hospice providers discussed above, we are
concerned that hospices may not be conducting a comprehensive
assessment nor updating the plan of care as articulated by the CoPs to
recognize the conditions that affect an individual's terminal
prognosis.
Therefore, we are clarifying that hospices will report all
diagnoses identified in the initial and comprehensive assessments on
hospice claims, whether related or unrelated to the terminal prognosis
of the individual effective October 1, 2015. This is in keeping with
the requirements of determining whether an individual is terminally
ill. This will also include the reporting of any mental health
disorders and conditions that would affect the plan of care as hospices
are to assess and provide care for identified psychosocial and
emotional needs, as well as, for the physical and spiritual needs. Our
regulations at Sec. 418.25(b) state, ``in reaching a decision to
certify that the patient is terminally ill, the hospice medical
director must consider at least the following information:
Diagnosis of the terminal condition of the patient.
Other health conditions, whether related or unrelated to
the terminal condition.
Current clinically relevant information supporting all
diagnoses.
ICD-10-CM Coding Guidelines state that diagnoses should be reported
that develop subsequently, coexist, or affect the treatment of the
individual. Furthermore, having these diagnoses reported on claims
falls under the authority of the Affordable Care Act for the collection
of data to inform hospice payment reform. Section 3132 a(1)(C) of the
Affordable Care Act states that the Secretary may collect the
additional data and information on cost reports, claims, or other
mechanisms as the Secretary determines to be appropriate.
We did not propose any new regulations nor solicit comments with
this coding clarification as these clarifications are based on existing
ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM coding guidelines, but received several
comments.
Most commenters asked whether hospices would have to identify
diagnoses as related or unrelated on hospice claims and if there would
be a modifier created for that identification. Some commenters stated
it would be burdensome to identify and report all diagnoses, while
others expressed concern that this would mean that hospices would be
financially responsible for all reported diagnoses. Some commenters
asked what the purpose is for collecting this information and felt that
there is no value added by collecting all diagnoses. Several commenters
stated that CMS should provide further clarification as to the scope of
diagnoses hospices are expected to cover and more clear criteria as to
what are unrelated conditions. One industry commenter felt that CMS
should define ``terminal illness'' and ``related conditions'' to
provide more clear criteria for the expectation as to what hospices are
required to cover. One commenter stated the CMS has changed its
interpretation of the hospice regulations and that this is a
requirement without a purpose. Several commenters felt that the phrase
``virtually all'' is a very ambiguous standard and CMS should provide
greater clarity as to its meaning. And, as in previous years' rules,
some commenters provided specific clinical scenarios as to why a
condition was related or unrelated.
We appreciate the varying interpretations of what hospices' view as
holistic and comprehensive end of life care. However, as articulated in
section II of this rule, since the implementation of the Medicare
hospice benefit in 1983, we have stated that it is our general view
that hospices are required to provide virtually all the care that is
needed by terminally ill individuals and we would expect to see little
being provided outside of the benefit. Admission to hospice must be
based on the recommendation of the medical director in consultation
with, or with input from, the patient's attending physician (if any).
Therefore, we expect that the hospice medical director follow the
requirements articulated at 42 CFR 418.25. In a separate section at 42
CFR 418.54(c), hospice's are expected to uphold the responsibilities
articulated in regulations regarding the requirements of the initial
and comprehensive assessments which becomes part of the patient's
hospice medical record and should not require an extensive historical
review of previous healthcare records. Modifiers for the hospice claim
form are not necessary at this time to identify related or unrelated
conditions.
The American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA)
provides procedure instructions for diagnosis reporting using coding
guidance for coding certification.\54\ These coding procedures are used
for determining which diagnoses to report for those in the inpatient
setting. Hospices follow coding guidelines for the inpatient setting.
The guidelines state to sequence those diagnoses that are listed in the
medical record with the principal diagnosis listed first. Additionally,
these guidelines state to code other diagnoses that coexist at the time
of admission, that develop subsequently, or that affect the treatment
received and/or the length of stay. These represent additional
conditions that affect patient care in terms of requiring clinical
evaluation, therapeutic treatment, diagnostic procedures, extended
length of hospital stay, or increased nursing care and/or monitoring.
These additional diagnoses include those that require active
intervention during hospitalization and those that require active
management of chronic disease during hospitalization, which is defined
as a patient who is continued on chronic management at time of
hospitalization. These coding guidelines instruct to code diagnoses of
chronic systemic or generalized conditions that are not under active
management when a physician documents them in the record and that may
have a bearing on the management of the patient. Specifically, all
diagnoses affecting the plan of care for the individual, which is in
line with the hospice coverage requirements which state that hospices
are to provide services for the palliation and management of the
terminal illness and related conditions, are to be reported on the
hospice claim.
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\54\ https://www.ahima.org/~/media/AHIMA/Files/Certification/
CCS%20Coding%20Instructions.ashx?la=en.
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The purpose of collecting this data, which is required in every
other healthcare setting as per coding guidelines, is to have adequate
data on hospice patient characteristics. This data will help to inform
thoughtful,
[[Page 47203]]
appropriate, and clinically relevant policy for future rulemaking. In
order to consider any future refinements, such as a case mix system
which utilizes diagnosis information as a few commenters suggested, it
is imperative that detailed patient characteristics are available to
determine whether a case mix payment system could be achieved. One
industry association felt that we should consider a risk-adjusted
payment system based on patient characteristics including
comorbidities, which would also require more detailed information
regarding the patient.
IV. Collection of Information Requirements
This document does not impose additional information collection
requirements, that is, reporting, recordkeeping or third-party
disclosure requirements. All information collection discussed in this
final rule have been approved by the Office of Management and Budget.
Consequently, there is no need for review by the Office of Management
and Budget under the authority of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
V. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
This final rule meets the requirements of our regulations at Sec.
418.306(c), which requires annual issuance, in the Federal Register, of
the hospice wage index based on the most current available CMS hospital
wage data, including any changes to the definitions of CBSAs, or
previously used MSAs. This final rule will also update payment rates
for each of the categories of hospice care described in Sec.
418.302(b) for FY 2016 as required under section 1814(i)(1)(C)(ii)(VII)
of the Act. The payment rate updates are subject to changes in economy-
wide productivity as specified in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the
Act. In addition, the payment rate updates may be reduced by an
additional 0.3 percentage point (although for FY 2014 to FY 2019, the
potential 0.3 percentage point reduction is subject to suspension under
conditions specified in section 1814(i)(1)(C)(v) of the Act). In 2010,
the Congress amended section 1814(i)(6) of the Act with section 3132(a)
of the Affordable Care Act. The amendment authorized the Secretary to
collect additional data and information determined appropriate to
revise payments for hospice care and for other purposes. The data
collected may be used to revise the methodology for determining the
payment rates for routine home care and other services included in
hospice care, no earlier than October 1, 2013. In accordance with
section 1814(i)(6)(D) of the Act, this final rule will provide an
update on hospice payment reform research and analyses and implement an
SIA payment in accordance with the requirement to revise the
methodology for determining hospice payments in a budget-neutral
manner. Finally, section 3004 of the Affordable Care Act amended the
Act to authorize a quality reporting program for hospices and this rule
discusses changes in the requirements for the hospice quality reporting
program in accordance with section 1814(i)(5) of the Act.
B. Introduction
We have examined the impacts of this final rule as required by
Executive Order 12866 on Regulatory Planning and Review (September 30,
1993), Executive Order 13563 on Improving Regulation and Regulatory
Review (January 18, 2011), the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
(September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96-354), section 1102(b) of the Act,
section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA, March
22, 1995; Pub. L. 104-4), and the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C.
804(2)).
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). Executive
Order 13563 emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and
benefits, of reducing costs, of harmonizing rules, and of promoting
flexibility. A regulatory impact analysis (RIA) must be prepared for
major rules with economically significant effects ($100 million or more
in any 1 year). This final rule has been designated as economically
significant under section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866 and thus a
major rule under the Congressional Review Act. Accordingly, we have
prepared a regulatory impact analysis (RIA) that, to the best of our
ability, presents the costs and benefits of the rulemaking. This final
rule was also reviewed by OMB.
C. Overall Impact
The overall impact of this final rule is an estimated net increase
in Federal Medicare payments to hospices of $160 million, or 1.1
percent, for FY 2016. The $160 million increase in estimated payments
for FY 2016 reflects the distributional effects of the 1.6 percent FY
2016 hospice payment update percentage ($250 million increase), the use
of updated wage index data and the phase-out of the wage index budget
neutrality adjustment factor (-0.7 percent/$120 million decrease) and
the implementation of the new OMB CBSA delineations for the FY 2016
hospice wage index with a 1-year transition (0.2 percent/$30 million
increase). The elimination of the wage index budget neutrality
adjustment factor (BNAF) was part of a 7-year phase-out that was
finalized in the FY 2010 Hospice Wage Index final rule (74 FR 39384),
and is not a policy change. The RHC rates and the SIA payment, outlined
in section III.B, will be implemented in a budget neutral manner in the
first year of implementation, as required per section 1814(i)(6)(D)(ii)
of the Act. In section III.B, we are also finalizing our proposal make
the SIA payments budget neutral annually. The RHC rate budget
neutrality factors and the SBNF used to reduce the overall RHC rate are
outlined in section III.C.3. Therefore, the RHC rates and the SIA
payment will not result in an overall payment impact for the Medicare
program or hospices.
D. Detailed Economic Analysis
Table H1, Column 3 shows the combined effects of the use of updated
wage data (the FY 2015 pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage index)
and the phase-out of the BNAF (for a total BNAF reduction of 100
percent), resulting in an estimated decrease in FY 2016 payments of 0.7
percent ($-120 million). Column 4 of Table 29, shows the effects of the
50/50 blend of the FY 2016 hospice wage index values (based on the use
of FY 2015 pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage index data) under
the old and the new CBSA delineations, resulting in an estimated
increase in FY 2016 payments of 0.2 percent ($30 million). Column 5
displays the estimated effects of the RHC rates, resulting in no
overall change in FY 2016 payments for hospices as this will be
implemented in a budget neutral manner. Column 6 shows the estimated
effects of the SIA payment, resulting in no change in FY 2016 payments
for hospices as this will be implemented in a budget neutral manner
through a reduction to the overall RHC rate for FY 2016. Column 7 shows
the effects of the FY 2016 hospice payment update percentage. The 1.6
percent hospice payment update percentage is based on a 2.4 percent
inpatient hospital market basket update for FY 2016 reduced by a 0.5
percentage point productivity adjustment and by 0.3 percentage point
[[Page 47204]]
as mandated by the Affordable Care Act. The estimated effects of the
1.6 percent hospice payment update percentage will result in an
increase in payments to hospices of approximately $250 million. Taking
into account the 1.6 percent hospice payment update percentage ($250
million increase), the use of updated wage data and the phase-out of
the BNAF (-$120 million), and the adoption of the new OMB CBSA
delineations with a 1-year transition for the FY 2016 hospice wage
index ($30 million), Column 8 shows that hospice payments are estimated
to increase by $160 million ($250 million-$120 million + $30 million =
$160 million), or 1.1 percent, in FY 2016. For the purposes of our
impact analysis, we use the utilization observed in the most complete
hospice claims data available at the time of rulemaking (FY 2014
hospice claims submitted as of March 31, 2015). Presenting these data
gives the hospice industry a more complete picture of the effects on
their total revenue based on the use of updated hospital wage index
data and the BNAF phase-out, the adoption of the new OMB CBSA
delineations with a 1-year transition, the SIA payment, and the FY 2016
hospice payment update percentage as discussed in this final rule.
Certain events may limit the scope or accuracy of our impact analysis,
because such an analysis is susceptible to forecasting errors due to
other changes in the forecasted impact time period. The nature of the
Medicare program is such that the changes may interact, and the
complexity of the interaction of these changes could make it difficult
to predict accurately the full scope of the impact upon hospices. As
illustrated in Table 29, the combined effects of all of the changes
vary by specific types of providers and by location. We note that some
individual hospices within the same group may experience different
impacts on payments than others due to: the distributional impact of
the FY 2016 wage index and phase-out of the BNAF; the extent to which
hospices had varying volume in the number of RHC days in days 1-60 of
the hospice episode versus days 61 and beyond; the number, length and
type (discipline) of visits provided to patients during the last 7 days
of life; and the degree of Medicare utilization.
Table 29--Estimated Hospice Impacts by Facility Type and Area of the Country, FY 2016
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
50/50 Blend of
Updated FY FY 2016 wage Routine home FY 2016
2016 wage index values care rates FY 2016 SIA Hospice Total FY 2016
Providers index data and under old and (days 1 thru payment (% payment policies (%
phase-out of new CBSA 60 and days change) update change)
BNAF (% delineations 61+) percentage (%
change) (% change) change)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All Hospices............................ 4,067 -0.7 0.2 0.0 0.0 1.6 1.1
Urban Hospices.......................... 3,060 -0.7 0.3 0.0 0.0 1.6 1.2
Rural Hospices.......................... 1,007 -0.3 -0.2 0.3 0.0 1.6 1.4
Urban Hospices--New England............. 140 0.0 0.1 0.9 0.0 1.6 2.6
Urban Hospices--Middle Atlantic......... 253 -0.7 -0.2 0.6 0.0 1.6 1.3
Urban Hospices--South Atlantic.......... 416 -1.1 0.3 -0.5 -0.1 1.6 0.2
Urban Hospices--East North Central...... 392 -0.8 0.7 -0.2 0.1 1.6 1.4
Urban Hospices--East South Central...... 166 -0.7 0.5 -0.2 0.0 1.6 1.2
Urban Hospices--West North Central...... 222 -0.7 0.6 0.6 0.2 1.6 2.3
Urban Hospices--West South Central...... 602 -1.1 0.6 -0.9 -0.1 1.6 0.1
Urban Hospices--Mountain................ 305 -0.6 0.2 -0.2 -0.1 1.6 0.9
Urban Hospices--Pacific................. 527 -0.1 0.0 0.8 0.0 1.6 2.3
Urban Hospices--Outlying................ 37 0.0 0.3 -0.7 -0.3 1.6 0.9
Rural Hospices--New England............. 24 -0.3 0.0 2.4 0.2 1.6 3.9
Rural Hospices--Middle Atlantic......... 42 0.3 -0.1 1.3 0.4 1.6 3.5
Rural Hospices--South Atlantic.......... 142 -0.6 0.0 -0.1 -0.1 1.6 0.8
Rural Hospices--East North Central...... 137 -0.7 -0.4 0.6 0.2 1.6 1.3
Rural Hospices--East South Central...... 137 -0.1 -0.1 -0.6 -0.2 1.6 0.6
Rural Hospices--West North Central...... 186 -0.3 -0.1 1.7 0.2 1.6 3.1
Rural Hospices--West South Central...... 185 -0.1 -0.1 -0.6 -0.1 1.6 0.7
Rural Hospices--Mountain................ 104 -1.4 -0.6 0.3 0.0 1.6 -0.1
Rural Hospices--Pacific................. 47 2.1 0.1 2.5 0.1 1.6 6.4
[[Page 47205]]
Rural Hospices--Outlying................ 3 -0.8 -0.2 1.4 -0.2 1.6 1.8
0-3,499 RHC Days (Small)................ 886 -0.5 0.1 2.6 0.0 1.6 3.8
3,500-19,999 RHC Days (Medium).......... 1,923 -0.6 0.2 0.5 0.0 1.6 1.7
20,000+ RHC Days (Large)................ 1,258 -0.7 0.3 -0.1 0.0 1.6 1.1
Non-Profit Ownership.................... 1,073 -0.6 0.2 1.0 0.1 1.6 2.3
For Profit Ownership.................... 2,449 -0.7 0.3 -0.7 -0.1 1.6 0.4
Govt/Other Ownership.................... 545 -0.6 0.2 0.5 0.1 1.6 1.8
Freestanding Facility Type.............. 3,070 -0.7 0.2 -0.2 0.0 1.6 0.9
HHA/Facility-Based Facility Type........ 997 -0.4 0.2 1.4 0.1 1.6 2.9
Rate of RHC NF/SNF Days is in Lowest 1,016 -0.5 0.1 0.5 -0.1 1.6 1.6
Quartile (Less than or equal to 3.1)...
Rate of RHC NF/SNF Days is in 2nd 1,017 -0.6 0.1 0.3 0.0 1.6 1.4
Quartile (Greater than 3.1 and Less
than or equal to 16.7).................
Rate of RHC NF/SNF Days is in 3rd 1,017 -0.8 0.3 0.0 0.0 1.6 1.1
Quartile (Greater than 16.7 and less
than or equal to 35.5).................
Rate of RHC NF/SNF Days is in Highest 1,017 -0.7 0.4 -0.4 0.0 1.6 0.9
Quartile (Greater than 35.5)...........
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: FY 2014 hospice claims data from the Standard Analytic Files for CY 2013 (as of June 30, 2014) and CY 2014 (as of March 31, 2015).
Note(s): The 1.6 percent hospice payment update percentage for FY 2016 is based on an estimated 2.4 percent inpatient hospital market basket update,
reduced by a 0.5 percentage point productivity adjustment and by 0.3 percentage point. Starting with FY 2013 (and in subsequent fiscal years), the
market basket percentage update under the hospice payment system as described in section 1814(i)(1)(C)(ii)(VII) or section 1814(i)(1)(C)(iii) of the
Act will be annually reduced by changes in economy-wide productivity as set out at section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act. In FY 2013 through FY
2019, the market basket percentage update under the hospice payment system will be reduced by an additional 0.3 percentage point (although for FY 2014
to FY 2019, the potential 0.3 percentage point reduction is subject to suspension under conditions set out under section 1814(i)(1)(C)(v) of the Act).
Region Key:
New England = Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont; Middle Atlantic = Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York; South
Atlantic = Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia; East North Central =
Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin; East South Central = Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi, Tennessee; West North Central = Iowa, Kansas,
Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota; West South Central = Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Texas; Mountain = Arizona, Colorado,
Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming; Pacific = Alaska, California, Hawaii, Oregon, Washington; Outlying = Guam, Puerto Rico, Virgin
Islands
1E. Accounting Statement and Table
As required by OMB Circular A-4 (available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars/a004/a-4.pdf), in Table 30 below, we
have prepared an accounting statement showing the classification of the
expenditures associated with this final rule. Table H2 provides our
best estimate of the increase in Medicare payments under the hospice
benefit as a result of the changes presented in this final rule for
4,067 hospices in our impact analysis file constructed using FY 2014
claims as of March 31, 2015.
[[Page 47206]]
Table 30--Accounting Statement: Classification of Estimated Transfers,
From FY 2015 to FY 2016
[In $millions]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category Transfers
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2015 Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate Update
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annualized Monetized Transfers......... $160.
From Whom to Whom?..................... Federal Government to Hospices.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
F. Conclusion
In conclusion, the overall effect of this final rule is an
estimated $160 million increase in Medicare payments to hospices. The
$160 million increase in estimated payments for FY 2016 reflects the
distributional effects of the 1.6 percent FY 2016 hospice payment
update percentage ($250 million increase), the use of updated wage
index data and the phase-out of the wage index budget neutrality
adjustment factor (-0.7 percent/$120 million decrease) and the
implementation of the new OMB CBSA delineations for FY 2016 hospice
wage index with a 1-year transition (0.2 percent/$30 million increase).
The SIA payment does not result in aggregate changes to estimate
hospice payments for FY 2016 as this will be implemented in a budget
neutral manner through an overall reduction to the RHC payment rate for
all hospices.
2. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
The RFA requires agencies to analyze options for regulatory relief
of small businesses if a rule has a significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The great majority of hospitals and most
other health care providers and suppliers are small entities by meeting
the Small Business Administration (SBA) definition of a small business
(in the service sector, having revenues of less than $7.5 million to
$38.5 million in any 1 year), or being nonprofit organizations. For
purposes of the RFA, we consider all hospices as small entities as that
term is used in the RFA. HHS's practice in interpreting the RFA is to
consider effects economically ``significant'' only if they reach a
threshold of 3 to 5 percent or more of total revenue or total costs. As
noted above, the combined effect of the updated wage data and the BNAF
phase-out (-0.7 percent decrease or -$120 million) the implementation
of the new OMB CBSA delineations for FY 2016 hospice wage index with a
1-year transition (0.2 percent increase or $30 million), the SIA
payment (no estimated aggregate impact on payments), and the FY 2016
hospice payment update percentage (1.6 percent increase or $250
million) results in an overall increase in estimated hospice payments
of 1.1 percent, or $160 million, for FY 2016. Therefore, the Secretary
has determined that this final rule will not create a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act requires us to prepare a
regulatory impact analysis if a rule may have a significant impact on
the operations of a substantial number of small rural hospitals. This
analysis must conform to the provisions of section 604 of the RFA. For
purposes of section 1102(b) of the Act, we define a small rural
hospital as a hospital that is located outside of a metropolitan
statistical area and has fewer than 100 beds. This final rule only
affects hospices. Therefore, the Secretary has determined that this
final rule will not have a significant impact on the operations of a
substantial number of small rural hospitals.
3. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act Analysis
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 also
requires that agencies assess anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule whose mandates require spending in any 1 year of $100
million in 1995 dollars, updated annually for inflation. In 2015, that
threshold is approximately $144 million. This final rule is not
anticipated to have an effect on State, local, or tribal governments,
in the aggregate, or on the private sector of $144 million or more.
VI. Federalism Analysis and Regulations Text
Executive Order 13132, Federalism (August 4, 1999) requires an
agency to provide federalism summary impact statement when it
promulgates a proposed rule (and subsequent final rule) that has
federalism implications and which imposes substantial direct
requirement costs on State and local governments which are not required
by statute. We have reviewed this final rule under these criteria of
Executive Order 13132, and have determined that it will not impose
substantial direct costs on State or local governments.
List of Subjects
42 CFR Part 418
Health facilities, Hospice care, Medicare, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services amends 42 CFR chapter IV as set forth below:
PART 418--HOSPICE CARE
0
1. The authority citation for part 418 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the Social Security Act (42
U.S.C. 1302 and 1395hh)
Subpart G--Payment for Hospice Care
0
2. Section 418.302 is amended by--
0
a. Adding paragraph (b)(1)(i) and (ii).
0
b. Amending paragraphs (d)(1), (d)(2), (e) introductory text, (f)(2)
and (f)(5)(ii) by removing the word ``intermediary'' and adding in its
place the words ``Medicare Administrative Contractor''.
0
c. Revising paragraph (e)(1).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 418.302 Payment procedures for hospice care.
* * * * *
(b)
(1) * * *
(i) Service intensity add-on. Routine home care days that occur
during the last 7 days of a hospice election ending with a patient
discharged due to death are eligible for a service intensity add-on
payment.
(ii) The service intensity add-on payment shall be equal to the
continuous home care hourly payment rate, as described in paragraph
(e)(4) of this section, multiplied by the amount of direct patient care
actually provided by a RN and/or social worker, up to 4 hours total per
day.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(1) Payment is made to the hospice for each day during which the
beneficiary is eligible and under the care of the hospice, regardless
of the amount of services furnished on any given day
[[Page 47207]]
(except as set out in paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section).
* * * * *
0
3. Section 418.306 is amended by revising the section heading and
paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) to read as follows.
Sec. 418.306 Annual update of the payment rates and adjustment for
area wage differences.
(a) Applicability. CMS establishes payment rates for each of the
categories of hospice care described in Sec. 418.302(b). The rates are
established using the methodology described in section 1814(i)(1)(C) of
the Act and in accordance with section 1814(i)(6)(D) of the Act.
(b) Annual update of the payment rates. The payment rates for
routine home care and other services included in hospice care are the
payment rates in effect under this paragraph during the previous fiscal
year increased by the hospice payment update percentage increase (as
defined in sections1814(i)(1)(C) of the Act), applicable to discharges
occurring in the fiscal year.
(1) For fiscal year 2014 and subsequent fiscal years, in accordance
with section 1814(i)(5)(A)(i) of the Act, in the case of a Medicare-
certified hospice that submits hospice quality data, as specified by
the Secretary, the payment rates are equal to the rates for the
previous fiscal year increased by the applicable hospice payment update
percentage increase.
(2) For fiscal year 2014 and subsequent fiscal years, in accordance
with section 1814(i)(5)(A)(i) of the Act, in the case of a Medicare-
certified hospice that does not submit hospice quality data, as
specified by the Secretary, the payment rates are equal to the rates
for the previous fiscal year increased by the applicable hospice
payment update percentage increase, minus 2 percentage points. Any
reduction of the percentage change will apply only to the fiscal year
involved and will not be taken into account in computing the payment
amounts for a subsequent fiscal year.
(c) Adjustment for wage differences. Each hospice's labor market is
determined based on definitions of Metropolitan Statistical Areas
(MSAs) issued by OMB. CMS will issue annually, in the Federal Register,
a hospice wage index based on the most current available CMS hospital
wage data, including changes to the definition of MSAs. The urban and
rural area geographic classifications are defined in Sec.
412.64(b)(1)(ii)(A) through (C) of this chapter. The payment rates
established by CMS are adjusted by the Medicare contractor to reflect
local differences in wages according to the revised wage data.
* * * * *
Sec. 418.308 [Amended]
0
4. Section 418.308(c) is amended by removing the phrase ``(that is, by
March 31st)''.
0
5. Section 418.309 is amended by revising the introductory text and
paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 418.309 Hospice aggregate cap.
A hospice's aggregate cap is calculated by multiplying the adjusted
cap amount (determined in paragraph (a) of this section) by the number
of Medicare beneficiaries, as determined by one of two methodologies
for determining the number of Medicare beneficiaries for a given cap
year described in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section.
(a) Cap Amount. The cap amount was set at $6,500 in 1983 and is
updated using one of two methodologies described in paragraphs (a)(1)
and (a)(2) of this section.
(1) For accounting years that end on or before September 30, 2016
and end on or after October 1, 2025, the cap amount is adjusted for
inflation by using the percentage change in the medical care
expenditure category of the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for urban
consumers that is published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. This
adjustment is made using the change in the CPI from March 1984 to the
fifth month of the cap year.
(2) For accounting years that end after September 30, 2016, and
before October 1, 2025, the cap amount is the cap amount for the
preceding accounting year updated by the percentage update to payment
rates for hospice care for services furnished during the fiscal year
beginning on the October 1 preceding the beginning of the accounting
year as determined pursuant to section 1814(i)(1)(C) of the Act
(including the application of any productivity or other adjustments to
the hospice percentage update).
* * * * *
Dated: July 27, 2015
Andrew M. Slavitt,
Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
Dated: July 28, 2015
Sylvia M. Burwell,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services.
[FR Doc. 2015-19033 Filed 7-31-15; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P